Bulletin Daily Paper 11-12-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75|t

TUESDAY November12,2013

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SPORTS• C1

REDMOND MAGAZINE-

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD VeteranS Day — Photos from the Bend parade. B1

PIUS — View aslideshow online at H denddulletin.com/ vetsparade AISO — President Obama speaks at Arlington. A2

e sres on 0 a • Fraud is fraud,LI.S.attorney argues,regardlessof ability to repay By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

The U.S. government has responded to an appeal filed by a Bend couple serving time in federal prison for

fraud, stating whether they had the money to repay their investors is moot when the money they solicited was used for purposes other than promised.

Former Bend Police Capt. Kevin Sawyer and his wife, former Bend real estate broker Tami Sawyer, went to prison in April after pleading guilty to crimes that

e ra e a defrauded more than 20 people of more than $4 million between 2004 and 2009.

They filed an appeal in September, alleging Chief U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken was wrong to exclude evidence that would have shown

they didn't intentionally seek to defraud the investors, and that the net fair market value of the couple's properties and companies exceeded the amount ofmoney they owed their investors. See Sawyers /A5

Thanksgiving diets

— Options for veganguests, Paleo dieters and more. D1

Local professor measures rec trends

911 frequent fliers — cities contemplate what to do about habitual callers. A3

Shopping record —chi-

na's biggest online seller processes $5.75 billion in sales on 11/11 — so-called Singles'

Day. C6

By Tyler Leeds

On the fenCe —Seewhat

The Bulletin

people around Bend do toset

Assessing the needs and habits of hikers, bikers, swimmers and the other recreators in Oregon requires more than a network of comment boxes. To get the job done, Oregon Parks and Recreation tasked Kreg Lindberg, an Oregon State University-Cascades Campus associate professor of tourism and outdoor leadership, with

their yard-dividers apart. D1

And a WebexclusiveLife on the lndia-Pakistani

border gets complicated when trouble flares up.

denddulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Sunday delivery narrowing a divide

figuring out what everyone Lin d berg thinks. With Randall Rosenberger, who is based at OSU in Corvallis, Lind-

berg developed a survey that allows the state to examine outdoor recreation across Oregon. "The main goal is to identify recreation trends and where we are falling short," said Lindberg, 49. "We want to be able to help set the priority for the state and local agencies. For instance, if there's a real growth in mountain biking, then when it comes to grant programs, the state may prioritize biking trails." See Recreation /A5

By Cecilia Kang The Washington Post

And on the seventh day, there was delivery. Already, work emails and conference calls have become part of Sunday routines, piling on top of sports tournaments, errands and homework. Now, with Amazon. com's plans • Amazon's to deliver

plan, C6 packages on

Sundays, one more barrier falls, inching that day even closer to becoming just another part of the consumer week. The tradition of a seventh day set aside for family, worship and rest has been crumblingforyears as states relaxed laws prohibiting gambling, shopping and even hunting on Sundays. The popularity of smartphones and the creation of an always-online culture has spurred greater demand — and ability — to have it all, right now, anytime. "We are moving toward a society where email and social media have caused the week and weekend to blur," said Jonathan Gruber, a professorofeconomics and labor at MIT. See Sundays/A5

Clarification In a story about tour bus

accidents that appearedFriday, Nov.8, on PageA1, the headline was misleading. A

Aaron Favila / The Associated Press

Survivors look up at a military C-130 plane as it arrives Monday at the typhoon-ravaged city of Tacloban, Philippines. Aid programs are rushing to mobilize assistance in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan, which killed thousands and upended the lives of many more. Meanwhile, in Tacloban, residents were covering their mouths and noses to mask the smell of unrecovered bodies.

Filipinos here wait

and worry By Hadley Robinson For The Bulletin

Bend couple David and Chris Brown own a small beach resort on the southerntip of an island inthe

Philippines, managed and operated by their local family members. But after a massive typhoon swept through portions of the country several days ago, shutting down all communications, the Browns don't know if the resort is still standing, or where their relatives are. "It's built real well, but anything could happen," David Brown said Monday about the resort, which recently expanded when he built a 150-person conference center. "I'm more worried about all the people. I have a lot of good friends there." See Locals/A4

Aftermath: shattered ci By Keith Bradsher New York Times News Service

TACLOBAN, Philippines

— Decomposing bodies

still lie along the roads, like a corpse in a pink, shortsleeved shirt and blue shorts facedown ina black,muddy puddle100 yards from the airport. Just down the road is a church that was supposed to be an evacuation center but is littered with the bodies of those who drowned inside. When a wind-whipped ocean rose Friday night, the ground floors of homes hundreds of yards inland were

Inside • Destruction hampers relief efforts, A4

• Where you can donate, A4 submerged within minutes, trapping residents like Virginia Basinang, a 54-year-old retired teacher, who suddenly found herself struggling in waist-deep water on the second floor of her home.

Screaming people bobbed in the water that surged through the streets, many grabbing for floating debris. "Some of them were able to

hold on, some were lucky and lived, but most did not," she said, addingthat 14bodies were left on a wall across the street when the seawater receded a half-hour later. The bodies are still there, and the odor of their decay makes it impossible for Basinang and her familyto eat meals at home. Typhoon Haiyan, among the most powerful in history, slammed into the eastern Philippine city of Tacloban four days ago and cut a path of devastation barreling west across the archipelago nation. See City /A4

Fading cities raze

and rebuild By Timothy Williams New York Times News Service

BALTIMORE — Shivihah Smith's East Baltimore neighborhood, where he lives with his mother and grandmother, is

Humans,natureshareblame, experts say By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Nature and man together cooked up the disaster in the Philippines.

Geography, meteorology, poverty, shoddy construction, a booming population, and, to a much lesser degree,

climate change combine to make the Philippines the nation most vulnerable to killer typhoons, according to several scientific studies. And Typhoon Haiyan was one mighty storm. Haiyan slammed the island nation with a storm surge two stories high and

disappearing. The

some of the highest winds ever measuredin a tropical cyclone — 195 mph as clocked by U.S. satellites, or 147 mph based on local reports. An untold number of homes were blown away, and thousands of people are feared dead. See Causes/A4

block one over is gone. A dozen rowhouses on an adjacent block were removed one afternoon last year. And on the corner a few weeks ago, a pair of houses that

were damaged by fire collapsed. See Cities /A5

government report is blaming the industry's safety record

in part on inadequate federal oversight and is calling for regulators to address safety issues before accidents occur. The Bulletin regrets the error.

TODAY'S WEATHER Chance of rain High 56, Low 34

At Home 01- 6 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope 06 Sports Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

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GENERAL INFORMATION

NATION 4% ORLD

resi en raises ve s an romises su o

InSuranCe enrOllment —Some major health insurers are so wor-

By Mary Faddoul

WiSCOnSin dargaiIIiiIg —The Wisconsin Supreme Court on

McClatchy Washington Bureau

Monday heard arguments on the constitutionality of a 2011 law that all but eliminated collective bargaining for most public employees.

ried about the Dbama administration's ability to fix its troubled health care website that they are pushing the government to let them enroll people entitled to subsidies directly rather than through the federal

system. Theidea is only one of several ideas being discussed in afrantic effort to find a way around the technological problems that teams of experts are urgently trying to resolve. So far, the administration has

resisted the insurers' idea, but astatement from the White Houseon Monday suggested the idea might still be under consideration.

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ARLINGTON, Va. — Presid ent B arack O b am a t o l d America's veterans Monday that the country is indebted to them and he pledged to support them "now, tomorrow and forever." Speaking at a Veterans Day event at A r lington National Cemetery's amp h i t heater, Obama and his secretary of veterans affairsasserted the need to continue providing for America's veterans. Thousands of people lined up at the cemetery on a sunny autumn morning to attend a wreath-laying at t h e T o mb of the Unknown Soldier and speeches at t h e a m phitheater by Obama and Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki. "They put on the uniform and they put their lives on the line," Obama said. "They do this so that the rest of us might live in a country and a world that is safer, freer and more just." Americans gathered to attend ceremonies across the country. O r iginally n a m ed Armistice Day by President W oodrow W i l son i n 1 9 1 9 — because of the World War I cease-fire between the Allied nations and Germany at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month — Veterans Day is set aside to thank those who've put their lives on the line. Parades took place from coast to coast, including in New York an d San D iego. Colorado State University held a 5-kilometer run, and the Cal Veterans Group a ssembled volunteers to build a home for a veteran in California. After a White House breakfast in honor of veterans, Obama placed the wreath on the Tomb of th e U n known Soldier and addressed an audience of some 4,000 about the responsibility the country has to those who sacrificed their lives for it. The president pledged to pay attention to t h e d ebts owed to veterans. "Even as we make difficult fiscal choices as a nation," he said, "we're going to keep making vital investments inour veterans." By this winter, only about 34,000 U.S. troops will remain in Afghanistan, Obama said. Next year, the transition to Afghan-led security should be

The law, which prompted large protests and thrust the Republican administration of Gov. Scott Walker into the national spotlight, has divided the state along partisan lines for more than two years. The

arguments on Mondaycentered largely on a broad legal question: Can state lawmakers so significantly curtail collective bargaining that union membership is made less desirable? The plaintiffs contend that

the measure violates freedom of association rights and equal protection of the law. x -7

C

BrOOklyn ShOOting —A gunmanwent on a rampagethrough a

v•

Brooklyn building early Monday, killing three people and then him-

self before police arrived, in what appeared to be a dispute among members of a local band, theYellow Dogs. Police said the violence

'. r l

unfolded shortly after midnight in the East Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, when someone called 911 to report shots fired inside of

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/The Associated Press

President Barack Obama places a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns Monday at Arlington National Cemetery. See photos from Bend's Veterans Day parade, Page B1.

a home. There, officials found three menshot to death on different floors of the five-story building.

Reported Gotti staddiiIg —Authorities are investigating a

Excerptsfromthe president's remarks

report that John "Junior" Gotti was stabbed outside a Long Island pharmacy on Sunday night. That's the word from Shams Tarek, a

... In the life of our nation, across every generation, there are those who stand apart. They step up, they raise their hands, they

spokesmanforNassauCountyprosecutors.Hesayspoliceandprosecutors are investigating Gotti's alleged stabbing. A Nassau County

take that oath. They put on the uniform and they put their lives on the line. They do this so that the rest of us might live in a country

police spokeswomansaysofficers did receive a report of a stabbing Sunday night. But shewould not release the victim's name. Police

and a world that is safer, freer, andmorejust. This is the gift

said the victim was in stable condition.

they've given us. This is the debt that we owe them.... ... On tour after tour after tour, in Iraq and Afghanistan, this

larry FlyiIt ShOOting —Larry Flynt wants to stop Missouri from

generation — the 9/11Generation — has met every mission we

executing the man whose bullet put the publisher of Hustler magazine in a wheelchair for life. Over the weekend, Flynt and the state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union filed suit to force the state to release documents on how the state determines the process by which it kills prisoners. Joseph Paul Franklin, 63, is scheduled to be executed

have asked of them. And today we can say that because of their heroic service, the core of al Qaida is on the path to defeat, our na-

tion is more secure, andour homeland is safer.... ... Our work is more urgent than ever, because this chapter of

war is coming to anend. Soon, one of the first Marines to arrive in Afghanistan12 years ago —Brigadier General Daniel Yoo —will

by lethal injection on Nov.20.

lead his Camp Pendleton Marines as they become one of the last

Militant death —A senior leader of the feared Haqqani militant network was shot dead onthe outskirts of the Pakistani capital,

major groups of Marines to deploy in this war. Andover the coming months, more of our troops will come home.This winter, our

Islamabad, officials said Monday, in a new blow to the close-knit cluster of militant groups that shelter in northwestern Pakistan. The

troop levels in Afghanistan will be down to 34,000. And by this time next year, the transition to Afghan-led security will be nearly

leader, Nasiruddin Haqqani, wasgunned down outside a breadstore

complete. The longest war in American history will end.

on Sunday night by a man riding a motorcycle, witnesses told Pakistani media outlets.

As is true after every conflict, there is a risk that the devoted service of our veterans could fade from the forefront of our minds;

that we might turn to other things. But part of the reasonwe're

Bangkok protests —With thousands of anti-government pro-

here today is to pledge that we will never forget the profound sac-

testers in the streets of Bangkok on Monday, Thailand's opposition

rifices that are made inour name. Today reminds us of our sacred obligations. For eventhough this time of war is coming to a close,

announced acampaign of civil disobedience, including a three-day general strike later this week and a call for businesses to delay paying their taxes. The protests against the government of Prime Minister

our time of service to our newest veterans has only just begun.

Read the full transcript online at 8denddulletin.coml speeches.

complete, he added. Shinseki noted that the budget for the Department of Veterans Affairs has increased by more than 50 percent, 2 million veterans have been added to the VA's health care system, and there have been reductions in veteran homelessness. The president said h e 'd work to improve health care and t o p r o vide a f fordable care for those not covered by the VA; he also pledged to reduce the mammoth backlog in disability claims so veterans can receive their benefits promptly.

Yingluck Shinawatra signaled areturn to the fractious and volatile politics that destabilized Thailand several years ago. — From wire reports

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:

0"OeOsOsOz v04v The estimated jackpot is now $4.8 million.

Iran reportedlyagrees

to managed access By Alissa J. Rubin

and David E. Sanger New York Times News Service

PARIS — The International Atomic Energy Agency said Monday that Iran had agreed to resolve all outstanding issues with the agency, and would allow international inspectors "managed access" to two key nuclear facilities that have not been regularly viewed. But the promise of wider scrutiny did not extend to one of the most contentious locations: the Parchin military site southwest of Tehran. Inspectors from the agency, the United Nations' nuclear watchdog, have been trying for months to see selected areas of the Parchin site, where they suspect that Iran at one time tested triggering devices for nuclear weapons. "This is an important step forward to start with, but much more needs to be done," Yukiya Amano, the d irector-general of the agency, told reporters in Tehran, apparently reflecting a degree of caution. The agreement came on the heels of talks between Iran and six world powers over Iran's nuclear program. Those talks ended Saturday without reaching an agreement that would have eased sanctions on Iran in exchange for verifiable assurances that Iran would not pursue the construction of a nuclear weapon. Western dip-

lomats said Iranian negotiators balked at a proposed agreement, and did not give enough concrete assurances of peaceful intentions. Coming so soon after those talks, the agreement with the agency Monday appeared to representan effort by Iran to show that it remained committed to reaching an accommodation with the West and wanted to demonstrate that it was willing to take steps it had not taken in the past. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said at a news conference in the United Arab Emirates that the Obama administration was not in a "race" to strike a deal. Theagreement, the firststep in at least five years toward resolving outstanding issues on Iran's program, was signed by Amano and Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization. Among its specific provisions is "managed access" to the Gachin mine in Bandar Abbas and the heavy-water production plant beingbuilt at Arak "Managed access"is a term used by the atomic agency to denoteground rulesfor inspections that allow host countries to protect information, like military technology, that they considerproprietary or secret, while still enabling inspectors to collect the data they require, officials said.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, Nov.12, the 316th day of 2013. There are 49 days left in the year.

IN PERSPECTIVE

PHENOMENON

HAPPENINGS China —Chinese troops take part in disaster relief exercises in Hawaii, billed by China's state media as the first time its troops

have drilled onU.S.territory. COllgl'eSS —TheSenate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions subcommittee holds

a hearing on payroll fraud.

HISTORY Highlights:In 1942, the World War II naval Battle of Guadal-

canal began. (TheAllies ended

eria

SLI er users In the Andes,the

un er increase scru in They're a small subset of callers, but they have an outsized impact on emergency services. Now, some cities are tracking mileage and ambulance hour time for each frequent caller to calculate the long-term costs and effects of serial 911 callers.

up winning a major victory

overJapaneseforces.) In1787, severe flooding struck Dublin, Ireland, as the River

Liffey rose. In1815,American suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in Johnstown, N.Y. In 1918, the short-lived Republic of German-Austria was

declared. In1927, Josef Stalin became the undisputed ruler of the So-

viet Union as LeonTrotsky was expelled from the Communist Party. In1936, the San Francisco-

Oakland BayBridge opened as President Franklin D. Roos-

evelt pressed atelegraph key in Washington, D.C., giving the green light to traffic.

In1948,former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo andseveral other World War II Japanese

leaders were sentenced to death by awarcrimes tribunal. In1969, news of the My Lai Massacre in South Vietnam in March1968 was broken by

investigative reporter Seymour Hersh. In1977, the city of New Orleans elected its first black mayor, Ernest"Dutch" Morial,

the winner of a runoff. In1982, Yuri Andropov was elected to succeed the late Leonid I. Brezhnev as general secretary of the Soviet Communist Party's Central Committee. In1987, the American Medical

Association issued apolicy statement saying it was unethical for a doctor to refuse to

treat someonesolely because that person hadAIDSor was HIV-positive.

In1990,Japanese Emperor Akihito formally assumed the

ChrysanthemumThrone. Actress Eve Arden died in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age 82. In 2001, American Airlines Flight 587, an Airbus A300

headed to the Dominican Republic, crashed after takeoff from New York's John F.

Kennedy lnternational Airport, killing all 260 people on board

and five people onthe ground. Ten years ago:President George W. Bushand histop foreign advisers reviewed new strategies to speed the transfer

of political power in Iraq. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat swore in a new Palestinian Cabinet.

Five yearsago:Same-sex marriages began inConnecticut, a month after the state

Supreme Court ruled that gays had the right to wed. Kenny Chesney took home his fourth entertainer of the year trophy at the CMA Awards.

One year ago:Twoweeks after Superstorm Sandy, more than 70,000 customers of the Long

Island PowerAuthority in New

York were still without electricity. The utility said more than half of those in the dark had water damage to electrical panels and wiring, and their

service could not be restored

without an inspection and pos-

sibly repairs.

BIRTHDAYS Rhythm-and-blues singer

Jimmy Hayes (Persuasionsj is 70. Singer-songwriter Neil Young is 68. Sen. Jack Reed,

D-R.I., is 64. Former MLB player Sammy Sosa is45. Figure skater TonyaHarding is 43. Actress Cote dePablo is 34. Actor Ryan Gosling is 33. Actress Anne Hathaway is

31. Pop singer Omarion is 29. Actress Macey Cruthird is 21. — From wire reports

The Washington Post WASHINGTON — Martha Rigsby collapsed to the ground for the first time in 1977. The spells continued, and she began calling 911 for help. She hasn't stopped. In the past year alone, she's accounted for 226 calls to 911 and been whisked by an ambulance to a hospital 117 times. Among firefighters in the District o f C o lumbia, she's a dreaded legend. They can recite her date of birth and Social Security number from memory. Over 30 years, Rigsby has become the most frequent 911 user in Washington history, totaling thousands of emergency calls and trips to the hospital after falling down, court pa-

pers say. Dubbed "super users" or "frequent fliers," repeat 911 callers have long been identified as burdens on the health system and a drain on publicsafety resources. " There will come a t i m e when one of these(frequent 911 callers) will call and they will cost someone else their life," said Jim Dunford, the Mark Gail/For The Washington Post emergency medical director Martha Rigsby, left, speaks with attorney Vickey Wright-Smith as for San Diego and a known ex- they leave the courthouse earlier this month in Washington, D.C. pert on frequent 911 callers. Rigsby has become the most frequent 911 user in Washington history, and the city is trying to place her in the care of a guardian.

Cities taking steps

Some cities, including San Diego, track mileage and ambulance hour time for each frequent caller to calculate the long-term costs and effects of serial 911 callers, Dunford said. "All cities are going through a similarexperience ofhow do we deal with this small subset of people," he said. For years, there has been concern that if crews are tending to Rigsby, the next 911 caller with an emergency might get aparamedic from a farther distance, said David Miramontes, medical director of the D.C. Fire and Emergency Medical ServicesDepartment. A group of D .C. officials met earlier this year to figure out how to solve their problem with Rigsby. Her situation has led to the first known attempt in the city to seek guardianship for a serial 911 caller. The Department of Behavioral Health filed a court petition in A pril, alleging that Rigsby, 58, has bipolar and b orderline p ersonality d i s orders and does not have the mental capacity to handle her medical affairs. These are "uncharted waters," Miramontes said. It might be a unique attempt in the District of Columbia, but other cities have reported success with similar proceedings. Niels Tangherlini, a param edic captain for t h e S a n Francisco Fire D epartment, led a successful pilot program from 2004 through 2009 to stop 911 serial callers. During the height of the program, Tangherlini said, officials successfully filed conservator petitions, which are legally similar to guardianships, for about 12 serial 911 users a year. Public documents and legal proceedings detail Rigsby's 911 habitsand assessments of her mental state and medical problems. They also reveal continued concerns from D.C. officials about the impact of one woman's troubles on publichealthand safety resources. Although Rigsby has had various m edical i n s urance plans throughout the years, she has an outstanding balance of $61,366.33 owed to the D.C. Fire and EMS for ambulance transports, according to

Andrew Beaton, the department's management program analyst. Over the past five years, each ambulancetrip has aver-

aged $478. Rigsby opposes the city's attempt at guardianship. Over two weeks, she has quietly watched the proceedings in Judge Erik Christian's courtroom in t h e D .C. Superior Court's probate division. She has whispered instructions to her court-appointed attorney, Vickey Wright-Smith, at times. Wright-Smith has argued that Rigsby is able to care for herself and has no malicious intent for calling 911.

Patternofcalls If the District of Columbia's p etition i s s u ccessful, t h e medical guardian could take responsibilities for such things as hiring a home health aide, filling prescriptions and proposing a different living environment. But it would still be possible for Rigsby to dial 911 because the guardian would not be a live-in caregiver. After a court session this week, Rigsby seemed taken aback by a question about her calls to 911. "Well, I don't do it on purpose," she responded. According t o te s t imony during the c ourt h e arings, Rigsby's calls follow the same general pattern. She feels faint and collapses. About 40 percent of the time, she dials 911 on herown. Other times, she's out in the District of Columbia when passersby see her fall and call for help, the testimony indicated. About 55 percent of the time, she refusesto be transported in an ambulance and signs a

waiver allowing emergency responders to leave. Court p r oceedings won't resume until January, when Rigsby will have had a neuropsychological assessment, according to attorneys in the case. Several mental-health expertshave already been called to testify. According to court records, Abayomi Jaji, a psychiatrist with the city's Department of Behavioral Health, said that Rigsby continues "to place

herself in real danger of bodily injuries from falls under the claim of 'seizures'or 'Narcolepsy,' which have never been correlated with medical findings." Jaji also said that Rigsby lacks the mental capacity to take care of herselfas evidenced by "almost every other day calls to 911." On Oct. 31, he testified in court that Rigsby's repeated calls may be driven by a feeling of "impending doom." "She seems to be aware at some level that she shouldn't be calling," he said. Firstresponders in Washington cannot refuse a patient. The patient's bill o f r i g hts, which has been posted in every ambulance since 2011, explicitly states this policy. When Rigsby calls 911, the reported symptoms "generally prompt the highest level of response," including the first available paramedic and a separateambulance fortransport, testified Rafael Sa'adah, the fire department's battalion fire chief for emergency medical services. "Our d efault a ssumption must be that she is suffering from a life-threatening medical condition," Sa'adah said. Although Rigsby has been known to paramedics for decades, city officials increased theirfocus on her in December after she called 911 and threatened toharm herself,according to court testimony. The Department of Behavioral Health's mobile crisis team was sent, and Rigsby was involuntarily admitted to the hospital for a m ental-health evaluation, according to testimony by Jonathan Ward,the team's director. After that, a group including representatives from several city agencies met to discuss

a plan for Rigsby. Rigsby declined some suggestions,such as having a home health aide and using a wheelchair, Ward testified. She has a lingering fear that the volume of calls might lead to criminal charges and said she has been handcuffed before. "I've been through a lot," she said. "I'm surprised they haven't put me in jail by now."

world's fastestevolution By Carl Zimmer

fastest evolving places on the planet. In 1799 the great natuScientists have long known ralist Alexander von Hum- that in certain spots, evoluboldt and his companions tion runs faster than normal. set out from Caracas, Ven- The Galapagos Islands, for ezuela, to climb the Andes. example, are home to some 13 They struggled up a moun- species of Darwin's finches, tainside enveloped in mist which all evolved from a sinso thick they had to clam- gle group of birds that origiber over rocks by hand. n ally colonized them. T h e When the fog cleared, von archipelago is just a few milHumboldt was left aston- lion years old, however, which ished by th e v i ew. Vast means that all their diversity g rasslands stretched al l has evolved in a geologically around him, home to an as- short period of time. tonishing number of trees, In recent years, scientists shrubs, and flowers. have identified other regions "Nowhere, perhaps, can where evolution is r u nning be found collected togeth- fast. To measure its speed, reer,in so small a space,pro- searchers have looked at the ductions so beautiful and DNA of species living in each so remarkable in regard to place. The longer it has been the geography of plants," since two species diverged he later wrote. from a common ancestor, the V on H u m b oldt h a d more time each lineage has stumbled into a r emark- had to accumulate mutations. able ecosystem, known as Young species have relatively a Paramo. Paramos blan- few mutations. ket the Andes in VenezueTo calculate the speed of la, Ecuador and Colombia, evolution i n t h e P a r amos, growing at altitudes 9,200 Madrinan and his colleagues to 14,800 feet above sea surveyed 13 different lineaglevel. es of plants that grow there. "They're like islands in They estimated the rate at a sea of forest," said San- which species had split from tiago Madrinan, an expert each other in each lineage, on Paramos at the Univer- and then combined those essity of the Andes in Co- timates into a single average. lombia. All told, Paramos The scientists then looked at cover about 13,500 square data on plants that grow in miles — an area the size other f a st-evolving p l aces, of Maryland. In that small such as Hawaii and the Medispace, Madrinan and other terranean coast. researchers have f o u nd The r e s ult s su r p assed 3,431 species of vascular Madrinan's suspicions. The plants, most of them found Paramos weren't just home to nowhere else on E a r th. fast evolution, it turned out. Of The Paramos are home the eight places he and his colto strange variations on leagues compared, the Parafamiliar forms, such as a mos are evolving the fastest daisy known as Espeletia of all. uribei that grows as tall as trees. But according to a new study, the P aramos are even m or e r e m a rkable than von Humboldt could have realized. They are the New York Times News Service

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Soldiers prepare to load supplies onto a helicopter Monday at Tacloban airport

oonieie e fllMIA By Chico Harlan

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country, d i rectly a ff ecting about 10 percent of the populaA massive relief effort foltion. As many as 10,000people lowing one of the deadliest are feared dead in Tacloban storms in a century was hamcity alone, according to unpered early Tuesday by the confirmed accounts, andthouwidespread wreckage in the sands nationwide are missing. central P h ilippines, where The g overnment's o f f icial the super-typhoon left trees death toll rose to 1,774, but it is splintered on the streets, bodexpected to rise greatly. "I don't believe there is a ies festering in open view, and desperate towns short of food single structure that is not deand water. stroyed or severely damaged in The destruction across a veloped as emergency work- some way — every single buildchain of Philippine islands ers reportedon conditions on ing, every single house," U.S. leaves authorities with a com- the ground and the Philippine Marine Brig. Gen. Paul Kenneplicated relief operation, on military provided aerial imag- dy said after taking a helicopter a scale exceeding any other es of towns ground into wood flight over Tacloban, according in the history of the disaster- beams and r ubble. Photos to the Associated Press. prone nation. showed survivors walking the Said Sandra Bulling, an Although rescue workers streets, covering their noses emergency communications h ave reached many of t h e with clothing to shield them officer at CARE, a humaniareas that Typhoon Haiyan from the stench of bodies. tarian agency, who made it to hit on Friday, others remain T he typhoon cut a p a th a village 20 miles from Tacloinaccessible. Pha r m acies t hrough the middle of t h e ban on Monday: "It is really a The Washington Post

have been swept away and hospitals g u t ted. L o o ters have hauled away medical supplies, according to local media reports. The half-dozen provinces hit most directly by Haiyan's 150-mph winds still lack electricity or mobile connections. In some remote areas,reliefcan arrive onlyby boat or helicopter. Early Tuesday, a clearer picture of the destruction de-

Prone to deadly disasters By Joshua Keating

City Continued from A1 In its w ake, corpses lay along roads lined with splintered homes and toppled power lines, as the living struggled to survive, increasingly desperate for fresh drinking water, food and shelter. The damage to everything was so great that it was hard even to tally. Mass graves began to fill as relief efforts struggled to get underway. The roads of this once-thriving city of 220,000 were so clogged with debris from nearby buildings that they were barely discernible. The civilian airport terminal has shattered walls and gaping holes in theroof where steelbeams protrude, twisted and torn by winds far more powerful than those of H u rricane Katrina when it made landfall near New Orleans in 2005. One of t h e s addest and d eadliest m o m ents c a m e when hundreds o f p e o ple flocked to Tacloban's domed sports arena at the urging of municipal officials, who believed its sturdy roof would withstand the wind. The roof

Record surge The top civil defense offlcial of the Philippines said in an interview after inspecting the damage that the storm surge had been the highest in the country's modern history, perhaps explaining why so few thought they needed to flee inland and instead went to evacuation centers near the coast. Nothing like this had ever happened. The sea level rose 10 to 13 feet and filled streets and homes deep in the city, propelled by sustained winds of at least 140 mph and gusts that were far stronger. "It was a tsunami-like storm surge; it is the first time," said Eduardo del Rosario, executive director of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council. T acloban has been hit by typhoons for decades, but never had the sea risen high enough to pour over the swath of low salt marshes and inundate the city's shady streets, he said. As a violet sunset melted

Here are some organizations accepting donations for relief efforts in the Philippines:

American Red Cross: redcross.org, 800-RED-CROSS(800-7332767) CARE International:care.org, 800-422-7385

Catholic Relief Services:crs.org, 877-435-7277 Christian Aid Mission:christianaid.org, 434-977-5650 Lutheran World Relief:Iwr.org, 800-597-5972

OxfamAmerica:oxfam.org,800-77-OXFAM (800-776-9326) Save the Children:savethechildren.org, 800-728-3843 UNICEF:unicefusa.org, 800-FOR-KIDS (800-367-5437) WorldFood Program USA: wfpusa.org,202-747-0722 — The Washington Post

all-too-familiar pattern." Scientists say m a n-made global warming has contributed to rising seas and a general increase in strength in the most powerful tropical cyclones. But they won't specifically apply these factors to Haiyan, saying it is impossible to attribute single weather events, like the typhoon, to climate change. A 2008 study found that in the northwestern Pacific where Haiyan formed, the top 1 percent of the strongest tropical cyclones over the past 30 years are getting on average about 1 mph stronger each year — a phenomenon some scientist s suspect is a consequence of global warming. "The strongest storms are getting stronger" said study co-author James Kossin of the National Climatic Data Center. Haiyan "is what potentially could be a good example of the kind of the things we're

Del Rosario said the government was still sending out helicopters Monday to look for communities that had not been heard from since the typhoon. The governmenthad confirmed 1,563 deaths through Sunday evening in the hardest-hit region of east-central Philippines, and the death toll would "most likely" rise, he said. But one of the biggest questions here involves the many quickly growing hungry and people who seem to have disapthirsty. peared, possibly sucked out to A coast guardsman said he sea when the ocean returned to had helped fill a mass grave in Missing citizens its usual level. the nearby village of Hernani. Miriam Refugio, 60, waited Rosemary Balais, 39, said a "I personally threw in one body in the crowd of Filipinos at the very large proportion, possibly earlier, and it was a relative of airportseeking a scarce place more than half, of the 5,000 my friend in Manila — I haven't on a flight to Manila. peoplein herhometown Tanau"Our home was destroyed, an, near Tacloban, seemed to told her yet because I can't get a signal" for cellphone usage, there is no food in this town, be missing. "My sister and their chilsaid the c oast g uardsman, so we have to flee," she said, who insisted on anonymity be- standing wit h h e r t e enage dren were there, and we have cause he was not authorized to granddaughter who held their not heard from them since last speak to the media. The same only drinking water, a nearly Thursday," she said, adding friend in Manila has lost her empty plastic bottle that could that they had lived only around grandfather, whom the coast hold perhaps 2 cups. 300 yards inland. "There was a neighbor who guardsman threw in the mass They were trying to decide had won a lottery and had a big grave, as well as her aunt and whether to drink water from two cousins, the guardsman a nearby pump, even though house, and even that house was added, saying that other rela- the granddaughter, tugging at flattened," she said. tives who survived the typhoon her stomachfor emphasis, said Compounding the damage had confirmed the identities of they were certain to become was the extraordinary force the dead. sick if they did. of the wind. Palm trees are

naturally resilient, flexing and bending in high w inds. But entire groves were flatt ened and their trunks left in tangles on the ground as though giant boxes of toothpicks had been tipped over. In a country cursed by a succession of natural disasters, from earthquakes to violent storms to volcanic eruptions, the typhoon was especially deadly and destructive. "It's going to be classified as one of the worst, if not the worst, in decades,"among disasters that have struck the Philippines, said Ricky Carandang, a presidential spokesman. The local government has declared astate of emergency and a curfew in Tacloban, and the national government was considering a n em e rgency declaration in the city as well to speedthe release of government money, Carandang said. The government was trying to fly in military and civilian police to restore law and order, but progress was slow. Hundreds of soldiers and dozens of relief workers milled around at Cebu airport throughout the morning, waiting for a plane to carry them to Tacloban.

ANALYSIS

did, but the arena flooded, and many inside drowned or were trampled in a frenzied rush to higher seats.

Causes

How tohelp

Noldy figures that 75 to 80 percent of the devastation can be blamed on the human factor. Meteorologists point to extreme poverty and huge growth in population — much of it in vulnerable coastal areas with poor construction, including storm shelters that didn't hold up against Haiyan. Morethan4outof 10Filipinos live in a storm-prone vulnerable city of more than 100,000, according to a 2012 World Bank study. The Haiyan-devastated provincial capital of Tacloban nearlytripled from about 76,000 to 221,000 in just 40 years. About one-third of Tacloban's homes have wooden exterior walls. And 1 in 7 homes have grass roofs,according to the census office. Those factors — especially flimsy construction — were so important that a weaker storm would have still caused almost as much devastation, McNoldy sa>d. "You end up with these kind of urban time bombs, where cities have doubled, tripled, quadrupledin size in 50 years" without good building standards, said Richard Olson, director of the Extreme Events Institute at Florida International University. "It is, I hate to say, an

World Economic Forum has identified "inadequate supply WASHINGTON — Geogof infrastructure"as one of raphy has not been kind to the ing on under $2 per day. The the primary obstacles for the Philippines. With six to nine country's unemployment rate country's economic growth. typhoons making l a ndfall is high and around a third of Current President Benigno every year, almost 900 earth- its workers are in agriculture, Aquino has made infrastrucquakes annually — including making them particularly vul- ture development a p r i orthe one that hit the island of nerable to severe weather. ity since coming into office Bohol, killing more than 200 A 2005 World Bank report in 2010. The government inpeople just last month — and discussed why poverty has creased spending by 47 permore than 20 active volca- exacerbated the Phillipines' cent on the country's roads, noes, it gets more than its frequent disasters, writing, airports, and public works in " Rapid urban growth a n d share of natural disasters. the first eight months of this Disasters in the Philippines lack of tenure, for instance, year. The Philippines has also are also particularly deadly. h ave forced many t o l i v e invested heavily to improve Just two years ago, Tropical and work i n h i gh-risk ar- flood-resistant construction. Storm Washi killed over 1,000 eas, such as on the shores of Unfortunately, the relationpeople. The country led the Navotas or flanks of active ship between natural disasworld in d isaster mortality volcanoes. Families may have ters and poor infrastructure is in 2012 with more than 2,000 little choice but to return to mutually reinforcing. The Bopeople killed. China was sec- such areas post disaster even hol earthquake caused more ond with just 802. The high when resettlement options than $51 million in damage, rate of poverty and the state are available because of the largely to roads, flood control of the country's infrastructure importance of proximity to facilities and bridges, exactly also make it particularly vul- place of work." the kind of construction that nerable to the kind of devastaThe country's chronic infra- makes futuredisasters more tion we're seeing this week. structure problems are anoth- severe. While the Philippines has er concern. Damaged roads The World Bank r eport earned global attention for its are hampering the relief effort noted that " D isasters can rapid economic growth in re- in this disaster as they did af- also contribute to longer-term cent years, it remains a very ter last month's earthquake. states of poverty by delaypoor country with around 40 Only 20 percent of the coun- ing development of poorer percent of the population liv- try's roads are paved and the areas." Slate

massive disaster. Aid is slowly getting through and the local authorities have started distributing. But what the municipalities are telling us is they're running out of their stock, and now they're really relying on international support." Nations across the region moved quickly to h elp t he P hilippines, a c o u ntry i n which 40 percent of the population lives on $2 or less per day and whose shoddy infrastructure makes it vulnerable to typhoon damage. Secretary of State John Kerry told Philippine Foreign Minister Albert del Rosario that the U.S. government will provide "allnecessary assistance." The U.S. Agency for International D e v elopment announced $20 million in immediate humanitarian aid.

American Association of the High Desert, with about 40 Continued from A1 members and has been hearFilipinos in the Bend area ing many sad stories. are reeling and searching for Reynold's family is in Maanswers after Typhoon Haiyan nila, which wasn't hit as hard ravaged portions of the country, by the storm, but a close friend flattening houses, taking down of her family is the mayor of a cell towers and phone lines, and small town called Basey. He killingthousands. and his wife are missing. The Browns have no contact Reynold's sister-in-law has with their friends and family family in Tacloban and was and can only read the news relieved to finally hear from for answers. Their resort and them, but they ar e u nsure family members are in a town where to go now because their of 16,000 called Sulangan in homes are gone. Eastern Samar, just south GuiReynolds said most the meuan, an area over which the dia coverage has been focused eye ofthe storm firstpassed. on the city of Tacloban, where "It w i pe d o u t G u i u an," the storm center also struck, Brown said. "I don't know but they h ear l i t tl e a bout what it did to my place." smaller islands and more reBrown is trying to get in mote regions. "The lack of touch with the Red Cross be- c ommunication, t h at's t h e cause he wants to go to the hardest thing," she said. "All Philippines and help the relief the cell towers are gone too." efforts. Reynolds is organizing a Mary Ann Meyers, of Bend, fundraising dinner Saturday. returned from atrip home tothe People in her group will cook Philippines last week, beating Filipino food, and attendees' the storm bylust days. Stnce the payment will be donated to storm hit, Meyers was able to help victims of the typhoon. speaktoherparents andbrother She is hoping to hold it at the who relayed the news that their Bend Community Center but homes were destroyed. Gusts is awaiting confirmation. blew off the roof of the house Other members of the local she is almost finished building Filipino community are also there in the city of Capiz. planning a vigil for Sunday to Nenette Reynolds runs a honor the victims and will ann onprofit o r g anization i n nounce more details as they Central Oregon, the Filipino become available.

on Monday into the nearly total darkness of a city without electricity, lighted only by a waxing half moon, dispirited residents walked home or lay down in the ruins of the airport terminal after another day of waiting at the airport in hope of fresh water, food or a flight out. Grocery stores and pharmacies across the city had been sacked over the weekend, leaving bare shelves for a city

Continued from A1 "You have a very intense event hitting a very susceptible part of the world. It's that combination of nature and man," said MIT tropical meteorology professor Kerry Emanuel. "If one of those ingredients were missing, you wouldn't have a disaster." The 7,000 islands of the Philippines sit in the middle of the world's most storm-prone region, which gets some of the

biggest typhoons because of

vast expanses of warm water that act as fuel and few pieces of land to slow storms down. Half the storms on an informal list of the strongest ones to hit land in the 20th and 21st centuries ended up striking the Philippines, according to research byJeffMasters, meteorology director of the Weather Underground. Storms often hit after they've peaked in strength orbefore they get a chance to, but Haiyan struck when it was at its most powerful, based on U.S. satellite observations, Emanuel said. Humans played a big role in this disaster, too — probably bigger than nature's, meteorologists said. University of Miami hurricane researcher Brian Mc-

This regional capital, the hometown of Imelda Marcos, was among the hardest hit in a nation accustomed to misery blown in from the sea. But this storm was like nothing before it, and its devastation was not yet fully understood. Villages along the coasts may have been wiped out, and the toll — at least 10,000 in Tacloban alone are feared dead — was just an estimate. Relief efforts were complicated by a persistent and heavy rain.

finding." Similarly, the P h ilippines has seen its sea rise nearly half an inch in the past 20 years — about triple the global increase, according to R. Steven Nerem of the University of Colorado. Higher sea levels can add tostorm surge, creat-

ing slightly greater flooding.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Sawyers

the victims of their fraud is not a defense to fraud charges," Continued from A1 Potter wrote. "Such evidence In the answering brief, filed would have only served to Friday by Assistant U.S. Attor- confuse the jury. The district ney Amy Potter in U.S. District court's ruling did not prevent Court in Eugene, Potter writes defendants from offering a that the government had two defense; the court's ruling was ways of d emonstrating the narrowly tailored to prevent Sawyers' fraud against their only irrelevant evidence ofinvestors. At trial the govern- fered toexcuse theirbehavior ment would have shown how and confuse the jury about the Sawyers lied to investors what constitutes fraud." and banks and demonstrated Kevin Sawyer pleaded guilty how they used the money, with to one count of providing false both documents and victim statements to a financial institestimony. tution and is serving 27 months "The government argued at a federal penitentiary in that evidence of intent or ability Littleton, Colo., expecting to to repaywas irrelevant because be released in April 2015. Tami 'the fraud in this case was com- Sawyer pleaded guilty to all 21 pleted when she made those counts against her, including m isrepresentations and ( t h e fraud, conspiracy and money investors) loaned or invested laundering, and is serving nine money based on those misrep- years in prison in Dublin, Caresentations,"' the brief states. lif., expecting to be released in Potter argues the court was February 2021. They were also right to refuse to allow the ordered to pay more than $5.8 Sawyers toinclude evidence million in restitution. that showed their ability to reThe Sawyers now have 14 pay the victims. days, if they want, to respond "As this Court has made to the government's answerclear i n s e veral p u blished ing brief. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, opinions,evidence of defendants' intent or ability to repay smiller@bendbulletin.com

Sundays Continued from A1 "Blue laws" that ban Sunday activities — dating to the 1600s — have been gradually repealed in many states, but some remain. As cities and states look for more revenue, they have loosened laws banning liquor sales on Sundays. Amazon's national plan to partner with the U.S. Postal Servicecould open the door to a wave of Sunday deliveries by other companies.The moneylosing Postal Service, which recently was trying to persuade Congress to halt Saturday mail, said it w il l e xpand Sunday

staffing and hopes to sign up more clients.The agency declined to disclose specifics or to reveal how much new revenue it expects. There were no complaints about prolonging the w orkweek from a union representing letter carriers. "We're excited about the potential of the rapidly growing e-Commerce market and what it means for the Postal Service," Fredric Rolando, president of the National Association of Letter Carriers, said in a statement. Expanding Sunday service "would benefit the economy, consumers, businesses and the nation as a whole," he said. Amazon said its plan grew out of consumer demands to get their online orders faster. "We hope it crosses an errand ortwoofftheweekendto-dolist," Amazon spokeswoman Kelly Cheeseman said. (Amazon chief executive Jeffrey Bezos owns The Washington Post.) Competitors such as WalMart, eBay and Google are racing to satisfy consumers virtually around the clock, aiming to

deliver products just hours after someone places an online order. "Amazon's a nnouncement is another incremental development in the erosion of that restful space — Sunday — and another example of an erosion onthe limits of market activity," said Jordan Ballor, a research fellow at the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, an economic think tank.

