THURSDAY December11, 2014
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ON Ct TODAY: BEAVERS GET A NEWCOACH GARYANDERSENW
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IN BUSINESS : PUTTINGA PRICETAGONTROY FIELD, BEND'S PLAYGROUND, C6
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo
grouse listing on hold
VaccineS — Worried your kids are spending the day around unvaccinated children? You can asktheir day care. D1 llIIIIIII
Sage
I I IIu IIIIIIIIII
Plus: Winter workouts-
C
Try hitting the pingpong table for a change of pace.D1
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — The $1.1 trillion
r
FalCOnere — They're being
federal funding bill
hired to clear nuisancebirds. C6
under consideration
includes aone• More on year the bill,A2 moratorium on listing the sage grouse as an endangered species, which
Related Weather watchers-
I
These experts makesureyour Christmas packagesarrive on time — no easytaskwith 900 million expected this month.A3
-Ir w
.
!
some environmental
Peace prize-
groups worry will sap the momentum
Malala Yousafzai. 17, is the youngest winner ever.A6
behind conservation
efforts. The sage grouse rider is one of many policy provisions
And aWebexclusiveClimate talks in Lima,Peru,set a record for their carbonfootprint. bendbnlletin.cern/extras
contained in the
EDITOR'SCHOICE
In Afghan census, no simple questions By Joseph Goldstein New York Times News Service
KABUL, Afghanistan
— Khaliddudin, who like many Afghans goes by a single name, has already picked out a second name to go alongside the first. He has decided on "Mayroj," which, he proudly explained, means the
"highest." But as a census worker for the Afghan government, Khaliddudin has
more than just his own name to consider. He is
at the vanguard of the government's effort to encourage everyone across the country to adopt a surname. This is an ambitious effort, one that seeks to
change — and to an extent standardize — Afghan naming conventions, which are so flexible that
1,603-page "cromnibus" fundingbill unveiled by congressional negotiators Tuesday. It is part omnibus spending package, with funds appropriated to largely fund the federal government through September 2015. It
By Taylor W. Anderson aThe Bulletin
SALEM — After consecutive years ofbad wildfire seasons in Oregon, the state may not get its unique fire insurance to help cover costs nextyear. Similar to car insurance, Oregon pays a premium for fire insurance everyyear. The state then must
is also part continuing resolution, with
pay the deductible, which last year was $20 million, before the insurance policypays for up to $25
short-term funding for the Department of
million. Also like car insurance,
Homeland Security so that Republicans spokesman for the Oregon
can revisit Obama's executive action on
gon and have a fire season you won't believe," Sen. Alan Bates, D-Medford, said. Oregon has had a wildfire insurancepolicyfornearlyfour decades. Thepolicycovers part of the rising cost of fighting wildfires afterthe statepays its deductible and premium, which was around $2 million last year.
wherepremiums goupwhen Department of Forestry, said drivershaveaccidents, one Wednesday. thingis dear: If the state can The prospect of missing out landanotherpolicythrough on wildfire reliefhas rural lawinsurance giant Lloyd's of makers talking about thinning London to help with rising and clear ingfuelsfrom forests wildfire costs, it'sgoingto and addressi ngthe effectsof have tocutabigger check climate change. "We're fully expecting "One of these years we're that based on the experigoingto light up Southern Oreence of the last two years that we'll probably be payingmore for insurance if we can get apolicy in the When costs coming year," Rod Nichols, exceeded
2015, when they will
control both chambers of Congress. SeeGrouse/A5
$100 million
CIA likely to weather scandal
$80 million
See Wildfire/A5
$60 intllion
immigration in early
$120 million
co'vERAQE
coverage
Fire costsskyrocket
$40 million The Oregon Department of Forestry has since 1973 purchased an insurance policy to help pay for fire suppression costs. The cost of firefighting $20 million has spiked over the years, especially in 2013.
When insurancepaid alter meeting
By Greg Miller and Dana Priest AGTUAL FIRE
The Washington Post
DEDUCTIBLE
cos TsGLAIMED
WASHINGTON
y S• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
4 0
---- deductible------------------
— The release of a searing report by the
4 • • &
Senate Intelligence Committee on the
• ~
•
•
•
PREMIUM
'73 '74 '75 '76 '77 '78 '79 '80 '8I '82 '83 '84 '85 '86 '87 '88 '89 '90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 'l1 'l2 '13
CIA's interrogation program'Itresday
Source:Oregon Forest Land Protection Fund Insurance Program Summary
was the latest mo-
Andy Zeigert 1 The Bulletin
rale-sinking moment for an agency that has beenbuffeted repeatedly throughout
the new president recently
issued a directive clarifying the name he plans to use. As a candidate
he was Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai. As president, he is sim-
ply Ashraf Ghani. Each day, Khaliddudin, who thinks he is 28
Comet data dears updebate on Earth'swater simenko, appears to eliminate
New York Times News Service
the possibility that the water in
One of the first scientific
Earth's oceans came from melted comets.
findingsto emerge from closesettled a question that planetary scientists have debated for
comet contains a higher fraction of "heavy hydrogen" than the
households to fill out cen-
decades.
water on Earth does, scientists
sus forms. Conducting a census can be daunting, even in developed coun-
The new finding, from the Eu- reported Wednesday. "That now probably rules out" ropean Space Agency's mission
tries, but in Afghanistan,
called 67P/Churyumov-Gera-
the Pamir and Hindu Kush Mountains, in whose re-
mote valleys innumerable Afghans live. SeeCensus/A5
Bay of Pigs fiasco to the Nixon-era domestic abuses to the 1980s
scandals tied to Iran By Kenneth Chang
(Afghans are also being encouraged to pick a birthday), and his team go door to door trying to persuade
there are unique challenges like avoiding the Taliban and navigating
its history, from the
up study of a comet has all but
to the little duck-shaped comet
Water vapor streaming off the
comets asthe primary source of terrestrial water, said Kathrin
TODAY'S WEATHER Morning rain High 48, Low31 Page B6
Altwegg, a scientist at the University of Bern in Switzerland
for the instrument to begin de-
and Latin America.
and the principal investigator
tailed analysis of the molecules coming off the comet. Earlier,
If anything, the cycle has onlybeen
for the Rosetta instrument that made the measurements.
the same instrument discovered that the comet exuded the scents
compressed in the years since the Sept. 11,2001, attacks, with at least four major investigations, not to mention criminal
With comets unlikely, most astronomers now think Earth's
water came from asteroids. The new findings, published in the journal Science, came after Rosetta arrived at Comet
of formaldehyde and rotten eggs. "It's a nice start to this phase of the mission," Matt Taylor, the project scientist, said of the wa-
ter findings.
67P in August, close enough
SeeComet/A4
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health D1-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 S ort E1-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
B5 C1-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 112, No. 345, 30 pages, 5 sections 0
probes, during a frenetic 13-year span. SeeCIA/A4
Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt
IIIIIIIIIIIjl 88267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
How to reachus HOng KOllg prOtOStS —Hong Kong authorities started clearing barricades today from a pro-democracy protest camp spread across a busy highway as part of a final push to retake streets occupied by activists for two and a half months. Watched by police, workers in white helmets used box cutters and pliers to remove plastic ties from the barricades, which were made up of metal and plastic safety barriers topped with traffic cones and scaffolding poles. They then passed parts of the barricades to coworkers who quickly shuffled them away to the side of the road. They were following orders from court workers carrying out a restraining order calling for barriers to be dismantled and obstructions removed from three sections of the protest site. Police then plan to move in to clear other blocked sections of road so that traffic can start flowing again.
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House Speaker John Boehner, from left, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi attend a ceremony Wednesday honoring veterans of the U.S. Civil Air Patrol at the Capitol. Campaign finance changes in the $1.1. trillion spend-
ing agreement are amongdozens of compromises reached behind closed doors that have cheered industries like coal and gas, while infuriating campaign finance watchdogs and environmental groups.
enin i sna s on ems'0 osi ion By Ashley Parker and Robert Pear
conservativeRepublicans con-
mittee helped to negotiate a political contribution provideal, called the spending plan sions were not changed. a "monumental achievement" "These provisions are dein an era of seemingly intrac- structive to middle-class famtable partisan divides. ilies and to the practice of our The objections mean that democracy," Pelosi said in a Congress will probably need statement. By Wednesday eveto pass a short-term funding ning, Democratic opposition measure tokeep government against the bill had hardened operations running beyond over the two provisions. today — the current deadline Boehner and his leader— while the final disputes are ship team nonetheless urged sorted out, even as Republi- Republicans to vote for t he cans expressed confidence bill, saying they would fight that the spending agreement Obama over immigration in would ultimatelybe approved. February — when the funding House Speaker John Boeh- for the Department of Homener w il l n e e d D e mocratic land Security is scheduled to votes to pass the bill, as many run out. of his more conservative memThe bipartisan package was bers arerefusing to support completed in the aftermath of it because of the president's the midterm elections in Nounilateral decision to d efer vember, when Democrats lost
tinued to argue that the bill
the deportations of as many
also did not do enough to try to scale back President Barack
as 5 million undocumented next year and lost seats in the immigrants. House as well. But the spending agreement showed signs of friction when Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.,
New York Times News Service
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C on-
gress limped Wednesday toward a r a r e b i partisan agreement on a $1.1 trillion spending bill to keep most of the government operating through next year, but dysfunction once again threatened to derail it. The fissures emerged as lawmakers in both parties balked over details in the 1,600-page bill, including one provision that rolled back
Wall Street regulations and could deliver a financial windfall to big banks, and another that would allow big donors to wield even more influence over political parties. More
Obama's executive action on
immigration. Even with the resistance,
their majority in the Senate
Child sex rillg —The conviction Wednesday of an Alabama woman accused of being part of an incestuous sex ring provided graphic evidence about horrendous child molestation, but it didn't answer a baffling question: What happened to ayoung victim who is missing and presumeddead? Jurors took two hours to convict Wendy Wood Holland, 35, of sodomy, sexual abuse, sexual torture and child endangerment. Sheshowed no emotion when theverdict was read. Prosecutors say Holland faces at least 20 years in prison and could get a life sentence. Witnesses heard two days of testimony in her trial that didn't give any clues about the whereabouts of her 19-year-old niece Brittney Wood. Woodwas last seen with Holland's husband, Donnie, in 2012, and11 people havesince been arrested on sex-related charges. WOman'S durllillg death —Surveillance video that shows a Mississippi woman at aconvenience store gasstation less than two hours before shewas set onfire and left to die is part of the puzzle authorities were trying to piece together Wednesdayabout the last hours of the 19-year-old's life. Authorities were reviewing Jessica Chambers' cellphone records andtalking to possible witnesses, who could becomesuspects, said Jay Hale, anassistant district attorney who prosecutes cases in PanolaCounty. Theyare trying to figure out what happened to herbefore shewasfound barely alive near her burning car Saturday in Mississippi. Hale saidChambers spokewith firefighters on the scenebefore shewas taken to a Memphis hospital, where she died. Halesaid hecould not discuss what she said. Plltin in India —President Vladimir Putin flew into NewDelhi on Wednesday in need of a friend. Putin's 22-hour visit comes amid some uncertainty in the old relationship. Thenewdecision makers in NewDelhi say theyare less interested in geopolitics than in jump-starting the economy. Russia hasalready begun to worry that it will lose its advantage asthedominant arms supplier to India. In New Delhi, Putin will try to reinvigorate their countries' ties with a long list of possible projects, including deals to export Russian diamonds to India for polishing, build nuclear reactors in India andconstruct an oil and gas pipeline betweenthe two nations.
HOmiCide deathS OutpaCeWar —Homicide andacts of personal violence kill more people thanwars andarethe third-leading cause of death amongmenaged15 to 44, the United Nations said Wednesday in anew report. Around the world, there were about 475,000 homicide deaths in 2012andabout 6 million since 2000, "making homicide amorefrequent cause of death than all wars combined in this period," the report states. The report is intended to provide a base line for assessing efforts to address domestic violence, including child maltreatment; youth, intimate partner andsexual violence; andelder abuse, as well as homicides. — Fromwirereports
Republican leaders and some the minority leader, told her Democrats expressed confi- members in a closed-door dence that a government shut- session that she had called down would be averted. Sen. the speaker and signaled that Barbara M i k u lski, D - M d ., Democrats could have diffiwho as chairwoman of the culty supporting the final deal Senate Appropriations Com- if the financial regulation and
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Detroit out of bankruptcy but not out of the woods By Monica Davey New York Times News Service
DETROIT — This city for-
• •
ing control of this mostly black, Democratic-run city. "We still have enormous
mally emerged from court pro- challenges delivering services tection on Wednesday, bring- in the cityevery day, but at least ing to a dose the largest munic- now we are no longer a city ipal bankruptcy in American that's inbankruptcy," said Dughistory after about 17 months.
gan, who took office almost
Yet the end of the bankruptcy
a year ago. "So we're going
was also the start of what may
to start fresh tomorrow. And
be a still more difficult, lengthy we're going to do the best we test — of Detroit leaders' abil- can to deliver the kind of serity to chart a new, sustainable vices that the people in the city coursefora city rescued from deserve." financial collapse but still Duggan said that the reorgastruggling. nization plan — which allows "How do you deliver service Detroit to shed $7 billion of its in a city where the unemploy- debts and to spend about $1.7 ment rate is double the state billion to remake its dismal city average, and we've got to re- services over the next 10 years build a water system and a bus — "gives us the tools to have a system and a computer system chance to succeed." and a financial system?" Mayor Even with a clean financial Mike Duggan asked Wednes- slate, questions remain about day, adding, "It's all going to be how Detroit can shift its fate, a challenge." stop an exodus of taxpayers Duggan appeared in a news and bring jobs and improveconference beside Gov. Rick ments to the hardest-hit neighSnyder, who announced that borhoods in a city with a foothe no longer considered De- print designed for a population troit to be in a state of finan-
that was once more than twice
cial emergency, and beside
as many asthe approximately
Kevyn Orr, the state-appointed
700,000residents here now.
manager who said he was no The Detroit public school longerneeded to oversee city system, too, has its own set of spending and operations as he woes; it is overseenby an emerhas since March 2013, and was gency managerbecause of its returning control to elected own financial crisis. leaders. But Snyder noted areas of The group assembled here, improvement. He said that the heaping praise on Detroit's city's homicide rate, which progress, might once have was at its highest rate in 40 seemed unlikely to sit in the years when the Detroit entered same room. bankruptcy in 2013, had fallThough the b ankruptcy en 18 percent; he said police case was ultimately resolved response times, 58 minutes on with deals struck with Detroit's average according to an exammajor creditors, the notion of ination last year, were now less bankruptcy had irked many than 18 minutes. And a plan is city leaders, who initially ac- underway to replace the city's cused the state's white, Republi- streetlights, 40percent of which can leadership of unfairly seiz- failed to light not long ago.
' is
e eason
0
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 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 Thursday, Dec.11,the 345th day of 2014.There are 20 days left in the year.
Rare insect imperiled by melting glaciers
DID YOU KNOW?
HAPPENINGS Spending dill —TheHouse of Representatives will vote on a $1.1 trillion spending measure.
m vin
HISTORY Highlight:In1936, Britain's King Edward Vlll abdicated the throne so hecould marry American divorceeWallis Warfield Simpson; his brother, Prince Albert, becameKing George Vl. In1792, France's King Louis XVI went before theConvention to face charges of treason. (Louis was convicted, andexecuted the following month.) In1816, Indiana becamethe 19th state.
In1928,police in BuenosAires announced they hadthwarted an attempt on the life of President-elect Herbert Hoover. In1937, Italy announced it was withdrawing from the League of Nations. In1941, Germanyand Italy declared war on theUnited States; the U.S. responded in kind. In1946, the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF)was established. In1964,Che Guevaraaddressed the United Nations; in his speech, the Argentine revolutionary declared that "the final hour of colonialism has struck." Singer-songwriter Sam Cooke wasshotto death by a motel manager in Los Angeles; he was33. In1972, Apollo 17's lunar module landedonthemoon with astronauts EugeneCernan and Harrison Schmitt aboard; during three extravehicular activities, they becamethe last two men to date to step onto the lunar surface. In1980, President Jimmy Carter signed legislation creating a $1.6 billion environmental "superfund" to pay for cleaning up chemical spills and toxic waste dumps. "MagnumP.l.," starring Tom Selleck, premiered on CBS. In1994, leaders of 34 Western Hemisphere nations signed a free-trade declaration in Miami. In1997,more than150 countries agreed at aglobal warming conference in Kyoto, Japan, to control the Earth's greenhouse gases. In2008, Bernie Madoff was arrested, accused of running a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme. (Madoff is serving a 150-year federal prison sentence.) Ten years ngo:Doctors in Austria said that Ukrainian presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko hadbeen poisoned with dioxin, which caused the severedisfigurement and partial paralysis of his face. Five years ago: Tiger Woods announced on his website that he was taking an indefinite leave from golf to try to save his 5-year-old marriage to Elin Nordegren. (However, the couple ended updivorcing in Aug. 2010.) Oneyearago:Timemagazine selected PopeFrancis as its Person of the Year,saying the Roman Catholic church's new leader — the first from Latin America — hadchanged the perception of the 2,000-yearold institution in anextraordinary way in ashort time.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Jean-Louis Trintignant is 84. Actress Rita Moreno is 83. Pop singer DavidGates (Bread) is 74. Actress Donna Mills is 74. Singer Brenda Lee is 70. Actress Teri Garr is 67. Movie director Susan Seidelman is 62. Actress Bess Armstrong is 61. Singer Jermaine Jacksunis 60. Rock musician Mike Mesaros (The Smithereens) is 57.Rockmusician Nikki Sixx (Motley Crue) is 56. Rock musician Darryl Jones (The Rolling Stones) is 53. Actor BenBrowder is 52. Actor Gary Dourdan is 48. Actress-comedian Mo'Nique is 47. Actor Max Martini is 45. Rapper-actor Mos Def is 41. — From wire reports
By Louis Sahagun Los Angeles Times
About 900 million packages will be delivered by UPS and FedEx this month — that's about three for
Shrinking glaciers and rising stream temperatures
every person in the U.S.
in Montana's Glacier National Park are prompting concern about the impacts
By Drew Harweg
on surrounding ecological systems afterperen-
The Washington Post
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Deep within a global operations nerve center in Memphis, a team of specially trained operativesscans data from nearly 200 countries, issues urgent
nial streams of melted ice
g~ iy,
disappear. Of particular concern
4
is the fate of a rare aquat-
ic insect, the western glacier stonefly, which is only
"SNOCON" alerts and tracks
found in the park and was first identified in streams
a fleet of cargo jets via a glowing, wall-size "war board."
there in 1963. Only 25 spec-
i
Their mission? To make sure
imens exist in museum col-
no"Frozen" doll is left behind. They are corporate meteorologists, commanded to help keep hectic holiday shipments
lections around the world. The ice masses in Glacier National Park are expected
to disappear by 2030, leav-
on time, snow or shine. And
ing the insect that scientists
America's shipping giants increasingly see them as a secret weapon, both in the fight against a brutal winter and in what could be the busiest online shopping season in history. UPS and FedEx expect to handle a record-breaking 900 Mike Brown/For TheWashington Post million packages this month At the FedEx global operations center in Memphis, Tennessee, corporate meteorologists examine the after the starter pistol of Black "war board," which shows the shipping compnny's flights along with any weather systems that could
know as Zapada glacier without the creature com-
Friday — about three for ev-
2011 and in two new locations at higher elevations,
forts it needs to avoid ex-
tinction: very cold alpine streams flowing out of patches of ice. Recent surveys and genetic analysis show that the half-inch-long insect is now only found in one of the six streams it inhabited before
disrupt them.
ery man, woman and child in America — and there is no room for error, not with bil-
change to snow at the Newark,
lions of dollars of business in
New Jersey, airport. But if this amounted to an
the air.
The job has becomemore demanding as online storefronts promise near-instant gratification through perks such as free shipping or same-day delivery, and as package-tracking shoppers have grown more acutely aware of — and annoyed by — how long their Blu-ray has been sitting in Buffalo.
officewide adrenaline rush, it was a quiet one, they said,
evoking less a military nerve center than the HR department of a Midwestern insur-
ance agency. "There's not m uch t a lk,"
FedEx meteorology manager Kory Gempler said. "But inside we're all a little bit revved up."
"Someone awaitinga packGempler's drive for meteoage in Bangkok doesn't care rology was sparked one night if it snowed in Louisville, Ken- in his boyhood back yard in tucky," said Randy Baker, a se- the Minneapolis suburbs: a nior meteorologist for UPS Air- stormy darkness, a falling elm lines. "They want their stuff." tree, a flash of light. "It was Some meteorologists help this desire to want to know," big retailers, including Wal- said Gempler, 46, "to warn my Mart and Home Depot, pre- family, to tell my friends." pare for emergencies and After graduation, he audiknow what to stock. But ship-
tioned for a TV weatherman
ping weather-watcher work can provefar more complex, with forecasters helping reroute jets around rough weather; mobilize deicing and refueling crews; and prepare pilots for the worst of fog, frost and potentially million-dollar delays. The largest shipping firms' top meteorologists are a mot-
gig in Duluth, Minnesota, but was felled by his fear of public speaking: "I was just terri-
ley crew of Air Force veter-
ble at it. I said, 'I know you're
not going to call me, so don't worry about it.'" He later went
to work for regional airlines, watching for threats of ice and turbulence. You can probably guess how high-level corporate meteorologists feel about the smil-
lays can cost hundreds of dollars more in spent fuel, service
failures and stranded crews; spread across a fleet making thousands of flights a year, the cost can tally into the millions. "Canceling flights is not an op-
ans, experienced forecasters ing suits on TV allowed the and part-time storm chasers, low-stakes comfort of general many of them weather nerds forecasting. Some say they who can trace their love of avoid telling people what they sky-watching back to a semi- do to fend off the excruciating nal childhood blizzard, hurri- questions. cane or act of God. When on an elevator with This winter could be their someone complaining about a biggest test yet. The National bad forecast, "you really have Retail Federation expects that
tion," Baker said.
When f o recasts a r en't enough, the top shipping firms often turn to desperate measures. FedEx dispatches special "sweep flight" jets to amble aimlessly across the skies so that, in case of emergency,
to hold back to not correct their
about45 percentofAmericans side of the conversation," said will do their holiday shopping Erik Proseus, 39, a FedEx seonline, and Forrester Research nior meteorologist. "Most peoanalysts predict that online ple small-talk about the weathsales will rise about 13 percent
er. Meteorologists small-talk
this season, to $89 billion. The shipping industry can
about everything else."
according to a new study published online in the scientific journal Freshwater Science. "The western glacier stonefly is representative of an entire,unique eco-
Weather-watching has long the United States, Asia and Eubeen a key battleground for rope, ready to take off within the international shipping 30 minutes of a call for help. elite: UPS launched its mete- The program "rescues" more orologydepartment 20 years than 1 million packages ayear, ago aftera surprise blizzard said one UPS spokesman, who crippled the firm's central air called it"an expensive but vital hub in Louisville, Kentucky. insurance policy." The teams nowadays work on The way shipping meteorol24-hour schedules, befitting ogists talk about hurricanes the cargo world's endless pace: and blizzards, seen mostly as One or more of UPS's 237 car- colors on a wireframe map, go jets is flying at all times, and can sound antiseptic, almost the company charters even Vulcan: Mary Taylor, the U.S. more aircraft during winter to Postal Service's manager of lohelp with an average of 1,955 gistics, called weather a "noncargo flights a day. preventable type of impact." Delivery data from logistics But they are not totally without firm ShipMatrix shows that emotion, even when it comes FedEx and UPS are off to a to keeping a stranger's gift strong start, and the firm exfrom fallingbehind. "We don't live for the sunpects the carrierstohave an ontime delivery rate of 95 percent ny-and-70 days. For us, that's easy," Proseussaid."Whenthe or better on Christmas Eve. But the world's increasingly general public is getting maycomplex shipping network has be some fear or some nerves made global transit a game of about a big weather event, brutal math: As with highway those are the big days for us traffic, any small delay can — that's when the adrenaline ripple larger down the chain. starts to flow." Every minute of weather de-
system," Joe Giersch, a U.S.
Geological Survey scientist and leader of the study, said in an interview. "Our con-
cern is the potential loss of whole communities of cold-water dependent spe-
cies found nowhere else on earth."
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they can swoop down to in-
tercept and deliver stranded packages. UPS runs a similar "hot spare" program, with more than a dozen standby jets and crews stationed across
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barely afford a repeat of last
winter's misery. As forecasters fought to dodge the polar vortex and a battery of icy storms,
shipping crews were overrun by a binge of last-minute
re ~
overwhelmed so thoroughly that it missed crucial Christmas deliveries,and FedEx e xpected profits, a hi t t h at Chief Financial Officer Alan
Graf called "beyond the realm of believable." Amid t hi s
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ping meteorologists' work can
20 ~/o Off
take on an air of near-military
remaining
momentousness, i n d uding among the 15 expert weath-
Poinsettias, Wreaths &Garlands
er-watchers at FedEx's glob-
al command complex. On the chaotic travel day before Thanksgiving, m e t eorologists there flitted among four monitors' worth of satellite, prepping for questions about when, for instance, rain would
e
AII Living Trees
t ension, ship-
radarand weather-model data,
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slashed $125 million from its
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Holiday Floral Arrangements, FTD, Teleflora, and Gift Certificates
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
CIA Continued from A1 That collection now includes
a 528-pageaccount of alleged CIA abuses and dishonesty in its brutal treatment of terror-
ism suspects. The Senate report is a substantial blow to the CIA's reputation, one that raises fun-
damental questions about the extent to which the agency can
Comet
Repart: CIA uSedmedia leakS —TheCentral Intelligence Agency leakedclassified material to reporters to shapethe perception that its detention and interrogation program was an effective tool in thwarting terrorism, according to aSenate Intelligence Committee report releasedTuesday. In addition to providing vivid details of the CIA'suse of secret prisons and more aggressive torture methods thanwas previously known, theSenatereport provides examples — in highly redacted form — of the interactions between theagency andjournalists in the years after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Thedetails in the report speak totensions inside the government over the intelligence community's dealings with the media. In somecases, theagency authorized the disclosure of classified information to journalists. Yet, in recent years, the government has investigated reporters andofficials, including prosecuting a CIAofficer for leaking details of the torture program.
be trusted. And yet, as in those previous instances of political and public outrage, the agency is expected to emerge from the investigatory rubble with its role and power in Washington largely intact. ligence. "Periodically, the CIA Indeed, the CIA is in many and other agencies end up dow ays at a p o sition of u n - ing things they should not and matched power. Its budgets are much more hesitant to do it have been swollen by billions again. I suspect in the future, if of dollars in counterterrorism some president asks the CIA to expenditures. Its workforce interrogate prisoners, they will has surged. Its overseas pres- say, 'No thanks, we've already ence has expanded. And its been there.'" arsenalnow includes systems, The programs the CIA gets including a fleet of armed in trouble over are a lways drones, that would have made shrouded in so much secreprior generations of CIA lead- cy that even supporters of the ers gasp. agencywho mighthave doubts In part, that is because de- about a program's legality or spite the deep fissures between ethics are cut out. "Secrecy the CIA and the Senate pan- enables bad policy choices," el that issued the excoriating said Thomas Blanton, director interrogation report, the two of the nonprofit National Sesides have largely compart- curity Archive and an expert mentalized their differences, on CIA covert operations. "It giving the agency deep con- gets the agency over and over gressional backing on a range again." of covert programs. CIA veterans said the latMore broadly, it is also be- est investigative barrage has cause as much as Washing- come at a substantial cost. ton struggles to reconcile its Former CIA Director Michael democratic ideals with the Hayden said the constant scruCIA's cloak-and-dagger mis- tiny has given CIA employees sion, U.S. leaders are repeat- reason to resist assignments edly drawn to the agency's that carry political risk. "How many man-years have mystique and capabilities as they face new threats. And the been consumed at the agency operators say they have long in responding to this report," grasped the imperatives of pol- Hayden said. "We have firstitics when things go sour. round draft picks doing noth-
Continued from A1 W ith Earth's water a
puzzle, scientists had long presumed that the planet was dry when it formed 4.5
billion years ago, and that the water came later, perhaps during the "late heavy bombardment" period more than 3.8 billion years ago. Comets, often called dirty
snowballs, seemed a likely candidate. Comets originate from
— New YorkTimes NewsService
two places in the solar system: the Kuiper belt, a ring European Space Agency via The New York Times of icy debris just beyond the The water that fills Earth's oceans almost certainly did not come orbit of Neptune; and the from melted comets, scientists working on the European Space Oort cloud, a spherical shell Agency's Rosetta mission reported Wednesday. Rosetta is studyof frozen detritus much far- ing Comet 67P, Churyumov-Gerasimenko, pictured. ther out. Asteroids are rocky
ism Center, the entity that ran
the secret prisons and interrogation program. The CTC's workforce went from a few hundred to more than 2,000.
bodies in the inner solar system, mostly between the or-
Its expanded resources and authorities have enabled it to
But comets' water turned out to b e d i fferent from
dore Cleeves, a graduate stuin play," said Conel Alexan- dent at the University of Michder, a scientist at the Carne- igan, found that these condi-
Earth's. A few water mole-
gie Institution for Science in
tions did not exist in the early
Pakistan. Even in recent months as tensions over the interrogation
cules have a heavier version
Washington. The new measurements of
solar system, so the high-deu-
said, senior CIA officers who
were involved in the discredited interrogation program roubriefings on Capitol Hill where they were congratulated on
of hydrogen called deuterium that replaces one of the 67P, another J upiter-family two hydrogenatoms, form- comet, appear to rule out coming what is known as heavy ets again. Its fraction of heavy
terium water must have been
water. On Earth, about 1 in 6,000 watermolecules contains deuterium.
system was cold enough, the radiation was lacking.
In all previous CIA scandals before Sept. 11, 2001, the agency tended, for some time, to keep a lower profile after its public censuring. That is unlikely to happen this time. The criticism over interrogations has gone on for years and is occurring while the pace of foreign operations has grown ever more demanding, most recently with the rise of the Is-
lamic State in Syria and Iraq. "Intelligence agencies have been whipsawed nonstop for 13 years," said Stanford University professor Amy Zegart,
to strike back at al-Qaida and its allies. The CIA's central role in counterterrorism operations
has been maintained under President Barack Obama. "What's happened has already happened," said Wil-
have deuterium levels similar to Earth's. In October, in another Sci-
ence paper, researchers found that meteorites that originated from the large asteroid Ves-
ta, which is believed to have formed inside of th e
water could h ave c ome
tists believe that ice-rich asteroids from outside the snow
line were pushed inward and were among the pieces that
combined to form Vesta and Earth hundreds of millions of years before the late heavy
tures along with radiation that
from Kuiper belt comets or knockselectrons offhydrogen those even closer, like Hart- — chemical reactions create water molecules with a much
go much farther out than Jupiter's.
higher fraction of deuterium. In a paper published in Sep- beginning.
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bombardment. In other words, Earth may have been wet from almost the
ley 2, whose orbit does not
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snow
line, also possess Earthlike deuterium levels. These scien-
like the universe overall, has
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dark arts intended to weaken
W. Bush turned to the agency
formed beyond the snow line,
very low levels of deuterium,
killing, spying, theft, bribery, blackmail and a host of other
2001, when President George
In 2012, Alexander of the
Carnegie Institution and his colleagues published a Science paper finding that some types of meteorites, in particular a class of primitive ones that
found that its deuterium about one-tenth as much as signal perfectly matched what is found in Earth's water. Earth's water. That opened However, under c ertain the possibility that Earth's conditions — cold tempera-
to do what no other agency
CIA became greater than ever after the terrorist attacks in
system. While the outer solar
water is three times that of Earth, higher than those of the
a look at water vapor from the comet Hartley 2 and
Even so, the cycle of inves- an expert on the intelligence official. "If it were easy to do, tigations has coincided with community. "The new reality someone else would do it. So an era of dramatic expansion is that intelligence officials are I think that they understand of authority and resources for working in a perpetual state that being second-guessed the agency. Much of that CIA of crisis while being asked to when something goes wrong windfall has gone directly to confront the most complex comes with the territory." the agency's Counterterror- threat environment in history." Since its founding in 1947, every president and every Congress has relied onthe CIA
tions overseas that can include
present in the cloud of matter that collapsed to form the solar
Oort cloud comets, it
their counterterrorism work.
of government is empowered to do: conduct covert opera-
that meant comets were back
Oort cloud comets. "Ten years ago, I would not turns out, have twice the have been surprised at all by concentration of heavy wa- this result, because that's what ter found in Earth water. I expected," Altwegg said. "But Thus, when th e R osetta then three years ago we got spacecraft was launched this Hartley 2 measurement, in 2004, most planetary and that was a real big surscientists h a d alr e ady prise. Now we're back to what crossed comets off the list of I actually expected." possibilities. Much of the solar system's But in 2011, a team using water, including up to half of the Herschel Space Obser- Earth's, appearsto predatethe vatory, an infrared tele- solar system, formed within scope operated by the Eu- expanses of interstellar space ropean Space Agency, took billi ons ofyears ago.The sun,
tinely took part in classified
things," said a U.S. intelligence
the country's adversaries. This dependency on the
tember, scientists led by L. Ilse-
launch an array of covert programs, including the drone campaigns in Yemen and
report mounted, U.S. officials
"Folks at CI A a r e o f t en ing but this, rather than chasasked to do risky and difficult ing (the Islamic State)."
"A lot of people thought
bits of Mars and Jupiter.
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drones strikes and paramilitary operations and gathering intelligence. Most public controversies have involved leaders at the top of the CIA and a small cad-
re of officers directly involved in the questionable operations, as is the case involving the interrogation of terrorist
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Wildfire
We're having dryer, longer very hard to come by and very summers," Bates said. expensive," Sen. Fred Girod, Continued fromA1 The state approved $14 mil- R-Stayton, said. "It's going Now Department of Forest- lion in emergency funds for to be a question of if we even ry officials will have to make the Department of Forestry, want the insurance." the case to Lloyd's that the state which both saw costs rise in G irod s ai d t h e war m aggressively fights wildfires 2014while fires ripped through ing climate and forests that and that the last two years much of the state, including the are filled with fire fuels is a were caused by anomalies Two Bulls fire near Bend in double-whammy. "The thing is if the federal in dry weather and lightning June. "Fire season's August, Sep- government keeps doing what strikes on state lands. The agency is putting togeth- tember," Bates said. "We had they're doing, it's only gonna er a presentation for Lloyd's to a fire hazard in December in get worse," Girod said. "We see whether the company will Medford lastyear. December." have to do something." still provide a policy, and that's The acreage burned in the Bates said he expects the got lawmakers nervous. Repre- long season thisyearwas near- state will lose its insurance sentatives from Lloyd's weren't ly triple the 10-year average. policy and will opt to create a immediately available. State climatologists say fires $100 million fund to help with While a legislative commit- will continue to grow in sever- costs. He also says he embractee was voting Wednesday to ity as climate change extends es some logging and thinning approve about $14 million for fire seasons. that would cut down on fuels in emergency costs related to the The stat e received about $77 dry forests. "It's not an environmental 2014 seasonfrom itsgeneral million of help through the infund, rural l awmakers said surance plan that it has paid versusthe lumber companies the state needs to find a way about $55.3 million for since (issue) anymore. We've got to to reducefuels in forests and 1973 through the 2013 season. dean these forests up," Bates address the impacts of climate The state is still tallying some said. "But if we don't change change before Oregon has a ofthecostsfrom the 2014 sea- what we're doing, we're going year-round fire season, as is son, but it expects the season to burn the state up one day." happening in California. cost about $76 million. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, "It's global weather change. "Insurance is going to be tanderson@bendbulletin.com
A male sage grouse fights for the attention
of a female sage grouse southwest of Rawlins, Wyoming. A legislative rider
in Congress' $1.1 trillion spending bill would delay
n
protections forthe
wide-ranging Western bird. Jerret Raffety I
Rawlins (Wyo.) Daily Times via The Associated Press file
Grouse
m ental Defense Fund, in a
prepared statement said the Continued fromA1 riderincreases the pressure to Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood get good conservation in place River, told The Bulletin that quickly. "Time is one thing the greatthe rider, which specifies that neither the sage grouse nor its er sage grouse does not have. smaller cousin, the Gunnison Delaying the process can sage grouse, can be officially work if and only if there is no listedas endangered for one delay in aggressive, creative, year, is "a big win" for Central on-the-ground efforts to pro-
restates Congress' i ntent that the BLM is responsible for building fencing within a cattle-free area on Steens Mountain. In April, Walden met with
BLM officials to discuss the case of George Stroemple, w ho owns land w i thin t h e
cattle-free area. Although the
Census Continued from A1 Still, culture may prove
the g r eatest o b stacle: Many people lack surnames, most do not know
their birthday, and Afghan women generally will not
a
speak to census workers
if their husbands are out, as they often are during
t
the daytime when census
workers knock. "We tell them to please
E
select a surname for them-
Bryan Denton/New YorkTimes News Service
selves if they don't have one," said Khaliddudin,
Mohammad Akhter, right, speaks with an Afghan census team, explaining that "Mohammed Akhtar" was just his first name, and he is standing on a dusty street. choosing Naibkhil, the name of his trlbe, for a surname. The Afghan Colorful Shiite banners government is seeking to change, and to an extent standardize, flew above concrete homes. Afghan naming conventions, which are so flexible that the new presInside each were house- ident recently issued adirective clarifying the name heplans to use.
holds awaiting registration. "When you select a
surname you can use any- ple — just 2 percent of the city. thing," he explained. Optimistic Afghan officials After long delays, false say it will take years before starts and s q uandered the entire country is surveyed. "We believe we will reach millions in foreign aid, the great Afghan census 70 percent of the population is finally underway. The in five years," said Homayoun census teams generally in- Mohtaat, the project's director. clude a man and a woman Nobody knows just how who often spend consider- many people reside in Afable time waiting in front ghanistan. The last census, in of doors that never open, 1979, found some 14.6 million often because of purdah, people. Afghanistan's Populathe custom of sequestering tion Registration Division curwomen indoors away from rentlyhas records for about men not their husbands or 17 million Afghan citizens, relatives and requiring a according to officials. burqa when outside. Each name is listed in On a recent morning, a clothbound ledger book there was audible stirring stacked on sagging metal inside as the census team racks in four dusty rooms in knocked on a door in the the offices of the department, Mikrorayon c omplexes, a government agency. t he S o v iet-built a p a r t For years, this is where ment blocks that are home citizens have come to seek to m an y m i d dle-classa passport, join the army Kabulis. or change their marital sta"The father of this apart- tus. Before that can happen, ment is not home — so they though, the petitioner's idencannot fill it out," said Ma- tity must be verified in one soud Rahmani, a supervi- of the books. Clerks say they
While
s o m e co u n t ries,
i ncluding Iran a n d T u r key, imposed surnames on t heir citizens i n
th e f i r st
half of the 20th century, the practice never took hold in Afghanistan. The remote, insular and tribal nature of Afghan villages may have had something to do with the lack of surnames. So perhaps did the historic weakness of national governments, which have tended to require fixed names in the in-
terest of keeping track of people, whether to draft them or taxthem.
Some Afghans adopted surnames in recent years when applying for visas to foreign countries. Others, particularly Kabulis, did so with the influx of foreign organizations and employers after the Taliban government was toppled in 2001.
But even some Afghans with two names lack a true surname in the sense that nei-
ther name is commonly held by relatives.
sor with the census proj-
seldom fail to locate an entry,
ect, with a resigned shrug. "This is a problem we are often facing."
except for people with the bad
So
when
Moh a m m ad
Akhtar, a retired police comor last page of a book. Those mander, opened the door In a n other n e ighbor- names and photos have large- last month to Khaliddudin's hood, in north Kabul, a ly worn away from use over census team, he said he was woman opened the door, the decades. readytoselecta surname and but only to hand one of The clerks who work here bestow it on his seven chilKhaliddudin's workers a have t h e ca r n i val-worthy dren. "Mohammad Akhtar," phone. On the line was her ability to guess a person's he explained, was just his husband, asking them to age within a year, a necessity first name. For a surname he come back later. in a place where few actually chose Naibkhil, the name of Since census workers know how old they are. his tribe. "I have thought about this began knocking on doors But for many Afghans, the in Kabul this year, they trickiest question to answer is second name and now I'm have registered 70,000 peo- probably their name. ready to choose it," he said. luck of being listed on the first
Steens Mountain Cooperative Management and Protection
and Eastern Oregon.
tect the species; otherwise, further declines in the next
do the habitat work that's been
threats to the bird and to local
that the BLM is responsible
tion director for Oregon Wild,
partnerships that have already
tains that it is Stroemple's obli-
"We need time and help to Act of 2000, which created avoid a listing long-term and year could lead to even greater the cattle-free area, specifies going on there," he said. economies," Holst said. "We for the fencing required for the Steve Pedery,the conserva- must nurture the productive protected area, the BLM mainnoted that the cromnibus did been developed in sage grouse gation to keep his cattle off of not contain money for the Se- country to promote solutions the designated area. cure Rural Schools payments
to timber counties and did not rework the way the fed-
I
like habitat exchanges that
The committee instructions benefit both sage grouse and assert that the Steens Act conthe Western way of life." tains a "clear mandate that
eral government pays to fight wildfires, two big priorities for Oregon.