The changes of shopping patterns began well before online commerce took off. Wal-Mart, Kmart and other major retailers were criticized when they started opening their stores on Sundays years ago. Since then, they have expanded shopping hours to 24 hours a day and holidays. They have faced renewed backlash over plans to open on Thanksgiving Day. Last year, an employee of Target wrote a letter to company chief executive Gregg Steinhafel, asking him to close the chain of stores on Thanksgiving. The letter was posted as a petition on Change.org and got more than 300,000signatures of support. The company stood by its decision to open on Thanksgiving evening, saying it was responding to the interests of shoppers and of employees who asked to work the overtime shifts. In an age of constant commerce, consumers have struggled to reconcile their urge to spend with older traditions of quiet Sundays. Last month, some residents ofBergen County, N.J., tried to repeal a county ban on the sale of furniture, clothing and electronics on Sundays. They had argued that opening retail stores seven days a week would boost the local economy. But they failed to get enough signatures of support.

Recreation

classmates from OSU. "I still remember that first drop from the Nordic Lodge before you go down Screamer," Lindberg said. "I was a mediocre skier, and I can remember my friends were loving it but I was definitely doing some snow plowing. It's fun to come back 10-plus years later and have Bachelor in the backyard."

Continued from A1 To conduct th e s u rvey, Lindberg contacted 50,000 Oregonians last year by mail. Instead of r andomly mailing residents, he stratified his

sample by county, meaning that enough surveys were sent to rural counties to ensure a

large enough response. By stratifying his sample, Lindberg avoidedthe risk ofhaving his survey focus on the Portland metro area, which, due its large population, would dominate any straightforward random sample of Oregonians. "Often these surveys are only done on a statewide basis, and the issue is you can only talk about the state," Lindberg said. "We may see stand-up

AS

Neutral questions

Lindberg's contribution to the state'srecreation surveys may seem below anacademic — he writes and orders the questions. "Survey design is kind of an art and a science," Lindberg important to have lights on sional path. said. "Anyone can put a survey "I ended up at a merger be- together, but there are techtrails, such as in a city. Maybe not for locals in Bend, but you tween tourism and conserva- niques for making it more effeccan imagine proximity to food tion, and that's how I really got tive and ensuring people underbeing important. Also, what started," Lindberg said. stand the question as you intend paddleboarding as a big area about hard- versus soft-surIn the mid-1980s, the WRG and that you are efficient in askhere, but that local need may face trails'?" was beginning to push the sus- ing the question so people don't be lost in the noise if we didn't The surveys are not only tainability discussion, and Lind- get tired of doing the survey." stratify the sample." meant to gauge satisfaction berg focused on the question of Some of the things Lindberg Terry Bergerson, an Or- with Oregon's recreation op- how governments can generate focuses on include the flow of egon Parks and Recreation portunities, they also are use- money to support conservation questions, so that " changes planning coordinator, said ful for studies of economic by harnessing tourism dollars. from one topic to the next are Lindberg's survey affects how development and t o u rism, This focus doesn't neatly fit into not too abrupt." He also pays the state distributes funding as well as gauging attitudes the field of forestry, something attention to how white space is and that it offers an impor- toward conservation. But be- Lindberg acknowledges. Re- used, as respondents may not tant tool for districts too small yond these traditional appli- gardless, he found his way to react wellto a piece of paper that school,w here he is too dense with text. Lindberg to complete their own needs cations, Lindberg argues the O SU's forestry assessments. data he collected has public completed his doctorate in 1995. also avoids one of the most com"Some of the bigger places health implications. "OSU forestry was pretty mon interrogationtechniques"There's a lot of i nterest well funded in terms of schol- "doublebarrel" questions, which have sufficient resources to do their own surveys," Berg- around the obesity issue, and arships,and they seemed fine allow for only one answer while erson said, noting that Bend of course trail recreation typi- with me not having a forestry containing two di fferentiable often conducts surveys. "But cally involves physical activ- background," Lindberg said. questions. "You also need to make sure a lot of the population lives ity," Lindberg said. "The ques- "So, yeah, I had to take some rein smaller communities, and tion is to what degree are trails medial courses in forestry, but I you're not l e ading people," we've developed manuals for providing health benefits, and was able to focus on recreation Lindberg said. "You'll see some local communities to use this can we prioritize trails from and tourism. My dissertation questions on TV, they'll say, 'Obamacare is the worst idea information." that perspective?" was on the social impacts of So what do residents of tourism on the Oregon Coast, since something or other, do you Deschutes County need'? The From the islands which had nothing to do with agree, yes or no'?' By that phrassurvey found a demand for Lindberg grew up on Oahu forestry in the traditional sense ing, you know there will be bias more drive-in tent sites. Resi- where he "lived with the sand but used tools and methods that in the responses, so we try to dents also expressed a desire and beaches." He and his fa- came out ofnatural resource minimize bias. Every human for more soft-surface walking ther would go backpacking economics." has bias, butwe tryto keep questrails, access to waterways on the Big Island's volcanoes, After graduating, Lindberg tions as neutral as possible." and off-street bicycle trails. an act which Lindberg said taught in Australia and Norway, — Reporter: 541-633-2160, Playgrounds with natural ma- "plantedthe seed, profession- but the confluence of 9/Il and tleedsC<bendbulletin.com terials, picnic areas and wild- ally and personally, that later familymattersbrought Lindberg life viewing areas were also in became a big part of my life." back to the States, first to Colorademand. Meanwhile, don'tex- For college, Lindberg traveled do State in Fort Collins and then vPure &OA6 &o. pect Bend's street basketball 5,000 miles to Dartmouth in to OSU-Cascades. Lindberg had scene to explode — residents New Hampshire, where he been to Bend a few times before ranked the need for outdoor wanted to Mdy neuroscience coming to the university, but Bend courts and sports fields as the but fell into European history, only on ski trips he made with lowest priority. neither of which related to his Redmond Lindberg is currently work- later career. After Dartmouth, John Day ing on a follow-up study that he went to Johns Hopkins to Burns looks more closely at trail study international relations, Lakeview needs. but a summer internship with La Pine "Oftentimes the needs for the World Resources Group 686 NW YorkDrive, Ste.150 trailsareveryspecific,"hesaid. realigned his childhood inter541.382.6447 Bend, OR541-306-3263 i "In areas people may think it's est in nature with his profesbenduroiogy.com Courtesy Kreg Lindberg

One of Kreg Lindberg's courses at OSU-Cascades involves a yearly field trip with Wanderlust Tours. This one, in 2006, is at Mt. Bachelor, east of Sunrise Lodge.

a~ B~ dU

THE HEALTH OF YOUR BUSINESS

Cities

environmental sustainability. A recent Brookings InstituContinued from A1 tion study found that from 2000 The city bulldozed those and to 2010 the number of vacant two others, leaving scavengers housing units nationally had to pick through the debris for increased by 44 percent, or 4.5 bits of metal and copper wire. million. And a reportbythe Uni"The city doesn't want these versity of California, Berkeley, old houses," lamented Smith, determined that over the past 15 36. years, 130 cities, most with relaFor the Smiths, the bulldoz- tively small populations, have ing of city blocks is a source of dissolved themselves, more anguish. But for Baltimore, as than half the total ever recorded for a number of American cities in the United States. in the Northeast and Midwest The continuing struggles of that have lost big chunks of their former manufacturing centers population, it i s i n creasingly have fundamentally a ltered regarded as a path to salvation. urban planning, traditionally Because despite the well-publi- a discipline based on growth cized embrace by young profes- and expansion. Today, it is also sionals of once-struggling city about disinvestment patterns to centers in New York, Seattle and help determine which depopuLos Angeles, for many cities ur- lated neighborhoods are worth ban planning has often become saving; what blocks should a form of creative destruction. be torn down and rebuilt; and "It is not the house itself that based on economic activity, has value, it is the land the transportation options, infrahouse stands on," said Sandra structure and population densiPianalto, the p resident and ty, where people might best be chief executive of the Federal relocated. Some even focus on Reserve Bank of C leveland. returning abandoned urban ar"This led us to the counterintui- eas into forests and meadows. "It's like a whole new field," tive concept that the best policy to stabilize neighborhoods may saidMargaretDewar,aprofessor not always be rehabilitation. It of urban and regional planning may be demolition." at the University of Michigan. Large-scale destruction is In all, more than half of the well known in Detroit, but it is nation's 20 largest cities in 1950 also underway in Baltimore, have lost at least one-third of Philadelphia, Cleveland, Cin- their populations. And since cinnati, Buffalo and other cities 2000, a number of cities, includat a total cost of more than $250 ing Baltimore, St. Louis, Pittsmillion. Officials are tearing burgh, Cincinnati and Buffalo, down tens of thousands of va- have lost around 10 percent; cant buildings, many perfectly Cleveland has lost more than habitable, as they seek to stimu- 17 percent; and more than 25 lateeconomic growth, reduce percent of residents have left crime and blight, and increase Detroit.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

rac eve move

BRIEFING

Holiday DUII patrols increasing Expect heightened attention turned to driving-under-the-influ-

enceoffensescome the Thanksgiving season, the Deschutes County

Sheriff's Office announced Monday. Nighttime traffic

patrols will be increased from Nov. 22 to Dec. 2, according to the

• Ankle bracelets used to detect use of alcohol andmore

Sheirff's Office. Thedepartment is partnering with other law enforce-

ment agencies to reduce the incidence of driving

offenses. Wednesday night

By Shelby R. King

before Thanksgiving

The Bulletin

Thursday has become a dangerous holiday

A tiny green arrow moves across a map of Bend on Olga Chapman's computer screen at the Deschutes County Adult Parole and Probation Department. The arrow represents a possible offender — in this case, a man awaiting trial on assault charges involving his former girlfriend. It moves back and forth between two locations on the map — the man's workplace and his home. On the m ap are three locations, each denoted with a red 'X', where the offender is not allowed to go. Those are called exclusion zones, and for this man includes the former girlfriend's home. Chapman is the county's electronic monitoring specialist. Her job is to keep tabs on the 100 individuals awaiting trial, many for driving while intoxicated, who are wearing Secure Continuous Alcohol Monitors or SCRAM devices. Chapman clicks her mouse a few times, and the moving arrow speeds up as she changes the settings to watch where her subject went earlier in the day. The arrow stays away from the exclusion zones, and, Chapman says, indicates this person did what he was supposed to do throughout the

driving period that

outpaces evenNew Years for the numberof alcohol-related driving fatalities across the na-

tion, according to the National Highway Traffic Administration.

OSP identifies deceased driver A 50-year-old Oregon City man died early Sunday when his1997 Jeep

Wrangler overturned on U.S. Highway 26and remained unseenthere for several hours, according to OregonState Police. OSP identified the

driver Monday as Scott Joseph Young. A nearby resident at

7:12 a.m. reported the Wrangler overturned on the south side of

Highway 26 about a mile from the U.S. Highway 97 intersection south

of Madras. OSPand Jefferson County emergency responders arrived to find Youngdead underneath. "It appears the vehi-

• II

cle was at the scenefor several hours," according to a statement from Lt. Gregg Hastings. "The property resident didn't hear the crash and

only saw the overturned vehicle after getting up

in the morning." Troopers believe

al. i

SA LIi'

4

day. He has been fitted with a SCRAMx device that monitors alcohol consumption and also contains a GPS tracking device. This allows the Adult Parole and Probation Department to keep track of his whereabouts without locking him up in jail. "Getting the global positioning has been fairly recent for us," said department Director Ken Hales. "There have been other types of electronic monitoring devices around for much longer, but all they were ableto do ism ake sure you were in your home. It's fairly recent that we've been able to track an offender's movements." SeeAnkle/B2

Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

Above, a Cub Scout salutes members of the Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps as they march down Wall Street during the Veterans Day Parade Monday morning. Below, a group of veterans representing High Desert Chapter No. 820 of the Vietnam Veterans of America carry a banner and flags down the street. The festivities closed the thoroughfare between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m. To see a slideshow from Veterans Day, visitQ bendbulletin.com/vetsparade

the Wrangler, west-

bound near milepost1, veered onto the right road shoulder. Young apparently over-corrected, lost control and the Wrangler strucka driveway culvert. It ap-

parently went airborne, OSP believes, and rolled

several times. Young was not wearing seat belts.

The vehicle came to rest about 35 yards from the highway and was not visible due to VIETNAM VETERANS

high bushes around it,

tl 'IIIII

according to Hastings. — Bulletin staff reports

of AMERICA High Desert Chapter ¹820

It's fairly recent that we've been able to track an offender's

.II~I

Never Agoin will one Generarion o/ veterans Aeondon Anwhe

movements." — Ken Hales, director of the Deschutes County Adult Parole and Probation Department

LOCAL OFFICIALS U.S. Senate • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http:I/merkley. sertate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 W eb: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend ouice: 131 N.W.HawthorneAve., Suite107 Bend,OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

U.S. Houseof Representatives • Rep. GregWalden, RHood River 2182 RayburnHouse Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phonei202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house. gOV

Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt.,Suite 400 Bend,OR 97701 Phone:541-389-4408

www.bendbulletin.com/local

STATE NEWS iPortland p i

P tll

• Portland:After a

woman was reportedly killed while tending to

animals at a sanctuary her mother speaks out.

• Pendleton:A mental health facility could be

receiving funds to help it refocus its mission, which might include treating an older

inmate population. Stories on B3

Well shot! reader photos • We want to seeyour photos of signs of winter

for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbeudbullotiu.com

/signsofwinterand we'll pickthe best for publication.

• Email other goodphotos ofthe greatoutdoors

to readerphotosO beudbulletiu.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them.

We'll choosethe best for publication.

Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpt) and cannot be altered.

Have astory idea or submission? Contactus! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-383-0367 Sttnriver.............541-883-0367

Deschutes.........541-383-0376 Crook.................541-883-0367 Jefferson...........541-383-0367 State projects ....541-410-9207 Salem .................541-554-1162 D.c.....................202-662-7456

Business...........541-383-0360 Education...........541-633-2160 Health..................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety........541-3e3-0387 Special projects... 541-617-7831

Submissions: • Letters andopinions: Mail: My Nickel's Worth or In My View p.o. Box6020 Bend,OR97708 Detailsortthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-3830358, bttlletin@bendbttlletin. com

• Civic Calendarnotices:

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO

Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while.Email ideas to news®bendbulletin.com. O Tofollow the series,visit www.bendbulletirLcomlupdates.

Emaileventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in thesubject, and includeacontact name andphonenumber.Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsand notes: Emailnewsitems and notices ofgeneral interest to

AtaRockseeks 5M

for geotherma pan By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Field work in the geothermal project on Newberry Volcano is on hold until spring, but that doesn't mean that Susan Petty isn't busy. Petty, president of AltaRock Energy in Seattle, is trying to secure millions of dollars in funding by April to ensure the next step in the enhanced

geothermal systems project goes as planned after the snow thaws. "We haveto raise a fair amount ofmoney, about $5 million to do this next phase," said Petty, who is also the chief technology officer for the

company. In total the project will cost more than $40 million. See Project/B5

news@beitdbttlletiit.com.

Geothermalexperiment AltaRock Energy is in the midst of an enhanced geothermal systems experiment on Newberry Volcano south of Bend. The

Seattle-based companyseeks $5 million in funding before the next field work season starts in the spring. NEWBERRY NATIONAL V OLCANIC MONU M E N T I

prOIBCt Newberry Ciater

21

Site To La Pine MILES 0

1

2

8, pauli

East Lake • Resort pauf fna Lake Lake

Paulina P k,

gBig Obsi

Qpiow

Source: Department of Energy Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

Email announcementsof teens'ac ademicachievements to youth©bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bttlletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, Death Notices: Detailsonthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: TheMilestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358


B2

THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 'I2, 2013

E VENT TODAY "A FIERCE GREEN FIRE: THE BATTLE FOR ALIVING PLANET": A screening of the documentary on five decades of the environmental movement; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-322-3116 or www. afiercegreenfire.com. NATURALHISTORYPUB: "Restoring Aspen Ecosystems in Oregon" will explore how prescribed fire and logging can help restore quaking aspen ecosystems; free; 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp.

WEDNESDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: TOSCA" ENCORE:Starring Patricia Racette in the title role of jealous diva opposite Roberto Alagna as her lover, Cavaradossi; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. CASEY NEILL &THE NORWAY RATS:The Portland-based Americana group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. NEKROFILTH:Death metal thrash from Cleveland, with Existential Depression; free; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 S.E.Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.

THURSDAY "HUNGRYFORCHANGE": A screening of the 2012 film about nutrition; proceeds benefit the Serendipity West Foundation; $10; 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.hungryforchange.tv. "FREE TOBE...YOU ANDME": Music and drama students present songs, storiesand comedy sketches to encourage children to accept and celebrate diversity; $5; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:15 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-335-4401.

Ankle Continued from B1 Hales said he believes the county began using GPS to track offenders in 2011. The county has three types of devices for offenders who need monitoring but who do not need to be in jail, according to Deborah Saia, department administrative manager. SCRAM devices are an k le bracelets fitted with an alcohol detection device. At regular intervals these devices check the wearer'sperspiration for alcohoL SCRAMx devicesare also ankle bracelets. In addition to monitoring alcohol consumption, the S CRAMx de v ices track an offender's movements using GPStechnology.

"GUYSAND DOLLS":The musical about gangsters and gamblers finding love is presented by the musical theater class; $12, $8 students and seniors; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; 541-549-4045. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!:Rebecca Skloot, author of "The lmmortal Life of Henrietta Lacks," will speak; $20-$75; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-312-1027 or www.dplfoundation.org. SLAID CLEAVES: The Austin, Texas singer-songwriter performs; $18 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 7-9 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. SWITCHFOOT: The Grammy awardwinning rock band performs along with a screening of its new film "Fading West"; $25-$35, $30-$40 day of show, plusfees;7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School Auditorium, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www.j.mp/switchfootinfo. "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES FOR THEHOLIDAYS": A1936 whodunit about a Broadway star noted for playing Sherlock Homes solving one of his guests' death; $ l9, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. PAUL BARREREB FREDTACKETT OF LITTLE FEAT: The country-rock group performs; $35-$45 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.

FRIDAY AUTHOR PRESENTATIONAND BOOKLAUNCH:Ellen Waterston reads from "Via Lactea, A Woman of a Certain Age Walks the Camino"; illustrator Ron Schultz and typography and book designers, Thomas Osborne and Sandy Tilcock, share their experience on collaboration; free; 5:30 p.m.; Atelier 6000, 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; 541-330-8759. "NATIVE PEOPLESOFCENTRAL OREGON":A dessert social followed by a presentation by interpretive ranger Eric Iseman; $1, free for Friends and Neighbors of the Deschutes Canyon Area members; 6 p.m. dessert social, 7 p.m. presentation; Crooked River Ranch

open at 6:15 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-335-4401. "GUYSAND DOLLS":The musical about gangsters and gamblers finding love is presented by the musical theater class; $12, $8 "I students and seniors; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney SATURDAY Butte Road; 541-549-4045. DRILL COMPETITION: Watch 13 "MIDDLEAGES, STRUGGLE, QI i llS>~ i.'~ Junior Reserve Officer Training Corp DEVOTION, MERRIMENT!":Central units compete in physical fitness, Oregon History Performers re-enact color guard, drill and marksmanship various periods in history using followed by an awards ceremony; music, art, dance and drama; free, free; 8 a.m.; Redmond High School, donations accepted;7 p.m.;The 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-923Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 4800 ext. 2198. W. Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-548Submitted photo 6821 or rebeccacentraloregon© HARVEST BARN SALE: Featuring Tom Murphy, a Montana multi-instrumentalist, is set to perform hotmail.com. antiques, handmade crafts, garage along with Twith Mai and Dave at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Runway "MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET": sale treasures, tack and much more; Ranch. For more information, visit www.hadbf.com. proceeds benefit Crystal Peaks Bend Experimental Art Theatre's Youth Ranch; free admission; 9 production of the Christmas a.m.-4 p.m.; Crystal Peaks Youth classic; $15, $10 for children18 and "GUYS AND DOLLS": The musical Administration Building, 5195 S.W. Ranch,19344 Innes Market Road, younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, Clubhouse Drive; 541-604-0963 or about gangsters and gamblers Bend; 541-330-0123 or www. 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541www.fansofdeschutes.org. finding love is presented by the crystalpeaksyouthranch.org. 312-9626 or www.beatonline.org. musical theater class; $12, $8 "TICKET TO RIDE": A screening of students and seniors; 7 p.m.; Sisters NATURAL LIVING FAIR: Featuring HOUSECONCERT:Featuring the Warren Miller ski film; $19 plus High School, 1700 W. McKinney vendors showing products and Montana multi-instrumentalist fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 Butte Road; 541-549-4045. services for living natural, raffle; player Tom Murphy, with Mai and N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 free; 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Shilo Inn Suites Dave; $10, reservations requested; "MIDDLEAGES, STRUGGLE, or www.towertheatre.org. 7 p.m.; Runway Ranch, 22655 DEVOTION, MERRIMENT!":Central Hotel, 3105 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; FOR THELOVE OF LAURIE AND 541-350-3176 or www.j.mp/NatLive. Peacock Lane, Bend; dehle@ Oregon History Performers re-enact THE HORSES:Featuring a fashion bendcable.com or www.hadbf.com. "MIRACLE ON34TH STREET": various periods in history using show, live music, raffles and more; music, art, dance and drama; free, Bend Experimental Art Theatre's MARY GAUTHIER: The Nashville, proceeds benefit Equine Outreach; accepted;7 p.m.;The Tenn.-based American singerproduction of the Christmas free, donations accepted; 6-11 p.m.; donations Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 classic; $15, $10 for children18 and songwriter performs, with Brad Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, W. Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-548younger; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, Tisdel; $15 in advance, $20 at the 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 9706821 or rebeccacentraloregon© 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. 903-2391 or www.equineoutreach. hotmail.com. 312-9626 or www.beatonline.org. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or com. www.belfryevents.com. "MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET": "TICKETTO RIDE": A screening of GUEST CHEFSERIES WITH KEVIN Bend Experimental Art Theatre's "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES the Warren Miller ski film; $19 plus LINDE:A dinner and demonstration production of the Christmas fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 FOR THEHOLIDAYS": A1936 with Pronghorn's executive chef; classic; $15, $10 for children18 and N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 whodunit about a Broadway star $90 for both events, registration younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, or www.towertheatre.org. noted for playing Sherlock Homes requested; 6:30 p.m. for dinner; 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541solving one of his guests' death; demonstration and reception12 ROOT DOWNCOMMUNITY 312-9626 or www.beatonline.org. $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; p.m. on Nov. 16; Pronghorn Resort, SUPPER:A farm-to-table event to 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, "CARNAGE":A screening of the 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, celebrate seasonal local food; free 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-693-5300 or www. 2011 comedy; free; 7:30 p.m.; childcare provided; $25, $20 for Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. j.mp/ChefSeries. Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County children younger than14; 6-9 p.m.; cascadestheatrical.org. Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541Central Oregon Locavore, 1216 N.E. "FAMILY ANDOTHER 475-3351 or www.jcld.org. "TICKETTO RIDE":A screening of First St., Bend; 541-633-7388 or FRUITCAKES":Dallas-based www.centraloregonlocavore.org. the Warren Miller ski film; $19 plus "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES storyteller Elizabeth Ellis performs, fees; 9 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 with Linda Roberts; $10, FOR THEHOLIDAYS":A I936 WESTERN MOVIENIGHT: A N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 reservations requested; 7 p.m., whodunit about a Broadway star screening of a classic western or www.towertheatre.org. doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Foundry noted for playing Sherlock Homes followed by a tour of the "Frontier Church, 60 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; solving one of his guests' death; Firearms" exhibit; cash bar; $3 for SASSPARILLA:The Portland based 541-389-1713 or bendstorytelling@ $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; members, $5 for nonmembers, indie roots band performs, with gmail.com. 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, Rural Demons; $10; 9 p.m.; Volcanic reservation requested; 6-8:30 p.m.; 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., "FREE TOBE... YOU ANDME": HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. Music and drama students present www.highdesertmuseum.org. volcanictheatrepub.com. songs, storiesand comedy sketches cascadestheatrical.org. RIDE": A screening of to encourage children to accept and "TICKET TO "FREE TOBE... YOU ANDME": THE BIGSMALL:The Portland celebrate diversity; $5; 7 p.m., doors the Warren Miller ski film; $19 plus Music and drama students present alternative band performs, with open at 6:15 p.m.; Mountain View fees; 9 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 songs, storiesand comedy sketches Mohawk Yard and TheHooligans; High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 to encourage children to accept and $3; 9 p.m.; Big T's, 413 S.W.Glacier Bend; 541-335-4401. or www.towertheatre.org. celebrate diversity; $5; 7 p.m., doors Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3864.

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Deschutes County beganusing new ankle bracelets that can detect alcohol intake and track anoffender's location in real time. TRACKING ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION

HC)UDAY PODD~GII'T I'KSTIVAI.

A new bracelet monitoring device referred to as SCRAM detects alcohol in the wearer's perspiration and transmits data wirelessly. Bracelet samples wearer's

Modemtransmits data to centralized servers. Offender data is available to law enforcementfrom any web-connected computer.

wirelessly transmits to

November 15, l6, R I7 Friday, Saturday, Sunday

TRACKING OFFENDERLOCATION An updated version of the classic tracking bracelet, the Omnilink

device uses cellular and GPS technology to track the movements of an offender. Bracelet

For those unable to wear an ankle bracelet, the county uses a device, called Soberlink, that the offender must blow into at intervals throughout the day to test for alcohol in their system. As the offender blows into the device,it takes his or her photo and transmits the information and theimage toChapman. "We have to tell people to be careful about the lotions and personal hy g iene pr o ducts they buy while they're wearing the SCRAM device,"Chapman said. "Because the devices will detect things like ethanol. We give them a list of products they can't use and tell them to read ingredients. If it contains alcohol they can't use it." Violating the rules of wearing a device include tampering with it, placing something between the sensor and the skin in an attempt to mask the device's ability to take a reading, submerging the de vice in water, failing to charge the battery or consuming alcohol, Saia said.

combination

It costs taxpayers more than $100 a day to house criminals in the Deschutes County Jail, according to Saia, administrative manager with the Adult Parole and Probation Department. But for $9 a day, offenders awaiting trial for certain crimes can stay out of jail by wearing a SCRAM device. "These can help people stay employed," Saia said. "For ex-

LATYRX:The underground hip-hop duo performs, with Marv Ellis 8 We Tribe and Those Guys; $10; 9 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www. facebook.com/slipmatscience.

New technology for tracking offenders

An alternative

Costs, potential benefits

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vvvvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

AL E N D A R

of GPSand

cellular signals to monitor individual's location.

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Device transmits constant data to centralized servers. Service candetectwhen the wearer is near criminal associates or past victims.

Datais available to law enforcementfrom any webconnected computer.

-

~

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Source: Alcohol Monitoring Systems, Omnilink Judicial Solutions Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin

ample, if we've got a guy with a couple DUIIs who's got a job, how is it going to serve the community if he loses his job because he'sin jail?"

Many of thepeople wearing the deviceswere arrested for DUII, Saia said. Others eligible for monitoring devices include those awaiting trial for sexual crimes or assaults in which alcohol was a fa ctor in t h e crime. "We had one offender who wasn't supposed to use the Internet because he's been arrestedforsex crimes and had lured his victims with the computer," Saia said. "Because he had the SCRAMx device on, we were ableto see thathe w as in a hotel lobby. We called the hotel to ask if there was a computer in the lobby. There was, and we were able to pick him up for a violation." In exchange for their freedom, offenders who are court ordered to wear a S C RAM device must pay a n i n i t ial setup fee of $119. They're also charged $12 per day for the device rental.

The devices are on loan to the county from Vigilnet Community Monitoring, a company with headquarters in Portland and Nebraska that manufactures them, according to Hales. If lost or broken, the county charges the we a rer ab o ut $1,800to replace the device.

Recognizing consequences "A lot of people have told me it's given them the jump-start they needed to stop drinking," Chapman said. "Because with the monitoring devices they realize there will be immediate consequencesif they drink." Offenders stay an average of 48 days on the program, according to d a ta pr o vided by Saia. Offenders have an 89 percent compliance rate. "It's really awesome and really effective," Saia said. "We don't take them off, even if the offender has a violation, unlessajudge orders it ,because evenifthey drink once maybe leaving the device on will deter them from doing it again." — Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletirLcom

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

oncern was ex resse over ae a anima san ua By Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press

PORTLAND — The longtime employee killed by a cougar this weekend at a suburban Portland animal sanctuary had expressed concerns about safety measures at the facility, her mother said Monday. Renee Radziwon, of Portland, was killed Saturday while cleaning a cougar enclosure at WildCat Haven in Sherwood. T he 36-year-old w if e a n d mother had worked as an animal caretechnician and head keeper at the sanctuary for the past eight years. "There was no one there to help her. There was no one at that sanctuary. They left her completely alone," her mother, Carol Radziwon, said over the phone from Pennsylvania. The sanctuary did not return multiple calls for comment Monday. However, the facility said in an earlier statement that it appeared Renee Radziwon had broken its protocol by being alone in the enclosure. Also Monday, the Clackamas County Sheriff's Office said it finished looking into the attack and concluded there was no crime to be investigated, spokesman Sgt. Robert Wurpes

said. According to the agency's report, WildCat Haven owner Michael Tullerdiscovered Renee Radziwon bloodied and lying on herback inside theenclosure at about 7 p.m. Saturday. Tuller pulled her by her boots into a secure entrance before calling 911. Hetold authoritiesthat Radziwon was alone at the facility because he and his wife — the sanctuary's executive director, Cheryl Tuller — were at another property in Scotts Mills, where they plan to eventually move the sanctuary, the report said. Responding officers found one cougar walking freely inside a main enclosure with a small amount of blood above its nose, and a second cougar in a

"There was no one there to help her. There was no one at that sanctuary. They left her completely alone." — Carol Radziwon, sanctuary worker's mother

workers inside an enclosure containing a n imals, R enee Radziwon was alone with two cats. The facility's handbook specifies that a staff member can enteran enclosure to clean or make repairs only after the animals are locked out of it. Carol Radziwon said her daughter was v ery c a reful around the animals and would not break any safety rules, because she had written some of cage. them herself when she started Autopsy r esults r e leased working at WildCat Haven. Monday showed Renee RadziMelanie Mesaros, spokeswon died at the scene as a result woman for Oregon OSHA, said of multiple bite wounds concen- the agency will be investigating trated on her head and neck. the incident, including looking Authorities said two cougars at training, safety protocols, were inside the enclosure, but evidence at the scene and interinvestigators were working on views with workers and potenthe theorythat just one attacked tial witnesses. the woman. WildCat Haven is a n o nThe sanctuary stated in a profit organization that rescues release Sunday that while its wild animals such as cougars, protocol calls for two qualified bobcats, tigers and other wild

cats. Cougars are the size of large dogs and are native to the American West. The sanctuary is 17 miles south of Portland, in a secluded, wooded area. The Tullers opened the facility in 2001 and still run it. Its website says the facility houses about 60 cats. Renee Radziwon was the only staff member listed on the site. WildCat Haven has an exhibitor's license, the USDA said. It is closed to the public but can conduct tours for donors. The USDA is looking into the incident to determine whether any noncompliance with the Animal Welfare Act contributed to the attack, spokeswoman Tanya Espinosa said. Two routine inspections conducted by the federal agency at the sanctuary in 2011 and 2012 showed no violations, according to USDA records.

r a er oe's uin t e s 0 saa 0 o itss eves (Medford)Matt Tribune

Trader Joe's officials reported three types of ready-to-eat salad sold in several of their storeshave been pulled from the shelvesfollowing a California-based company'srecall of food products that could contain E.coli. The decision comes after Richmond, Calif.-based Glass O nion Catering's recall o f 181,620 pounds of ready-to-eat salads and sandwich wraps with fully-cooked chicken and ham that might have been contaminated with the bacteria.

The company reportedly suppliesfoods to Trader Joe's Super Fresh Goods and Delish.

Products from the company were shipped to distribution centers for retail sale in Oregon, Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Utah and Washington. The company's website said that the Trader Jose's brand Mexicali Salads with chili lime chicken that have use-by dates through Nov. 15 have been pulled from stores across the aforementioned states. Additionally, Trader Joe's Field Fresh Chopped Salad with grilledchicken and Trader Joe's Classic Greek Salad with the same use-by dates also have been pulled from shelves in Northern California and northern Nevada stores.

Amtrak damd SCare —A phone conversation overheard by another passenger reportedly led to a bomb scare on anAmtrak train that authorities stopped Sunday in Eugene. Police said passengers were removed from the train, and one person was questioned while a bomb squad conducted a search. Nothing suspicious was found. Passengers reboarded, and the train resumed its trip north about four hours later without the passenger who was questioned. That person reportedly left from the station in a taxi.

Rental Care fee — Rental car customers at Portland International Airport could pay a facilities fee of up to $7 a day for a maxi-

mum of four days under a proposal the Port of Portland is considering. Spokesman Steve Johnson, at the Port of Portland, said that the proceeds would be dedicated to projects related to vehicle

rentals. The port's commission could approve the fee asearly as Dec.11 and put it into effect Jan.15. At the top of the list of projects slated to receive funding is the replacement of the quick turn-

around facility for fueling, washing and readying vehicles. Johnson

Find It All

By RyanPfeil

AROUND THE STATE

"In a ccordance with o u r stringent health an d s afety standards, and as an extreme precaution, all of the potentially affected product has been removedfromsaleanddestroyed," the company's site stated. Customers who have purchasedthe items should not consume them. The company said customerswho return the products will receive a full refund. E.coli can cause dehydration, bloody diarrhea and abdominal cramps. Most affected by the bacterium will recover within a w eek, but kidney failure can result in extreme cases. A complete list of foods recalled is available online at www.fsis.usda.gov.

Online

bendbulletin.com

said the existing facility is 24 years old and too small. Replacing it would cost an estimated $25 million. He said the exact amount of

the fee hasn't been determined, but $7 is the highest it could be. NOllPI'Ofi't d8lll8d fUlldS —A nonprofit group has been denied a grant for a 40-unit apartment building on the1-acre lot where Ward Weaver hid the bodies of two girls he killed more

thana decadeago.TheOregon Housingand Community Services agency said the proposal from Central City Concern for people recovering from addiction was worthy of consideration. But the

agency said it didn't have enough money to allocate. Weaver is currently serving life in prison for killing 12-year-old Ashley Pond and13-year-old Miranda Gaddis. Gaddis' remains were found in a

shed. Pond's were buried in a barrel. Critics of the proposed development, including Gaddis' sister, said it would attract criminals and dishonorthevictims. An agency spokesman saidthe campaign against the project didn't influence the decision not to grant

$8 million. POliCe Car tOtaled —A police officer was unhurt but her patrol car was totaled when it was rear ended Sunday on Highway 126 in Springfield. The Springfield officer had stopped and jumped over a concrete divider to help a woman and child in lanes with

traffic going in the opposite direction who suffered minor injuries in an unrelated accident. The officer's patrol car had its lights flashing when it was reportedly hit by a car driven by a 61-year-old

Springfield woman. Shewas reported to have minor injuries. — From wire reports

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Funding Mental health problems close for a growing issue injails recovery center sex abuse jumped 12 percent in five years, moving that P ORTLAND — O n e i n crime to the No. 2 spot from three inmates i n O r egon No. 4. prisons have mental health Substance abuse plays a issues, and their numbers key role in landing inmates are growing, according to in prison, the data show. data from the state Correc- Currently, 10,618 inmates tions Department. have substance abuse isThe agency's latest inmate sues.That's 7 outof 10.Some profile, which is published 2,800 inmates are in prison monthly, counted 4,672 infor drug charges, although mates who require mental 1,977 have other charges as health treatment. That's up well. The number of inmates 17 percent from five years in for drug charges grew 21 ago, when the count was percent over the past five 3,991. years. Research atOregon State The agency also reported Penitentiary in Salem found 820 inmates who are 61 or that"psychiatricmedications older.That's an increase of are a primary form of treat- 41 percent in five years, and ment within the penitentiary prison officials expect the for mental illness, either seri- senior population to continous mental illness, or minor ue growing. This segment is mental illnesses." The dis- especially challenging in a sertation was researched by prison environment because Joseph Galanek. older inmates typically need The monthly profiles are much more expensive mediposted on the agency's web- cal care. site without comment, but Other key numbers from they provide r ic h d e tails the report: about Oregon's prison popu• 630 are serving life senlation. The latest numbers tences, 184 are serving life are a Nov. 1 snapshot for without parole and death 14,707 inmates. row holds 35 inmates. According to the report, • 281 inmates are clasthe top five crimes that earn sified a s d e velopmentally prison sentences: disabled. • Assault: 1,930 • 37 inmates are serving • Sex abuse: 1,714 sentences for escape. • Robbery: 1,674 • The gender breakdown • Homicide: 1,605 is 13,436 men, 1,271 women. • Burglary: 1,397 • O ne i nmate is 1 7 o r The total sent to prison for younger.

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The Associated Press PENDLETON — The only facility in Eastern Oregon for patients with severe mental illness is expected to receive more than $2 million in funding so it can stay open until March, local legislators say. That could give officials in Pendleton more time to figure out an alternate use for the 60bed Blue Mountain Recovery Center. It's another last-minute save for the center, whose funding was expected to run out at year's end. The state i s o v erhauling mental health treatment, rebuilding the main state hospital at Salem and planning a new hospital in Junction City in the Willamette Valley by 2015. The Pendleton facility's fate has long been a concern in the city. Veteran Rep. Bob Jenson said he's spent 20 years trying to keep it open. He and Sen. Bill Hansell, both Republicans, said they e xpect l awmakers t o a p prove more than $2 million to keep the center open through March. Housing geriatric prisoners is among the ideas proposed to give the facility a new mission.

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

The Bulletin

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eith Cyrus and his family have made no bones

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about their desire to develop a new destination resort on their property near Sisters, yet getting there tEA PARt'V

has proved extraordinarily difficult. Changes to state law that would allow them to do so have yet to make it through the Oregon Legislature. Mostrecently,Rep.JohnHuffman, R-The Dalles, introduced legislation givingthe Cyrus family development rights; the measure failed to gain approval from the 2013 Legislature. Now, Huffman has a new approach, one that makes more sense. Rather than give one family the right to do something no other family can, he's planning to introduce legislation that would put both Deschutes and Jefferson counties on the list of places where development originally proposed forthe Metolius Riverbasin couldgo. The 2009 Legislature was the first to get into specialized land-use lawmaking in a serious way. It declared much of the Metolius basin off limits to resort development, nomatter how conservatively and carefully done. The decision was made in part because state Sen. Betsy Johnson, DScappoose, owns the land on which the headwaters of the river sit and she opposednearby development. It wasn't the last such change. The 2011 Legislature created a special measure to allow for resort

development in Grant County, while earlier this year lawmakers told county commissions in Wasco and Jefferson counties how they should respondto Young Life camp's expansion plans. To compensate for the ban in the Metolius River basin, meanwhile, lawmakers gave two developers the right to go elsewhere — a right that should be extended before it expires in 2015. One developer, Shane Lundgren, might be interested in joining forces with the Cyrus family if Huffman's changes become law. There's a valuable difference between what Huffman now proposes and the three earlier changes. Huffman would not order Deschutes and Jefferson counties to allow — or forbid — Cyrus's resort. Rather, he would give the counties the right to approve it or any competing resort, for that matter. We still don't like the idea of carving out exceptions to laws that supposedly apply to all Oregonians. That said, this proposal is a better approach.

GED tests atcoun jai l

are a good investment ince September, five inmates in the Deschutes County Jail have achieved a critical milestone that could help them avoid a return to jail by finding a job or furthering their education. Thanks to a new program at the jail, they've passed the General Educational Development test, better known as the GED. It's considered the equivalent of a high school diploma and agateway to a productive life. The Sheriff's Office has offered GED tutoring in the past, but now inmates can take the test itself. In addition to the five who gained the credential, another is awaiting results. Inmates can retake the test if they fail. At a cost of$25 perhour fortutoring and $155 for the test, according to Capt. Michael Espinosa, it's a good investment for taxpayers, because those with the GED are less likely to reoffend. Espinosa said inmates are screened and must show initiative and good conduct to participate in the program. A similar option is offered at Deer Ridge Correctional Institution in Madras. The timing is particularly significant because the GED is about

S

to undergo a significant update. In revisions scheduled to roll out in January, the test is being changed to more closely align with the Common Core standards being implemented in high schools across the nation. The test also will be given exclusively by computer. The GED exam is periodically changed to keep it relevant. Earlier revisions were made in 1978, 1988 and 2002. The 2014 version will have four sections — math, social studies, science and language arts — rather than the five segments in the current test because reading and writinghave been combined. In addition to a pass or fail, test takers will also get a score that indicates their readiness for college or a career. The GED was first offered in the 1940s to allow returning World War II soldiers to take advantage of the GI Bill to advance their education. In recent years, it has been criticized because few who earn it go onto higher education and many struggle to earn a living wage. The pending changes are designed to make the GED a more meaningful achievement that can help open doors for those who earn it.

NI Nickel's Worth Not comparable to slavery

The real fish kill

I know that quite a few Americans oppose the Affordable Care Act. I can't understand why anyo ne would o ppose a l a w t h a t makes it possible for uninsured citizens to purchase private health insurance, but they are entitled to their opinion. But I was shocked when I read a letter from Al Phillips agreeing with Dr. Ben Carson's statement: "I have to t el l y o u O b amacare is, really I think, the worst thing that's happened i n t h i s n a t ion since slavery." Phillips said i t i s b e cause of "forced participation." While it is true that there is an individual mandate to p urchase insurance, according t o O b a macarefacts.com, the afee for not having insurance in 2014 is $95 per adult and $47.50 per child or 1 percent of your taxable income (up to $285 for a family), whichever is greater." Really? Having to pay a maximum o f $ 9 5 t o a v o i d " f o rced participation" i s c o mparable to slavery'? If Phillips really believes that, I question his understanding of the terrible history of slavery in this country. I would like to suggest that he go see the film "12 Years a Slave." It is based on the memoir of a free black man sold into slavery and a viewing might change his opinion about whether it's appropriate to compare Obamacare to slavery. KasIa Wilson Bend

sion by Vernon Frost in The Bulletin, and I felt a comment was in orIn times past, the upper Desder. The letter was primarily about chutes River was one of the finest partisanship and the A f fordable spring creeks in America. The fish- Care Act, which is also known as ery was so prolific that there was Obamacare. a limit of 125 fish per day. That's Either Frost or I must have been right, once you caught your 125th on another planet as this bill was fish you had to quit; you were done debated and finally passed into for the day. Those days are long law by the Democrats. He states gone but the potential remains. that the Republican Party's plan The riversystem has been great- all along was to pass a f l awed ly modified since that time, prihealth care bill, and that "the ACA marily by managing the flows to is not as good as it could have been benefit irrigation demands. That because the Republicans would means high flows in the summer not allow anything else to pass." and low flows below Wickiup Res- I find this logic most interesting ervoir in the winter. because as I reflect back on the The low flows are the problem. so-called debate and the ultimate W hen t h e r i v e r l e v el s a r e passage of the bill, I seem to recall dropped, the banks are exposed that the Democrat leadership, with to freezing and t h awing. They the support of President Barack slough off and end up as silt. Not Obama, allowed virtually no deonly is this silt a problem for Mirbate on the bill, knowing they had ror Pond, but it a lso covers the the votes to pass it without a biparspawning gravel in the Upper Des- tisan support. When Republicans chutes. In essence, the life is being attempted time and again to introchoked out of the river due to low duce ideasto make health care or winter flows. The recent fish kill the ACA better, they were continudue to reduced flows killed an es- ally rebuffed. The bill was finally timated 3,000 fish. That's a drop passed on a weekend without a in the bucket (pun intended) to the single Republican vote. millions of fish denied life due to Now, the president's approval destruction of their life-producing is at an all-time low and many are gravels. calling for the dismissal of SecreWhile the discussion of w h at tary Kathleen Sibelius because of to do with Mirror Pond rages on, Obamacare's flawed rollout. I propose that it is broadened to After three-plus years to preinclude how to stop the silt from pare the website for the launch of forming in the first place. the ACA, it appears to be a colosCraIg Lacy sal flop at this time, showing that Bend those in government lack the ability and the capacity to do someRepublicans thing as big as this when led by utopian ideologues.

and Obamacare

Roger Bean

The other day I read a submis-

Bend

Letters policy

In My View policy How to submit

We welcome your letters. Letters

In My View submissions should be between 550 and 650 words, signed and include the writer's

should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer's signature, phone

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Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or ln My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 5 41-385-5804 Email: bulletin©bendbIJlletin.COm

Compromise on rights for Prineville Reservoir exists By Yancy LInd t's deja vu all over again." The U.S. Houseof Representatives recently p assed l egislation introduced by Rep. Greg Walden intended to change the way water stored in Prineville Reservoir is allocated. It is identical to legislation passed two years ago. It was found wanting then and is wanting today. Bowman Dam was built in 1961 to provide flood control for the city of Prineville and to create a reservoir of water for use by irrigation districts. Since that time, Central Oregon has evolved from an a g ricultural and forest products-based economy to a much morediverseregion. The abundant natural resources in Central Oregon make it a great place to live and recreate. The area's mix of urban and rural lifestyles, coupled with outstanding outdoor qualities,

makes it a highly sought destination for new residents, businesses and visitors. A vibrant Crooked River is part of that mix. Just ask any of the anglers, bird watchers, campers, hikers, bicyclists and sightseers who visit the river year round. In addition, an extensive effort to reintroduce salmon and steelhead into the Upper Deschutes basin, including the Crooked River and its tributaries, has been underway for a number of years. We recently have seen the initial results of this effort with adult fish returning to the Crooked. Walden's bill does provide many benefits on which we can all agree. It moves the boundary of the Wild and Scenic section of the river to allow a new hydroelectric plant to be built below the dam. It is well known that the city of Prineville has a water shortage issue. Releasing reservoir water to mit-

IN MY VIEW igate increased groundwater pumping by the city is also agreeable to all. This will allow Prineville to grow and continue to attract companies like Apple and Facebook. The problem with the bill is granting first fill rights to irrigators, giving them 100 percent of their water allotment before any other uses for the water. This would ignore any allocation for the valuable fisheries in the Crooked River. In low water years, Walden's bill would allow irrigators to withdraw all of their water, potentially leaving so little in the river that it would decimate the wildlife that rely on it. Such a kill event happened this summer on the South Fork Crooked River above the reservoir. Today, 50 percent of the water in the

Prineville Reservoir is allocated for irrigation, the rest is unallocated. The city of Prineville will only take a very small amount. It is entirely reasonable to ask that in exchange for first fill, a minimum amount be provided to fish and wildlife out of the unallocated water — enough to ensure survival of fish, as well as the birds, beavers, otters and other animals that rely on the Crooked River. This can be done while still leaving water in the reservoir for boaters. First fill represents a significant change from current management policy. It provides the farming community greater certainty, but with that should come flexibility to use additional water in the reservoir for wildlife. Let's keep in mind that companies like Apple and Facebook are not going to come to Central Oregon if providing water for them is done via a bill

that sacrifices a healthy river. During the past two years, irrigators, the city of Prineville, Portland General Electric, the Confederated Tribe of Warm Springs, the state and various fishing an d c o nservation groups negotiated, and agreed to a compromise bill that includes both first fill protections for the irrigation districts and access to the unallocated water in the reservoir to fisheries managers. That bill was introduced by Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, and was endorsed by Gov. John Kitzhaber. Tensions exist between competing interests for our natural resources. Fortunately, a compromise solution has been found. We call on Walden to endorsethe compromise bilL — Yancy Lind livesin Bend andis the president of the Deschutes Basin chapter of the Association of NW Steelheaders.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Project

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES AliCe May Bonita Evelyn Brenneman Kutch, of Bend (former long time Silverton resident) Dec. 8 1914 - Nov. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Graveside Service will be held at Miller Cemetery in Silverton, Oregon Thursday, November 14, 2013, with a viewing at 1:00 PM and the service at 2:00. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Elizabeth "Liz" Ann Laginess, of Bend (Resident of Touchmark) May 9, 1933 - Nov. 4, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No formal services have been scheduled at this time. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Michale Cunnington, of Bend Mar. 25, 1967 - Nov. 6, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private memorial gathering for family and close friends will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Ralph Lewis McLain, of Redmond Jan. 13, 1925 - Nov. 9, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Services: A memorial service will be held Saturday, November 16, 2013 at Community of Christ Church in Bend, OR.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all

correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries RO. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Penn Kimball, 98: A journalist and longtime professor sued the federal government in the 1980s after learning that he was secretly declared a security risk decades earlier. Died Friday in Chevy Chase, Md. He was 98. — From wire reports

Johnson Sept. 12, 1926- Oct. 28, 2013 A lice M ay (Spencer) Johnson, 87, passed away October 28, 2013. She was the last survivor of a set of t riplets born t o D ean a n d M innie Spencer o n S e p t . 12, 1926, in Sterling, Colorado. A lice g r a d u ate d fr o m Redmond Uni o n Hi gh S chool in 1944. In M a r c h 1 947, she m a r r ie d B r u c e Johnson. A lice i s su r v i v e d by h er s o n , Ge n e (M a r i e ) Johnson; gr a n d c h ildren, T ony ( J u l ia ) a n d A n n a (Richie) Breitling; and five great-grandchildren, all of Redmond. A ls o s u r v iving a re tw o s i sters, Ruth , o f Redmond, a n d L oi s , o f North Carolina; as well as many nieces and nephews. A lice w a s p r e c eded i n d eath b y h er h us b a n d , B ruce; d a u g hter , J o y c e ; son, Dean; tw o b r o t h ers, two si s t e rs ; and on e grandson. A memorial service w i l l be held Saturday, Novemb er 16 , a t 5 : 0 0 p . m . , a t the R e d m on d Ch r i s t i an Church, 5 3 6 SW 10th Street, Redmond. In lieu of f l o w ers, donations m a y b e ma d e to Partners I n C a r e o r th e R ob J o h n so n M e m o r i a l Scholarship Fun d at Oregon State Foundation, 8 50 S W 35th Str e e t , Corvallis, OR 97333. A utumn F u n e r al , R e d m ond, is in cha r ge of t he ar r an g e m ents. 541-504-9485.

Continued from B1 AltaRock has a $21.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy, Petty said, but the company only gets the money if it can first raise incremental amounts of funding itself first. The company is trying to create a geothermal source, underground hot water, that could drive a power plant. While geothermal exploration on public land outside the Newberry National Volcanic Monument has t urned up hot rocks, there hasn't been enough water to bring the heat to the surface and create power. AltaRock intends to see if it can change that by cracking rock to create an underground radiator of sorts, pouring water down an injection well and then drawing water up a production well. The company cracked subterranean rock last year by dropping cold water down the 10,000-foot injection well, which was left over from earlier exploration for a traditional geothermalhot water source, and it now is planning to drill a production well. So far, the work has cost about $8 million, Petty said, with half coveredbythe federalgrant. The project site is about 10 miles northeast of La Pine, between U.S. Highway 97 and Paulina Lake. As AltaRock prepared for the project it held public meetings in La Pine and Sunriver. At the meetings critics raised questions about whether the p rocess was fracking, if i t could cause destructive earthquakes and if it could taint wa-

More online To follow a blogby AltaRock Energy about

the geothermal project on Newberry Volcano, vist blog.newberrygeothermal. com.Tocheckonseismic activity around the project site go to esd.lbl.

gov/research/projects/ induced seismicity/egs/ newberry.html.

terin nearby aquifers. Petty says the project does not involve fracking, which

is the high pressure pumping of water and chemicals into the ground to fracture rock and accesspockets of natural gas and oil. Instead of the big breaks in rocks created by fracking, AltaRock has created a web of small fractures while building that underground radiator. Small earthquakes have resulted from this, with the company even using them to map the expansion of the underground cracks. But Petty said none have been strong enough to cause a stir. "We didn't get any that anyone could feel," she said. The strongest earthquake was a magnitude 2.39 temblor on Dec. 7, 2012, according to data from the Energy Department. Petty said a seismometer,or device that measures for earthquakes, at La Pine High School hasn't detected any rumblings from her company's project. There was, however, a problem with the casing for the injection well, which Petty said, will be fixed in the spring. Water tests from nearby

FEATURED OBITUARY

Palmer turnsfrom medicine to writing, leaving behinddrinking anddrug abuse By Paul Vitello

New York Times News Service

Dr. Michael Palmer, a phys ician wh o b e gan w r i t i ng tightly plotted thrillers at his kitchen table in 1978 to escape the inner chaos of alcohol and drug addiction, died Oct. 30 in New York. He was 71. Palmer had had aheart attack the previous day while going through c ustoms at K ennedy International A i r port. He was on his way home to Swampscott, Mass., from an African safari vacation, said Jennifer Enderlin, senior vice president and publisher of St. Martin's Press, who was his longtime editor. He died at Jamaica Hospital. Palmer published 19 books. " Extreme M e a sures," h i s fourth novel, became a movie in 1996 starring Hugh Grant and Gene Hackman. He sold about 5 million books worldwide, and hi s b o oks w ere translated into 35 languages, Enderlin said. His 20th novel, "Resistant," is to be published in May. Palmer began writing during what he described as the nadir of his life. An internist and former chief of medicine at Falmouth Hospital in Cape Cod, Mass., he had become hooked o n s e l f -prescribed pain killers and alcohol in the 1970s after a divorce and a series of knee surgeries. In 1978, he was charged with writing false prescriptions, sentenced to two years of probation and had his hospital privileges suspended. A year later, he began injecting himself with Demerol. "I was thinking at some point, 'I will kill myself,' and I almost did," he said in a 1995 interview. Psychiatric help, and the support of fellow physicians in recovery, got him past the worst of it. (He never lost his medical license.) Writing suspense thrillers, and working out the internal logic of intricate plots became a kind of long-term therapy before it became hisprofession. "I loved the feeling of being in control when my life was not," he said. "When you find you don't like a character, you just type four letters and he's dead," he added. Palmer said he had quit drinking and t aking d r ugs in late 1979, while w r iting his first n o vel. I t f l o pped commercially. And by 1982, he had published a second,

BS

Roh Kerr / The Bulletin

While AltaRock Energy is attempting to secure funds to continue its development of a potential geothermal site near Newberry Crater, it's had to address citizen's concerns about the possibility of pollution. wells, as well as Paulina Creek and Paulina Lake, showed no signs of contamination, said David Stowe, a spokesman for AltaRock. The company used tracer chemicals in the water put down the well to gauge how much rock surface was created by the

cracking. "Nothing that has gone into the well has gotten out, or gone into any of the surrounding aquifers," Stowe said. The biggest challenge for AltaRock at the moment remains finding more money to keep the project going, Petty said. The

company is looking for "strategic partners," she said, such as a big energy company or a company that builds geothermal equipment. She said AltaRock has been successful in creating geothermal systems that support power production elsewhere, but it is trying to refine the process to make it a viable renewable en-

ergy option. "The big question is not can we do it, but can we do it cheap enough to make it economical and competitive," Petty said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarli ng@bendbulletin.com

DEscHUTEs MEMQRIAL CHAPEL R GARDENs 63875 N. HIGHWAY97 ' BEND

S41.382. S S92

~. ~,~g~.. cM~W Deschutes Memorial now displays obituaries on our website. Please go to www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com to leave condolence messages for the family and to learn about funeral/ memorial services.

"The Sisterhood," about a from Case Western Reserve FUNERALS j BURIALS j CREMATION secret society of mercy-kill- University School of M ediLOCALLY FAMILY OWNED &. OPERATED ing nurses, to admiring re- cine in Cleveland. We honor all pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society. views. That was followed, in ,h tu 1985, by "Side Effects," another tale of sinister medical conspirators, and, i n 1 991, by "Extreme Measures," in which a n e m ergency-room I , I doctor uncovers a plot to test a dangerous new drug on the homeless. He f i rst s p ok e p u b licly about his addiction in 1991, a dmitting l ater t hat — a t least initially — he had done it mainly for mercenary reasons. Planning a promotional tour for "Extreme Measures," publicists cautioned him not to expect attention from major media outlets because, they said, Michael Crichton and Robin Cook had already tapped the novelty appeal of doctor-authors. Palmer was bythen writing full time, working a flexible schedule as an emergencyroom doctor and counseling other physicians with dr ug and alcohol problems. He asked th e p u b licists This special wrap will showcase your business whether the m edia outlets might be more interested if along with a message of thanks to your customers. they knew that the author of this medical thriller was not Ad sizes are 3.33" x 2.751" just a doctor but also a recovering addict an d a l coholic and are only 9 9 " in c l uding full colof". who helped other d o ctors overcome their addictions. "That's very hard-edged," his p u b licists r e p lied meaning, yes — as Palmer recounted the exchange in a 1996 interview. Starting in 1991, he gave many interviews to newspaper, television and radio reporters — both to publicize his latest book and to promote awareness about substance abuse among doctors, an issue he embraced with increasing urgency as time passed. After retiring from clinical practice in the mid-1990s, Palmer became associate director ofthe Massachusetts Medical Society's Physician Health Services, a nonprofit organization providing docContact your B u l l etin A d v e r t ising tors with confidential mental health and substance abuse

g

Shom your appreciation to your customers by thanldng them in a group space ad that ~vill run

Nov. 28'", Thanlmgiving Day, the most fead pep-er o f the yeav!

Deadline for ad space and copy: Thursday, November 21, 2013 Publishes on Thursday, November 28'"

help. Michael Stephen Palmer was b or n i n Sp r i n g field, Mass., on Oct. 9, 1942, the f irst o f t h r e e c h i ldren t o Milton and May Palmer. His father was a n o p tometrist. He graduated from Wesleyan College in M i d dletown, Conn. (where he was a classmate of Robin Cook), and received his medicaldegree

R epresentative for m or e i n f o r m a t i o n

541-382-1S11 • www.bendbulletin.com

uein

~


B6

THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 'I2, 2013

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

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Tonight: Decreasing clouds.

light rain early, then mostly cloudy.

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57/46

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• Silv e r

55/32

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Rome

56/45

Lakeview

57/33

54/30

• Klamath Falls sw»

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• 70'

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Yesterday's state extremes

Jordan Valley

C hr i st V II „

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Ashland

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58/31

52/26

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• Brothers 54/30

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Medford

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Lakeview

McDermitt

63/35

58/30

61/30

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Billings

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A LA S K A

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

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48 34

46 35

48 31

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 6:57 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 4 42 p.m F ull L ast New Sunrise tomorrow .. 6:58 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 4:41 p.m l Moonrisetoday.... 2:07 p.m Moonsettoday .... 1:42 a.m Nov. 17 Nov. 25 Dec. 2 Dec. 9

• Pl

Yesterday Tuesday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

PLANET WATCH

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5:19 a.m...... 4:02 p.m. Venus.....11:02 a.m...... 7:15 p.m. Mars.......1:19 a.m...... 2:17 p.m. Jupiter......8 25 p m..... 1 1:37a.m. Satum......6:21 a.m......4;31 p.m. Uranus.....2:52 p.m...... 3:23 a.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 44/30 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........69in1956 Monthtodate.......... 0.15" Recordlow.......... 9in1985 Average monthtodate... 041" Average high.............. 49 Year to date............ 4.45" Averagelow .............. 29 Average year to date..... 8.1 8"

Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.20 Record24 hours ...0.22 in1937 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

WATER REPORT

W e d. Bend,westofHwy97.....Low H i /Lo/WBend,eastof Hwy.97......Low

sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central La Pine...............................Low Qregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Low

Astoria ........61/41/0.00.....56/46/r.....55/44/sh Baker City...... 59/23/0.00..... 55/30/r.....51/29/pc Brookings......65/47/0.00....56/45/sh.....56745/pc Burns..........62/24/0.00....57/27/sh......50/25/s Eugene........47/44/0.00.....57/44/r.....56/39/pc KlamathFalls .. 65/30/000 ....56/27/r ... 55/25/s Lakeview.......70/16/0.00 ...58/30/sh..... 54/28/s La Pine........49/24/0.01 ....51/26/sh......48/27/s Medford.......56/37/0.00.....59/39/r.....58/34/pc Newport....... 61/46/0.00..... 55/47/r.....55/43/pc North Bend..... 63/46/0.00..... 58/46/r.....58/44/pc Ontario........53/28/0.00.....57/34/c......55/33/s Pendleton......45/38/0.00.....54/37/r......56/35/s Portland ....... 60/41/0.00..... 57/46/r.....56743/pc Prineville.......40/34/0.01 ....56/33/sh......51/32/s Redmond....... 41 /30/0.00..... 57/30/r...... 52/29/s Roseburg....... 55/45/0.00.... 58/45/sh.....57/40/pc Salem ....... 59/39/000 . . 57/45/r .. .57/41/pc Sisters....... notavailable....53/30/sh......49729/s The DaRes...... 51/44/0 00..... 56/40/r......56/40/s

a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 32,861...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 95,356..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 58,404...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . . 9,824...... 47,000 The higher the Uv Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 80,931..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 198 for ar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 36.0 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 14 MEDIUM HIGH gggg Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 142 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 448 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . . 532 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res..... . . . . . 48 Crooked RiverBelow Prinevige Res.... . . . . . 74.2 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 2.88 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 142 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LOW I or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 1

IPOLLEN COUNT

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TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m 3 Vancouver ~1

Mostly cloudy with a chance of light rain.

Legend Wweather,Pcpprecipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze, shshowers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries,snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

Mostly cloudy with a chance of light rain.

HIGH LOW

OREGON CITIES

EAST

Baker City

57/30

56/34

5 0/24

59/39

49/31

Prlneville 56/33 Redmand • paulina 55/30

Port Orfor 56/45

Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain.

55/30

O a kridg

oseburg

CENTRAL

Enterprise • 50H5

53/34

Granite

56/36

53/37 Unio

Condon

WiHo wdale

Sunriver Bend

Cottage

57/45

oW asco

56/38

53/30

7/ 4 4

i

Camp Sherma

Eugene •

~5

56/47

I Ma u>pin 5 / 37

Warm Springs • ser35

57/45

COrValliS

Florence•

55/40

The Biggs

mg

57/45 I •

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UmatiUa

Hood

Seasideo 56/48 •ocannon Beach

TiBamook •

Partly cloudy.

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:STATE I,

Mostly sunny.

3

FRONTS Cold

CONDITIONS ee+

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W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain

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Flurries S now

Ice

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......73/52/0 00..44/27/pc. 52/35/pc GrandRapids....45/30/0 24..36/23/pc.43/30/pc RapidCity.......30/17/004...48/36/s. 55/36/pc Savannah.......72/48/000.. 71/40/pc. 50/34/pc Akron ..........47/32/000..32/20/sn. 34/24lpc Green Bay.......40/28/0.02..31/19/pc.. 40/29/s Reno...........68/31/0.00..70/33/pc.. 65/33/s Seattle..........61/43/0.00... 56/47/r. 54/45/sh Albany..........48/35/000..36/18/pc. 37/24/pc Greensboro......59/32/000..53/28/sh.. 43/22/5 Richmond.......58/32/0 00 .. 45/28/sh .. 42/29/s SiouxFalls.......39/14/002...31/18/s. 46/31/pc Albuquerque.....69/43/000..57/38/pc. 58/39/pc Harusburg.......54/36/0.00..42/26/pc.. 42/24/s Rochester, NY....46/31/0.29... 35/26/c .. 39/30/c Spokane........51/36/0.00... 49/35/r .. 47/34/c Anchorage ......33/26/0 00...23/13/s. 31/28/sn Hartford,CT.....53/42/0 00..43/22/pc.39/25/pc Sacramento......70/40/0.00 ..73/47/pc.. 75/45/s Springfield, MO ..62/44/0.00... 36/19/s .. 43/28/s Atlanta .........66/44/000..61/29/pc.. 49/27/s Helena..........42/30/000..55734/pc.. 53/32/c St. Louis.........65/44/0.02...36/18/s .. 41/28/s Tampa..........84/65/0 00 ..82761Ish. 72/55/pc Atlantic City.....56/35/000 ..45/29/sh .. 45/36/s Honolulu........81/72/0 00 ..81/65/pc .. 8U67/s Salt Lake City....64734/000..68/42/pc. 62737/pc Tucson. .........89/53/0.00..86/57/pc..80/52/s Austin..........75/49/000..63/37/pc.. 56/35/s Houston........75/52/000..71/42/pc..57/36/s 580Antonio.....78/59/0.00 ..68/40/pc.. 57/36/s Tulsa ...........71/47/000...42/21/s.. 50/3 Us Baltimore .......55/37/000 ..42/28/sh.. 43/26/s Huntsville.......70/33/0.00...47/24/s .. 44/23/s 580Diego.......72/54/000 .. 74/58/pc.. 79/60/s Washington, DC..58/39/0.00..41/29/sh.. 43/28/s Bitings.........28/19/0.19 ..59/39/pc. 56/34/pc Indianapolis.....50/31/0.00..37/21/pc.. 39/27/s 580 Francisco....62/54/000..66/51/pc.. 68/50/s Wichita .........58/40/0.00...39/20/s. 46/33/pc Birmingham.....73/43/0.00 ..56/26/pc. 48/25/s Jackson, MS.... 75/42/0.00. 60/28/pc 52/29/s SaoJose........66/52/000..69/50/pc 72/48/s Yakima .........58/47/0 00 55/35/r.. 56/35/s Bismarck.........24/8/000...37/23/s. 49/30/pc Jacksonvile......75/51/000..74/48/pc. 57/42/pc SantaFe........64/34/0.00.. 51/28/pc.54/29/pc Yuma...........90/56/0.00 ..89/58/pc.. 87/56/s Boise...........55/34/0.00...59/37/c.. 56/36/s Juneau..........38/27/0.00... 41/32/r...40/34/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........53/41/000 ..42/25/pc. 38/30/pc Kansas City......60/34/0 00... 36/20/s .. 45/30/s BodgeportCT....53/41/000..45/27/pc.. 41/32/s Lansing.........42/28/022..37/20/pc. 44/26/pc Amsterdam......48/36/000 45/41/sh 45/43/c Mecca..........97/79/000 .91 l72ls.. 90/71/s Buffalo.........45/32/043 ..36/26/sn .. 39/32/c Las Vegas.......78/49/0 00..76/51/pc .. 76/50/s Athens..........73/64/0.86 ..70/63/sh.65/57lsh MexicoCity .....73/54/000 .66/48/sh 55/41/pc BurlingtonVT....43/35/000...33/20/c. 33/26/pc Lexington.......63/31/0 00..36/22/pc .. 40/24/5 Auckland........66/59/000.. 69/51/pc. 67/52/pc Montreal........39/34/025.. 32/18/pc.. 28/28/s Caribou,ME.....34/30/000...30/18/c. 28/19/pc Lincoln..........47/27/0 00... 35/19/s. 48/32/pc Baghdad........71/60/0.00 ..78/62/pc.. 78/63/s Moscow........48/43/0.00... 34/27/c .. 39/34/c Charleston SC...68/47/000 ..68/39/pc.. 50/32/s Little Rock.......71/43/0 00...47/27/s .. 46/28/s Bangkok........97/81/0.00 ..90/71/sh...89/75/r Hairobi.........79/61/0.53 ..77/57/sh. 77/56/sh Charlotte........61/38/000...58/29/c .. 45/25/s LosAngeles......72/54/0 00 .. 77/59/pc .. 84/63/s Beiling..........55/28/0.00 ..56/32/pc.56/39/pc Nassau.........81/73/0.00... 83/75/t.. 78/73/c Chattanooga.....68/35/0.00... 50/27/s .. 47/26/s Louisville........66/34/0.00..38/25/pc.. 43/25/s Beirut..........79/66/000...77/65/s .. 76/65ls New Delhi.......77/54/0.00...80/61ls ..80/56/s Cheyenne.......52/28/0.00 ..51/35/pc. 59/33/pc Madison,Wl.....45/25/0.12...30/20/s .. 40/27/s Berlin...........46/32/000 ..36/33/sf.38734/pc Osaka..........57/46/003 ..54/44/sh. 53/49/sh Chicago.........47/28/029 ..34/24/pc. 38/31/s Memphis....... 72/42/0 00 ..42/29/s .. 45/29/s Bogota .........68/50/0.62... 68/48/t...73/48lt Oslo............43/21/000...37/31Ic. 33/31Ipc Cincinnati.......59/26/0.00 ..35/22/pc.. 39/25/s Miami..........85/74/0.00 ..84/70/sh. 77/69/sh Budapest........52/48/0.1952/42/pc .. .. 45/40lc Ottawa.........39/28/011 ..30/14/pc. 32/32/pc Cleveland.......49/33/0.16 ..38/28/sn.. 37/30/s Milwaukee......46/28/0.23..31/24/pc.. 39/31/s BuenosAires.....72/61/022...81/53/s .. 82/62/s Paris............$2/32/0.00..45/40/sh.48/38/pc ColoradoSpnngs.68/33/000..51/34/pc. 62/36/pc Miuneapolis.....39/21/0 00... 30/20/s .. 42/30/s Cabo580Lucas ..86/64/000...88/61/c .. 88/62/s Rio deJaneiro....93/72/0.00... 96/70/t.76/67lsh Columbia,MO...63/40/001 ...35/17/s .. 42/26/s Nashvige........70/31/000...41/25/s .. 44/26/s Cairo...........79/63/000.. 82/61/s .. 82/62/s Rome...........57/50/0.00...69/5is.. 68/53/c ColumbiaSC....63/41/000 ..64/34/pc.. 47/29/s New Orleans.....76/58/0 00 ..72/38/pc .. 57/44/s Calgary..........34/9/0.00..54/36/pc.46/27lpc Santiago........79/48/0.00...70/60ls. 77/55/pc Columbus GA...76/46/000 ..70/35/pc .. 54/28/s New York.......53/43/0 00 ..44730/pc.. 44/34/s Cancun.........86/75/0.00...83/76/t...81/75/t SaoPaulo.......93/70/0.00... 88/62/t. 73/56/pc Columbus OH....51/30/000 ..34/21/pc.. 37/25/s Newark Hl......53/39/000 ..45728/pc.. 44/32/s Dublin..........57/48/0.19... 48/35/s. 50/43/sh Sapporo ........34/27/0.00..35/29/sn.37/34/sn Concord,HH.....48/37/000..38/15/pc. 36/21/pc Norfolk VA......55/46/0 00..49/34/sh.. 45/33/s Edinburgh.......55/41/000 ..45/39/pc. 46/40/sh Seoul...........45/30/0.00...52/40/s. 54/44/pc Corpus Christi....79/65/000..71/45/pc.. 58/46/s OklahomaCity...73/48/0 00...41/23/s. 49/32/pc Geneva.........4869/0.00... 45/29/s. 39/35/sh Shanghai........61/54/0.00...59/55/c. 62/58/sh DatasFtWorth...76/50/0.00..49/30/pc.. 48/35/s Omaha.........43/26/0.00...34/20ls. 46/32/pc Harare..........84/63/0 47 ..82/58/pc. 86760/pc Singapore.......88/77/000..81I79/sh. 88/78/sh Dayton .........51/32/000 ..34/21/pc.. 37/26/s Orlando.........84/65/0 00..82/62/pc. 69/54/sh Hong Kong......81/75/0.00 .. 73/67/sh. 77/69lsh Stockholm.......39/30/000..42738/sh. 37/29/pc Denver....... 65/29/000 ..54/35/pc.MI35lpc Palm Springs.... 90/57/000. 89/61/pc .. 88/61/s Istanbul.........70/50/000... 65/52/s ..61/56/c Sydney..........64/59/0.00..73758/sh.. 79/55/s Des Moines......50/26/001...31/1Is .. 42/30/s Peoria..........52/32/012... 34/20/s.. 40/26/s lerusalem.......70/59/0.00... 75/60/s ..77/60ls Taipei...........75/66/000..69/66/sh. 72/69/pc Detroit......... 44/28/0 t8 ..36/25/pc .. 41/31/s Philadelphia.....55/40/000..43/28/pc .. 44/28/s Johannesburg....78/55/000..78/60/sh. 86/64/pc TelAviv.........84/59/0.00..84/67/pc.. 83/67/s Duluth..........24/17/000...32/21/s .. 43/28/s Phoeuix.........89/58/0.00..89/64pc .. 85/59/s Lima...........68/59/0.00 .. 73/61/pc.. 73/61/c Tokyo...........61/48/0.00..52/40/pc.. 55/48/s El Paso..........77/46/000 ..63/39/sh. 59/39/pc Pittsburgh.......48/32/000...34/21/c. 34/23/pc Lisbon..........68/54/000 69/52/s 69/47/s Toronto.........43/32/0 00 37/28/sf 41/32/pc Fairbanks.........19/1/000....4/-3/s.22/14/sn Portland,ME.....46/35/0.00..38/2vpc. 37/24/pc London.........55/36/0.06 .. 52/30/pc.. 41/43lc Vancouver.......52/43/0.00...52/50/r. 52/45/sh Fargo...........19/14/000...31/22/s.43/29/pc Providence......52/39/0.00 ..43724/pc.. 38/27/s Madrid .........70/43/0.00... 64/40/s.59/37/pc Vienna..........46/41/0.54...37/34/c.. 45/31/c Flagstaff........61/23/000 ..61/27/pc .. 60/24/s Raleigh.........58/32/0 00...54/30/c .. 45/23/s Manila..........86/77/007..84/76/pc. 80/74/pc Warsaw.........46/37/0.00...34/32/c. 40/33/sh

If you're planning on buying or selling a home in the next 12 months, you won't want to miSS thiS FREE hOme-OWnerShiP Seminar taking PlaCe NOVember 13th, and rePeated November 14th — choose the night that works best for your schedule.

•w •w

DATES Wednesday November 13'" ThurSday

TIM E

D, • II

N O Vember 14th

R RS C x

aaa i

i

5: 3 0pm 7:30pm —

PLACE T h e conference/classroom in COAR's main building 2112 NE 4'" Street, Bend

C OST

F R EE!

The seminars will f eature a panel of p r o fessionals from l e n d i ng, real estate, home

inspection and appraisal to discuss the home-buying-and-selling process.

DISCUSSION TOPICS WILL INCLUDE: • The advantages of home ownership

• Why good credit is important

• Wh at the market is doing 8 what that means for the buyer 8 seller

• In formation on new construction 8 remodeling

• St eps in the home-buying 8 selling process

• Who is onyour home buying team

• Un derstanding the costs of home ownership

• Mo rtgage loan basics

• Learn ways to determine how much house you can afford

• Pl us More!

p igHOUSy FOR

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Information from local non-profits on housing assistance programs will also be available.

Space is limited to 75 people each night, so please RSVP to

Sponsored by:

infOC ICOar.COm Or Call 541-382-6027

Central Oregon Association of REALTORS' YOUR VOICE IN REAL ESTATE


IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 NB A , C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 NFL, C3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

MLB

Fernandez, Myers picked toprookies

Ells ury amon 13 reea ents who turn owno ers

PREP SPORTS

NEW YORK — Jose

Fernandezarrived early. Wil Myers made it big

after a blockbuster trade. Neither one needed

much time to create a splash, and together they brought both Rook-

ie of the Yearawards back to Florida. Fernandez stood out

in a very deepNational League class this season, and the precocious Miami Marlins pitcher

t

(

received 26 of 30 first-

place votes from a Baseball Writers' Association of America panel

By Ronald Blum

in results announced Monday.

The Associated Press

I t t

Myers won the

ORLANDO, Fla. — Baseball's annual gathering of general managers began Monday

American Leagueprize after the TampaBay slugger put up impressive offensive numbers in barely half a season.

when $14.1 million qualifying offers were

The right fielder was chosen first on 23 of 30 ballots, beating out Detroit shortstop Jose

Iglesias and Raysteammate Chris Archer. The two announcements marked the be-

ginning of awards week in baseball. NL and AL Manager of the Year will

~

'\ I

be revealed today, with

1 lL

the Cy Young winners Wednesday and MVPs

on Thursday. Myers becamethe third TampaBayplayer in sixyearsto be selected Rookie of the

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

Summit's Hadlie Plummer, left, and Bend High's Delaney Crook grew up playing soccer together but now are high school rivals contending for a state championship berth.

Year, joining Jeremy Hellickson (2011) and Evan Longoria (2008). Fernandezeasily topped runner-up Yasiel Puig of the Los Angeles

Dodgers as Cubanplayers ran1-2 in the NL race.

turned down by all 13 free agents who received them from their former teams, a group that included Central Oregon's Jacoby Ellsbury of the World Series champion Boston Red Sox. Ellsbury, 30 and an Oregon native from Madras, is Boston's regular center fielder. In 20D, he batted .298 with nine home E l l sbury runs and 53 runs batted in, and his 52 stolen bases (in 56 attempts) led the big leagues. The Oregon State University product made his major league debut with the Red Sox in 2007. Two other Boston players — Mike Napoli and Stephen Drew — likewise turned down offers. Three New York Yankees also declined qualifying o ffers: Robinson Cano, Curtis Granderson and Hiroki Kuroda. The others turning down the offers were Atlanta's Brian McCann, Cincinnati's ShinSoo Choo, Cleveland'sUbaldo Jimenez, Kansas City's Ervin Santana, St. Louis' Carlos Beltran,Seattle's Kendrys Morales and Texas' Nelson Cruz. "That ought to tell you a little bit about their expectations," New York Mets general manager Sandy Alderson said, predicting the possibility of a bull market. SeeEllsbury/C4

Puig received the oth-

er four first-place votes and amassed 95points

WOMEN'S HOCKEY

to142 for Fernandez, who made the All-Star team at age 20. He went 12-6 with a 2.19 ERA and 187 strikeouts. — The Associated Press

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

OSU 'gamewatch' Saturday night The Central Oregon Beaver Athletic Student Fund will host the final Oregon State University football "game watch"

SOCC<Hj.; Zftg

gathering of the season

• Summit's Hadlie Plummer and Bend's DelaneyCrook will lead their crosstown teamsinto today's Class 5Astate girls soccersemifinals IF.ftti o Zotrf

this Saturday night

for the Beavers' game against Arizona State. The event will take place in the theater at McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St. in downtime for the Beavers and the Sun Devils from Tempe, Ariz., is 6:30 A $5 donation at the

door is suggested. Food and beverages will be available for purchase. Minors are allowed in

T

When her Lava Bears

town Bend. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., andgame

p.m.

Mike Groll /The AssociatedPress

he bottom line is simple. Win, head to the state championship on Saturday. Lose, season over. But there is so much more at stake. Bend High's Delaney C rook k n o w s th i s .

Submitted photo

Delaney Crook, left, and Hadlie Plummer during their days in youth soccer.

GRANT

tal e to the pitch at 3 LUCA5 o'clock this afternoon, it will be more than just a Class 5A girls soccer state semifinal contest. There will be a different feel to it, because lining up opposite Bend will be crosstown rival Summit. And because anumber of the Storm's players are past or present club soccer teammates of many of the Lava Bears. SeeRivalry/C4

or adult guardian. Pro-

Here is a quick look at the games involving area teams today, with records in parentheses:

Athletic Student Fund. — Bulletin staff report

Wilsonvilfe (12-3-1) at Summit(14-1-2) in Class

Philomath (9-3-5) at Sisters (15-1-1) inClass 4A

5A semifinafs, 5:30 p.m.:The Storm, seeded No. 2 in the16-team bracket, have fallen short

semifinals, 2 p.m.:After logging wins decided by penalty kicks in the first two rounds of the

of the state championship each of the past

CORRECTION

two years, losing in the semifinals to eventual champion Woodburn in 2011 and to runner-up

state playoffs, the seventh-seededOutlaws have gone deeper into postseason play thanever

appeared in Sunday's Bulletin on page D4 included incorrect in-

formation regarding the Sisters High volleyball team. The Outlaws' third-place finish at the 2013 Class 4A volleyball state tournament was their bestshowing since winning the 4A state title in 2009. The Bulletin regrets

the error.

brewing for the Olympics New York Times News Service

Boyssoccerstate semifinals, at aglance

A story headlined "Ridgeview takes fourth place in Class 4A" that

Border war By Jere Longman

the company of aparent ceeds go to the Beaver

Canada's Gillian Apps (10) and United States' Josephine Pucci (24) battle for position during last week's Four Nations Cup in Lake Placid, N.Y.

before in the program's history. Scoring went

Mountain View last season. Now, Intermountain

up from one goal in the first round to three in the

Conference champion Summit takes a13-game winning streak into the semis — including back-

quarterfinals, and Sisters will look to return to its form in the regular season, when the Outlaws

to-back1-0 victories over Liberty and Marist in

averaged nearly sevengoals per game. Sisters

the first two rounds of the state playoffs — to face off against the third-seeded Wildcats.

hosts the No. 11 Warriors, who finished third in the Oregon West Conference. Philomath

Wilsonville, No. 1 out of the Northwest Oregon

dispatched sixth-seeded Phoenix 2-1 in overtime

Conference, defeated Mountain View 5-1 in the first round and beat Silverton 3-0 in Saturday's

before upsetting No. 3 Stayton1-0 in Saturday's quarterfinals. The Warriors will be on the road

quarterfinals.

for the third time in asmany games inthe state playoffs.

Admission to semifinal matches is $7for adults, $5 for students (ages 5andolder through high school).

LAKE PLACID, N.Y. — Kacey Bellamy and Courtney Birchard were hockey teammates and close friends at the University of New Hampshire. The friendship endures, Bellamy said, "but we definitely know our boundaries. We're not afraid to mix it up with each other on the ice, absolutely." Bellamy plays for the United States and Birchard for Canada in a rivalry that will be unsurpassed in intensity and expectation in February at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. One team or the other has won every Olympic gold medal and world championship ever awarded in women's hockey. "Right now, the rivalry keeps our sport alive," said Gillian Apps, a Canadian forward. Respect also comes with an edginess that led to a rare brawl last month after a U.S. forward violated a cardinal rule and skated into Canada's goaltender. "We really don't like each other," Bellamy, an American defender, said. "I'm going to throw it out there." Women's hockey prohibits body checking and has established its distinctiveness with speed, stick handling, fluidity and finesse. SeeBorder /C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 20'(3

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY BASKETBALL Time Men's college, Akron at St. Mary's midnight Men's college, New Mexico State at Hawaii 2 a.m.

ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN2 ESPN ESPN ESPN

Men's college, Hartford at Florida Gulf Coast 4 a.m. Men's college, Qunnipiac at LaSalle 6 a.m. Men's college, LSUat Massachusetts 8 a.m. Men's college, West Virginia at Virginia Tech 10 a.m. Men's college, South Carolina at Baylor noon Men's college, N.C. State at Cincinnati 2 p.m.

Men's college, Virginia Commonwealth at Virginia 4 p.m. Men's college, Grambling State at Marquette 4 p.m.

ESPN2 Fox Sports1 Men's college, Kentucky vs. Michigan State 4:30 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Florida at Wisconsin 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Tennessee atXavier 6 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Oakland at UCLA Pac-12 6 p.m. Men's college, Southern Utah at Utah State 6 p.m. Root Men's college, Dukevs. Kansas 7 p.m. ESPN NBA, Detroit at Golden State 7:30 p.m. NBA

Men's college, Denver atCalifornia

8 p.m.

Pac-12

HOCKEY NHL, Phoenix at St. Louis

5 p.m.

NBCSN

WEDNESDAY SOCCER FIFA World Cup, qualifying,

Time

Mexico vs. NewZealand

12:15 p.m.

TV/Radio ESPN

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Wright State at Georgetown 4 p.m.

Fox Sports1 Root 5 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. Pac-12 7 p.m. Root 7 p.m. CSNNW 7:30 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Western Carolina at Oregon 8 p.m. Pac-12 FOOTBALL College, Ball State at Northern lllinois 5 p.m. ESPN2 HOCKEY NHL, Philadelphia at Pittsburgh 5 p.m. NBCSN Men's college, Brown at Providence NBA, New YorkatAtlanta Men's college, Portland at Oregon State Men's college, Cal State Fullerton at Seattle NBA, Phoenix at Portland NBA, Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers

COREBOARD

TV/Radio

4 p.m.

Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by Nor radio stations.

ON DECK Today Boys soccer: 5A statesemifinals: Wilsonviffeat Summit,5:30p.m.; 4Astate semifinals: Philomath at Sisters, 2p.m. Girls soccer: 5Astatesemifinals: Bendat Summit, 3 p.m. Friday Football: 4Astatertuarterfinals: Henleyat Ridgeview, 7 p.m.