The funding bill also contains report language — instructions from Congress to "But there i s a m e asure the agencies on how to carry blocking protective measures out the laws enacted — that for sage grouse habitat because the oil and gas indus-
fencing is BLM's responsibility," and directs the BLM to
comply with the law. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
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bers of a particularspecies
and protecting its habitat, Pedery said. In the 1970s and '80s, people in Oregon knew the number of salmon were decreasing, but it wasn't until
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could be considered endang ered, but did no t pu t t h e
chicken-sized bird, known for the showy strutting by males during mating rituals, on the list. The bird, which can be
I I I I'
found in 11 western states,
now occupies less than three-
I
HIGH DESERT BANK
fifths of its traditional habitat. The Bureau of Land Man-
"Local Service-Local Kno+tedgew
agement oversees 57 million acresof sage grouse habitat,
1000 SW Disk Drive, Bend, OR 97702
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servation Service, a branch of the Department of Agricul-
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'
YMLIMITED WARRAitlv
Wildlife Service said the sage grouse population had decreased to the point where it
of working lands at Environ-
•
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YEARLIMITEDWARRAitTY
those questions, it just kicks the can down the road." In 2010, the U.S. Fish and
10 million acres of sage grouse habitat in Oregon.
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541-848-4444
"We're in the midst of a
huge West-wide debate on how to reverse the decline of sage grouse," he said. "This does nothing to help resolve
to the Natural Resource Con-
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YEAR LIMITEDWARRAitly
that serious work on restoring their runs took place, he said.
bird's natural habitat is on privately owned lands, according
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the fish was listed in the 1990s
but about 40 percent of the
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and we don't have a lot of
ests on increasing the num-
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those in Oregon." Placement on the endangered species list helps focus the attention of various inter-
t
$
tries want it," he said. "The
only parties that the sage grouse rider is a priority for are oil and gas corporations,
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
IN FOCUS:NOBEL PEACEPRIZE
aaa, , is oun estwinnerever By Alan Cowell
The Nobel
New York Times News Service
Peace Prize is
LONDON — They came from lands that had fought
being shared between Malala Yousafzai, left, the 17-year-old Taliban attack survivor7 and Indian children's rights activist Kailash Satyarthi.
wars against each other, and that still skirmish — an older
man and a high school student divided by faith and generations; he a Hindu, she a Muslim; he aged 60, she 17.
J~
But when Malala Yousafzai,
Qf i(l
the Pakistani teenager shot in the head by the Taliban in 2012, and Kailash Satyarthi,
an Indian child rights campaigner, were named as joint winners of the $1.1 million Nobel Peace Prize in October, the choice seemed to speak to
By Saeed Al-Batati and Kareem Fahim
cluding a 70-year-old man. Harad said he lost five sons, New York Times News Service including Sheikh. AL MUKALLA, YemenThe conflicting accounts As the raid got underway in were impossible to reconcile. his village, Mubarak al-Ha- Yemeni military officials rad was woken first by bark- provided their own version ing dogs, then explosions. of the outcome, claiming Instinctively, he grabbed his that 10 militants had been killed, though they mistakgun. " We thought w e w e r e enly said one of them was being attacked by another Harad. tribe," Harad said. "We are There was no mistaking constantly at war with many the anger and anguish in tribes." Wadi Abadan after the raid, He saw three helicopters which added to the bitter in the distance. U.S. com- view of American countermandos and Yemeni soldiers terrorism operations in Yewere advancing toward the men. Residents gathered at a village, Wadi Abadan, on a meeting the next day to formission to rescue an Amer- mulate a response, accordican hostage being held by ing to Tarek al-Daghari, a the al-Qaida affiliate in Ye- local tribal leader. The fammen, along with a South ilies of the victims said they African. would demand compensaH arad k ne w t h a t hi s tion from the government. 28-year-old son, Sheikh, At the meeting, Daghari who was in the village, was also chastised some of the a longtime member of the parents, including Hadar, a ffiliate, al-Qaida in t h e for exposing the village
Heikc Junge/NTB Scanpix via The Associated Press
a desireto transcend differ-
ences and forge a common campaign m support of dIspossessed children across the
globe. On Wednesday, Yousafzai and Satyarthi received their
awards from the Norwegian
ceive medals and diplomas,
Yousafzai, who studies at Edgbaston High School for Girls in B irmingham, England, said she had brought
Nobel Committee in a v a st the two winners drew a standa nd ornate chamber at t h e ing ovation from the audience
Oslo City Hall before an au- before them. dience of royals, dignitaries, In his speech to the ceremo- with her five other teenage family members and others. ny, Satyarthi, speaking alter- girls from Pakistan, Nigeria Yousafzai said the Nobel nately in Hindi and in English, and Syria. "Though I appear Prize "is not just for me." declaredthat he represented as one girl, one person who is "It is for those forgotten chil- "the sound of silence, the cry 5 foot 2 inches tall, if you indren who w ant e ducation," of innocence, and the face of clude my high heels, I am not she continued. "It is for those invisibility." a lone voice. I am many," she "I have come here to share said. frightened children who want peace. It is for those voiceless the voicesand dreams of our She said she would spend children who want change." children, because they are all her share of the prize monYousafzai became the our children," he said. ey on building schools in "There is no greater vio- Pakistan. youngest recipient of the prize "This is where I will begin, since it was first awarded in lence than to deny the dreams 1901, adding to an extraor- of our children," he said. but it is not where I will stop," "I refuse to accept that the she said. "I will continue this dinary tally of accolades, including visits with President shackles of slavery can ever be fight until I see every child in Barack Obama and with more stronger than the quest school." Queen Elizabeth II and an ad- for freedom," he added. "The She added: "Why is it that dress to the United Nations. single aim of my life is that ev- countries which we call so "Her courage is almost inde- ery child is free to be a child." strong are so powerful in "We live in an age of rapid creating wars but so w eak scribable," Thorbjorn Jagland, the chairman of th e N obel globalization," he continued. in bringing peace? Why is it Committee, told the ceremony "We are connected through that giving guns is so easy but on Wednesday. high-speed Internet. We ex- giving books is so hard? Why If their shared award "can change goods and services is it that making tanks is so contribute to bringing Indians in one single global market. easy, but building schools is so and Pakistanis, two people so Thousands of flights every hard?" near to one another and yet so day connect us to every corner Even before the ceremodistant, closer to one another, of the globe. ny, Yousafzai and Satyarthi "But there is one serious dis- seemed intent on using the this would add an extra dimension to the prize," Jagland connect. It is the lack of com- occasion not simply as a platsaid. passion," he said, adding: "Let form for acknowledgment of Standing side by side to re- us globalize compassion." their achievements, but also as
Conflicting acmunts arise in failedrescue of Yemen hostages
a podium from which to renew
their campaigns. "We are not here just to accept our award, get this medal
and go back home," Yousafzai tolda news conference on the eve of the ceremony, accord-
ing to Agence France-Presse. "We are here to tell children especially that you need to stand up, you need to speakup for your rights. It is you who can change the world." "In this world, if we are thinking we are modern and have achieved so much development," she said on Tuesday, "then why is it that there are
so many countries where children are not asking for any iPad or computer or anything? What they are asking for is just a book, just a pen, so why
Arabian Peninsula. But Harad said that he and other
residents had no idea that Sheikh had smuggled foreign hostages into Wadi Abadan. So the tribesmen of the village fought back against the Americans, con-
to harm. "I told them they
should partly blame their children, for bringing al-Qaida to the village," he said. Sheikh had been warned repeatedly by village elders not to shelter foreign jihadists in Wadi Abadan, and
vinced that their homes and families were under attack,
had agreed not to, according to Daghari. But he and other
he said. The rescue operation early
militants "violated the agreement when they sneaked the
can't we do that?"
hostages and other members ern Shabwah province end- of al-Qaida into the village," ed in tragedy. The hostages, Daghari said. Luke Somers, an American Details started to emerge photojournalist, and Pierre after the raid, Daghari said.
Satyarthi, who has struggled to free child laborers,
Korkie, a S o ut h A f r i can At least seven militants had teacher, were shot by their guarded Somers and Korkie.
said, "This prize is important for the millions and millions
captors, according to U.S. officials, who said that the
who are denied a childhood."
commandos also killed six
"There are children who are
Saturday in Yemen's south-
Among them were Sheikh and another local tribesman, who also was killed.
referring to Yousafzai as "the
people, all of them militants. Daghari said that the miliBut residents of the vil- tants who survived had fled, lage, as well as a local secu- but that he did not k now rity official, said that only where. They would find no two militants — Sheikh and shelter from neighboring one other — had been killed. tribes, he said, who would The rest of the victims, eight fear their villages would be
bravest child we can think of."
in total, were civilians, in-
sold and bought like animals," he said. "There are children who are
born and live in situations of conflict and terror," he added,
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I F IN E
F U RN IT U R E
FREE STATEWIDE DELIVERY* Bend River Promenade
www.mjacobsfamilyofstores.com 541-3824900 • Toll Free 1-800-275-721 4 Open Mon.-Fri. 10AM to 7PM Sat.5 Sun.10AM to 6PM *$999or more **i comfort 8i iSeries beds excluded
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
STATE NEWS
Newport
Eugene
• Newport: Coast Guard helicopter basewill remain openfor at least another year,B3 • Eugene: University of Oregonteaching assisfantstrikeends,B3
O www.bendbulletin.com/local
AG tells state to update privacy laws • Rosenblum will propose law on notifying people wheninformation hasbeen hacked By Taylor W. Anderson
ment Department in October
The Bulletin
— along with privacy concernsfromtechnologygiants,
information is hacked. "We do have the opportunity for attorneys general to work together in what are called
Department attack, which is
multistate investigations," she said. Rosenblum couldn't lead
ters to people whose informa-
under investigation by Oregon State Police andthe FBI, the
agency sent about 819,000 let-
COCC
Finalists for president to be named
tion, incjuding Social Security numbers, were potentially
By Tyler Leeds
breached in the attack.
The Bulletin
General Ellen Rosenblum told
Rosenblum said the time has
those investigations unless Oregon changed its laws; the state agency with that power
come to update privacy laws. She said she plans bring a
has taken little action in data breach cases since the law was
ment Department spokeswoman, said the department ex-
nity College will announce next week four finalists in
proposal to the Legislature that
updatedin2007. The toughtalkcomes ayear
ceeded what was requiredby
the search for the school's
state law by sending the letters. The department also offered to
next president. The college's board of
pay for ayear of ID theft and
directors is scheduled to
Well shot!
lawmakers on Wednesday the state's privacy laws need to be updated to keep up with cyberthreats and an amount of data that many people don't even know they give out. Given the increasingly common hacking of private and
credit report monitoring. More than 37,000 people took the
Reader photos
public databases — 1.9 million
make an announcement during a special meeting Tuesday. This will be COCC's second slate of finalists. Last academic year, the college narrowed a field of 36 candidates down to three. COCC
Send us your best outdoor photos at Hbendbulletin.com/ readerphotos. Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section.
SALEM — Oregon Attorney
records were at risk during a breach at the state Employ-
than the Department of Consumer and Business Services,
after massive hacks on the com-
lead national databreach
puters of mega-retailers Target, Home Depot and Jimmy John's.
investigations. And she will
About 800,000Oregonianswere
propose other laws that would requirebusinesses and agencies to notify people whose
vulnerable duringthe Target attack alone, Rosenblum said. After the Employment
department's offer for credit monitoring, Fogue said. See Privacy laws/B5
Central Oregon Commu-
announced its intention
to hire Patrick Lanning,
B C CO1 S 1"0 8
Submission requirements:
Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
would let her agency, rather
Andrea Fogue, an Employ-
10
an administrator from Chemeketa Community
College, but decided to redo its search in April after it discovered Lanning
had been accused of raping a colleague. Shirley Metcalf, who was previously extended learning dean,
S cl CS BCC1 Cn
took over as one-year interim president this summer after President Jim Middleton retired follow-
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
ing a decade on the job. Board Chairwoman Laura Craska Cooper
DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR 97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571
said at Wednesday night's board meeting the college has had "a great search," receiving 50 applications from "all over the United
Deschutes County Commission • Tammy Baney,R-Bend Phone:541-388-6567 Email:Tammy Baney© co.deschutes.or.us • Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone:541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger@ co.deschutes.or.us • Tony DeBone,R-LaPine Phone:541-388-6568 Email:Tony DeBone©o. deschutes.or.us
States."
The four finalists will be invited to visit COCC at the end of January, interview-
ing with the board and meeting with community members. See COCC /B2 I
CROOK COUNTY 300 NEThird St., Prineville, OR 97754 Phorte: 541-447-6555 Email: administrationO co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
Crook County Court • Mike McCabe,Crook County judge Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabeO co.crook.or.us • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgrenO co.crook.or.us JEFFERSON COUNTY 66 SE DSt., Madras, OR 97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Web: www.co.jefferson. OI'.US
Jefferson County Commission • Mike Ahern • John Raffield • Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner© co.jefferson.or.us CITY OF BEND 710 NW Wall St.
Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us CITY OF REDMOND 716 SWEvergreenAve. Redmond, OR97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O. Box39 Sisters, OR97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 CITY OF LA PINE P.O. Box 3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432
s's 4,.=::-
ta
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
The Bulletin
cle accident during s training exercise for Mt. Bachelor employees Wednesday.
The day before the roof collapsed at Woodgrain
By Claire Withycombe
paramedic, said Mt. Bachelor
The Bulletin
Medical Supervisor Rick Mjelde, who organized the drill.
present to observe the Mt. Bachelor team's response to the emergency. "They did fine," Kelly said after the drill concluded shortly before 1p.m. u(There was) a lot of treatment in the triage area. What's hopeful is to get
See video coverage on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/bncbelordrill
o
Millwork in Prineville last month there were no indi-
They were ski zombies, moaning and groaning as the wind whipped around Bache-
was the first to respond, short-
lor Butte. No slaves to powder and
ly after the accident was staged at 11a.m. She triaged the
ice,thecrew of15orso people wandering around Mt. Bachelor ski area Wednesday, faces caked in blood, were participating in an emergency drill, posing as victims of a horrific car accident. The scenario: Avehicje
theatrical crowd as the injured
Norsen assessed the patients
45 minutes after the drill started.
rammed into a crowd of people
and categori zed themby severity, returningto those who
volunteers played relatives of people who were involved in
based on complaints, seri-
cated well and didn't rely too
were hurt the worst. Her col-
heavily on the radio, Kelly
the incident.
roof collapse did not cause
leagues dragged in stretchers behind them in the snow.
sald. Despite the atmosphere of levity at the drill — assisted in
That was Deb Mjelde's job. "They didn't tell me anything, so I guess it went OK," Deb
any injuries, but OSHA did receive a complaint about
no small part by the shouting
Mjelde said after the drill. Giv-
and Redmond Fire EMS Di-
of profanities and profundities alike by the victims — the
ing out information was supposed to be tightly controlled.
and their ranks include one
vision Chief Doug Kelly were
Pro Patrol moved quickly and
S
I IC I a l I I u a
in the resort's parkinglot, killing one person. Mt. Bachelor's Pro Patrol, mountain-ready for
m edical and emergency situations, was the first to respond. Most of the Pro Patrol mem-
bers hold basic certification in emergency medical services,
Pro Patrol's Betsy Norsen
demanded attention and approximately 10 other members of the Pro Patrol trickled in to ald.
the patients triaged quickjy
In such a big-scale scenario, the triage is complex and swift:
by patrol team members about
Deschutes County Sheriffs
Sgt. Nathan Garibay,who manages emergency services,
and taken here," he said, indicatingthe locker room where patients were being evaluated
The patrol also communi-
calmly. One patrol member sat on a bench in the locker room, drawing up a scheme of how the vehicles were positioned at the accident scene. Both the medical emergency and the public's right to know must be attended to, said Mjelde, who had organized an information station. Some
cations of sagging or the ceiling dropping, according to an inspection report by the Oregon Occupational Safety 8z Health Divi-
sion. But company officials were aware the roof was unstable and had a history
of leaking water. A division of the Oregon Department of Consumer
and Business Services, OSHA inspects workplaces ous injuries and deaths. The
the condition of the work environment. However,
Woodgrain will not be cited as a result of the inspection.
See Woodgrain /B2
See Drill /B5
Funeral procession forSgt.JohnLawrence al
IV Z
,
traf icwi e oc e
CITY OF MADRAS 71 SE DStreet, Madras, OR 97741 Phone: 541-475-2344
Sgt. John Lawrence travels from the Bend Police Depart-
blocked, and traffic will be
ment to Westside Church,
police personnel. Drivers are encouraged to find alternate
CITY OF METOLIUS 636 Jefferson Ave., Metolius, OR97741 Phone: 541-546-5533
By Dylan J. Darling
Members of the Mt. Bachelor ski patrol prepare fake patients, complete with fake blood, for transport while participating in a mock vehi-
CITY OF PRINEVILLE 387 NEThird St., Prineville, OR 97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-5628 Email: cityhallO cityofprineville.com Web: www.cityofprineville. com
CITY OF CULVER 200 W. First St., Culver, OR 97734 Phone: 541-546-6494
Woodgrain not cited after OSHA inspection
"=; fgwA
Bulletin staff report Traffic will be blocked between noon and 1 p.m. Friday as afuneral procession for
according to a news release from the department. The sergeant's immediate
family, along with police and fire personnel, will travel
Aproces sionofpoliceofficers,firefightersandSgt.JohnLawrence'sfamilywilldisrupttrafficbetween noon and1 p.m. Friday. Reader boards and police personnel will help direct traffic during the procession. Drivers are encouraged to find alternate routes of travel.
BendPolice Qept. ~
on NW Shevlin Park Road,
where services begin at 1 p.m. Intersections and traffic lanes along the route will be
I IDl
tte tate Par
kli Ave.
directed by reader boards and
Westside Church
routes during this time. The
public is welcome to view the procession, according to the
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
news release.
west on Greenwood Avenue and continue onto NW New-
Lawrence, 43, died of natural causes Dec.4. Donations
port Avenue. The procession
to his memorial fund may
will end at Westside Church
be takento any Mid Oregon
Credit Union. Reference the "John Lawrence Memorial Fund" and account number 78088.
Lawrence began his career in law enforcement at the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, where he worked 4t/2
years. He then worked for the Bend department for 10 years and was promoted to sergeant
in January.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
NEWS OF
E VENT
ENDA R
RECORD POLICE LOG
TODAY CASCADEHORIZONBAND HOLIDAYCONCERT: The band plays holiday melodies; free, donations accepted;1:30 p.m.; BendSenior Center, 1600 SEReed Market Road; www.cascadehorizonband.org or 541-815-3767. LIVING NATIVITY:Live tableau representing the birth of Jesus, with indoor and outdoor scenes; free; 6-8 p.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www. hbcredmond.org or 541-548-4161. TODD HAABY: Theflamenco guitarist performs with his group SolaVia;$28-$38plusfees;7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "HUMBUG":A modern-day twist on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" about Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES":
CHRISTMAS LIGHTSKAYAK: Kayaks and canoes decorated with lights paddle around the Deschutes River; free; 3:30 p.m. participants gather, 4 p.m. float; Tumalo Creek Kayak 8 Canoe, 805 SW Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; www. tumalocreek.com or 541-317-9407. DIRKSENDERBYKICKOFFPARTY: Featuring live music by StealHead, asilentauction, a raffle and more to benefit Tyler Eklund; $5 suggested donation; 6-11 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend;541-408-4329. "ALMOST, MAINE":Play about a small town and the citizens' tales of love, presented by the Redmond Proficiency Academy; $8, $5for students with ID; 7 p.m.; The Printing Post, 639 SWForest Avenue,
org, tori miller©rpacademy.orgor
The Bulletin file photo
Stuart Baronti, of Eugene, paddles down The Deschutes River next to Drake Park in Bend. The annual Christmas Kayak Float takes
place Friday at 4 p.m.
Redmond;www.rpacademy.org,
tori miller@rpacademy.org or 541-526-0882. "THE HOBBIT":A production of the classi cJ.R.R.Tolkien bookbyBend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students18 and younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.tickettails.com or 541-419-5558. CASCADEBRASSQUINTET Aperformanceofthe one-man, HOLIDAYCONCERT:Featuring one-act play based on aDavid holiday music, with Michelle Sedaris essay;$10plusfees in VanHandel; free, donations accepted; advance; 7:30 p.m .;VolcanicTheatre 7-9 p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680 NWBond St., Bend; Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.cascadebrassqui ntet.com, www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. bobshimekmusic©bendbroadband. com or 541-420-5503. ZEPPARELLA: The San Francisco rock'n' roll band performs, with GOSPEL CHOIRCHRISTMAS CONCERT:Featuring the Gospel Groovy Wallpaper and Daniele Choir of the Cascades; free, Gottardo; $20 plus fees in advance, donations accepted;7-8 p.m.; $25 at the door; 8 p.m.; TheBelfry, EastmontChurch,62425 Eagle Road, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. Bend; www.eastmontchurch.com or belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. 541-390-2441. EVERYONE IS DIRTY:The psychHOLIDAYCONCERT:Featuring rock band performs, with Problem Stick; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Sisters High Desert Chorale, Bell Choir and Children's Choir; free; 7 Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; p.m.; Sisters Community Church, www volcanictheatrepub.com or 1300 W. McKenzie Highway; www. 541-323-1881. sisterschurch.com or 541-549-1037. JOHN CRAIGIE: The folk singer FRIDAY performs, with Brad Tisdel; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 7-11 SANTALAND ATTHEOLDMILL p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or children's activities, Tree of Joy and 541-815-9122. more; free admission, additional costfor take-home photos, $5 "HUMBUG":A modern-day donation for children's activities; twist on the Christmas classic "A 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 Christmas Carol" about Wall Street SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20, 541-312-0131. $16 for seniors, $13 for students;
7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": A performance of the one-man, one-act play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $10 plus fees in advance; 7:30p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. WESTAFRICANDRUMAND DANCE:Featuring Kerfala"Fana" Bangoura, West African Master Drummer and dancer, with Bend's Fe Fanyi West African Drum andDance Troupe; free; 8:45-10 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. tinyurl.com/westafricandance or 541-760-3204.
COCC
Vice President for Administra-
mentation plan and economic
tion Matt McCoy.
model," said Gene Zinkgraf, the project's manager. "In par-
Continued from B1 In other news, the college is moving forward on plans to build a solar panel system in a to-be-announced location
McCoy noted that much of the project is being funded with grants, including $90,000 from the Energy Trust of Oregon and$320,000 from Pacific near its Redmond campus. Power. The college is also in The college is required by state the running for additional state law to invest 1.5 percent of its construction exp e n ditures
SATURDAY FATHER CHRISTMASFOR SPECIAL NEEDSKIDS: Featuring a quiet time for children with special needs to visit Father Christmas before the museum opens to the public; free; 9-10a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org,
info©highdesertmuseum.orgor
541-382-4754. HOLIDAYHOMETOUR: Featuring potholders for sale, quilts from Quilts of Valor will be on display, signings by Bob Maxwell, the nation's oldest Medal of Honor recipient, to benefit Bend Heroes Foundation's "Honor Flightof Eastern Oregon" program;
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tfeedsibendbulletir[.com
secondary production plant
ation of the facility," he wrote.
rather than a sawmill.
"After analyzing the situation
trim-molding plant, workers
The mill has a mix of old andI the available options, the wood buildings and new met- Company has decided to cease al buildings, according to the many of the operations at the OSHA report. The old buildPrineville location for the foreings were about 40 years old. seeable future." Where roofs for the old and A 2010 OSHA inspection new buildings meet there are of the mill found violations, "valleys," where rain and melt- and the agency issued $795 ing snow would run off and in citations, Melanie Mesaros, where there was a history of OSHA spokeswoman wrote leaks. in an emaiL OSHA documents
in the door-and-window plant are out of a job.
Someone saying he or she was an employee at the mill filled an anonymous complaint with OSHA at 9:24 a.m. Nov. 14, just over two hours af-
ter the 7:15 a.m. roof collapse, according to the OSHA report. The employee was concerned about the roof being unstable and water leaking into the building and falling onto an electrical panel. About 45 minutes before
Inspectors with OSHA visited the mill Nov. 17, three
show the five violations did
days afterthe roof collapse, and spent three hours there, according to OSHA records. Complete access to the mill was not available because
mill. Instead, they were for not
not pertain to buildings at the
having three fans grounded, not enclosing some belts and the roofcollapse, around 6:30 pulleys in mill machinery, not a.m., maintenance workers anchoring a drill press, not encovered the electrical panel some areas were considered closing a chain and sprocket with plastic, according to the unsafe. While there, inspec- in mill machinery and failing OSHA report. A supervisor tors interviewed people at the to report an overnight hospifor that section of the mill also mill. talization following a worker moved employees from the Benjamin Barron, opera- breaking a leg at the plant in area because of water leaks tions manager at the mill, and January 2010. and cold hydraulics in one of Greg Easton, vice president — Reporter: 541-617-7812, the mill machines. for Woodgrain, were on hand ddarifng@bendbulletir[.com
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at10:51 a.m. Dec. 9, in the area of NWThird Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:33 p.m. Dec. 9, in thearea of NE Eighth Street.
AT THE FORUM CENTER • BEND SPECIAL EVENT SHOPPING HOURS!
systemsprogram tobelocated in one building.
in a pellet mill and an interior
Theft —A theft was reported at 1:46 p.m. Dec. 6, in the700 block of NW Columbia Street. Unauthorizeduse —A vehicle was reported stolen at12:36 p.m. Dec. 7, in the700 block of NW Riverside Boulevard. DUII —Derek JaySalazar, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:14 p.m. Dec. 7, inthe 600 block of SEThird Street. DUII —Holly Elizabeth Norcom, 18, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:57 p.m. Dec. 7,in the area of NEFifth Street and NE GreenwoodAvenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12:46 p.m. Dec. 8, in the19900 block of Brass Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12:53 p.m. Dec. 8, in the600 block of NE Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 1:16 p.m. Dec. 8, in the2500 block of NE Neff Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:07a.m. Dec. 9, inthe 63000 block of O.B. Riley Road. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:19a.m. Dec. 9, in the 63000 block of 0.8. Riley Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:01 p.m. Dec. 9, in the61000 block of FergusonCourt. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:24p.m.Dec.9,inthe2500 block of NE Neff Road.
THURSDAY • DECEMBER 11™ 6:00 - 8:OOPM
lege's computer information
t he corner o f N o rt h M a i n that the roof collapsed due to Street and NE Peters Road heavy snow and rain. "Unfortunately, the part of in Prineville has been a mill of some sort since the 1930s. the facility where the roof colSince the 1960s it has been a lapsed is integral to the oper-
BEMD POLICE DEPARTMEMT
SMALL SHOP HOUOAy HOP
own the panels but will have
Company policy k eeps for the inspection, accordworkers from going onto the ing to OSHA records. A pair Continued from B1 roof when there is snow on of employees — Ron Booth, A m i d -November s t orm it, due to safety concerns, but production manager, and buried much of Central Or- maintenance workers that Steve Shelfer, maintenance egon in s n ow, i n cluding morning did look up at the lead — also were there for the Prineville, leading up to the ceiling in an effort to deter- inspection. roof collapse at Woodgrain. mine where the water was Barron and Easton did not After the Nov. 14 roof col- coming into the building, ac- return calls from The Bulletin. lapse, Fruitland, Idaho-based cording to the OSHA report. On Nov. 25, Easton put out a Woodgrain Millwork laid off They did not see indications of press release announcing emmore than 130 workers andI an impending collapse. ployment changes at the plant. plans to lay off 85 more at the W oodgrain's l o cation a t In the release, Easton wrote ly changing the complexion of what had been the third largest employer in Crook County. While Woodgrain plans to keep 36 full-time jobs
THE CLARIONCALL:Openm icfor all Central Oregon youth through high school students; free; 12-3 p.m., sign-up at noon; Kelly D's, 1012 SECleveland Ave., Bend; thudson©bendbroadband.com or 541-390-0921. "ALMOST, MAINE":Play about a small town and the citizens' tales of love, presented by the Redmond Proficiency Academy; $8, $5 for students with ID; 2 and 7p.m.; The Printing Post, 639 SWForest Avenue, Redmond; www.rpacademy.
folks we feel comfortable with." COCC will not ultimately
Woodgrain
end of the month — drastical-
THE BELLS:A holiday performance by the hand-bells group from Sunriver;11 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sunriver/, tinad©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034.
ticular, we will get to work with
a long-term agreement with the company that takes on and federal grants that come ownership. dose to covering the project's The college also awarded a entire cost. $155,522 remodel contract to On Wednesday, the board Griffin Construction to comapproved a bid structure for plete work on Pioneer HalL the solar project that will allow The work will allow the col-
in renewable energy. In this case, COCC must spend about $800,000, though the project is estimated to cost $1.2 to $2.2 million. the college to evaluate conThe solar panels will gener- structionproposals on more ate 500 kilowatts, more than points than just cost. "We will be able to evaluate enough to power the Redmond campus, according to COCC the system designs, imple-
$5,donationsaccepted;10a.m .-4 p.m.; private residence, 21131 Clairaway Ave., Bend; 541-480-5560. CHRISTMASTREELANE: Visit Santaand shop for a Christmas tree, with complimentary face painting, hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net, info©ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131.
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynew information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
541-526-0882. "THE HOBBIT":A production of the classic J.R.R. Tolkienbook by Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students 18 andyounger; 2 and 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www. tickettails.com or 541-419-5558. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CENTRALOREGON MASTERSINGERS: The46-voice choir performs "A Family Christmas," featuring holiday carols, with the Premiere Choir of the Youth Choir of Central Oregon; $18 plus fees; 2 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. CENTRAL OREGONSHOWCASE CHORUS:A holiday performance; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond, lizg@deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. SILVERADO: A holiday performance by the all-female barbershop quartet; 2 p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ lapine, tinad©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034. OLD FASHIONEDCHRISTMAS: Featuring hayrides, caroling, desserts, a tree lighting ceremony, cookie decorating and more; free; 3-6 p.m.; Crescent CreekChurch, 52340 Huntington Road, La Pine; robin@ crescentcreek.org or 541-536-2183. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Phillip Margolin will speak on his book"Woman With A Gun"; free, registration requested; 5:30-7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-593-2525. CHRISTMAS LIGHT8[HOTTODDY RIDE:Decorate your bike, enjoy some hol idaycheerand takea tour of Larkspur Trail, the event is timed to coincide with the Larkspur Neighborhood AssociationaE™s "Light Up the Larkspur Trail"; free; 6 p.m.; Bend Electric Bikes, 223 NW Hill Street, Bend.
Shoe lnn FREE Vera Bradley Holiday Tote with any $50 in-store purchase. The Shoe Inn offers are valid on December 11", 2014 from 6-Bpm only.
&tPdQedg 4PAWted' Nature shop
FREE Pin Feeder with purchase of a seed character. Wild Birds offers are valid through December 11", 2014 from 6-Bpm only.
CINDY 'S
G OL D C R O W N
FREE Pinecone Candleholder and Tea Light with a $15 purchase. Cindy's Hallmark offers are good through December 24'", 2014.
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THURsDAY, DEGEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Insurersur e uic actionon o ver re on rom a a e r s By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
SALEM — Oregon health
insurers Wednesday urged state lawmakers to act quickly in dissolving Cover Oregon and transferring its authority to other state agencies. Insurance companies need
certainty as they plan their 2016 insurance rates, which
amson, a lobbyist for Providence Health & Services. Gov. John Kitzhaber and
l egislative l e aders
h ave
backed a p l a n t o t r a n sfer Cover Oregon's powers to the
state Department of Consumer and Business Services. The
move follows Cover Oregon's failure to launch a working
director Patrick A l len t o ld lawmakers.
The insurance company officials told lawmakers they should require separation between Cover Oregon and the agency's Insurance Division, which regulates insurance companies and must approve their premiums.
AROUND THE STATE PO'tfuleS — Oregonlawmakershaveapprovednearly$600,000 so the Liquor Control Commission can begin making rules for legal marijuana. The Legislature's Emergency Board approved the funding Wednesday. The movewill allow the commission to hire four workers: a program manager, two policy analysts and a public affairs staffer. One state estimate said regulating recreational marijuana would eventually require up to 30 workers. Taxes collected on marijuana sales are expected eventually to cover the regulatory costs. The money approved Wednesday will come from liquor sales and must eventually be paid back with interest once marijuana sales start generating taxes. The measure voters approved last month makes personal possession and home grown pot legal as of July1. But the commercial sales the rules will govern aren't expected to begin until 2016.
ers to be careful not to jeop-
ardize Oregon's arrangement with the federal government, which allows the state to retain control over insurance
regulation but use federal technology. If Oregon cedes all control to Washington — losing its status as a
NOXiOuSWeedS — A new study shows two dozen of Oregon's most significant invasive noxious weeds cause anestimated annual loss of about $83.5 million to the state's economy. Losses include livestock deaths, reduced cattle foraging and wildlife grazing, smaller crop yields, decreased quality of seed and crop, and even the loss of available fishing and hunting opportunities. Two weeds — Scotch broom and Armenian blackberry — contribute nearly $80 million of the losses. Twenty-three other species are under intense management to stop their spread. The study shows if the state did nothing to control them, it could lead to potential losses of about $1.8 billion. The study was prepared by TheResearch Group, LLC of Corvallis for the Oregon Department of Agriculture.
s t ate-based
"We think it's very important to do that in the bill so we
exchange — insurers worry that consumers might lose in the spring, lobbyists for ance under the new federal don't have the appearance of subsidies due to a pending several companies told a leg- health care law. the regulator in business with U.S. Supreme Court case. islative committee formed to The Consumer and Busi- the regulated," said Tom Holt, A legislative lawyer said oversee the potential unwind- ness Services Department a lobbyist for Cambia Health dissolving Cover O r egon ing of the health insurance i s well-positioned t o t a k e Solutions, the parent com- would not affect the ongoing exchange. on the task and could save pany for insurers Regence litigation between the state "The t imeliness a n d money by combining tech- Blue Cross Blue Shield and and Oracle Inc., which have smoothness of this transition nology, human resources and Bridgespan. sued each other over Cover is critical," said Jessica Ad- accounting services, agency They also urged lawmak- Oregon's failure. must be filed with the state
website that would allow people to enroll in health insur-
ACCidental ShOOting —Clackamas County deputies a 22-year-old man trying to fix a firearm has beenshot to death, and the evidence suggests it happened when hewas trying to remove a stuck cartridge. The sheriff's department said the death is believed to have been anaccident. The man is identified as Alexander Keith Olenslager of Eagle Creek, an unincorporated community. Family members told deputies that he had told them earlier he was having trouble with one of his weapons and wasworking in an outbuilding.
U of 0, grad assistants reacb deal; strike ends The Associated Press
in the 38-year history of the wanted it. The school coun- Graduate Teaching Fellows of exam week, graduate teach- tered with a hardship fund the Federation. ing assistants at the Universi- teachers could tap. It began Dec. 1, just as stuty of Oregon have reached a Joe Henry, president of the dents were beginning the contract agreement with the graduate teachers union, said "dead week" in advance of leave. The teaching assistants
EUGENE — In the middle
"Effectively, grads who experience family or medical
— From wire reports
issues will be able to receive
the funds they need for missed work," he said in a statement. It provides for grants of school's administration and the deal includes 5 percent exams. As i t s t retched on, $1,000 for medical and $1,500 ended their strike. annual pay raises over two tensions arose between facul- for maternity purposes, and The compromise reached years. ty members and the adminit would apply to all graduate Wednesday gives the graduThe union plans a ratifica- istration over how to handle students, not just those covateteachers some controlover tion vote, but graduates said tests and grading, something ered by the contract, Henry what's described as a souped- they would be back at work the teaching assistants often sard. up hardship fund for medical Wednesday. The university handle. He said graduate students and maternity purposes. said in a statement that interHenry said the hardship would be on a b o ard conThe sticking point in the im President Scott Coltrane fund isn't paid leave but would trolling the fund, and denial bargaining was the question would sign the agreement. help teachers who get serious- of benefits would be subject to of paid medical and maternity The strike was th e f i r st ly ill or have new children. grievances.
Find It All
Online
TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO
bendbulletin.com •J
Coast Guard Officer laid off for fabricating evidence copter base Garrett said that laying off Miguel Monico was not a disciplinary action, and he remainsopen complimented Monico on his service. The Associated Press
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HILLSBORO — Washington County Sheriff Pat Garrett has laid off an officer
who was no longer accept-
By Jeff Barnard
able to the district attorney's
The Associated Press
office as a witness because a jury found he had fabricated dict based on questions they you success in your future evidence. asked and the low dollar endeavors." But Garrett said that layamount they awarded. Monico was formerly an ing off Miguel Monico was G arrett sa i d Moni c o officer in Cornelius, a Washnot a disciplinary action, and couldn't continue to work if ington County city where the he complimented Monico on he couldn't testify in courtdepartment was in turmoil his service. In September, a but that he would be eligible for years over corruption and federal jury awarded a man for reinstatement if his status mismanagement allegations. $30,000 after determining with prosecutors changes in He was one of four officers
GRANTS PASS.— The U.S. Coast Guard helicopter base in
Newport will remain open for the nextyear. Democratic members of the
Oregon delegat ion announced Wednesday that they were able to attach a provision to the Coast Guard authorization
bill that passed the House and Senate.
It prohibits the Coast Guard from closing any air base that was operating Nov. 30. The prohibition is good through Jan. 1, 2016. It also applies to
that Monico had fabricated evidence in a 2010 case that
the next 18 months.
"This action in no way involved white powder that reflects discredit on you or tested negative for cocaine. your job performance, as After that, District Attorney you are a valued employee Bob Hermann said his of- and have exhibited a dedi-
officer, he filed a $1.5 million suit last year alleging offiThe department was dis-
M onico's lawyer, D a n Garrett wrote Monico in a Thenell, said he plans to chal- N ovember letter that w a s lenge the sheriff's decision. released Tuesday. "Your serThenell said the jurors vice to the department and
ed to close on Monday to save
in the 2010 case may have
$6 million a year each. The Coast Guard had said it would
had trouble reaching a ver-
•
ruption. Along with another
of Washington County,"
ton, South Carolina. The Coast Guard will have to find the money in its existingbudget. The two bases had been slat-
•
I
officials in 2012 alleging cor-
cated service to the citizens
fice had lost confidence in Monico.
t ••
I'
who submitted a letter to city
cials retaliated for reporting corruption.
the helicopter base in Charles-
I I'
solved last s ummer a f ter
officials deemed its internal problems unfixable. Corn elius contracted with t h e
sheriff's department for law County is appreciated. I wish enforcementservices.
to the citizens of Washington
Make an unforgettable Holiday Memory! Take advantage of special tour and
Lfl jI-j
KDGE
4 v I jj t I jj jj I jl c .
..overnight packages with the Hilton Garden Inni
be able to meet its rescue obli-
gations with helicopters from neighboring bases, but response times would be longer. "That helicopter is such a necessity out there and I am very happy they were able to save it foratleastanotheryearorso," said Kelly Madden, who was skipper of the fishingboat Blazer when it sank last month off
5 •
Newport. Some ofhis crewwas rescued by the Newport-based
helicopter."I can'tbelieve this is a topic we are discussing - taking a piece of safety equipment away." Meanwhile, a group of wives
I
I
of Newport f ishermen was
in federalcourt for a hearing on their lawsuit. The lawsuit
argues that dosing the New-
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port Air Station violates the
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Homeland Security Act of 2002, which prohibits the Coast
Guard from cutting back its mission. It also contends the National Environmental Policy
Actrequires the Coast Guard to do aformal assessment ofa clo-
sure's impacts on public safety and potential oil spills.
Get a tasl9 of
Food. Home 8 Garden In
AT HOME • • TheBulletin
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
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ANYTH1H6 YETP
.S. District Judge Ann Aiken was unambiguous when she ruled last week that Bend's Bridge Creek Surface Water Improvement Project should be allowed to go forward. The U.S. Forest Service, along with the city a defendant in the lawsuit brought by Central Oregon LandWatch, had met every legal requirement, she said, dismissing the suit and any remaining motions related to it. Paul Dewey, Central Oregon e r its customers the water they were LandWatch director, emailed The e ntitledto. Bulletin over the weekend, saying T hat s a g~ th;~ H i p o ~ ~ y that 1 o m~ a t on stul ham't de- the d ~d has lo~ a huge percentcided if it will aPPeal Aiken's deci- a e of the water it takes from the tend a costly and t e -consu~ g bes t solut;ontotheproblem — isexlawsuit that began over a year ago. p e nsive and money for it is hard to We'd like to suggest thatif the or- find. Meanwhile, anearlypart of the ganization really is interested in the project saw the district borrow $3.5 health of Tumalo Creek, there's a million, interest free, to plan and bebetter wayto go aboutimprovingit gi n w ork to repair and replace two As Aiken noted Tumalo Irtiga leaky flumes in the system. tion District's impact on the stream If Dewey and Central Oregon far outstrips that of the city. The LandWatch really do want to imdistrict controls the flow and tem- p rove Tumalo Creek,wehaveasugperature of water in the creek, and gestion. Rather than spending more that would not change regardless of moneyon alawsuit that has cost the whatthecitydoes. city alone upward of $500,000 in Meanwhile,theirrigationdistrict o utside legal fees, Central Oregon continues to work to replace an ag- LandWatch should calculate what it ing and leaky water delivery sys- w ouldspendtoappealAiken'sdecitem. It's a program that goes back sion to the 9th Circuit Court. Then it at least to the mid-l970s, when the should donate that amount to TID's district was not always able to deliv- canal improvement efforts.
Sick leave proposal needs some healing ick leave should be a benefit for employees who are sick. Some Oregon legislators are hard at work to shatter that logic. There's a bill set to go in the next legislative session to turn sick leave into a benefit that people get even if they are never sick. It's sick time for healthy people. How does that logic work? You should know first that we hope employers can afford to offer sick leave. Western Communications, the parent company of The Bulletin, does. The bill bristles with that good intent. Our quarrel is with how it would do it. Here are thebasics of the proposal: All employers shall have a sick leavepolicythat allows an employee to earnand accrue atleast56 hours of paid sick time per year. It would accrue at the rate of one hour of paid sicktime for every 30 hours worked. Employers would be able to limit paid sick time to no more than
S
56 hours per year. And employers would not be required to compensate employees for unused sick time if they quit, get fired or retire. The proposalgoes far too far, though, when it requires employers to pay employees for being healthy. It says that an employer would be required to pay an employee for unused sickleave at the end of the year if employees were not able to carry unused time over. Sickleave is abenefit to help people when they are sick. This plan creates anewbenefit for people who stayhealthy or come to work anyway when they are sick. This legislation has another issue. It applies to all employers, no matter what the size. That could be onerous to small businesses. It's likely that with a Democratic governor and Democraticmajorities in the Legislature that some version of paid sick leave will pass this session.They should not pass something so flawed.