Saturday Boys soccer:OSAAClass5Astatechampionship at HiffsboroStadium;OSA A Class 4Astate championship at Liberty Highin HiIsboro Girls soccer: OSAA Class5Astate championship at HiffsboroStadium,OSA A Class 4Astate championship at Liberty Highin Hiffsboro

PREP SPORTS Football Class 6A SecondRound Friday's Games LakeDswegoatJesuit,7p.m. Lakeridge at Southridge, TBD BeavertonatCanby,TBD Tualatin at Sheldon,TBD McNary at Central Catholic, 7 p.m. GlencoeatClackamas 7p.m. OregonCityat NorthMedford, TBD GrantsPassat Tigard, TBD Class 5A Quarterfinals Friday's Games 0rescent ValleyatSherwood,7 p.m. AshlandatRoosevet, TBD SilvertonatSpringfield, TBD Dallas atWestAlbany, TBD Class 4A Quarterfinals Friday's Games Gladstone at Philomath,TBD Henleyat Ridgeview,7 p.m. NorthBendatScappoose, 7 p.m. Central atCottageGrove, TBD Class 3A Quarterfinals

Friday's Games

BlanchetCatholic atDayton, 7pm. Nyssaat SantiamChristian, TBD Rainier atCascadeChristian, TBD Vale atHarrisburg,TBD

Class 2A Quarterfinals

Friday's Games Knappa at PortlandChristian,7 p.m. Gold Beach at GrantUnion, TBD Monroeat Heppner,TBD OaklandatRegis, 7 pm. Clsss1A Quarterfinals Friday's Games St. Paulat Lowell,TBD

SPORTS IN BRIEF TENNIS DjokOVic WinSATP FinalS — Defending champion Novak

Plaines-Robinson. SCP Auctions

Djokovic beat top-ranked Rafael Nadal 6-3, 6-4 to win the ATP

Vice President Dan Imler said

extending his winning streak to 22 matches and claiming the

Monday the Owensfamily confirmed the medal is original; the whereabouts of the other three

is unknown.

season-ending title for the third time. Djokovic, who has not lost a match since his defeat to Nadal

in the U.S. Openfinal, returned superbly from the start to move his Spanish rival around the

court and prevent him from dictating the points. Nadal hit only

nine winners andwas broken three times.

BASEBALL Braves planningnew Stadium —The Bravesannounced Mondaythey are leav-

MOTOR SPORTS Pastrana leavingNASCAR — Travis Pastrana said Monday he's leaving NASCAR after this weekend's season finale Nation-

wide Series race atHomestead. Pastrana announced his decision on his Facebookpage. He cited a lack of sponsorship, a desire to spend time with his

wife and new daughter and frustration over his struggles in

NASCAR ashis reasons for leaving the sport.

ing Turner Field and moving into

a new 42,000-seat, $672 million stadium about10 miles from downtown Atlanta in 2017. It's

not clear how much it will cost taxpayers. Bravesexecutives John Schuerholz, Mike Plant

FOOTBALL TitanS' LOCkerOut fOr SSBSOll —Titans quarterback Jake Locker will miss the rest of

and Derek Schiller said the team the season with a Lisfranc injury decided not to seek another lease at17-year-old Turner Field and began talks with the Cobb Marietta Coliseum and Exhibit Hall Authority in July. Plant, the

to his right foot that may need

surgery. Coach MikeMunchak said Monday losing Locker is very disappointing and hard on

executive vice president of busi-

the Titans (4-5). Thequarterback was hurt in the second quarter

ness operations, said the team has not signed a contract with

the end of anoption play.

Cobb County, but he's "100 percent certain it will happen."

of a 29-27 loss to Jacksonville at

Harvln officially actlvatSd — The Seattle Seahawks

Mattingly returningto

have addedwide receiver Percy

DOdgii'8 — Don Mattingly will

Harvin to the 53-man roster.

return as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers next season,

along with most of his coaching staff. Tim Wallach was named

the new benchcoach Monday, moving over from third base to

replace TreyHillman, whowas fired last month. LorenzoBundy, who was managing at Triple AAlbuquerque, joins the team to

Monday's movewasexpected as Seattle had to add Harvin to the active roster or he would

have to remain on thephysically unable to perform list for the remainder of the season. Seattle coach Pete Carroll said Harvin is

expected to practice this week, meaninghis Seahawks debut

couldcome SundayagainstMintake Wallach's spot. Mattingly re- nesota. turns for his fourth season with

general managerNedColletti making noannouncementabout a possible contract extension.

BASKETBALL UGOnn WOmendeatStanfOrd —Bria Hartley had 20

OLYMPICS OWenS gold medal to de SOld —One of the four Olympic gold medals won bytrack and field star JesseOwensat the 1936 Berlin Games is set to go on the auction block. SCP Auc-

tions says the medal could sell for upward of $1 million in the online auction that runs from

Nov. 20-Dec. 7.Owenswon gold in the100- and 200-meters, the 400 relay and the long jump at

Saturday'sGame Adrian atCamasVaiey, I p.m.

to a specific event. Themedal is being sold by the estate of Robinson's late widow, Elaine

World Tour Finals on Monday,

Triad atImbler,TBD TriangleLakeatDufur, 7p.m.

points, eight rebounds and six assists to help No.1 Connecticut beat No. 3 Stanford 76-57 on Monday night in Storrs, Conn. Kiah Stokes added 10 points, 13

rebounds and six blocks for the Huskies (2-0), who got a scare early in the secondhalf when

preseason All-America Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis went down trying for a rebound. Morgan Tuck, her replacement, scored

eight straight points, including two 3-pointers, to make it 53-32 thegames attendedbyAdolph with13:19 left. Stanford couldn't Hitler. According to the Laguna get closer than15 points the rest Niguel-based auction house, the of the way. — From wire reports medal to be sold is unidentifiable

Girls Soccer Class 6A Semifinals

Today'sGames Westview atSunset, 7p.m. Tualatin at Jesuit, 7p.m. Class 5A Semifinals Today's Games Bendat Summit, 3p.m. Wilson atWilsonviffe,7p.m. Class 4A Semifinals

Today'sGames NorthBendatLaGrande,1 p.m. LaSalleatScappoose,2p.m. Class SA/2A/1A Semifinals Today's Games St. Mary'sMedfordat OregonEpiscopal, 4p.m. Catlin Cabel atValey Catholic, 7 p.m.

Boys Soccer Class 6A Semifinals Today's Games McKayat Central Catholic, 6p.m. WestLinnatJesuit, 4 p.m. Class 5A Semifinals Today's Games HoodRiverValleyatWoodburn, 6 p.m. WilsonviffeatSummit, 5:30p.m. Class 4A Semifinals Today's Games NorthBendatHenley, 3p.m. Philomath at Sisters,2 p.m.

Class SA/2A/1A Semifinals Today's Games St. Mary'sMedfordatPortlandAdventist, 1 p.m. Oregon Episcopal atRiverside, 3:30 p.m.

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AH TimesPST AMERICANCONFERENCE

East

W L T Pct PF PA 7 2 0 . 778234 175 5 4 0 . 556169 231 4 5 0 . 444193 209 3 7 0 . 300199 259 South W L T Pct PF PA Indianapo is 6 3 0 6 6 7222 193 4 5 0 . 444200 196 Tennessee Houston 2 7 0 . 222170 248 Jacksonvile 1 8 0 . 111115 291 North W L T Pct PF PA 6 4 0 . 600234 186 4 5 0 . 444172 197 4 5 0 . 444188 189 3 6 0 . 333179 218 West W L T Pct PF PA Kansas Cit y 9 0 0 1. 0 00 215 111 Denver 8 I 0 . 8 89371 238 San Diego 4 5 0 . 444212 202 Oakland 3 6 0 . 333166 223 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 5 5 0 5 0 0274 258 Philadelphia 5 5 0 . 500252 244 N.Y.Giants 3 6 0 . 333165 243 Washington 3 6 0 . 333230 287

South

Detroit Chicago GreenBay Minnesota

W L T Pct PF PA 7 2 0 . 778265 163 6 3 0 .667214 115 2 7 0 . 222186 251 I 8 0 . 1 11146 209 North W L T Pct PF PA 6 3 0 6 6 7238 216 5 4 0 . 556259 247 5 4 0 . 556245 212 2 7 0 . 222220 279

Seattle SanFrancisco Arizona St. Louis

W L T Pct PF PA 9 1 0 . 900265 159 6 3 0 .667227 155 5 4 0 . 556187 198 4 6 0 . 400224 234

NewOrleans Carolina Atlanta TampaBay

West

Monday'sGame

TampaBay22, Miamt19

Thursday's Game IndianapolisatTennessee 5.25p.m.

Sunday'sGames

Ba timoreat Chicago,10a.m.

Oakland at Houston,10 a.m. N.Y.Jetsat Buffalo,10 a.m AtlantaatTampaBay,10a.m.

Lipscomb 88,OaklandCity 78 Miami81,Georgia Southem80,DT Milwaukee 81,Davidson77 Nc Central98,Johnson8 Wales(Nc) 47 Radtord89,Chattanooga78 Richmond 69,Belmont61 St. Francis(NY)59,FAU57 Troy102,LaGrange69 UAB79,Rutgers76 W. Carolina 74, UNCAshevile 67 Woffor d83,Emory8 Henry58 Midwest Creighton96,UMKC70 Detroit106,Michigan-Dearborn 51 IPFW 90,Indiana-Kokomo62 N. Iowa86,Coe52

Detroit atPittsburgh, 10a.m. WashingtonatPhiladelphia,10a.m. Clevelandat Cincinnati,10 a.m.

Arizona atJacksonviffe,10am. San Diego at Miami,1:05 p.m. MinnesotaatSeatle, 1:25p.m. San FranciscoatNewOrleans, I:25 p.m. GreenBayat N.Y. Giants,1:25 p.m. KansasCityatDenver,5:30 p.m. Open:Dallas,St Louis Monday, Nov.18 NewEnglandat Carolina, 5:40p.m. Monday's Summary

SE Missouri118,CentralBaptist 56

Buccaneers 22, Dolphins19 Miami TampaBay

0 7 12 0 — 1 9 10 5 0 7 — 22 First Quarter TB — Penn 1 passfrom Glennon(Lindeff kick), 9:37. TB FGLindeff 24,5:27.

SecondQuarter

TB — David safety, 13:52. TB— FG Lindeff 35,9:01. Mia — Matthews 6 passfromTannehiff (Sturgis kick),:28. Third Quarter Mta — FGSturgis 40 7:57. Mia — Matthews 19 passfrom Tannehiff (pass failed), 2.01. Mia — FGSturgis 30,.10. Fourth Quarter TB — Rainey1run (Lindeffkick),10:19 A—64,448. Mia TB 16 18 213 264 14-2 37-140 2 11 12 4 1 -34 2 - 72 2 -30 3 - 57 1-23 1-0

First downs Tota NetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession

27-42-1 11-21-1

2 -18 2 - 15 5-51.4 5-42.4

0-0 4 -70

0-0 9 - 70

25;12 3 4:48

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Miami: Miler 7-2, Tannehiff 1-2, Clay2-0,Dan.Thomas4-(minus2).Tampa Bay: Leonar d 20-57,Rainey 8 45,James 5-41,Glennon

4-(minus3).

PASSING —Miami: Tannehiff 27-42-1-229. TampaBay:Glennon11-21-1-139. RECEIVING —Miami: Matthews11-120, Hartline 5-57,Clay4-21, Walace4-15, Miler 2-9,Egnew 1-7. TampaBay: Underwood3-64, Jackson3-28, Leonard2-16, Wnght1-19 Rainey1-11,Penn1-1. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.

College Schedule AH TimesPST

(Subject to change) Today'sGames MIDWEST Ohio atBowlingGreen,4:30 p.m. Buffalo atToledo, 4.30p.m.

W.Michigan63,TennesseeSt.52 Southwest Houston77,Texas-PanAmerican65 HoustonBaptist 75,Crowley'sRidge61 Incarnate Word74,Trinity (Texas)62 NorthFlorida72,UALR70 Oklahoma 95, NorthTexas82 PrairieView100,Schreiner 73 SMU89,RhodeIs and58 SamHoustonSt.116, HiffsdaleBaptist54 TexasABM91, MVSU67 TexasSouthem113, Wiley96 TexasTech88 N.Arizona68 Far West Arizona 91,LongBeachSt.57 BYU112, Stanford103 CS Bakersfield97,UCMerced54 Gonzaga 93,ColoradoSt. 61 UC Davis80,HolyNames54 UtahValley78,NCABT71

Polls AP Top25 The top25teamsinTheAssociated Press' college basketballpoll, withfirst-placevotes in parentheses, records throughNov.10, total points basedon 25 points for a first-placevotethrough onepoint tor a 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Kentucky(28) 2 -0 1,552 1 2. Michigan St.(22) 1-0 1, 54 9 2 3. Louisvile(12 ) 2-0 1,4 9 4 3 4. Duke(3) 1 -0 1,454 4 5.Kansas 1 -0 1,358 5 6. Arizona 1 -0 1,291 6 7. Michigan 1 -0 1,154 7 8. Oklahoma St. 1 -0 1,124 8 9. Syracuse 1 -0 1,087 8 I 0. OhioSt. 1 -0 1,033 1 1 11. Florida 1-0 9 9 5 10 12. NorthCarolina 1-0 95 0 12 13. Memphis 0-0 7 4 3 13 14. VCU 1-0 7 0 8 14 15. Gonza ga 1-0 56 1 15 16. WichitaSt. 1-0 5 5 5 16 17. Marquette 1-0 4 9 1 17 18. Oregon 1-0 48 4 19 1-0 4 4 1 18 19. Uconn 1-0 35 7 20 20. Wtsconsin 2-0 32 8 21 21. NotreDame 1-0 24 0 23 22. New Mexico 1-0 2 3 5 25 23. Baylor 1-0 19 6 22 24. UCLA 1-0 17 0 24 25. Virginia Dthersreceivingvotes Creighton148,Tennessee 138, Indiana78, lowa54, Harvard46, BoiseSt. 24, Colorado18,Viffanova14, ArizonaSt. 11, LSU8, Washington8, Pittsburgh6, UNLV6, Georgetown 4, Missouri 3, SaintLouis 3,Stanford3, Cincinnati 2, Towson1.

USATodayTop25 Thetop25 teams intheUSA Todaymen'scollege basketbalpoll, l withtirst-placevotesin parentheses, recordsthroughNov.10, pointsbasedon 25 points fora hrst-place votethroughonepoint fora25th-place vote and previousranking: Record Pts Pvs 1. Kentucky(19) 2-0 77 6 1 2. Michigan State(2) 1 0752 2 3. Louisville(9) 1-0 7 4 5 3 4. Duke(2) 1-0 7 1 6 4 5. Arizona 1-0 6 4 3 5 6.Kansas 1-0 63 9 6 7. Syracuse 1-0 56 5 7 8. Michigan 1-0 5 4 4 9

Wednesdey'sGames MIDWEST

Miami(Ohio)atKentSt.,5p.m. Ball St.at N.Illinois,5p.m.

Thursdey'sGames SOUTH Georgi aTechatCemson,4:30p.m. MorganSt.atSCState, 4:30p m. SOUTHWES T

Marshall atTulsa,4.30 p.m.

Fridsy's Game

FAR WEST WashingtonatIJCLA,6p.m.

9. OhioState 1-0 5 4 2 10 10. Florida 1-0 53 5 8 1-0 4 9 3 11 Betting line 11. NorthCarolina 1-0 47 2 1 2 NFC 12. Oklahoma State 0-0 33 6 13 (Hometeamsin CAPS) 13. Memphis 15 Favorite Opening Current Underdog 14 VirginiaCommonwealth 1-0 3 2 9 1-0 2 9 1 14 Thursday 15. Gonza ga 1-0 2 7 7 16 Colts 3 3 TITANS 16. WichitaState 1-0 23 8 17 Sunday 17. Marquette 1-0 2 3 3 18 Falcons NL NL 8UCCANE ERS 18 Oregon 1-0 17 7 21 BILLS 1 15 Jets 19. Wisconsin 1-0 17 5 19 Lions 2 2.5 STEELE RS 20. Connecticut 1-0 1 6 6 20 EAGLES 3.5 3.5 Redskins 21. New Mexico 2-0 12 7 22 DOLPHINS NL NL Chargers 22. NotreDame 1-0 9 6 24 BEARS 3 3 Ravens 23. Indiana BENGAL S 6 6 Browns 24. UCLA 1-0 8 9 23 TEKANS 7 7 Raiders 25. Virgtnia 1-0 8 2 25 Cardinals 6.5 6.5 JAGUAR S 25. Baylor 1-0 8 2 NR BRONC OS 8 8 Chiefs Dthers receivingvotes: Creighton63;Tennessee SEAHA WKS 13.5 1 3 .5 Vikings 63; lowa 48; Georgetown18; BoiseState14; California SAINTS 3 3 49ers 14; Pittsburgh13;Colorado12; Harvard10;Missouri GIANTS 4 6.5 Packers 5; lffinois 4;lowaState 3; LSU3; Viffanova3; Arizona Monday State 2;Saint Louis 2; Georgia1; Massachusetts 1; PANTHE RS 2.5 2.5 Patriots Saint Mary's1.

College Today

B OWLING GREEN 10 1 0 TOLEDD 4 4

Wednesday

5.5 17

6.5 17 . 5

Women's College Dhio Buffalo

Monday's Games East Dartmouth 66,Vermont62

Ball St Lehigh77,NJIT72 Miami-Dhio St. Francis(NY)56,Army53 Uconn76,Stanford 57 1 0.5 I 0 . 5 GeorgiaTech UMBC 59, Eastern50 14 14 TULSA South Friday Belmont69,Mercer62 2.5 2.5 Washington Gardner-W ebb71, UNC-Greensboro60 Saturday Howard 83,JacksonSt. 63 Miami-Fla 3 .5 3 DUKE Kennesaw St.70,TennesseeSt.68 WISCON SIN 2 0.5 21 Indiana Longwood 59,Wiliam &Mary 52 VANDER BILT 13 13 Kentucky Louisiana-Lafayette 72,Southern NO62 LOUISVILLE 16 16 Houston Louisiana-Monroe 92, LouisianaCollege52 C. Michigan 3 3 W.MICHIG AN NC State69,Towson46 VIRGINIA TECH 14.5 1 4 5 Maryland SouthernU.63,SELouisiana56 BOSTONCOLLEGE 7.5 7.5 Nc State Tennessee 81,North Carolina 65 Cincinnati 1.5 1.5 RUTGE RS Troy100,FloridaABM88 PITTSBU RGH PK PK N. Carolina Tulane74,McNeeseSt. 49 C. Floirda 1 6.5 1 6 .5 TEMPLE Vanderbil85, t WKentucky 60 PENN ST 22 215 Purdue Virginia73,HighPoint 54 S. CARO LINA 1 3.5 1 3 5 Florida VirginiaTech73,OldDominion61 NORTH WESTERN 3 2.5 Michigan Midwest FLORIDA ST 38.5 3 8 .5 Syracuse Bradley72,SEMissouri68 Fla. Atlantic 16.5 1 6 .5 S. MISSISSIPIP Marquette 96,Ark.-Pine Bluff44 Akron 7.5 7. 5 ASSACH M USETTS MurraySt.62,Evansvile 50 E.CARO LINA 26 26 uab Nebraska62,Alabama48 SMU 1 3.5 14 Connecticut NotreDam e81,MichiganSt. 62 W. Virginia 7 6,5 KANSAS Southwest UL-Lafayette 2 1.5 2 1 .5 GEORGIA ST Arkansas St. 79, MissouriSt.61 COLOR ADO 3 3 California Lamar 94,OurLadyoftheLake60 a-Baylor 26.5 27 TexasTech Rice61,TexasSouthern54 BOISEST 21 5 225 Wyoming TexasABM67, NorthTexas48 ARIZONA ST 13 13 OregonSt Far West AUBURN 3.5 3.5 Georgia BoiseSt.76,Lewis-Clark St.68 Oklahoma St 3 3 TEXAS IdahoSt.61,Carrol (Mont.)48 OKLAHO MA 24.5 2 4 .5 lowaSt OregonSt.80,CSBakersfield 49 OREG ON NL NL Utah UCLA82,Pepperdine78 NAVY 9 .5 9 S Alabama WeberSt.77,Montana-Western57 MichiganSt 6.5 6.5 NEBRA SKA OhioSt 3 2.5 3 2 .5 ILLINOIS Polls SanJoseSt 7.5 7.5 NEVAD A AP Women'sTop26 Alabama 25 25 MISSISSIPPI ST The top 25teamsin TheAssociated Press'women's Stanford 3 3.5 USC collegebasketball poll, withfirst-placevotesin parenColoradoSt 6 6.5 NEWMEXICO theses,recordsthroughNov. 10,total pointsbasedon Memphis 2 1.5 S. FLOR IDA pointsforaftrst-place votethrough onepoint for a RICE 17 17 Louisiana Tech 25 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: KANSAS ST 10 10 . 5 Tcu Record Pts Prv MISSISSIPP I 2 8.5 2 8 5 Troy 1. Uconn 1-0 8 9 9 1 (35) ARKAN SASST 6 .5 7 Texas St 2. Duke 1-0 86 2 2 (I) UTEP 5 .5 6 FloridaInt'I 3. Stanford 1-0 80 4 3 ARIZON A 13 13 Washington St 4.Tennessee 1-0 7 5 9 4 SanDiegoSt 5 4.5 HAWAII 5. Louisvile 1-0 73 2 5 a-Arlington,Texas 1-0 7 2 8 6 6. NotreDame 7. Kentucky 2-0 69 1 7 8. Maryl a nd 2-0 67 6 8 BASKETBALL 9. Baylor 1-0 59 0 10 10. California 1-1 55 0 9 Men's college 11. Oklahom a 1-0 4 9 2 11 12. North Carol i n a 1-0 47 6 1 2 Monday'sGames 13. PennSt. 2-0 44 6 13 East 14. LSU 2-0 39 1 15 Canisius71,SouthDakota66 KentSt.81,Temple77 15. Nebraska 1-0 39 0 17 St. Bonaven ture 75,AbileneChristian 47 16. Texas ABM 0-0 36 6 16 St. Francis(Pa.)60,Navy57 17. Colorado 0-0 25 9 19 18 Purdue 1-0 2 4 9 18 Uconn80,Yale 62 UMBC84,Eastem 79,OT 19. Michigan St. 0-0 21 3 20 2 0. Ok l a h o ma S t . 2-0 19 8 21 South Ark. -PineBluff 67,Morehouse54 21. SouthCarolina 2-0 1 9 0 22 Arkansas St.65,JacksonSt.61 22. IowaSt. 1-0 12 4 23 23. Dayton 1-1 1 0 4 14 CoastalCarolina76,Guilford 49 24. Georgi a 1-0 1 0 2 24 GeorgiaTech68 DelawareSt. 50 2-0 9 9 25 Kennesaw St. 92,WarrenWilson48 25. Gonza ga

Thursday

Othersreceivingvotes: Vanderbilt 68, DePaul60, GreenBay51, Chatanooga 33,Georgia Tech30, lowa 23, Texas 9,Middle Tennessee8, West Virginia 8,Ohio St. 6, FloridaSt. 4, Creighton 3, UCLA3, Marist 2, JamesMadison1, Quinnipiac1.

TENNIS Professional ATP WorldTourFinals

Monday

At 02 Arena London Purse: $6million(Tour Final) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Champronshrp NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia,def. Rafael Nadal (1), Spain,6-3, 6-4

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPDT

EasternConference Atlantic Division

G P W L O TPts GF GA 17 12 5 0 24 54 42 17 11 5 1 23 48 30 17 11 6 0 22 51 40 Detroit 18 9 5 4 22 45 48 Montreal 18 9 8 1 19 48 40 Ottawa 17 7 6 4 18 53 51 Florida 1 8 3 1 1 4 10 37 64 Buttalo 1 9 3 1 5 I 7 33 61 Metropolitan Division G P W L O T Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 17 1 1 6 0 22 50 40 Washington 18 9 8 I 19 57 52 N.Y.Rangers 17 9 8 0 18 39 46 Carolina 1 7 6 7 4 16 32 48 NewJersey 17 5 7 5 15 35 44 N.Y. Islanders 18 6 9 3 15 51 60 Columbus 16 6 10 0 12 41 46 P hiladelphia 16 5 1 0 1 11 26 44

TampaBay Boston Toronto

WesternConference Central Division

G P W L O TPts GF GA 1 6 14 2 0 28 54 28 18 12 2 4 28 66 49 1 5 11 2 2 24 52 34 1 8 10 4 4 24 48 40 17 8 7 2 18 37 54 17 8 7 2 18 46 52 19 8 9 2 18 50 55 Pacific Division G P W L O T Pts GF GA Anaheim 1 9 1 5 3 1 31 66 45 Phoenix 1 8 1 2 4 2 26 60 56 San Jose 17 1 0 2 5 25 63 41 Vancouver 20 1 1 7 2 24 54 54 L os Angeles 17 11 6 0 22 50 41 Calgary I7 6 9 2 14 47 61 Edmonton 19 4 13 2 10 48 75 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime

Colorado Chicago St. Louis Minnesota Nashville Dallas Winnipeg

loss

Monday's Games Boston3, Tampa Bay0 Today'sGames Los Angeleat s Buffalo, 4 p.m. Nashville at N.Y.Islanders,4p.m. NewJerseyatN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. Coiumbus at Washington, 4p.m. Colorado atCaroltna, 4p.m. TampaBayat Montreal, 4:30p.m. PhiladelphiaatOttawa,4:30p.m. WinnipegatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Anahetm at Florida,4:30 p.m. PhoenixatSt. Louis,5p.m. SanJoseatCalgary,6 p.m. Wednesdey'sGames Toronto at Minnesota,4:30p.m. PhiladelphiaatPittsburgh, 5p.m. Dallas atEdmonton, 7p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT CONFERENCECHAMPIONSHIP

EasternConference Leg1 — Saturday,Nov9: SportingKc0, Houston0 Leg 2 Saturday,Nov.23 Houstonat Sporting KC, 4:30p.m. WesternConference Leg1 —Sunday,Nov.10. ReaiSalt Lake4, Portland2 Leg 2 Sunday,Nov 24:RealSalt LakeatPortland, 6 p.m. MLS CUP

Saturday,Dec.7. athigherseed,1 p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BALTIMOR EORIOLES— Named DomChit> buIpen coach. BOSTONRED SOX — Announced SS Stephen Drew, OF Jacoby Elsbury and18 Mike Napoli declined theclub's one-yearqualifying offers. CLEVELANDINDIANS— Announced RHPUb-

aido Jimenez declined the club's one-year riualitying offer KANSASCITY ROAYLS — Announced RHP Ervin Santana declined the club's one-yearqualifying offer. Requestedrelease waiverson RHPLuis Mendoza. NEWYORKYANKEES—Announced28 Robinson Cano, OF Curtis GrandersonandRHPHiroki Kuroda declinedtheclub's one-yearqualifying offers. SEATTLEMARINERS — Named Trent Jewett bench coach.AnnouncedDHKendrys Moralesdeclined theclub's one-yearqualifying offer. TEXASRANGERS — Promoted A.J. Preffer to assistantgeneralmanager and MikeDalyto senior director, minor leagueoperations. AnnouncedOF NelsonCruzdeclinedthe club's one-yearqualifying offer. TORONTO BI.UEJAYS— Agreed to termswith RHPMichael Broadway, SSJonathan Diaz andRHP Marcus Waldenon minor leaguecontracts. NationalLeague ATLANTA BRAVES — Announced C Brian McCanndeclinedthe club's one-yearqualifying otfer. CINCINNATIRED S— AnnouncedOFShin-Soo Choodeclinedtheclub's one-year qualifying offer. .OSANGELES DDDGERS — Named l.orenzo I Bundythtrdbasecoach. ST. LOLIISCARDINALS —Announced OFCar-

los Beltrandeclinedtheclub's one-yearqualitying offer. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association HOUSTONRDCKETS — Fined HoustonG James Harden $5,000forviolating theleague'santi-flopping rules forthesecondtimethis seasonin aNov. 9game againsttheLosAngeles Clippers. FOOTBALL

National Football League

CHICAGO BEARS— Piaced CBCharles Tilman on theinjuredreserve/returnlist. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed DEAstonWhiteside to thepracticesquad. ReleasedDEDeQuin Evansfromthepractice squad. CLEVELANDBROWNS — Placed LB Quentin Grovesoninjured reserve. SignedLBBrandonMagee from the practice squad. INDIANAPOLI S COLTS — Signed WR Da'Rick Rogersfromthepractice squad. Waived-injured S Larry Asante.SignedWRJosh Lenzto the practice squad. MIAMI DOLP HINS— SignedS D.J. Campbe l from the practice squad.WaivedSJordanKovacs. MINNESOT A VIKINGS Signed OTKevin Murphy tothepractice squad. NEWYORKJETS— Activated TE KeffenWinslow Jr. fromthesuspendedlist. WaivedS Rontez Miles. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Rel eased DT Michael Brooks.ActivatedWRPercyHarvin fromthePUPlist. HOCKEY

NationalHockeyLeague

ANAHEIM DLICKS—StgnedCDavid Stecke and assignedhim, GViktor GasthandLWMat Beleskey to Nortolk(AHL). FLORIDA PANTHERS Recalled D MikeMottau from SanAntonto (AHL).LoanedDRyanWhitneyto San Antonio. NEW JERSEYDEVILS— PlacedDJonMerrill on injuredreserve,retroactiveto Nov.3 COLLEGE LOUISVILLE — Reinstatedmen's junior basketball

FChaneBehananfromsuspension. SETONHALL Announced theresignation of KazbekTambi, women'ssoccercoach.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NBA ROUNDUP

azersno sa is ie wi win gg

The Associated Press

x

John Raoux I The Associated Press

Tampa Bay tackle Donald Penn, right, catches a 1-yard pass for a touchdown against Miami during the first half of Monday night'sgame inTampa, Fla.The Buccaneers won 22-19.

Bucs get first win of season, beatDolphins NFL

By Fred Goodall The Associated Press

TAMPA, Fla. — Tampa Bay's status as the N FL's only winless team didn't last

quarter leads in four of its eight losses, losing each time in the final 89 seconds of reglong. ulation or overtime. Rookie M i k e G l e nnon "It had the same feeling threw a 1-yard touchdown going down t h e s t r etch," pass to tackle Donald Penn Schiano said. "But our guys and led a long fourth-quarter bowed up and made some TD drive to put the Bucca- plays." Glennon completed 11 of neers ahead for good in a 2219 victory over the embattled 21 for D9 yards in his sixth Miami Dolphins on Monday pro start. The third-round night. draft pick threw his first inBobby Rainey's 1-yard run terception in four games — a capped an 80-yard drive, and span of 159 attempts — to the Bucs held on the final 10 set up a third-quarter field minutes to become the last goal that put the Dolphins up 19-15. team in the league to win Tannehill finished 27 of this season. Jacksonville beat Tennes- 42 for 229 yards, two touchsee on Sunday, leaving Tam- downs and an interception. The Bucs saluted Hall of pa Bay (1-8) as the league's only winless team entering Famer Warren Sapp athalfthe game. time, retiring his No. 99 jer"It's good to stand up here sey and inducting the 1999 after a w i n," B ucs coach NFL defensive player of the Greg Schiano said after his year and 2002 Super Bowl team won for only the sec- champion into th e t eam's ond time in 15 games dating Ring of Honor. to last season. "We have to T he Dolphins ha d n o t build off this." played since Oct. 31, when Playing for the first time they beat Cincinnati 22-20 in since a bullying scandal, overtime to stop a four-game the Dolphins (4-5) started skid. slowly before overcoming W ith J acksonville w i n an early 15-0 deficit to lead ning on Sunday, the Bucs 19-15 heading into the fourth entered Monday night as the quarter. only NFL team yet to win R yan T a nnehill t h r e w this season. touchdown passes of 6 and It was apparent from the 19 yards to Rishard Mat- start that they might be able thews, but got no help from a to change t heir f o r tunes running game that was lim- against the Dolphins, who ited to just 2 yards rushing. spent much of the past week The Bucs sacked Tan- answering questions about nehill twice on Miami's final the bullying scandal. possession before Darrelle Glennon finished a nineRevis intercepted Tannehill's play, 76-yard, game-opening fourth-down des p eration drive with his TD pass to throwintended for Mike Wal- Penn, a 6-foot-5, 340-pound lace with 1:35 remaining. tackle who discreetly slipped "We have good guys on off the line and was all alone this team who understand in the end zone. Mike James adversity an d u n derstand ran five times for 41 yards how to handle it," Tannehill on the drive before leaving said. "This is a good test. the game with a broken left I'm not saying it's easy. I'm ankle. The Bucs built the lead not saying it's fun to deal with. ButIhavefaithinthese to 15-0 with a pair of field guys." goals by Rian Lindell and a Tampa Bay held fourth- safety.

NHL

Bruins get win, but Lightning losestar By Ken Powtak

When he left the ice on The Associated Press a stretcher, players on both BOSTON Clearly, teams tapped their sticks Tampa Ba y s t a r S t even on ice as the fans applauded S tamkos' injury w a s o n in tribute. "A player like that, I don't everyone's minds. The Boston Bruins were able to get know how serious it is, but back to playing hockey a lot it looks pretty serious to me," Boston coach Claude quicker after it happened. P atrice B e r geron a n d Julien said. "You don't want Daniel Paille scored 20 sec- to see that." onds apart a few minutes The Lightning confirmed after Stamkos was taken on the team's Twitter acoff the ice on a s t retcher count that S t amkos sufw ith a b r o ken r i ght l e g , fered a broken right tibia. a nd the B r u ins beat t h e General manager Steve Lightning 3-0 on Monday Yzerman said that Stamkos afternoon. is expected to have surgery S tamkos was hurt w i t h today. "At this point Steven will 7:11 to play in the second period. He entered the day be out indefinitely," Yzertied with Pittsburgh's Sid- man said in a s t atement. ney Crosby as the N HL's "The medical staff in Bosleading s c orer. S t a mkos t on, in c o nsultation w i t h got tied up with Boston de- our team physicians, has fenseman Dougie Hamilton made the decision to surgiand crashed into the right cally repair the injury. " The procedure i s expost. His left skate appeared pected to take place tomorto hit the post first before row morning. The biggest his right leg crashed into concern forme, and the rest it around the shin area. He of the Lightning, is that detried to get up twice before cisions are made in Steven's g oing down to th e ice i n best long-term interest, and pain, grabbing his leg just we feel this is the appropriabove the ankle. ate course of action."

PORTLAND — It's unusual for the Trail Blazers to talk about being frustrated with a win. But Portland, which ended last season with a 13-game losing streak, is off to a 5-2 start and taking a hard look at its early success — with an eye on improvement. After a 109-103 victory over Detroit on Monday, the Blazers were concerned by a late push by the Pistons that brought them within three points after Portland had built a 13-point, second-half lead. "We can't relax and let a team get back like that," Nicolas Batum said. Robin Lopez warned about being c o mplacent: "That's something we need to fend off. We need to be mentally tougher, mentally stronger." But Damian Lillard, who rebounded from a rough shooting night in the Blazers' previous game to score25 points, said this season Portland is better equipped to fight off late opponentruns. "Last year some games we'd have an answer and get a big win and other times we'd let the game get away from us," Lillard said. "Now we've got a different level of confidence in those situations and we expect to win those games." Brandon Jennings had 28 points an d f o u r r e b ounds for Detroit. Acquired by the Pistons in an offseason signand-trade wit h M i l w aukee, Jennings came into the game needing one rebound for 1,000 in hiscareer, and one point for 5,000.

Jennings' alley-oop layup from Rodney Stuckey pulled

Also on Monday: Pacers 95 Grizzlies 79: INDIANAPOLIS — Paul George scored 23 points and Lance Stephenson had the first triple-doubleof his career, leading perfect Indiana to a victory over Memphis. Spurs109, 76ers 85: PHILADELPHIA — D a nny Green scored 18 points, Tony Parker had 14 and San Antonio rolled to an easy victory over Philadelphia. Hawks 103, Bobcats 94: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Al Horford scored 24 points and Atlanta handed Charlotte coach Steve Clifford a loss in his first

game back since undergoing a heart procedure. Celtics 120, Magic 105:BOSTON — Avery Bradley scored 24 points as Boston beat Orlando for the second time in four days. Bulls 96, Cavaliers 81: CHICAGO — Derrick Rose had 16 points before leaving in the fourth quarter with an appar-

ent injury, and Chicago pulled

I

Don Ryan/The Associated Press

Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard, left, goes to the basket against the Detroit Pistons' Andre Drummond, right, and Brandon Jennings during the second half of Monday night's game in Portland. Lillard led the Trail Blazers in scoring with 25 points as they beat the Pistons109-103. the Pistons within 1 07-103 with 1:28 left. After he stole the ball from Lillard and was fouled by B atum, Jennings drove to the basket but missed a layup and fouled Lillard on the rebound. Lillard made free throws for the final margin and Stuckey missed a 3-point-

er on the other end. "It's very difficult. We knew coming in they were a team that takes a lot of 3s," Jennings said. "They were on fire tonight." The Blazers made 11 3pointers, including five from Lillard.

away from Cleveland. Rockets 110, Raptors 104: H OUSTON — J eremy L i n scored 31 p o i nts, D w i ght Howard had 18 points and 24 rebounds, and Houston outlasted Toronto to snap a twogame losing streak. Nuggets 100, Jazz 81: SALT LAKE CITY — Andre Miller scorednine ofhis season-high 15 points in the fourth quarter and Denver defeatedwinless Utah.

Clippers 109, Timberwolves 107: LOS ANGELES — Blake Griffin had 25 points and 10 rebounds, Chris Paul added 21 points and Los Angeles held off Minnesota after Nikola Pekovic missed a tip-in at the buzzer.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPST

EasternConference d-Indiana d-Atlanta Miami d-Philadelphia Boston Chicago Charlotte Milwaukee Toronto Cleveland Orlando Detroit Washington NewYork Brooklyn

W 8 4 4

t 0 3 3

4

4

4 3 3 2 3 3 3 2 2 2 2

4 3 4 3 5 5 5 4 4 4 4

W 7 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 3 2 1 0

t 1 t 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 4 5 8

WesternConference

d-Sari Antonio d-Oklahoma City d-Phoetiix

Portland LA. Clippers Minnesota Houston GoldenState Dallas NewOrleans Memphis LA. Lakers Denver Sacramento Utah d-divisiottleader

Pct GB 1.000 .571 3t/t

.571 3 t/t

500 4 .500 4 .500 4 .429 4'/t 400 4 1/2

.375 5 .375 5 375 5 .333 5 .333 5

.333 5 .333 5 Pct GB 875 833 t 71 4 1'/t 7 I 4 1t/t

625 2 625 2 625 2 57t 2 t/t 571 2'/t

429 3'/z 429 3 t/t 375 4

333 4 167 5 000 7

Mottday's Games San Antonio109,Philadelphia85 Indi ana95,Memphis79 Atlarita103,Charlotte94 Boston120,Orlando105 Chicago 96, Cleveland81 Houston110,Toronto104,20T Denver100,Utah81 Portland109,Detroit 103 LA. Clippers109,Minnesota107

Today'sGames

Milwaukee ai Miami,4:30 p.m. Washington at Dallas,5.30p.m.

Detroit atGoldenState, 730p.m NewOrleansatLA. Lakers, 7:30p.m.

Wednesday'sGames

Milwaukee at Orlando, 4p.m. HoustonatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. CharlotteatBoston,4:30 pm. ClevelandatMinnesota, 5p.m.

Torontoat Memphis, 5p.m. NewYorkatAtlanta, 5 p.m.

WashingtonatSaii Antonio, 5:30p.m. LA. Lakers at Denver, 6 p.m.

NewOrleansat Utah, 6p.m. Phoenixat Portland,7p.m. Brooklynat Sacramento, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City atLA. Clippers, 7:30p.m.

Summaries

5-9 4-6 14,Lawson6-13 5-6 17, Foye3-10 0-0 7, Mozgov3-64-4 10, Fottrnier1-32-25,Arthur3-70-0 6, Randolph2-4t-2 6 A Miler 5-84-415, Robinson 0-3 0-0 0.Totals 36-80 23-27100. UTAH(81) Jefferson2-10 2 46, Favors8 15 5 821, Kanter 6-120-012, LttcasIII 2-80-04, Hayward8-165-622, Williams2-30-06, Bttrks2-9 3-37, Tinsley0-10-0 0, Gobert1-31-2 3.Totals 31-7716-23 81. Denver 20 26 24 30 — 100 Utah 26 19 23 13 — 81

Monday's Summaries

Blazers109, Pistons103

Bulls 96, Cavaliers 81

DETROIT(103) Smith 4-9 2-3 11,Monroe9-17 1-1 19,Drummond 8-9 0 2 16,Jennings 11-24 5-5 28, Billups 2-5 0-0 4, Sttickey4-15 4-6 13, Singler 0-2 2-22, Byni/m3-72-2 8,Vilariueva1-3 00 Z Totals 42-91 16-21 103. PORTLAND (109) Bati/m 5-111-212, Aldridge8-192-218, Lopez 7-103-3 17,Lillard 7-166-625, Matthews1-30-03, Freeland 3 50 06,Wiliams7922 t/, Wright4-/00u Robinson0-20-00. Totals 42-8214-15109. Detroit 30 25 23 25 — 103 Portland 34 24 25 26 — 109 3-Poiiit Goal— s Detroit 3-14(Stucitey1-3, Smith13, Jennings1-4,Singler0-2, t/illanueva0-2), Portland 11-23(Lillard5-8, Wright3-5,Wiliams1-1, Matthews 1-3, Batum1-5, Aldridge0-1). FouledOut—None. Reboutids —Detroit 46 (Drttmmond 16), Portland49 (Aldridge12). Assists Detroit20(Bynum6), Portland 23 (Batttm8). Total Fouls—Detroit 13, Portland 16. Techriical— s Drummond,Lopez.A—18834(19980)

CLEVELAND(81) Gee3-40-07, Thompson6-112-414, Bynttm3-5 5-511, Irving5-194-516 Waiters6-130-013, Jack 0-62-2 2, t/arejao2-51-2 5,Miles4-100-0 9, Dellavedova1-10-02, Sims0-00-2 0, Zeller1-1 0-0z Totals 31-7514-20 81.

Rockets110, Raptors104 (2OTj TORONTO (104) Gay11-374-4 29,Johnson4-10 2-610, Valanci-

i/nas 4-9 2-310, Lowry6-160-0 16, DeRozan6-25 10-11 22,Hansbroi/gh1-3 0-0 Z Fields0-1 1-2 h Ross4-60-09,Buycks 2-6115, Acy0-1 0-0 0,Gray 0-0 0-0 0.TotaIs 38-11420-27 104.

HOUSTON (110)

Parsons7-163-318, Howard7-12 4-12 18,Asik 2-40-2 4, Beverley0-51-2 t, Harden7-199-11 26, Casspi1-43-65, Lin10-178-931,Jones3-71-27, Brooks0-00-00. Totals 37-8429-47110. Toronto 2013 29 25 8 9 — 104 Houston 24 23 24 16 815 — 110

Nuggets100, Jazz81 DENVER (100)

Hamilton 2-60-0 5,Faried6-0 3-3 15, Hickson

CHICAGO (96)

Detig 3-12 6-6 12, Boozer7-11 3-3 17, Noah 4-5 2-210, Rose8-21 0-016, Butler 4-132-211, Dunleavy4-65-515, Gibson3-7 3-4 9, Hinrith 1-6 3-46, Mohammed 0-20-0 0,Snell0-00-00.Totals 34-83 24-26 96. Cleveland 17 19 24 21 — 81 Chicago 20 25 19 32 — 96

Celtics120, Magic105 ORLANDO (105)

Harkless4-102-4 12, Maxiel 4-9 2-210,t/ucevic 6-113-315, Nelson3-102-210,Afflalo6-124-518, Moore4-63-3 u, O'Quinri 0-22-2 Z Nicholsori4-7 0 08, Oladipo7-172-217, Price1-10-0 z Totals 39-85 20-23105.