Legislator's red-tape complaints over U.S. Arctic oil don't hold Up IN MY VIEW
By KIm Elton
t
its secondary drill rig towed south through the winter storm-lashed Gulf of Alaska despite the tug
n a guest column on this page Nov. 26, Oregon state Rep. Tim
beacheddragging anchor in a calm Aleutian port en route to the Arc- master's prescient warning that: tic; Shell's required spill response "the length of tow, at this time of barge initially flunked minimum the year, in this location, with our
Freeman, R-Roseburg, opined that energy development in the U.S. Arctic is "hamstrung by federal red tape and delays." Freeman then suggests the oil pipeline from the North
s eaworthiness tests after it
was
current r outing, g uarantees an
rescued from a barge boneyard in ass-kicking." The tug master was Southern California; Shell's spill right. His tow broke in a fierce containment dome was "crushed storm. Eighteen crew m embers like a beer can" in placid Puget were helicoptered to safety and Sound sea trials, never making it more than 600 emergency respondto the Arctic; the lead drilling rig ers tried to save the rig before it finally punched its first drill bit into was fatally maimed on a desolate the Arctic Ocean floor in mid-Sep- Alaska beach. Shell bean counters tember and, the next day, an ice floe lost a $300 million rig and jeoparthe size of Manhattan forced it off; dized lives just to save a few million that same rig then suffered an ex- in taxes. plosion and fire leaving the Arctic; So, it is Shell's spectacular belit later was detained by the Coast ly flop into the Arctic Ocean that Guard in Alaska for major safety, stalls development. Perhaps Freepropulsion and pollution "discrep- man, owner/operator of a Shell ancies" (CBS reported when Coast gas station, finds it more palatable Guard criminal investigators ar- to blame the government that acrived, the crew had been provided tually: 1) awarded Shell the Arctic with lawyers and declined to be in- leases; and then 2) approved Shell's terviewed); Shell's secondary drill- exploration drilling plan. But I'm ing rig had 19 deficiencies in elec- not swallowing it — the facts are trical and maintenance systems the facts. discovered when it arrived back in — Kim Elton lives in Bend. Elton served
Slope of Alaska to tidewater may
shut down without production from offshore Arctic Ocean production. I strongly disagree. Let's deal quickly with Freeman's last point f irst. There's enough North Slope proven reserves to keep the pipeline running until 2068. An Alaska judge affirmed that pipeline longevity date based upon a confidential study by BP, a North Slope producer and an
owner of the pipeline. Suggesting Arctic Ocean oil is needed to save the pipeline is disingenuous. More surprising is the legislator's assertion that government has hamstrung oil extraction in the U.S. Arctic. He's wrong. The bu-
reaucracy he blames gave industry the opportunity to explore for and produce oil. Royal Dutch Shell blew that opportunity. Dutch Harbor from the Arctic; and Here are some lowlights from Shell incurred more than $1 million Shell's pratfall-ridden 2012 effort in fines for air-quality violations in to drill exploration wells: A Coast the Arctic. Guard inspection of Shell's 47-yearEven more troubling than Shell's old primary drilling ship found 23 "Arctic-ready" armada problems is "deficiencies" (including engine Shell's spectacular failure of good problems) days before it was set to judgment. To avoid an Alaska tax sail for the Arctic; that rig nearly bill, company managers ordered
fouryears as senioradviserto former Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.He was involved in the secretary's decision to approve Shell's 2012excursion into the Arctic. He also represented the secretary in the Gulf of Mexico during the BP spill and was a federal trustee on the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council.
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 slgnature, 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 veriflcatlon. Weedlt 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 submlsslons are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Being a cop poses emotional and psychological challenges ike a lot of people in journalism, Ibegan my career,briefl y,as a police reporter. As the Michael
L
Brown and Eric Garner cases have
unfolded, I've found myself thinking back to those days. Nothing excuses
DAVID BROOKS
specific acts of police brutality, es-
pecially in the Garner case, but not enough attention is being paid to the emotional and psychological challenges of being a cop. Early on, I learned that there is an amazing variety of police officers, even comparedto other professions. Most cops are conscientious, and some, especially among detectives, are brilliant. They spend much of their time in the chaotic and depressing neth-
er-reaches of society: busting up domestic violence disputes, dealing with drunks and drug addicts, coming upon fatal car crashes, managing conflicts large and small. They ride an emotional and biochemical roller coaster. They experience moments of i ntense action
lant. Surrounded by crime all day, some come to perceive that society is more threatening than it really is.
To cope, they emotionally armor up. Many of the cops I was around developed a cynical, dehumanizing and hard-edge sense of humor that was an attempt to insulate themselves
from the pain of seeing a dead child or the extinguished life of a young girl they arrived too late to save.
Many of us see cops as relativelyinvulnerable as they patrol the streets. The copsthemselves do not perceive their situation that way. As criminol-
ogist George Kelling wrote in City Journal in 1993, "It is a common myth
that police officers approach conflicts with a feeling of power — after all, they are armed, they represent the
and alertness, followed by emotional state, they are specially trained and crashes marked by exhaustion, and backed by an 'army.' In reality, an isolation. They become hypervigi- officer's gun is almost always a lia-
bility ... because a suspect may grab
cops than among other municipal
it in a scuffle. Officers are usually at
workers. Other studies have found
threatened declined from 664,000 in 2002 to574,000 in 2008. Community
a disadvantage because they have to that somewhere between 7 percent
policing has helped bind police forces
intervene in unfamiliar terrain, on someone else'sterritory.They worry
closer to the citizenry.
and 19 percent of cops suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. The ef-
that bystanders might become in- fect is especially harsh on those who volved, either by helping somebody have been involved in shootings. Twothe officer has to confront or, after the thirds of the officers who have been fact, by second-guessing an officer's involved in shootings suffer moderate conduct." or severe emotional problems. SevenEven though most situations are ty percent leave the police force withnot dangerous, danger is always an in seven years of the incident. out-of-the-blue possibility, often in the Most cops know they walk a danback of the mind. gerous line, between necessary and In many places, a self-supporting excessiveforce.According to a 2000 and insular police culture develops: National Institute of Justice study, In this culture no one understands more than 90 percent of the police ofpolice work except fellow officers; the ficers surveyed said that it is wrong training in the academy is useless; to to respond to verbal abuse with force. do the job you've got to bend the rules Nonetheless, 15 percent of the cops and understand the law of the jungle; surveyed were aware that officers in the world is divided into two sorts of their own department sometimes or people — cops and a-holes. often did so. This is a life of both boredom and And through the years, departstress. Life expectancy for cops is ments have worked to humanize the lower than for the general population. professi on.Overall,policeuseofforce Cops suffer disproportionately from is on the decline, along with the crime pepticulcers, back disorders and rate generally. According to the Deheart disease. In one study, suicide partment of Justice, the number of rates were three times higher among incidents in which force was used or
A blind spot is race. Only 1 in 20 white officers believe that blacks and other minorities receive unequal
treatment from the police. But 57 percent of black officers are convinced the treatment of minorities is unfair.
But at the core of profession lies the central problem of political philosophy. How does the state preserve order through coercion'? When should you use overwhelming force to master lawbreaking? When is it
wiser to step back and use patience and understanding to defuse a situa-
tion? How do you make this decision instantaneously, when testosterone is flowing, when fear is in the air, when someone is disrespecting you and you feel indignation rising in the gut? Racist police brutality has to be
punished. But respect has to be paid. Police serve by walking that hazardous line where civilization meets
disorder. — David Brooksis a columnist for The New York Times.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES John Edward Lawrence Jr.
FEATURED OBITUARY
Redmond Nov. 12, 1926 - Dec. 7, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of a Life lived will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Deschutes Historical Museum and Society 129 Idaho Street Bend, OR 97701 www.deschuteshistory.org
Harold "Jim" St. Clair Funk, of Bend Dec. 10, 1927 - Dec. 7, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Contributionsmay be made to:
St. Charles Home Health Services, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend, Oregon 97701, 541-706-7796
foundation.stcharleshealthcare.org
Thomas A. Day, of La Pine Feb. 15, 1952 - Dec. 7, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at wwtN.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: Private services will be held at a later date.
Barbara Jean Collins, of Redmond
July 6, 1931 - Dec. 7, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will be announced at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Deschutes County Library Friends of the Redmond Library, 827 SW Deschutes Avenue, Redmond, OR 97756 www.redmondfol.org
gradu-
ated from Quartz H ill H i g h J ohn Lawrence School i n 1989, and later earned an associate's degree in c r i m i nal j u stice f rom Cen t r a l Or eg o n Community College. I n 1999, he m a r r ied h i s wife of 15 y ears, Jennifer
Obituary policy
ELSEWHERE
Niswonger-Reynolds
Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: Private inurnment will take place at Deschutes Memorial Gardens.
Gloria J. Jones, of Redmond Jan. 30, 1955 - Nov. 29, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services:
Services are pending.
Contributionsmay be made to: https:I/suejonesmemorial. shutterfly.com
Marty LederhandlerI rhe Associated Press file photo
FormerMissAmerica acted alongsideElvis
DEATHS
Deaths of note from around theworld:
Ralph Giordano,91: German writer and Holocaust survi-
vor who spoke out against anti-Semitism and the far right, and later became a prominent
critic of Germany's failure to integrate Muslim immigrants. Died Wednesday in Cologne, Germany. Jane Freilicher, 90: Stubbornly independent painter whose brushy, light-saturated still lifes and luminous land-
Death Notices are freeand willbe runfor one day,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services orabout the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
Kemple
® IENORIAl
Children's
— From wire reports
en a inic
osplcE of Redmond 5 4 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3 You Have A Choice. Ask For Us BIJ Name. I I I I
t~ o
IBIEH IHIB
Your Local Nonprofit Hospice Committed to QuaUtil of Life For Over 33 Years
®
Honoring your wishes for your care
® P e rsonalized care in your own home
® ® ®
Working closely with your personal doctor Access to our nurses 24/7 Bereavement support for your loved ones
Serving Bend I Redmond I Sisters I Powell Butte I Crooked River Ranch I Terrebonne I Madras
vast amounts of students' per-
sonal data. Google's privacy policies don't go into detail about what
information the company collects on students and what it
co-based digital rights group nology providers, the providthat focuses on updating priva- ers that we depend on for our cy lawsforthe modern era. modern, everyday lives, know Cardozo pointed out that about us." as schools are moving to put — Reporter: 406-589-4347, electronic devices in students'
Drill
tanderson@bendbutletin.com
be available for emergency services on Wednesday.
Continued from B1
In the event that such a ca-
Reporters weren't exempt
from role-play, either: Garibay acted as public information
officer for the incident after the ski area's communications and marketing manager, Drew Jackson, gave an initial briefing. John Beery, who has been a volunteer on the ski patrol for 43 years, played apatientexpe-
tastrophe actually occurred, emergency services from Bend, Sunriver, La Pine and Redmond, as well as several air ambulances, would be able to
respond, Mjelde said. It was the first time the ski area'spatrolteam has done an
active emergency drill since 2004,Mjeldesaid.They'vedone two tabletop drills since then.
"We're hoping to check theincidentduringthe drill. Re- our plan make sure everysponders acted out delivering body's aware of how it works his medication, and Beery was and work out the bugs," said able to get up and walk away Mjelde. from the parking lot, he said. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, He was writing up a review cwithycombe@bendbul/etin.com of the scenario on a legal pad riencing chest pain unrelated to
as he warmed up in the locker room.
"She was triaging right off
the bat," Beery said of Norsen.
Mjelde said he wanted Pro Patrol to understand how to respond toa me dicalemergency that could require a criminal
WIHDOW TREATS 711 SW10th• Redmond• (5S1) 5S8-8616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com
investigation. In planning for the drill, Deschutes County
sheriffs deputies taught the team about crime scene preservation, according to Mjelde. "That's part of our learning," he said.
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-utinning neighborhood on Bend's
Pickups stood in for ambu-
lances and simulated realistic arrival times for the resort, which lies 20 miles west of
teestside.
Bend. Mjelde asked Deschutes County 911 to prepare a sched-
www.notthwestcrossing.com
ule of when ambulances would
- Craig tVargienh'oven ~ 1965 - 2014 Craig:Stephen Warmenhoven of.;Send, „ passedaw'ayW adttesday,December),2014 at Iha age of %.;-,Ctaig Iotight a'15-year courageous battle witH5rainVattcer.
.+
After yatious treatttt'etlts.tand extenslvti
surgeries, -it finally ttacame appamttt . thee were-nofurther-'meijpa1-.opttons. He remained at home until his final two weeks,mhen-he~as movett.to a nursingfacility.
II .
Phone: 541-617-7825
scapes set in the marshes of
eastern Long Island, New York, made heroneofthem ore anomalous figures to emerge from the second generation of abstract expressionists. Died TuesdayinNewYork.
Continued from B1 Rosenblum said she'll push for a requirement that companies and agencies have to notify consumers about any hack affecting 100people or more. "If you have a breach of at
zo from the Electronic Frontier ers," Cardozo said. "We deFoundation, a Sa n F r ancis- serve to know what our tech-
TV star Steve Allen, left, and Miss America, Mary Ann Mobley, go through a duet number in New York in1958. Mobley, who (Stone), and th e c o uple went on to appear in movies with Elvis Presley and make docuhad tw o c h i l d r en, A l y ssa mentary films around the world, has died. a nd Ryker, wh o w er e t h e light of his life. His love for hts children wa s u n parall eled, a n d he w i l l b e remembered as a d evoted father. John began his career in l aw enforcement w it h t h e Deschutes County Sheriff's O ffice i n 1 9 95, an d t h e n w orked f o r t h e Ci t y of Bend P o l ic e D e p a r tment for a d e cade. I n J a n uary The Associated Press Jerry Lewis. It was on that 2014, he was promoted to LOS ANGELES — A for- film she met her husband, acsergeant, o v e r s eeing a mer Miss America who went tor Gary Collins, who died in team of officers who loved on to appear in movies with 2012. working for him. Elvis Presley and make docMobley Collins was also Although his job was imumentary films around the a documentarian, traveling portant to him, John's life to Cambodia, Ethiopia, Mowas about much more than world has died. A spokesman for the Uni- zambique,Somalia, Kenya, being a p o l ice o f f icer: he enjoyed golfing, boating, versity of Mississippi con- Z imbabwe and S udan t o and most of a ll , spending firmed Mary Ann Mobley make movies about the strugt ime wit h h i s f a m il y a n d Collins died Tuesday in Bev- gles of homeless and starving c ountless friends. Hi s i n - erly Hills, California, after a children. fectious laugh and sense of battle with breast cancer. She She and her husband were h umor w i l l be gr ea t l y was 77. also active humanitarians, missed by all. Danny Blanton of Ole Miss raising money and awareHe was preceded in death by his father. John leaves said Mobley Collins was close ness for organizations such b ehind his w i f e an d c h i l - friends with a former chan- as the March of Dimes and d ren, a s w ell as hi s cellor of the university. She the United Cerebral Palsy m other, sister a n d m a n y graduated from Ole Miss in Association. other family members. 1958, the same year she won Mobley Collins is survived A Celebration of Life will the Miss America crown. by daughters Clancy Collins t ake p l ace a t 1 : 0 0 p . m . , She became an actress a White and Melissa Collins, F riday, at W estsi d e few years later, with credits son Guy William Collins, sisChurch, 2051 NW Shevlin including such TV shows as ter Sandra Young, and two Park Rd, Bend, Oregon. "General Hospital" and "Per- grandsons. In lieu of fl o w e rs, donary Mason," and films such Services were p l a nned tions are being accepted to t he "John L a w r ence M e - as "Girl Happy" with Presley for Monday i n J ackson, m orial Fund" a t a n y M i d and "Three on a Couch" with Mississippi. O regon F e d e ra l Cr e d i t Union. P l e as e r e f e r ence account number 78088.
Feb. 5, 1925 - Dec. 9, 2014 Arrangements:
hands, the companies behind those products have access to
is and isn't doing, Cardozo said. Google provides some this new law that we're pro- schools with its laptops, called posing, you would have to" let Chromebooks, along with free consumers know, Rosenblum online services such as email said after the hearing. "If you that work with the computers. don't do that then we can bring Cardozo said California an action under the Unlawful passed a law that will restrict Trade ~ctices Act." companies that offer online Rosenblum said she would apps and sites for students like the state to create laws that from using info to create tarwould simplify and shorten geted advertising. Companies privacy policies so they're easy would also be banned fr om for consumers to understand. selling student data that's colShe was flanked at an inter- lected through the devices. "Oregon can use its existing im Judiciary Committee hearing Wednesday by Nate Cardo- powers to protect its consum-
J ohn L a w r ence, 4 3 , o f Bend, d ie d u n e x pectedly on December 4. H e was born in L o s A n geles t o J o h n L a w r e n ce a nd R u t h Mack, and r aised i n Quartz H ill, C a lifornia. John
Odie A. Pool, of Bend
Privacy laws
least 100 people's data under
Jane17, 1971- December 4, 2014
Donna Mae Clark, of
B5
In our effort to provide dental care to children in Deschutes County who can't afford it, the Kemple Memorial Children's Dental Clinic wishes to thank the following dentists for their volunteered services in November, 2014. VOLUNTEER DENTISTS TREATING KEMPLE KIDS IN THEIR OWN OFFICES. NOVEMBER, 2014 Dr. Carolyn Ash Dr. Elise Burrus Dr. David Burrus Dr. David Cauble Dr. Karen Coe Dr. David Dunscombe Dr. Matt Falkenstein Dr. Jay Gronemyer Dr. Benjamin Grieb Dr. Mark Jensen Dr. Tony Parsley Dr. Maureen Porter Dr. Catherine Quas Dr. Tom Rheuben Dr. Brian Rosenzweig
Dr. Todd Schock Dr. Anne Scott Dr. Andrew Timm Dr. Jefrey Timm Dr. Ryan Timm Dr. Steve Timm Dr. Peter Yonan Dental Professionals Cindy Baumgardner RDH Stephanie Lamp EFDA Hailey Rambo EPDH Karen Siewert RDH Desiree Strawn EPDH Darla 'Ihompson RDH Cathy Taylor EFDA
At the KemplMem e orial Children's DentalClinic, ourmission is toimprovethe health and well-beingofchildren in Deschutes Countybyfacilitating critical preventative, educationalanddental treatment servicesfor childrenwhosefamilies cannot access basic dentalcare.Weadvocate for all childrenneedingtimely, highquality dental care.
f
Craig was bo'rn May 15, 1965 in Aubttrtt, Wasititt'gton, the third of four sonsbornto Paul and Jane Warttterttoovan. Craig grew up playing with hisbrothersand neighborhtttod ttoys and boating on weekends with his family. From sixth grade into 'high school he. delivered the morning Seattle PI and worked for J,C. Penney dUring the summer. He and hispastor bicycled arouhd Mt. Rainer-ttNice. He attended.all grades in the Kenf Schttel.9jstrict. H6 was very ta/ented athletically playing ballsportsandbecamekick@ forthe Kent Meridian High School football team,-yadtta5ng.itt t983.: Ctaig chose to attend Central Washington University where he tittas the. kickeronthe Wildcat football team for four years. In recertt'years he was-inducted into the University'sSports Haltof Fame,
After college Craig worked for Horizon Air at the Seattie/Tapoma Terminal. While worklng there he met.and began datlng barby Nelson, an Alaska Airlines amployee: They were married June 19,' 1993 in Bigfork, Montana, Darby's hometowg. Shortly after.that, Craig attended fligltt school and earned his pHot'srtcense and also trained,'to become a flight controller, however the Fith 'was not hiring at the time.,' Graig also studied and worked in the computei C programming field. Togttther they enjoyed-,traveling to many destinatiohs around thy world., Many fimes a stop at an amusement park to, rideori roller ' coaSteIs lhis true pam'ion) was part of Craig's,trip itirtf,'rqry.
6
He and Darby moved lo Bend, Oregooin 1999 to raise their family. Craig was employed as a prograttjmer:at Fwrst Choice Computer Services. Even though Craig tNassick for 15 of the 16 years they have lived in Hend, he continued to do as many things outdoors a's he' could.' Crai~vecLskiing, ttlountain biking, hiking, golfing, coaching Eli's Little League teams, tNatchitIg Sierra's dance recitals as well as attending Eli and Sierra's manysoccer games. The family attended the Westside Church. ,ee
Survivors include Darby, his wife of.21 years, two children, Eli and Sierra; mother, Jane Warmenhoven;brothers, Paul, David (Karen), DanaiLesa);nieces;Amy,Hanna,Grace,Chloe;nephews,PJ.,and Slake. Craig waspreceded in death by his father, Paul. Craig's Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, December13, 2014 at 10am at Westside Church (2051 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend, OR 97702). In lieu of flowers,contributions may be made to The Warmenhoven Memorial Fund at Mid Oregon CreditUnion. Autumn Funerals Bend was honored to serve the family. 541-318-0842wtNtN.autumnfunerals.net
B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014
I
s
i
I
'
TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
HIGH
i
48'
t, t ,
A touch of morning rain; becoming windier
I f' I
ALMANAC
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
LOW
41'
39
31'
24'
21.
Cloudy; a showerearly, then snow and rain
TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record
EAST:Patchy morning fog; otherwise, mostly Seasid cloudy and windy in 55/47 spots today with a Cannon little rain. 55/48
/
na
0
38
~
city
•
•
•
•
•
iQ
•
•
UV INDEX TODAY
ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
,Q.
's
Amsterdam Athens
48/41/0.65 45/42/r * aomon P 3 /28 59/48/0.48 60/53/sh a tThermal, CA . . . o <, < , ' • • so/3 Auckland 67/60/0.17 69/58/pc ' Nationallowra 3 /2 uu u g 43 Baghdad 73/62/0.02 72/49/s s oi s * ** * atAlamosa, CO /31 Che n Bangkok 90/75/0'.0O 89/73/pc 4 u,u,d i . *, * , * 43/so PreciPitation:2.3D" ,u,u u,u,u, ss/ Q esijing 40/26/0.00 38/24/s ) ug u Beirut 70/63/0.02 73/62/pc at Quglayute, WA s ncisco S s h I k e I t y • Osn dd 82 62/45 Berlin 38/30/0.03 40/37/r ington 1 88/3 us ae 45 Lss V ss Bogota 64/50/0.42 65/47/r )u~ 4 66/4 SI. u ' 43/27 Budapest 41/37/0.00 39/32/c 45/35 43/ Buenos Ai r es 75/63/0.14 74/62/pc " Chsrlo Los An Iss Csbo SsnLucss 84/64/0.00 82/63/s lshoms City 45/2 6 47 • Cairo 72/54/0.00 78/60/pc Calgary 46/36/0.00 47/38/c • 76/54 Alhuqusrq s ls Rock n o 59/37 Csncun 79/59/0.00 78/63/s 51 air inghs 6 /60 * * al Ps Dublin 45/37/0.10 42/33/r ~, Juneau 5 0 ' ** 0/ Edinburgh 41/36/0.87 40/29/r 39/32 i h i&1/~ Geneva 39/27/0.16 41/33/c ad ' , , • rlsndO Hsrsrs xx x s x s '• 76/62/0.32 80/62/I r w Orleans 54 6 45 Hong Kong 71/62/0.08 67/55/r Honolulu Chihushus 62/45 Istanbul 49/46/0.06 57/48/c .I 81/da 72/39 Ssismi Jerusalem 64/47/0.00 68/53/pc Monte 70/ 70/57, > Johannesburg 75/57/0.19 75/57/I Lima 76/68/0.00 76/64/pc Lisbon 59/48/0.00 59/44/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 48/45/0.01 48/45/r T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 54/32/0.00 55/33/s Manila 87/75/0.00 88/77/pc 56/39
M ne
"
SKI REPORT In inches ss of 5p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.opening Dec.12 Hoodoo SkiArea: est, opening Dec.12 Mt.Ashland:est.opening Dec.12 Mt. Bachelor 0 27-5 0 8-9 M t. Hood Meadows 0 Mt. HoodSki Bowl: est opening Dec.13 6-6 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass:est. opening Dec.12 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 14-26 Vail, CO 0 20-2 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 18-22 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-1 8 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 26-26 Sun Valley, ID 0 14-3 7 Source: OnThsSnnw.cnm
•
O
•
'
High wind warning for coast could bring strong winds today over the coast of Oregon and southwest Washington.
i,iIIlllIII
t h e W e a ther
hit the Portland metropolitan
area this afternoon through evening. He said gusts of 40 to 45 mph could beexpected
there. Calmer weather is expect-
ed Friday, with perhaps some lingering showers.
tS
" 'I;; t;;ItI:"; 4/'
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vsgss Lexington Lincoln
r
I
I
Mecca Mexico City
47/37/r 59/49/r 67/57/r 71/47/pc 89/71/pc 37/18/s 76/62/sh 45/40/r 65/48/I 43/32/s 81/65/s 82/63/s 66/52/s 47/35/c 78/65/s 39/31/c 39/28/c 44/41/pc 81/62/I 64/55/r 54/47/r 65/44/sh 77/58/I 74/66/pc 56/49/pc 48/33/r 50/39/s
93/73/0.00 67/47/0.00 Montreal 32/28/0.00 Moscow 28/25/0.64 Nairobi 77/61/0.31 Nassau 73/68/0.00 New Delhi 77/49/0.00 Osaka 54/37/0.12 Oslo 39/23/0.23 Ottawa 28/27/0.19 Paris 50/37/0.23 nin ds Janeiro 88/73/0.00 Rome 57/44/0.00 Santiago 75/55/0.00 Ssn Paulo 81/70/0.12 Sspporo 31/26/0.12 Seoul 39/20/0.16 Shanghai 51/45/0.09 gong/0'.05 Singapore Stockholm 39/32/0.22 Sydney 75/68/0.41 Taipei 75/64/0.10 Tsi Aviv 72/54/0.00 Tokyo 50/43/0.14 Toronto 28/25/0.02 Vancouver 57/50/0.73 Vienna 39/30/0.00 Warsaw 28/23/0.00
ssm/pc
95/71/s 67/45/pc 35/25/sn 31/26/c 77/59/I 75/66/pc 73/41/s 56/38/r 43/36/c 31/20/sn 48/43/c 89/75/pc 56/38/pc 82/52/pc 80/69/I 40/26/r 32/17/pc 49/32/c 87/76/I 40/33/c 74/65/r 66/57/r 77/63/pc 66/46/r 32/26/sn 49/44/r 44/35/c 35/33/c
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Yesterday Today Friday
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 39/33/0.31 39/32/r 37/32/sh 33/25/Tr 45/35/c 53/45/pc 29/27/0.00 38/27/pc 37/30/c 67/47/0.00 66/49/pc 58/44/r 37/35/0.00 40/24/c 43/29/pc 41/21/0.00 46/31/pc 55/44/pc Little Rock 48/30/0.00 51/40/c 54/45/pc Lns Angeles 73/53/0.00 69/57/pc 63/50/r Louisville 39/38/Tr 43/27/c 47/33/c Madison, Wi 26/24/Tr 34/22/c 40/29/c Memphis 48/33/0.00 49/36/pc 55/40/pc Miami 66/51/0.00 70/51/s 70/53/pc Milwaukee 31/29/0.00 37/26/pc 40/32/pc Minneapolis 28/21/Tr 35/28/c 39/36/c Nashville 43/39/0.00 45/26/c 51/31/pc New Orleans 58/45/0.00 62/45/pc 65/46/pc New YorkCity 39/37/0.08 38/31/sf 38/32/c Newark, NJ 41/39/0.03 38/29/sf 40/30/c Norfolk, VA 54/43/0.02 47/32/s 48/34/s OklahomaCity 58/33/0.00 60/47/c 61/52/c Omaha 35/25/0.00 44/31/pc 53/44/pc Orlando 64/42/0.00 63/45/pc 64/43/pc Palm Spdngs 79/55/0.00 72/52/pc 65/48/sh Peoria 34/33/0.00 39/27/c 44/34/c Philadelphia 43/41/Tr 39/30/sn 41/31/c Phoenix 77/54/0.00 75/54/pc 78/55/pc Pittsburgh 35/34/0.02 35/28/sf 36/29/c Portland, ME 39/37/1.22 42/28/sh 39/28/c Providence 43/39/0.37 40/28/sn 39/28/c Raleigh 50/35/0.00 49/27/s 53/32/s Rapid City 63/25/0.00 60/35/s 64/39/s nsno 59/31/0.00 58/38/r 46/25/r Richmond 52/38/0.00 48/30/s 50/30/s Rochester, NY 36/28/0.28 30/26/sn 32/27/sf Sacramento 57/50/0.00 59/50/r 56/45/r SI. Louis 37/35/0.00 43/32/c 50/39/c Salt Lake City 55/30/0.00 62/45/c 60/38/sh Ssn Antonio 70/51/0.00 66/58/r 72/56/r Ssn Diego 67/55/0.00 69/60/pc 65/53/r Ssn Francisco 65/58/0.00 63/52/r 59/49/I Ssn Jose 64/52/0.00 60/50/r 58/44/I santa rs 56/27/0.00 56/29/s 55/30/s Savannah 60/38/0.00 59/33/s 62/35/s Seattle 66/52/0.61 53/46/r 54/41/c Sioux Falls 30/22/0.00 41/27/pc 46/38/pc Spokane 55/43/0.01 49/39/r 44/32/r Springfield, Mo 41/27/0.00 49/39/c 57/44/pc Tampa 65/46/0.00 63/47/pc 64/45/pc Tucson 76/48/0.00 74/48/s 76/52/pc Tulsa 53/28/0.00 56/45/c 59/50/c W ashingt on,OC 51/43/0.00 45/35/pc 46/35/pc Wichita 45/32/Tr 53/42/c 58/49/pc Yskims 46/39/0.05 49/37/r 49/29/c Yuma 77/56/0.00 79/58/pc 77/53/c
Hi/Lo/W 71/54/pc 36/30/c 34/28/c 58/38/s 25/16/c 58/34/s 43/35/c 70/53/sh 43/32/pc 56/36/pc 58/34/s 42/26/pc 52/34/r 40/31/c 39/30/c 33/26/sf 34/28/sf 36/29/c 59/34/s 56/29/s 53/29/pc 60/38/s 40/32/pc 42/31/c 36/31/c 62/36/s 52/41/pc 59/31/s 60/34/s 39/31/c 36/23/c 75/58/sh 67/53/c 40/31/c 60/36/s 50/41/pc 39/30/c 37/32/c 71/46/s 4/-1 0/pc 42/30/pc 51/34/pc 38/30/c 36/27/c 53/32/s 40/30/c 38/29/c 47/28/pc 82/69/pc 69/52/c 54/31/pc 40/31/c 60/41/s 60/33/s
94/71/s 67/47/pc 33/21/si 30/28/sn 76/59/I 75/66/s 73/46/s 50/34/sh 41/32/c 32/1 7/sf 49/39/r
gons/s
57/47/s 81/51/s 79/69/I 31/22/sn 33/15/pc 47/32/s 87/76/1 37/33/pc 72/65/sh 60/54/sh 74/56/pc 49/37/c 34/26/c 50/39/c 46/33/s 41/36/pc
ANnaat Open House 4 Chrhtmas Sale!
The National Weather Ser-
Service in Portland said the storm'swinds are expected to
Mostly cloudy
This Saturday, Dec. 13th 11am Shotgun Start
vice says wind gusts of 75 to 85 mph on the coast could Scott Graves/ WesCom News Service cause power outages, disrupt U.S. Coast Guardsmen from Brtyokings place sandbags around an oceanfront restaurant at the Port tyf truck travel and cause proper- Brookings Harbor on Wednesday afternoon. ty damage. Peak gusts of 80 to 90 mph are possible over higher terrain on the coast. Meteorologist Ma t t hew Cullen w i t h
26'
o uru a m e u
The Associated Press PORTLAND — Forecasters are warning that a new storm
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Yesterday Today Friday
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TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiga Hood 54/40 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
•
Naticnal high: GO •
QL t 4+
4
Some sun
Hi/Lo/Prsc. HiRo/W 55 39 62' in 1975 Abilene 64/50/0.00 69/54/sh /40 Irngton 58/43 45' 23' -24'in 1972 Portland Akron 33/32/0.08 35/28/sf Meac am l.ostrne /44 i40 Albany 34/33/1.45 35/25/sn • dl > n 5O / 49/ 3 S Enterprise PRECIPITATION • • • he Daa Albuquerque 60/35/0.00 59/37/s • • 47/33 Tdlamo • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace CENTRAL:Mostly andy • Anchorage 32/24/0.01 28/18/pc 52/42 58/45 Mc 8 1.50"in 1919 cloudy and windyat agsnbr 50/36/0.00 52/33/s Record • He ppner Grande • Condon 3/38 Atlantic City 43/40/0.02 41/34/sn 5 39 Month to date (normal) 0.3 7 " (0.73") times today; periods of Lincoln Union Austin 67/41/0.01 66/54/r 44/ Year to date(normal) 8.98 " (9.89") rain. Rain mixing with 55/47 Sale Baltimore 49/40/0.04 40/31/pc • prey Grsnitee Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 5 3" snow down to 3,000 58/4 • 3/39 Billings 57/34/0.00 56/39/pc 'Baker C Newpo 44/33 feet tonight. • 49/38 Birmingham 48/29/0.00 52/30/s SUN ANDMOON 6/43 57/46 • Mltch 8 48/35 Bismarck 39/16/0.00 44/23/s 8a mPSh m8n R8d I\ WEST:Strong winds 50738 Today Fri. OTV g 8 I eu Boise 57/34/0.00 57/43/r Yach 48/33 • John Sunrise 7:30 a.m. 7: 3 1 a.m. for a time at the coast 55/47 56/44 Boston 48/39/0.20 • Prineville Dsy 32 tario Bridgeport, CT 40/38/Tr 41/31/sn Sunset 4:27 p.m. 4: 2 7 p.m. and a period of gusty 38/28/sn 50/33 • Pa lina 50 / 3 6 5 41 Buffalo 30/29/0.07 30/26/sn Moonrise 9 :50 p.m. 10:48p.m. winds elsewhere. Floren e • Eugene ' Se d Brothers Valee 56/47 Burlington, VT 33/32/0.93 36/27/sf Periods of rain. Moonset 10: 49 a.m. 1 1 :19 a.m. Su iVere 48/31 51/39 Caribou, ME 34/29/1.21 39/31/sn Nyssa e 4 8/ 1 • l.a pine Ham ton MOONPHASES e Charleston, SC 57/38/0.00 57/32/s Grove Oakridge Charlotte 53/33/0.00 52/27/s Last Ne w Fir s t Full • Burns Junture OREGON EXTREMES 49/35 56/42 /39 Chattanooga 44/30/0.00 49/27/pc • Fort Rock Riley 49/31 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 47/31 Cheyenne 56/26/0.00 58/34/s 49/31 45/32 Chicago 33/30/Tr 37/26/pc High: ee' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 36/35/Tr 40/26/c D ec14 Dec21 D e c28 Ja n 4 at North Bend Jordan V Hey 58/45 Beaver Silver 49/31 Frenchglen 56/43 Cleveland 33/32/0.03 36/30/sf Low: 30' 52/38 Marsh Lake 54/35 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 60/26/0.00 60/34/s 44/32 at Lakeview 47/32 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 36/32/0.03 45/35/c T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 7/ a Columbia, SC 56/33/0.00 55/28/s • 58/38 Mercury 7:47 a.m. 4: 2 8 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 55/33/0.00 55/30/s Medfo d 4 5 / 32 Gold ach Rome Venus 8:29 a.m. 5: 1 1 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 33/32/Tr 38/27/c 57/ 81/38 Mars 10:35 a.m. 7 : 5 6 p.m. • 40 Klamath Concord, NH 38/36/0.47 37/23/sn • Ashl nd • FaNS Jupiter 9:23 p.m. 1 1:28 a.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 73/57/0.00 74/61/c Bro ings 51/ 46/32 Saturn 5:42 a.m. 3: 2 2 p.m. 57/ 46/35 55/37 Dallas 56/40/0.00 61/53/sh Dayton 34/33/Tr 40/27/c Uranus 1:13 p.m. 1: 5 4 a.m. Denver 62/28/0.00 58/34/s Yesterday Today Fridey Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday oss Moines 34/27/0.00 43/30/c city H i/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 34/25/Tr 37/28/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astnris 63/51/2.23 55/46/r 54/38/c Ls Grande 54/ 48/0.00 52/39/r 47/31/r Portland 56/4 9/0.5355/45/r 52/39/c Duluth 24/21/Tr 32/23/pc Baker City 48/37/Tr 48/35/r 4 3/30/r Ls Pine 52/42/0.03 46/32/r 41/26/c Prinsviiis 59/ 5 2/0.0150/33/r 41/25/c El Paso 68/43/0.00 70/44/s • ~ 1 ~ 1 WI 0 Brookings 63/57/0.65 57/45/r 53/43/sh Msdford 6 4 /43/0.18 53/40/r 49/36/sh Redmond 60 / 48/Tr 54/32/r 42/22/c Fairbanks 13/11/0.00 8/0/sf ThehighertheAccuWssursccem HVIndex number , 46/31/0.00 49/31/r 41/23/r Ne w port 63/5 4 /1.25 57/46/r 5 4/42/sh Rnseburg 66/ 5 2/0.4556/43/r 51/38/sh Fargo 33/22/0.00 38/25/s the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin protscgon.0-2 Low, sums Eugene 58/52/0.60 55/42/r 50/36/sh North Bend 66/54/0.82 58/45/r 54/41/sh Salem 63/52/0.78 58/43/r 53/37/c Flagstaff 52/25/0.00 53/31/c 34 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10VeryHigh; II+ Exlrsme. Klsmsth Falls 52/42/Tr 46/32/r 4 1/26/r On t ario 46/34/Tr 55/41/r 4 8/36/r Sisters 55/38/0.02 53/33/r 43/24/c Grand Rapids 34/28/0.00 38/28/pc Lsksvisw 52/30/0.00 46/35/r 40/25/r Pe n dleton 62/ 4 7/0.02 57/41/r 46/34/r The Dallss 46 / 41/0.0552/42/r 52/34/c Green Ssy 26/24/Tr 31/21/pc Greensboro 49/35/0.00 48/29/s Weether(W):s-sunny,pc-psrtlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-shnwers,t-thundsrstorms,r-rsin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowI-ics,Tr-irscs,Yesterday data ssof 5 p.m. yesterday I-84at Cabbage Hill: Cloudy andwindy at Harrisburg 45/41/0.01 38/29/sf times todaywith periods of rain. Hsrffnrd, CT 41/39/0.36 39/27/sn Helena 43/27/0.00 48/31/c US 20 at SantiamPass:Cloudyandwindy at Honolulu 82/67/0.00 81/68/s times todaywith periods of rain. ~ 08 ~ te s ~ 2 0 8 ~ 3 0 8 ~ 4 0 8 ~ 5 0s ~e o s ~7 0 8 ~ 8 0 8 ~ 9 0 8 ~ t ggs ~ttes Houston ~ tgs ~g s 69/42/0.00 64/54/c US 28atGov'tCamp: Cloudy and windyat Huntsville 45/39/0.00 48/26/pc NATIONAL x times todaywith periods of rain. Indianapolis 33/32/Tr 38/25/c * ** * • i nipeg Tgnder aay Jackson, MS 53/33/0.00 57/37/pc EXTREMES +++ US 28 at Dchoco Divide:Cloudy todaywith a Jacksonville 59/38/0.00 57/33/pc gusty windandperiods of rain. YESTERDAY (for the ' .. i • • aismsrck
DRE 58 atWigamette Pass:Rain andgusty winds todaywith slower travel. Rain changing to snow showerstonight. DRE138 at Diamond Lake: Cloudytoday with a gusty wind andperiods of rain.
MONDAY
24'
Mostly sunny
A thick cloud cover
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
SUNDAY
VUomen's Health
NEW LOCATION I 340 NW 5th St. iiT RedmOnd StCharleSHealthCare.Org/WOmeiTShealth SQ
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NFL , C3 Sports in brief, C2 C o llege football, C4 NBA, C3 NHL, C4 College basketball, C3 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL: SMALL SCHOOL PREVIEW
PREPS
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Fundraiser to help coach's family A fundraiser to support the family of an assistant football coach at Bend's Summit High School who recently lost a15-year battle with bone cancer is scheduled for tonight at Bouncing Off the Wall in southeast Bend. The event will run from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. and is a glow-in-thedark bouncing party with pizza anddrinks for sale. Admission is $8. Andre Parris died in October, leaving behind a wife and three young children. According to event organizers, 100 percentof the proceeds from the event will go to support the Parris fam-
Morry Gash/The Associated Press
Gary Andersen is leaving Wisconsin and taking over as head coach at Oregon State.
Oregon State hires Wisconsin's
Gary Andersen
ily, which was left with
mounting medical bills. Bouncing Off the Wall is located at1134 SE
Centennial Court. For more information, visit www.youcaring. com and search for Andre Parris.
By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
Wisconsin football coach Gary Andersen unexpectedly stepped down Wednesday tobe-
I
u
,.>~jSELIltil>
— Bulletin staff report
come head coach at Oregon State.
The 52-year-old Andersen, the Badgers' coach for the past two seasons, informed the
CYCLING
team of his deci-
sion Wednesday afternoon, the school said. Wisconsin finished 10-3 this season
Astana retains top status for '15 AIGLE, Switzerland — The Astana teamof Tour de Francewinner Vincenzo Nibali has been put on probation to retain its top-tier racing status next seasonafter a series of doping cases. Noting "heavy and repeated doping cases" in the Kazakhstan government-backed team, the International Cycling Union's license commission imposed conditions Wednesday to avoid a further review. Reports in Italy this week that Astana riders have worked with doctor Michele Ferrari — banned for life in the Lance Armstrong case — could also rebound on the team. "The UCIwould call upon the commission if evidence against the team is established," said the governing body, which awaits a file from Italian prosecutors investigating a doping network. The Astana casehas been a serious challenge for the UCIpresidency of Brian Cookson, the Englishman elected in September 2013 ona platform to changecycling's doping culture. "In the case of the Astana ProTeam,this remains a very serious situation for our sport given the number of doping cases," Cookson said in a statement, insisting that the team "can be considered very much to be onprobation." — The Associated Press
NBA
under Andersen
and will play in the Outback Bowl
against Auburn on Jan. 1. Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez said the search for A dersen's
successor had
Ilyoi QII I'Igpi' Sout h ern Utah 4-7 2pp3 Ufnh Sfntn 2010 2011 2012
Wisconsin 2p13 2014
4-8 4-8 7-6 11-2 9-4 10-3
already started. Alvarez said he
would consider coaching the team in the bowl game himself after several players asked him, but had not made a final decision. Alvarez said Andersen made the move for personal reasons. Mike Riley left the Pac-12's Beavers to accept
the Nebraska job after the dismissal of Bo Pelini. Oregon State finished this season 5-7 and
out of the postseason picture. Oregon State will introduce Andersen as the 28th coach in team history at a news conference
Friday. The announcement of his hiring came the same day Oregon State announced extensive renovation plans for its football facilities.
SeeAndersen/C4 Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Madras returning starters Jered Pichette, left, and Brent Sullivan look to lead the White Buffs this
season.
NATIONAL FINALS RODEO
• Madras, otherschools, look to put mediocreseasonsin the past By Mark Morical
Inside
• A breakdown of Central Oregon small schools,C4 Bouncing back from a subpar season is nev- • Bend wrestling beats La Pine 54-24,C2 er an easy task in high school basketball. Most Central Oregon small school boys teams face that stiff challenge as the 2014-15 Hair says Pichette will not have to shoulder season gets underway. as much of the load this season as several othAt Madras, coach Allen Hair is encouraging er seniors, including post Brent Sullivan and his team to focus on the positives as the White wing Voshaun Bryant, are expected to step Buffaloes are coming off an injury-plagued into larger roles. 10-14 season in which they won only three Finding that senior leadership and chemTri-Valley Conference games. istry is crucial as the White Buffaloes look "We can't change the past," Hair says. "We to rebound from a mediocre year and reach can learn from our mistakes and try to move the eight-team Class 4A state tournament in forward. We have a lot of people who gained Hillsboro. "That's the whole key," Hair says. "We're a lot of varsity experience. Most guys played a lot of minutes last year. I think we have more only going to go as far as our leadership takes firepower offensively." us, and that has to come from the kids. We The Bulletin
Returning senior guard Jered Pichette aver-
aged nearly 20 points per game last season for Madras and earned player of the year honors in the TVC.
win and lose as a team. That's what the pre-
season will be all about, identifying roles and building leadership." SeeMadras/C4
Madras coach Allen Hair talks to the team last week at Madras High School.
Bob Click/For The Bulletin
Bobby Mote, of Culver, scores 81.5 points riding Red Bandana to tie for fourth in the seventh round of bareback riding. Mote still leads in the
aggregate with three rounds to go.
Mote, Fossstill in hunt for bareback Bulletin staff report
during a practice Portland's LaMarcus
AnlIerSen'S
LAS VEGAS — With three rounds remaining at this year's National Finals Rodeo, the
'< f®I,
world bareback title is still up for grabs. Central Oregon cowboys Bobby Mote and Austin Foss both finished in the money
es for a rebound during Wednesday's game in Minneapolis.
Wednesday night during the seventh round of the NFR to keep within striking distance of world leader Kaycee Feild, of Spanish Fork, Utah. Feild, who tied for fourth Wednesday with Mote — both cowboys earned $6,436for
Blazers fall to
their 81.5-point rides — leads the bareback
Aldridge, top, stretch-
Timderwolves
Andrew Wiggins scores 23 points and has10 rebounds in Minnesota's 90-82 win,C3
standings with $208,243. Foss, who took sixth W ednesday with an 81— hecashed a check for $3,065 — is second in the world standings with $165,473 and Mote is third at $150,017. Mote also is in first place in the average. SeeBareback/C2
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER Time TV /Radio Europa League,Qarabag(Azerbaijan) vs. Inter Milan (Italy) 8:50 a.m. FS2 Europa League,Besiktas (Turkey) vs. Tottenham Hotspur (England) 10 a.m. FS1 Europa League,Sevilla (Spain) vs. Rijeka (Croatia) 11:55a.m. FS2 Europa League,Everton (England) vs. Krasnodar (Russia) noon FS1 GOLF
Franklin Templeton Shootout 10 a.m. Golf Australian PGAChampionship 5 p.m. Golf Asian Tour, Thailand Championship 10 p.m. Golf EuropeanTour, Alfred Dunhill Championship 4 :30 a.m. (Fri.) Golf WRESTLING
College, PennState at Maryland
3 p.m.
Big Ten
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Elon at Missouri NBA, Cleveland atOklahoma City Women's college, lowa State at lowa W omen's college, Nebraska Crei at ghton NBA, Houston at Sacramento
4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. TNT 5 p.m. Big Ten 6 p.m . FS1 7:30 p.m. TNT
FOOTBALL
NFL, Arizona atSt. Louis
5 p.m.
NFL
7 p.m.
ESPN2
BOXING
Austin Trout vs. Luis Grajeda
FRIDAY GOLF
Franklin Templeton Shootout 1 0 a.m. Go l f Australian PGAChampionship 5 p.m. Golf Asian Tour, Thailand Championship 1 0 p.m. Go l f EuropeanTour, Alfred Dunhill Championship 2:30 a.m. (Sat.) Golf SOCCER Men's college, Maryland-Balt. County vs. Virginia 2 p.m. ESPNU Men's college,Providencevs.UCLA 4:30 p.m. ESPNU Australian, Wellington vs. Central Coast 8 p.m. FS2 BASKETBALL
HighSchool,BishopO'Dowd atMontverde 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. NBA, Portland at Chicago ESPN, CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM, KRCO690-AM,
Men's college, Charleston Southern at N.C.State 4 p.m. M en's college, Texas Southern at Florida 4 p.m . Men's college, lowa State at lowa 5 p.m. Women's college, MidTennesseeSt. at Kentucky 6 p.m. NBA,LosAngelesLakersatSanAntonio 6 :30 p.m. FOOTBALL
College, UT-ChattanoogaatNew Hampshire 5 p.m. ESPN2 HOCKEY
College, North Dakota at Denver
6:30 p.m. Root
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF WRESTLING Bend tOPSLa Pine 54-24 — The visiting Lava Bearswon10 of 14 matchesWednesday in La Pine to roll past the Hawks in a nonleague dual. Austin Palmer (132 pounds), SageFarnworth (145), Cade Foisset (182), JordanGentner (195) and Jakob Larsen (220) all won by fall for Bend.Gentner was especially impressive, pinning his opponent, Erick Torres, in 29 seconds. LavaBearcoach LukeLarwin praised the wrestling of David O'Connor, whoedged out the Hawks' BenHarrison3-2at285pounds,andDamareaDunnigan,whooutlasted La Pine's AlexDodley18-13 at120 pounds.
BASEBALL MarlinS acpuire GOrdan, Haien fram DOdgerS —TheMarlins pulled off a major tradeWednesday,acquiring second baseman Dee Gordon andstarting pitcher Dan Harenfrom the Los Angeles Dodgers for pitcher Andrew Heaneyand three other players. The deal, which has not yet beenannounced, was confirmed by major league sources. Gordon, who led themajors in stolen baseslast season, provides the Marlins with a leadoff hitter. Haren is a34-year-old veteran of12 major leagueseasons, compiling a career record of 142-122. Last seasonwith the Dodgers, Haren went13-11 with a 4.02 ERA in 32 starts. In anaddition to Heaney, who is regarded as oneof the top left-handed pitching prospects in baseball, the Marlins also gave up reliever Chris Hatcher, minor-leaguecatcher Austin Barnes and infielder Kike Hernandez.
Phillies trade shortstop Rollins to Dodgers — ThePhilies, a team resigned to breaking downthe roster that produced someof the franchise's greatest moments, started to rebuild Wednesdayby trading the manwith more hits than anyother. Shortstop Jimmy Rollins, the longest-tenured athlete in Philadelphia, is aLosAngeles Dodger. Details of the trade —which could involve athird team — were still being finalizedWednesdayevening, said a source familiar with the talks. Rollins, who earnedfull no-trade rights by spending 10seasons in the majors and five with the sameteam, approved the trade.
FOOTBALL AnderSOn replaCing NewtOn at QB vS.BIICB —Panthers coach Ron Riverasaysformer Oregon State quarterback DerekAnderson will start Sundayagainst the TampaBay Buccaneers in place of Cam Newton, who is recovering from anautomobile accident that left him with two fractures in his lower back. Rivera says it's highly unlikely Newton will suit up against the Buccaneers. Newton wasdischarged from the hospital Wednesday. — From wire reports
Bareback
a wash fo r
bareback competition with
Beers and his teammate Jim
an 86-point ride.
Ross Cooper, of Monument,
C entral O r e-
gon's team ropers. Neither Continued from C1 Prineville's Charly Crawford Richmond Champion,of and his partner Shay CarThe Woodlands, Texas, won roll, of La Junta, Colorado, the seventh round of the nor Powell Butte's Brandon With round winners earn-
New Mexico, recorded times.
ing $19,002 a night and the Crawford and Carroll enter average payout expected to today's eighth round sitting be more than $40,000, both eighth in the world standings Foss and Mote are within while Beers and Cooper are striking distance of Feild, 11t11. who is looking for his fourth T he NFR, w h ic h r u n s consecutive bareback world title.
W ednesday night w a s
t hrough Saturday a t
the
Thomas & Mack Center, continues today.
ON DECK Today Boys basketball: Ridgeviewvs.Mazama at Crater Tournament,5:45 p.mc Sisters at Lebanon,7 p.m.; CulveratMadrasJV, 6:30p.m. Girls basketball: Ridgeview vs. Brookings-Harbor at CraterTournament, 7:30 p.mcMadrasJVat Culver,6:30p.m.
EAST CCSU 65, UMBC53 Dartmouth69,Mass.-Lowell 48 Fordha m68,Monmouth(NJ)58,OT Hobart71,Rochester 61 lona 77,Rider64 Kansas75, Georgetown70 PennSt.64, Duquesne62 PennSt.Behrend71,FredoniaSt.48 Providence 68, RhodeIsland60 RichardStockton82,Rutgers-Camden66 St. John's74,Fairleigh Dickinson52 St. Peter's60, Princeton46 Temple76,Towson64 SOUTH Campbel70, l DelawareSt. 55 Carson-Ne wman80, Lenoir-Rhvne76 Emory8 Henry85, Montreat 74 Hofstra105,CoppinSt.64 Kentu cky56,Columbia46 LincolnMemorial109, Va.Lynchburg38 Louisiana-Lafayette 94, LouisianaTech86 Maryland67, NCCentral56
IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
Friday Boys basketball: Springfield at Bend, 7 p.m.; Dallas atMountainView,7 p.m.; CrookCounty at Redmond,7 p.m.; Ridgeviewat Crater Tournament ,TBD;Summitvs.SandyatSandyTournament,7:30p.mcMadrasat Henley, 7 p.mcLa Pine atDouglasInvite, TBD;Central Christianvs. C.S. LewiAca s demyat C.S.Lewis AcademyInvitational inNew berg, 8:15 p.m. Girls basketball: Springfield atBend,5:15p.mc Redmond at Crook County, 7 p.m.; Sisters at Summit,7 p.mq MountainViewat Dallas, 7 p,mc Ridgeviewat Crater Tournament, TBD; Madras atHenley, 6 p.m.; LaPine at Douglas Invite, TBD;Central Christian vs. C.S. Lewis Academy JVat C.S. LewisTournament in Newberg, 6:30p.mcTrinity Lutheranvs. Elktonat Elkton Tip-Off Classic, 6 p.mc Gilchrist at Gilchrist Tournametn Wrestling: Ridgeview,Sisters, Gilchrist at Culver Invite, 2 p.mcRedmond, Crook County at North BendCoastClassic, TBD;Mountain Viewat SilyertonDualMeetTournament, TBD Swimming: MountaiVi newat Swimmingfor Giving Meet,11a.m. Saturday Boys basketball: Springfield at MountainView, 12:45 p,mcDallasatRedmond,2:30p,m.;Ridgeview atCraterTournament, TBD;La Pine at Douglas Invite, TBD;Central Christian at C.S. LewisAcademyInvitational inNewberg, TBD Girls basketball: Mountain Viewat Union(Wash.), 2p.m.;RedmondatDallas,2:30p.mcRidgeview at CraterTournament, TBD;Silverton at Summit, 1:30 p.mc LaPineat Douglas Invite, TBD;Central Christian atC.S.LewisTournament in Newberg, TBD; Trinity Lutheranvs. North Douglasat Elkton Tip-OffClassic, 1p.m.; Gilchrist at Gilchrist Tournamen t Wrestling: Ridgeview,Sisters, Gilchrist at Culver Invite,10 amcRedmond, CrookCountyat North BendCoastClassic, TBD;Bend atSpringfield Invitational,TBD Swimming: Bend,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit, Sisters atBendWinter Classic, TBD Nordic skiing: OHSN Oclassic at Mt. Bachelor
UNCGreensboro82,Greensboro78 MIDWEST Augsburg67, Macalester 36 Bethel(Minn.)60,Hamline 55 Gustavus 63,Carleton 57 Incarnate Word 74,Nebraska73 Kalamazoo 53, Marygrove51 Minnesota85,Southern U.57 Nebra ska-Omaha94,lowaWesleyan67 Ohio St.97, HighPoint43
"They both should be ejected."
tur, Texas,andCodyOhl,Hico,Texas,7.3seconds, $17,010each.3. Clint Cooper,Decatur, Texas, 7.7, $11,340.4.TimberMoore, Aubrey,Texas,8.0, $7,969. 5. TrevorBrazile, Decatur, Texas,8.8, $4,904.6. Ryan Watki ns,Bluff Dale,Texas,8.9,$3,065.7.CadeSwor, Winnie,Texas,9.0. 8,(tie) MattShiozawa,Chubbuck, Idaho, andAdamGray,Seymour,Texas,9.3each.10. ShaneHanchey, Sulphur, La., 9.4.11. ReeseRiemer, PREPS Stinnett,Texas,12rg. 12.MartyYates, Stephenvile, Texas,13.6.13.Clint Robinson,Spanish Fork, Utah, 23.6.14.(tie)HunterHerrin, Apache,Okla.,andTyson Wrestling Durfey,Colbert, Wash., NT.World standings—1. Tuf Bend High64, LaPine 24 Cooper,$181,662. 2. Matt Shiozawa,$148,551. 3. At La Pine 106 — TristanWilson, LP,wins byforfeit. 118 Marty Yates,$141,268. 4. TrevorBrazile, $136,757. — DavidKerr,LP,wins byforfeit. 120 — Damarea 5. CodyOhl,$126,887. 6. CadeSwor, $115,243.7. Clint Cooper, $108,316.8. ShaneHanchey,$104,207. Dunnigan, 8,def.Alex Dodley,LP,18-13. 126TimberMoore,$103,095. 10. Clint Robinson, EthanMatthews,LP,pins Maitiu Milar-Sanchez, B, 9. 11. HunterHerrin, S100,842.12. Adam 3:53.132 —Austin Palmer, 8, pinsKyleAnders, LP, $102,137. $93,307.13.RyanWatkins,$75,348.14.Tyson 4:49. 138— SeanBrantley, LP,pins ChanceBeutler, Gray, Durfey, $73, 742.15. ReeseRiemer,$66317. B, 1:01.145—SageFarnworth, 8, pinsJaredDyer, Bawal racing —1. Lisa Lockhart, Oelrichs, S.D., LP,:39.162—Victor Rincon,B,wins byforfeit. 160 13.73 seconds,$19,002.2. FaffonTaylor, Whitesboro, — JacobDupuis,8, winsbyforfeit. 170 — Justin $15,018.3. CarleePierce,Stephenvile, Vinton, 8, wins byforfeit. 182 — CadeFoisset, 8, Texas,13.89, $11,340. 4. NancyHunter, Neola, Utah, pinsTannerHanson, LP,536.195 —JordanGentern, Texas,14.04, 1 4.08 , $ 7 , 9 6 9 .5.MicheleMcLeod,Whitesboro,TexB, pinsErickTorres, LP,:29. 220—JakobLarsen,8, as,14.11,$4,904. 6.JanaBean, Fort Hancock, Texas, pins Gageyeager,LP,1:57.285— DavidO'Connor, 14.14,$3,065.7. Ka leyBass, Kissimmee, Fla.,14.15. B, def.BenHarrison, LP,3-2. 8. SherryCervi, Marana,Ariz.,14.28. 9. BritanyDiaz, Solen, N.D.,14.34. 10.Christine Laughlin, Pueblo, Colo., 14.51. 11. TrulaChurchill, Valentine,Neb., RODEO 18.87.12.(tie)MaryWalker, Ennis, Texas,andChristy Loflin, Franktown,Colo.,19.20each.14. Kassidy DenProfessional nison ,Tohatchi,N.M.,24.22.15.SamanthaLyne,CoNational Finals Rodeo tulla, Texas,NT.World standings—1. Fallon Taylor, $218,821.2. LisaLockhart, $192,263.3. KaleyBass, W ednesday atThomas& MackCenter, $175,201. 4.MicheleMcLeod, $138,956. 5. Britany Las Vegas Diaz,$131,604.6.NancyHunter,$130,341.7. Kassidy SeventhRound Dennison,$126,072. 8. SherryCervi, $117,261.9. Bareback riding—1. Richmond Champion, The CarleePierce,$115,869.10. ChristyLoflin, S107,980. Woodlands,Texas,86 points onThreeHils Rodeo's 11. Mary Walker, $107,681.12. Trula Churchil, Angel Eyes,$19,002. 2. Tilden Hooper,Carthage, $107,136.13.ChristineLaughlin, $93,135.14.Jana Texas,84,$15,018.3. TimO'Connel, Zwingle,lowa, Bean,$89,418.15.SamanthaLyne,$70,577. 83.5, S11,340.4, (tie) KayceeFeild, SpanishFork, Bull riding—1. (tie) SageKimzey, Strong City, Utah, andBobbyMote,Culver,81.5,$6,436each.6. Okla. ,on4L& Diamond SRodeo'sHaunted Mesa, Austin Foss,Terrebonne81, $3,065. 7. WinnRatliff, and ElliotJacoby,Fredericksburg, Texas, onHurst Pro Leesvile,La.,79.5.8, (tie) CalebBennett, Tremonton, Rodeo'sCactusJungle, 86.5 points, $17,010each. Utah, andJustin McDaniel, Porum,Okla., 79 each. 3. Brennon Eldred,Sulphur, Okla., 84.5, $11,340.4. 10. (tie)Wil Lowe,Canyon,Texas, andStevenDent, Tyler Smith,Fruita, Colo.,82.5,$7,969.5. (tie) J.W. Mullen ,Neb.,78.5each.12.JakeVold,Ponoka,Al- Harris, Mullin, Texas,andJordanSpears, Redding, berta, 76.13.JessyDavis, Power, Mont., 75.5.14. Cali f.,80,$3,984each.7.CodyTeel,Kountze,Texas, (tie) Steven Peebles,Redmond, andJ.R.Vezain, Cow- 76.5. 8.JoshKoschel, Nunn,Colo., 73.5.9.(tie) Trey ley, Wyo.,NS.World slandings—1. Kaycee Field, Benton ffl,RockIsland, Texas. TimBingham, Hon$208, 243.2.AustinFoss,$165,473.3.BobbyMote, eyville, Utah.BeauHil, WestGlacier, Mont.. Aaron $150, 017.4.StevenPeebles,S145,932.5.Tim O'Con- Pass,Dallas,Texas.Reid Barker, Comfort, Te xas.Joe nell, $131,240. 6. RichmondChampion,$129,472.7. Frost,Randlett,Utah,andTyWallace,Collbran, Colo., Justin McD aniel, $121,981.8.Wil Lowe,$115,104.9. NS. World slandings —1. Sage Kimzey, 6239,556. WinnRatliff, $103,076.10. TildenHooper, S101,588. 2.TreyBentonff l,$159,874.3.CodyTeel,$128,947. 11. Steven Dent, $93,633.12. JakeVold, $92,713.13. 4. JoeFrost,$123,500.5. AaronPass, S104,550.6. Caleb Bennett,S92,296.14.JessyDavis,$75,757.15. Tim Bingham,$100,652. 7. BeauHill, $97,807.8. J.R. Vezain$70, , 208. J.W. Harris,S97,228.9. Elliot Jacoby,$97,067. 10. Sleer wreslling—1.(tie) Curtis Cassidy, Donalda, BrennonEldred, $89,170.11. Tyler Smith,$81,074. Alberta,andDakotaEldridge, Elko, Nev., 3.4seconds, 12. JordanSpears, $8L027.13. TyWallace,$78,917. $17,010 each.3. (tie) Casey Martin, Sulphur,La.,and 14. ReidBarker, S76,227.15.Josh Koschel, $72,837. Luke Branquinho,LosAlamos, Calif., 3.9, $9,654 each. 5.BrayArmes, Ponder, Texas, 4.1, $4,904.6. FOOTBALL Wyatt Smith,Rexburg,Idaho,4.4, $3,065.7. Trevor Knowles,Mount Vernon,4.5. 8. Nick Guy,Sparta, Wis., 5.2. 9. (tie)ColeEdge, Durant, Okla., andTy NFL Erickson,Helena,Mont., 6.5each. 11.ClaytonHass, NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Terrell, Texas,6.8. 12. SethBrockm an, Wheatland, AU TimesPST Wyo.,7.1.13. DruMelvin, Hebron,Neb., 10.6.14. Kyle Irwin,Robertsdale,Ala., 15.9.15. K.C.Jones, AMERICANCONFERENCE Decatur,Texas, NT.World slandings—1. LukeBranEast quinho,$138,630.2. NickGuy,$124,341.3. Trevor W L T Pct PF PA Knowles,S123,066.4. CaseyMartin, $112,613.5. N ew Engl a nd 1 0 3 0 769 401 267 Curtis Cassidy,$101,431. 6. K.C.Jones, S101,058. 7. KyleIrwin,$100,653. 8. ClaytonHass, $94,353.9. Miami 7 6 0 538 314 260 BrayArmes,S90,057. 10.Dakota Eldridge, $86,462. Buffalo 7 6 0 538 281 241 11. DruMelvin,$80,399.12.Wyatt Smith, $75,271. N.Y.Jets 2 11 0 154 214 349 13. Seth Brockman,$73,468.14. ColeEdge, $72,424. South 15. TyErickson,$66,568. W L T Pct PF PA Team roping —1. Dustin Bird,CutBank, Mont./ 9 4 0 692 407 307 PaulEaves,Lonedell,Mo.,3. 7 seconds,619,002 7 6 0 538 314 260 each. 2.ErichRogers, RoundRock,Ariz./Cory Petska, 2 11 0 154 220 374 Marana,Ariz., 3r9,$15,018. 3. TrevorBrazile, De2 11 0 154 199 356 catur,Texas/TravisGraves,Jay, Okla., 4.0,611,340. North 4. Aaron Tsinigine, TubaCity, Ariz/Clay O'Brien W L T Pct PF PA Cooper,Gardnervile, Nev.,4.2, $7,969.5. Coleman Cincinnati 8 4 1 654 281 289 Proctor, Pryor, Okla./JakeLong, Coffeyvile, Kan., Pittsburgh 8 5 0 615 362 319 6.5r $4,904. 6.KalebDriggers, Albany,Ga./Patrick Baltimore 8 5 0 615 356 255 Smith, Lipan,Texas,8.2, $3,065. 7. TurtlePowell, 7 6 0 538 276 270 Stephenviffe,Texas/Dakota Kirchenschlager, Morgan Cleveland West Mill, Texas, 8.7.8. ClayTryan, Bilings, Mont./Jade W L T Pct PF PA Corkiff, Fallon,Nev.,10.6. 9. LukeBrown, Stephen10 3 0 .769 385 293 ville, Texas/Kollin VonAhn,Blanchard,Okla., 21.1. Denver Diego 8 5 0 .615 293 272 10. (tie)RileyMinor,Ellensburg, Wash./BradyMinor, San 7 6 0 .538 291 241 Ellensburg,Wash.. BrandonBeers, Powell Butte, KansasCity 2 11 0 .154 200 350 Ore./JimRossCooper, Monument, N.M.. NickSar- Oakland NATIONAL CONFERENCE tain, Dover,Okla./Rich Skelton, Llano,Texas.Jake East Barnes,Scottsdale,Ariz./Junior Nogueira, Scottsdale, W L T Pct PF PA Ariz.. CharlyCrawford, Prinevile, Ore./ShayCarroll, 9 4 0 692 389 309 La Junta,Colo.. andTomRichards, Humboldt, Ariz./ 9 4 0 692 343 301 CesardelaCruz,Tucson,Ariz., NT.World standings 4 9 0 308 293 326 headers) —1.ClayTryan, $147,113.2. DustinBird, 3 10 0 231 244 346 143,666.3. TrevorBrazile, $140,630.4. ErichRogSouth ers, $125,941.5. Turtle Poweff,$122,332. 6. ColeW L T Pct PF PA manProctor,$121,684.7. RileyMinor,$111,393. 8. 5 8 0 385 328 342 Charly Crawford,$99,756.9. JakeBarnes,$99,619. Atlanta N ew Orl e an s 5 8 0 385 333 359 10. KalebDriggers,$99,093.11. BrandonBeers, $97,267. 12. AaronTsinigine, S95,045.13. Luke Carolina 4 8 1 346 269 341 Brown,S92,065.14. NickSartain, $80,028.15. Tom TampaBay 2 11 0 154 237 348 Richards, $74,713.World standings (heelem+L North JadeCorkiff,$147,113.2. PaulEaves, S146,758. 3. W L T Pct PF PA TravisGraves,$140,630.4. CoryPetska,S126,288. 10 3 0 769 423 304 5. JakeLong,$122,684. 6. DakotaKirchenschlager, 9 4 0 692 265 224 $118,972.7.BradyMinor,$111,393.8.Shay Carroll, 6 7 0 462 263 281 $100,815. 9.Patrick Smith,$99,093. 10.JimRoss 5 8 0 385 281 378 Cooper,$97,267.11.Junior Nogueira,$89,611.12. West Kollin VonAhn,$89,065. 13. ClayO'BrienCooper, W L T Pct PF PA $87,227.14.RichSkelton, S80,028.15. Cesarde la Arizona 10 3 0 769 275 238 Cruz,$66,484. 9 4 0 692 322 235 Seattle Saddle bronc riding —1. Spencer Wright, Mil- SanFrancisco 7 6 0 538 244 268 ford, Utah, 85points on StaceSmith Pro Rodeo's St. Louis 6 7 0 462 285 285 Pretty Boy,$19,002.2. Cort Scheer,Elsmere,Neb., 80.5, $15,018. 3. Jake Wright, Milford, Utah, 80, Today'sGame $11,340. 4.JesseWright, Milford, Utah,78, $7,969. ArizonaatSt. Louis, 5:25p.m. 5. WadeSundeff ,Boxholm,lowa,77.5,$4,904. Sunday'sGames 6.HeithDeMoss,Heflin,La.,77,$3,065.7.Taos Oakland at KansasCity,10 a.m. Muncy,Corona,N.M., 76.8. Dustin Flundra,Pincher Pittsburgh atAtlanta, 10a.m. Creek,Alberta, 73. 9. CodyWright, Milford, Utah, Washington atN.y.Giants, 10a.m. 65. 10. (tie) JacobsCrawley,Stephenviffe, Texas. Miami atNew England,10a.m. Bradley Harter, Loranger, La.. Tyler Corrington, Houston at Indi napolis,10a.m. Hastings,Minn.. ChadFerley, Oelrichs,S.Dr. Cole Jacksonville ataBal timore,10 a.m. Elshere,Faith,S.D.,andCodyDeMoss, Heflin, La., NS.Worldslandings—1. Cort Scheer,$156,049. 2. GreenBayat Buffalo, 10a.m. Bayat Carolina,10 a.m. HeithDeMoss, S144,831. 3. TaosMuncy,S141,437. Tampa 4. Cody Wright, S130,394. 5. Wade Sundell, CincinnatiatCleveland,10a.m. D enver atSanDiego,1:05 p.m. $129,848. 6.SpencerWright, $129,072.7. Jacobs Crawley, $120,450.8. TylerCorrington,$104,052.9. N.Y.Jetsat Tennessee, 1:05p.m. JakeWright,S98,107.10.CodyDeMoss, $96,719. SanFranciscoatSeattle,1:25 p.m. at Detroit, 1:25p.m. 11. Jesse Wright, $85,464. 12. Cole Elshere, Minnesota $82,449.13.ChadFerley,$81,674. 14.BradleyHar- Dallasat Philadelphia,5;30p.m. Monday'sGame ter, S77,901.15.Dustin Flundra,S77,133. Tie-dewn roping —1. (tie) Tuf Cooper,Deca- NewOrleansatChicago,5:30p.m.
Injury Reperl Today'sGame ARIZONACARDINALSatST.LOUIS RAMSCARDINALS:OUT:GPaul Fanaika (ankle), STyrann Mathieu (thumb). QUE STIONABLE; CB Antonio Cromartie(ankle),DTEdStinson(toe). PROBABLE:LB Lorenzo Alexander (knee), WRLarry Fitzgerald (knee), LB LarryFoote(foot), LB Matt Shaughnessy(shoulder), QB DrewStanton(ankle, knee), TJaredVeldheer (ankle).RAMS:QUESTIONABLE: DEChris Long(ankle). PRO BABLE: WRKennyBritt (not injury related), DT AlexCarrington(thigh), TECory Harkey(knee), LB Will Herring(foot), LBJames Laurinaitis (ankle), GRodgerSaffold(shoulder), CScottWells (elbow).
merica's Line NFL
Favorite RAMS CHIEFS RAVEN S FALCON S COLTS
Bengals
PATRIOT S PANTHE RS
GIANTS Packers LIONS Jets
Hometeam inCAPS Open Current 0/U Underdog Today 3 4 39' / z Cards Sunday 10'/~ 10 41'/z Raiders 13'/~ 13Rt 45 tAt Jaguars 2I/2 21/2 54 Steelers 6'/~ 6'I~ 49'I~ Texans 6'/z 5
PK 44'I~ BROWN S 7'/~ 48'/~ Dolphins 7'/z 41'/z Bucs 6'/z 47'/z Washington 5 5 0 '/z BILLS
71/2
7tAt
PK
1'At 42'At
1
7'Iz
5
Purdue 87, ArkansasSt.46 SE Missouri55,S.Illinois 54 St. Olaf84,St.John's(Minn.) 73 St. Thomas (Minn.) 75, St.Mary's (Minn.)43 Valparaiso79,Trinity (III.) 54 Wis.-Platteville52,Wis.-Oshkosh47 Wis.-RiverFalls 64,Wis.-LaCrosse59 Wis.-Stevens Pt.73,Wis.-Stout 56 Wis.-Superio67, r Wis.-EauClaire 58 Wisconsin93,Milwaukee54 SOUTHWE ST SEOklahoma69,Tulsa66 TexasTech73, FresnoSt.56 FARWES T California45,Wyoming 42 ColoradoSt.62, Colorado60 Davidson110,Montana99 Gonzaga 81, Washington St. 66 N. Iowa65, Denver55 SanDiegoSt. 60,LongBeachSt. 59 UCLA77,UCRiverside66 Utah65,BYU61
Wo m e n's college Wednesday'sGames TOP 26 No.5NotreDame94,No.25DePaul93(OT) No. 9Baylor88, Idaho70 No. 17Rutgers88, Temple 55 No. 23WestVirginia 79, Duquesne60 EAST Hartford62,PennSt. 57 Holy Cross80, BostonCollege64 Rutgers88, Temple55 WestVirginia79,Duquesne60 SOUTH VirginiaTech80, NCCentral 44 Wisconsin51,Florida48 MIDWEST Arkansas 59, Missouri St.50 Indiana 80,IPFW37 Minnesota68,North Dakota55 Notre Dame94,DePaul93,OT SOUTHWE ST Baylor88,Idaho70 FARWEST Nevada83,CSStanislaus 57 SanJoseSt. 89,UCDavis 75 UCLA57,UCRiverside43 Utah59,IdahoSt.40
Vikings SOCCER TITANS Broncos 31/2 4 51 CHARG ERS SEAHAW KS 91/2 10 38'I~ 49ers MLS EAGLES 31/2 3'I~ 55'I~ Cowboys MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Monday ExpansionDraft Selections 3 3 54' / z BE A RS Saints 1. Donovan Ricketts, Portland 2. TonyCascio, Colorado College 3.Jalil Anibaba, Seattle Saturday 4. Pedro Ribiero, Philadelphia Navy 14t/t 1 4R 57Rr Arm y 5. LewisNeal, D.C. 6.JairoArrieta,Columbus 7.HeathPearce,Montreal HOCKEY 8. Danny Mwanga, Colorado 9. MarkSherrod, Houston NHL 10. EncGehng, Columbus NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PST
DEALS
EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GFGA
Transactions
BASEBALL 2 9 17 6 6 4 0 8 9 7 2 AmericanLeague 29 18 8 3 3 9101 77 CHICAGO WHITESOX— Agreed to termswith 3 0 18 10 2 3 8 7 7 7 7 obertsononafour-yearcontract. 2 8 16 9 3 3 5 9 5 8 1 RHPDavid R National League 2 8 15 12 1 3 1 7 2 7 2 MIAMIMARLINS—Agreedto termswith CJho2 6 11 8 7 2 9 5 8 6 8 natanSolanoonaminor leaguecontract. 27 11 11 5 27 70 74 NEWYOR K METS — Promoted lan Levin to di28 10 16 2 22 48 85 rector ofminor leagueoperations. NamedTJ. Barra Metropolitan Division m anager of ba seball researchanddevelopment. GP W L OT Pls GF GA PITTSBURGHPIRATES— TradedLHPJoelyRoP ittsburgh 2 7 1 8 6 3 3 9 8 8 6 4 driguez to Philadelphia forLHPAntonioBastardo. N .Y. Islanders 28 19 9 0 3 8 9 0 7 9 BASKETBALL W ashington 27 13 10 4 3 0 79 74 National Basketball Association N.Y.Rangers 26 12 10 4 28 77 76 MILWAUKEE BUCKS— NamedMattPazarasseN ewJersey 29 11 13 5 2 7 68 83 nior vicepresidentof businessdevelopment. P hiladelphia 27 9 1 3 5 2 3 7 0 85 FOOTBALL C olumbus 27 1 0 15 2 2 2 6 4 90 National Football League C arolina 2 7 8 16 3 1 9 5 9 7 6 NFL —NamedPhoenixownerMichaelBidweff , WesternConference AtlantaownerArthur Blank, KansasCity owner Clark Central Oivision Dee Haslam, Cowboys executive vice president GP W L OTPtsGF GA Hunt, CharlotteJonesAnderson,Chicagoowner GeorgeMcChicago 2 8 19 8 1 3 9 8 8 5 5 C askey, Ho uston owner Robert McNair, Warrick Dunn Nashville 2 7 18 7 2 3 8 7 3 5 4 and John Stalworthto theconduct commitee. St. Louis 2 8 18 8 2 3 8 8 0 6 5 NFLPA — NamedAhmadNassarpresidentofNFL Winnipeg 2 9 15 9 5 3 5 6 9 6 6 Inc.,effectiveFeb.2. Minnesota 2 6 15 10 1 3 1 7 6 6 5 Players BALTIMORERAVENS— PlacedDBDannyGorrer Dallas 28 10 13 5 25 81 100 Colorado 2 8 9 13 6 2 4 7 2 92 on injuredreserve.ReleasedWRLaQuan Williams
Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA A naheim 3 0 1 9 6 5 43 8 7 8 0 V ancouver 29 18 9 2 3 8 8 8 8 1 C algary 29 1 7 1 0 2 3 6 9 0 7 6 SanJose 3 0 1 5 11 4 3 4 86 81 L osAngeles 28 14 9 5 3 3 7 2 60 Arizona 28 1 0 1 5 3 2 3 66 90 E dmonton 2 9 7 1 7 5 1 9 6 3 9 8 Wednesday'sGames Toronto2, Detroit1, SO Anaheim 2, Edmonton1 Today'sGames Chicag oatBoston,4p.m. CalgaryatBufalo, 4 p.m. NewJerseyatPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. ColumbusatWashington, 4p.m. Los AngelesatOttawa,4:30p.m. Carolinaat TampaBay,4:30p.m. N.y. Islanders at St.Louis, 5p.m. WinnipegatColorado,6 p.m. Nashville atArizona,6p.m. Minnes otaatSanJose,7:30p.m.
BASKETBALL Men's college Pac-12 All TimesPST
Wednesday'sGames
Utah65,BYU61 Colorado St. 62,Colorado60 UCLA77,UCRiverside 66 California45,Wyoming42
Saturday'sGames
PepperdineatArizonaSt., 11a.m. Utah atKansas,12:15 p.m. MississippiSt.atOregonSt.,1 p.m. MichiganatArizona,2:15p.m. N. CoioradoatColorado, 3p.m. Denverat Stanford, 3p.m. Oregon vs.Illinois,4 p.m. PrincetonatCalifornia, 5:30p.m. WashingtonSt.at SantaClara, 7p.m. GonzagaatUCLA, 7p.m. Army atSouthern Cal, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesdav'sGames
TOP 26 No. 1Kentucky56, Columbia46 No. 5Wisconsin93, Milwaukee54 No. 9Gonzaga81, Washington State66
No. 10Kansas75,Georgetown70
No.12 OhioState97, HighPoint 43 No.13 Utah65, BYU61 No.18 SanDiego State60, LongBeachState59 No.19 Maryland 67,North Carolina Central 56 No. 23Northernlowa65,Denver 55 No. 24St.John's74, Fairleigh Dickinson52
from the practice squad.SignedCBAntoineCason. SignedTEAllenReisnerto thepractice squda. BUFFALO BILLS— PlacedWRMikeWilliams on injuredreserve.ReleasedWREric Thomasfrom the practicesquad. CAROLINAPANTHERS — Rel eased QB Matt Blanchard.SignedRBTauren Poole to the practice squad. DENVERBRONCOS — ReleasedG MarkAsper from the practice squad. SigneWRIsaiah Burseto the practicesquad. DETROITLIONS— ReleasedRBMontell Owens from theactive rosterandLBJerrell Harrisfromthe practicesquad. HOUSTONTEXANS— PlacedJadeveonClowney on injuredreserve.SignedLBJasonAnkrahfromthe practicesquadand DEKourtnei Brownto the practice squad. JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS— PlacedRBDenard Robinsononinjuredreserve. KANSASCITYCHIEFS— SignedLBJoJoDickson to thepracticesquad. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—PlacedLBMichaelMauti on injuredreserve.SignedOTCarter Bykowski from SanFrancisco'spracticesquad. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Released FB Michael Zordichfromthepractice squad. NEW YORKGIANTS — Signed DT Dominique Hamiltonto thepractice squad. PHILADE LPHIA EAGLE
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
NBA ROUNDUP
C3
COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP
o Bazers a toTim erwo es The Associated Press
points, and Atlanta beat Phil-
MINNEAPOLIS — The Portland Trail B l azers had
adelphia for its eighth straight victory — the Hawks' longest winning streak in 17 years. Spurs 109, Knicks 95:SAN
trimmed a 20-point deficit to four in the fourth quarter, and
the young Minnesota Timberwolves looked a little jittery
ANTONIO —
as they tried to hold off the
points and short-handed San
charge. While h i s te a mmates scrambled, 19-year-old Andrew Wiggins was calm as can be, and the No. I overall pick responded with the flurry that saved the night. Wiggins scored five straight
Antonio rolled to victory over New York, which lost its 10th
straight. Hornets 96, Celtics 87: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Al Jefferson had 23 points and 14 rebounds, and Charlotte with-
stood Boston's fourth-quarter rally to win. Wizards 91, Magic 89: ORLANDO, Fla. — Bradley Beal
cial moment and finished with 23 points, 10 rebounds and four assists to help the Timberwolves stun the Trail Blazers with a 90-82 victory on
converted a lob pass at the buzzer to lift Washington over
Orlando. Clippers 103, Pacers 96:
Wednesday night. "The baby Wolves grew
I NDIANAPOLIS —
coach Flip Saunders said. Corey Brewer had 19 points, eight rebounds, five assists and five steals for the Timber-
pers hold off Indiana for their ninth straight win. Bulls 105, Nets 80: CHICAGO — Derrick Rose scored 23 points, Pau Gasol had 16
wolves, who snapped a sixgame losing streak and won for just the third time since Ricky Rubio went out with an
injured ankle on Nov. 7. They
D amian L i l lard
had 2 3
Ann Heisenfelt/The Associated Press
Minnesota forward Jeff Adrien, right, tries for a shot under pressure from Portland center Chris Kaman (35) during the third
quarter of Wednesday's game in Minneapolis. The Timberwolves won 90-82.
points and seven rebounds for cus Aldridge managed just of them outcompeting us for 10 points on 3-for-14 shoot- most of the game until we actually made a run."
points and 16 rebounds, and Chicago beat Brooklyn. Mavericks 112, Pelicans 107: DALLAS — Monta Ellis scored 13 of his 26 points in the final 5 minutes, and Dallas
outlasted New Orleans. Nuggets 102, Heat 82:DEN-
the Trail Blazers. But LaMaring, and Portland turned the
J a mal
Crawford scored 18 points and DeAndre Jordan grabbed a season-high 19 rebounds, helping the Los Angeles Clip-
up a little bit," Timberwolves
to overcome four key players being out with injuries.
tough," Aldridge said. Aldridge missed his first VER — W i l so n C h andler six shots and went scoreless scored 17 points, Arron Affla-
ball over 20 times and shot a Playing on the second night season-low 38.8 percent. The of a back-to-back against a Blazers scored 16 points in the team missing Rubio, Nikola second quarter and 15 in the P ekovic, Kevin M artin a n d
in the first half, Shabazz Muhammad attacked the stepslow Portland defense, and the
third, their two lowest outputs of the season, and lost for just
Mo Williams, the Blazers were
five times in the first 7 minutes
sluggish throughout in a loss that could sting when they
of the second half to fall be-
ami to snap a four-game losing streak. Warriors 105, Rockets 93: OAKLAND, Calif. — Klay Thompson and Stephen Curry
hind 60-40.
shook off slow starts to finish
the second time in 16 games. "We kind of were just like,
,5'
nelli scored a season-high 22
points at the game's most cru-
outrebounded Portland 56-38
0%lLLI '
M a r c o B eli-
'We'll fix it, we'll fix it.' And
look back at it in April. "You don't want to lose at
they just kept doing it," Lillard
all, and to lose right now with
said. "So it was just a matter
the West being so tight, it's
Blazers turned the ball over
lo had 16 and Denver beat Mi-
Also on Wednesday: Hawks 95, 76ers 79: AT-
with a flurry, and Golden State extended its franchise-best LANTA — Kyle Korver and winning streak to 14 games by Paul Millsap each scored 17 beating Houston.