BOSTON (120) Green 5 9 5 5 16, Bass5-12 0 0 10, olynyk7 9 0-016, Crawford7-122-216, Bradley10-15 4-424, Wallace 0-1 1-21, Si/llinger 7-90-1 14, Faverani2-4 0-0 4, Lee 5-8t-t t2, Pressey3-60-07. Totals 5185 13-15 120. Orlando 25 25 24 31 — 105 Boston 31 28 28 33 — 120

Hawks103, Bobcats 94 ATLANTA (103)

Carroll 2-5 0-0 5, Millsap2-7 4-4 9, Horford915 6-7 24,Teagtte4-145-814, Korver 4-9 1-1 11, Schrode r2-2 0-04,Mack2-30-0 6,Martin5-73-4 16, Brand25226, Scott 38 22 8, Jenkitis 01 00 0. Totals 35-7623-28103. CHARLOTTE (94) Kidd-Gilchrist 6-0 4-5 16, McRoberts7-130-0

19, Jetferson5-110-010, Walker3-116-712, HendeIsoti38560, Biyombo1-1 022,Taylor4102310, Zelier t-s 2-2 4,Sessions3-104-410, Tolliver 0-1 0-0 0.Totals 33-81 23-29 94. Atlanta 26 20 34 23 — 103 Charlotte 29 25 16 24 — 94

Pacers 95, Grizzlies 79 MEMPHIS(79) Prince2-52-26, Randolph6-120-012, Gasol5135-615, Conle4-112-3 y u, Allen 3-41-1 8, Miler 3-60-0 8,Koi /tos 3-6 2-2 8,Pondexter0-4 0-0 0 Calathes 2-50-34, Davis2-81-2 5, Franklin1-10-0 z Totals 31-7513-19 79. INDIANA (95) George9-165-6 23, West5-8 0-010, Hibbertt41-2 3, G.Hill 6-91-1 13,Stephenson5-0 0-013, S.Hill0-30-00, Scola5-102-312,Watson0-30-00, Johnson2-50-0 5,Mahinmi2-36-610 Copelarid120 03, Sloan 1-2003. Totals 3776151895. Memphis 16 23 16 24 — 79 Indiana 23 23 26 23 — 95

Spurs109, 76ers 85 SANANTONIO(109) Leonard6-120-013, Diaw4-8 0-08, Splitter 4-8 3-411, Parker7-120-014, Green6-91-1 18,Ginobi i 3-4 0-0 8, Mills 4-8 0-0 10,Belinelli 5-11 0-0 12, Ayres3-90-06, De Colo1-30-03,Joseph1-44-66, Baynes 0-10-00 Totals 44-89 8-11109. PHILADELPHIA(85) Turner9-211-220,Young3-71-2 7, Hawes6-13 3-3 17, Carter-Williams2-11 4-48, Anderson3-6 00 7, WIoten5-9 2-3 13,Allen2-4 0-14, Morris 2-6 1-1 5,Davies2-40-04, ThompsonO-t 0-00. Totals 34-82 12-16 85. SanAntottio 31 26 26 26 — 109 Philadelphia 13 2 5 26 21 — 85

Clippers109, Timberwolves107 MINNESOTA (107) Brewer3-90-07, LoveBd93-423, Pekovic11-15 3-4 25, Rubio2-6 0-0 5, Martin 9-22 8-8 30, Ci/nningham 2-70-04, Barea1-80-03, Dieng2-20-04, Shved0-30-0 0, Wiliams2-52-2 6 Totals 40-96 16-18 107. LA. CLIPPERS (109) Dttdley1-t 0-02,Griffiri11-223-425,Jordan7-80614,Paul7147 B21,Redick3-70-07,Crawford7u 1-118,Barnes3-5349,Hollins2-4357,Collison2-5 0-04, Mi/lleris1-30-02. Totals 44-8017-28109. Minnesota 26 32 22 27 — 107 L.A. Clippers 23 3 6 26 24 — 109

No. 6Arizona rides defense to victory The Associated Press TUCSON, Ariz. — Arizona hounded ballhandlers, collapsed on post players, turned every shot into a struggle. The Wildcats' defense is their calling card and when

it's going good, they can be

unstoppable. F reshman A a r o n Gor don had 14 points and 10 rebounds, Brandon Ashley added 16 points and No. 6 Arizona used a dominating defense to roll over Long Beach State 91-57 on Monday night. " Our identity is to be an outstanding defensive team," Arizona coach Sean Miller said. "That feeds into our fast break and you saw that." After a so-so opener against

Cal Poly, Arizona (2-0) looked more like the team everyone expected, dominating Long Beach State from the opening

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

points.

No. 19 Uconn 80, Yale caromed high off the glass. Long Beach State (1-1) hit a few shots in the second half got it started by keying a big when the game was well out opening run. of reach, but still finished at Gabe York, a l i t t le-used 27 percentfrom the floor and player a year ago, kept it go- made 5 of 23 f rom 3-point ing by dropping in four 3- range. "Arizona came out with a p ointers, finishing w it h 1 4 points and six assists. Nick passion and they came out Johnson added 14 points and playing harder than us," said Arizona shot58 percent from Dan Jennings, who led Long the field. Beach State with 16 points. "They did well." The defense trigged it all. Playing Miller's aggressive Also on Monday: No. 15 Gonzaga 93, Coloman defense tonear perfection, th e W i l d cats b a rely rado St. 61:SPOKANE, Wash. gave Long Beach State room — Gary Bell Jr. scored all of his 24 points on 3-pointers to to breathe, much less get off good shots, while racing out lead Gonzaga in the rout. Geto an early double-digit lead. rard Coleman added 16 points Arizona's defense flustered and Kevin Pangos had 13 for the 49ers, leading to numer- Gonzaga (2-0). Jon Octeus led ous airballs and shots that Colorado State (1-1) with 27 ttp. Gordon and T.J. McConnell, who had eight assists,

62: H AR T F ORD, C on n . — Shabazz Napier put up the 1 0th triple-double in U C o nn history in th e wi n over Yale. Napier finished with 14 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists for the Huskies (2-0), while Omar Calhoun had 18 points and Niels Giffey added 15, all of them in the first half. BYU 112, S tanford 103: STANFORD, Calif. — Tyler Haws had 31 points and eight rebounds, Matt Carlino s cored 26 points and BY U beat Stanford in the first major test of the season for both teams. K y l e Co l l i nsworth added 14 points, nine assists and seven rebounds to help

the hot-shooting Cougars (2-0) build a 19-point lead with 6:30

remaining.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

Rivalry

Ellsbury

GAME OF THEWEEK

Continued from C1 Take Crook and standout Summit forward Hadlie Plummer, for example, who began playing side by side in a local park district league when they were 8 years old, by Crook's estimation, and continued playing together into high school with the

Oregon Rush Soccer Club (now Bend FC Timbers). According toBend High coach Mackenzie Groshong, a similar story could be told for the majority of her team as well as Summit's. "Since we've already played them twice this year, there's always those thoughts going on," says Crook, Bend's senior midfielder, who shared Intermountain Conference player of the year honors with Plummer this season. "It's a big rivalry, and I think it probably will get a little more physical, a little more intense, than any other semifinal you'll see because it is Bend-Summit." Since 2005,Bend and Summit have dominated the IMC. Between them in that span they have won all nine league titles and have seven runner-up finishes. Five of the past eight IMC champions have gone on to win the Class 5A state title — the Lava Bears three times, the Storm twice. Between the state accolades, the intracity IMC competition and the familiarity between players and coaches, today's semifinal matchup is personal, Groshong says, with each team having considerable knowledge of the other's strengths and weaknesses. All of this adds even more fuel to an already heated rivalry. "A lot of them are friends off the field, and then on the field the emotions run high," says Summit coach JamieBrock, whose Storm defeatedthe Lava Bears in the state quarterfinals in 2010, the last time the two teams met in the playoffs. "There's this rivalry piece where our girls are like, 'Oh, it's Bend High. We want to beat Bend High.' ... This is one more step on the way to a finals." At Summit High this afternoon, the Storm will look to continue their quest for a second straight state championship to join Bend High (2008-09) as the only Central Oregon girls soccer programs to capture back-to-back titles. "It doesn't matter who it is, you've got to go through anybody to get to the finals," Brock says. "Of course, it (the rivalry) carries more weight with the girls. There's no way around that. They've

Three times Sisters erased one-goal deficits on Saturday, and the Outlaws defeated McLoughlin 5-4 in penalty kicks to advance to the Class 4A boys soccer semifinals with a 4-3 win in MiltonFreewater. The quarterfinal triumph came four days after Sisters eked out a 2-1 first-round victory over visiting North Marion thanks to a 5-4 decision in

penalty kicks. PLAYER OFTHE WEEK With17 kills and15 digs (both match highs), senior outside hitter Hannah Troutman guided Crook County to a 25-15, 25-17, 25-12 win in the Class 4A

volleyball state championship final Saturday night at Lane Community College in Eugene. Her efforts helped the Cowgirls secure their eighth straight state

championship. STAT OF THEWEEK One. On Saturday, for the first time in the history of the Oregon High School Water Polo boys state

championship, a teamfrom Central Oregon not only reached the title game —actually, both Mountain View and Summit accomplished the feat — but one took home the first-place trophy. With Quinn

Corrigan logging four goals in the secondhalf, the Cougars broke a 5-5 halftime tie en route to their first-ever state title, defeating the crosstown rival

Storm15-6 in the 5Astate championship final in Corvallis.

other's weaknesses." As much as the opposing coaches contend that today's contest is simply a semifinal matchup, there is no way around it — this is Bend versus Summit. Crook notes that as a team gets deeper into the playoffs, games become more difficult — no matter the opponent. "The teams get better and there's more at stake as you go on," Crook says. "It's expected that it's going to be a little more physical and more intense. But I think it's always intense with Bend-Summit." Plummer expects the play to be aggressive and emotional. It will differ from the two previous Summit-Bend meetings — when the Storm won 3-0 at home before playing the Bears to a 2-2 draw at 15th Street Field a month later. Simply put, this semifibeen playing (Bend's) girls since they were little.... nal contest will be a battle. They know that it will be tough. It's always a hardAnd despite the strong friendship that many of er game than it might have been if the other team these rivals share, as soon as the whistle blows to wasn't local." start this afternoon's contest, that relationship goes "I don't think it's going to be much different than out the window. " Obviously, the Bend High-Summit rivalry i s the way it was played (Saturday)," Groshong says, referring to the Bears' 2-1 home quarterfinal win pretty strong — it a lways has been," Plummer over Willamette of Eugene. "It's continuing on to says. "But especially for a game like this, you can't do what we learned and do together what we've really let that get in the way of how you play or learned. Obviously, we know how each other plays. anything." So it's going to make it that much more of a battle. — Reporter: 541-383-0307, We know each other's strengths. We know each gfucas@bendbulfetin.com.

dle infielders Ian Kinsler and Elvis Andrus to clear a starting spot for touted 20-year-oldprospect Jurickson Profar. Continued from C1 If any of these players signs with a After missing the playoffs for just the new team, his former club would receive second time in 19 years, the Yankees figan extra amateur draft pick at the end ure to be a central figure in the market. of the first round next June. All 22 play- Cano, an All-Star second baseman, has ers given qualifying offers have said no been seekinga 10-year deal in excess of during two offseasons under the new $300 million. Re-signing Cano is a top system. priority, but at some point the Yankees "When we made the qualifying offers, would have to move on. "Those type of players dictate the we did notexpect anyone to accept. We would have been happy if any of them dance steps," Cashman said. "So we'll do did,"Yankees general manager Brian the dance as long as we can but, yeah, at Cashman said. some point you can't do that forever. But Cashman was an early arrival at the we're in the very front end of this thing, sessions; some GMs were due to check so the music hasn't even started yet." in on Monday night. In addition to early W hile New York w ants to get it s talks with agents and trade feelers, GMs payroll under next year's $189 million will hold rules discussions on topics threshold for the luxury tax, the Yankees such as whether base runners should be may not be able to unless Alex Rodriallowed to bowl over catchers. guez servesa major part ofhis 211-game Owners then arrive Thursday morn- suspension for violations of baseball's ing for their fall meeting, where expand- drug agreement andlabor contract.The ed instant replay is on the agenda. players' union filed a grievance to overA baseball official familiar with the turn the penalty, and arbitrator Fredric deliberations, speaking to The Associat- Horowitz is expected to rule during the ed Press on condition of anonymity, said offseason. management probably would approve New York would be happy to save the additional video review by umpires much of Rodriguez's $25 million salary in phases. The go-ahead to spend the if he misses a lengthy part of the season, funds probably will occur Thursday. Ap- but the Yankees would need to find a proval of the rules likely would be put off third baseman. until the January owners' meeting. "I have question marks clearly with The person spoke on condition of the controversy at third," Cashman said. anonymity because no statements were "I have a question mark at short with Derek Jeter coming back from his ankle, authorized. For expanded replay to start next sea- a free agent in Cano. So ultimately, I son, agreements with the World Umpires need to look and be open-minded to imAssociation and Major League Baseball proving aspects when I can." Players Association would have to be With more cash available because of reached. the increase in national broadcast con"Both parties are working diligently tracts, more team could be bidders. to iron out every possible scenario that After cutting payroll by about 33 could occur with a replay," said Joe West, percent over two years, the Mets may WUA president. be ready to spend. And they could be These meetingsusually are the spark interested in some of the players who for trades and signings later in the off- turned down qualifying offers, because season.The pace figures to increase dur- they would not forfeit their first-round ing the winter meetings, to be held Dec. draft pick — the top 10 selections in the 9-22 in nearby Lake Buena Vista. opening round are protected, and those With many clubs seeking top starting clubs would lose their second-round pitching, Tampa Bay is expected at some slot. "The fact that we only have to give up point to trade 2012 American League Cy Young Award winner David Price, who a second-round pick may give us a little is eligible for free agency after next sea- bit of an edge," Alderson said. "We'll son. Detroit' s Max Scherzer,favored to see." win a Cy Young Award on Wednesday, He even joked about his newfound fialso can be a free agent in 12 months, nancial flexibility. "I was upstairs stacking our money," and the Tigers may try to gauge what he would bring in return. he said. "Don't get excited. They were all fives. Texas would consider offers for mid-

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

Border

then it swirls into a game of hesitation for us," Stone said. The Canadians have em-

and again at an e x hibition resemblance to a N a t ional last month in Burlington, Vt., H ockey L e ague f i g ht , i n Continued from C1 after the U.S. forward Mowhich team "enforcers"drop Smaller players retain a ployed a calculated physical- nique L amoureux c o l lided their gloves and square off. chance to excel. But as play- ity to temper the U.S. speed, with Canadian goalie Shan- For one thing, women wear full-face shields or cages on ers have grown bigger, faster quickness and pressure. Jay- non Szabados in the crease. na Hefford, a Canadian fort heir h elmets. T h ere w a s a nd stronger, more fit a n d L amoureux said she d i d competitive, a hybrid game ward seeking to play in her not see Szabados until it was some grappling and punchhas evolved t ha t i n c reas- fifth Olympics, said: "They too late to avoid her. ing, but the brawl quickly disingly embraces muscular have a lot of skilled players. "When I saw her fall in the sipated. Both sides chalked it assertiveness. We certainly don't want to let corner of my eye, I kind of up to necessary protection of Players a r e c o n t i nually them do whatever they want expected what came after," their teammates. "I'm sure if we were all on pushing the limits of permis- with the puck." Lamoureux said. sible contact. Canada plays on the fringe Birchard charged Lamou- the same t eam," B i rchard "We send a message to the of acceptability, realizing that reux and threw her to the ice. said, "we would a l l be "She took a head shot to the friends." world to prove that, yeah, we the referees will not whistle can hit," U.S. forward Lynd- every transgression, hesitant goalie," Birchard said. "It was Hayley W i c kenheiser, a sey Fry said. "We're not going to unduly impede the flow pretty unnecessary. I figured longtime Canadian star, said to go out there and open-ice of the game, Stone said. Afit was enough and tried to at the time, "It was kind of handle it. Women's hockey is fun to see, and it brought a lot h it someone; that's not a l ter last week's defeat, which lowed. But we can throw our was tense but not fistic, Stone definitely about speed, puck of intensity to another dogbodies around. We can get called Canada's physical style handling, scoring nice goals, fight with these guys." really gritty in th e corners. "over the edge" and "out of but, I mean, if there's a cheap Tessa Bonhomme, a CanaWhen somebody throws me the scope of the rules, in my shot to a player or a goalie dian defender, told a Canainto the boards a little bit, it's opinion." and it' s c o ntinuous every dian television i nterviewer not cheap play. It's hockey." T he Americans ar e n o t time we play them, how else about an old saying that "the Refereeing, though, has exactly sh y a n d re t i r i ng, do you handle it?" best team-bonding is a bar remained inconsistent. The said Birchard, a C a nadian L amoureux's t w i n , J o c - fight. U n fortunately, that's boundaries of allowable hit- defender. elyne, intervened, and then what happened." "Each game we play them, others on the ice paired off. ting seem to vary from game Fortunately, as the Olym"The fists are starting to to game. And unlike other they do something dirty," she pics approach, there is widefly," said a webcast announc- spread agreement that womlevels of hockey, the interna- said. tional women's game is poThe teams scuffled before er."We've got bedlam here." en should cultivate the best In truth, t hi s b or e l i t t le of what makes their game liced byonly one referee and the 2010 Vancouver Olympics two linesmen instead of two referees and two linesmen. "We have it at every other level but w o men's interna0~~~ Oregan Hewtpeper tional hockey," said K atey Publishera Assaelath ii Stone of Harvard, who coach"I es the U.S. Olympic team. don't understand that." A second referee is being considered for the 2018 Olympics, Stone said. One concern of international hockey officials is that the pool of available referees is too shallow. "I don't know," Stone said. "There's a lot at stake and there's a lot that gets missed. "That's human error," she said. "It's everywhere. It's not

going to be fair. The key for us is, we've got to keep making our success happen." In rehearsal for Sochi, the U.S. and Canada will p l ay seven times, and then at least once at the Olympics. So far, Canada, the reigning Olympic champion, has a 3-0 edge in these warm-ups, including a 4-2 victory last week here at the Four Nations Cup. "I think, to some degree, we give them more respect than we would like, at times, and

Find It All

Online bendbulletin.com

Clas's'ifteds

singular and limit the worst aspectsof the men's game. "Women's hockey has got such skill and speed and finesse," Stone said. "I would never want to see that disap-

pear. As far as fighting goes, it's totally unnecessary."

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INFINITY WATCHREPAIP 503-887-4241 6f405 s. Hwy. 97, Bend QR 97702 Office; 541L728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner S tem & Crown s M o v e m e n t s

A Free Public Service

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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

+

15,783.10

3,91 9.79

Toda+

Milk woes Dean Foods reports its thirdquarter results today. The nation's largest processor and distributor of milk has been struggling because of a slump in milk sales. The trend, along with the loss of a major customer earlier this year, has taken a toll on the company's bottom line. To cope, Dean has slashed costs, including closing as many as 15 percent of its plants.

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t

1,720 '

1 0 DA Y S

+

Close: 15,783.10

I

Change : 21.32 (0.1%)

10 DAYS

15,600 15,200 14,800

1,600 M' " ' J ' ' ' ' " J

1 550

StocksRecap Vol. (in mil.) 2,493 1,545 Pvs. Volume 3,749 1,921 Advanced 1589 1240 Declined 1444 1281 New Highs 1 31 118 New Lows 35 27

, '13

est. I

3Q ' 1 3

A

S

0

DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

Price-earnings ratio: 2 0 2

N

'

Dividend: none

M

HIGH LOW CLOSE 15791.45 15737.22 15783.10 7061.05 7010.03 7049.62 504.63 499.30 502.04 10049.39 10008.94 10042.94 3925.34 3904.72 3919.79 1773.44 1767.85 1771.89 1292.00 1284.52 1291.37 18831.96 18770.57 18817.49 1102.86 1096.33 1101.50

J

J

CHG. +21.32 +32.28 -0.42 +10.80 +0.56 +1.28 +5.51 +18.86 +1.53

A

0

N

%CHG. WK Mo OTR YTD +0.14% +0.46%

-0.08% +0.11% +0.01% +0.07% +0.43% +0.10% +0.14%

L

L +20.44% +32.84% L +10.80% +18.94% L +29.82% L +24.24% L +26.55% +25.49% +29.69%

NAME

Alaska Air Group ALK 3956 — 0 7375 73 3 6 + 62 +0 9 L L Avista Corp A VA 22.78 ~ 29.26 2 7. 7 5 -.09 -0.3 V L Bank of America BAC 8.92 ~ 15.03 14.4 0 +.0 8 +0 .6 L L BarrettBusiness B BSI 28.74 ~ 90.70 83.4 7 +1 . 17 +1.4 L L Interest rate effect? Boeing Co BA 70.29 —0 134 .58 132.53 -.96 -0.7 w L D.R. Horton has benefited this CascadeBancorp CA C B4 .65 ~ 7.18 5.17 -.07 -1.3 V V year from rising home prices and Columbia Bnkg CDLB 16.18 — 0 26.87 26 .54 -.18 -0.7 w L growing demand for homes. Columbia Sporlswear COLM47.72 ~ 69.97 67. 0 2 +. 0 3 ... ~ L Analysts anticipate that the trend CostcoWholesale COST 93.51 — 0 12 4 .74123.02 +.24 +0.2 L continued during the homebuilder's Craft BrewAlliance BR EW 5 .62 ~ 18.70 1 5.2 2 -.72 -4.5 L fiscal fourth quarter, despite an FLIR Systems FLIR 18.58 ~ 3 3.82 2 9.2 7 +.21 +0.7 L w uptick in mortgage interest rates Hewlett Packard HPQ 11,35 — 0 27,78 26 .35 +.41 +1.6 L L thatled some would-be homebuy- Home Federal Bncp ID HOME 10.33 ~ 16.03 1 5. 2 3 -.08 -0.5 w L ers to put off home purchases. Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ 25.98 2 4. 1 7 +.08 +0.3 L L Mortgage rates have fallen in Keycorp KEY 7 . 8 1 — 0 13.02 12 .96 -.06 -0.5 w L Kroger Co K R 2 4 .19 ~ 43.85 4 1.5 3 -.43 -1.0 w v recent weeks, so investors will Lattice Semi LSCC 3 .62 ~ 5.71 5.46 -.05 -0.9 w L want to hear today whether that's LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 22.55 15.9 6 +. 1 1 + 0 .7 L V helped generate more sales for MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — 0 30.79 30 .37 + . 2 1 +0.7 L L Horton. Mentor Graphics MENT 13.21 ~ 23.7 7 21. 8 3 +. 2 2 +1.0 L V Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 — 0 38.22 37.59 -.19 -0.5 w L DHI $16.06 $30 Nike Inc 8 NKE 44 83 — 0 7766 77.16 +.04 +0.1 L L $20.97 Nordstrom Inc JWN 50.94 ~ 63.34 61.84 +.82 t1 . 3 L 25 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39 96 ~ 46 55 42.56 10 -0.2 V L PaccarInc PCAR 41.17 ~ 60.00 57.00 +.16 +0.3 L L 20 Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 ~ 2.36 2.05 -.01 -0.5 V L ,'13 Plum Creek PCL 40.60 tt— 5 4.6 2 44.81 + .19 +0 .4 w 15 Prec Castparts PCP 1 71.00 ~ 2 70.0 0 248.15 -2.96 -1.2 V L Operating Safeway Inc SWY 16.00 ~ 36.90 32.89 -.13 -0.4 w w I I I ' I EPS Schnitzer Steel SCHN 23.07 ~ 32.99 31.25 -.17 -0.5 V L 4 Q '12 4Q ' 1 3 Sherwin Wmc SHW 143.60 ~ 1 95.3 2 184.37 -1.14 -0.6 w L Price-earnings ratio: 1 5 StancorpFncl SFG 32,14 — 0 62,71 62.35 +.47 +0.8 based on trailing 12 month results StarbucksCp SBUX 47.85 — 0 82.50 80.99 -.21 -0.3 w L TQNT 431 ~ 898 7.33 -. 08 -1.1 V V Dividend: $0.15 Div yield: 0.6% Triquint Semi UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 — 0 17.48 17.32 Source: Factset US Bancorp USB 30,96 — 0 38,25 37.94 -.14 -0.4 V L WashingtonFedl WAFD 15.64 — 0 23.48 22.83 -.03 -0.1 w L Wells Fargo &Co WFC 31.25 44.79 42.75 +.04 +0.1 L L Woyerhaouser WY 2 4 .75 33.24 29.11 -.19 -0.6 w w Spotlight on Potbelly

Sandwich shop operator Potbelly enjoyed an explosive market debut last month. Wall Street will get to see the company's first earnings report as a publicly traded company today. Potbelly's IPO lured in many investors who see the restaurant chain as a proven concept with a long runway for growth. Investors will want to see whether sales at established stores grew during the quarter.

L +70 2 +77 2 379 12 0 80 L +15.1 +2 0 .9 3 8 3 1 7 1. 2 2 L +24.0 +52 .8 65104 19 0 . 0 4 L +119 . 1 + 1 61.6 4 8 34 0.7 2 f L +75.9 +9 0 .8 2 9 36 2 3 1. 9 4 V -17.4 +10.3 2 5 L +47. 9 +6 0 . 1 141 22 0.44f L + 25 . 6 +2 3 .6 28 24 1.00f L +24. 6 t 38 . 2 1 2 48 2 7 1. 2 4 L +1 3 4.9 +148.7 5 0 cc w +31. 2 +5 3 .4 1 026 19 0 . 3 6 L +84.9 +91 .7 12101 dd 0 . 5 8 L +22. 5 + 49 .0 22 90 0. 2 43 L +17.2 +20 .0 18955 13 0 . 9 0 L + 53. 9 +6 0 .4 7 6 72 1 4 0. 2 2 L +59. 6 +7 3 .4 4 2 45 1 4 0 . 66f L +36 . 8 + 3 9.5 4 6 9 7 8 V -17.4 + 0 . 3 2 4 63 1 0 L +43.0 +51 .3 39 7 4 6 0. 6 9 W + 28. 3 +4 2 .4 2 3 8 2 3 0. 1 8 L +40.7 +3 4 .3 26477 14 1 .12f L + 49.5 +69 . 7 1 7 38 2 6 0. 8 4 L + 15 6 t.1 2 3 1 6 56 1 6 1. 2 0 L -3.7 + 3 . 6 92 20 1 . 84f L +26.1 +35 .2 1 0 54 1 9 0 .803 L +43.4 +6 6 .1 7 dd w +1 . 0 +8 . 1 1 153 2 8 1 . 76 L +31 0 +4 76 469 2 3 0 1 2 L +81 . 8 +105.8 4548 18 0 . 8 0 L +3.0 +12 . 6 24 9 d d 0.7 5 L + 19 9 +3 20 463 2 5 2 0 0 +70.0 +86.3 2 0 2 1 4 0 .93f L +51 . 0 + 6 1.32474 36 1. 04f V +51. 8 +6 2 .1 1 5 46 d d +46.9 +54.0 8 5 1 1 8 0 .603 L +18. 8 +2 1 .0 5 855 1 3 0. 9 2 L + 35. 3 +4 2 .9 3 2 0 1 6 0. 4 0f L +25. 1 +3 5 .6 11565 11 1 . 2 0 L +4.6 +1 3 . 8 2 947 2 6 0 . 8 8

R A" s

Transocean strikes deal with Icahn $ ptll

support a dividend of $3 per share and reduce the size of its board. It is also looking to boost margins by $800 million through cost-cutting efforts and other measures. Icahn, a minority shareholder, had previously pushed for a $4 per share dividend but Transocean's sharehold-

EURO 1.3408

' 54

StoryStocks Stockindexes inched higher Monday, enough to send the Dow Jones industrial average to a record high for the second straight trading session. The S&P 500 index also rose slightly, and it sits just below its record high set on Oct. 29. Modest gains for health care and energy stocks helped offset drops for telecommunications providers and companies that sell staples to consumers. It was a light day for economic and corporate earnings reports, giving investors little inclination to either buy or sell. Later this week, investors will get quarterly earnings updates from technology bellwether Cisco Systems and WalMart Stores, the world's largest retailer. KORS Best Buy BBY Close:$81.10L1.70 or 2.1% Close:$44.33L1.92 or 4.5% The high-end women's apparel and UBS upgraded shares and Jefferies accessories maker joins the S&P hiked its price target after the elec500 index after trading Tuesday, retronics store shifted to compete with online rivals. placing NYSE Euronext. $90 $50 80

40

70

A

S 0 52-week range

N

ers rejected it. Icahn, known for shaking up companies in which he invests, had also wanted several board changes. The company agreed to reduce its board to 11 directors from 14 and said it will also pursue converting the company to a master limited partnership. It anticipates an initial public offering of a master limited partnership being completed around the middle of next year. The offering needs the approval of Transocean's board.

A

S 0 52-week range

$46.66

$81.60

Vold6.4m (1.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$16.2 b

PE: 3 3.1 Vol3 6.9m (1.2x avg.) Yield: .. Mkt. Cap:$15.14 b

RIG Close:$55.37%1.92 or 3.6% The oil driller ended a protracted proxy fight with Carl Icahn, agreeing to a $3 per-share dividend and a smaller board. $60

$11.20

$44.34

52-WEEK RANGE

AP

A small-cap specialist on the management team left in Marketsummary September but Morningstar says Most Active departures are less of a concern NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG under American funds' multimanFacebook 792435 46.20 -1.33 ager system. BkofAm iShEMkts S&P500ETF ViroPhrm MicronT SiriusXM FordM Microsoft Penney

651035 573553 542598 465668 368213 303165 293024 264767 264096

14.40 + . 08 40.95 -.21 American FundsCaplncBuA m CAIBX 177.32 + . 03 49.42 +10.04 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 1 8.27 t . f 7 3.71 + . 06 cC o C3 16.89 + . 04 37.59 —.19 co o8.56 + . 33

Gainers NAME VisnChina NwstBio wt USEC rs

L AST

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co

C H G %C H G

9 .10 +3. 4 5 3 .46 +1. 1 1 7 .22 +1. 9 4 Gogo n 2 4.15 +5. 4 0 NwstBio n 4 .43 +.93 ViroPhrm 4 9.42 + 1 0.04 ChiNBorun 2 .15 +.37 ChiMobGm 1 9.84 +3 . 4 1 NQ Mobile 1 3.49 +2. 1 6 RocketF n 4 5.04 +7 . 1 8

+61 . 1 +47 . 2 «C +36 . 7 cc +28 . 8 «C +26 . 6 CO +2 5 .5 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +20 . 8 +20 . 7 O a Fund target represents weighted +19 . 1 average of stock holdings +1 9 . 0 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings

Losers NAME Galcctin un RadNet

Cirrus WashFd wt

LAST 21.68 2.03 19.24 6.11 3.83

cc

CHG %CHG -4.19 -16.2 —.32 -13.6 -3.01 -13.5 -.84 -12.1 -.47 -10.9

CATEGORY World Allocation MORNINGSTAR

RATING™ *** y ryr ASSETS $65,601 million

EXP RATIO 0.63% MANAGER Joyce Gordon ChinaHGS SINCE 1999-12-31 RETURNS3-MD +3.6 Foreign Markets YTD +12.8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +16.0 Paris + 29.70 + . 7 0 4,290.14 3-YR ANNL +9.3 London 6,728.37 + 19.95 + . 30 5-YR-ANNL +12.1 Frankfurt + 29.58 + . 3 3 9,107.86 Hong Kong 23,069.85 t 325.46 t 1 . 4 3 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico -.44 Philip Morris International, Inc. 39,686.83 -177.33 Milan 19,107.85 + 146.14 + . 7 7 Altria Group Inc. Tokyo 14,269.84 +183.04 +1.30 Stockholm 1,286.54 + 4.68 + . 3 7 Novartis AG Sydney -13.60 -.25 Vodafone Group PLC 5,380.80 Zurich 8,280.20 + 39.28 + . 48 National Grid PLC

Annual dividend:$2.24 Div. yield: 4.0%

Pric e -earnings ratio

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 23.70 - . 0 1+17.7 +21.1 +12.6+14.1 A A A CaplncBuA m 57.96 -.03 +12.8 +16.0 +9.3+12.1 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 43.79 +.05 +19.9 +26.4 +10.1+14.6 C C D EurPacGrA m 47.09 +.05 +14.2 +21.7 +6.0 +13.8 D C 8 FnlnvA m 50. 5 8 - . 01+25.0 +30.7 +14.2 +17.1 C C 8 GrthAmA m 43.39 +.05 +26.3 +32.9 +14.3+16.9 8 C C IncAmerA m 20.31 -.02 +15.4 +18.5 +11.5+14.2 8 A A InvCoAmA m 37.56 +.02 +26.0 +30.6 +13.9+15.4 C C D NewPerspA m 37.74 +.08 +20.7 +27.8 +11.5+16.9 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m38.83 -.05+26.3 +30.2 +16.4+15.9 C A C Dodge 8 Cox Income 13.56 . . . 0.0 +0 . 2 + 4.0 +8.1 A A A IntlStk 41.92 +.07 +21.0 +31.9 +8.0 +16.6 A A A Stock 160.76 +.17 + 33.4 +40.2 +17.7 +18.9 A A A Fidelity Contra 97.69 +.06 + 27.1 +32.5 +14.7+17.6 C 8 C GrowCo 121. 46 +.30+30.3 +36.4 +17.6+21.4 A A A LowPriStk d 48.77 +.05+29.6 +36.7 +16.9+22.4 8 A A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 62 .92 +.04+26.5 +31.2 +15.9+17.1 C 8 8 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 42 +.01 +12.2 +15.8 +9.6+14.5 A A A IncomeA m 2. 3 9 ... + 12.3 +16.0 +10.0+15.0 A A A FrankTemp-Templeton GIBondAdv 12.99 -.07+0.6 +3.5 +4.7+10.0 A A A Oakmark Intl I 26.43 +.25 t 26.3 +42.1 t13.2 t21.0 A A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 21. 03 - .01+21.8 +26.7 +13.3+13.7 E D E RisDivB m 19. 02 - .01+ 20.8 +25.5 +12.3+12.7 E D E RisDivC m 18 . 93 . . . + 21.0 +25.8 +12.5+12.9 E D E SmMidValA m42.79 +.10 +32.0 +39.0 +12.3+19.5 8 E D SmMidValB m35.87 +.08 + 31.1 +37.8 +11.3+18.5 8 E D PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 84 -.01 -1.8 -1.3 +3.2 +7.2 C C 8 T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.78 +.01 +25.6 +30.4 +15.5 +16.7 C 8 8 GrowStk 49.12 +.05 +30.0 +36.0 +16.2 +21.0 A A A HealthSci 58.12 +.33 +41.0 +47.5 +29.7 +26.6 8 A A Vanguard 500Adml 163.70 +.12 +26.5 +31.2 +15.9+17.1 C 8 8 500lnv 163.68 +.11 +26.3 +31.0 + 15.7+17.0 C 8 8 CapDp 45.59 +.15 +35.6 +44.0 +16.4+20.3 A A A Eqlnc 29.77 +.02 t25.7 +29.3 + 18.0+16.5 D A 8 StratgcEq 28.79 +.12 t34.2 +42.1 + 19.4+21.8 A A 8 TgtRe2020 26.93 +.01 +13.0 +16.6 + 93+130 8 A 8 Tgtet2025 15.61 . . . +14.9 +19.0 + 10.0+13.8 8 8 8 TotBdAdml 1 0 63 . . . -1.9 -2.2 + 2.7 +5.5 D D D Totlntl 16.43 -.02 +11.9 +20.4 + 47+128 D E C TotStlAdm 44.77 +.05 t27.4 +32.7 + 16.1+18.1 8 A A TotStldx 44.75 +.05 +27.2 +32.5 + 16.0+18.0 8 A A USGro 26.97 +.06 +26.9 +32.8 + 15.6+17.5 8 8 C Welltn 38.65 +.01 +16.4 +19.1 t 11.5 t14.1 8 A 8 FAMILY

PCT 3.54 3.03 2.8 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, cr redemption 2.28 fee. I - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales cr 2.15 redemption fea Source: Mcrningstar.

P E: .. . Yiel d : 1. 5%

ViroPharma

VPHM Close:$49.42 %1 0.04 or 25.5% Shire PLC is spending $4.2 billion to acquire the biopharmaceutical as it broadens its own rare disease treatment portfolio.

$50 30

A

S 0 52-week range

$43.65~

N $59.50

A

S 0 52-week range

N $49.49 P E: . . . Yield:...

$22.12

Vol.:12.5m (2.3x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:70.1m (33.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$20.7 b Yield : 4 . 0% Mkt. Cap:$3.26 b

ImmunoGen

IMG N Zalicus ZLCS Close:$15.05L1.41 or 10.3% Close:$1.30 V-3.39 or -72.3% Shares of biotech company jumped The biopharmaceutical company after the Swiss drugmaker Novartis ended its development program for a licensed another of its potential drug that was intended to treat

chronic pain. $10

dI'U9S.

$20 15

A

S 0 52-week range

N

$10.85~

$20.25

Vol.:3.5m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.29 b

PE: .. Yield: ..

CDVV

CDW Close:$21.72 V-1.23 or -5.4% The information technology provider, which went public in June, an-

nouncedthecommencement ofan offering of 15 million shares. $26 24

S 0 52-week range

N

$v15 ~

$8.28

Volx17.3m (14.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$33.92 m

P E: . . . Yield: ...

J.C. Penney

JCP Close:$8.56 %0.33 or 4.0% The retailer was one of the top performers in the S&P 500, sustaining its momentum after reporting improving sales trends. $15 ~ 10

22

A

A

S 0 52-week range

N

A

$24.51

$6.24 ~

S 0 52-week range

N $23.10

Vol.:172.3k(0.8x avg.) PE: 26.5 Vol.:26.6m (0.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.73 b Yiel d : 0. 2 % Mkt. Cap:$2.61 b

P E: . . . Yield:... AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

Bond trading was closed Monday in observance of the Veterans Day holiday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note is at 2.75 percent.

L

W

L

+0. 0 1 L

W

~

2-year T-note . 31 .29 +0 . 02 L 5-year T-note 1 . 4 1 1 .31 + 0.10 L 10-year T-note 2.75 2.60 + 0.15 L 30-year T-bond 3.85 3.71 +0.14 L

W W L L

BONDS

. 05 .05 . 0 8 .08 .10 .09

...

Commodities

FUELS

The price of crude oil rose to settle above $95 per barrel for the first time this month. Natural gas rose for a fifth straight day, its longest winning streak since March.

METALS

Exchange The dollar was nearly flat against other major currencies. It inched higher against the British pound

and Japanese yen, but it

slipped modestly against the euro.

h5N4 QG

.26 .64 1.61 2.74

L L L W L L W L W L L L W

L 2.41 W 4.1 4 L 1.67 W 6.4 8 L 3 4. 2 L .92 L 2 6.4

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 95.14 94.60 + 0.57 + 3 . 6 Ethanol (gal) 1.72 1.68 +0.72 -21.6 Heating Dil (gal) 2.89 2.87 +0.68 -5.1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.57 3.56 + 0.42 + 6 . 7 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.60 2.55 +1.69 -7.7

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE

CLOSE PVS. 1281.00 1284.50 21.27 21.31 1432.40 1442.90 3.26 3.25 754.05 757.35

%CH. %YTD -0.27 -23.5 -0.16 -29.5 -0.73 -6.9 +0.12 -10.6 - 0.44 + 7 . 3

CLOSE 1.33 1.03 4.35

PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.32 + 0.26 + 2 . 2 1.04 -0.77 -28.2 4.27 +1.87 -37.7 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.77 0.77 + 0.12 + 2 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 373.00 372.90 +0.03 -0.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.34 1.26 +1.86 +15.3 Soybeans (bu) 13.08 13.06 +0.15 -7.8 Wheat(bu) 6.46 6.50 -0.54 -16.9

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

Foreign

L L L

.09 .14 .17

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.60 3.50 +0.10 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.11 5.06 +0.05 Monday's close:$55.37 $44~ ~ ~ ~ 60 (trailing 12 months):12 Barclays USAggregate 2.38 2.29 +0.09 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.79 5.64 +0.15 5-YR*: -4% Total return: 1 - Y R:22% 3-Y R*: -5% 10-YR*: 11% Marke t value:$20.0 billion RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.57 4.61 -0.04 *Annualized AP Total returns through Nov. 11 Source: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.63 1.57 +0.06 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .27 3.17 +0.10 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 FundFocus SelectedMutualFunds

Transocean (RIG)

N

40

50

$18.26~ Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid In last12 months. I - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement. I - Sum ct dividends paid after stock split, nc regular rate. I - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dIvIdetxt was omitted cr deferred k - Declared or paId thIs year, acumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - ImtIal dividend, annual rate nct known, yIeld nct shown. I - Declared cr paid In precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid In stock apprcxImate cash value cn ex-dIstrIIIutIcn date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a clcsed-end fund - no PiE ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 9a dd - Loss In last I2 months

After a months-long proxy fight, Transocean has reached an agreement with billionaire investor Carl Icahn. The oil driller said Monday that it will

+

Transocean

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

Source: FactSet

CRUDEOIL $95.14

Michael Kors

NorthwestStocks

based on trailing 12 month results

I)4

$21.27

1,650

15

I

.t

SILVER

-350

Dow jones industrials

]

I" - '"

GOLD ~ $128100 ~

16,000

NYSE NASD

3 Q '12

Change: 1.28 (0.1%)

15

1,700

$15.25

Operating EPS

15,660

1,750

20

10

S&P 500 . .. C lose: 1,771.89

1,800

$19.71

DF

10 YR T NOTE ~ 2.75% ~

1,771.89

1,soo

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

$25

+

SBIP500

NAsDAO ~

+21.32

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5988 —.0014 —.09% 1.5903 C anadian Dollar 1.0 4 73 —.0016 —.15% 1.0004 USD per Euro 1.3408 +.0053 +.40% 1 . 2713 Japanese Yen 9 9.23 + . 0 8 + . 08 % 79 . 4 5 Mexican Peso 13.2 140 + .0333 +.25% 13.1901 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5307 —.0071 —.20% 3.9104 Norwegian Krone 6. 1 448 + .0022 +.04% 5.7383 SouthAfrican Rand 10.3864 +.0639 +.62% 8.7039 S wedish Krona 6.5 6 7 5 —.0326 —.50% 6.7392 Swiss Franc .9193 —.0032 —.35% .9487 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0688 + .0023 +.22% .9 6 24 Chinese Yuan 6.0933 +.0003 +.00% 6 .2411 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7528 +.0011 +.01% 7 .7513 Indian Rupee 63.325 +.760 +1.20% 54.685 Singapore Dollar 1.2487 +.0019 +.15% 1 .2240 South Korean Won 1072.95 +5.56 +.52% 1088.70 Taiwan Dollar 29.55 + .06 +.20% 29 . 02


THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/business

BRIEFING

U.S. and EU resume talks European andU.S. officials resumednegotiations Monday ona trans-Atlantic free trade agreement, despite angry protests in Europe over American electronic spying and threats to call off the talks.