NBA SCOREBOARD
Young Kwak/The Associated Press
Washington State's Ike Iroegbu goes after a loose ball against Gonzaga's Kyle Wiltjer, right, and Kevin Pangos during the first
half of Wednesday night's game inSpokane, Washington.
No. 9 Gonzagarolls to win over WashingtonSt. The Associated Press
Wyoming.
SPOKANE, W a s h. Przemek Karnowski tied a
No. 13 Utah 65, BYU 61: P ROVO, UTAH — D e l on Wright had 16 points and 11
career high with 22 points and No. 9 Gonzaga beat Washington State 81-66 on
Wednesday night. Kyle Wiltjer added 21 points and Byron Wesley had 20 for Gonzaga (8-1), which was coming off an overtime
Summaries
AllTimesPST
Easlern Conference d-Toronto d-Atlanta Washington d-Cleveland Chicago Milwaukee Miami Brooklyn Orlando Boston Indiana Charlotte NewYork Detroit Philadelphia
W 16 15 15 13 13 11 10 8 9 7 7 6 4 3 2
L 6 6 6 7 8 12 t2 12 15 t3 15 t5 20 19 tg
NEWORLEANS(1 07)
Timberwolves 90, Blazers 82 Pst GB 727 714 714 '/t 650 2
PORTLAND (82) Batttm1-62-25, Aldridge3-143-410, Lopez4-8 0-0 8, Lillard 9-243-3 23, Matthews7-13 0-0 t8, Blake0-10-00, Kaman4-90-1 8, Crabbe2-30-06, Freelartd0-0 0-00, Robinson1-t 0-0 2, Wright 0-1 619 2'/z 2-2 z Totals 31-8010-1282. 478 5'It MINNESOT A(90) 455 6 Wiggins9-165-1023, Young6-201-1 t3, Dieng 400 7 2-32-2 6,LaVine4-9 2-210, Brewer 4-u 10-1019, 375 8 Muhammad 4-14 3-4 11, Bennett O-t 0-0 0,AdrietI 350 8 3-72-48,Hummel0-0 0-00.Totals32-81 25-33 318 9 90. 286 9'A Portland 16 20 15 31 — 82 167 13 Minnesota 20 24 22 24 — 90 136 13 3-Point Goal— s Portland 10-35 (Matthews4-10, 095 t3'/z Crabbe2-3, Lillard 2-12, Aldridge1-3, Batum1-5, Western Conference W L Pst GB Wright0-1,Blake0-1j, Minnesota1-12(Brewer1-2, d-Golden State Muhammad 0-1,Wiggins 0-2,LaVine 0-2,Young 19 2 905 d-Memphis 0-5). FouledOut—Matthews. Rebounds—Portland 17 4 810 2 d-Portland 773 2'/z 43 (Aldridge 9), Minnesota 65 (Adrien11). As17 5 sists — Portland 20(Batum6), Minnesota22 (LaVine, LA. Clippers 16 5 762 3 Brewer5). TotalFouls—Portland 25, Minnesota19. Houston 16 5 762 3 A—t0,337 (19,356). SanAntonio 16 6 727 3'/t Dallas 17 7 708 3'It Phoenix 12 t1 522 8 Bulls105, Nets80 Sacramen to 11 11 500 8'It NewOrleans 1g t1 476 9 BROOK LYN(80) Denver 10 12 455 91/2 Anderson 5-10 0-0 12, Garrtett 6-15 1-1 13, Oklahoma City 8 1 3 381 1 t Plumlee 3-11 2-58, Wi l iams 5-15 6-717, Karasev Utah 6 t 6 273 t3'/z 3-8 0-0 6,Jordan3-74-410, Jefferson2-6 0-04, LA. Lakers 6 16 273 13'/t Jack 1-85-6 7, Bogdanovic0-5 0-0 0,Brown1-3 Minnesota 5 t 6 238 14 1-1 3, Gutierrez0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-88 19-24 d-divisionleader 80. CHICAGO (105) Wednesday'sGames Dunleavy 5-100-014, Gibson5-91-2 u, Gasol Washington91, Orlando89 5-9 6-616, Rose 8-154-5 23,Butler 6-106-1018, LA. Clippers103,Indiana96 Hinrich 3-60-0 6, Mirotic 3-9 3-610, Brooks2-4 Charlotte96,Boston87 3-3 7, Bai r stow 0-3 0-0 0, Snell 0-1 0-0 0,Moore Atlanta95, Philadelphia 79 0-20-00,MohammedO-t0-00.Totals 37-79 Chicago105,Brooklyn80 23-32105. Dallas02, Neworleans107 Brooklyn 25 26 17 12 — 80 Minnesota 90, Portland82 Chicago 20 31 26 28 — 105 SanAntonio109,NewYork95 GoldenStatet05, Houston93 Denvert02, Miami82 Spurs109, Knicks95
Today'sGames
ClevelandatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. Housto natSacramento,7:30p.m.
Friday'sGames PortlandatChicago,4p.m. LA, Clippers atWashington, 4p.m. OrlandoatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Indianaat Toronto,4:30p.m. NewYorkatBoston,4:30 p.m. PhiladelphiaatBrooklyn,4:30p.m. Cleveland atNewOrleans,5p.m. Charlotteat Memphis, 5p.m. OklahomaCity at Minnesota, 5p.m. Detroit atPhoenix, 6p.m. Miami atUtah,6 p.m. LA,LakersatSanAntonio,6:30p.m.
NEWYORK(95) Hardaway Jr. 9-181-223, Acy3-6 2-2 8, Stoudemire4-6 0-0 8, Calderon1-4 0-0 2, Shum pert 2-6 4-5 8,Dalembert1-4 0-02, Ja.smith 5-104-4 14, Larkin 2-32-2 6, Prigioni 3-70-0 8,Wear3-5 0-0 6, Aldrich 4-7 2-2 10.Totals 37-76 15-17 95. SANANTONIO(109) Anderson4-5 0-0 9, Bonner4-51-2 10, Baynes 1-48-8 10,Joseph4-91-2 9, Green3-10 6-713, Belinelli 6-137-722,Diaw5-90-012, Ayres5-51-21t, Daye 4-110-010, Splitter1-21-2 3. Totals37-73 25-30109. NewYork 26 26 21 22 — 95 San Antonio 29 27 38 15 — 109
Babbitt 2-7 0-0 5,Davis 11-209-9 31, Asik 2-6 2-4 6, roliday12-221-230,Evans4-11 0-08, Cunningham 2-30-04, Anderson3-87-713, Rivers2-5 1-26, Mekel2-60-04.Totals40-8820-24107.
DALLAS (112) Parsonss-131-120, Nowitzki 8-164-420, ChandleI 4-71-1 9,BareaI-7 0-0 2, Ellis 11-192-3 26, Aminti 0-03-43, Harris8-131-120,Wright2-21-1 5,Crowdert-40-03,Jeffersottt-22-24. Totals4483 15-17 112.
Newsrleans Dallas
Iizards 91, Magic89 WASHING TON(91)
Pierce310 00 8, Humphries5121-2 11,Gortat 5-90-010, Wall10-170-121,Beal4-80-09, Butler 26 t-26, Nene680012, Miller001-21, Porter 2-31-25, Seraphi4-80-08. n Totals41-814-991.
ORLANDO (89)
Harris 7-110-1 t5, Frye4-50-010,O'Quinrt4-15 1-210, Oladipo7-162-217, Fournier3-50-07, Dedmon 2-22-2 6,Payton6-15 0-012, Nicholson0-1
0-00, B.Gordon2-90-04,Green3-t1-28.Totals 38-84 6-9 89. Washington 26 19 22 24 — 91 15 3 6 27 29 — 107 25 22 30 35 — 112 Orlando 21 23 31 14 — 89
Hawks95, 76ers79 PHIULDEL PHIA(79) Mbah aMoute5-9 0-1 12, Noel3-72-4 8, Sims 0-31-21, Carter-Wiliams4-70-08, Thompson3-7 1-1 8,McDaniels 3-0 3-4 10,Covington3-01-29, Grant5-70-210,Shved4-85-613, Sampson 0-1 0-0 0, Lee0-10-00. Totals 30-7213-22 79. ATLANTA (95) Carroll 5-12 2-3 14, Milsap7-132-217, Horford 5-12 1-211,Teaguet-5 2-2 4, Korver6-11 0-017, Antic2-60-05, Mack2-7 1-26,Schroder2-91-25, Sefol osha0-40-00,Muscal a6-80-012,Bazemore 2-30-04, Jertkins O-t 0-00. Totals 38-919-1395. P hiladelphia 21 17 2 0 21 — 79 Atlanta 25 22 21 27 — 95
Clippers103, Pacers96
Warriors105, Rockets93 HOUSTON (93)
Ariza 5-144-618, Motiejttnas8-172-4 18,Black 3-3 0-0 6,Hardent4-27 3-4 34,Beverley5-15 0-0 12, Johnson0-20-00, Terry 1-t 0-02, Dorseyt-2
1-1 3, Danielsg-10-00, Capela0-10-00. Totals 37-8910-15 93. GOLDENSTATE(105) Barnes7-93-320, Green4-82-211, Ezeli2-43-4 7, Thompson 8-184-421, Curry8-151-120,Iguodala 0-41-21, Speights6-133-315, Livingston 4-9 0-1 8,Barbosa1-10-0z Totals 40-8117-20105. Houston 30 16 30 17 — 93 Goldenstate 23 23 2 7 32 — 105
Nuggets102, Heat82
MIAMI (82) Deng5-102-412, Hamilton2-50-04, Bosh5-12 LA. CLIPPERS (103) Barnes4-8 2-2 u, Griffin 7-17 3-4 17,Jordan 3 514, Cole3-80-26, Wade4-152-210,Chalmers 5-8 2-3 12,Redick7-11 0-0 16, Paul7-163-3 17, 3-64-4 11,Haslem0-20-00, Ennis0-32-22, WilCrawford7-122-218, Hawe s2-7 0-05, Farmar2-5 liams39009, Napie1-3003,Granger1-6225, r 0-05, Turkogltt0-1 0-00, Davis1-30-02. Totals White side3-30-06.Totals30-8215-21 82. 42-8812-14103. OENVER (102) INDIANA (96) Chandler8-170-017, Hickson3-50-2 6,Mozgov 3-123-510, Afflalo6-8 3-416, Copeland 3-92-210, Westt-T0-02, Hibbert 2-4 4-71-1 9, Lawson Arihur 1-61-1 4,Harris2-71-27, Faried4-95-613, 004, SHill1-1 224, Stuckey 40 2210, Miles022 1-430,Scola5-102-2 12,Allen7-110-0 14,Watson Gee3-52-2 8, Green4-71-211, Nurkic 0-21-2 1. t-76-88, Rude z0-1 2-2z Totals35-8917-2296. Totals38-8518-27102. 21 27 14 20 — 82 L.Ar Clippers 33 2 1 28 21 — 103 Miami Indiana 25 24 16 31 — 96 Denver 22 26 31 23 — 102
Hornets96, Celtics87 BOSTON (87)
Green6-124-516, Stillirtger 2-100-0 5, TZeller 6-91-t 13, Rondo 6-110-012, Bradley2-9 0-04, Olynyk 4-70-28,Turner0-40-00,Smart0-20-00, Bass5-9 0-0t0, Thornton6-131-216, Pressey1-1 0-03.Totals38-876-10 87.
CHARLOlrE (96) Henderson 3-90-07, C.Zeller3-63-39, Jefferson 9-15 5-623,Walker5-14 7-818, SIephertson6-14 t-2 t3, KiddGilchrist 36 33 9,Wiliams371-3 8, Biyombo0-02-22,Neal1-91-23, Roberts2-40-04. Totals 35-8423-2996. Boston 16 29 21 21 — 87 Charlotle 22 18 33 23 — 96
Leaders
ThroughWednesday's Games Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden,HOU 21 157 175 537 25.6 Bryant,LAL 22 t92 146 562 25.5 Davis,NOR 21 205 117 527 25.1 James,CLE 20 172 120 495 24.8 Griffin, LAC 21 192 107 497 23.7 Curry,GO L 21 168 84 482 23.0 Anthony,NYK 21 t80 89 480 2zg Aldridge,PO R 21 176 92 456 21.7 Gay,SAC 20 150 u4 432 21.6 Bosh,MIA 22 171 99 474 21.5 Butler,CHI 19 t32 129 409 21.5 Thompson, GOL 20 t48 71 423 21.2
Colorado St. 62, Colorado 60: BOULDER, Colo. J.J. Avila scored 19 points -
and Daniel Bejarano sealed the victory by grabbing a rebound off a m i ssed free
Josh Hawkinson had 18 points and 11 rebounds for Washington State ( 4-5), which has lost four straight to the Bulldogs. DaVonte Lacy and Ike Iroegbu scored 14 apiece. G onzaga has won 3 1 straight home games, the second-longest streak in the
throw in the final seconds as Colorado State beat Colorado to extend the best start in
school history.
Top 25 No. 1 Kentucky 56, CoIumbia 46:
LE X I N GTON,
Ky.— Kentucky gave up the first 11 points, still trailed at
halftime and finally shook Gonzaga star guard Kev- off a slow start to beat pesky in Pangos, who hit the floor Columbia. hard when he was blocked No. 5 Wisconsin 93, Milby Jordan Railey while try- waukee 54:MILWAUKEEing a layup in the opening Frank Kaminsky scored 18 minutes, was h eld s core- points and Sam Dekker addnation.
less for the first time in his
Mavericks112, Pelicans107
BYU.
loss at No. 3 Arizona.
career. Standings
rebounds to help Utah beat
ed 17 as Wisconsin extended its dominance over in-state
Karnowski, a t 7 - f oot-l, rival Wisconsin-Milwaukee. dominated the smaller CouNo. 10 Kansas 75, Georgegars inside, making 10 of 15 town 70: WA S H INGTON shots, including a flurry of — Brannen Greene went
left-handed hooks. Gonzaga dominatedthe rebounding 36-23 and scored 56 points in the paint. After the Zags led by 10 at halftime, Wesley scored
three quick baskets in the opening minutes of the second half as Gonzaga built a 48-33 lead. Ny R edding's b asket brought Washington State to 50-39. But baskets by Wilt-
5 for 5 from 3-point range and scored a career-high 19 points as Kansas made a statement with a win over
Georgetown. No. 12 Ohio State 97, High Point 43:COLUMBUS, Ohio
— Kam Williams scored a career-high 23 points, including 13 in a row for Ohio State in the first half against High Point.
No. 18 San Diego State 60, jer and Domantas Sabonis Long Beach State 59:SAN pushed Gonzaga's lead back DIEGO — Dwayne Polee II to 15. hit a tying 3-pointer and JJ Gonzaga made 10 of its O'Brien made a go-ahead first 13 shots in the second putback as San Diego State half to thwart the Cougars' rallied with a 1 9 -10 closcomeback hopes. ing run to beat Long Beach Hawkinson scored seven
State.
points and Brett Boese sank No. 19 Maryland 67, N.C. a 3-pointer during a 10-2 run Central 5 6 : C OL L E G E that pulled WSU to 62-53. PARK, Md. — Richaud Pack Also on Wednesday: scored 17 points, Jake Layman added 15 and Maryland Pac-12 took control in the first half UCLA 77, UC Riverside 66: LOS ANGELES — Nor-
before coasting past North
erside for its fourth straight win and seventh in a row at
his 11 in the first half, when
Carolina Central. man Powell scored 20 points, No. 23 Northern lowa 65, starting a second-half rally Denver 55:DENVER — Seth with seven straight points, Tuttle had 12 p oints and and UCLA defeated UC Riv- Deon Mitchell scored nine of Northern Iowa missed only home. two shots from the floor California 45, Wyoming 42: against Denver. BERKELEY, Calif. — Ttir-
No. 24 St. John's 74, Fair-
rone Wallacescored 12ofhis including an emphatic dunk
leigh Dickinson 52: NEW YORK — D'Angelo Harrison scored 26 points and
with 22.7 seconds left, and
Phil Greene IV had 16 to
17 points in the second half,
California overcame a slug- lead St. John's past Fairleigh gish night offensively to beat Dickinson.
Owners unanimouslyapprove new personal conduct policy union wants Goodell removed enNFL tirely from the disciplinary process. IRVING, Texas — NFL owners The players believe any changes to think there's any need for legal moved quickly and unanimously the personal conduct policy should challenges." Wednesday to change the league's be part of labor negotiations. The union has sought negotiapersonal conduct policy. Now the Asked whether he anticipated a tions with the NFL on any revampquestion is how, or whether, the challenge from the union, Goodell ing of the policy, and said Tuesday players' union responds. deferred to NFL general counsel Jeff it would "reserve the right to take The league announced it will hire Pash, who said the owners' decision any and all actions" should the owna special counsel for investigations w as "entirely consistent with t h e ers act unilaterally. The union could and conduct to oversee initial discollective bargaining agreement." consider the vote by owners a vio"I don't know whether the union lation of the collective bargaining cipline, but Commissioner Roger Goodell will retain authority to rule will challenge it or not, but we've agreement reached in 2011, giving on appeals. The commissioner also given it a lot of thought," Pash the union cause to file a grievance. may appoint a panel of independent said. "And I would hope they don't Among the union's options is experts to participate in appeals. challenge. We'd be happy to sit pursuing an unfair labor practice Amid questions over his handling down with them again tomorrow charge with the National Labor of domestic violence cases involving if they wanted to have some fur- Relations Board. The players could Ray Rice and Adrian Peterson, the ther conversations about it. I don't argue this policy is a change in By Schuyler Dixon The Associated Press
policy changes through collective ment; the National Labor Relations bargaining. "You would think, you would Act says such changes in unionized situations are subject to collective hope anything having to do with bargaining. the players and especially discipline "Our union has not been offered and things like that players would the professi onal courtesy of seeing have some say so in the policy," the NFL's new personal conduct Sherman said. "At least something policy before it hit the presses," the we could agree on, everybody is union said in a statement issued af- comfortable with, but obviously that ter Wednesday's vote. "Their unilat- isn't what they saw fit." eral decision and conduct today is Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said the only thing that has been consis- he was "aware of a lot of the things tent over the past few months." that the union is an advocate of." terms and conditions of employ-
Seattle cornerback Richard Sherm an r e iterated c r i ticisms f r o m
other players Wednesday that the NFL was "making things up as they go along" by not pursuing
"This differs in some respects,"
Jones said. "At the end of the day, we're all t r y ing t o
d o t h e s ame
thing. We're trying to influence and diminish domestic violence."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
Prep doys dasketdall at aglance
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Andersen Continued from C1 "We have hired the right coach," Oregon State athletic director Bob De Carolis said. "We are investing in the new and expanded facilities he needs, including the $42 million makeover of the Valley Football Center we announced earlier today. We are ready to have Gary
A look at Central Oregon's Class4A, 3A, 2Aand1A teams:
Class4A CROOKCOUNTY Head coach:Darin Kessi (second season) 2013-14record:3-20 overall, 1-2 SD1(second) Outlook: TheCowboyshavemissed outonthepostseason each of the last two years andposted their second three-win season in the last three years. But CrookCounty opens the 2014-15 campaign with nothing but upperclassmen onits roster, one that includes five seniors and six juniors. Behind junior guards Blake Bartels andGarrett Harper, the Cowboys look to contend in their new league —the Tri-Valley Conference. MADRAS Head coach:Allen Hair (eighth season) 2013-14record:10-14 overall, 3-7 TVC (fourth) Outlook:TheWhite Buffaloes will be led this season by senior guard Jered Pichette, last season's Tri-Valley Conferenceplayer of the year and asecond-team all-state selection. Hewill be joined in the starting lineup bysenior Brent Sullivan at the post position and senior wing VoshaunBryant. Giving the teamadded depth will be senior ChadLingren andjunior wings Sean LeRichie and BryceRehwinkel aswell as Dalton Herkshan in post. Hair says one ofthe challengesthis season is the leadership of the seniors andhowthey can pull the teamtogether toward the common goal of making it to the state tournament. SISTERS Head coach:RandRunco (17th season) 2013-14record:4-19, 2-8 Sky-Em (fifth) Outlook:Sisters boasts eight returning players this season, including second-team all-Sky-Em forward Justin Harrer. The bad news is that Harrer is out with an offseason ankle injury. Runco hopes to get him back into the starting lineup by the time the Outlaws start league play in January. But there is no lack of depth with the return of senior BenLarson andHayes Moore at the guard positions, senior Connor Schaab atforward and senior TysenGill at post.
Class2A CULVER Head coach:BrennanWhitaker (fourth season) 2013-14record:3-20, 2-14 TRC(eighth) Outlook:With eight returning letter winners, including three starters from last year's team that tied for last in the Tri-River Conference, Whitaker has high expectations for a better season as the Bulldogs jump to theColumbia Basin Conference. "I think this could be thebest defensive team I haveever coached," says Whitaker. "Weexpect to be in the mix at the top half in our league, which is a hugestep for this program. We could really havemeaningful gamesthe last half of the league season." GuardsCorey SledgeandTristan Bogart, both juniors, and senior forward AdamKneppwill provide the core for the starting lineup. Culver is short on height with only two players over 6 feet on the roster, so the key to asuccessful season, according to Whitaker, will be astrong defense and keeping offensive lulls to a minimum.
Class1A Head couch:DanPoet (fourth season) 2013-14record:1-14overall, 0-7 BSL (10th) Outlook:Led by seniors Caleb Roberts and CalebReynolds, the Tigers return five players from last season's roster as they transition to the Mountain Valley League.Adding scoring depth for Central Christian are sophomoreJacob Bieverand junior Bryson Eells astheTigers join the 10-team conference that includes Gilchrist.
GILCHRIST Head coach:ToddWhite (third season) 2013-14record:15-9 overall, 8-3 MVL (third) Outlook:The Grizzlies just missed out on the state playoffs last season, finishing third at the Mountain Valley League tournament. This season, nine returning players highlight Gilchrist's roster, including 6-3 post JamesWible andwing Thomas Lowell — the loneseniors. Behind those two, the Grizzlies, whose 15wins last season werethe program's most since joining 1A inthe 2004-05 season, havetheir sights set on a postseason run.
accept lesser roles to improve
the team is a key to winning. He refers to Manu Ginobili of the reigning NBA champion San Antonio Spurs as a player willing to come off the bench because that is best
for his team. The White Buffaloes are certainly not the Spurs, but
they can learn from players like Ginobili, Hair believes. "Championship-caliber teams are successfulbecause they have strong leadership," Hair says. "Even when you look at the Spurs, they have guys like Ginobili,
View, then travel to face defending Class 4A state champion Philomath.
"For us, you have to play a
higher classification team or
travel a lot(inthepreseason)," Hair says. "I think we've got the talent and ability. I think
we can be a top-eight team. We have the ability to get to Hillsboro for the final eight. We've got to stayhealthy." Sisters is also coming off a disappointing season, in which the Outlaws finished 4-19 overalL But the return of a number of seniors has
coach Rand Runco confident that the Outlaws can be a force in the Class 4A Sky-
fore becoming an assistant at Utah. He is 49-38 overall as a head coach.
Andersen tha n k ed Wisconsin in a prepared statement.
"We worked very hard together and accomplished some great things," Andersen said. "I had the oppor-
Michael Conroy I The Associated Press
Wisconsin head coachGary Andersen roamsthe field before the start of the Big Ten Conference championship on Saturday in Indianapolis. The Badgers will now look to fill its vacant coaching position after Andersen took the open position at Oregon State.
tunity to meet and coach
some great young men and I look forward to watching them as they continue their
Wisconsin aims to ire
'anot er exce entcoac '
The baddest athletic director in the land will not waste
time wondering why Wisconsin has turned into a farm team for other programs. No, Barry Alvarez has a job to do — and that is to replace Gary Andersen, who shocked his players Wednesday when he told them he was bolting for Oregon State after just two seasons in Madison.
"I'm a big boy," Alvarez said. "I understand this business. People move for differ-
ent reasons; that's why I'm always prepared. We'll go hire a good coach. Put him in place. Get him started in r ecruit-
ing. I know one thing: I won't flinch." T he news of t h e d a y Wednesday a t W is c onsin expected to i nvolve Melvin
Gordon, the star tailback who flew to Orlando, Fla., for to-
day's college football awards show on ESPN. The fourth-
year junior acknowledged on "The Dan Patrick Show" that
he would be turning pro, later telling the Tribune: "Yeah, he just kind of got (the information) out of me." A tougher task was pulling information from Wisconsin and Oregon State officials afhe believed Andersen would leave.
That made sense to an industry source who said Andersen was "not happy" in Madison and it was "an awkward deal from the start." Andersen is from Salt Lake
City, played at Utah and has spent nearly all of his coaching career in the West. His
previous head coaching jobs they want him to step in again were at Utah State and South- and coach. "Very flattering," Alvarez ern Utah. Many believed Utah was said. "I told them I'd make up Andersen's dream job and he my mind (Wednesday night). would wait to see if Utes coach
It's about the kids. I want them
Kyle Whittingham would depart, perhaps for Michigan, before making a move. But Oregon State, in need of a coach after Mike Riley left for Nebraska, struck quickly.
to have a good experience, to feel good about it." He wants them to feel great about Andersen's successor.
Andersen will be introduced
use a search firm, as most
Friday in Corvallis.
schools do, to help him find a replacement.
He went 19-7 at Wisconsin.
After Bielema left, a report-
er asked Alvarez if he would
NHL ROUNDUP
Ducks win 5th straight The Associated Press ANAHEIM, Calif. — Matt
Beleskey scored his 14th goal and Frederik Andersen made 21 saves i n
careers and move through life." The Badgers had an inconsistent season, losing two of their first five games but recovering to win sev-
en straight. But the season ended with a thud when the team was blown out by Ohio State 59-0 in the Big
Ten championshipgame. Riley was credited with
turning around an Oregon State team that had 26 straight losing seasons when he first became head coach in1997.He left for the San Diego Chargers in 1999, and Dennis Erickson coached the Beavers for four seasons from 1999 to
2002. Riley returned to Oregon State in 2003.
"Most search committees," The Badgers won the Big Ten Riley took the Beavers West this season, but Ohio Alvarez shot back, "use me." to eight bowl appearances, State crushed them 59-0 in the S imilarly, w he n A l v a compiling a 6-2 bowl record. conference title game. rez was asked Wednesday De Carolis called Riley's "I thought Gary was a good about the biggest challenge replacement a man with fit," Alvarez said. "There was in finding a new coach, he "integrity and substance." "He has extensive West never any talk of 'someday replied: eNo challenge. We I'd like to get back to that part have a great product to sell, Coast ties and knows the of the country.' Maybe when a great community, a worldlandscape of the Pacific-12 you're away for a while, that class university. My phone is Conference, having previsettles in. I don't know that. ringing off the hook already. ously coached at Utah, a Those are things you may I'll be very busy answering current conference memwant to ask him." phone calls from agents and ber. He is part of the Urban What we also would like to coaches trying to get in on Meyer coaching tree," De know is w hether Andersen this job." Carolis said. "He and his had an issue with Wisconsin's Alvarez said he already has staff will teach offense and admissions standards or sala- a "short list." Logical candidefense,and lif e lessons ry concerns involving him or dates include Wisconsin asabout values and character. his assistants. sistants-turned-head-coaches They will guide our student-athletes to success in Two years ago Bret Bielema Paul Chryst (Pittsburgh) and left for Arkansas in part beDave Doeren (North Carolilife and careers upon leavcause Wisconsin would not in- na State), Seattle Seahawks ing Oregon State." crease the salary pool enough offensive coordinator and to retain top assistants. Many former Badgers quarterback suspect Bielema also wanted Darrell Bevell and top Big Ten to escape the mighty shadow coordinators Pat Narduzzi of Alvarez, who won t hree (Michigan State) and Tom Rose Bowls as the Badgers' Herman (Ohio State). "As I stressed to the players Plae Well, Retire Well coach. After Bielema left, Alvarez two years ago: 'Everyone's returned to the sideline for the afraid of change, but you can 2013 Rose Bowl, which Stan- grow through change,' " Alford won 20-14. The Badgers varez said. "I promised them will face Auburn in the Jan. that our program would not 1 Outback Bowl, and Alva- take a step back. We will rerez said the players told him place Coach Andersen with 775SW onneWay,Suite120•Ben 541-728 -0321•Niww.elevationcalitalstralegies.com during a Wednesday meeting another excellent coach."
HAPPY HQLIDAYs
Find It All
Online
FROM THE PHYSICIANS AND STAFF AT BEND UROLOGY Ir ' bawL@r.
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TheBulletin
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Ducks' fifth consecutive victory, 2-1 over the spiraling Edmonton Oilers on Wednesday
night. Ryan Kesler also scored for the NHL-leading Ducks, who held off last-place Edmonton's late charge for their eighth win in 10 games. Anaheim (19-6-5) is three points ahead of Detroit in the overall standings. The Ducks' last 12 victories were by just one goal, and they
Em League. "We return several players and feel we will be very who is one of the best players competitive in league," Runin the league, and he's OK co says. "I know we will play coming off the bench." well defensively, but we need Madras, which has missed to have consistent scoring several days of practice to this season to t ur n t h ose weather-related school clo- close games into wins. We sures, faces a tough ear- lost several close games last ly-season schedule. The Buf- year and have worked hard faloes play only two home in the weight room and on games before league play the court to turn the corner." starts. In early January, they — Reporter: 541-383-0318,
hung on to that slim lead after
play at Class 5A Mountain
Leafs beat Detroit.
mmorlcal@bendbulletin.com
short stint as head coach at Southern Utah in 2003 be-
4t'-
ter a source told the Tribune in the early afternoon that
CENTRALCHRISTIAN
Continued from C1 Hair adds that having players who are willing to
State, where he spent four
seasons. He also had a
Chicago Tribune
LA PINE Head coach:Josh Mclnnis (first season) 2013-14record:10-14 overall, 2-8 Sky-Em (fifth) Outlook: TheHawksaremovingfrom the4A Sky-Em League to the 3A Mountain Valley Conference this season. LaPine lost considerable varsity experience to graduation last spring, according to Mclnnis, but the first-year coach is confident that players like senior Tyress Turnsplenty and juniors lan Johnson and Austin Kentner will help make La Pine competitive. Adding roster depth will be ConradParker andTaylor Brown. "We have a goodcore group of underclassmen that put sometime in over the summerand it shows," Mclnnis says. "And I think our seniors are really excited about playing in this new league."
take us to the next level." Andersen was 19-7 in his two seasons as Wis-
consin's coach. He came to the Badgers from Utah
By Teddy Greenstein
Class3A
Madras
~f= r
Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored early in the third for Edmonton, which has lost 13 of 14.
Former Ducks goalie Viktor Fasth stopped 32 shots for the
Oilers (7-17-5), who are tied with Carolina for the fewest points in the NHL.
Also on Wednesday: Maple Leafs2, Red Wings 1: DETROIT — M i k e Santorelli scored Toronto's second
shootout goal, and the Maple
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C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
+
NASDAQ ~
17,533.15
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
+
<2 44
4,684.03
TOdap Holiday haul?
2 040.
The Commerce Department reports today U.S. retail sales figures for November. The datashould provide some insight into how holiday season sales are faring, as it will include Thanksgiving Day and Black Friday, two of the busiest shopping days of the year. Economists project that retail sales rose in November for the second month in a row. Retail sales seasonally adjusted percent change est. 0.4
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Rough stretch Lululemon has been working to improve its operations since a headline-grabbing stumble last year. The yoga gear company alienated some customers after it introduced yoga pants that were too sheer. Fixing the problem cost the company millions. Lululemon's sales have improved recently, prompting the company to raise its full-year outlook in September. Did its good fortune continue in the third quarter? Find out today, when Lululemon reports its latest results.
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.... Close: 17,533.15 Change: -268.05 (-1.5%)
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StocksRecap NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 4,025 1,813 Pvs. Volume 3,875 1,875 Advanced 5 60 4 8 0 Declined 2622 2241 New Highs 114 92 New Lows 2 70 1 2 7
16 000
0
J
J
A
HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17797.99 17508.10 17533.15 -268.05 DOW Trans. 9008.69 8852.33 8858.34 -121.61 DOW Util. 609.72 597.28 597.46 -7.91 NYSE Comp. 1081 6.77 10649.12 10662.24 -185.12 NASDAQ 4766.64 4679.25 4684.03 -82.44 S&P 500 2058.86 2024.26 2026.14 -33.68 S&P 400 1440.79 1413.33 1414.24 -27.59 Wilshire 5000 2161 6.03 21226.88 21244.73 -371.30 Russell 2000 1185.03 1161.86 1161.86 -26.20
%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -1.51% L +5.77% -1.35% L +1 9.70% -1.31% L L +21.79% -1.71% +2.52% -1.73% L L +1 2.15% -1.64% L +9.62% -1.91% +5.34% -1.72% L +7.81% -2.20% -0.15%
NorthwestStocks Alaska Air Group A LK 34.81 ~ Avista Corp A VA 26.79 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 t -r Barrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 o — Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 11~ ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — o CostcoWholesale COST 109.50— o Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ty FLIR Systems F LIR 28.03 ~ Hewlett PacKard HP Q 2 6.29 ~ Intel Corp I NTC 23.50 ~ Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 5.30 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ MDU Resources MDU 23 . 03 o — Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.25 ~ Microsoft Corp MSFT 34.63 ~ Nike Inc 8 N KE 69.85 ~ Nordstrom Inc J WN 54.90 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 40.05 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 53.59 ~ Planar Systms PLNR 1.93 ~ Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 215.09 ~ Safeway Inc SWY 26.69 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCHN 2 1.41 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 170.63 — 0 StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ StarbucbsCp SBUX 67.93 ~ Triquint Semi TQNT 7.75 — o Dmppua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.94 ty US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ Washington Fedl WAF D 19.52 ty— WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 3.47 — o Weyerhaeuser WY 2 7 .48 — o
59.97 55. 1 9 - 1 .21 -2.1 T T 35.98 3 4. 2 7 -.61 -1.7 L T 18.0 3 17 . 38 -.18 -1.0 T L 10 2 .20 22 . 01 + . 12 +0.5 L T 144. 5 7 12 4.64 -5.02 -3.9 T T 5.82 4.70 -.10 -2.1 T T T 0.3 6 27.10 -.90 -3.2 T 45.51 44.42 -.07 -0.2 T L 14 3.49140.25 -2.79 -2.0 T L 17.97 13 .16 -.50 -3.7 T T 37.42 3 2. 1 4 -.58 -1.8 L T 39. 6 5 37.36 -.84 -2.2 T L 37.90 3 6. 4 2 -.47 -1.3 T L 14.70 1 3.4 8 -.34 -2.5 T ~ 61.98 6 1. 3 6 -.13 -0.2 L L T 9.19 6.13 -.48 -7.3 T 18.96 1 6. 1 1 -1.13 -6.6 L L 36.0 5 22 . 7 4 -.97 -4.1 T T 24.31 2 1. 4 1 -.81 -3.6 T T T 50.05 4 6. 9 0 - .69 -1.4 T 99.76 97. 6 6 +. 6 3 +0.6 T L 77.20 7 3.3 9 - 1 . 25 - 1 .7 T L 48.54 47. 3 0 - 1 .24 -2.6 L L 71.1 5 6 8. 3 1 -2.21 -3.1 T L 8.12 7.30 -.05 -0.7 T L 46.99 4 1. 5 3 -.13 -0.3 ~ L 275. 0 9 23 4.90 -6.99 -2.9 T L 36.03 3 4. 6 1 -.25 -0.7 T T 33.32 2 3. 4 0 -.27 -1.1 L T 25 0 .00246.80 -2.78 -1.1 ~ L 70.35 66. 8 7 - 1 .51 -2.2 T T 84.20 8 2. 6 6 -.37 -0.4 T L 26.53 25 .60 -.20 -0.8 T L 19.65 16 .96 -.57 -3.3 T T 45.52 4 4. 6 4 -.57 -1.3 T L 24. 53 21 . 66 -.61 -2.7 T T 55.35 54 .26 -.57 -1.0 T L L 36.35 36.05 - .10 -0.3 L
L
+50. 4 +5 2 .7 1 460 14 0 . 5 0
L
+21.6
L T T T L L
L T L L L L
L T L T L L
L L L L L L T L T L L L L L
L L
+31 . 7
48 2 11
1.2 7
+11. 6 +1 3 .5100734 16 0 . 20 -76.3 -73.3 237 d d 0 .88f -8.7 -1.6 6443 18 2 . 92 -10.1 -7.3 64 -1.4 +7 . 5 21 7 1 7 0 . 64f +12.8 +29 .9 1 8 6 2 6 0. 6 0f +17. 8 +1 8 .7 4 828 30 1 . 4 2 -19.9 -14.8 60 82 +6.8 t 14. 3 1 3 21 2 3 0. 4 0 +33.5 +42 .5 13606 14 0 . 6 4 + 40.3 t 51. 6 26981 17 0 .96f + 0 . 4 +9 . 2 10751 13 0 . 26 + 55. 2 +5 3 .8 5 006 19 0 .74f +11.7 +17 .4 1 6 37 2 8 - 13.0 + 6.9 4 989 dd -25.6 -16.9 92 8 1 4 0 .73f -11.1 511 18 0 .20 +25.4 +25 .9 29833 18 1 . 2 4 +24. 2 +2 2 .8 3 130 33 1 .12f +18.8 +25 .1 1 4 88 1 9 1. 3 2 +10.5 +20 .7 70 22 1.8 6 f + 15.4 $. 2 7.1 1 814 19 0 .88a t 187. 4 + 180.5 3 9 3 4 3 -10.7 - 3.2 83 2 4 0 1 . 7 6 -12.8 -4.6 1064 18 0 . 12 +18.7 +21 .9 1 2 47 3 0.92 -28.4 - 20.2 397 8 1 0 . 75 +3 4 . 5 + 3 5.7 4 8 7 2 8 2 . 2 0 +0.9 +8.3 155 13 1. 3 0f +5.4 +5.5 48 9 9 3 1 1 . 28f +207 .0 + 218.9 3332 c c -11.4 -1.7 1314 2 3 0 . 6 0 +10. 5 +1 6 .2 8 818 15 0 . 9 8 -7.0 -4.1 6 1 6 1 4 0 . 59f +19. 5 +2 6 .8 20692 13 1 . 40 +14. 2 +2 3.6 4 650 2 7 1 . 16
,'
52-WEEK RANGE
Price-earnings ratio: 146
$110
Dividend: none
147
AP
AmdFocus
Source: Factaet
Delafield Fund recently had its Morningstar analyst rating MarhetSummary lowered to Bronze from Silver, Most Active although Morningstar says its NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG long-term results remain solid. 203.16 -3.31 17.38 -.18 11.44 -.18 30.33 +2.89 39.31 -.59 19.21 -.56 2.68 +.44 25.27 -.31 4.36 -.21 11.47 -1.20
Tocqueville Dlfld m VALUE
DEFIX
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
Calithera n SonicFdry Paratek rs Novadaq g VBI Vac rs VstnRMII rs SkystarBio InterCld wt Celladon n Neothet n
LAST 17.17 10.30 26.63 16.87 3.20 4.88 4.63 2.73 18.05 8.50
CHG %CHG +3.95 + 29.9 +2.20 + 27.2 +4.43 + 2 0.0 +2.46
+.34
Mitcham VaalcoE TrnsRty SevSevEn IGI Labs
LAST 5.71 4.62 9.76 4.74 8.89
65
63
073
Morningstar OwnershipZone™
u Fund target represents weighted + 1 4 .2 Q
+2.24 + 14.2 +.95 + 1 2.6
Losers NAME
c-
+ 1 7 .1
+.44 + 1 5.9 +.65 + 1 5.4 +.58 + 1 4.3
CHG %CHG -1.44 -20.1 -1.08 -18.9 -1.99 -16.9 -.91 -16.1 -1.66 -15.7
average of stock holdings
• Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings
CATEGORY Mid-Cap Value MORNINGSTAR RATING™ *ryryryry ASSETS $1,418 million EXP RATIO 1.22%
+.0070
CVX
Ciose.$1 04.86 V-2.15 or -2.0% The energycompany and itscompetitors continue to feel the pressure from low crude oil prices following another decline. $130
Yum Brands
120
75
110
70
S
0 N D 52-week range $103.07 ~ $135.10
YUM
Close:$70.53 V-4.69 or -6.2% The fast-food company cut its outlook because sales in China are recovering more slowly than expected after a food-safety scare. $80
S
0 N D 52-week range $65.81 ~ $83.58
Vol.:15.1m (1.9x avg.) PE: 9 .7 Vol.:10.3m (3.6x avg.) PE: 2 2 .0 Mkt. Cap:$198.23b Yi eld: 4.1% Mkt.Cap:$30.86 b Yield: 2.3% JPM Close:$60.68 V-1.77 or -2.8% Regulators proposed the eight biggest U.S. banks be required to increase the capital they set aside to cushion against losses. $65 60
Broadcom BRCM Close: $42.68%0.03 or 0.1% The communications and networking infrastructure company raised its revenue outlook and increased its dividend by 17 percent. $45 40
S
0 N 52-week range
$52.37 ~
Vol.:29.6m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$226.83 b
D
S
$63 .16
$27.80~
0 N 52-week range
Yi e ld:2.6%
JetBIue Airways
JBLU Close:$15.15L0.11 or 0.7% The airline reported a 10.1 percent passenger traffic boost in November as it also increased capacity by 6 percent in that period. $20
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FDND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds AmBalA m 26 . 81 25 +7.9 +9.9 +14.6+12.0 A A A CaplncBuA m60.41 53 +6.5 +8.7 +11.6 +9.0 A A A CpWldGrlA m 46.63 58 +4.6 +7.3 +15.8 +9.3 8 8 C EurPacGrA m 48.34 41 -1.5 +0.9 +11.5 +6.1 8 8 C FnlnvA m 54. 8 6 89 +7.4 +11.1 +18.4+13.5 D C C GrthAmA m 46.34 81 +7.8 +11.2 +19.8+13.6 C 8 D IncAmerA m 21.71 21 +7.6 +9.8 +13.2+11.2 A 8 A InvCoAmA m 40.40 70 +11.3 +14.4 +19.6+13.4 8 8 D NewPerspA m38.79 47 +3.3 +6.2 +15.9+10.8 8 A 8 WAMutlnvA m42.55 62 +9.3 +12.2 +18.0+14.6 8 C A Dodge &Cox Income 13.93 +.81 +5.5 + 5 .4 + 5.0 + 5.2 8 A 8 IntlStk 43.45 -.61 +1.0 + 4.3+14.7+8.3 A A A Stock 180.97 -2.70 +8.7 +12.3 +23.2+15.5 8 A A Fidelity Contra 103. 2 4 - 1.49+8.5 +11.3 +18.6+15.2 C C 8 ContraK 103 . 2 7-1.49+8.6 +11.5 +18.7+15.3 C C 8 LowPriStk d 49.68 -.59 +5.2 + 7 .3 +18.5+15.8 D D 8 Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 72.16 -1.19+11.7 +14.7 +19.8+15.3 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.39 -.83+1.8 +3.5 +10.0+8.9 D A A IncomeA m 2. 3 6 - .83+2.4 + 4 .1 +10.5 +9.5 D A A Oakmarb Intl I 25.89 -.21 -4.7 -2.0 +16.0+10.1 D A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 66 -.34+9.1 +12.4 +15.9+12.9 C E D RisDivB m 17 . 39 -.31+8.2 +11.5 +14.9+11.9 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 27 -.30+8.3 +11.5 +15.0+12.0 D E E SmMidValA m47.27 -.92 +7.1 +10.5 +17.4+13.2 C D E SmMidValBm 39.72 -.78 +6.4 +9.6 +16.4+12.3 C E E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 34.8 0 - . 53 +5.1 + 7 .5 +17.3+13.2 E D C GrowStk 56.2 8 - . 99 +7.1 +10.5 +20.4+16.1 D A A HealthSci 75.9 0 -1.24+31.3 +34.3 +39.0+28.4 8 A A Newlncome 9. 5 8 +.81+ 5.6 + 5.2 + 3.3 +4.4 8 C D Vanguard 500Adml 187.72 3.10 +11.7 +14.7 +19.8+15.3 A 8 A 500lnv 187.67 3.11 +11.6 +14.5 +19.7+15.2 A 8 8 CapOp 54.57 -.87 +18.2 +20.8 +25.8+16.6 A A A Eqlnc 32.85 -.50 +9.8 +12.6 +18.3+15.8 8 C A IntlStkldxAdm 26.34 -.32 -3.7 -1.2 +8.7 NA C D StratgcEq 33.89 -.69 +10.3 +14.1 +22.8+18.9 A A A TgtRe2020 28.79 -.24 +6.2 +7.8 +11.4 +9.7 A A A Tgtet2025 16.72 -.17 +6.2 +8.1 +12.4+10.2 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.90 +.82 +5.8 +5.2 +2.8 +4.1 8 D D Totlntl 15.75 -.19 -3.8 -1.3 +8.6 +4.6 C D D TotStlAdm 50.85 -.88 +10.3 +13.5 +19.8+15.7 8 8 A TotStldx 50.82 -.88 +10.2 +13.4 +19.6+15.5 C 8 A USGro 32.80 -.49 +11.5 +15.7 +20.8+15.2 A A B Welltn 40.58 -.38 +8.9 +10.7 +14.0+11.1 A A A FAMILY
MANAGER J. Delafield SINCE 1993-11-19 RETURNS3-MO -9.4 Foreign Markets YTD -7.5 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR -3.8 -36.03 -.84 Paris 4,227.91 3-YR ANNL +12,5 London 6,500.04 -29.43 -.45 5-YR-ANNL +11.6 Frankfurt 9,799.73 +6.02 + . 06 Hong Kong23,524.52 + 38.69 + . 16 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 41,372.66 -966.97 -2.28 Eastman Chemical Co 3.86 Milan 19,21 7.69 -1 72.31 -.89 Dover Corp 3.7 Tokyo 17,41 2.58 -400.80 -2.25 3.06 Stockholm 1,452.80 + .56 + . 04 Honeywell lnternational Inc Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -21.20 -AO Fairchild Semiconductor International Inc Sydney 5,237.10 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Zurich 9,020.83 -30.56 -.34 2.81 redemption fee.Source: Morn$nestar.