The five-day discussion in Brussels had

already beenpostponed because of theU.S. government shutdown, and

some Europeanofficials urged that this week's

talks be suspended. But the potential pay-

off of a tradeagreement outweighed concerns.

EXECUTIVE FILE

zon

What:Sanitation Strategies LLC What it does: Sanitation consult-

isset on Sunday delivery

ing and equipment to medical, science and food processing companies Pictured:Sherman McDonald, founder and

president Where:550 N.W. Franklin Ave., Suite 478, Bend

By Barbara Ortutay

Employees:11in Oregon

The Associated Press

and four other states Phone:541-633-7341 Website:www. sanitationstrategies.

NEW YORK — Amazon is rolling out Sunday package delivery as part of a new deal with the U.S. Postal Service. Delivery started on Sunday to customers in the New York and Los Angeles metropolitan areas, but Amazon and the USPS plan to extend service to "a large portion of the U.S. population" next year, the company said. This includes the cities of Dallas, Houston, New Orleans and Phoenix. Sunday delivery will be available to all Amazon customersforno extra charge,but Amazon expects it will be particularly popular with members of its Prime service, which costs $79 a year and comes with free two-day shipping on many items on the site, as well as access to Amazon's TV and movie streaming service. "For Prime members, it's free. For non-Prime members, it's like any other delivery day of the week," said Dave Clark, vice president of worldwide operationsand customer service at Amazon. Financial terms of the arrangement werenot disclosed, but the deal is likely to give the ailing USPS a boost.

com/index.asp Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Between them, the U.S.

and the 28-nation European Union alreadyac-

OI'

count for almost half the

world's economic output. A tariff-busting pact would create the world's

largest free-trade area and, supporters say, could create millions of

jobs.

Virgin, Southwest to opposemerger Virgin America on Monday asked afederal court for permission to file a brief in theAmerican Airlines-US Airways

antitrust case, saying

eanin u

wife, Linda, andI had to do all of the

work ourselves. I was responsible for selling newcustomers, installing

dispensing equip-

By Rachael Reess The Bulletin

ment, customer training and month-

There's a science behind the cleaning of surfaces

ly servicing of the account ... Linda

and equipment in the food processing and healthrelated industries, and Sherman McDonald's business,

consumers. The carrier, which

Sanitation Strategies LLC, helps companies nationwide

caters to business travelers withits in-flight

learn the right formulas.

amenities, said it opposes the American-US Airways merger because it will reduce competi-

McDonald started the company in 2003 in Michigan, after working for 15 years in sanitation chemical sales. Recently, he relocated its corporate headquarters and administrative office to Bend in the Franklin Crossing building at Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Franklin Avenue. McDonald owns a second company, SanitationTools.com LLC, which manages threerelated e-commerce sites. McDonald said his clients, who range from pharmaceutical and food processing companies to government facilities and universities, usually need a solution fast because they are dealing with issues such as microbial contamination or compliance with government regulations. While those customers can buy cleaning products from a number of companies, he said, Sanitation Strategiesoffers a service pack-

simple fix for a fewlarge airports will leave most of the hub-hub routes

as monopoly markets and the connecting city

pairs, and all the passengers who travel in them without any remedy at all," the airline said in its

filing. Judge ColleenKollar-Kotelly quickly

granted Virgin America's request. Briefs for the antitrust trial must be

received by Friday.The trial is scheduled to begin Nov. 25. Last week, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said that the carriers were

• your business grownand changed overthe years? . Whenwe • started, my

that slot divestitures at a few airports will not help

tion for U.S. travelers. "Virgin America believes that it can show the Court that unless this mergeris blocked, a

. Howhas

age and verification that surfaces are clean, which sets it apart from the others. "What we do is supply the equipment, chemistry and consultative approach to make sure they are getting the necessary equipment cleaned correctly," he said. The company helps its customers identify areas of their facilities that need to be cleaned, how often, and the chemicals and equipment to use. Sanitation chemical products are used to clean and disinfect a wide variety of critical components used in hospitals, research labs and food processing plants, he said. The company also provides antimicrobial processing aids that reduce harmful foodborne bacteria, viruses and other germs commonly found on poultry, red meat, fruits and vegetables. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

took orders over the phone,managed the booksand gotorders shipped on time. Today,we are blessed tohave an excellent teamof professionals who work hard every day to deliver the

value proposition to our customers that has made us

a leader in our industry.

CHINA

• Wheredo . you hope

Menhelp reach online sales record

Sanitation Strate-

gies LLCwill be in the next five years?

. Our recent . entryintothe Pacific Northwest market is a continu-

ation of theexpansion from where we started from10

By ShanshanWang

years ago,whenwe

New York Times News Service

and Eric Pfanner

were in one state.

HANGZHOU, China — Unmarried men across China used to spend Nov. 11 lamenting their single status with a drink. Now that unofficial holiday has become the world's largest online shopping event. On Monday, China's biggest

Today, weare now operating in19 statesand plan on being in another10 to12 states in the next five years.

in"ongoing" settlement

online shopping company pro-

talks with the government and that giving up takeoff

and landing slots at afew airports was being discussed. Southwest Air-

Stores jump-start holiday season

lines andJetBlue Airways reportedly have both told

the governmenttheyare interested in purchasing slots at Washington's Reagan National Airport

and NewYork's LaGuardia Airport. Southwestsaid Friday

italso planstofilea"friend of the court" brief in the antitrust trial, saying it will

explainhowthe merger wil lessen competition unless there isa"significant dives-

By John Ewoldt (Minneapolis) Star Tribune

Retailers are wasting no time this holiday season show-

casinggreatdealslong before the Black Friday doorbusters. Walmart.com offered a 42-inch JVC TV for $300 on Nov. 1. Banana Republic and Pottery Barn discounted virtually their entire non-clearance inventory 15 to 40 percent in October. And last week Target

offered an unprecedented $200 credit on any used, functioning iPad with a new iPad purchase. The early bargains are partly a reflection of the uncertain economy, as well

as a compressed shopping season between this year's late Thanksgiving and Christmas. But they also show how retailers are working harder to get shoppers' attention in

an age of intensifying online competition. "Every year the promotions start earlier and get more sensational," said Sean Naughton, an analyst for Piper Jaffray in Minneapolis. Some are attributing the early specials to consumer sentiment sliding in October to its lowest since the end of last year, according to a University of Michigan survey.

cessed more than 85.75 billion in its online payments system — a record for a single day anywhere in the world, surpassing by 2'/2 times the total for American retailers last year on so-called Cyber Monday. The company, Alibaba, which owns Tmall and other e-commerce sites, first latched onto so-called Singles' Day, symbolized by the four lonely ls of 11/ll, five years ago. The company realized men could just as easily seek solace by buying electronic devices and other gear on its sites. Soon enough, just about everyone else did, too.

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • ProfessionalEnrichment Series, StressandTime Management:Create a time and task management system that works for you; make timefor health and well being, achieving longterm goals; registration required; $20 for Bend Chamber ofCommerce members; 7:30a.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. bendchamber.org. • SeriousSuccess, Motivational Series for Women:Spend an afternoon focused on communication, registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3760 or www. facebook. com/evenisl 1427038530849250/?ref dashboard filter=upcoming • What ShouldBeIu Your New HomeWarranty? Discussion of warranties contractors are required io offer to new homebuyers; registration required; $20, or free for Central Oregon Builders Association members; 8-10a.m.; COBA, 1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-1058 or www. coba.org. • Membership101Driving YourMembership. Connect with newmembers and reconnect with current members of theBend Chamber ofCommerce; registration required; free; 10 a m 777 NWWall St Suite 200; 541-382-3221, shelleyobendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org. • Clostngthe Deal:Youare in the Door,NowWhat? Learn to improve sales, build trust, credibility and authority; registration requested; $20 or freefor Central OregonBuilders Association members; 1-3 p.m.; COBA,1051 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-3891058, gretchenp@coba.org or www.coba.org. • Twitter forBusiness: Learn howsmall-tomediumsizedbusinesses use Twitter to market and advertise; registration required; $49; 1-4 p.m.; COCC,2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY • Economic Forecast Breakfast:Panel discussion of business, real estate andeconomic investment managers; registration required; 7 a.m. The RiverhouseConvention Center, 2850 N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111 or www. bendchamber.org. • HomeownerSeminar: Advantages of homeownership; market trends; steps to buy and sell; understanding costs; construction and remodeling; mortgage basics and more, registration required; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.;Central Oregon Association of Realtors, 2112N.E.Fourth St., Bend; 541-382-6027 or infoocoar.com. THURSDAY • HomeownerSeminar: Advantages of homeownership; market trends; stepsto buy and sell; understanding costs; construction and remodeling; mortgage basics andmore, registration required; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Association of Realtors, 2112 N.E.Fourth Si., Bend; 541-382-6027 or info©coar.com. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.corn/bizcal

titure of slots" atReagan and LaGuardia.

New BlackBerry boss'paydisclosed New BlackBerry chair-

man andinterim chief executive John Chenhas a

large paypackage. In addition to $1 a millionbasesalaryand a $2million performance bonus, theWaterloo,

Ontario, company will give him13 million BlackBerry

restrictedshares,reportedly worth $85 million that will vest over fiveyears.

TheformerSybaseCEO signed on last week, when

the smartphonemaker abandonedplansto sell itself. The details were disclosed ina Securitiesand

ExchangeCommission filing on the strategy shift. —Fromwire reports

DEEDS Deschutes County • Barton P. Butlerio George A. and Gail O. Lewis, Pheasant Run, Phase 2, Loi 20, $324,900 • Crystal A. Oenkinger to Susan J. and David K.Coiner, Ponderosa Cascade, Lot 5, Block 3, $270,000 • Bella Villa Homes Corporation to Frankand Nancy P. Mariino, Caldera Springs, Phase 3, Lot11, $540,500 • Choice OneBuilders LLCio Ronald I.and BonnieRuby,Renaissanceat Shevlin Park, Loi 55, $542,417.92 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to David R. and Tabitha L. Chamberlain, Bridges ai Shadow Glen, Phase1, Loi 64, $279,050 • Woodcraft Building lnc. io Eric M. and Laurie J. Kutter, NorthWest Crossing, Phase17, Lo1761, $457,500 •MarkG.Reineckeand MelissaP. Lande io Dennis M.andSusan J. Mullen, Three PinesP.U.O., Phases 1-4, Loi 4, $710,000

• Mt. Bachelor Center LLC to Choice One Builders LLC,ChaseVillage, Lots 2, 3, 9 and10, $180000 • Kathryn M. Young, trustee for the Kathryn J. PeeleTrust, to David A. Palmer, Oeschuies River Woods, Loi 72, Block ZZ, $445,000 • Beverly K. Sallee-0phoff, who acquired title as Beverly K. Sallee, io John O. Matrisciano, trustee for the John O. Matrisciano M.O. Inc. Money Purchase PlanandTrust, Hidden Glen, Phase 2, Loi11, $274,250 •ScottPelham andRobinA.Rose, alsoknown asRobin Pelham,to Jeffrey D. andKatherine J. Johnson, Village at Cold Springs, Lot 7, $210,000 • Curtis L. and RebeccaS. Gage to Robert B. and Nina J. Kehrer, trustees for the R/NKehrer Family Trust, Rockridge, Phase1, Loi 3, $189,900 •Alan J. and PamelaL. Fortier to John E. Armour andShelley A.

Ransom, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase19, Loi 47, Block 6, $481,700 • Margaret S. Gregory to Hector and Megan R.West, Old Oeschuies, Loi 2, $555,000 • Wesion lnvestment Co. LLC io Triple Knot Associates LLC,Golf Homes at Tetherow, Lots11, 12, 45 and 46, $300,000 • Vladimir and Liya Malyakin to David H. and Tory C.Schechter, Caldera Springs, Phase1, Lot182, $790,000 • Erin A. Boniragerio Monte K. and Marie V. Meade,Hayden Ranch Estates, Phases 2and 3, Lot 38, $175,000 • Cory A. Ryan to Brian L. and Karen M. Blonder, TamarackParkEast, Phase1, Lot 6, Block1, $162,000 • James E. Clabaughio Jeffrey A. and Mary A. Williamson, Osprey Pointe Condominiums Plat Amendment, Unii16 $620 000 • Russell R. and Sally L. Porter, trustees forthe Russell andSally

Porter Trust, to William P.and Judith A. Barnett, trustees for the Barneti Family Trust, and Andrew and Wendy Laakmann, trustees for the Laakmann Living Trust, Awbrey Butte Homesiies, Phase 29, Lot 27, $790,000 • William E. Thomas to Kevin C. Guerrero andShannon T.Abero, Gardenside P.U.D.,Phase1, Lot 33, $254,500 •Michael L.andLana B.Kowalski io Bard W. Saladin, trustee for the Bard and Sharon Saladin Family Trust, Ridge ai EagleCrest, 33, Loi 6, $150,000 • Gary Dimeo to Andrew E.and Jennifer L. Peterson, Township16, Range12, Section 28, $266,000 • Deborah J. Graham to Seth Ramsey, LavaRidges, Phase 5,Lot 160, $415,000 • Marion L. Cook, trustee for the Marion Cook Living Trust andElaine M. Ross Living Trust, io Karen A.

Kelley, Township18, Range14, Section 8, $320,000 • Kenneth E. andTerri L. Reedand George R.andMelissa O.Bunting to Kimberlee A. Mallery, RedHawk, Unit 6, Loi 25, $176,000 • Paul O. Diaz to Justin T. Hendrickson, Second Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Loi 23, Block 22, $315,000 • Vicki M. Myers io Matthew and Teresa Brunson, Summit Crest, Phase1, Lo158, $249,000 • Timberline Construction of Bend LLC to Mark G.Reineckeand Melissa P. Lande, Teiherow, Phase 2, Loi14, $769,000 • Cindy Wilsonio Kevin and Joy Wilson, Kings Forest Second Addition, Loi31, Block5, $243,000 • Levi W. Miller to Franklin S. Payne, Hobbs Court, Lot1, $273,000 • Long Term Bendlnvestors LLC io Lands Bend LLC,Crosswinds, Lots 8, 10, and 18-20, $350,000


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome

GARDEN FOOD

Fences for all s les

PALEO

HEART HEALTKY

By Marielle Gallagher The Bu(letin

A fence around a yard or along a property line can provide a first impression for what lies beyond. A white picket fence conveys a classic all-American look, a wrought-iron fence provides an antique and artistic quality and a corrugated metal fence has a contemporary effect. We took a look around Bend to find some unique and eyecatching fences. In Northeast Bend, a yellow picket fence appears conventional, until you pass by and see the side view ofthe fence,which is painted the colors of the rainbow. The traditional looking picket fence got a fun update when homeowners Kim Plummer and Doug Ward decided to paint the side of each picket a color of the rainbow and the tops of each post gold. "It seemed like a fun idea.... Not too serious. There's enough seriousness in the world," said Plummer. "We painted the house a Big Bird yellow, and then my husband and I had the idea that we could paint the tops of the fence and it wouldn't bother the neighbors. You would see it only when you were offset (from the front of the fence)," said Plummer. At The Lot, a food cart pod in Northwest Bend, a modern industrialstyle fence delineates the seating area. The owner and developer of The Lot, David Staley, said many people think the fence is reminiscent of a gabion wall-style fence. But Staley hadn't heard of a gabion wall before

GLUTENFREE

I I

I

VEGAN

iet iemmas? '

yl

II

to Thanksgiving choicesQLJ ~~

I I I g •

I+ c-.„ < Jf I)5' • t)j

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• Ellie Krieger's Garlic Mashed Potatoes

sketching up a design that included steel posts and beams and steel mesh panels filled with rounded rock. "My wife and I spent many hours doing the rock work. We hand-picked the right size rocks from the Shevlin rock pit," said Staley. Although the finished product looks simple, Staley laughs about how much work went into designing and building the fence. "A lot of people say it looks so easy to put together. ... But there's a lot of hidden design and thought that went into it," said Staley. See Fences/D4

• Slow-Roasted Sage Turkey Breast

• Gluten-Free

Turkey Gravy

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

• Braised Winter Squash • Portobellos Stuffed with Chickpeas and Chard

• Paleo Pumpkin Pie • Paleo Truffles

By Aiison Highberger • For The Bulletin

ot so long ago, the only questions home cooks had to ask their guests at Thanksgiving dinner were, "white or dark meat?" and "want w hippedcream or ice cream on your pie'?" Nowadays, dietary restrictions, food allergies and special diets can complicate holiday meals.

HOME

Do it: Winterize andsave

on your energy bi s

Vegans don't eat meat, dairy and other animal products. Gluten-free and Paleo diet folks don't eat grains, so traditional bread stuffing is out. Heart-healthy eaters avoid fats and salt, so there go the buttery mashed potatoes and gravy — or maybe not. To help us come up with Thanksgiving menu options that will

please a variety of people with special diets, we talked to Garrett Berdan, a registered dietician, nutrition and culinaryeducator,chef and food consultant who lives in Bend. A few easy substitutions and ingredient changes can result in holiday foods that everyone will enjoy. And a new side dish just might become a new tradition. See Diets /D2

ontestentr ea ine to a Do you makegreat cookies? The

• Bar

Those entering the competi-

Bulletin wants to know. The At Home section is hosting a cookie contest to determine the

• Traditional (This category will include cookiessuch assnicker-

tion must bring adozen cookies, covered, on adisposable plate to

doodle, peanut butter, oatmeal

The Bulletin for judging. Cookie

Editor's note: Check back everyotherweek for do-it-

erative based in Redmond

best cookies inCentral Oregon.

raisin and othercookies that people

(www.cec-co.com), for tips

yourself projects.

are familiar with.) • Nontraditional/wacky (This

Oregon Coast. Other winners will

For The Bulletin

recessed lighting, plumbing

It's the perfect time of year to spend a couple of hours on small, do-it-yourself winterizing projects to reduce your heating bill and increase the warmth and coziness of your home. We checked in with Vern Rice, energy services supervisor at Central Electric Coop-

and at doors and windows. "Air leaks account for 20 to 30 percent of the total heat loss in a structure. Sealing them up is worth doing, takes very little time and the material costs are not great. Do your sealing at the ceiling first," Rice said. See Winterize/D5

category is for cookieswith unusual ingredients or preparations.) • Youth (age16 andyounger.) To register, email thefollowing

submissions will beaccepted Thursday evening (until 7:30 p.m.) or Friday morning (between 8and 10a.m.).

By Alison Highberger

about DIY energy savings. He gave us some great ideas about how to seal up air leaks around

The grand prize winner will receive a two-night stay at the receive $25 in Downtown Dollars,

which canbeusedatbusinessesin downtown Bend. The winners will be determined

All of the winning recipes will be published, alongside photos of the

winning cookies, in the AtHome

information to athome©bend bulletin.com: Name, type of cookie

section Dec.3.

and contact information. Individu-

Johnson at 541-617-7860nr

competition must register by noon

als can enter up to three types of

njnhnsnn©bnndbulletin.cnm.

today. Cookies will bedivided into several categories:

cookies. Registration canalso be

bya panel of judges onFriday. Those interested inentering the

• Chocolate chip

mailed to: The Bulletin, Cookie Contest, P.O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708.

Questions? Contact Alandrn

H Want to see somecookies in action? Visit bnndbullntin.cnm/ cnokiecnntest

Pa' Qa Pa


D2

THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 20'I3

Fooo

Next week: Brussels sprouts

Diets

like miso paste, soy sauce, tomatoes — fresh, canned, sunContinued from D1 dried, ketchup — caramelized mushrooms, olives and sauerVegan kraut.These are some of the Vegans are like super veg- foods with that savory note. etarians. Their diet is plant- Look for recipes that include based, and they do not eat any one orsome of these ingrediproducts from animals. That ents," Berdan said. means no meat, fish, dairy A vegan recipe for Portobel(milk, cheese or yogurt), eggs los Stuffed with C hickpeas or honey. and Chard and a recipe for "That takes away the tradi- Braised Winter Squash, made tional entree, so you're looking with olive oil, not butter, are for another entree your vegan likely to please a lot of palates guest can enjoy and one the (see recipes), especially the others can try and enjoy too. vegans at the table. "What you end up losing is You can cook these recithat savory or umami flavor pes a day before and reheat that meat has, so look for other them in t h e m i c rowave if ingredients that aren't animal oven space is at a premium on products that have that taste, Thanksgiving. Be sureto steer clear of using meat broth in recipes if you have vegan guests. Gluten-R ee "Use vegetable broth. A lot lbrkey Gravy of omnivores forget that chickMakes about 2 cups. en and beef broth are made This recipe was adapted for glu- with chicken and beef. It's ten-free diets from a 5-star turkey easy to forget," Berdan said.

Andy Tultis/The Bulletin

Paleo Pumpkin Pie works as a dessert for any guests sticking to a Paleo, or "caveman," diet.

"The meat entree is not an issue with gluten-free, but the gravy is. To make gluten-free Rattray. I have been using sweet The gluten-free diet avoids gravy, thicken it with a slurry rice flour, sometimes called "sushi g luten, a p r otein f ound i n made with arrowroot flour or rice flour" for thickening gravies wheat, barley, rye and triticale corn starch mixed with water and soups with excellent results. (a cross between wheat and or broth, instead of all-purpose If you don't have sweet rice flour, rye), so baked goods, desserts, flour, and you're good to go. It substitute cornstarch. stuffing and sauces thickened will not taste different at all," — Teri Gruss,M.S. with flour are a problem. Berdan said. (See the recipe

gravy recipe from About.com's Guide to Southern Food, by Diane Gluten-free

Reserved pan juices from turkey roasting pan 2 TBS sweet rice flour or cornstarch (or arrowroot flour)

Paleo Truffles Makes about onedozen.

LIQUID: One or a combination of the following: /2 C water or milk or white wine Salt and pepper to taste

/2 C raw cacao nibs, ground in a nut grinder (or coffee grinder), plus a little extra for dusting t/4 C virgin coconut oil, warmed t/4 C coconut butter, warmed

'/4 C cream raw almond butter '/4 C raw honey '/4 tsp finely grated orange zest

for gluten-free gravy.)

or quinoa side dish, with some flavor and texture elements

do a roasted squash side dish with toasted sliced almonds or pumpkin seeds and no one else would know the difference or miss anything," Berdan said. For dessert, we found a Paleo Pumpkin Pie with a ground pecan crust and Paleo Truffle

added.

candy (see recipes) made with

"With grain side dishes, crunchy t o a sted pe c ans, dried cranberries or cherries are good, plus roasted diced squash to add a vegetable and something soft," Berdan said. Desserts can be an issue for

cacao, coconut oil, a lmond butter, honey and cinnamon that will satisfy most guests who saved room for a sweet treat at the end of the feast.

gluten-free people.

Eating"hearthealthy"means a diet low in fat and sodium. "It doesn't mean you can't have animal protein as an entree, but I'd suggest a turkey

Use gluten-free bread for stuffing, and try a savory gluten-free grains medley side dish. Berdan, who trained as a

chef,suggests making a rice

"We're so used to eating pie (optional) at Thanksgiving, and if you '/4 tsp freshly grated cinnamon must have pie — and I must have pie — purchase a storebought gluten-free pie crust. Cook'snote: Gradually sprinkle in Combine the cacao nibs, coconut oil, coconut butter, almond butter, Or try something new, like a more sweet rice flour (or cornstarch honey and orange zest, if using, in a medium bowl. Stir with a wooden pumpkin custard or p a nna or arrowroot flour) if needed, to get rounded spoon until well combined. Place the bowl in the freezer for 10 cotta with Christmasy spices the amount of thickness you want. minutes to harden slightly. in it, or poached pears with If you are using cornstarch for thickUsing a teaspoon to measure portions, scoop out the mixture and roll star anise," Berdan said. ening, add more by first whisking 2 in your palms into 1-inch balls. Roll in the extra ground cacao nibs and

tablespoons of cornstarch with 2 ta- then sprinkle with cinnamon. Place in tiny foil candy cups, and then in Paleo blespoons of cold water. This is called a small "candy box" for presentation. Store in the refrigerator for one to making a "slurry" and will prevent two days. Best eaten fresh! — "Pateoista: Gain Energy, GetLeanand FeeiFabulous with the Diet You Were the cornstarch from clumping when added to hot gravy. Gradually whisk Born to Eat," byNell Stephenson, (Simon andSchuster Touchstone Books, 20t2), in to gravy to desired thickness. yywyypateoista.com.

The Paleo diet, also known as the "caveman diet," is based on the idea that the healthiest food for us is the same that our hunter-gathererancestors ate:

Preparation:When roasted turkey is donecooking, pour panjuices into a 2-cupmeasuring cup orbowl. Use a spatula toscrapeflavorful pan

mainly meat, fish, eggs, veg-

Paleo Pumpkin Pie

drippings into the cup or bowl. Makes 8-10 servings. When the fat rises to the top of the cup, skim off '/4 cup of the fat 1 C toasted pecans 3 tsp natural pumpkin pie and pour it into a medium sauce- 2 C pureed, organic baked spice (cinnamon, ginger, pan. Discard any remaining fat. Mix pumpkin lemon peel, nutmeg, cloves, cornstarch with t/e cup water, milk 2 Ig cage-free eggs cardamom, star anise, or white wine. Stir until smooth and t/2 C honey fennel, black pepper mixture) dissolved. Add the remaining pan juices to Preheat oven to 475. the fat in the skillet. Whisk the disGrind the pecans in a food processor and press into the bottom of a solved cornstarch into the pan and glass pie plate rubbed with olive oil and lined with parchment paper to form cook over medium heat while con- the crust. tinuing to whisk for about 5 minThoroughly mix the remaining ingredients (pumpkin, honey,eggs, spice) utes, until thickened. Add salt and and pour over thecrust. pepper to taste. Bake for15 minutes at 475, and then lower the temperature to 350 for — Adapted from tyyyyyabout com another 30-40 minutes, or until the "custard" sets (cover the edges of the pie plate with foil to prevent the "crust" from burning).

etables, fruits, nuts and seeds. No grains, dairy, processed foods or refined sugars. "The Paleo person would not partake in the stuffing or dessert. Your traditional entree will work and vegetable side dishes are great — even the green bean casserole, unless it has dairy in it. You could

Heart healthy

Mountain Medical HIGH DESERT BANK I

I

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t.

Immediate Care 541-3SS-7799

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~ III

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s

Braised Winter Squash Makes 4 servings. This is a perfect example of how naturally sweet orange squashes can be. Any of the many winter

squashes, such as acorn, delicata, Hubbard, kabocha or Red Kuri, can stand in for the most popular winter squash of all: the butternut. — Ann Gentry 2 (2-Ib) butternut squash (or acorn or kabocha squash) 2 TBS olive oil 1 TBS minced garlic 1t/~ tsp minced peeled fresh

ginger t/4 C water 1 TBS mirin (Japanese rice wine)

1 tsp tamari (or soy sauce)

tenderloin or filet because those aren't highly marbleized cuts. Best of all, you can please the whole family with salmon. It's heart healthy as long as it's not basted with butter," Berdan sard. For heart healthy mashed potatoes, Ellie Krieger's Garlic

Fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper

Halve the squash, scoop out the seeds, then cut each squash crosswise into 1-inch half moons.

Turn the half-moon segments on their sides, and slice away the skin with a sharp knife.

Mashed Potatoes (see recipe)

Heat the oil the a large, heavy

does not have any butter, milk or cream, but she promises that by using Yukon gold potatoes, garlic and a touch of olive oil, you'll get c reamy, delicious results. "Mashed potatoes are truly the best when they have almost equal parts butter to potatoes, but that's not a great option for anyone! Instead ofbutter, infuse reduced fat 2 percent milk with a garlic clove or roasted garlic,

skillet over medium heat. Add the

garlic and ginger and saute until the garlic and ginger become tender, about 1 minute. Add the

squash pieces, water, mirin and tamari. When the liquid comes to a boil, turn the heat to medium-low,

cover and cook, turning the squash pieces after 10 minutes, until the squash is nearing tender, but still quite firm, about15 minutes total.

Uncover the pan and increase the heat to medium. Simmer, turn-

ing the squash pieces occasionally, until the liquid evaporates and

Slow-Roasted Sage Turkey Breast Makes 4 servings.

the squash begins to caramelize, about10 minutes. Season to taste

with salt and pepper.

A thin coating of seasoning mixture and a squeeze of fresh lemon between the breast meat and the skin impart a flavor that permeates the

turkey as it slowly roasts.

'/4 tsp garlic powder Vegetable oil spray '/4 tsp pepper /2 TBS dried sage Optional:Serve with coconut whipped cream, which you can make by 1 fsp paprika 3-Ib turkey breast with skin allowing a can of full-fat coconut milk to separate overnight in the fridge, '/4 tsp dried rosemary, crushed 1 med lemon, halved crosswise then whipping the top thick layer in a chilled bowl with some honey and '/4 tsp onion powder vanilla extract. — yywyypateoista.com. Preheat the oven to 325. Lightly spray a baking rack andpanwith veg-

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— Reporter: ahighberger@mac. com.

breast (see recipe), or a beef

Cool on awire rack beforeserving in wedges.

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add thyme sprigs, some parsley stems, a bay leaf and some peppercorns. Warm the milk, then strain it, and incorporate some of that flavorful milk with the mashed potatoes. You'll get flavor instead of a lot of butter or fat," Berdan said. When cooking low sodium, think about adding more flavors instead of salt. "Bump up all the flavors by using fresh herbs and other spices. Ingredients that are a little acidic, like vinegar and lemon juice, can add an element of taste so that you won't miss the salt as much," Berdan said. Thanksgiving dinner is all about tradition and nostalgia, but the guests around the table make the day special. Have fun trying some new recipes to cater to the special food needs ofyour special friends and relatives.

— "VeganFamily Meals: Real Foodfor Everyone," byAnnGentry, Andrews McMeei Publishing,2011

Portobellos Stuffed with Chickpeas and Chard Makes 4 servings. Baking time: 25 minutes.

etable oil spray. In a small bowl, combine the sage, paprika, rosemary, onion powder, 4 Ig portobello mushroom caps, garlic powder andpepper. stems and gills removed Carefully pull back the skin from the turkey, leaving it attached at one 1 TBS olive oil end, and trying not to tear the skin. Squeeze the lemon over the breast t/4 C minced onion meat. Sprinkle with the sage mixture. Put the skin back in place. Put the 3 cloves garlic, minced turkey on the baking rack in the pan. 1 tsp grated fresh ginger Roast, uncovered, for1 hour 45 minutes, or until the internal tempera- 1 bunch chard, finely chopped ture reaches170 when tested with a meat thermometer. 2 TBS soy sauce Transfer the turkey to a cutting board. Let stand for 10 minutes. Dis- 2 tsp toasted sesame oil 1t/~ C home-cooked chickpeas, card the skin before slicing the turkey.

Nutrition informationperserving: 122calories, 1 g total fat, 0.5 g saturated fat, 0.5 g polyunsaturated fat, 73 mgcholesterol, 48 mgsodium, 1 g carbohydrates, 0 g fiber, 0 gsugar, 26 g protein.

or1(15oz) can, drained and

rinsed '/4 C panko crumbs, plus more — "No-Fad Diet,"from the American Heart Association, Clarkson Potter/ for topping Publishers, 2005 Salt and freshly ground black

pepper I •

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Makes 4 servings. side up, in a lightly oiled baking dish This mash owes its luxurious texture to the natural creaminess of Yukon and set aside. Heat the olive oil in a gold potatoes and a touch of olive oil. At first glance, four cloves of garlic skillet over medium-high heat. Add may seem like a lot, but the garlic mellows as it steams with the potatoes, the onion, garlic, ginger and chard.

so when they aremashedtogether you get just the right garlic infusion.

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1t/4 Ibs Yukon gold potatoes, unpeeled and cut into1-inch

pieces 4 Ig cloves garlic, peeled and quartered

Drizzle on the soy sauce and ses-

— Eiiie Kneger ame oil and cook until the onion is soft and the chard is tender, about 7 /2 C low-sodium chicken broth minutes. Setaside. 1 TBS olive oil Mash the chickpeas in a bowl. '/2 tsp salt Drain off and reserve any liquid from '/4 tsp freshly ground black the chard mixture. Add the chard mixpepper ture to the chickpeas and mix well to

combine. Addthe pankoand season Place the potatoes and garlic in a steamer basket fitted over a large to taste withsalt andpepper. Mixwell. pot of boiling water. Cover and steam until the potatoes are knife-tender, Spoon the stuffing mixture into the about 12 to 15 minutes. Warm the chicken broth in a small pot on the mushroom caps.Drizzleany remain-

VOU CAIU BID OIU:

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stove or in a glass container in the microwave. Note: This is vegan if you ing chard liquid around the mushsubstitute vegetable broth. Remove the steamer basket and drain the water from the large pot.

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Transfer the potatoes and garlic to the pot, add the oil, salt, pepper and utes, then uncoverandbakeuntil the broth, and mash until smooth.

mushroom are tender andthe stuffing

Nutrition information per serving:170 calories; 4 g total fat; (0.5 g is hot, about10 minutes. Serve hot. — "Quick-Fi x Vegan,"by Robin saturated fat, 2.5 g monounsaturated fat, 0.5 g polyunsaturated fat); 4 g protein; 31 g carbohydrates; 3 g fiber; 0 mg cholesterol; 310 mg sodium.

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— yyyyyy.foodnetyyork.com

Robertson, AndreyvsMcMeei Publishing,20t 1


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

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LL

&edlNeyer. 4-Day coupon Valid Wednesday, Nov. 13 through Saturday, Nov. 16, 2013.

10-20 Ib Kroger Brand or Private Selection Frozen

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Limit one of this coupon per Customer. Valid for in-store purchases only *Excludes Fred Meyer Jewelers and Fuel purchases. Also excluded are Pharmacy, alcohol, tobacco, postage, gift cards, lottery, Westem Union services, activation, tickets and the price of

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013

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Next week: In the kitchen with ... Savory Spice Shop

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Manelle Gallagher/The Bulletin

This wrought-iron Victorian-era fence style is popular in Bend. Jon Sargent, who installed the fence, found this style at iron Horse Antiques in Bend.

Fences

See additional photos

Continued from D1 One of those hidden design elements is a pattern of pins welded in between the rocks to keep them from spreading and settling. Another singular look we spotted around town was a metal fence with Victorian-era flair. Jon Sargent, who remodeled a lot in Bend and installed a metal fence around the perimeter said he was able to find the wrought-iron fencing at Iron Horse Antiques in Bend. "I wanted to do metal fencing so people could see through it and it would last forever.... I wanted to go for something ornate," said Sargent. Eric Storjohann, owner of Bend Fencing, said his clients tend to either choose their fence style based on what they see in their neighborhood or they'll go online for inspiration. "Usually the customer comes to us knowing what they want," said Storjohann. "We've had a couple people ask for a similar fence to the McMenamins fence ... All the

on The Bulletin's website:

denddulletin.com/athometour tops are cut at random angles." Storjohann says the most common reason people decide to install fencing is to create privacy or a perimeter to contain children or animals. Among the most common styles of fencing Storjohann installs is cedar privacy fences. There are multiple ways to add a design element to a cedar fence that Storjohann says he builds on-site, including lattice work along the top of a fence or an arbor over the gate. Sometimes homeowners have a specialty gate they want to use, and Storjohann incorporates it into the fence

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Courtesy Bend Fenc!ng

design. Chain-link fencing is also a common choice and is available in a v a riety of colors. "Chain link is cheaper than cedar.... We've installed it for people who have an open lot and they want to keep their view so we'll do black, brown or green and it blends in with

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If you find that noisy holiday gatherings are difficult listening situations for you, it might be time fora hearing screening. Our staffof trained hearing care professionals can help you hear the sounds of the season. Enjoy the holidays to the fullest this year

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S torjohann s o u rces f r o m Round Tree Lodgepole Products in Tumalo. Vinyl fencing i s a n other choice, but Storjohann is wary of using vinyl in Central Oregon because of the dramatic changes in temperature. "The problem around here is with the bigtemperature changes ... it'll break really easy if it gets really cold because it gets brittle," said Storjohann. Winter can be a good time to have fencing installed beMarielle Gallagher/The Bulletin cause Storjohann's business David Staley designed the fence that surrounds the eating area slows sothere'sless of a wai t. at The Lot, a food cart pod in Northwest Bend. The fence is steel T ypically, it's a t w o w e e k posts and beams and steel mesh panels filled with rocks. wait in the winter, whereas in the spring, summer and fall Storjohann schedules clients three and four weeks out from installation. "I think a lot of people think you can't put up a fence in the winter. There are days we don't work in the winter, but for the most part we're putting up fences year-round," dl I Ii tjim said Storjohann. Storjohann prepares holes in the ground for the fence posts with an auger, unless a gl i ! f lal' 7 rock shelf is discovered under the soil and then it may require a jackhammer. The posts are then set in concrete, which takes a few days to set. Installation of the fence takes another few days for a typical sized city lot. Courtesy Bend Fencing — Reporter: 541-383-0361or A shadow box-style cedar privacy fence and gate, built by Bend mgallagher@bendbulletin.com Fencing, was completed with a triangular arbor over the gate. /

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the landscape," said Storjohann. Chain-link fencing is available from 3 to 6 feet in height and is galvanized to prevent rusting and then powder coated. Another popular choice in Central Oregon is ranch fencing, which has round posts with round rails made from pressure-treatedposts,which

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A double swinging gate leads into a garden and patio area. "We built that for a privacy area on their patio," says Eric Storjohann, owner of Bend Fencing. The squared off arbor was designed to achieve an East Asian theme.

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Kim Plummer and Doug Ward's fence features a surprise rainbow element visible only when passing by.

By Alan J. Heavens

Remove dirt by scrubbing with detergent and warm wa• I live in a h o use that ter. Rinse thoroughly. . was built in the 1940s to Scrape out and widen any 1950s, and the floor tile in the cracks, brush out dust, and bathroom is original — black seal with 100 percent acrylic and pink. Can I successfully or siliconized acrylic caulk. paint this tile so that it is more Smooth caulk flush while it's up-to-date? still wet. Make a second ap. Usually, I r e commend plication in several hours, if . waiting a w h i le, until needed. a style comes back, but you Check grouting and repair seem very eager. or re-grout as needed. You can repaint ceramic To the tile, apply a hightile, but floors are a problem adhesion latex s t ain-blockbecause you walk on t h em ing primer recommended for and can mark up what you interior use. Allow the primhave painted. er to dr y o v ernight before Here's some advice from painting. Dow's Paint Quality Institute For floors, use an alcoholin Spring House: based or oil-based stain-blockFirst, prepare the surface. ing primer recommended for Treat mildew with a 3:I wainterior use. ter/household bleach mixture, D o not l e ave a p r i m er leaving it on for 20 minutes unpainted. and adding more as it dries. When you paint the floors, Wear eye and skin protection. use a latex satin-finish floor Rinse thoroughly. paint that i s r ecommended The Philadelphia tnquirer

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for interior use on primed tile, or a semigloss oil-based or polyurethane floor paint recommended for use on primed tile.

Other advice The National Association of Home Builders has published a guide for members and consumers called "Home Maintenance Made Easy: What to Do, When to Do It, When to Call for Help," available at ebooks. b uilderbooks.com or w w w .

myhomepress.com for $19.95 to nonmembers. And finally, a winter-prep tip from Dow Building Solutions: Be sure to put a screen at the top of your chimney to keep out rodents and birds. If you haven't used your chimney since last winter, make sure to hire a chimney sweep to remove the soot buildup. — Questions? Email aheavens@ phillynews.com.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Time towinterize

DS

ASK MARTHA

Some simple measures can help assure a more comfortable home during the cold winter months.

an S IVlll •

Seal area under trim ring

ecola ianS

MARTHA STEWART Seal door bottoms with a "draft snake" or a rolled up towel.

Seal gaps between recessed lights and sheetrock with caulk or spray foam. Seal gaps around pipes with foam. Install foundation vent plugs.

t is incredible how things change when the family dynamic is so greatly, fabulously altered with the addition of two grandbabies. Family vacations have to be adjusted to a c commodate little ones: What is a fun as well as safe environment?

t

The same concerns apply

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Winterize

mer and fall, and closed when it's cold. "You don't want that freezing cold air to circulate under your house. It'll keep y our floors colder and wi ll increase the likelihood of a freezing pipe," Rice said.

Continued from D1 Time: About two to three hours, depending on how many recessed lights you have, or how many exhaust fans, windows and doors you want to tackle.

dows and draft stoppers Install a storm door if you own one, or put a rolled up towel or a purchased or homemade "draft snake" at the base of doors and windows to prevent drafts. (You can make a

Supplies: • Caulk (about $5 for a 5-oz

tube) • Caulk gun ($4-$20)

"snake" by sewing up a long,

• Insulating foam sealant

(about $5 per can)

narrow piece of fabric, and filling it w it h dr y b eans or ($10.99 for a four-window kit) cat-box litter.) Weather strip• Door weather strip (about ping and door sweeps to seal $7-$10) out cold air are available at • Garage d o or w e a t h er hardware and big box stores. strip (about $12) Install temporary p l astic • F oundation v e nt p l u g s storm windows. They come (styrofoam) (about $6) in inexpensive kits and are easy to install. A hairdryer is Step 1: Seal recessed light- ne e ded for hot air to shrink ing cans the plastic sheets to fit tightly Recessed l i gh t f i x t u re s o v e r the window. "Do common sense things that attach to the ceiling and into the attic often leak air. l i k e c l osing your drapes at "There's typically a g o o d - n i g h t to create that little barrisized gap between the sheet- e r between you and that cold rock and the fixwindow to reduce ture. Take the trim heat loss and in• Window insulation kits

see the gap. Caulk

or sPray foam the

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it's

a quarter-inch or less, use caulking;

if it's bigger, use expanding foam o r some sort o f sheetrock or pan-

eling. You can get creative to plug t he h o le,"

Rice

said. (It's a good idea to practice spraying foam on a piece of c ardboard to see how much it expands before you start

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and I wanted everything to be for the children. With the help of Marcie McGoldrick, crafts editor at Martha Stewart Living, we devised a method for casting numerous turkeys from a material called PermaStone, a lightweight, durable cement. We tried casting in my old tin and metal turkey-shaped chocolate molds first, but we couldn't get the cement to release easily once set, so we used very beautiful plastic candy and candle molds of turkeys in various sizes for the project instead. From there, I decided to make turkeys the t h eme:

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— Questions of general interest can be emailed to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.