D
$4 4.33
PE: 11.2 Vol.:11.4m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$23.13 b
PE: 5 8 .5 Yie l d: 1.1%
Vera Bradley
VRA Close:$21.61 LO.OB or 0.4% The handbag and accessories company reported better-than-expected fiscal third-quarter profit, but provided a weak outlook. $30 25
15
10
20
S
0
N
D
S
52-week range $7.61~ Vol.:11.9m (1.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.42 b
0
N
D
52-week range $15.73
$18.75~
$30.00
PE: 1 4 . 4 Vol.:1.4m (3.5x avg.) Yield:... Mkt.Cap:$879.29 m
PE: 18 . 0 Yie ld: ...
Land's End
LE Hovnanian Enterprises HOV Close:$46.95%-3.71 or -7.3% Close: $4.11 %0.21 or 5.4% The company reported a dip in The homebuilder's fiscal quarterly revenue on a mix of fewer fourth-quarter profit met Wall Street shops and a drop in same-storeexpectations and its quarterly revesales, which is a key measure. nue beat analyst forecasts. $60 $4.5 4.0
40
3.5
A M J J A S 0 N 52-week range $25.35~ $5 1.00
Vol.:3.0m (6.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.5 b
S
0 N D 52-week range $3.06~ $6.80 PE:1 9 .0 Vol.:6.6m (2.5x avg.) P E:4 5 .7 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$538.72 m Yield : ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 3 .0 3 . 0 9 .1 0 -0.01 L
52-wk T-bill
.21
.22
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.17 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other loans.
2-year T-note . 5 7 .6 2 5-year T-note 1.56 1.62 10-year T-note 2.17 2.21 30-year T-bond 2.83 2.87
Commodities
FUELS
The price of oil plunged to a five-year low Wednesday, after the U.S. reported a surprise increase in domestic oil inventories and OPEC projected lower demand in 2015. Gold was flat.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
BONDS
-0.01 L
L L L
L L L
-0.05 L -0.06 T -0.04 T -0.04 T
L T T T
.30 T 1.45 T 2.80 T 3.84
Foreign Exchange The dollar fell versus the euro and the pound. The ICE U.S. Dollar index, which compares the dollar's value to a basket of key currencies, fell.
h5Q HS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
.06 .09 .13
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.67 2.71 -0.04 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.30 4.31 -0.01 T T Barclays USAggregate 2.26 2.28 -0.02 L T COST 17.8% 18. 5 19. 0 Price-earnings ratio: 29 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.65 6.46 +0.19 L L ( B a sedon past12monthresults) DiV. y l eld: 10 4y, ptVt d end.$1 42 RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.79 3.82 -0.03 T T *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.86 1.92 -0.06 T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.10 3.12 -0.02 L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds
AP
S&P500ETF 1461088 BkofAm 1007339 iShJapan 621303 8 iPVixST 603985 iShEMkts 512630 MktVGold 482533 CSVixSht 452476 GenElec 447206 Sprint 445852 FiatChry n 443507
+
1.2444
Stocks ended lower on Wednesday, as a slide in oil prices sent energy stocks tumbling. Of the 10 sectors in the Standard & Poor's 500 index, energy fell the most. The sector is down almost 15 percent this year. The price of oil dropped following reports that OPEC has slashed its estimate of how much crude it will need to produce next year due to rising supplies. Another likely factor in the market decline Wednesday: Growing speculation among investors that the Federal Reserve will signal that it intends to raise interest rates next year should the economy continue to strengthen. The central bank's policymakers are scheduled to meet next week.
JPMorgan Chase
L Wall Street will comb Adobe L Systems' latest quarterly report card for signs that the company's sales are improving. The software maker, due to DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but areuot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current report fourth-quarter financial annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, nc regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend results today, delivered announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid iu stock, approximatecash lower-than-expected revenue in value on ex-distributicu date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 8 clcsed-eud fund - uo P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 98 dd - Loss in last t2 months. the previous quarter, ended Aug. 31. Financial analysts predict Adobe'srevenue inthe SeptemSpotlight ber-November period rose modestly versus a year ago. They Shares of Costco hit an all-time Analysts with Janney Capital also forecast that Adobe will report high Wednesday after the retailer Markets said the jump in profit on lower earnings for the quarter. reported a 17 percent profit a per-share basis outpaced the increase in its fiscal first quarter. company's last five quarters ADBE $69.85 The warehouse club operator thanks to plunging gasoline prices. $80 posted net income of $496 million, Costco has the potential to win $55.44 70 or $1.12 per share. That's better twice with fuel prices declining, than the $1.09 that analysts had first because it pays less to buy 60 projected, according to Zacks Investment Research. gasoline for its fuel pumps, and second because when '14 Revenue was $26.87 billion in the period, just edging those savings are passed on to customers, they may out Wall Street expectations. spend more freely once they get into the store. Operating EPS 5-yr* Costco (COST) W ednes d ay's close: $140.25 Pri ce changeY TD 3 - y r * based on past 12 month results
+ -2.88 '
StoryStocks
Chevron
DOW
4Q '13 4 Q '14
$60.94
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52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
NAME Source: Factset
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Dow jones industrials
... Close: 2,026.14 Change: -33.68 (-1.6%)
2,000' " ""'10 DAYS
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GOLD ~ $1,228.90 ~
10-YR T-NOTE ~ 2.17%
SstP 500
Thursday, December t t, 2014
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T T T L T T L
3.62 5.14 2.41 5.58 4.7 0 1.7 0 3.24
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 60.94 63.82 -4.51 -38.1 1.69 1.72 +0.99 -11.5 2.05 2.08 -1.80 -33.5 3.71 3.65 +1.48 -1 2.4 1.64 1.72 -4.75 -41.1
CLOSE PVS. 1228.90 1231.50 17.13 17.08 1242.60 1246.80 2.91 2.95 821.80 812.10
%CH. %YTD - 0.21 + 2 . 3 +0.30 -11.4 -0.34 -9.4 -1.10 -15.3 +1.19 +1 4.6
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.62 1.62 +0.04 +20.8 Coffee (Ib) 1.78 1.79 -1.06 +60.4 -9.4 Corn (bu) 3.83 3.83 -0.13 Cotton (Ib) 0.60 0.60 -0.52 -29.6 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 331.80 333.90 -0.63 -7.9 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.48 1.47 + 0.41 + 8 . 5 Soybeans (bu) 10.32 10.49 -1.64 -21.4 -2.0 Wheat(bu) 5.93 6.01 -1.21 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5708 +.0046 +.29% 1.6447 Canadian Dollar 1.1 488 +.0049 +.43% 1.0612 USD per Euro 1.2444 +.0070 +.56% 1.3762 JapaneseYen 118.08 -1.41 -1.19% 102.79 Mexican Peso 14. 5 665 +.1630 +1.12% 12.8654 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9309 -.0031 -.08% 3.4940 Norwegian Krone 7 . 1692 +.0519 +.72% 6.1150 South African Rand 11.5472 +.0924 +.80% 10.3650 Swedish Krona 7.5 2 47 -.0011 -.01% 6.5290 Swiss Franc .9670 -.0042 -.43% . 8 873 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2047 +.0003 +.02% 1.0922 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1763 -.0129 -.21% 6.0708 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7511 -.001 2 -.02% 7.7537 Indian Rupee 62.250 +.235 +.38% 61.045 Singapore Dollar 1.3106 -.0057 -.43% 1.2482 South KoreanWon 1103.09 -1.50 -.14% 1052.00 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.19 + . 0 6 +.19% 29.59
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
BRIEFING State brewers blend beers Deschutes Brewery, of Bend, and Widmer Brothers Brewing, of Portland, have blended two of their products into one new beer in recognition of Widmer Brothers' 30 years in brewing. The result, AltBitter,
is a two-thirds blend of the barrel-aged versions of Deschutes Brewery's Bachelor Bitter and Widmer Brothers' Altbier.
"The result is a hoppy ale with a big, malty backbone, which pays homage to the breweries' respective German and English influences, yet is still uniquely Oregon," according to a Widmer Brothers news release. AltBitter is available for a limited time in 22-ounce bottles in select markets, including Bend, according to the news release. Widmer Brothers Brewing previously released beer collaborations with Boneyard Beer, 10 Barrel Brewing, Breakside Brewing and Gigantic Brewing.
By Joseph Ditzler
the first chance to bid on the
McMenamins Old St. Francis
The Bulletin
property: the city of Bend,
School, sold for $95 a square
Troy Field, the 0.8-acre playing field on NW Bond
Deschutes County, Bend Park & Recreation District, High
foot in August 2006, he said.
Street and one of the last
Desert Education Service
pieces of ground left undevel-
District, Deschutes Public
oped in downtown Bend, is
Library, Central Oregon Community College, Oregon
Troy Field, about 35,000 square feet, is priced at about $75 a square foot. The Bend-La Pine school board agreed in October to
State University-Cascades
designate the lot south of
and Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School as surplus property,
officially for sale. Fratzke Commercial Real Estate listed the parcel, which
belongs to Bend-La Pine Schools, at $2.62 million. Although zoned for limited commercial use, it comes overlaid with a public facilities designation, meaning it was meant
as a site for some public use. That designation can be removed or incorporated into
a future use by a new owner, said Brian Fratzke, whose firm is the school district's
"We have to give these
folks two weeks ... and they all came back and said, 'Thanks, but we don't want to buy it,'" Fratzke said
Wednesday. The firm priced the field based on comparable sales between 2004 and 2007, Fratzke said. For example, a
0.23-acre parking lot, about
real estate broker. Eight public entities had
11,000 square feet, at 527 NW Franklin Ave., adjacent to
urged that the Troy Field property remain a place for lacrosse, soccer and general play. In the past, it's been a
e
baseball field and, in wintertime from the 1920s to the
rt v .
i V.
1950s, an ice skating rink. Its name derives from the
Troy Field
Troy Laundry, which lay east of the field until destroyed by fire sometime after 1989,
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
according to The Bulletin sale. The money from the sale archives. could fund construction of As property in a limited another elementary school, commercial, or CL, zone, the board members have said. field may accommodate housDeschutes County assessed ing, retail shops and offices, the property's market value with height restrictions, or at $1.2 million. By compariopen space, such as a park. the first step in listing it for
son, the city earlier this year
The school district fielded
agreed to sell a 3.2-acre property at Wall Street and Olney Avenue for $1.9 million. Opponents of the sale
callsfrom severalinterested parties after its decision to sell the property, said
not identify those callers. Along with Troy Field, the
school district also put up for sale 1.64 acres zoned for medium-density residential use on NE Full Moon Drive across from Ensworth Elementary SchooL Fratzke Commercial Real Estate lists that property at $285,000. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, j ditzler@bendbulletin.com
Fratzke, who said he could
Instagram to launch verification
— Bulletin staff report
By Hayley Tsukayama The Washington Post
Instagram announced Tuesday that 300 million people log into its site every month. That puts the photo-sharing site ahead of
PERMITS City of Bend • Hale-Campbell Properties LLC, 20783 SE Helen Lane, $243,809 • Third & Franklin LLC, 222 NE Emerson Avenue, 3700,000 • Holliday Properties LLC, 2230 NE Indigo Lane, $217,547 • Nordic Construction , 2409 NW Drouillard Avenue, $249,749 • Adrian Nicol Kettering, 3541 NW MesaVerde Court, $421,580 • Larry Kine, 61677 Woodriver Drive, $422,899 • FCFundLLC,616SE Gleneden Place, $154,398 • Hayden Homes LLC, 21246 SE Golden Market Lane, $224,583
Twitter, which claims 284
million monthly active users on its official website. "Over the past four years,
whatbegan as two friends with a dream has grown into a global community that shares more than 70 each day," wrote chief executive Kevin Systrom, who Joshua Bright Irhe New York Times filephoto
Elizabeth Henael, a falconer, stands with Isabella, one of her 10 birds, at the Monmouth County Reclamation Center in Tinton Falls, New Jersey, last month. Landfills and airports often employ falcons to drive off gulls and other birds that pose a greater hazard.
SATURDAY • Homebuyer Education Workshop:Learn to save time and money when buyinga home; $45 plus fees; registration required; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 SW First St., Redmond; 541-323-6567 or www. neighborimpact.orgl homebuyerhelp. • Make Your Brand Stand Out:Agricultural business workshop about using social media and websites; $10/farm; register online or call 541-447-6228; 9-1 I:30 a.m. Central Oregon Community College Redmond Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond www.agbiz. eventbrite.com. TUESDAY • Habitat for Humanity Affordadle Homeowner Information Session:For families and individuals who earn 35-60 percent of the area median income interested in becoming homeowners in Crook County; free; 5:30 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 NW Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-385-5387 Ext. 103 or djohnson@ bendhabitat.org. • SCORE Free Business Counseling:Business counselors conduct free, 30-minuteone-on-one conferences withlocal entrepreneurs; check in at the library deskon the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentrai0regon.
a cons
eanin u
when Facebook bought it
for $1 billion in 2012. young — the strongest with adults ages 18 to 24, according to eMarketer
— and the majority are outside of the U.S. In both cases, those are coveted
demographicsforsocial New York Times News Service
BIZ CALENDAR
went with the company Instagram's users skew
By Patricia R. Olsen
BEST OF THE
million photos and videos
r
'/
Elizabeth Hensel, 27, is a falconer with Falcon Envi-
ronmental Services, based in Plattsburgh, New York.
What do you do as a
Q • Ifalconer? work with falcons to
A• rid areas of gulls and other birds that pose a dan-
ger or environmental threat at places like airports and landfills. Landfills are a food source for them, and their waste is a public health haz-
Did the company train ticeship on myown time when • you to work with falcons'? a falconer friend told me about No, I had hunted with this opening and I applied. My • falcons and hawks on degree in geologywith a conmy own, for sport, and I was centration in environmental already licensed. You really science from State University needto know whatyou're of New York at Cortland may doingbeforeyou can do it as a have helped. profession. What is your day like? How did you become inIn the morning,
Q
A
in this field'? Q • terested My aunt's neighbor was
A• a falconer. When I was about 6, my cousins and I
would go to his house to watch them. I was fascinated.
Kansas. Now I'm at a landfill
in New Jersey.
• a co-worker and I move our 10 falcons to the ~
outside pen. We release them one by one throughout the day to chase gulls away from the landfill and blow a whistle to signal them to return. When
ard.I've worked forthe com-
pany for almost four years, earlier at a military airfield in
Q
How did you get this job'? they do, we give them quail. • P I w a s working at ~ • a nature center Do you find your work while completing an appren• rewarding?
Q
Q
Report: Disney,l(och usedsecret tax deals By Dean Starkman Los Angeles Times
to go forward. In a statement Tuesday, the
Walt Disney Co., giant conLuxembourg Finance Ministry glomerate Koch Industries Inc. "acknowledged the publication" and other companies channeled of the journalism group's rehundreds of millions of dollars port, saying "the way in which in profits through units based in thesedocuments were acquired Luxembourginsecret dealsde- is highly questionable." signed to avoid paying U.S. taxEven so, the ministry said, "Luxembourg agrees that the es, accordingto anewreport. The International Coalition legitimacy of certain mechaof Investigative Journalists nisms, which are compliant said in its reportlate Monday with international and national thatthe maneuvers were
law, can be put in doubt from
found among a trove of leaked documents highlighting Luxembourg's role as a center of tax-avoidance deals for global corporations. The organization's reports,
an ethicalpoint of view." The journalists' group has published exposes on the offshore taxhavenindustrysince spring 2013, basing its first reporting on 2.5 million pages of documents leaked from offshore financial servicing firms
which started last month,
OI'g.
have roiled the tiny Northern European grand duchy and
• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
government to tighten oversight of so-called tax rulings, which have allowed the deals
led to vows from the country's
I love working with the
networks, thanks to their
A • birds; you have to be
passionate about animals to do this. In the wild, you can't be 10 feet from a bird jumping out of a tree to catch a squirrel; it would fly away. But these are trained birds, so they accept us
as part of their world.
has 1.35 billion users. And
clearly, despite all the hand-wringing that went on when Instagram was
first acquired, the move hasn't seemed to hurt its appeal at all. The network's
Do you have a favorite
falcon? Q • That's like asking a par-
A child. Elena, who weighs a
• ent if they have a favorite
pound and a half, is really cute and well-behaved. I also like Isabella, who sits next to Elena
and is very dependable. We use
growth is, however, sparking a couple of new changes in the coming weeks. For one, the company is going to start approving "verified" accounts from
celebrities, athletes and brands. The badges, the company said, will start
rolling out in the "coming days."
her as our closer atthe end of
the day.
• • f •
growth potential. The news is pretty good for Facebook, which itself
•
the Philippines and elsewhere. The latest set of leaks was
based on what the organization said was a confidential cache
it obtained of secret taxagreements approved by Luxembourg authorities that provide tax relief for more than 350
companies around the world. In the latest report, the
group said Disney and Koch engineered restructuring deals to reorder the ownership of
subsidiaries and centralize them under Luxembourgfirms that were served by an internal
finance company. These internal lenders, the report said, received interest from the affiliates that had the
1 58 L c r e R a n ch 6172 SF home overlooking McKay Creek/ Allen Creek mea. 68 Irrigated Acres 4 Bay Shop Hay Barn GP Building Cow/Cdf R Hay Production Only 8 miles from Prineville
- $1,SOO , O O O
effect of channelingprofits throughLuxembourg from
based in the British Virgin Is-
2009to2013. As aresult, both
lands and other tax havens. Those stories had spurred of-
companies'Luxembourgunits
ficial investigations in the Unit-
cent in some years, the report
ed Kingdom, France, Canada,
sald.
paid tax rates of less than 1per-
'l l • i
••/•
I •
•
-
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, D2 Money, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
-
i~
,F:,' ~
Conventional apple wisdom: Don't peel it
--,IRIsCy i
,5
t a iaiaaaggg %%
By Hope Warshaw
grate cultural, biological and
Special to The Washington Post
mechanical practices that
Can you help resolve • an ongoing discussion among my friends and family about
Q
fostercycling ofresources, promote ecological balance and conserve biodiversity." The certified-organic label is
NUTRITION nonorgan-
not an indicator of nutrition-
ic apples?
al superiority. • Apples and other fruits whether organic or con-
Is it healthier to eat the peel
for its healthbenefits or discard the peel to get rid of any toxins? At
ventional, are inher-
ently nutritious, disease-fighting foods. According
home, I buy organic apples, but when I travel I can't al-
to the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for
ways find them.
A • focuses squarely on the debate
Americans, there's moderate evidenceto
Your question
show that eating at
about buying con-
Deb Lindaey/ leaSt 2/2 CupS eaCh The waahington Post p f Vegetablea and
ventipnal pr prganic
Andy Tullia/The Bulletin
Kindergarten teacher Lisa West, second from left, helps a student during a spelling game inher class at The Cottage Day Care Home in Bend. Viruses can spread quickly in day cares, and most parents in a recent survey say they would consider removing their children from day care if other children aren't vaccinated.
fruits and vegetables. Before digging in, let's cover a couple basic points: • Conflict remains about whether organically grown produce is nutritionally superior to conventional. The U.S. Agriculture Department, which oversees the U.S. National Organic Program, states, "Organic is a labeling term that indicates that the food or other agricultural product has been produced through
fruits per day is associated with reduced risk of cardi ovascular disease and certain cancers. But take note: Our current fruit intake
is abysmal. Statistics from a 2013 Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention survey show nearly 40 percent of Americans eat fruit less
than onetime aday.So a round of applause to you for eating apples regularly and seeking them out during yourtravels!
SeeApples/D2
approved methods that inte-
Federal contractors find growth in health,notwar By Jay Hancock
they knew legislation was coming up that was going to inject funds into the health
Kaiser Health News
• Researchers to parents: Don't be shyabout askingdaycare providers about statuses
Two years ago, General Dynamics, one of the big-
care market."
care a lot more than she thought about whether the other kids at day care are
They were right. In a way that is deeply changing MONEY quarterly loss Washington contracting, of $2 billion. growth opportunities from An "eye-watering" result, the federal government have one analyst called it. increasingly come not from Diminishing wars and war but from healing, an explunging defense spending amination by Kaiser Health had slashed the weapons News and The Washington maker's revenue and left Post shows. some subsidiaries worth far Politics are frozen. Budless than what it had paid gets are tight. But business for them. But the company purchases by the Departwas already pushing in a ment of Health and Human new direction. Services have doubled to $21 Soon after Congress billion annually in the past passed the landmark decade and are expected to Affordable Care Act, the continue rising. maker of submarines and HHS has become the tanks decided to expand its No. 3 contracting agency,
vaccinated.
business related to health care. Its 2011 purchase of
By Tara Bannowa The Bulletin
n a recent national survey, 74 percent of parents said they would consider removing their child from a day care if 1 in 4 of the other children there were not up to date on their vaccinations. Sarah Clark, associate research scientist in the University of Michigan's department of pediatrics and associate director of the C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health, said that figure shows parents
gest federal contractors,
reported a
thanks to health-law spend-
ing combined with outlays for computer upgrades and the Medicare drug program
health-data firm Vangent It also shows parents
ought to feel comfortable asking day care providers about the others kids' vac-
cination statuses, although doing so probably has never crossed most parents'
minds, Clark said. "What we hope happens with this poll is now they
do," she said. "Now they think about it; they feel em-
spective parents who ask for schutes County are not All day care providers in i t , said Stacy de Assis Mat- up to date on vaccinations Oregon that are certified t hew s , school law coordibecause their parents don't with the state's Office of nator f o r the Oregon Immu- believe they should receive Child Care must report their n i zation Program. Parents them. A new Oregon law kids' vaccination can, however, get the requires those parents to statuses both when M E D ICI N E data from the state if speak with a medical prothey first enroll and the provider has 50 vider or watch an interactive powered to ask about it."
annually after that. Oregon law, however, does not re-
or m o r e kids, she said. Near ly 10 percent of the
quire day care providers to
ki d s who attend certified
give that information to pro-
ch i l d care facilities in De-
online video before they can
opt out of vaccinating their child. SeeVaccinations/D5
instantly made it the largest contractor to Medicare and ernment health plans for
that grew in the administration of President George W. Bush. HHS outranks NASA
seniors and the poor.
and the Department of
M edicaid, thehugegov"They saw that their
Homeland Security in busi-
legacy defense market was going to be taking a hit," said Sebastian Lagana, an analyst with Technology Business Research, a market research firm. "And 9
W interwor out:Pic u a a By Des Bieler The Washington Post
than the Justice, Transporta-
tion, Treasury and Agriculture departments combined, according to federal data. SeeContractors/D3
•
WHEN YOU DON'T FIND YOUR LAUGH LINES THE LEAST BIT FUNNY. • •
e
of injury. And you might even benefit from the positive
Maybe you played pingeffects the sport is widely pong as a kid because your cre d ited with having on brain parents set up a table in the fun c t ions. basement. Maybe you played The n there's Navin Kumar, in high school because you a 4 0 -year-old government were hanging out with friends worker who told me, "I'm at the rec center. And maybe p l a ying table tennis really for later, you played that other my survival." version of pong that Kumar has gotten FITN ESS back into the sport in requires a table and a ball but no paddles a big way recently, debecause, you know, you were s pite some pretty major health in college. challenges. The Gaithersburg, You may well have drifted M a r y land, resident was born away from the sport since with a congenital heart conthen, but you know what'? diti o n and has undergone five Your younger self was onto ope n -heart surgeries, two of something. Table tennis is an t h em when he was just 3 years effective — and fun — way to
ness deals and spends more
ol d . Now his heart is partially
Botox Party Thursday, Dec 11 9am-6pm All tnlecttons performed by our Doctor or RN •
s •
•
•
•
I
•
s
•
•I •
•
•
•
•
•
Katherine Frey/The Washington Post
work up a sweat. Your older me c hanical, with valves madeNavin Kumar, whohas apartially mechanical heart and Parkinself might want to try it if from c arbon fiber, and he uses son's disease, practices pingpong at the Maryland Table Tennis you're looking for a vigorous a p acemaker. Center in Gaithersburg, Maryland. He will represent Maryland at workout with very little risk SeePingpong/D4 the U.S. National table tennis Championships next month.
•
•
EsTHETIx MD spaa Laser center
•
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Make your appointment today! 5 41-330-555 1 esthetixmd.com
D2 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
N
TjoN
Using bone broth to cover a m ultitude ofhealth benefits
HEALTH EVENTS
TODAY PILATES CLASS: Classes offered in celebration of Peach Pilates'
one-year anniversary; free, By Casey Seidenberg Special to The Washington Post
When my daughter was a year old, she drank homemade vegetableand chicken broths from her bottle. Don't stop reading; we are normal people with milk in the fridge and Halloween candy lingering in the pantry. My baby daughter simply didn't take
ing of the digestive tract and helps aid in the digestion of
food, particularly for its nu-
nutrients.
tritive value. The most ba-
• Support skin, hair and nail growth. The collagen and gelatin in bone broth support hair growth and help to keep nails strong. • Promote sleep and calm the mind. The amino acid glycine in bone broth can be very calming. • Fight infections such as colds and flu.
sic recipe calls for vegetable scraps and the bones from a leftover roast chicken, all food that would normally go to waste. A gallon of homemade chicken stock can be
Stock is a n
i n e xpensive
made for under a dollar, while
a store-bought broth can cost well to cow's milk, and I was $4 or $5. You can also make determined to give her somebroth with beef bones, vegething nutrient-dense to drink. table peelings, and fish and At the suggestion of my peW ith t h ose h ealth p a y - shellfish scraps — all with diatrician, she started con- backs, you can bet that I still healthful benefits. "Nourishsuming homemade broths. feed my 3-year-old daughter ing Broth" has recipes, and She loved them. She chugged broth, warmed in a teacup or you can easily find more on them like other kids chug served with a spoon. My boys the Internet. milk. She sported her own will happily down it if I throw What is the difference beversion of a milk mustache. in some vegetables, noodles tween homemade stock and Why was I so keen on broth or rice to make a simple soup. store bought broth? • Homemade bone broths (also known as stock) as a Whenever anyone in our food for my child? Some ex- house has digestive troubles a re mor e n u t r itious t h a n cellent reasons are found in or a common cold, we de- store-bought varieties. • Commercially prepared the research cited in "Nour- fault to homemade broth as ishing Broth: An Old-Fash- the first food after illness. It broths are often highly proioned Remedy for the Mod- nourishes the digestive tract cessed, and high in sodium ern World," by Sally Fallon and provides the nutrients we and additives. • Bouillon cubes and many Morell and Kaayla T. Daniel. need to promptly get back on They show that broths, espe- our feet. otherprocessed stock flavorcially those made with bones: I unambiguously care a ings contain MSG and other • Are full of n utrients in
lot about the nutrition in my
unhealthful additives.
• Homemade bone broth largelyoffers richer flavor
forms that are very easy for the body to absorb. • Reduce joint pain and inflammation. The glucosamine and chondroitin in
food, but how it tastes cannot be compromised or nobody in my family would eat. Thank- than store-bought broth. A "broth bar" called Brodo fully, beyond being nourishing, homemade stock adds fla- opened in New York's East bone broth c a n s t i m ulate vor to so many foods. Try boil- Village recently. Instead of the growth of new collagen, ing one batch of rice in water sipping a sugared pumpkin repair damaged joints, ease and one in stock and tell me spice latte, New Yorkers can arthritis and reduce pain and which is more flavorful. Spoil- stop by for a cup of nourinflammation. er: The broth wins every time. ishing, warming, delicious • Help with bone formaBroth makes a d e licious broth. With the prevalence tion. The calcium, magne- base for any soup, adds fla- of chronic disease, wouldn't sium, collagen and phos- vor to mashed potatoes, can it be great if the broth bar phorus in bone broth help be substituted for oil w h en became the new Starbucks bones to grow and repairsauteing vegetables, moist- and broth t h e n e w l a t t e? the perfect weapon against ens leftovers when reheating, We'd all be a lot healthier. In osteoporosis. swaps in for water when boil- the meantime, I'll keep mak• Heal the gut. The gela- ing pasta or grains, and adds ing my own, and smiling as tin in bone broth protects a richness to risottos, sauces we all wipe away our broth and heals the mucosal lin- and gravies. mustaches.
Apples
to assure themselves that their food has gone through Continued from D1 a systematic process aligned with organic certification and Comparing apples to apples offers certain environmental To your specific question: benefits, such as avoiding geBy peeling apples, you miss netically modified organisms out on powerful nutritional and synthetic pesticides. pluses. Accordingto the USDA Other reasons? "One is to National Nutrient Database, support farmers who make one medium (3-inch-diame- the choice to abide by regulater) unpeeled apple has near- tions to produce foods using ly double the fiber, 25 percent environmentally sound methmore potassium and 40 more ods that improve biodiversity vitamin A — just to choose a and protect soils," says Ashley few important nutrients. Colpaart, a registered dietitian Apple peels have further and coordinator of the Northnutritional a ssets. "They ern Colorado Food Cluster, contain the b ioactive com- which works to build resilient pounds polyphenols, pectins local food systems. and ursolic acid," says Elaine One more factoid to chew Trujillo, a registered dietitian on: According to the USDA's nutritionist and author of Economic Research Service, "The Calories In, Calories Out in 2007 nearly a quarter of Cookbook." apples organically grown in "Animal studies show that the United States were sold ursolic acid may have an ef- as conventional. "If you ask fect on burning more calories, farmers abouttheir producweight loss and improved glu- tion process, they may say cose control," Trujillo says. they use organic production She suggests skipping the methods but aren't certified," seeds, though; they can be Colpaart says. "Whether a toxic. farmer chooses to become certified includes many con-
Why buy organic?
Choosing organic produce, such as apples, may help reduce your exposure to pesticide residues. A 2010 report f rom U .S .
D e partment o f
Health and Human Services, "Reducing E n v ironmental
siderations: cost, regulatory
oversight and record keeping, to name a few. The farmer's
philosophy matters, too. It includes whether they believe their on-farm management ac-
tually goes beyond the organic regulations set by the National Organic Board." If you can afford organic, that's the way to go to limit pesticides, Trujillo says. But don't avoid fruit if you can't find organic. "The benefit of getting your fill of fruits each day outweighs the risks of minimal pesticide exposure."
2014 Dirty Dozen list identi-
fying the most pesticide-laden produce, this shouldn't be
tested are at levels below the
tolerances established by the Environmental
Pr o t e ction
Agency and do not pose a safety concern." Some people choose to purchase cert ified-organic foods
FRIDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.-
www.redcrossblood.org or
SATURDAY
800-RED-CROSS.
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Redmond Community Church Auditorium, 237 NW Ninth St.; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
WEDMESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.3 p.m.;Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. COFFEE 8CONNECTION: Meet other people whose lives have been affected by cancer; free; 12:30 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer Center, 2100 NEWyatt Court, Bend; www.stcharlescancer.org or 541-706-3754. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6 p.m.; Madras United Methodist Church, 49 NE 12th St.; www.redcrossblood.org or800-RED-CROSS.
MONDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
TUESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required,
FITNESS
PEOPLE
EVENTS
TODAY MOUNTAINVIEW DANCE CLINIC: Dance clinic hosted by the MVHS dance team; will perform at the boys basketball game Friday; $30; 4-6 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; www.
bend.k12.or.us, stanton.s© comcast.net or 503-961-3580.
How to submit Events: Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact:
• Alllson LlaBraaten, FNP,has joined TheCenter for Orthopedic & Neurosurgical Care & Research. LiaBraaten has joined Dr. Michael Caravelli's orthopedics team. LiaBraaten previously performed high level acute care at St. Charles. • Katle Cypcar, PA-C, has joined TheCenter for Orthopedic & Neurosurgical Care & Research. Cypcar is working with the physical medicine and rehabilitation team. Cypcar received her master's degree from the University of Washington.
541-383-0358.
Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact:
fOI' POU t0 IPf.
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• Tlmothy Curtis, PA-C, has joined TheCenter for Orthopedic 8 Neurosurgical Care & Research. Curtis will work with Dr. Joel Moore in orthopedics. Curtis received his master's degree from DuquesneUniversity.
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viewed in isolation. Consider this list in light of a 2012 report from the USDA Pesticide Data
Program, which summarizes, "Overall pesticide chemical residues found on the foods
donations accepted;5-6 p.m .; Peach Pilates, 760 NWYork Drive, Bend; www.peachpilates. com, lynn©peachpilates.com or 541-678-4642.
800-RED-CROSS.
• Soap, detergent or com-
CARE EXPENSES
Although apples top the Environmental Working Group's
one-year anniversary; free,
www.redcrossblood.org or
mercial produce washes are not recommended. • Scrub firm produce, such as apples, potatoes or squash, with a clean produce brush. • Dry all produce with a clean cloth or paper towel.
choosing, to the extent possible, food grown without pes-
residues."
to low-income older adults living in Central Oregon; free; 9 a.m.-noon; Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.; www.councilonaging.org or 541-678-5483. PILATES CLASS: Classes offered in celebration of Peach Pilates'
p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Fire 8 Rescue,6971 SWShadRoad;
• Cut away damaged or bruised areas. • Wash all produce (conventional or organic) thoroughly under running water before eating, cutting or cooking.
v ironmental cancer risk b y
ers." Regarding conventional foods, the report recommends "washing con v entionally grown produce to remove
Oregon providelegal assistance
call for appointment; noon-5
FDA:
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When it comes to handling
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Cancer Risk: What We Can Do Now," recommends that
"individuals reduce their en-
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MoNEY
B i c an esin ine rinto some2015 eat By Charles Ornstein, Ryann Grochowski Jones and Lena Groeger New York Times News Service
At first glance, the 2015
health plans offered by the
But even if they get the same plan — of the nearly 2,800 health plans offered in 2014, about 1,700 of them will exist
in the same form next year-
Ohio nonprofit insurer Care-
government's health
i n sur- created a tool that allows us-
ance exchange, often through the website HealthCare.gov. Now, as they pick plans for next year, they face a complex battery of choices. They have until Monday to select a new plan or they'll be re-enrolled automatically in
ers to see, quickly and easily, some significant ways the plans have changed from one year to the next. More than a quarter of the
2,800 health plans altered the costs of specialty medications for conditions such as multiple
Nicole Bengiveno/The New YorkTimes
The often busy emergency area at Lincoln Medical Center in New York. A ProPublica analysis found that many health insurance plans offered in the federal marketplace are changing their benefits heading into 2015.
words, but are quite significant. This year, many insur-
app to make sure their plan is still the best choice.
Shopping around is essenfee of a few hundred dollars tial — and there's little time to for emergency room visits. delay. For next year, some of those The open enrollment period plans changed the wording of continues until Feb. 15, and their benefit, adding "co-pay customers who are automatafter deductible." That means ically renewed in their plans the insurers won't pay for any can still make changes until portionofan emergency room that time, but only changes visit until c onsumers meet made by Dec. 15, will take eftheir deductible, spending fect on Jan. 1. thousands of dollars. Those earning less than What ProPublica's analy- fourtimes the federal poversis suggests is that even those ty rate ($62,920 for a couple) who would be willing to pay qualify for subsidies to pay higher premiums to keep their premiums, and those their current plan may be sur- earning less may qualify for ers charged members a set
sclerosis, mostly increasing Or, if that plan no longer ex- the patients' share. prised to learn that substantial additional help to lower out-ofists, they'll be enrolled in anSome policy changes ap- details have changed. They pocket costs once enrolled. other product offered by the pear subtle, just a matter of should go back to HealthCare. Changes to insurance benesame insurer, when available. adding or subtracting a few gov or to ProPublica's news fits are hardly exclusive to the
the one they currently have.
Contractors Continued from D1 If health care is "the new oil," as some investors hope, HHS is one of the richest fields
The law effectively created
major companies from scratch and grew new divisions at established businesses. "It occurred to me: If this
bill does become law, it will be a level playing field (for tunities in health-related com- contractors) and we'll have a puter spending by Defense, head start," said Sanjay Singh, Veterans Affairs and Treasury. w ho founded Reston, V i r "The DOD market is very ginia-based hCentive based weak," said Steve Kelman, a on the Affordable Care Act's Harvard management profes- promise. sor and contracting specialist. Today, hCentive employs "The two growth markets are more than 650 people. The cybersecurity and health care. company built the federal govSo everybody's trying to get ernment's online marketplace into those." for small-business health The new money is buying plans and is working on inmedical-records software, surance portals for Massachuinsurance websites, claims setts, New York, Colorado and processing, data a nalysis, Kentucky. computer system overhauls, Business at HighPoint Globconsumer education and con- al, with offices in Virginia, sulting expertise to c ontrol Maryland and Indiana, balcosts and identify fraud. looned from a few million dolTrue, it's a fraction of the lars to more than $100 million $200 billion-plus the Pentagon annually after it landed the job spent on planes, bombs and of training and quality control other purchases in fiscal 2014. for dozensof callcenters hanBut thanks largely to automat- dling questions about the inic cuts set in 2011, defense con- surance marketplaces, federal tracting has dipped by more data show. HighPoint CEO than one-third since 2008 de- Ben Lanius declined arequest spite continuing conflicts in for an interview. Afghanistan and the Middle For contractors, profiting East. from the health law goes far Few expect that to happen beyond the more than $840 to health contracting — even million HHS ha s spent on w ith l i m ited b u dgets a n d the troubled HealthCare.gov Republicans opposed to the portal. (This year, the agency health law soon to control both fired CGI Federal, the site's sides of Congress. Analysts primary contractor,and reexpect the Ebola crisis to add placed it with Accenture.) HHS's innovation lab, which billions to an HHS budget that was already expected to grow. has a $10 billion budget over "It's going to be really hard a decade, is hiring research to find more money," said Ste- firms such as Mathematica to — along with massive oppor-
phen Fuller, an economist at
test alternatives to tradition-
George Mason University who al, "feefor service" medicine follows federal spending close- that encourages unnecessary ly. "But I would think HHS is procedures. The health law in a position to sustain their also furnished an extra $350 funding levels and gain some million to hire cybersleuths to as wellwhere other agencies fight Medicare fraud. are going to find it more difA related law, the Hitech Act ficult just to keep what they
have."
Banking on the Affordable Care Act
cord software from private Traditionally, HHS vendors industry. processed Medicareclaims, Defense vendors are recymade vaccines and managed cling products from battleinformation technology. HHS field to b e dside. Lockheed spending had already spiked says it converted missile-dein 2009, before the health law fense software into a hospital
ed by HHS, some contractors have found, is often to mimic
General Dynamics and buy an outfit already doing the work.
visits, they will need to meet
the plan's deductible next year before their ER visits are covered with a co-payment that
Pure. &md.6 Co.
contractor for fiscal 2014, not
GE N T E
counting vaccine makers. And because its call-center
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aj. B~ dc Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine
bvr a p l asticsvrgearr for
Coolsrrrlprrng'
8
541.382.6447
bendurology.com
www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006
In October, Xerox said it ac-
quired Consilience Software, maker of patient case-man-
America Hears
agement and d i sease-surveillance programs for gov-
HEARING AIDS.
ernment agencies. The same month, defense and i ntelli-
Helping Heeple Hear Better Established 1979
gence giant Booz Allen Hamilton said it bought the health
division of Genova Technologies, a tech company that has done $90 million in HHS business since the health law was passed,according to federal
HEAR BETTER FOR LESS
records.
The deal is part of a larger push by Booz, majority owned by the Carlyle Group, a private equity firm, to sell technology services and consulting to HHS.
Its yearly business with the agency has quadrupled in the past decade, to $170 million even as its overall revenue from the federal government
has shrunk, according to contracting data. (However, the
B.Eq
extent of Booz's government
~%%d'. '. • e~
Health care acquisitions by defense contractorsdon't al-
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spond to repeated requests for interviews.
A clash of corporate culture
c
r
work is unclear because its jobs for spy agencies don't show up in official records, contracting specialists say). Booz officials did not re• • ' s
X
*
o,v R'R%
e
•
MANUFACTURER DIRECT PRICING
ness services.
General Dynamics did not make executives available for
•
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•
•
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•
•
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interviews. But the deal did
not go as well as the company hoped, as Vangent's corporate culture clashed with that
of the buyer, said Technology Business Research's Lagana.
was passed, thanks to extraor-
tool for the early identifica-
dinary purchases of H1N1 flu vaccines. But the ambitious
tion of sepsis, a life-threaten- $2 billion quarterly loss at the ing response by the body to end of 2012 was — ironically
Affordable Care Act, intend-
infection.
ed to expand health coverage, Along with cybersecurity overhaul payments and re- smarts, Washington employengineer care — and with am- ers especially prize health anple budgets to attempt all three alytics skills, recruiters say. "We have 200 epidemiolo— changed the game.
pay $250 for emergency room
places. They happen regularly in health plans offered by employers. Under the law, insurers
ing for the National Institutes Medicare. jobs are "cost-plus" contracts, of Health; helped launch the This year, HealthCare.gov every hire comes with a builthealth law's accountable care is working better, by many in profit. organizations to control costs accounts. A g a in , G e n eral and improve care; and turned Dynamics has been hiring telecom software into a Medi- to answer the phones. The care fraud detector. company's $815 million in ~+ccoolsculpting The quickest way to acquire spending commitments from a particular expertise need- HHS made it the agency's top LE F F E L Dan'r s ettle faranyone
ways work smoothly. In 2011, General Dynamics paid Veritas nearly $1 billion for Vanof 2009, steered an additional gent, a seller of health infor$30 billion via Medicare reim- mation technology and busibursements to spur hospitals and doctorsto buy medical-re-
Affordable Care Act market-
are somewhat limited in how varies from $250 to $500. And they can change their plans. members will now pay 40 perProducts are grouped by tiers: cent of the cost of specialty Bronze plans cover about 60 medications, up from 25 perpercent of their members' centthisyear. overall health services; silver CareSource enrolled more plans 70 percent; gold plans than 30,000 people during 80 percent. To stay at those the 2014 open enrollment cylevels from year to year, plans cle and expects to double that can't just increase all of their amount this time around, charges. If they charge more Streator said. for some things, that often The data analyzed by Promeans charging less for others. Publica does not include inforThat's what happened at mation for states that run their CareSource, the Ohio non- own insurance exchanges, profit. Officials there said they including California and New changed their benefits based York. In California, plans are er a standard on comments from mem- requiredto off bers and conversations with benefit design, which allows others who are uninsured. consumers to compare plans "Many didn't understand the more easily. Insurers compete value of h ealth i n surance," ontheirbrand's reputation, presaid Scott Streator, vice pres- miums and on the size of their ident of Enterprise Strategy doctor and hospital networks. at CareSource. "Therefore, The government's plan to we changed our plan design automatically re-enroll conto make it more simple, more sumers for 2015 has come understandable and more pre- under criticism, with some ventive, focused on everyday warning that consumers who don't make a choicethemtypes of health care needs." That translated into f r ee selves could end up in a plan generic drugs and lower co- with higher costs. As a result, pays for physician office vis- the government is considering its, Streator said. "If you make a different system for 2017 in these changes, there's trade- which consumers who don't offs," he said. "The costs go up pick their own plan could be somewhere else." In contrast shifted to the lowest-cost plan with this year, when members in the market.
their benefits may not stay the
same. "You're getting re-enrolled Source look a lot like the ones it sold this year, in the Afford- in the same carrier, but there's able Care Act's first enroll- basically no guarantees that ment season. your product looks anywhere The monthly premiums are near the same as it did last nearly identical, and the de- year," said Caroline Pearductibles are the same. son, vice president of Avalere But tucked within the plans' Health, a consulting firm. jargonarechanges thatcould Much attention has focused markedly affect how much on changes to plans' monthly consumers pay for health premiums, but changes to othcare. Generic drugs will soon er kinds of benefits — affectbe free, but the cost of expen- ing the cost of things like docsive specialty medications will tors' visits and prescriptionsincrease. Co-payments for can be trickier to understand visits to primary-care doctors and makea huge difference in will go down, but those for annual health care costs. emergency room trips will be A ProPublica analysis of higher. the 2014 and 2015 plans in 34 Millions of people nation- states being offered on the exwide bought health insurance change shows the adjustments this year through the federal taking place. ProPublica has
ans
•
•
s •
Part of G eneral Dynamics' — related not to defense but
•
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•
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•
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to Vangent and its health care work, he said. But thanks to Vangent, the
company got the task of staffing call centers to explain "Just because of the Afford- gists. We have clinical statis- HealthCare.gov to consumers. ableCare Act,ourhealth care ticians. We have physicians. That job became bigger than business has probably dou- We have nurses," said Amy anybody imaginedwhen the bled in the last five years," said Caro, head of the health divisite crashed during insurance Nelson Ford, chief executive of sion at Northrop Grumman, enrollment a year ago. GenLMI Government Consulting, better known for its B-2 stealth eral Dynamics ended up hirwhich helps HHS analyze and bomber. ing 8,000 mostly temporary regulate the new private insurAmong other HHS work, workers to run hotlines for the ance plans sold under the law. Northrop manages data-shar- Affordable Care Act as well as
5 41-213-22 9 4 Monday through Friday9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment only 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite 4105 • Bend, Oregon
www.americahears.com
•
D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
FrmEss
Fitness a
sto ee at-ris
By Eryn Brown
Many such mobile health, or "m-health," programs are
help at-risk groups. "Everyone has a phone,
— and working long hours — to find time to care for
in their infancy. But research-
even if it's a throwaway," add-
Sago knew she had a problem. Three years ago, at age 30, she weighed 269 pounds. She was taking pills for high blood pressure. Her trigl ycerides were "the highest you can
ers and advocates for underserved, hard-to-reach patient groups hope they soon will contribute to major advances in the treatment of diabetes,
themselves. They also needed help understanding nutrition
have," she said.
ic conditions. Cellphones provide unprec-
ed UCLA psychologist and researcher Vickie Mays. labels. Mays, who leads a center Eastwood taught the women that focuses on addressing about healthy-heart lifestyles health disparities, collaborates and stress reduction in four diwith the university's Wireless et-and-exerciseclasses before Health Institute, which backed handing out custom-configthe Inglewood study. ured Android phones. Heart disease among young The devices were disabled black women — a long-recog- for voice calls but could be nized problem — appeared to used to text others in the study be an ideal condition to target group. The phones were loadwith m-health programs, said ed with an app, developed at Jo-Ann Eastwood, a nurse UCLA, that interacted with practitioner and a ssociate the women, sending daily and professor at UCLA's School of weekly questions — "Did you Nursing who ran the church eat five to six servings of fruit today'?" — and tracking how group study. Sago and the other women much exercise they got via selected for the study all were built-in accelerometers.
Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Qiana
Working as an LAX airport custodian, she was surrounded by fast food, which became a daily staple. "You ate (it) when you got to work, you ate it again midday," she said. "Then I'd get off work and eat more."
heart disease and other chronedented, low-cost access to
patients, experts say,because the technology is so widely used and the socioeconomic
digital divide is shrinking. The Pew Research Internet Project reported earlier this year that
But, partly because she was 84 percent of U.S. adults with provided access to unique incomes below $30,000 a year fitness technology, the Ingle- had cellphones; 47 percent had wood, California, resident has smartphones. turned things around — losIncreasingly, phones — not ing more than 40 pounds and home-based broadband conworking toward the day she nections — are the gateway to can stop taking blood pres- the Internet for all Americans. "Anything that you're do-
sure medication.
Sago and 39 other young African-American women at Faithful Central Bible Church
recently participated in a UCBC-backed clinical trial that used a smartphone app to track their eating and activity and teach them healthful diet
ing online, that you want to extend to a low-income population, the way they're most
Pingpong
strategic decisions and react quickly with their bodies.
officially sanctioned event in 1986. He started coming to the Maryland Table Tennis Center
important, Alshurafa said.
Preliminary results from the study have been promising. Compared with a control group, the church women had significant improvements in bloodpressure and cholesterol levels, lower levels of anxiety
Nabil Alshurafa, a Ph.D. can-
didate who spent many days at Faithful Central tweaking the
phone app. One challenge was figuring out a comfortable way for the women to wear the phones during waking hours. and stress and improved eatHe and Eastwood ultimately ing and exercise habits. opted for passport pouches Sago, now 33 and a full-time worn around the waist.
student, cut red meat out of
Blood-pressure r eadings spiked after the Fourth of July,the researchers noticed
"Study after study shows
and a co-founder of MDTTC.
As for the rest of the body, "you have to move so fast. In
a fast rally, you do incredible training. Your legs have to be in great shape, and if you have extra weight, you can't move."
SCADE COTTONS
At the Northern Virginia Table Tennis Center in Chan-
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as well as the fact that he takes executive board, two of whom anticoagulant medicine. He
were a spry 71, with the third
has gotten his cardio level way up, all right, plus some side effects that are proving very helpful in battling an even more pressing medical issue. About a year and a half ago, Kumar was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease. He might
checking in at an even sprier (one presumes) 70. "Aside from the physical movement,the hand-eye coordination that you develop
have gotten that
It took time to make the
system work as planned, said
how it helps the brain; it delays the onset of Alzheimer's," says Larry Hodges, Kumar's coach
ing for an energetic but non- Tennis Club in Arlington was contact activity, because of any indication. There, I spoke "the mechanical stuff inside"
one was watching and that the diet and exercise goals were
researchers.
her diet and loaded up on vegetables. In addition to losing weight, she significantly im— a holidaywhen the women proved her blood pressure and had loaded up on salty foods. triglycerides. Due to signal and data variaThe smartphone helped tions, Alshurafa could also tell keep her honest. "Everybody lies to thembetween 25 and 45 at the time S tudy p a rticipants w e r e when one participant faked and had at least two risk fac- supposed to wear the smart- her workouts by shaking the selves," she said. "But when tors for heart disease. They phones whenever they were phone in her hand instead of you use the phone, you can't knew that they needed to eat awake. They also had to mea- taking walks. really lie. You can't cheat. The well and exercise. But many sure their blood pressure on When unusual patterns of phone showed that you did the said they were too busy caring Sunday nights, using Blue- data were spotted, a nurse work. It kept track every time for their children and parents tooth-equipped blood-pres- would give the subject a call, you moved."
in Gaithersburg but then had tilly, Virginia, head coach to take some time off because Zhongxing Lu pointed out of some more heart-rel ated is- (through his daughter, who sues, as well as the birth of a translated his Chinese) still child. more selling points, includSince July, Kumar has ing table tennis' ability to imbeen backat MDTTC with a prove vision and reflexes, the vengeance, saying that, "in unlikelihood of serious injury fact, now I'm playing bet- and the almost unlimited age ter because,from a heart range. His youngest member s tandpoint, I've had all t h e is 6; his oldest is 82. open-heart surgeries I needTable tennis is certainly a knock on wood." sport one can play well into When he first got back into one's senior years, if my visit table tennis, Kumar was look-
reinforced the idea that some-
of the California Health Care Foundation in Oakland, Cali-
fornia. Laws runs a program that hopes to use technology to
s ter, even competing in a n
sure cuffs that sent readings which at wavering moments to the phones, which then s treamed the d at a t o t h e
likely to access it is through mobile," said Margaret Laws
and exercise habits.
ContInued from D1 On a Caribbean cruise a few years ago, Kumar won a pingpong tournament (most aficionados refer to it as table tennis, but the more informal term is still acceptable), and he was remindedofhow much he had enjoyed the sport as a young-
ieters on trac
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www. CascadeCottons.com 909 NWWALL STREET DOWNTOWNBEND• 541-306-6071
"eem
I S e II I
here is wonderful," Fred Siskind o f M c L ean, V i rginia, (the 70-year-old) told me. "I d i agnosis thought I would have lost the
sooner, but the onset of symp- hand-eye quickness (after
toms was initially hard to dis- many years not playing the tinguish from th e essential sport), and I'm sure I'm not the
tremor disorder he'd long had. ET affects the left side of Kumar's body, while Parkinson's manifests itself on his right, the side he uses to hold his paddle. During a training session, I saw Kumar ask his coach if he could switch to some drills on the backhand
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Tom Norwood, also from McLean, added, "This is how I
fight off my diabetes. It's very good exercise.... If it weren't for this, I'd be running on a treadmill somewhere."
The Maryland centeris a state-of-the-art operation, and,
s J
ily difficult. according to Hodges, the oldStill, the fluidity of his play- est in the country. "With the Parkinson's, I'm
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"As of 2007, there were only
eight full-time training centers in the United States," Hodges said. "When we opened in
getting the added benefit of less muscle stiffness, some 1992, we were the first.... Now improvement in the tremors, there are 76 — we've been as well," Kumar added. "I'm keeping track." always going to have the tremHodges described Maryors, but at least this helps keep land as "one of the hotbeds for my hands more relaxed." table tennis," and MDTTC has N ot only that, but in t h e long been home to some of the most recent visit to his neu- finest table tennis players in rologist, Kumar showed huge the United States, including improvement on tests of his many national team members. motor skills, reflexes and Kumar is good at table tenmemory. nis, but he knows he can beTable tennis has been linked come much better ,and he is to improved cognitive function excited about his prospects at least as far back as 1992,
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ness is still there."
hands had become temporar-
months ago," Kumar told me.
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way I was in my 20s, but I've been surprised.... The quick-
side, because hitting fore-
ing "was much worse three
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iArtistry in Design",
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of getting there. In the short
when Japanese researchers term, he is looking forward ran tests on frequent players. to competing at the national Their conclusion: "It i s evi- championships in Las Vegas dent from this study that table this month. tennis players preserve far Of course, Kumar also has better mental ability even in some other major goals in the older age compared with mind. non-players." "I look at my two girls, and Given a small ball traveling I want to be around them forshort distances at high speed, ever. I don't want this Parkinplayers must not only track son's to have its way with me, its movements carefully with or even my heart. So I play for their eyes, but instantly make my survival."
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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D5
MEDICINE
A oseo o By Jane E. Brody
e o r o ssi e un cancer atients
country will learn they have lung cancer and more than
New York Times News Service
ing by chest X-ray.
turn out not to be cancer. AlLast December, the U .S. though in most cases, a repeat P reventive S e r vices T a s k scan can rule out cancer, in Force advised that a n nual others a lung biopsy, which
In 2011, a year after my 159,000 will die of the disease, husband Richard died of lung according to the American cancer, a major national study Cancer Society. documented the potential abilThe disease is aggressive, ity to detect this disease when and 70 percent of cases are it might still be amenable to diagnosed in advanced stag-
screening with LDCT be lim- can be risky, is required. In the ited to adults between the ages national trial, major complicaof 55 and 80 who have at least tions, including some deaths, a 30-pack-year smoking histo- occurred in 33 of every 10,000 ry and either still smoke or quit persons from procedures used within the last 15 years. Pack- to determine whether nodules years are calculated by multi- seen on LDCT were cancerous. plying the number of packs of Follow-up tests can also cigarettes smoked per day by uncover other possible unrethe number of years a person lated problems that must be smoked. A 30 pack-year histo- checked, leading to a spiral of ry would result, for example, additional procedures, any of from smoking a pack a day for which can have its own com30 years, or two packs a day plications. Anxiety can also for 15 years, or half a pack a result from a suspicious findday for 60 years. ing, prompting a Brown Uni-
es, which accounts for the low
Having smoked up to a pack a day for 50 years, Richard knew his days were numbered even though he had quit smoking 15 years before his diagnosis of stage 4 cancer. Now there is guarded hope for the millions of other former and current smokers who are at high risk of developing one of the deadliest of cancers. Through the A ff ordable
survival rate. Only 30 percent of lung cancers are discovered in stage 1 or 2, when surgery offers a potential cure, and only about half of those are cul ed.
Now, after years of research and one of the largest cancer
screening trials ever mounted, there is genuine hope for reducing the toll exacted by this disease. A national study
The task force also recommended that screening be dis-
Care Act and, if draft recom-
involving 53,454current and mendations are adopted, soon former smokersbelieved to be through Medicare as well, healthy showed that annual
many insured individuals will screening by low-dose computbe eligible for a free CT exam ed tomography could prevent Otto Steininger/The New York Times that, for some at least, could be three lung cancer deaths for Annual screening of individuals at a high-risk of developing Iung lifesaving. every1,000 people screened. cancer could help reduce the toll exacted by the disease, which Is Lung cancer is the third Given the millions of people the leading cause of cancer deaths in the United States. most common cancer among
at risk, that could translate to a
Americans, exceeded only by cancers of the prostate and
lot of lives saved. But it is by no
ing would have to be limited to to lung cancer mortality; for people at high risk of developthe leading cause of cancer every 1,000 people screened, ing lung cancer. As calculated deaths in both men and wom- 14 still died of the disease. All by Dr. Peter Bach of Memorial en, causing more deaths annu- told, of the 53,454 study par- Sloan-Kettering Cancer Cenally than breast and prostate ticipants screened with LDCT ter and Dr. Michael Gould of cancers combined. for three years, 1,076 received Kaiser Permanente Southern Despite treatment advances a lung cancer diagnosis, and California, screening highfor many cancers, lung can- within three years of fol- risk individuals would prevent cer has remained a stubborn low-up, 469 died of the disease. 15 times as many lung cankiller, with only 16 percent of For the benefits shown in the cer deaths as screening those patients alive five years after trial to be fully realized and for at low risk of developing the diagnosis. This year an esti- those benefits to outweigh po- disease. mated 224,210 people in this tentially serious risks, screenIn addition, to maximize the
ratio of benefit to risk, screening should only be done at
means a miraculous solution
breast. But it remains by far
venues with up-to-date equip-
ment and thoroughly trained personnel who know whom to test, how to interpret the
results and when to follow up with additional tests and treatment if needed, Bach said.
Such criteria resulted in a 20 percent higher survival rate in individuals screened annually for three years by LDCT than
Deschutes County Crook County Jefferson County
82 7 14
Statewide
1,783
Num b e r of kIds up- t o-date
Percentage of kIds with nonmedical exemptions
"We respect parents' rights to make their own choices, so it's not something that we real-
Number of kIds with medical exemptions
ly get emotionally involved in, it's just their choice," she said, adding she thinks it's important that parents understand
2,771 88 . 1% (2,440) 9 .7% (268) 0.1% (3) 155 92. 9 % (144) 3.2 % (5) 0% (0) 4 75 93. 1 % (442) 1%(5 ) 0% (0) 0.08% (52) 64,621 90.8% (58,647) 6.9% (4,428)
the ramifications of refusing vaccinations.
Like all certified day cares, Stendahl collects updated parents every year, and none of them seem to mind — some
Vaccinations
even seem to appreciate the
reminder, she said. Smaller child care providers — often in-home ones — are regis-
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
tered with the state, but not
tions and are complying with
certified. Those providers only
members with compromised the immunization schedule," ContInued from 01 immune systems, especially Opel said. That's been the experience Deschutes County has the those who are elderly.
need to submit vaccination re-
t hird-highest r ate o f
s uch
important to protect family
"It's that 'It takes a village'
o f Sue Stendahl, who h a s
kind of thing with vaccina- owned The Cottage Day Care tions," she said. "The people since 1978. Although she said state, behind Multnomah and who cannot be fully vacci- probably 90 percent of her Wallowa counties. Statewide, nated do rely on everybody kids are up to date on their just under 7 percent of kids in else to create that circle of vaccinations,there have been certified child care facilities protection." a few parents in recent years who've gotten exemptions. have nonmedical exemptions. Kids 18 months or older at-
rounds of polio and vaccines
ers should check kids' status
The University of
for measles, mumps and rubella, chickenpox, Hepatitis
annually. Another 66 percent of parents said they believe B, Hepatitis A and Hib, a vac- day care providers should let cine that prevents meningitis, them know how many kids pneumonia and epiglottitis. are not up to date on their Some kids don't get them
Locker Room, Spa & Steam Room
years of running a day care,
Staying active all xeinter long is zehat me strive for
Stendahl said she can't re-
call one parent asking about the other kids' vaccination statuses. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
M i chi-
Putting Care Back Into Health Care
mobile dentures
Tennis & Pickleball Courts
facilities, not annually. But in her more than 30
A vocal minority
gan survey also found that 81 percent of parents think kids in day cares should be up to date on vaccinations, and 74 percent said provid-
Broken Top's social membership provides access to Bend's top fitness and yoga instructors, in a private, small group setting. Fith nearly 20 classes weekly, ranging Pom sports conditioning to Pilates and yoga, there's something to fit everyone's needs!
cords when kids enroll at their
nonmedical exemptions at child care facilities in the
tending preschool, day care or Head Start programs are required to have a number of vaccinations, including four rounds of a diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis, three
Fitness, Health & Wellness Center
vaccination information from
* Child care centers registered with the state but not certified (Including many in-home facilities), are not required to submit annual figures. ** Total number of kids includes children whrj have received some vaccination but are not yet past due for missing ones. Source:Oregon Immunization Program
counseling people beforehand continued after a person had about the potentially high rate not smoked for 15 years or de- of false positives and "signifiveloped a health problem that cant incidental findings" asso"substantially limits life expec- ciated with LDCT screening. tancy or the ability or willingThen there is the cost, which ness to have curative lung sur- could exceed $9 billion for gery." A "Lung Cancer Screen- Medicare alone and higher ing Decision Tool" developed rates for everyone insured. by Memorial Sloan-Kettering The trial research team estiis available online. mated that, compared with Why shouldn't everyone no screening, LDCT costs an get a LDCT screening test? additional $1,631 for a perAlthough the test itself is non- son to achieve an additional invasive and the amount of 0.0316years of life, for atotal of radiation involved is very low $52,000per life-yeargained or (comparable to six months of $81,000 for each quality-adjustnatural background radiation), ed life-year. it is also associated with potenFinally, "every screening tially serious risks. program should offer help for Most common is the risk of a smoking cessation," Bach said. false-positive result. Up to half "Stopping smoking is far more of lung nodules seen on LDCT important than screening."
that achievedthrough screen-
* centers, 2014 Vaccination rates at certified child care N umber of Number facilities o f kIds In facilities
versity team to r ecommend
Q®05t
j
— featuring A Snowshoeing Group Watercolor Classes Men's Poker Group Book Club M e m ber Trips To Mt. Bachelor F or more in f o r m a t io n c o n t act Jack Perk i n s to set up a tou r o f th e c l u b h o u se.
541-383-8202
Discountapplieswhenadis mentioned for a full set ofdentures...
vaccinations.
b ecause they're no t o l d In recent years, a vocal mienough or, in r are cases, nority of parents who delay or have a medical condition that
prevents them from getting vaccinated, such as having a compromised immune systems while undergoing can-
refuse vaccines has drowned
out "the majority of parents
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0
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who are fine with immuniza-
cer treatment. Vaccinations are not 100
percenteffective,so even ifa child is up to date on vaccina-
tions, it's still possible for him or her to catch an illness from a peer who is not, said Dr.
Doug Opel, assistant professor of pediatrics at the Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute. Since illnesses tend
to spread more rapidly in day cares than in other settings, it's important to know how
many kids at your child's day care or school are up to date
on their vaccinations, he said. As a parent, Opel said all of the decisions he makes have
With compassion, respect and 35 years of expertise, we bring the highest level of home health care into your home to help you recover and regain your independence. When you need help with
his child's safety in mind. "I do that when I strap my child into the car seat," he
said. "I do that when I strap on a b i cycle helmet when they're on their bike, and I'm
coordinated medical care at home, choose Partners In Care.
going to do that when I send my child to public school," he said. "I'm going to ask, 'How many are exempted here?'"
(541) 382-5882
Clark, with th e U niversi-
ty of Michigan, said it's also
— Dru I P artners In Care Home Health r s e -
p a r t n e rsbend.org
Hospice I Home Health I Hospice House Transitions I Palliative Care
Partners In Care H OME H E A L T H
D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
e ix's' arco o o' e s a s ows a TV SPOTLIGHT
ET
"Marco Polo" Streaming beginning Friday, Netflix By David Wiegnnd The San Francisco Chronicle
SAN FRANCISCO — "Mar-
co Polo," the big-budget saga with occasional references to the real-life 13th century Italian merchant who hung out with
Kublai Khan, is action-packed, compelling and filled with intrigue and sex... eventually. Andy Kropa l The Associated Press And by "eventually," I mean Benedict Wong, from left, Lorenzo Richelmy nnd Rick Yune attend only after you slog through the season premiere of the new Netflix series "Marco Polo" at AMC four slowlypaced hourlong epi- Lincoln Square in NewYork. sodes filmed in semi-darkness, with a script filled with declamatory dialogue that does little unde, in Mongolia, ruled by ivia Cheng), into becoming a to either humanize the story or the great and powerful Kublai concubine in Khan's harem in help untangle the deceptively Khan (Benedict Wong). The el- order to keep tabs on what the labyrinthine script. Once you der Polos soon take off, leaving Mongols are up to. Basically, do penetrate the mare's nest of Marco to fend for himself as he's the Song Dynasty equivaa plot, you realize you've prob- a guest of Khan, although, in lent of Lord Baelish in "Game ably seen enough of this kind truth, he is a prisoner. of Thrones." of thing before to anticipate There is upheaval both withThrough all of this, you may much of the action. in the empire and beyond. Not find yourself asking, "Where's Six of the 10 episodes of the only are the Chinese fighting Marco?" Well, he's there and firstseason were made avail- to keep the Mongols at bay, but sometimes even present in the able to critics and for much of there is treachery among the thick of things, but the charthe time, I almost found myself Mongol tribes, including the acter is a somewhat uninterwishing, for a change, that the one headed by Khan's young- esting cypher. He takes kung network had sent fewer. er brother, who has designs fu lessons from the blind HunThe series was created by on Khan's expansive throne. dred Eyes (Tom Wu), smokes John Fusco ("The Forbidden In China, the aged emperor is some sort of Mongolian peyKingdom") and directed with on his death bed, with only an ote and imagines himself in somnambulant pacing by Dan infant son as an heir, opening the center of an orgy, trails the Minahan, Joachim Ronning an opportunity for his schem- mysterious Blue Princess (Zhu and Espen Sandberg. ing chancellor, Sidao (Chin Zhu) around trying to figure It begins, of course, with Han), to claim power after the out where she goes at night, the arrival of Marco (Loren- emperor's death. He b lack- and gradually insinuates himzo Richelmy), his father and mails his sister, Mei Lin (Ol- self in Khan's good graces.
TV TODAY • More TI/listingsinside Sports Sp.m. on TCM, Movie:"The Shop Around the Corner" — Alfred and Klara (James Stewart, Margaret Sullavan) are rival store employees who constantly argue. Little do theyknow thatthey havebeen corresponding with each other through the mail. Alfred has fallen in love with the woman to whom he writes, clueless that it is Klara. This1940 movie is a precursor to1949's "In the Good Old Summertime" and also was adapted into the Broadway musical "She Loves Me."
But he's not that interesting, In supporting roles, Austrawhich may have something lian actor Remy Hii is perfect to do with Richelmy, who cer- as Khan's son and heir, who tainly looks the part of a swar- has been raised in China and thy young hero but is rather is now trying to be the man passionless, even when Marco his father wants him to be. is forced to decide punish- Tom Wu is mesmerizing as the ment for his father and unde's all-seeing blind martial arts transgressi ons against Khan master Hundred Eyes, Chin and when Khan is attacked by Han a picture of unadulterated would-be assassins. evil ambition as chancellor SiYou can't really blame dao, and Mahesh Jadu is quite Richelmy as much as Fusco convincing as the not entirely and his band of merry direc- trustworthy Ahmad. tors, all of whom seem to be The opening credit sequence straining for the longest time for the series evokes that of "Game of Thrones," but with
against the temptation to turn "Marco Polo" into a martial arts series, either of the Bruce
nately, Fusco et al give in and "Marco Polo" rocks with lots of
flowing ink creating images such as bodies hanging on pikes, an attacking eagle and, for some completely unknown reason, a replica of Caravaggio's self-portrait as the head of Goliath in his painting "David
action, much of it in the "Tiger/
With the Head of Goliath."
Lee variety or the "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" ilk. By the fifth episode, fortu-
8 p.m. on CW, "The Vampire Diaries" —Even if it isn't necessarily a wonderful life for Bonnie (Kat Graham) as Christmas nears, she's able to take comfort in her memories of past holiday seasons in Mystic Falls in the new episode "Christmas Through Your Eyes." Jo's (guest star Jodi Lyn O'Keefe) disappearance prompts Alaric (Matt Davis)
Dragon" slo-mo style. At this B ut this i sn't " G ame of point, "Marco Polo" breaks Thrones," and not only b eloose from its dingy lethargy. cause it's about 13th-century Although even Richelmy Mongolia and not seven mythisn't bad, just irrelevant, sev- ical kingdoms. There is a lot of eral actors pump energy into violence in it and a whole lot of "Marco Polo" to keep it afloat, nudity, and there are superb beginning with the endearing performances, all of which are first family of Mongolia, Ben- undermined by ponderousedict Wong and Joan Chen. ly self-important writing and Wong plays Kublai like a 13th direction. The fifth and sixth century Mongol Henry VIII, episodes suggest that "Marcommanding our focus in al- co Polo" may belatedly get most every scene he's in, while
to seek help from Damonand Elena (lan Somerhalder, Nina
Dobrev). Caroline (Candice Accola) gets a surprise from Sheriff Forbes (guest star Marguerite Maclntyre). 8 p.m. on AMC, "Blake Shelton's Not So Family Christmas" —The title of this holiday special is a bit misleading since Shelton's wife, fellow country crooner Miranda Lambert, is part of the show. So are his fellow "The Voice" veteran Christina Aguilera, Kelly Clarkson, Jay Leno, Reba McEntire and Larry the Cable Guy. They
over itself in the home stretch,
Chen brings depth, majesty which may be OK since this is and welcome nuance tothe a streamed show with multiple role of the Empress Chabi. episodes available at once. But Thanks to Chen, the Empress you still have to give viewers a is the most interesting charac- compelling reason to keep going from the get-go. ter in the whole shebang.
present seasonal songs old and new,along with some comedy bits, to get viewers in the seasonal spirit.
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY
Communi t eater ues romance
• There may be an additional fee for 3-D and/MAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
share of costumes. But I have also wife. We have had more than a letters from people who are look- learned how to frame a wall and few "spirited discussions" about ing to meet decent, honorable and build a staircase while working on it, which I view as a real threat to interesting other people. While set construction. the long-term well-being of our you have recommended volunEven if you don't find that spe- marriage. teering, joining health clubs, go- cial someone, you will make dozI have tried mightily for her sake ing to church — and staying out ens of new friends and have the to overlook their major personality of bars — something s atisfaction of a c- and character flaws, with no sucI have yet to see complishing some- cess. I don't want another divorce. mentioned is a comthing at the same Please help. DFP,R — Desperate in the m unltybased a " s time. ABBY — Always Busy in organization. Mid-Atlantic S omeone who i s Des Moines Dear Desperate:If you love your musically i n clined Dear Always Busy: wife and don't want this marriage might look for a local band, or- I love your suggestion. Not every- ruined, accept that you are going Dear Abby:You sometimes print
chestra or community chorus. But
I'd like to put in a word for community theater. A person doesn't
one is meant to be in front of the footlights, but that doesn't mean
one can't be an important member
have to be a performer; these of the team. And community the-
groups need people to build sets, ater is definitely a team effort. make costumes, locate props, run Dear Abby: I find my wife's the backstage operations during daughter and son-in-law, who a performance, etc. In the front live nearby, to be very unlikable. of the house, they need people for Her daughter is gossipy, arrogant, promotion, selling tickets, usher- smug and superficial. The husing and soliciting donations from band is ill-mannered, devoid of sosponsors. cial skills, lazy, impossible to carI met my husband of 30-plus ry on a normal conversation with years through a community the- and, worst of all, a liar. ater group, and know of several Naturally, I am expected to see other long-term marriages that them often, and the more I am came about the same way. I'm a around them, the less I like them. seamstress, so I have made my This has become apparent to my
to have to accommodate to some
degree her insuff erable daughter and son-in-law. This does not mean you must love them or even enjoy their company. It does mean working out a compromise that includes spending some time with them.
You and your wife are not joined at the hip. Every visit doesn't have toinclude you. Take up some hobbies you can enjoy on your own. Develop a sense of humor where they are concerned. If you do, you won't force your wife to choose between you and her child, because the chances are you would lose. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
I
I
8:30 p.m. on SHD, Movie: "God's Pocket" — John Slattery ("Mad Men") directed this 2014 adaptation of Pete Dexter's character-driven 1983 novel about a boozy lowlife who tries to bury the truth about his mentally unstable stepson's suspicious death. His subterfuge is complicated, however, by a nosy newspaper columnist and the young man's mother. In one of his final roles, Philip Seymour Hoffman stars, along with Slattery's "Mad Men" co-star Christina Hendricks. The cast also includes Richard Jenkins, John Turturro, Peter Gerety and Molly Price.
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BIG HERD 6(PG)10:40 a.m., 1:20, 4:10 • BIRDMAN(R) 1:30, 4:20, 7:10, 10:05 • THE BLUEROOM(R)3:15, 9:10 • DUMB ANDDUMBER TO (PG-13)11:20a.m.,2,4:40 • EXODUS:GODS AND KINGS 3D (PG13)8,9 • GONE GIRL(R) 11:40 a.m., 3:10 • HORRIBLEBOSSES2(R) 12:30, 3:05, 6:05 • THEHUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 11:30a.m., 1:55, 3, 6, 7, 10 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) noon, 4 • INTERSTELLAR IMAX (PG-13) 1, 5, 9 • MEET THE MORMONS(PG) 12:15, 6:15 • ffIGHTCRAWLER (R) 11:45 a.m., 3:25, 6:50, 9:50 • PEffGUINS DFMADAGASCAR(PG) 10:45 a.m.,1:15, 4:05, 6:45, 9: I5 • PENGUIffS OF MADAGASCAR3-D (PG)11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9:45 • ST. VINCENT(PG-13) 1:05, 3:40, 6:40, 9:20 • THETHEORY DF EVERYTHING (PG-13)11:35a.m.,3:20, 6:20, 9:25 • TDP FIVE(R) 8, 9 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •
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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, DEC. 11, 2014:This year you open upto having more compassion for others. You are likely to develop a stronger relationship with your friends and family as a result. You might be stunned when you see the difference that accepting love can make. If you are single, you are likely to go through several different relationships before you find someone you Stnrsshowthe ging can respect who of tfny yon I hnve knows how to love ** * * * D ynamic well. If you are ** * * p ositive attached, the two of you will spend *** Average more and more ** So-so time together. You * Difficult often act like two
teenagers in love. LEO knowshow to make people relax and smile.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * H olding back and thinking before you act might not be as successful as youhad hoped.Actually,youare better off being impulsive. Someone could offer a different perspective. You intuitively will know which way to go. Tonight: Add a little spice to a relationship.
TAURUS (April 20-Mny20) ** * Emphasis seems to be on your personal life. A partner or loved one might make a suggestion that could affect your financial situation, but you could be quite attached to the status quo. Try to open up to different perspectives. Tonight: Happiest at home.
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * Be willing to break a standoff and make an important phone call. You might not be happy about making the first move, but ultimately it will be for the
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
best. A friend might be unusually expressive. Try to understand what is happening. Tonight: The only answer is "yes."
CANCER (June21-July 22)
what the best way to handle someone would be. How you present what you want will make a big difference in the outcome.Money could be a key issue. Discuss this matter openly rather than let it go undiscussed. Tonight: A must
appearance. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
** * * You might want to take a hard look at your finances and decide what would be best to do. Look at a situation more carefully in order to understand what is happening with an associate. This person's optimism might not be realistic. Tonight: Relax with friends.
** * * * Y ou know where to head to get more information. Don't hesitate to go past that level and find an expert. You could be emotional when discussing various scenarios, but you will make the right choice regardless. Do not jump to conclusions. Tonight: Paint the town I'ed.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
** * * S omeone could be a little too contentious for your taste. You might respond to this person's mood with a knee-jerk reaction, so be careful. Someone is likely to misread your intensity and your natural charisma as being something else! Tonight: Ever playful.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * Be aware of your limits, and recognize that you just might not be up to snuff. It happens to everyone. Take a day off from your normal patterns and/or schedule. Create a special 12 hours for you. Do you know what that would look like? Tonight: Not to be found.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22)
** * * * Y ou relate well to others, especially if they are authentic and clear. As conversations continue, you will want to consider what you are hearing before drawing any conclusions. Let others know what you are thinking. Tonight: Find a favorite person.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh. 18) ** * * * O t hers are likely to have a lot to say. Keep an open mind, and be willing to listen and learn from them. You might have the whole situation played out in your head, but choose not to share your judgments just yet. Tonight: Go along with someone else's plans.