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to apply, and they are very appealing for any celebration. I look forward to many holidays

I

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not brittle or porous. It's more durable than plaster of Paris. Dye Rubber gloves and dust mask PermaStone compound Spatula Plastic turkey-shaped candle or chocolate mold Wood blocks Sandpaper, 80 grit, or sanding

sponge

Dremel drill and sanding bit

(optional) Construction adhesive, such as Liquid Nails Rubber bands Paper towels Mixing buckets (optional) Joint compound (optional) Acrylic craft paint (optional) Paintbrush (optional)

Mix 2 to 3 tablespoons of dye into water to reach desired color.

(We used tan andyellow dye to create lighter turkeys; and tan, yellow and brown dyes for darker ones.) Don mask and gloves, then slowly sprinkle PermaStone powder (48 ounces of PermaStone will make 1 large 2-part turkey and1 small1-part turkey) into water and let it abwater sparingly, if needed, until equally mixed.)

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

and parties with the babies, and I promise to continue innovating and creating to make those celebrations memorable, fun, delectable and beautiful!

PermaStone is a lightweight cement that dries with a smooth finish,

tion and keep registers open

be open in the spring, sum-

large PermaStone turkey "statues," gently tinted in various earth tones; smaller turkey place-card holders; turkey chocolates for dessert;and turkey decals for some of my Wedgwood Drabware plates. We printed clip art (available at marthastewart.com/turkeydecals) on a home printer and stuck it on as a purely decorative embellishment — the p lates were r eplaced w i t h heated dinner plates for the meal. The decals are so easy

Molded Decorative Turkey

sorb; do not stir yet. When powder no longer completely absorbs, stir with a spatula until mixture is the consistency of yogurt. (Add more

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friends in the Tenant House at the farm in Bedford where I live. T he children l ov e t h e small 1 8 80 s f a r m house, which Alexis renovated and furnished several years before they were born. I keep special toys in the house, and lots of unusual books and things to catch their interest. We decided to have Thanksgiving there this year, at the very large soapstone-topped kitchen table, amid the hubbub of preparation for the afternoon dinner. I wanted the table to be seasonal, indicative of turkeys and harvest,

Step 5: Adjust ceiiing fan direc-

Ceiling f an s services suPervisor, h ave a sw i t c h CentralElectric o r pull chain t o Cooperative change the directhejob.) tion of the blades. Do not close up In the winter, you vent holes in the light fixture w a n t to pull the cooler air up. withcaulkor foam. Thevents "The cool air h its the ceilare there to d i ssipate heat i n g a n d t h e w arm ai r g ets from the lightbulb; you want w h o o shed down the outside to seal around the can light w a l l s , which are the coldest where it attaches to the dry- w a l l s i n t h e h o use. You're wall, and leave the vent holes b r i n ging the warm air to the open, Rice explained. 6 -foot-high level where w e live," Rice said. Step 2: Look around If you have a furnace or Look at exhaust fans, and heat pump, keep all registers if you find a gap between the at least partly open, even if drywall and th e fa n w h en they're in a back bedroom or you remove the trim, caulk a room that's not used much. the edge of the hole or patch it "Forced airsystems are made with foam, drywall or patch- to heat the entire building. i ng m aterial. L oo k u n d er When you close them off, you kitchen and bathroom cabi- throw the pressure in the duct nets, where plumbing enters system off balance. You can or exits. If there's a gap be- actually increase duct leakage tween the pipe and the wall, and heat loss by closing regiswarm air is escaping, and cold ters. On that same furnace, air may be entering. See step set the fan switch to auto in one for how to close gaps. the winter to prevent the fans If you have a forced air fur- from running continuously. nace, there are registers on That reduces electricity use the floor. Lift them up to see and reduces duct leakage," if there's a gap between the Rice said. wood subfloor and the ductFor more energy saving work. "It'll look similar to the information, look at the Cenrecessed light. Get out your tral Electric Cooperative and tube of caulk or caulk gun, Pacific Power websites (www. and fill that gap," Rice said. cec-co.com and www.pacific power.net), and consider a Step 3: Outside foundation home energy audit for more vents covered tips about how to conserve When temperatures are energy and have a more comconsistently cold in the fall, fortable home during the cold go outside and install founda- months. tion vent plugs. Vents should — Reporter: ahighberger~mac. "

Matthew Wiliiams/ New York Times News Service

The overall look of the tablescape is casual but inviting. The centerpieces are full but unfussybunches of Timothy grass wheat and foxtail gathered in gold lusterware cups. They alternate with old English carved breadboards, which hold the turkey sculptures.

a dining room would be less appropriate than a smaller

ong e r t obringthe

temperature back up, overall you're saving m o n ey,"

Rice s a id.

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— so a big, splashy dinner in gathering of f amily and

Step 4: Storm door and win-

Cost:less than $50

ring off, and you'll

to the celebratory events, including this Thanksgiving, when both children, Jude and Truman, will b e able to sit at the table, eat all the food and begin to comprehend what this holiday is all about. Granted, they are still just 2 and a half and 1 and a half — and a little bit messy in their eating habits

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Set mold on blocks to stabilize. Slowly pour mixture to fill mold. With your fingers, gently tap mold to remove air bubbles and to settle

and level mixture. If you've added too much, swipe awayexcess with spatula. Let sit for 2 hours. If using a1-part mold, peel away at part lines and gently remove

Publishing

turkey. If using a 2-part mold, flip flat side down onto work surface. Gently ease each turkey half from thicker areas, such as feet and tail. Sand and connect pieces: For1-part turkey, sandbottom with sand-

paper until smooth and level. For 2-part turkey, sand the flat sides. With Dremel drill (optional) or smaller piece of sandpaper or sanding sponge, sand away ridges along the part line. Onceflush, apply a thin coat of construction adhesive to one flat side, press halves together and secure tightly with rubber bands. Wipeawayany excess adhesive with damp paper towels. Let glue dry about an hour. Sand bottom.

Optional: Turkeycolor will change slightly as the PermaStone cures. Wait 2 days to fill in any gaps at the part line: Tint joint compound with craft paint to match the PermaStone. Mix with paintbrush, press into

gaps with fingertips, and wipe awayexcess with a moist paper towel. Let dry, then gently sand. For more Thanksgiving ideas, visit marthastewart.com.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013 in The Bulletin Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationallyrecognized appreciation for the region's quality of life. From providingthe most basic needs of food, shelter and security, to creating and maintaining positive social, educational, recreational and professional environments, Central Oregon's nonprofit community is a foundation for our area's success and sustainability.

Hundreds oforganizationsandthousandsofvolunteersmakeupthis nonprofit network. Through the publication of Connections, The Bulletin will both

defineand profile the organizations that make up this network. Connections wiLL provide readers with a thorough look at

GARDENING.Get good at it. Are you passionate about gardening

nonprofi t organizationsin Deschutes,Jeff erson,and Crook Counties.

SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5 CALL 541.382.1811 To RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY.

in Central Oregon? Willing to share your

The Bulletin

time R knowledge locally? Consider becoming an OSU Master Gardener.

Serving CentralOregon since 1903

Classes on Saturday at the OSU Cascades Hallin Bend from January 18th - April 5th, 2014, 9am - 4pm

ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS

Cost is $275, and application deadline is January 8th, 2014.

The Bulletin is in the process of verifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon. Please fill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail back to:

(scholarships available)

The Bulletin, Attn: Kari Mauser, P.O.Box6020, Bend, OR97708. For more information go to our website at:

conl.

E-mail information tokmauser©bendbulletin.com orcall

http://extenston.oregonstate.edu/deschutes/

541-382-1 811 ext. 404

or by calling OSU Extension at 541-548-6088

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D6

THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER '!2, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

usion's Menen eza voice or mi ennia s TV SPOTLIGHT

equipment that staffers say they know how to use only a By Manuel Roig-Franzia fraction of it. Packs of "answer The Washington Post people" in bright orange vests MIAMI — Her apartment in roam the newsroom floor to exthe oh-so-happening, urban-replain how things work. vivified Brickell neighborhood Menendez's p r ogram i s came fully f u r nished. Sofa billed as an examination of the "intersection of politics, sex and shopping isn't something Alicia Menendez seesherselfdoing. money." But you get the sense Notnow. that, like everything at Fusion, "I'm renting something preit is a work in progress that furnished.Ishare a carw ith my could morph into something boyfriend. And, oh! I don't have entirely different at any moa master's degree," Menendez, ment. For now, network execufillls s b who is 30, says over lunch one tives gush about her potential afternoon. Joshua Prezant/ For The Washington Post to be aneven brainierversion She is sorting through what Alicia Menendez is the audacious and high-risk choice to host an of MSNBC's Rachel Maddow, this means, what it says about eveningnews and culture show on Fusion,an audacious and high- but with less of an emphasis on her and, pressingly, what it risk cable network. Beltway politics and more on might reveal about her felfeminism and millennial cullow millennials. This is what tural issues. Menendez does: She sorts. She million homes. The English- the network's utter confidence In her first week and a half as turns things over and over and language channel, a heavily that it can spot the next big host, she boasted about airing over in her mind, which hap- hyped partnership of ABC and thing in places everyone else the word "vagina" eight times pens to be one supple and ac- Univision, is angling to attract has missed. Her success would in a single show that featured a tive place, a place of ceaseless millennials with a m e lange be an affirmation of the net- lengthy discussion of the defiand eclectic curiosity, of ques- of news, commentary, humor work's unconventionality; her nition of virginity. ("A personal tions as much as answers. and satire. It will draw on a failure a sign for the naysayers best" that was all the more im"I want to know, then, how few establishedstars, such as of its recklessness. pressive,she told viewers, beShe's hosting a h a lf-hour cause she has twice appeared I know that I'm an adult," she Univision anchor Jorge Ramos, goes on. "There are a bunch of and it'll push the wackiness program, "Alicia Menendez To- in "The Vagina Monologues.") us who feel like losers. I know envelope by pairing some of its night," out of a 160,000-square- And she read an open letter to I'm not alone in that." anchors with puppets from a foot warehouse in Doral, Fla. "parents of horny teens" urging M enendez i s g e t t in g a Southern California company Fusion spent $100 million on them to have "awkward" conchance to work on figuring out founded by Muppets creator the building — that's not a typo. versations about sex. herselfand her generation in Jim Henson. Projectors change the colors of But it hasn't all been sex. She the most public of ways. She But its elevation of Menen- the soaring walls throughout called JPMorgan chief execuis the audacious and high-risk dez — a relative unknown who the day: purple one moment, tive Jamie Dimon "the luckiest choice to host an evening news has sparkled as a cable taE dng soothing green the next, lending mofo in the world" because he's and culture show on Fusion, an head and Web programming a mood-lit ambiance more remi- still considered"a banking god" audacious and high-risk cable host but has never carried her niscent of a Virgin America air- despite the company's possible network that debuted recently own television program — says line cabin or a W Hotel than the $13 billion settlement deal with on providers including Verizon more than anything else about grungy newsrooms of the past. the Justice Department. And FiOS, Cox, AT8T U-verse and the channel's bravado. MenenThe place is so crammed she prodded tennis star Venus Charter, which serve about 20 dez is the foremost example of with technologically complex Williams to run for Congress.

e a sin artner's e avior

No thanks, Williams told her. And told her. And told her. In the days leading up to her debut, Menendez, who can be a surprisingand arresting communicator, sounded a tad scripted as she rattled off the show's mission. It was as if she were sticking to the talking points while she worked it out. "I want people to feel informed so that they can make educated decisions in their own lives," she said somewhatmechanically."That's really it; it's a simple goal." Menendez rolls her eyes as the camera cuts away during rehearsal. The over-caffeinated segue music for "Alicia Menendez Tonight" irritates her. The elevated studio stage at Menendez's feet lights up from below, evoking a disco. It was inspired by the flashing, lighted dance floor in the movie "Saturday Night Fever." Everything about the studio screams. Menendez seems intent on lowering the volume and making people listen. On weeknights, her 7 o'clock program follows a hyperkinetic show anchored by charismatic Ghanaian musician Derrick Ashong, whose producers sit off camera during rehearsals chanting his stage name, "DNA! DNA!" and hollering, "Woot Woors But when it's Menendez's turn, she is planted behind a riveted metal desk that resembles a bent airplane wing, and she's talking about ... the debt ceiling. For six minutes. An eternity in TV time.

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I

Dear Abby:I have been with my partner, "Harold," for 11 years. After gay marriage passed here in Minnesota, Harold told me he didn't want to marry me because ofmy credit rating. I find this insulting and humiliating. Worse, the

day marriage equality passed, we were DEAR with some friends of ABBY mine, and he bluntly told them, "I don't want to marry him because of his FICO score!" It was very embarrassing. I have also learned that Harold has been telling anyone he knows some of my private information. What can I say to him to get him to stop revealing things about me to people we don't know well'? I have asked him plenty of times not to mention my private life to others, but he still brings up information I'd prefer others not know. Should I end the relationship? I think in some way if I do, that I'll be better off without him. But after 11 years and all that he's done for me, I'd feel really sad. I'd appreciate any advice you give me. — Frustrated in Minneapolis Dear Frustrated:I agree that after all these years you have much time

and emotioninvestedinyourrelationship with Harold. Although I'm sure he has many virtues, sensitivity and discretion do not appear to be among them. It would be interesting to know if Harold would be willing to marry you if your FICO score improved, or if he's using it as an excuse because he doesn't want a legal commitment. Even if the two of you did marry, you would still have a partner who lacks discretion about what should be private. If this is important to you, Harold may not be the spouse for you because he isn't likely to change. Couples counseling could help you decide what to do next. Inquire at your nearest gay and lesbian community center about any seminars it offers for longtime couples on this important subject. Just because people CAN marry doesn't necessarily mean they should. Dear Abby:Our son recently came to usand confessed that three years ago he'dhad an affair with a married woman who had two children. He ran into her recently, and she told him she now has three children, and the most recent one — age 3 — is his daughter. She's still married to the

man she cheated on, and our son says he's still in love with her. We told our son that because she says the child is his doesn't necessarilymean it is, and ifher husband didn't question the pregnancy, it's possible the child is her husband's. We advised our son to get a paternity test. Our son is now so angry with us for suggesting it that he won't speak to us. He said if we can't support him and the woman he loves, we should stay out of his life. He said she plans to leave her husband. gt has been three weeks and she's still there.) I think she was just trying to get our son's attention. Was our suggestion unreasonable? We don't support this kind of behavior or their lack of morals. What a mess! What do we do next? — On the Outsfn California Dear On the Outs:Your suggestion to your son was not only reasonable, it was the same clearheaded advice he would have received from an attorney. What you do next is ... nothing, except letting him know you're there for him if he needs you. This is your son's affair, literally, and he is going to have to deal with whatever consequences are the result. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY,

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

NOV. 12, 2013:This yearyou follow

** * * * Y ou might respond on totally a intuitive level and feel as if you know what it is the right path for you. Logic might not conform to your actions, and trying to make your actions logical simply might not work. Stop trying this exercise. Tonight: Continue being spontaneous.

YOURHOROSCOPE

your intuition more often, and you will land By Jacqueline Bigar on your feet. To manypeople, including yourself, your actions do not appear logical. Do they needto? Listening to your faith, and you will emerge on the right side. gut will put you in Tonight: Till the wee hours. Stars showthe kind the right place at 21-July 22) of day you'll have th e right time. If you CANCER (June D etach from recent events and ** * * * D ynamic are single, you will ** * * ** * * P ositive m e et many people.see a situation from a different perspective. You might want to reframe the situation in ** * A verage Her e is another several different ways. Know that you are ** S o-so time when you carrying a figurative rabbit's foot in your * Difficult need to followyour back pocket. Remain optimistic. Tonight: gut. As a result, Be around great music. youcould meetsomeone veryspecial. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) If you are attached, your sweetie enjoys ** * A partner or an associate wants to your more emotional side. PISCES can be assume the lead. Make it possible. You provocative and fun. might want more time to yourself, as you ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Apersonal matter or a situation have a personal matter on the back burner. Use your intuition, and it will land you on involving your home will turn out positively. the right side of a problem. Tonight: Go off You could have alot of discussion with and do something for yourself. your mate or a keyperson about a potential VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) change. Know that this person might ** * * By integrating a suggestion from surprise you with his or her compliant a partner, you will come out a victor. You attitude. Tonight: What is stopping you? seem know which path is best for you. TAURUS (April 20-May20) Make an effort to draw in a newperson ** * * * Y ou finally will achieve what whom you are getting to know. Heor you want, and you might feel as if you she would be good for you. Tonight: Sort have the capability to have along-overdue conversation. Your sense of humor weaves through others' ideas, then decide. through various situations, which adds lightness to them. Youare likely to achieve whatyou want. Tonight: Dream big.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22)

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(R) 1:05, 4:15, 7:30 • ABOUTTIME(R) I, 3:55, 6:50, 9:40 • ALL IS LOST (PG-13) 1: I0, 4:05, 6:45, 9:25 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 2,6:30, 9:35 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)1:40, 4:10, 6:35 • THE COUNSELOR (R)3:40, 9:20 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) 12:55, 3:40, 6:25, 9:10 • ENDER'8 GAME IMAX (PG-13) 1, 3:45 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 9:05 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 12:55, 3:20, 6, 8:45 • FREE BIRDS 3-D (PG) 1:20, 3:45, 6:15 • GRAVITY(PG-I3) 3:50 • GRAVITY3-D(PG- I3) 1:35,6:20, 9, 9:50 • JACKASSPRESENTS: 8ADGRANDPA(R) 1:25, 4:30, 7:15, IO • LASTVEGAS (PG-13)t:05,I:50,4:45,6:30,7:40 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-I3)1:30,3,4:40,6:10, 7:25, 8:55 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD 3-D (PG-13) 1:15, 4:25, 7:10, 9:55 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD IMAX3-D (PG-13)7,9:45 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. I

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • 2 GUNS(R) 9p.m. • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are2f ando/der only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied f/y a legal guardian. f

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * W hile people around you might be emotional and undisciplined, you seem to handle their passionate displays and continue as normal. Your ability to stay steadfast might prevent you from picking up on important information. Listen well. Tonight: Hang out with your friends.

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Fed. 18)

** * You might be focused on completing an important task that has financial ramifications. You could be doing a lot of thinking about your budget. Your finances might need ahard, skeptical look. Sometimes self-discipline is lacking, even foryou. Tonight: Dff to the gym to work out.

** * * You have an abundance of to-dos. PISCES (Fed.19-March20) Do your best to prevent someone from ** * * You will draw someone toward interfering with your pace. Youmight feel GEMINI (May21-June20) you who serves as amuse for you. When ** * * A s sume a more dominant role in as if no one can stop you. Your energy you are with this person, your natural surprises many people. A boss is more a professional discussion. You might want talents seem to expand. If you are single, to do something very differently from how than happy with the results of this trait. abuddingromance becomes a strong Tonight: Slow down only when you want you have beendoing it, butyou will abide possibility. Tonight: Be spontaneous. to. bya superior's decision. Take aleap of ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

8 p.m. on H A, "Marvel's Agents of S.H.f.E.L.D." — With the team being kept in the dark about some dangerous secrets, Coulson (Clark Gregg) must work the system to keep Ward and Fitz (Brett Dalton, lain De Caestecker) safe during a Level 8 classified mission that could end in tragedy. Ming-Na Wen, Chloe Bennet and Elizabeth Henstridge also star in the new episode "The Hub."

8 p.m. on(CW), "The Originals" —As Klaus and Elijah (Joseph Morgan, Daniel Gillies) seek Sabine's (Shannon Kane) help in finding the missing Hayley (Phoebe Tonkin), someone from Hayley's past reveals something that causes her to worry about herself and the baby. A trip down the bayou leads Klaus into a dangerous, unexpected encounter. Marcel (Charles Michael Davis) makes Rebekah (Claire Holt) an offer that has her torn in the new episode "Bloodletting." 9 p.m. on (CW),uSopernatural" — While enjoying his new life as a human and his new job at a convenience store, Castiel (Misha Collins) spots a newspaperheadline aboutsom e disappearances in his area and asks Dean (Jensen Ackles) for help. Knowing he needs to keep Sam/Ezekiel (Jared Padalecki) away from Castiel, Dean tells him to stay behind and work with Kevin and Crowley (Osric Chau, Mark Sheppard) on deciphering the tablet in the new episode "Heaven Can't Wait." 10:01 p.m. onH E3, "Chicago Fire" —While out jogging, Severide (Taylor Kinney) discovers a boy trapped in abackhoe loader at a construction site. Boden (Eamonn Walker) continues butting heads with McLeod (Michelle Forbes) over the firehouse's fate and breaks the news toCasey (Jesse Spencer) about his own future. Mouch (Christian Stolte) and his rival for the union presidency (Eric Slater) have anonline debate in the new episode "Joyriding." Monica Raymund also stars. 10:01 p.m. on BRAVO,"Shahs of Sunset" —Asa visits the Diamond Water bottling plant and realizes she needs to make more changes. RezaandAdam decide to take their relationship to the next level by moving in together, while GG pressures her own boyfriend, Sean, to make a bigger commitment. When MJ and Lilly meet face to face, everyone else is forced to take sides in the new episode "These People Are Not Your Friends." ©Zap2tt

Q NQRTHWEsT CROSSING

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Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINPHILLIPS(PG-13) 6:45 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) 6:30 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 5 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 6 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)6:15 t / •

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SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * You could opt to stay home; work at home, if you must. If at work, your mind might keep focusing on a personal situation. A newfound closeness has started to evolve between you and someone else. Make it OK tovanish early in the day. Tonight: Screen your calls.

TV TODAY

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Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • FREE BIRDS (Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD (PG-!3)6:15 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.

O

Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's

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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 •

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Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Includeyour name, phone number and address

Monday - Friday : 7:30a.m. -5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

. Classified telephone hours:

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371

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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 ltems 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,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo and Video 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 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 Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood 205

Items for Free

g 7 g c 2

210

210

242

246

249

Furniture & Appliances

Exercise Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Art, Jewelry & Furs

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO

A1 Washers&Dryers

The Bulletin recommends extra

Nordic Trac A2350. Presents beautifully. Hardly used. A perfect holiday gift. $350.00

SELL

FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with

$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355

Get your business

oui

"QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 1 2 $ 2f« ~2 Ad must include

price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

www.bendbulletin.com

a ROWI N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

German Shepherd/Lab, perfect mix! Smart, fun-loving, protective. UTD shots $400. Ready 11/1 3/13 541-350-3025

Great wood & wire cage, swings & nest box, 48" x39"x49"L, $200 cash. 541-382-2194

Lab Pups AKC, black & yellow, Master Hunter sired, performance pedigree, OFA cert hips 8 elbows, 541-771-2330

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chasing products or • services from out of I

I the area. Sending y cash, checks, or I I credit i n f ormation I may be subjected to

541-390-1713.

Proform Crosswalk 380

I FRAUD. For moreI treadmill, like new, $275 information about an s obo. 541-408-0846 I advertiser, you may I I call t h e ' State

Ore g onI Attor ney '

Garage Sales

O ff ice I Consumer P rotec- • Garage Sales

I General's

Inf

Bid Now! www.BulletfnBfdnBuy.com

Cash and carry.

I t ion

ho t l in e at I I 1-877-877-9392.

Garage Sales

LThe Bulleting

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

Bid Now!

www.Bulletinsidnsuy.com

Antiques & Collectibles

541-385-5809

R«? «ft«, ~

Buy New...Buy Local

You Can Bid On: $200 Gift Certificate X Tactical

(Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)

CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.

Double Tap Firearms 2075 NE Hwy. 20

14 carrot white gold ladies wedding band with a bright polish finish, 1.66 c a rrot diamond Hearts and arrows round c ut, Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Appraised at $15,000. Very unique piece. Asking $9500. 541-281-7815

Hot Tubs & Spas

541-977-0202

Buy/Sell/Trade/Consign

DON'T MISS THIS

negtlttt

Buy New...Buy Local

You Can Bid On: Stearns 8 Foster Olga King Bed Retail Value $3,319 M. Jacobs Fine Furniture (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)

Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron,

Bid Now!

www.BulletinBidnBuy.com

1-541-954-1727

BLUE NOSE PITBULL PUPS, 4 FEMALES.

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL

Bend 541-318-1501 www.redeuxbend.com

4L" Buy New...Buy Local

Reber's Farm Toy Sale! Each Sat. 8 Sun., 10-5 until Christmas, 4500 SE Tillamook Lp., Prineville. 541-447-7585

Freezer

-

. ,• 6 e n d • O r e g o n

Furniture & Appliances

Lovebird baby hand-fed, s weet, ready in 1 - 2 Antique weeks. $60 taking deShots, Vet Check-up, Dining Set posits. 541-279-3578 I Want to Buy or Rent The Bulletin recomcall for deta i l s. 18th century legs, mends extra caution k i t tens, mahogany topo r Maine Coo n Wanted: $Cash paid for when purc h as- 541-876-5155 541-977-1705. Ask unique pets, no papers, 2 95"x46"x29"; vintage costume jew- ing products or sergirls, 1 boy, 7 wks, $150 6 Chippendale style for Brad or Suzanne elry. Top dollar paid for vices from out of the ea., obo. 541-389-0322 chairs, $2770. Gold/Silver.l buy by the area. Sending cash, 541-639-3211 Estate, Honest Artist checks, or credit inPoodle pups, AKC. Toy Elizabeth,541-633-7006 f ormation may b e Also-7mo. M,$200; F, $250. 541-475-3889 subjected to fraud. For more i nformaQueensland Heelers tion about an adverStandard 8 Mini, $150 tiser, you may call Blue Tick/Walker & up. 541-280-1537 the O r egon State Cross Good Hunting www.rightwayranch.wor Attorney General's Parents. Ready to .. ABIGDeal... dpress.com Commercial Office C o n sumer start training today, VENDORS WANTED upright Delfield Protection hotline at $250 each. Been Rodent issues? Free for Craft Fair & Bazaar 1-877-877-9392. 6000 Series wormed healthy, and adult barn/ shop cats, Dec. 7; 9-5 & Dec. 8; eating solid food fixed, shots, s o me freezer, 20 cubic 10-3. Booths: $30 541-815-6705 f riendly, some n o t . feet, stainless, crafts / $50 commercial $efWPP Central Oregan Pnfe 19$$ Will deliver. 389-8420 $1200. Accepting donations Check out the f or Rummage S a l e . 541-325-2691 Shih Tzufemale puppy. classifieds online Donate items through Adopt a rescued kitten www.bendbulletin.com $499 for pet companDec. 6. Receipts avail- or cat! W i l l m a tch ion home. GENERATE S OM E Updated daily able for donations. shelter fees. F ixed, 541-788-0090 EXCITEMENT in your TACK & E QUIPMENTs shots, ID chip, tested, neighborhood! Plan a more! Nonprofit resSiberian-Husky pups, 15% Consignment garage sale and don't AND Wolf-Husky pups, Let us sell your tack 8 cue at 65480 78th St., forget to advertise in Bend, Thurs/Sat/Sun $400 ea. 541-977-7019 equip. For info call classified! 1-5, 389-8430; kitten 541.548.6088 or kimVETERANS! Adopt a 541-385-5809. foster appts 815-7278 lii///////' berly.griffiths@orp n, great adult companwww.craftcats.org. egonstate.edu Chihuahua puppies, tea- ion cat, fee waived! cup, shots 8 dewormed, Fixed, shots, ID chip, 3rd Holiday Fair $250. 541-420-4403 tested, more! SanctuComing to Sisters at Find exactly what ary at 65480 78th St., OutlawStationHShop- you are looking for in the Chihuahua/Yorkie mix, Bend, Thurs/Sat/Sun ping Center close to 2 males, $150. CLASSIFIEDS 1-5, and on Veterans' Ray's Food Place, 541-771-2606 Day by a p pt. C a ll GREAT SOFA Hwy 20. Open11/29 541-389-8430. 9'x28"h x 37"d. thru 12/22, Mon. Australian Shepherd Call a Pro www.craftcats.org. Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. Tan, down feather Puppies AKC/ASCA All Whether you need a with foam for Sun., 10-6. Colors, Excellent Bloodsupport. 3 Back Vendors wanted! lines. $750-$950. fence fixed, hedges & 3 seatloose 541-815-9257 trimmed or a house cushions. Very comfy! $400 OBO built, you'll find 541-504-5224 Bid Now! professional help in www.Bulletinsidnsuy.com Harvest Barn Sale puppies, 14 The Bulletin's "Call a Whoodle Crystal Peaks wks, 2nd shots, wormed, Youth Ranch Service Professional" 2 males left! Reduced to 19275 Innes Mkt. Rd. $800 ea. 541-410-1581 Directory Bend - Sat. 11/16, 9-4 541-385-5809 Yorkie-Maltese puppies, Antiques, handmade females, $300; 1 male, crafts, garage sale treasures, furniture & more! Donate deposit bottles/ $250. Also Maltese-Shih Buy New...Buy Local HANCOCK & cans to local all vol- Tzu male puppy, $200. * Country Holiday You Can Bid On: MOORE SOFA unteer, non-profit res- Cash. 541-546-7909 Bazaar * 6 Month Supply of in salmon/coral checue, for feral cat spay/ Yorkie mix males, (2), 14 creat/ve cra/terswill Dog Food - Canidae nille fabric with dianeuter. Cans for Cats $150 each. be sharing in this festive Value: $330.00 t railer at B en d P e t mond pattern. Tradi541-771-2606 holiday bazaar! Quarry Ave. tional styling w ith Express East, across Nov. 15 & 16, 10-4 both Hay 8 Feed from Costco; or do- Yorkie pup AKC, 1 sweet loose pillow back, days - 69427 Crooked (Bidding closes nate Mon-Fri at Smith 8 adorable tiny male left, down-wrapped seat Horseshoe Rd., Sisters Tues., Nov 12, Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or potty t raining, $ 950. cushions, roll arms, (off CampPolk Rd). at 8:00 p.m.) at CRAFT in Tumalo. Health guar.541-777-7743 skirt, two matching www.craftcats.org pillows a n d ar m People Look for Information Y orkie puppy, 8 w k s covers. L i k e new About Products and B lack Lab AKC p up Doxie mix female pup, cute, playful m ale. condition. $1500. Services Every Daythrough pies, Born Aug 18. 10 weeks, very cute. Shots, tai l d o cked. 541-526-1332 The BulletinClassifieds $250 541-508-0429 $600. 541-536-3108 $150. 541-390-8875

The Bulletin

: Monday- Friday 7:30a.m. -5p.m.

A v e

O tt a n d t e r

Labrador Pups, AKC Chocolate & Yellow. Hips OFA guaranteed. $300-$400.

206

.

Pets & Supplies

www.kinnamanretnevers.com

GRACO HIGH CHAIR FREE 541-312-9312

Pets & Supplies

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Place, cancel or extend an ad

Tp

Subscribe or manage your subscription

The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website. •

The Bulletin

You Can Bid On: Young Adult Season Pass Value: $425.00 Hoodoo Ski Area (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12,

at 8:00 p.m.) Go l f Equipment CHECK YOUR AD

$pwipg Central Oregon since 1$0$

215

FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12

Tub, seats 8 people, has cover, $400 or best offer. You haul! 541-385-0454

TV, Stereo 8 Video

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~2

« 2$! Ad must include price of ff f $5 $ 0 or less, or multiple items whose total does notexceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

Coins 8 Stamps

Northwest Spa Hot

Audio InterfaceM-Audio Fast Track Go digital! Put your music onto your computer using a M-Audio Fast Track N382, with inputs for a microphone and a guitar or keyboard. $80. Call 541-383-0361

Private collector buying postagestamp albums 8 collections, w orld-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343

Marlin 1895 SS Guide on the first day it runs 45/70 ported, ammo, to make sure it is corsling, as new $575. rect. "Spellcheck" and 541-815-8345. No Po«X $«Pwlff (local, cell phone). human errors do oc$$ ~ cur. If this happens to TURN THE PAGE Good classified ads tell your ad, please conMini DV Deck the essential facts in an For More Ads tact us ASAP so that Panasonic AGDV2500 interesting Manner. Write corrections and any The Bulletin lets you easily transfer from the readers view - nol adjustments can be digital tape recordings to the seller's. Convert the made to your ad. Ruger 10/22 F/S NIB, your computer. Can facts into benefits. Show 541-385-5809 handle professional fullblack syn. stk., blued. size the reader how the item will The Bulletin Classified DV an d m ini-DV $250. Comes w/ exhelp them in someway. video tapes, providing t ras C al l o r Te x t This USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 541-306-0253 full-feature video editing. Two-channel (16-bit, 48) advertising tip Door-tc-docr selling with Hz s a mpling) a n d brought to you by Wanted: Collector seeks k fast results! It's the easiest high quality fishing items Four-channel (12-bit, 32 The Bulletin way in the world tc sell. Sewf gcentraloegppf fef$03 & upscale bamboo fly kHz sampling) audio rods. Call 541-678-5753, modes. PAL and NTSC playback recording. $600 240 The Bulletin Classified or 503-351-2746 541-383-0361 Crafts & Hobbies 541-385-5809 3rd Holiday Fair coming to Sisters, at OutGuns, Hunting lawStationHShopping & Fishing Center close to Ray's Food Place, Hwy 20. Open 11/29 -12/22 50 Caliber AE GoldDot 300GR, 100 rounds Mon.-Thur. 10-4, $115. 541-525-2495 Fri. Sat. Sun. 10-6. Vendors wanted! BB/pellet gun, C r os541-595-6967 man, Recruit, w/box $35. 541-385-1799 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Belgian made Brown i ng CAT1 SA22 L R Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com w ith n e w Niko n P roStaff Rimf i r e . 22LR scope. V e ry 241 nice condition. $800. Bicycles & 593 7483 Accessories Belguim Browning High Power 9mm with extras, $675. 541-633-9895

I

Bend local pays CASH!!

for all firearms & ammo. 541-526-0617

2005 Maverick ML7 M ountain Bike, 1 5 " Bend Trap Club frame (small). F ull TURKEY SHOOT suspension, Maverick Sat. Nov. 16th. Shoots hock, S RA M X O ing starts at 9:30 a.m. drivetrain 8 shifters, 9 $25.00 gets you 5 speed rear cassette, shoots & guaranteed 34-11, Avid Juicy disc prize! Ammunition 8 brakes. Well t a ken lunch available. Hwy c are of. $950 . 20 East at the 30 mile 541-788-6227. marker. 541-382-7515

Bid Now! www.BulletfnBfdnBuy.com

Buy New...Buy Local

You Can Bid On. 20 Classes of Hot Yoga Punch Card Value: $190.00 Steve's Hot yoga (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)

Movie Maker Package - Canon XL2 Canon XL2 Digital Video Camcorder (mini DV) with extra lithium ion battery, charger & wall plug. Package also inc ludes 14 b l ank 6 0 minute mini DV tapes, a d igital v i d e o hea d cleaner, as well as a hard carrying case. This prosumer camcorder has an i nterchangeable le n s system. $1200 541-383-0361

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

Rock star microphone - Shure PG58 Shure PG58 microphone with plenty of cable for attaching to your PA system. Rugged mic that is great for lead and backup vocals.$50 541-383-0361


E2 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletinscom

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • . •• • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri •

476

00

fg,/F~>Jir) JI,J j Jlq tJjjJ~ jg

Employment Opportunities

g[Rtips+ogJlgggg

Can be found on these pages:

Gutter Installer

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - Independent Positions

Are you the best? Ifso, do you want to work for the best?

Tuesday. • • • . Noon Mons 476 Employment Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess Opportunities B & R is hiring. Excellent pay and group insurance. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. CAUTION: Ads published in Call 541-480-7823 "Employment O p Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. portunities" and tell me in clude about yourself. employee and indeSaturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. pendent p o sitions. Ads fo r p o s itions require a fee or Saturday • . • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. that upfront i nvestment be stated. With Heavy Line T e chniSunday.. • • • • • • • . • • • 5:00 pm Fri • must any independentjob cian Needed. •

Place aphotoin your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500 in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

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

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days.................................................$33.50 28 days.................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days .................................

(call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*Must state prices in ad

C®X

at 1-503-378-4320

For Equal Opportunity Laws c o ntact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division,

The Bulletin bendbulletimcom is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

971-673- 0764.

The Bulletin 541-385-5809

PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified acs running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday. 260

Computers T HE

Misc. Items

B U LLETIN r e - BUYING &

• Heating & Stoves •

SE L LING

quires computer ad- All gold jewelry, silver vertisers with multiple and gold coins, bars, ad schedules or those rounds, wedding sets, selling multiple sys- class rings, sterling siltems/ software, to dis- ver, coin collect, vinclose the name of the tage watches, dental Fl e ming, business or the term go1d. Bill "dealer" in their ads. 541-382-9419. Private party advertisCemetery plot at ers are defined as those who sell one Tumalo cemetery. computer. A bargain at $450. Look at:

541-848-7436

Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

I

Mis c . Items Bid Now!

www.euttetioeidoeuy.com

Classic Stallion Boots Ladies size 7t/~, seldom worn, Paid $1100; selling for $290.

541-480-1199 Buy New...auy Local

You Can Bid On: Soccer TotsBEARS (Back to Back SessionsAges 5-6 Years Value: $160.00 CascadeIndoor

Sports (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.) Bid Now!

www.eutteuoeidneuy.com

Need help fixing stuff? Call A ServiceProfessional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

COWGIRL CASH We buy Jewelry, Boots, Vintage Dresses & More. 924 Brooks St.

541-678-5162 www.getcowgirlcash.com

Flexible Flyer sled, $25. Queen bed-in-a-bag, $20. Computer desk, $20. TV stand, $15. 4 drawer file cabinet, $20. Rose pattern dishes, 45-pc set for 8, new, $20. Wall-mount hand-crank phone, $100. 541-617-3951

tthmm.t Buy New...auy Local

You Can Bid On: Radiant Division: Rinnai RL 75i Tankless Water Heater Retail Value $2,495 Bend Heating (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12,

at 8:00 p.m.) Bid Now!

www.euttetineidoeuy com

®.

I-Year Elementary

SchoolTuition

Buy New...nuy Local

You Can Bid On: One Year School Tuition Retail Value from $5,050 to $5,520 Morning Star Christian School (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655

BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.

Vacuum: bagged Platinum upright Hoover, with portable canister, like new cond., $100

Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been c ertified by th e O r egon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection Ag e n cy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t i fied w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will no t k n owingly accept advertisi ng for the s ale o f uncertified woodstoves. Fuel & Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD...

Missing: Chihuahua since 8/2 in Crooked River Ranch. Male, 8 rs old, about 6 lbs.

here has been a sighting of him with a man in his late 50's with black hair, mustache 8 glasses in CRR. $5000 c ash reward, no questions asked. 541-325-6629

or 503-805-3833

REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check

The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 P e lle 541-447-7178; or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

To avoid fraud, The Bulletin

recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species 8 cost per cord to better serve our customers.

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

541-385-5809 266

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE **

LODGEPOLE PINE

Cut, split & delivered, $200/cord

(delivery included) 541-604-1925

Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-

rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" picK up YQUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

Thc Bulletin

541-548-8895

Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio 8 studio equip. Mclntosh, J BL, Marantz, D y BarkTurfSoil.com naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 PROMPT D E LIVERY 54Z-389-9663 WHEN YOU SEE THIS •

~ OO

MorePixatBendbulletin,com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN '500you can place it in The Bulletin Your future is just a page away. Whether you're looking Classifieds for: for a hat or a place to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is '10 - 3 lines, 7 days your best source. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Every daythousandsof buyers and sellers of goods (Private Party ads only) and services co business in these pages.They know 265 you can't beat TheBulletin Building Materials Classified Section for selection and convenience Bend Habitat - every item isjust a phone RESTORE call away. Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW The Classified Section is PRICES easy to use. Everyitem 740 NE 1st ie categorized andevery 541-312-6709 cartegory is indexed onthe Open to the public. section's front page. Whether youarelooking for Sisters Habitat ReStore a home orneed aservice, Building Supply Resale your future ie in thepages of Quality items. The Bulletin Classified. LOW PRICES!

The Bulletin

Lost & Found •

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER

Foot 8 back massager, The Bulletin $200. Inverter t b l., serving central oregon wnre ecs $60, Bike trlr, new $130. T o p qu a lity 1 cord dry, split Juniper, stuff! 541-385-5685 $200/cord. Multi-cord discounts, & ya cords available. Immediate Home Security delivery! 541-408-6193 System 2GIG Brand new installed All Year Dependable by AbbaJay inFirewood: Seasoned cludes 2 hour inLodgepole, Split, Del. stallation and one Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 year basic security for $365. Cash, Check service. $375. or Credit Card OK. (Valued at $850) 541-420-3484. 541-382-3479

150 N. Fir. 541-549-1621

Open to the public.

opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use e xtra c aution when a p plying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H o tline

Free maple leaves for your garden. You bag! 541-389-1578

Hay, Grain & Feed~ First quality Orchard/Timothy/Blue Grass mixed hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Patterson Ranch Sisters, 541-549-3831

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email

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

classifiedObendbulletio.com

The Bulletin sen nscent aloego snce scs

Looking for your www.hershe soilandbark.com next employee? Screened, soil & comPlace a Bulletin post mi x ed , no help wanted ad rocks/clods. High hutoday and mus level, exc. for reach over flower beds, lawns, 60,000 readers straight gardens, each week. s creened to p s o i l . Your classified ad Bark. Clean fill. Dewill also liver/you haul. appearon 541-548-3949. bendbulletin.com which currently receives over • Lo s t & Found 1.5 million page Lost Cat, black longviews every haired male, "Oliver, month at no 11/4 near corner of NE extra cost. Isabella & NE 7th (near Bulletin Revere). 541-953-7576 Classifieds Get Results! Lost small brown metal suitcase, containing car Call 541-385-5809 jack 8 other parts, mayor place your ad be downtown near Jackon-line at alope Grill, Sat Oct. 29. bendbulletin.com

Accounting Growing CPA firm seeks a CPA or CPA Candidate with 2 to 5 years public accounting experience. Please visit www.bendcpa.com/ jobs for application information. Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulietin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

Reward! 541-389-7329

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin

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

Growing Bend-based investment adviser office looking for an operations/client per s o n. Dodge Cummings die- s ervice seltech needed. Work C andidate MU S T for the best and busi- have prior brokerade st d e alership i n age/investment Central Oregon. Bring viser operations experience. Familiarity your resume and ap- with PortfolioCenter ply to Don Mueller at Smolich Motors, 1865 and/or other portfolio mgmt/CRM softNE Hwy 20, Bend. No ware desired. Must phone calls please. be: proficient in MS Office, tech savvy, HOUSEKEEPER organized, selfWhispering Winds Re- starter, team player, tirement is seeking a able to work under p art-time hous e - pressure, and have keeper. Two 7-hour great written & verdays per week plus bal communication on-call as n e eded. skills. Star t i ng: Duties include laun- $36,000 plus bendry a n d gen e ral efits. Please email cleaning. Must speak y our r e sume t o : clear English, be reresume©valentinsponsible and enjoy eventures.com being around senior citizens. Apply in per- Ranch Hand person son at 2920 NE Conposition available. n ers A v e. , B e nd. For info contact Pre-employment drug job.positionhr©yahoo.com test required. ROOFERS with experience, needed. The Bulletin is your Call River Roofing, 541-316-7663

r

I Recommends extra

caution when pur- I products or I I chasing services from out of I I the area. SendingI c ash, c hecks, o r

I credit i n f o rmationI I may be subjected to

FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI Co n s umerI I Office Protection hotline at I

I 1-877-877-9392.