** * * * Z ero in on what you want, and PISCES (Feh. 19-Mnrch20) don't allow someone to push you too ** * * You might be taken aback by far. If this person's interests are similar all the possibilities that surround you. enough to yours, you'll have an opportu- Think about what would be the best way nity to work together. Dreams and prac- to complete what you must do. If you tical matters are likely to be discussed. do, you will be more relaxed with what Tonight: Found among the crowds. serendipity presents in your life. Learn SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov. 21) to flex. Tonight: Get a good night's sleep. ** * * You could be wondering © King Features Syndicate
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Adjustablc Beds
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine
•
541-548-2066
RlV&TREss
G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014 •
•
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
Call for package rates
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Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
208
202
Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
WANTED wood dressers; dead washer/ dryers. 541-420-5640 TURN THE PAGE
203
Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows
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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood
Pets & Supplies
For More Ads The Bulletin
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
208
• P ets & Supplies
POODLE or POMAPOO The Bulletin recom- puppies, toy. Adorable! mends extra caution 541-475-3889 or when purc h as541-325-6212 ing products or services from out of the QueensfandHeelers area. Sending cash, Standard & Mini, $150 checks, or credit in& up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor f ormation may b e subjected to fraud. dpress.com For more informaRodent issues? Free tion about an adveradult barn/ shop cats, tiser, you may call fixed, shots, s o me the O r egon State friendly, some not. Attorney General's Office C o nsumer Will deliver. 280-3172 Protection hotline at SHIH-TZU, male, $400 1-877-877-9392. Pure Bred, 3yr old, Trained. 541-589-4948 The Bulletin ServInyCenCralOregongnce tggg blossomhut@gmail.co m 2 young Parrakeets, w/ Shih-Tzu puppy, male, big iron cage. $67 gorgeous! $350 541-389-8745. 541-788-0234 or 541-548-0403 Adopt a rescued cat or kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, g more! CRAFT, 65480 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun,
1-5. 541 - 389-8420 www.craftcats.org CHRISTMAS BAZAAR Huskies, cute Crescent Community Aussies, Mini, A K C, Siberian hybrids. Reserve your
Center, Crescent ready to go. M/F red puppy now! 3 cut-off- Rd., Crescent. merle & tri, black tri. Christmas M's, 3 F's, ready 12/20. Dec 12-13, 8-5 u.t.d. shots & worm- $500. 541-280-0457 Free Admission ing. 541-598-5314 20+ venders - quilts, Chihuahua puppies for Where can you find a knitting, metal art, helping hand? wood crafts, jewelry, sale, $200-$250 Call for info, 541-233-9079 bread & more! From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service I WILL WRAP Professional" Directory YOUR
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Furniture & Appliances
Furniture 8 Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
Bicycles & Accessories
Golf Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
CHECK YOURAD
For sale, used Browning A5 12ga. shotgun with non rib barrel, good condition, $450. OBO. 541-382-0321. Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Left-hand Savage Mod 10 Predator Hunter Max 1 with Nikon N223 4-16 BDC scope, like new,
Musf See! Beautiful Oval Table Solid walnut, handcrafted by an Amish artisan for Schanz Furniture Co. Excellent condition w/lovely patina. 27" H, top 30" L and 20" wide. Graceful curved legs with 2-1/2" hand-turned center support. Orig. $649; sell $200.
Dining Table (with 2 leaves) 8 chairswith burgundy upholstered seats,hutch and buffet, built in 1927, a beautiful set! Seats 10-12. Paid $4500; asking$1800 obo. 541-548-2797
on the first day it runs Men's Enhanced Alumito make sure it is cornum Alloy-constructed "Spellcheck" and Crossroads Sport 2012, rect. human errors do ocS/N ENI14764,has If this happens to never been used or rid- cur. your ad, please conden. Wheel 8 rear retact us ASAP so that flectors, removable front corrections and any basket, special order adjustments can be comfort seat, Planet Bike made to your ad. eco-rack, unisex bar, $1250. 541-536-7924 541-385-5809 Shimano non-slip gear 541-385-4790 system. Was $940;sell- The Bulletin Classified Remington1100 ing for $775cash, firm. semi- auto 12 ga., 246 The Bulletin reserves 1-231-360-5105 3" shells. PurWhat are you Guns, Hunting the right to publish all chased in 1980s. Takara bikes, mens & ads from The Bulletin & Fishing looking for? Present condition is newspaper onto The womens, ridden once, like new. Asking You'll find it in $75/ea. 541-382-9211 Bulletin Internet webDining Chairs (8) & Table $750. 541-410-4066 300 Weatherby site. Moving, 6 mos old. Pur- The Bulletin Classifieds 242 magnum Mark V chased at Haven Homes Exercise Equipment German made, with S 8 W 329PD 44 mag, The Bulletin for $10K; askinq $5,000. Servfng Central Oregonslnce Iggg wood & Pachmayr grip, Leupold 3x9x50 541-419-8860. 541-385-5809 custom leather chest holGFE exercise upright scope. ster. $850. 541-639-7009 bike, programmable? $1600 obo. 541-480-9430 $25. 541-548-9619 249 Gold's gym stationary AR15 - Wyndham arms. Art, Jewelry bike, 390R like new Includes 100rnds .556 & Furs $125 541-526-7185 and 6 0rnds . 2 23. Dining tableplus 6 Three Chinese Men Treadmill, Proform XP $650. 541-610-4538 chairs, custom South Korean produced in solid Crosswalk 580, $300. CASHII teak. Dimensions: 541-382-9211 made, 82"x43"x29" Blanket Chest For Guns, Ammo & 15" high x 6.5" wide. end grain walnut and typical of storing Reloading Supplies. 243 Figures were alder. $1550. blankets for frigid 541-408-6900. 541-312-2393 nights. Dimensions produced in • S k i Equipment Thailand in 1978. are 31" long x 14.5" Above artwork, wide x 22" high. $200 for created in 1975 in Asking$800 cash. all 3 statues, cash. Bangkok, Thailand, 1-231-360-5105 1-231-360-5105 is fabricated from litDO YOU HAVE (Bend) (in Bend) erally thousands upon SOMETHING TO thousands of wax SELL particles, and can 240 FOR $500 OR 200 pairs of X-CounExceptional c r a fts- The Bulletin only be described as LESS? Crafts & Hobbies try & Downhill skis, unimaginable art! manship signed by recommends extra ' Non-commercial many leading brands, Painting is 44" x 32". builder. All solid oak l caution when puradvertisers may (Atomic, K2, Head, forAsking$2,500cash medium colored stain chasing products or • place an ad eign imports, etc.) with 231-360-5105 (Bend) desk that looks as el- services from out of I with our Quilting bindings, in great conegant from the back 8 the area. Sending 8 "QUICK CASH dition, some like new. Machineas it does from the • cash, checks, or • New Pandora bracelet SPECIAL" Children's & adult sizes. I H u sqvarna/ front. Lumbar sup- l credit i n f ormation with 10 charms, $360. 1 week 3 lines 12 Cheaper than a 1-day may be subjected to Viking, 10-ft bed, Larry, 541-385-4797 ported chair included. or' rental! $22/pair. Call Paid $4400 asking l FRAUD. For more computerized, ge eks 2 N ~ 253 for information/location. $650 cash. More info information about an 8 Ad must $85OO. 541-408-1828 available. advertiser, you may 8 i5 41-416-0538 TV, Stereo 8 Video include price of 541-408-5227 8 call t he Ore g on8 si le l e t g ggDO ~ ' State Atto r ney ' Want to impress the or less, or multiple G ENERATE SOM E Wineguard/carry-out 241 O f f i ce relatives? Remodel items whosetotal EXCITEMENT in your l General's autoportable Consumer Protec- • Bicycles & does not exceed your home with the neighborhood! Plan a tion h o t line a t i satellite antenna $500. Accessories help of a professional garage sale and don't adapts to either Diforget to advertise in i 1-877-877-9392. from The Bulletin's recTV or Dish sysCall Classifieds at Childrens bikes, girls classified! "Call A Service tem. $500 or best > Serving TheBulletin > 20", $60. Boys 16", 541-385-5809 Cengaf Oregonsince l903 541-385-5809. offer. 541-549-4834 Professional" Directory www.bendbulleun.com $40. 541-382-9211 Guest c ouch: l i ght212 weight clean no tears. $40. 541-548-9619 Antiques & Collectibles
South Korean Apothecary chest typical of what was used decades ago to sell herbs and medicinals. This piece is believed to have been produced in 1940s or later. 35"W x 9.5" deep x 42" high. Asking$2500 cash 231-360-5105(Bend)
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• CA King Henredon Sleigh Bed with Organic Mattress and Bedding. It's magnificient. $4500 Cash only. 541-390-7109
Antique Barber Chair complete with headrest & strops! Swivels, reclines. Built in 1901, in good condition considering age. Perfect gift - excellent TV chair for the man who has everything!$2700 Check out the PRESENTS! Chihuahua puppy, Siberian Husky/Wolf Interesting trades classifieds online micro-mini, tiniest Call 541-408-5909 considered. pups, bundles of love! www.bendbulletin.com Chihuahua, $450. $400. 541-977-7019 541-408-1828 541-977-0035 Updated daily Good classified adstell the essential facts in an Donate deposit bottles/ Antiques wanted: Tools, interesting Manner.Write cans to local all vol., furniture, pre-'80s John from the readers view not non-profit rescue, for Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W the seller's. Convert the feral cat spay/neuter. photography, beer cans. 541-389-1578 facts into benefits. Show T railer a t Jak e ' s D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; the reader howthe item will St. Bernard puppies, Petco (near Wal-Mart) 1st shots, deworming, help them insomeway. Antique table Top in Redmond; or dodewclaws removed, Massage Chairs This nate M-F a t S mith $450. 541-771-0956 Paid $4,000 a piece advertising tip Sign, 1515 NE 2nd at M.Jacob's; brought to you by Bend; or CRAFT in Yorkie pups AKC baby Selling for $750 dolls! Shots, potty trained, Tumalo. Can pick up The Bulletin a piece. SNVlflg CNI53I OKgOll StllC8fgtg large amts, 389-8420. health guar., ready now! Call Gary, 35~/~" diameter, has $600 & up. 541-777-7743 www.craftcats.org 541-419-8860 image of sailing ship 205 on the 210 German Shepherds Items for Free top. Base www.sherman-ranch.us Furniture & Appliances SOFA - dark brown is oak F ree c a t s t o g o od $1900+. 541-281-6829 l eather, Hita c h i capstan. home, 2 br o t hersPom-Chi 18 mo. spayed A1 Washers8 Dryers brand, l i k e n ew, Very a bout 5 yrs ol d , female. All shots; good $300; and matching unique $150 ea. Full warfriendly, good w i th chair and ottoman w/children. Bed, toys, piece, could sell ranty. Free Del. Also dogs, good mousers, bowls, etc. included. like n e w, $200. separately. $300 wanted, used W/D's neutered, all s hots FREE to good home. 541-280-0892 obo 541-419-6408. 541-280-7355 current. 541-588-0059 Call 541-903-0337
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Sell your old equipment and "grab" some cash! *Ad runs until SOLD or up toe weeks (whichever comes first!
gurton Sggwbogrg uhlly URa boatd e. II b'indicgs Ic great shp the IIo%rapcsordingslced a and flcshty wQ dzsdy fcrtheseascon szeo ouo e41-oooooo
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregonsince 1ggg
541-385-5809 Some restrictions apply
Item Priced af: Your Total Ad Cost on . • Under $500....................................................................... $29 • $500 fo $999...................................................................$3cp • $1000 fo $2499.............................................................. $49 • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 Includes:2"in length,withborder,full colorphoto,boldheadline andprice Your adwill also appear in: • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace
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*Privateparty merchandiseonly - excludespets8 livestock, autos,Rvs,motor<y<les, boats,airplanes,andgaragesale categories.
E2 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
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ESTATE/MOVING
Can be found on these pages:
SALE Queen 8 full bed, five
dressers, leather sofa FINANCEANDBUSINESS EMPLOYMENT & chair, futon, tables 8 410 - Private Instruction 507- Real Estate Contracts lamps, Hey w ood 514 - Insurance Wakefield m i d-cen- 5th wheel 3-horse 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 528- Loans andMortgages Silverado 2001 tury Modern dining set 29'x8' trailer. Deluxe 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 543- Stocks andBonds & tables, kitchenware, showman/semi living 476 - EmploymentOpportunities paintings & artwork, 558- Business Investments pottery dishes, Jennquarters, lots of ex- 486 - IndependentPositions 573 - BusinessOpportunities Air® BBQ, Troy-Bilt tras. Beautiful condimower, E x p edition tion. $21,900. OBO 476 Sport bike, yard & 54 I -420-3277 Employment RmIILISI arden, tools, saddle One gently used single tack, antique pine pony cart with 5 3" Opportunities dresser, oak stacking shafts, $450. 2 Head bookcase, brass bed, stalls and harness set Ranch help S i sters Garcia 8 other silver Horse Ranch looking for Shetland pony for tack, Lenox china, lots up experienced barn of jewelry, antique fur- but can be adjusted help. S t a ll/paddock niture, western items for a mini horse. $100. cleaning. 6am-11am Phone eve n ings, & more! Fri-Sat 9-4 DAILY. Must be de541-443-4301. 528 numbers Fri 8 a.m. pendable, have referTake Hwy 20 W. to ences and r e liable Loans & Mortgages Vacation Rentals 18771 Pinehurst Rd. t ransportation. C a l l www.atticestatesan& Exchanges Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad WARNING 541-504-1144 (leave PRIVATE PARTY RATES dappraisals.com The Bulletin recomfor only$15.00per week. message) Starting at 3 lines 541-350-6822 mends you use cau- :) Oceanfront house *UNDER '500in total merchandise Call The Bulletin At tion when you pro- beach walk from town, OVER '500 intotal merchandise Estate of 541-385-5809 vide personal 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Dr. & Mrs. Thomas information to compa- fireplace, BBQ. $95 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 by Farmhouse nies offering loans or per night, 3 night Min. *llllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 Estate Sales credit, especially Gift? 208-369-3144 those asking for ad28 days .................................................$61.50 421 Garage Sale Special The Bulletin 2465 Ashwood Rd., vance loan fees or 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (call for commercial line ad rates) Schools & Training in Madras companies from out of caution when purApt JMultiplex GeneralI state. If you have Fri-Sat., Dec. 12-13, 9-4 IITR Truck School chasing products or I concerns or quesREDMOND CAMPUS services from out of e CHECKYOUR AD A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: tions, we suggest you 50 years'accumulation! Our Grads Get Jobs! I the area. Sending consult your attorney Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Beautiful home full of an1-888-438-2235 c ash, checks, o r or call CONSUMER tiques. Mint condition WWW.IITR.EDU BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) I credit i n f ormation HOTLINE, mid-century furniture, I may be subjected to 1-877-877-9392. antique doctors' tools, 470 REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well FRAUD. sewing, weaving, quilting Domestic 8 as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin I For more i nforma- I BANK TURNED YOU items, antique books, on the first day it runs ' tion about an adver- ' DOWN? Private party to In-Home Positions bendbulletimcom photos, records, reserves the right to reject any ad at make sure it is corwill loan on real esI tiser, you may call table & chairs, fridge, rect. "Spellcheck" and tate equity. Credit, no any time. is located at: the Oregon State Will do HHA, Housitting, washer/dryer, dishhuman errors do ocproblem, good equity Attorney General's washer & range. housecleaning. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. If this happens to Call 937-789-7756 Office C o n sumer t is all you need. Call cur. Too much to list! your ad, please conBend, Oregon 97702 Protection hotline at l Oregon Land MortFor more info, pix tact us ASAP so that 476 gage 541-388-4200. I 1-877-877-9392. and descriptions, visit corrections and any farmhouseestatesales.com Employment can be PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction gThe Bulleting USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! adjustments Opportunities made to your ad. is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 541-385-5809 to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these Door-to-door selling with Need to get an ad newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party CAUTION: Looking for your next fast results! It's the easiest The Bulletin Classified in ASAP? Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Ads published in employee? way in the world to sell. Senior Apartment"Employment O p Place a Bulletin help Independent Living 255 260 260 266 Fax it to 641-322-7253 porlunilies" include wanted ad today and The Bulletin Classified ALL-INCLUSIVE employee and indereach over 60,000 541-385-5809 Computers Misc. Items Illisc. Items Heating & Stoves with 3 meals daily • The Bulletin Classifieds pendent positions. readers each week. Month-to-month lease, Ads fo r p o sitions Your classified ad LOCAL MONEY:Webuy T HE B ULLETIN r e - Buyfng Dlamonds New Samsung S5 with NOTICE TO check it out! that require a fee or will also appear on secured trust deeds & 3 extras, $360. ADVERTISER quires computer ad/Gofd for Cash Call 541-233-9914 284 upfront investment bendbulletin.com note, some hard money vertisers with multiple Saxon's Fine Jewelers Larry, 541-385-4797 Since September 29, which currently loans. Call Pat Kellev ad schedules or those 1991, advertising for Sales Southwest Bend must be stated. With 541-389-6655 541-382-3099 ext.18. any independentjob receives over 1.5 selling multiple sysused woodstoves has opportunity, please million page views Apt JMultiplex Redmondl tems/ software, to disBUYING been limited to mod- Garage Sale, Fri-Sat, i nvestigate tho r every month at Take care of close the name of the Lionel/American Flyer els which have been 9-4, 60948 Flint Lane no extra cost. 4 Plex, 2 bdrm, 1.5 trains, accessories. business or the term certified by the Or- (Romaine Village) Dish- oughly. Use extra your investments Bulletin Classifieds bath, 1200 s q .ft., 541-408-2191. "dealer" in their ads. egon Department of washer, clothes, AC, twin c aution when a p with the help from bed/mattress/boxsprings. plying for jobs onGet Results! very clean. Fridge, Private party advertis- BUYING &r SELLING Environmental Qualline and never proCall 385-5809 dishwasher, w/s/g & ers are defined as All gold jewelry, silver Olhaunsen regulaity (DEQ) and the fedThe Bulletin's 286 vide personal inforor place gardener pd, carthose who sell one and gold coins, bars, tion size pool table eral E n v ironmental "Call A Service port with large storin very good shape your ad on-line at computer. Protection A g e ncySales Northeast Bend mation to any source rounds, wedding sets, with cues, balls, you may not have bendbulletin.com Professional" Directory a ge room, r e ar (EPA) as having met class rings, sterling silresearched and deck, large l a wn 257 misc. accessories. smoke emission stanver, coin collect, vindeemed to be repuarea. Peaceful set$1000. dards. A cer t ified ** FREE ** Musical Instruments tage watches, dental table. Use extreme Mill Workers ting. $725 + dep. or w oodstove may b e Garage Sale Kit gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-389-1272 541-604-0338 541-480-4695 c aution when r e identified by its certifi- Place an ad in The 541-382-9419. s ponding to A N Y FINGER JOINT, CUTTING AND cation label, which is Bulletin for your gaonline employment MILLING EXPERIENCE Coffee shop going out permanently attached rage sale and read from out-of-state. AS WELLAS ENTRY LEVEL of business. Conti to the stove. The Bul- ceive a Garage Sale Get your Houses for We suggest you call letin will not know- Kit FREE! 1948 Wurlftzer piano, XEOS espresso mabusiness Rent General the State of Oregon We are looking for individuals with experience chine $3000; Mazzer ingly accept advertisall wood, no plastic. Consumer Hotline to fill positions in our finger joint, milling and ing for the sale of KIT INCLUDES: Tuned in Nov., looks Luigi grinder $700; PUBLISHER'S at 1-503-378-4320 cutting departments. Looking for experienced • 4 Garage Sale Signs uncertified like new, with bench Everest r e frigerator a ROW I N G NOTICE • $2.00 Off Coupon To For Equal Opportuoperators in milling, fingerjointing, engineered $800; LK 3-panel sink woodstoves. $700 541-382-3837 with f aucet $800; All real estate advernity Laws c ontact wood products, cutters, graders and feeder Use Toward Your tising in this newspawith an ad in Next Ad Oregon Bureau of work team members. Entry level well. If you grease trap; blinking 267 • 10 Tips For "Garage per is subject to the Grand Piano Labor 8 I n d ustry, have a good work history and attendance we open sign; Car notifiThe Bulletin's Fuel & Wood F air H o using A c t Beautiful American Sale Success!" Civil Rights Division, want you to apply. cation system $200; "Call A Service which makes it illegal made (1926) 971-673- 0764. 541-419-3147 to a d vertise "any Kurtzmann parlor Professional" Starting pay is commensurate with experience WHEN BUYING PICK UP YOUR The Bulletin preference, limitation grand piano for Franciscan Earthen$10.50 to $15.00 or more. We offer medical, terw'ny central oresonsince r903 Directory GARAGE SALE KIT at FIREWOOD... or disc r imination sale. 5'5", maware, Ivv pattern. dental, vision, and life insurance, after 60 days 541-385-5809 1777 SW Chandler Call 541-389-0753 based on race, color, hogany case, of full time employment, vacation after 6 To avoid fraud, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Wanted- paying cash religion, sex, handimatching bench, remonths, profit sharing plan as well. We are a The Bulletin Add your web address family How to avoid scam for Hi-fi audio & stucap, familial status, cently serviced and owned wood remanufacturer and have recommends payThe Bulletin to your ad and readdio equip. Mclntosh, marital status or natuned. Family and fraud attempts serangcentral oregon«nce rss been in business for over 50 years. Please ment for Firewood ers onThe Bulletin's JBL, Marantz, Dytional origin, or an inowned since origiapply in person at VBe aware of internaonly upon delivery web site, www.bendnaco, Heathkit, Santention to make any nal purchase. tional fraud. Deal loand inspection. 288 bulletin.com, will be sui, Carver, NAD, etc. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. such pre f erence, $1200 or OBO. cally whenever posBright Wood Corp. able to click through Call 541-261-1808 Sales Southeast Bend limitation or discrimi541-306-6770. 4' x 4' x 8' sible. 335 Nfff/Hess St. or 630 SE First St. automatically to your nation." Familial staY Watch for buyers • Receipts should Madras, OR97741 Redmond, OR 97756 website. This Sat. 12/13tus includes children who offer more than WHEN YOU SEE THIS include name, Advertise Your car! 9am-5pm 61562 under the age of 18 your asking price and phone, price and Must pass pre-employment drug test. Add APicture! American Loop. Automotive Sales living with parents or kind of wood Reach thousands oi readers! who ask to have Lots of interesting stuff, in preparation for the legal cus t odians, money wired or MOrePiXatBendijletin.COII • purchased. Call 541-385-5809 collectibles, old tools, grand opening of our pregnant women and Firewood ads General On a classified ad The Bulletin Classtfteds handed back to them. hand blown glass deco- ALL-NEW state-ofpeople securing cusThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturMUST include Fake cashier checks go to rations, Indian artifacts, the-art facility, Robtody of children under day night shift and other shifts as needed. We www.bendbulletin.com species & cost per and money orders rendezvous and moun- berson Ford is look18. This newspaper currently have openings all nights of the week. cord to better serve are common. to view additional tain man artifacts. lite ing for 2 established will not knowingly acEveryone must work Saturday night. Shifts u'Nevergive out perphotos of the item. our customers. stands Guns - Ruger dynamic sales except any advertising start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and sonal financial infor357 mag. - GP 100, ecutives. We offer for real estate which is end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpomation. Colt 357 mag, Trooper servlny ceneal oregon slnce ssr full benefits includin violation of the law. Wineguard/carry-out sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. YTrust your instincts Mark III, Ruger P 90ing profit sharing. O ur r e aders a r e auto portable Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a and be wary of 45 cal., Win. Super XWurlitzer please apply in perhereby informed that satellite antenna minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts someone using an 12ga shotgun., Black son as these 2 posiall dwellings adverUltra Console adapts to either Di- Aff Year Dependable are short (t 1:30 - t:30). The work consists of escrow service or Pow Kentucky long rifle Firewood: Seasoned; Model ¹2636 tions will fill rapidly. tised in this newsparecTV or Dish sysloading inserting machines or stitcher, stackagent to pick up your swords, knives,more. Lodgepole, split, del, per are available on Serial ¹1222229. tem. $500 or best ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup merchandise. ROBBERSON B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 Made in USA. an equal opportunity offer. 541-549-4834 and other tasks. For qualifying employees we 292 Genuine maple wood. or 2 cords for $365. offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, basis. To complain of The Bulletin serving central oregon since rea Includes matching Call fo r m u lti-cord Sales Other Areas d iscrimination ca l l short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid discounts! bench.$750. HUD t o l l-free at 262 vacation and sick time. Drug test is required Lawn Crypt for two at 541-420-3484. (541) 598-4674 days, 1-800-877-0246. The NOTICE prior to employment. Deschutes Memorial RCommercial/Office Caregivers or (541) 923-0488 Remember to remove toll f ree t e lephone Gardens near the Pond. Equipment & Fixtures evenings. Needed your Garage Sale signs number for the hearPlease submit a completed application attenPine & Juniper Split $1500. 541-771-4800 ing im p aired is (nails, staples, etc.) for all shifts in tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available KONICA MINOLTA BI1-800-927-9275. after your Sale event at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanour memory care ZHUB 222 Full size busi- PROMPT DELIVERY is over! THANKS! dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be ness "all in one" unit. community. Must 541-389-9663 From The Bulletin obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Virtually brand new with be caring, a and your local utility Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). only 4000 pages on the Houses for Rent team player, and companies. No phone calls please. Only completed appli269 counter. All manuals and NW Bend reliable. Wage cations will be considered for this position. No discs Call 541-390-7239 Gardening Supplie The Bulletin resumes will be accepted. Drug test is refor more info. $1500 obo. serving central ongonsinceere DOE, Contact House for rent/sale! 3 & Equipment Call 54 I -385-580 9 quired prior to employment. EOE. Victoria Dale bdrm 2 bath, newly rewww.bendbunetin.com to r o m ot e o u r service 263 541-385-4717 mod. thru-out, 134 NW The Bulletin Colorado. $1200/mo. 1st/ • Tools BarkTurfSoil.com for more sew<ng renrral oregonvnce rss Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care last/sec. 541-389-2028 information. 10" Delta table saw, DELIVERY brand new, never used PROMPT 541-389-9663 EDUCATION $450. 541-382-4476 Oregon LandNOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: YOUR /to WILL RECEIVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 scape Contractors Law Siuslaw 265 law requires anyone ExposUREs FQRQNLYase! 671) requires all • Building Materials For newspaper School District who con t racts for (ORS oegoecl~iarAdw1uwN~ k v a s~ cevraongonN ms~ p bial A ~~i~n . that addelivery, call the construction work to businesses Job Openings to pe r form Circulation Dept. at Weekof December 8, 2014 be licensed with the vertise Florence, OR Bend Habitat 541-385-5800 Construction Contrac- Landscape Construcwww.siuslaw.k12.or.us RESTORE 325 which includes: To place an ad, call tors Board (CCB). An tion l anting, deck s , Building Supply Resale 541-385-5809 Hay, Grain & Feed • Spanish Teacher, active license Quality at LOW arbors, ences, Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 or email means the contractor Middle and High PRICES classified@bendbulletimccm water-features, and in1st Quality, 2nd cutting is bonded & insured. stallation, repair of ir541-385-5809 School, 1.0 FTE 740 NE 1st grass hay, no rain, Verify the contractor's rigation systems to be 541-312-6709 The Bulletin Counselor, barn stored, $250/ton. • School CCB l i c ense at Elementary School, l icensed w it h th e Open to the public. Call 541-549-3831 www.hirealicensedLandscape ContracPatterson Ranch, Sisters 1.0 FTE contractor.com Board. This 4-digit Look at: or call 503-378-4621. tors • Cambria Quartz Wheat Straw For Sale. Please see our webslte DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. The Bulletin recom- number is to be inBendhomes.com "Bellingham," for moreinformation. in all adveralso weaner pigs. mends checking with cluded 55"x36", nearly for Complete Listings of which indi541-546-6171 the CCB prior to con- tisements 1-1/2" thick, never Includes children, custody, support, Area Real Estate for Sale tracting with anyone. cate the business has Maintenance installed, $300 or a bond, insurance and Some other t rades workers compensaLooking for your best offer. Person 270 p roperty a n d b i l l s d i v ision. N o also req u ire addinext employee? Temporary tional licenses and tion for their employ- • Bronze 8 Crystal Lost & Found Place a Bulletin ees. For your protecc ourt a p pearances. D i vorced i n certifications. Maintenance 2-tier, 6-arm chanhelp wanted ad tion call 503-378-5909 Lost: Mid-sized Black delier, 22" across, today and or use our website: person needed lab/Catahoula on Em1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www.lcb.state.or.us to $300 or best offer. reach over for our pire Ave. W e aring 541-923-7491 check license status 60,000 readers Debris Removal c ollar w it h p e a ce memory care www.paralegalalternatives.com before contracting with each week. signs. P l ease call the business. Persons community. Your classified ad 541-280-7992 Sisters Habitat ReStore doing lan d scape legalalt@msn.com will also Please call maintenance do not Building Supply Resale appear on JUNK BE GONE Quality items. Victoria Dale r equire an LC B l i bendbuHetin.com LOW PRICES! I Haul Away FREE cense. 541-385-4717 which currently 150 N. Fir. For Salvage. Also REMEMBER:If you for more receives over 541-549-1621 Cleanups 8 Cleanouts have lost an animal, 1.5 million page Open to the public. information. don't forget to check Mel, 541-389-8107 Painting/Wall Covering views every The Humane Society 266 month at no Bend Plumber, Journeymen ALL AMERICAN extra cost. 541-382-3537 Needed for new con• Heating 8 Stoves PAINTING Bulletin struction. Start immediHandyman Redmond Interior and Exterior atelyl Good pay/benefits Natural ga s h e a ter, 541-923-0882 Classifieds Family-owned Call Gary, 541-410-1655 I DO THAT! Madras Get Results! Residential & Commercial Avalon, free standing, Home/Rental repairs 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 38,000 BTU, w / ce541-475-6889 Call 541-385-5809 People Look for Information Small jobs to remodels ramic hearth 8 stove Prineville 5-vear warranties or place your ad About Products and Honest, guaranteed 541-447-7178 HOLIDAY SPECIAL! pipe, like new, reon-line at work. CCB¹151573 d uced to $600 . or Craft Cats Call 541-337-6149 bendbuHetin.com Services EveryDaythrough Dennis 541-317-9768 Madras 541-325-6791 541-389-8420. The Bulletin Classifieds CCB ¹t 93960
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Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DEC 11, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUBThursday, December 11,2014 GrOWing On treeS
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sbortz ACROSS 391 Winter plantings? 40 Not perfectly 9 First name in put "Star Wars" 42 Subject of a 150ne who's just onetime Nepali
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
As I sat down to kibitz a Chicago game, another kibitzer whispered in my ear. "Grapefruit just said that if idiots grew on trees, this place would be an orchard." Grapefruit, my club's acid-tongued member, has the disposition of an u ntipped w aiter an d m a ke s h i s partners miserable. As West he Ied the queen of c l ub s against four spades. South put up dummy's king, and East took the ace and shifted to hearts. S outh won, cashed the K-Q o f trumps and led a club, and Grapefruit took his jack and cashed his ace of diamonds. South then claimed his game, and Grapefruit told East that if he had a lens in each ear, he could be a telescope. "What did I d o ? " E ast asked, outraged. WINNING PLAY
DAILY QUESTION Youhold: 49KQJ 10 3
hunting license [true fact!] 43 Belated observation of 4/14/12 44 Home of Charlotte Amalie 46 Like the people of Siberia 48 Unanimously, after "to" 2013 49 Stadium 24Turnblue? projection, maybe 25 Feast of unleavened bread 50 Co-signer, say 54 Location of the 28 Southernmost 37-Across U.S. capital 32 Gardner 58 Priestify namesakes 592014 World Cup 33 Nonmusical Abba host 35 Diamond 61 Strange bird complements 62 Spare item? 3637 See 19- and 63Airplanewith the 54-Across and propeller at the 11- and 41-Down back
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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1 Leveler 2 Many a state lottery game 3 Mythical Greek who slew Castor 4 Impersonated 5"Justa mo!" 6 Hoopster Jeremy 7 European city of 500,000+ whose name translates as "to eat" 8 Result (from) 9 Snake'5 place, in part 10 Party game 11 Beneficiary of the 37-Across, in modern times 12 "Just a momentl" 13Captain's direction ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 14 Filmdom's Napoleon R EE L B R E R MA S T S Dynamite, for one A L L E V I A T E I N U I T 21"Youcan count D OW A H D I D D Y D I D D Y on me" O PE N S H OR S E X 23 Flightless bird N ES T C I A L I 5 for much O B L A D I O B L A D A 2SSetting of "Inglourioirs S SN OA T E R A TOM Basterds" I KO I K O S HB OO M 26 Schedule listing A I R S A E R I E P R O 27 October War M M M M M M M M M M M M leader S T I R I N O RA L 28 Bad feelings? A BC C S A P R I M O D 0 0 D 0 0 D 0 0 D 0 0 D 0 0 29 Last name of three D UNN O I N T E RS E C T Indianapolis 500 S T EA K OT T O E RO S winners
NORTH 45A72
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I think Grapefruit was asking a lot of East, whose winning play was to duck the king of clubs! South can't set up the clubs and eventually loses a club, a heart and two diamonds against best defense. South could always make four spades by playing low from dummy on the first club.
out for a good time 16Junk shop transaction 17So to speak 18More Serling-esque 19Leader of a noted 37-Across 20 Left for good 22 "Nebraska" star,
0 K 5 4 6 2 .You open one spade, your partner responds two diamonds, you bid two hearts and he jumps to three spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner's second bid is forcing; he has at least opening values, a diamond suit and spade support. Slam is quite possible, but since you have two low clubs, you can't t ake c o ntrol w i t h a 4N T Blackwood bid. Cue-bid four hearts to show the ace and slam interest. South dealer N-S vulnerable
WEST 4o965
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No. 1106
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12/11/14
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
)
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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
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest 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
675
745
RV Parking
Homes for Sale
• Redmond Homes
Full hookup RV s ite 65390 NE Stacy Lane- $519,000 - 6555 NW avail. through April 3 bdrm, 2. 5 b a t h 61st St., Redmond. 30th, $325 + e l ec. home with 1921 sq ft C edar siding, m a Central Oregon KOA of living space. Large hogany decking, wall 541-546-3046 m aster s uite w i t h of windows, hickory soaking t u b and cabinets, vaulted ceil walk-in closet. Close ings. to schools 8 shop- Cherly Tanler, Broker 541-410-7434 ping. MLS¹201404922 KceH Windermere $229,000. op gggg [pp Scott McLean, Central Oregon Principal Broker Real Estate 541-408-6908 Realty Executives Call a Pro Whether you need a The Bulletin fencefixed,hedges To Subscribe call 745 trimmed or a house 541-385-5600 or go to Homes for Sale built, you'll find www.bendbulletin.com professional help in $140,000 G o rgeous The Bulletin's "Call a views. 6.4 Acres and NOTICE borders BLM land. On All real estate adver- Service Professional" Cul-de-sac, electric at tised here in is subDirectory street and septic ap ject to th e F ederal 541-385-5809 proved. Fair Housing A c t, Veronica Theriot, Browhich makes it illegal ker 541-610-5672 to advertise any prefWindermere erence, limitation or Looking for your next Central Oregon emp/oyee? discrimination based Real Estate on race, color, reli- Place a Bulletin help gion, sex, handicap, wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 51460 Lasso Lane, La familial status or naeach week. Pine Charmer - 3 tional origin, or inten- readers Your classified ad bdrm, 2 bath, 1160 sq tion to make any such will also appear on preferences, l imitaft home. Gas f irebendbulletin.com place, large kitchen tions or discrimination. which currently rei sland with lots o f We will not knowingly ceives over storage. Open great- accept any advertis1.5 million page r oom c o ncept & ing for real estate views every month double rear entry ga- which is in violation of at no extra cost. rage. Large lot, built in this law. All persons Bulletin Classifieds are hereby informed 2005. $137,500 Get Results! that all dwellings adMLS¹201404934 Call 385-5809 or vertised are available Scott McLean, place your ad on-line on an equal opportuPrincipal Broker at nity basis. The Bulle541-408-6908 bendbulletin.com tin Classified Realty Executives
ppo o
771
775
Lots
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Lot Awaits your Dream Home - Build your NEW Marlette Special dream West s ide 1404 sq.ft., 4/12 roof, home on this 0 .18 a rch shingles, d bl acre lot in the cov- dormer, 9 lite door, eted Awbrey Ridge. glamour bath, appliLocated on a ance pkg, $69,900 cul-de-sac near parks finished on site and trails. $139,000 PRICE GUARANTEED MLS 201405853 TILL MARCH Call Terry Skjersaa, JandMHomes.com 541-383-1426
Duke Warner Realty 541-382-8262 Waterfront lot on Lake Baert. A 0 .27 acre waterfront l o t in Christmas Val l ey, near world class sand dune recreation area. Great hunting, bird watching and hiking. Park the RV and play. MLS ¹201409930. Brad Whitcomb, Broker 541-350-3449 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscottbend.com
541-548-5511
: e.
03
860
880
870
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
Harley Fat Boy 2002 14k orig. miles.. Excellent cond. Vance & Hines exhaust, 5 spoke HD rims, wind vest, 12" rise handle bars, detachable luggage rack w/ back rest, hwy pegs & many chrome accents. Must see to appreciate! $10,500. InCRRarea call 530-957-1865
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. $1 2,500 541-815-2523
880
Motor h o mes
2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $55K. Ph. 541-447-9268 FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT!
The Bulletin Classifieds
HDFat Bo 1996
Motorhomes
i'reighiiiner iii94 Custom Motorhome 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
Find It in
The Bulletin Classigedsf 541-385-5808
850
Snowmobiles Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
773
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500
Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 HOLIDAY RAMBLER transmission, dual exVACATIONER 2003 haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, eling system, 5kw gen, workhorse, Allison 1000 power mirrors w/defrost, 5 speed trans., 39K, 2 slide-outs with aw- NEW TIRES, 2 slides, nings, rear c a mera,Onan 5.5w gen., ABS trailer hitch, dr!ver door brakes, steel cage cockw/power window, cruise, pit, washer/dryer, fireexhaust brake, central lace, mw/conv. oven, vac, satellite sys. Asking ree standing dinette, $67,500. 503-781-8812 was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer Rocky Mountainpkg, $75,000 360 degree breathtak- w/ 541-546-4807 ing mtn views. Sister, $8500. 541-379-3530 503-646-1804 Oregon. 105 acres, 860 borders BLM. Bring offers. $64 9 ,000. Motorcycles & Accessories Need to get an www.johnlscott.com/5 ad in ASAP? HD Softtail Deuce 2002, 1985 Harley Davidson 1631 You can place it 1200C with S portster broken back forces Kellie Cook, Broker frame and '05 Harley sale, only 200 mi. on 541-408-0463 online at: crate motor. Rat Rod new motor from HarJohn L. Scott www.bendbulletin.com look, Screaming Eagle ley, new trans case Real Estate, Bend www.johnlscottbend.com tips, leather saddlebags, and p arts, s p oke e xtras. S a crifice a t wheels, new brakes, 541-385-5809 HARD TO FIND 5 acre $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, n early all o f b i k e2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like Beaver Marquis, brand new. Has proof flat buildable corner 458-206-8446 (in Bend). 1993 of all work done. Re- new, ActiV hull, safe lot located in Lake 40-ft, Brunswick movable windshield, lock canister, 15HP P ark Estates w i t h Garage Sales T-bags, black and all Yamaha w/ t r olling floor plan. Many mature l a ndscape. plate, 6 gal Transom extras, well mainchromed out with a MLS¹ 201 4 06959 Garage Sales willy skeleton theme tank, less 30 hrs, 2 tained, fire sup$135,500 on all caps and cov- chest seats, full Bimini pression behind Pam Lester, Principal Garage Sales ers. Lots o f w o rk, top, Transom wheels, refrig, Stow Master Broker, Century 21 cover, RV's special. heart and love went Gold Country Realty, Find them 5000 tow bar, into all aspects. All $5500. 541-923-6427 Inc. 541-504-1338 $22,995. in done at professional ds published in the 541-383%503 shops, call for info. "Boats" classification The Bulletin 775 Must sell quickly due include: Speed, fishManufactured/ Classifieds to m e dical b i l l s, ing, drift, canoe, Mobile Homes $8250. Call Jack at house and sail boats. 541-385-5809 541-279-9538. For all other types of Fall Clearance watercraft, please go 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, to Class 875. KAWASAKI 1601 sq.ft., 541-385-5809 KLX125, 2003, Fleetwood D i scovery RETAIL 40' 2003, diesel, w/all good condition $85,609 erv>n Cenfrai Ore on since 1903 $925. options - 3 slide outs, SALE 541-593-8748 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, $77,599 Finished Bayliner 185 2006 On Your Site. open bow. 2nd owner etc., 32,000 m iles. Harley Davidson Wintered in h eated J & MHomes — low engine hrs. 2001 FXSTD, twin shop. $79,995 obo. 541-548-5511 Yamaha V-Star, 250cc — fuel injected V6 cam 88, fuel injected, 541-447-8664 2011 motorcycle, new — Radio & Tower. Vance & Hines short custom seat for rider, List Your Home Great family boat shot exhaust, Stage I vinyl coating on tank, JandMHomes.com Priced to sell. with Vance & Hines We Have Buyers 2 helmets included. $11,590. fuel management Get Top Dollar Gets 60mpg, and has 541-548-0345. system, custom parts, Financing Available. 3,278 miles. extra seat. 875 541-548-5511 Asking $4700, firm. $1 0,500OBO. Call Dan 541-550-0171 Watercraft Call Today New Dream Special 541-516-8684 Fleetwood South3 bdrm, 2 bath ds published in "Wa 870 wind 1991, 33', 454 $50,900 finished tercraft" include: Kay GMC. Owner died; yrs Boats & Accessories on your site. of storage. Loaded aks, rafts and motor J andfv! Homes Harley Davidson 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, Ized personal with factory options. 541-548-5511 Fo Twin AC & 2 TVs, 883 Sportster like new, 135hp I/O, low watercrafts. "boats" please se electric steps & cor1998, 20,200 miles, time, Bimini top, many ner jacks, tow pkg, Class 870. exc. cond., Find exactly what extras, Karavan trailer outside shower, great with swing neck current 41-385-5809 you are looking for in the $3,500. tire tread. $15,500. registrations. $7000. 541-548-2872. CLASSIFIEDS Jim, 541-408-1828 541-350-2336
Acreages
Phe Bulletin
•
In Print Ctnd Online WithThe Bulletin'5 CICISSifiedS. I
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are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and ajj the quiet can haul it ajj! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwjjjneed. Roomtogrowjnyour a to ugh V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 OWn little ParadiSe! Call noW. done on the ranch.
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GOLDENRETRjEVERPUPPjES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck
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*SpeCjal 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 l 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
541-480-2019
, • ese--
j= -''w ~
Winnebago 22' 2002 - $28,500 Chevy 454, heavy duty chassis, new batteries & tires, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w /brake, 21k m i . , more! 541-280-3251
•
The Bulletin
A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e !
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
Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean! Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179