LTl ie Bulletin

I

J

TRUCK DRIVER

Long term full time work. CDL needed; doubles endorsement & good driving record required. Local haul; home every day! Truck leaves & returns to Madras, OR. Call 541-546-6489 or 541-419-1125.

FIND IT! BVY IT! SELL IT! The BulletinClassifieds

Millwrights - Bright Wood Corp.

Call

We are looking for experienced MOULDER OPERATORS & SET UP people, as well as entry level stacker positions.

5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 to advertise.

Entry level positions starting at $10.00 per hour. Moulder/Set Up pay rates up to$16.00 depending on experience. Medical, dental, vision, life insurance and vacation available after standard qualification requirements for each. Bright Wood is an equal opportunity employer and we p erform our own on-site pre-employment drug screening. You must pass a p r e-employment drug screening. Please apply in person in the Personnel Dept. to complete an application.

www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

serving central oregon since e03

Pressroom

RIMijiCQ

© Umtk(m

00 528

Loans & Mortgages

Marketplace

Night Supervisor

We are located in the Madras Industrial Park. The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrBright Wood Corporation — Personnel Dept., egon, is seeking a night time press supervi335 NyffHess St., Madras, OR 97741 sor. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon Press Operator and two in California. Our ideal candidate will The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is manage a small crew of three and must be seeking a night time press operator. We are part able to l e arn o u r e q uipment/processes of Western Communications, Inc. which is a quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for small, family owned group consisting of 7 newsour 3ya tower KBA press. Prior management/ papers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our leadership experience preferred. In addition to ideal candidate must be able to l earn our our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuequipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style merous commercial print clients as well. Beis a requirement for our 3 tya tower KBA press. In sides a competitive wage and benefit proaddition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. gram, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. In addition to a competitive wage and benefit If you provide dependability combined with a program, we also provide potential opportunity positive attitude, are able to manage people for advancement. and schedules and are a team player, we If you provide dependability combined with a would like to hear from you. If you seek a positive attitude and are a team player, we stable work environment that provides a great would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable place to live and raise a family, let us hear work environment that provides a great place to from you. live and raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at anelson©wescompapers.com with your comanelson@wescom a ers.com with yourcomplete r e sume, r e ferences a n d sa l a ry plete resume, references and salary history/rehistory/requirements. No phone calls please. quirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is Drug test is required prior to employment. required prior to employment. EOE EOE.

The Bulletin

WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have

concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.

Advertise your car! Add A Picture!

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. LOCAL MONEyrWebuy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.

GarageSales

GarageSales

GarageSales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!

541-385-5809

The Bulletin Advertising Account Executive Rewardingnew business development Call54 I-385-5809tctramoteyourservice Advertisefor 28daysstarting at 'l4I frsa spe calpsugeamtsafableonss wefsrte The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted Building/Contracting Handyman LandscapingNard Care products. This full-time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw r equires anyone Two years of m edia sales experience is SERVICES. Home & scape Contractors Law who con t racts for Commercial Repairs, (ORS 671) requires all preferable, but we will train the right candidate. construction work to businesses that a dCarpentry-Painting, be licensed with the vertise to pe r form Pressure-washing, The p o s ition i n c ludes a comp etitive Construction ContracLandscape Construccompensation package including benefits, and Honey Do's. On-time tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: promise. Senior rewards an aggressive, customer focused active license decks , salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Discount. Work guar- p lanting, means the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 fences, arbors, is bonded 8 insured. water-features, and inEmail your resume, cover letter or 541-771-4463 Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irBonded & Insured and salary history to: CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be Jay Brandt, Advertising Director CCB¹181595 www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the brandt O bendbulletin.com Chester Elliot Constr. contractor.com Landscape ContracOI' or call 503-378-4621. Home remodel/renovate tors Board. This 4-digit drop off your resume in person at Creative designs The Bulletin recomnumber is to be i n1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; 541-420-2980 mends checking with cluded in all adverOr mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. CCB¹ 148659 the CCB prior to contisements which indiNo phone inquiries please. tracting with anyone. Home Repairs, Remod cate the business has Some other t r ades els, Tile, C arpentry a bond,insurance and EOE / Drug Free Workplace also req u ire addi- Finish work, M a inte workers c o mpensational licenses and nance. CCB¹168910 tion for their employcertifications. ees. For your protecPhil, 541-279-0846. tion call 503-378-5909 or use our website: LandscapingNardCare Debris Removal www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status JUNK BE GONE before contracting with I Haul Away FREE the business. Persons For Salvage. Also Zor/f',tz gaaErip doing land s cape In The Bulletin's print and Cleanups & Cleanouts maintenance do not Zacug ge-e, ~,. r equire an LCB Mel, 541-389-8107 online Classifieds. cense. Managing Central Oregon Domestic Services Just bought a new boat? •s Landscapes Sell your old one in the A ssisting Seniors a t Since 2006 classifieds! Ask about our Home. Light h ouse Super Seller rates! keeping & other ser 541-385-5809 Fall Clean Up v ices. L icensed & Don t track it in all Winter Bonded. BBB C erti •Leaves Nelson fied. 503-756-3544 •Cones Landscaping &

Show Your Stuff. Sell Your Stuff.

Drywall

SUPER TOP SOIL

476

Employment Opportunities OPERATIONS I CLIENT SERVICE

Employment

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,

We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.

JL' S

tial. 541-815-4928 CCB¹161513

Add

Full Color Photos For an additional s15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks* ('Special private party ratesapply to merchandise andautomotive categories,)

Electrical Services Mike Dillon Electric Electrical troubleshoot-

ing, Generator systems, new panel installations. 24 yrs exp/ Lic./ Bonded

¹192171 503-949-2336 •

ClassifIeds

To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 385-5809

D R YWALL

Over 30 years of fast, reliable service. Commercial & Residen-

Handyman I DO THAT!

Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

• Needles • Debris Hauling

Winter Prep •Pruning •Aerating •Fertilizing

Compost Applications Use Less Water

$$$ SAVE $$$

Improve Plant Health

2014 Maintenance Package Available Weekly, Monthly & One Time Service EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Senior Discounts

541-390-1466

Same Day Response

Maintenance

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Sprinkler Blowouts Sprinkler Repair Maintenance

• Fall Clean up •Weekly Mowing 8 Edging •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc.

~Landsca in •Landscape Construction •Water Feature Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations

• Irngations Installation

Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759



E4 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DA I L Y

B R ID G E C LU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sh offz

Tu esrtaym Nove ber12, 2013

ACROSS 1 With 1-Across, toy train 5Set of values 10Halfof cuatro 13 mar k (¹) 14Texascity 15Messenger 161ntroductory drawing class 170ld game consoles 18EarlyTarzan Ron 19 Not found 21 With 21-Across, "I'll believe it when I see it!" 23 With 23-Across,

33 Med. exam involving an injection into the forearm 36 "Washingtons" 37 With 37-Across and 37-Across, a holiday song 39 Lead-in to girl 42 Tots 43 Rec o rds 46Play lazily, as a guitar 48Rap'sDr. 49Thai or Taiwanese 51 With 51-Across, town crier's cry 53 With 53-Across, "Nothing's CBer's opening changed" 26 With 26-Across, 55 With 55-Across ¹1 hit for the and 55-Across, Mamas & the real-estate Papas catchphrase 27 D oo n e 58 Real nerve (cookie brand) 59 Rec o rds 28 Prefix with 60 Montana's center capital 31 Jobs at Apple 62"The lady 32 Six-pointers, in protest too brief much"

Counting by inference By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

player overcalls one heart. What do you say? ANSWER: As in t oday's deal, your best call is a negative double, a c onvention used b y a l m ost a l l experts. You show four cards in spades. A bid of one spade would show five or more. You also need a "landing place" i n c ase partner doesn't like spades. Here, if he bids clubs, you can comfortably show diamond support. East dealer E-W vulnerable

At matchpoint scoring, as much can ride on a 1NT contract as on a slam. In the Life Master Pairs at the S ummer C hampionships, M a r k Itabashi was today's declarer. East's "negative" double showed f o ur spades plus diamond support or clubs. West led the jack of clubs: king, ace. East returned a cl ub: eight, seven, queen.Itabashi suspected that West had begun with J-10-7 — the suit was blocked — so he ducked a spade to West's jack next. West took his ten of clubs and led a heart. He had bid d iamonds but hadn't led one, so Itabashi placed him with 2-4-4-3 pattern — and finessed with dummy's ten.

NORTH 4I 1076 9 A K Q 10 6 C 1042 4KQ

MAKING TWO

WEST 4rKJ 9 J982 0 AJ93 181J 107

If the ten had lost, I wouldn't be writing up the deal. But as it was, Itabashi ran the hearts. West failed to unload his king of spades, so Itabashi ducked another spade at the end, forcing West to concede a trick to the king of diamonds. Making two. Itabashi and Ross Grabel won the event, and Itabashi took the Fishbein Trophy for most masterpoints won at the NABC.

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

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Jumbles: COMMA G L A Z E TO W AR D LA T E LY Answer: I t's 001that Garfield i8 100 lazy 10 bowl, II'8 that he's no — ALLEY CAT

10 XT computers 14 Mandel of "America's GoI Talent" 15 Actress Lollobrigida 16 "La maja desnuda" arfisI 17 Primary artery 18 First name in advice 19 Baseball's Hershiser 20 Amt. 21 Playskool's Rocktivity products, e.g. 24 Mugs, e.g. 25 Old British coin 26 Clinic helper 31 Big concert setting 32 Gambler's lOU 33 Lawyers' org. 36 Peer pruriently 37 Kermit's color 39 Coffee-brewing choice 40 Boozer 41 High-fiber food 42 Longtime

"Masterpiece

Theater" hoSt Alistair 43 Decree that spells things out 46 Nighttime shindig 49 TV warrior princess 50 One's toughest critics, often, and, literally, three different words hidden in 21-, 26and 43-Across 53 Internet letters 56 Uses a straw 57 Fairy tale start 58 D-Day beach 60 Promote big-time 61 Slangy turnarounds

2 Old grump 3 Haywire 4 "Picked" complaint 5 Olympians in red, white and blue 6 And r e of tennis 7 Netanyahu of Israel, familiarly 8 "Squawk on the Street" airer 9 "Hu h ? " 10 Ouffielder's cry 11 B in chemistry 12 "Poppycock!" 13 Doritos scoopful 22 'What can Brown

do for you?" shipping co. 23 Manhattan's Fontanne Theatre 24 Mr. Peanut prop 26 Vietnam neighbor 27 Golden Fleece

vessel 28 Suspenders alternative 29 What a hound follows 30 With 53-Down, stadium fans' rhythmic motion 33 Yankee infielder, to fans 1

2

con versation

39 Cartoon explorer 5 1 Attending to a 41 Uncle Remus's task Fox 52 Likesome coffee 42 MonarCh'S or tea spouse 53 See 30-Down 43 Tears (awayj 54 Ro l ler coaster from Ciy 44 Superabundance 55 Hand-held 45 Maiden name scanner intro 59 Vandalize

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: O P E D S

AT LO L I A L H E

S P E R W A R E A S I D L A S C O L V E 0 I L H B R OW S M E R E P S M A C U S E S A S H C O NV E R S E E D S E L F LA G O F S H I V I G L P U R E B R A F E E T B E N xwordeditor@aol.com 6

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DOWN 1 Cager-turnedrapper O'Neal, familiarly

38 Scavenging pest

15

bird" 63 Tiny hill builders 64 Criteria: Abbr. branch

4

4 6S langy sibling 47 Bulb in a garden 48 Ad d ition to the

14

62 Poe's "ebony

65 Trapped on a

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34 Ride the Harley 35 Copycat 37 Heartrending

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By Ed Sessa (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

59

11/1 2/1 3


THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 2013 E5

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

~

e

I •

860

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

f •

634

771

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Lots

Bid Now!

www.eulletineidnBuy.com

' lj I '

Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

Vacation Rentals & Exchanges

Buy New...auy Local

You Can Bid On: Lot 22 at Yarrow in Madras Retail Value $23,000

687 ;I

I

I' Christmas at the Coast WorldMark Depoe Bay, OR 2 bedroom condo, sleeps 6 12/22 - 12/29 or 12/23 -12/30.

$1399

541-325-6566 630

Rooms for Rent Room for rent in Redmond, $350+ utilities. No s moking. Mature, r e sponsible, & stable. Call Jim, 541-419-4513 632

Apt./Multiplex General

HDFatBo 1996

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313

627

Motorcycles & Accessories

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks.

'.0 0

e

Commercial for Rent/Lease

541-923-7343. 693

Office/Retail Space for Rent 500 sq. ft. upstairs office on NE side of town, private bath, all util. paid. $500 month plus $500 d e posit. 541-480-4744

BM 5@KtRs

Vce ©nlls

775

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-548-5511

Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes

Recreational Homes & Property

541-548-5511

PRICED REDUCED

cabin on year-round creek. 637 acres surrounded federal land, Fremont Nat'I Forest. 541-480-7215

adjustments can be made to your ad. 771 541-385-5809 Lots The Bulletin Classified RIDGE Small studio downtown SHEVLIN area, $495 mo. inc. 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, approved plans. More util., $475 d ep. No pets/smking. 541-330- details and photos on craigslist. $ 159,900. 9769, 541-480-7870 541-389-8614

Find It in

The Bulletin Classifiedsl 541-385-5809

860

Motorcycles & Accessories

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads T he B u l l e t i n

Sell an Item

$17,000

541-548-4807

Suzuki DRZ400 SM 2007, 14K mi., 4 gal. tank, racks, recent tires, $4200 OBO. 541-383-2847.

2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384

Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K mi l e s , perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin

Harley Davidson 1992 FXRS Super Glide, nice bike, $6500 obo. 541-460-0494

DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

at 8:00 p.m.)

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

763

tact us ASAP so that corrections and any

• Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.

Sun Forest Construction (Bidding closes Tues., Nov 12,

JandMHomes.com

your ad, please con-

• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, SOLD!

!60% Reserve)

Fenced storage yard, building an d o f f ice trailer for rent. In convenient Redmond location, 205 SE Railroad Blvd. Reduced to $700/mo. Avail. 10/1.

CHECK YOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn correct. nSpellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to

Snowmobiles

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

Health Forces Sale! 2007 Harley Davidson FLHX Street GlideToo many extras to list! 6-spd, cruise control, stereo, batt. tender, cover. Set-up for long haul road trips. Dealership svc'd. Only 2,000 miles. PLUS H-D cold weather gear, rain gear, packs, helmets, leathers 8 much more. $15,000. 541-382-3135 after 5pm

rx,

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, LOADED, 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32,000 in bike, only $23,000 obo.

870

881

Boats & Accessories • 21' Crownline Cuddy Cabin, 1995, only 325 hrs on the boat, 5.7 Merc engine with outdrive. Bimini top & moorage cover, $7500 obo.

Motorhomes

f

lg~

~

Motorhomes

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, Fleetwood D i s covery professionaly winter40' 2003, diesel moized every year, cut541-382-2577 torhome w/all off switch to battery, options-3 slide outs, plus new RV battersatellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Find exactly what ies. Oven, hot water etc. 3 2,000 m i les. heater 8 air condiyou are looking for in the Wintered in h e ated tioning have never CLASSIFIEDS shop. $84,900 O.B.O. been used! 541-447-8664 $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

21' Sun Tracker Sig. series Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp, live well, fish fndr, new int, extras, exc cond, $7900. 541-508-0679

Call The Bulletin At 544 -385-5809 G ulfstream S u n - Place Your Ad Or E-Mail sport 30' Class A At: www.bendbulletin.com 1988 ne w f r i dge, TV, solar panel, new

refrigerator, wheelAds published in the c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W "Boats" classification g enerator, Goo d include: Speed, fishcondition! $12,500 ing, drift, canoe, obo 541-447-5504 house and sail boats. For all other types of Check out the watercraft, please go to Class 875. classifieds online 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletinvcom Updated daily

870

Boats & Accessories

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

3erewg Central Oregon tlnte 1903

Travel Trailers

yg $85,000. 541-390-4693

www.centraloregon houseboat.com GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

Bid Now!

www.eulletlneldneuy.com

You Can Bid On: 2014 Hideout 27RBWE Travel Trailer. Retail Value $24,086

$25,000.

541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

(70% Reserve)

Big Country RV lB!dding closes Tues., Nov 12, at 8:00 p.m.)

Serving Central Oregon since1903

875

Watercraft Ads published in eWatercraft" include: Kay-

aks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Class 870.

880

Motorhomes

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces,

Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $8700. 541-815-9939

F leetwood Am e r i cana W i l liamsburg 2006. Two king tent end beds w/storage t runk b e lo w on e , slideout portable din ette, b e nch s e a t , cassette t o i le t & shower, swing level galley w/ 3 bu r ner cook top and s ink. outside grill, outside shower. includes 2 propane tanks, 2 batteries, new tires plus bike trailer hitch on back bumper. Dealer serviced 2013. $8500

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

Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 '4 tlk

Reduced $1 Ok!

,•a

Sunchaser Pontoon boat - $19,895

PHAETON QSH Fleetwood Discovery TIFFIN 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 2008 40X, Corian 350hp diesel engine, cruise, S-8521. 2006 counters, convection/ $129,900. 30,900 miles, Harley Davidson Sport- 75hp. Mercury. Full micro, 2-door fridge/ great condition! e n c losure. freezer, washer/dryer, ster 2 0 01 , 1 2 0 0cc, camping dishwasher, washer/ cha n ging central vac, new ti e & 9,257 miles, $4995. Call Pop u p room/porta-potty, BBQ, dryer, central vac, roof carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, Michael, 541-310-9057 satellite, aluminum swim ladder, all gear. window awnings, levelJust bought a new boat? Trailer, 2006 E a sy- ers, ext'd warranty, multi- wheels, 2 full slide-thru Sell your old one in the loader gal v anized. media GPS, 350 Cum- basement trays & 3 TV's. classifieds! Ask about our P urchased new, a l l mins diesel, 7.5 gen. Falcon-2 towbar and Super Seller rates! records. 541-706-9977, Many extras! $119,900. Even-Brake included. 541-385-5809 cell 503-807-1973. 541-604-4662 Call 541-977-4150 20' 2006 Smokercraft

N

WHEELIC naco DVnasty 2004 - L~OAo olid surtures include» trld 6, g ace counters, 4-dr ro buitt-tn convection mtcro washer/dryer ceramic tile sateHite t'loor, TTV, DVD, p dish, air leueling, ra and a through storage 4 y, king size bed - All tor only $149,000 541-000-000

0

Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat

8 air, queen

walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

"Little Rect Corvette "

CD

y~pE-C~tllL~ mU

Your auto, RV, mo t o r cycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells o r up to 1 2 m o n t h s

+ol tret]e + A+eyt l bf "to w th 901$ 26 s mpra d 8« l n faya 9. LODk fun a gl.i 0

I/ke thiS I $12 5P0' 541 000 000

a

(whiche ve r co m e s f i r s t ! ) I ncludes u p t o 4 0 w o r d s o f t e x t , 2 " i n l e n g t h , w i t h b o r d e r , f ull colo r p h o t o , b o l d h e a d l i n e a n d p r i c e . e Da i l y p u b l i C a t i O n i n Th e B u lle t i n , a n a u d i e n C e O f O V e r 7 0 , 0 0 0 .

e Week ly p u b l i C atiOn in Ce n t r a l O r e g O n M a r k e t p l a r e — DE L I VE RED t o o ve r 3 0 , 0 0 0 h o u s e h o l d s . e We e k l y

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $15,000 obo (or trade for camper that fits 6tyg'pickup bed, plus cash). 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

WANTED 1950's-60's TRAVEL TRAILER. Needing some restoration ok, prefer no leaks. Will pay up to $1000 cash for the right trailer. (541 i 637-7404

4R ~ I „<. WEEKEND WARRIOR

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000

I, WrNee

eu~p~~® ~pgi gi5'l0>

batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

541-948-2216

FAST! If it's under $500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times A / C oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual

•e

wood floors (kitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV 8 roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed 8 chair, all records, no pets or s moking. $28,450. Call 541-771-4800

COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Pristine - just 23,390 inboard motor, g r eat miles! Efficient coach cond, well maintained, has Ford V10 $8995obo. 541-350-7755 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ People Look for Information AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ About Products and smkg. 1 ownerServices Every Daythrough a must see! $52,500. The Bulletin Classiheds 541-548-4969

nnauh+

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

Buy Neyv...atty Local

I/O, 1 owner, always garaged, w/trlr, exc cond, $2000. 541-788-5456

541-318-6049

Layton 27-ft, 2001

1994 37.5' motor-

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

The Bulletin

The Bulletin can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp

541-447-4805

h o u seboat, KOUNTRY AIRE

Beautiful

541-385-5809

16'9 n Larson All Ameri-

Keystone Laredo 31' RV 2006 with 12' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w e r. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600

IBe'Q sg •

The Bulletin

$4995 Dream Car AutoSales 1801 Division, Bend

Trav el T r ailers

1

¹201536.

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

p u b li C a t i O n i n Th e C e n t r a l O r e g O n N iCk e l A d S W i t h a n a u d i e n C e O f O V e r

3 0,000 i n C e n t r a l a n d E a s t e r n O r e g o n e CO n t i n u O u S l i S t i n g W i t h p h O t O O n B e n d b u lle t i n . C O m "A $ 2 9 0 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in t he a b o v e p u b l i c a t i o n s . P r i v a t e p a r t y a d s o n l y .

Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free. Tow with 3/9-ton. Strong

suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266


E6 TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 975

• a

s •

BOATS &RVs 805 -Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats &Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent

s

Antique & Classic Autos

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

AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

541-389-6998

541-549-6028.

Ford Model A 1930

—..

a • '

Q

Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 5B, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! Must see to appreciate!

$19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call or text541-325-1956. CHECK VOUR AD

Fifth Wheels

your ad, please con-

tact us ASAP so that corrections and any

adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

BMW X3 2 0 07, 99 K 541-598-3750 PriceReduced! miles, premium packFord T-Bird, 1966, 390 age, heated lumbar www. aaaoregonautoOPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in/out. $7500 obo.

SuperhavvkOnly 1 Share Available

supported seats, panoramic moonroof, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xenon headlights, tan & black leather interior, n ew front & rea r brakes O 76K miles, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. 541-388-4360

sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. wa541-480-3179 Economical flying ter heater, 10 cu.ft. in your own fridge, central vac, IFR equipped s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New front power leveling Garmin Touchscreen jacks and s c issor BMW X5 S eries 4.8i avionics center stack! stabilizer jacks, 16' 2007 6 9 , 70 6 mi. GMC Pra ton 1971, Only Exceptionally clean! awning. Like new! $28,888 ¹Z37964 $1 9,700! Original low Hangared at BDN. 541-419-0566 mile, exceptional, 3rd Call 541-728-0773 owner. 951-699-7171 Oregon AntoSonree

541-598-3750

~ ,

M

www.aaaoregonautosource.com

Ford 1965 6-yard

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter,

dump truck, good paint, recent overhaul, everything works! $3995. 541-815-3636

GMC Sierra 1977 short bed, e xlnt o r i ginal cond., runs & drives great. Ve, new paint and tires. $4750 obo. 541-504-1050

307-221-2422,

( in La Pine )

WILL DELIVER

Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, MGA 1959 - $19,999 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 9 O r igip ump, 4 - 3 hoses, Convertible. body/motor. No camlocks, $ 2 5,000. nal rust. 541-549-3838 541-820-3724

~ OO

RV Transport

Local or Long Distance: 5th wheels, camp trailers, toy haulers, etc. Ask for Teddy,

MorePixatBendboletin,com Lltl

541-260-4293

Chevy Tahoe 1998, 4x4, 5.7L V8, 197K

mi., good c o nd., runs great, w/studded tires on extra factory rims. $3000 OBO. 541-480-8060

4' 2" wide x 7' 10 U

Qoo 908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

$350. 541-389-9844

New 2013 Wells Cargo V-nose car hauler, 8/E' x 20', 5200-Ib axles. Price new is $7288; asking $6750. 541-548-3595

BMW 525 2002

Luxury Sport Edition, V-6, automatic, U loaded, 18 new tires, 114k miles. $7,900 obo (541) 419-4152

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

¹4155624940 for

additional details.) Serious inquiries only. 541-480-5348

Buick La Cross CXS 2 005, loaded, n e w battery/tires, p erfect $8995. 541-475-6794 Cadillac El Dorado 1994 Total Cream Puff! Body, paint, trunk as showroom, blue leather, $1700 wheels w/snow tires although car has not been wet in 8 years. On trip to Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., $4800. 541-593-4016.s

~

¹178907

$17,988

MorePixatBendbuletin,com

S bt.l® SUBAR U .

go to

On a classified ad

9UBARUOIBRND COM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. www.bendbulletin.com to view additional 877-266-3821 photos of the item. Dlr ¹0354 Toyota Camry CXL 1998, 70K miles, good cond. Looking for your $6000. 541-385-9289 next employee? Place a Bulletin help Toyota Celica wanted ad today and Convertible 1 993 reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad

will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

2003 6 speed, X50

added power pkg.,

530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver,

gray leather interior, new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700. 541-322-9647

G T 2200 4 c yl, 5 speed a/c pw pdl nicest c o n vertible around in this pnce range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., r emarkable cond. i n side and out. Fun car to d rive, Must S E E ! The Bulletin recoml $5995. R e dmond. mends extra caution I 541-504-1993 when p u r chasing ~

r---I

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928

Toyota Corolla CE 1999, auto., White, 1 owner, 81,700 miles, $3900, 541-382-6795

U Say Ugoodbuy

f products or servicesf from out of the area.

J S ending c

ash ,J

checks, or credit in-

I formation may be I / subject toFRAUD For more informaf tion about an advertiser, you may call

f

I the Oregon State I

Attorney General's I to that unused Subaru Imp r e za Office C o n sumer 2006, 4 dr., AWD, item by placing it in f Protection hotline at silver gray c o lor, 1-877-877-9392. auto, real nice car in The Bulletin Classifieds great shape. $6200.

I

541 -385-5809

I f

The Bulletin

SeWing CCOPPBI OreganAlCCC 1903

9UBMIUOPBRND COM

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877-266-3821

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Save money. Learn Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 I nternational to fly or build hours Fla t small block w/Weiand Bed Pickup 1963, 1 with your own airdual quad tunnel ram c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o ton dually, 4 s pd. with 450 Holleys. T-10 trans., great MPG, Commander, 4 seat, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, 150 HP, low time, could be exc. wood Weld Prostar wheels, hauler, runs great, full panel. $23,000 extra rolling chassis + new brakes, $1950. obo. Contact Paul at extras. $6500 for all. 541-447-5184. 541-41 9-5480. 541-389-7669.

L e g al Notices

Legal Notices •

LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT COURT OF OREGON FOR DESCHUTES C O UNTY. W ELLS FARG O BANK, N . A . , AS TRUSTEE FOR OPT ION ONE M O R T GAGE LOAN TRUST 2 006-3, ASS ET BACKED C E RTIFIC ATES, SERI E S 2006-, Plaintiff, v. ESTATE OF W E SLEY M. JOHNSON, DEC EASED; JULIE R . JOHNSON AKA JULIE ROUSE; UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF WESLEY M. JOHNSON, DECEASED; STATE OF OREGON, DEPARTMENT OF JUST ICE; RA Y K L EIN INC. DBA PROFESS IONAL CRE D I T SERVICE; PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN C LAIMING AN Y R I G HT, TITLE, LIEN OR INT EREST I N THE PROPERTY DES CRIBED I N T H E COMPLAINT HEREIN,

will win automatically.

To "appear" you must file with the court a le-

Legal Notices O n N o vember 4 , 2013, Forest Supervisor John Allen made a decision to issue a construction special use permit authorizing Bend Cable to install an approximately 10 mile fiber optic line in the Bridge Creek Water System project ditch. The decision to approve the City of Bend Bridge Creek Water System Project was made November 4, 2013. T h e f i ber optic line is located at T17S, R11E, Section 34, T18S, R10E, Sections 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 an d T 18S, R11E, Sections 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 W . M. This decision also includes the installation of sweeps out from the road at approximately 5,000 foot intervals t o a p p roxim ately 13 flus h mounted vaults. Utilizing an existing ditch to install the fiber optic line will prevent f uture g round d i s turbing activities and minimize the impact to the area.

gal paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or Uanswer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i t hin thirty days along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n at t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. IF YOU HAVE ANY Q U ESTIONS, YOU S HOULD SE E A N A TTORNEY IMMEDIATELY. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may call the O r egon S t a te Bar's Lawyer Referral S ervice a t (503) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. The object of the said action and the relief sought to be o btained therein i s fully set forth in said complaint, an d is D efendant(s). NO . briefly stated as follows: Foreclosure of a P LAINTIFF'S S U MMONS BY PUBLICA- Deed of T r ust/MortT ION. TO:Estate o f gage. Grantors:EsWesley M. Johnson, t ate of W esley M . This project is c atDeceased; Unknown Johnson, Deceased, egorically e x cluded from documentation in Heirs and Devisees of Unknown Heirs and Wesley M. Johnson, Devisees of Wesley an EA or EIS as deM . J o hnson, D e - s cribed in 3 6 C F R D eceased; Julie R . Johnson AKA J u lie ceased. Property ad- 220.6(e)(2). Old Rouse; P E R SONS dress:64560 Bend-Redmond, The Decision Memo is O R PARTIES U N 977 0 1 . available at the KNOWN C LAIMING B end, O R Rock Publication: The Bulle- Bend-Fort ANY RIGHT, TITLE, tin. DATED this 6 day R anger Stati o n, LIEN OR INTEREST Des c h utes IN THE PROPERTY of November, 2013. 63095 Brandon Smith, OSB Market Road, Bend, DESCRIBED IN THE ¹ 124584, Email : Oregon and on the COMPLAINT Forest Service webHEREIN, IN THE bsmith@robinsontait.c site at: NAME OF THE om, Robinson Tait, http://data.ecosystemSTATE OF OREGON: P .S., Attorneys f o r Plaintiff, Tel: ( 2 06) management.org/neYou are hereby repaweb/project list.php quired to appear and 676-9640. ? forest=110601 d efend against t h e LEGAL NOTICE allegations contained Storage Auction This decision is not in the Complaint filed November 16, 2013 subject to appeal pura gainst you i n t h e On at 9 00 am a 257 SE suant t o 36 CFR above entitled pro2nd Street, Alliance 21512(e)(1). A ceeding within thirty S torage, L L C wi l l 30-day comment pe(30) days from the handle the disposition riod was provided and date of service of this of the entire contents Summons upon you. of Units ¹ 4 6 A n toi- no substantive comIf you fail to appear nette Grant-Hayward, ments were received. This decision may be and defend this mat¹101 L illy T r imble, implemented immediter within thirty (30) ¹128 Daniel Harris, ately. days from the date of ¹393 James Edward publication specified M arkham, Jr, ¹ 5 2 3 herein along with the J en S nyder, ¹ 5 3 6 For additional information contact: Lisa r equired filing f e e, T erry Foster, ¹ 5 4 0 Wells Fargo B a nk, j azmyne logan, t o Dilley, Special Uses at (541) N.A., as Trustee for satisfy said lien of the Administrator 383-4025 or by e-mail Option One Mortgage above named. at lldilley@fs.fed.us. Loan Trust 2006-3, LEGAL NOTICE Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2006- USDA Forest Service BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS will apply to the Court Deschutes National Search the area's most f or th e r e l ief d e Forest comprehensive listing of 541-362-5598 Bend-Fort Rock classified advertising... manded in the Comreal estate to automotive, Ranger District plaint. The first date merchandise to sporting Mercedes C300 2009 of publication is NoNotice of Decision goods. Bulletin Classifieds 4-door 4-Matic, red v ember 1 2 , 20 1 3 . Bend Cable appear every day in the with black leather inte- NOTICE TO DEFENCommunications print or on line. rior, navigation, pan- DANTS: READ Underground Fiber Call 541-385-5809 oramic roof, loaded! T HESE PAP E R SOptic Line Installation GMC 1995 Safari XT, www.bendbulletin.com O ne o w ner, o n l y CAREFULLY! You City of Bend Bridge A/C, seats 8, 4.3L V6, studs on rims, $1750 29,200 miles. $23,000 must "appear" in this Creek Water System The Bulletin obo. 541-312-6960 obo. 541-475-3306 case or the other side Project Ditch ACO«AD CentralCMPCD 9 OCC I993 BUBMIUOPBRND COM

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

viced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700

Toyota Avalon Limited 2007, V6, auto, FWD, leather, moon roof, WHEN YOU SEE THIS A lloy w h eels. V i n Oo

BUBARUOPBRND COM

BUBARUOPBRND COM

MONTANA 3585 2008,

relatives? Remodel your home with the from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 Ve, center- (photo for illustration only) lines, 541-593-2597 Dodge Durango 2005, 541-548-3379. Ve 5.7L, Tow Project/Restoration '78 4WD, running boards. lphoio lor illustration only) Porsche 924 coupe pkg., row seat, moon- C hevy Malibu L T Z $1400; '72 Datsun third 5 10 w a gon $ 3 5 0. roof.Vin¹ 534944 2010, V6, aut o Both good bodies, will w/overdrive, leather, $10,999 run. 541-598-2729 loaded, 21K m i les, Vin ¹103070 ©+ S U BARU. M$17,988 y,fN®b®PR 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 S UBA R U . Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

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1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-

Porsche 911 Turbo BMW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $21,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not many M-Roadsters available. (See Craigslist posting id

Want Io impress the help of a professional

541-322-9647

541-460-0494

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Chevy Tahoe 2001, 5.3 Ve, leather, air, heated seats, fully loaded, 120K m iles, $ 7 50 0 obo .

s' Atwood Tilt Trailer,

I

Automo b iles

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

Porsche 911

Carrera 993 cou e

Oregon

VW Bug Sedan, 1969, Dlr ¹0354 • fully restored, 2 owners Service & Accessories with 73,000 total miles, $10,000. 541-382-5127 1/3 interest in Columbia i 400, $150,000 (located (4) Studded tires on r ims from th e T i re © Bend.) Also: Sunri•v lnfinifi FX35 2012, P ickups • ver hangar available for Factory, 225/60/R16 Platinum silver, sale at $155K, or lease, off Buick, but fits other Chevy 1986, long bed, 24,000 miles, with Corvette 1979 GM. 5/16 tread, $250. @ $400/mo. factory war r anty, four spd., 350 V8 reL88 - 4 speed. 541-389-0038 Fleetwood Prowler 541-948-2963 f ully l o aded, A l l built, custom paint, 85,000 miles 32' - 2001 4 studded Wintercat tires, Wheel Drive, GPS, great ti r e s and Garaged since new. 2 slides, ducted mounted on 16U rims, sunroof, etc. I've owned it 25 w heels, ne w t a g s , heat & air, great 225/70R-16, $250, obo. $35,500. $5000 years. Never damcondition, snowbird 541-390-7270 541-550-7189 541-389-3026 aged or abused. ready, Many up4 S tudded 9Wintercat Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD grade options, fi$12,900. nancing available! tires on 17 GMC EnDave, 541-350-4077 1 /3 interest i n w e ll- voy Rims, 245/65R17, SLT quad cab, short box, $14,500 obo. equipped IFR Beech Bo- used 2 seasons, lots auto, AC, high mileage, $12,900. 541-389-7857 nanza A36, new 10-550/ of tread left. Call Dick, prop, located KBDN. $300 541-388-0801 541-480-1687. $65,000. 541-419-9510 Dash topper for Chevy ELK HUNTERS! Suburban, 2 0 07 Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. 2014. Medium gray, owner, 87k only 3k on CORVETTECOUPE $25. 541-593-0204. new 258 long block. Glasstop 2010 iphoto for illustration only) FJ Toyota 4 snow tires Ford F350 Super Duty C lutch p kg , W a r n Grand Sport -4 LT U Excellent runloaded, clear bra on 17 rims, $495 Crew Cab 2004, V10, hubs. ner, very dependable. hood & fenders. obo. 541-420-3277 auto, 4WD, tow pkg., Northman 6 i/a' plow, Keystone Ch allenger 1/5th interest in 1973 New Michelin Super alloy wheels, w i de 2004 CH34TLB04 34' Cessna 150 LLC Warn 6000¹ w i nch. Sports, G.S. floor tires. VIN ¹A53944 fully S/C, w/d hookups, 150hp conversion, low Les Schwab Mud & $9500 or best reamats, 17,000 miles, Snow blackwall new 18' Dometic aw$9,888 time on air frame and sonable offer. Crystal red. Murano ning, 4 new tires, new engine, hangared in 541-549-6970 or $42,000. S UB A R U . P245/50/R-20 102T Kubota 7000w marine Bend. Excellent per541-815-8105. 503-358-1164. Observe G02, used diesel generator, 3 formance & afford2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 1 winter. Pd $1200. slides, exc. cond. inable flying! $6,500. 877-266-3821 Will take reasonable Honda Civic 1991 s ide & o ut . 27 " T V 541-410-6007 Dlr ¹0354 offer. 541-306-4915 W glQ % runs good, needs dvd/cd/am/fm entertain clutch. Asking $900 center. Call for more 541-480-3179 details. Only used 4 Look at: times total in last 5 i/a Honda Civic EX-L 2012 Bendhomes.com y ears.. No p ets, n o iphoto forillustration only J 2-dr, 28,300 mi, 1 owner, for Complete Listings of smoking. High r etail Nissan Pathfinder SE FWD, snow tires incl. Area Real Estate for Sale $27,700. Will sell for 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, Nav, Bluetooth, AC, pwr Ford Supercab 1992, roof rack, moon roof, windows, locks & moon$24,000 including slidi ng hitch that fits i n 1974 Bellanca brown/tan color with t ow pk g . , all o w roof, heated front seats, your truck. Call 8 a.m. 1730A m atching f ul l s i z e wheels. Vin¹722634 cruise, HD mats & side to 10 p.m. for appt to c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 $12,988 molding, $16,900. Call see. 541-330-5527. STUDDED over drive, 135K mi., 503-936-3792. 2180 TT, 440 SMO, S UBA R U . full bench rear seat, © SNOW TIRES 180 mph, excellent size 225/70-R16 slide rear w i ndow,2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. I condition, always bucket seats, power and Hyundai Santa 877-266-3821 hangared, 1 owner •a Fe wheels, new! seats w/lumbar, pw, Dlr ¹0354 for 35 years. $60K. HD receiver & trailer $600. 541-388-4003 brakes, good t i res. In Madras, Good cond i tion. Lincoln LS 2001 4door Keystone Raptor, 2007 call 541-475-6302 Studded tires (4) and $4900. 541-389-5341 sport sedan, plus set 37 toy hauler, 2 slides, rims for F ord p / up of snow tires. $6000. generator, A/C, 2 TVs, Dramatic Price Reduc- 235/85/16, 10- p l y. 541-317-0324. satellite system w/auto tion Executive Hangar New $970, sell $550. seek, in/out sound sys541-923-8202 Bend Airport (KBDN) Subaru Baja T u rbo tem, sleeps 6,many ex- at60' x 50' deep, Sport 2005, Auto, tow TIRES: (4) 265/70-17 tras. $32,500. In Madras, w/55' wide wide x 17' high bipkg., two tone, moon on 6-hole Ford alloy call 541-771-9607 or fold dr. Natural gas heat, roof, alloys. 541-475-6265 rims, $200; (4) Ford offc, bathroom. Adjacent 5 -hole a l lo y ri m s FORD XLT 1992 Vin¹103619 3/4 ton 4x4 to Frontage Rd; great $15,999 $150. 541-480-9277 fphoto forillustration only) matching canopy, visibility for aviation busiMercedes-Benz C230 ness. 541-948-2126 or Toyo mud/snow tires (4) 30k original miles, fjfel SUBARU. 2005, V6, auto, RWD, email 1jetjock@q.com 225/60R-16/98H, o n possible trade for leather, moon r oof, Subaru rims, $350. classic car, pickup, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend alloy wheels. Piper A rcher 1 9 80, 541-923-8226. motorcycle, RV 877-266-3821 Vin ¹778905. based in Madras, al$1 3,500. Dlr ¹0354 Monaco Lakota 2004 ways hangared since $9,888 In La Pine, call 5th Wheel new. New annual, auto 928-581-9190 Subaru Forester 2010 ~ ©) S UBARU. 34 ft.; 3 s lides; impilot, IFR, one piece 2.5X Prem. 26k mi. maculate c o ndition; windshield. Fastest Ar¹H797076 $20,995 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. l arge screen TV w / cher around. 1750 to877-266-3821 entertainment center; tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. Dlr ¹0354 reclining chairs; cen- 541-475-6947, ask for Oregon AuloSource ter kitchen; air; queen Rob Berg. GMC Sierra 2002 SLE Mercedes Benz 541-598-3750 bed; complete hitch 1921 Model T Z71 4x4 extended E500 4-matic 2004 www.aaaoregonautoand new fabric cover. Delivery Truck cab, 63K miles, 86,625 miles, sunsource.com $20,000 OBO. Restored & Runs roof with a shade, $12,500 or best offer. (541) 548-5886 $9000. 541-389-1473 loaded, silver, 2 sets 940 NeurA' 541-389-8963 of tires and a set of Vans chains. $13,500.

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Automobiles •

Autogouree

long, great condition,

on the first day it runs to make sure it isN corU rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to

Audi A4 Avant Quattro wagon 2011 36k mi. ¹A040927 $30,988

Coupe, good condition, $16,000. 541-588-6084

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541-382-2577

Au t o mobiles

9UBARUOI BRND COM

Fifth Wheels

kitchen, very good condition. Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer.

SUBARU OUTBACK Nissan Versa S 2011, ffDhoto for flluatratton only) Toyota Matrix S 2009, LTD 2006 - $13,495 4 Gas saver, auto, air, Subaru lmpreza yyRX FWD, power window, One owner, ImmacuCD, a lloys, Vin 2006, 4 Cyl., Turbo, 5 p ower locks, A / C . late 2.5i AWD runs and spd, AWD, moon roof, Vin ¹023839 ¹397598 1996, 350 auto, looks like new with a leather. Vin ¹508150 $13,988 $11,888 132,000 miles. sun/moonroof, leather $18,888 Non-ethanol fuel & heated seats, 6 d i sc . SUBUBARUOPBEND B A R UCOM. synthetic oil only, 4 j@ S U PUBARUOPBENDCOM BARU. +©~ SUBARU. CD, 100k c h eckup, premium Bose stenew belts, timing belt, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. water pump, transmis- reo, always garaged, 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 sion fluid & filter. Auto. $11,000. Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 trans. with sport shifter. 541-923-1781

Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call

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