The Bulletin Daily Paper 11/13/12

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

TUESDAY November13,2012

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Ben consi ers c an e to its water rate 'LIr e By Hillary Borrud

The city Infrastructure Advisory Committee recently recommended that the city move to a water ratesystem based more on how much water people use by eliminating the flat fee for the first 400 cubic feet of water that a household uses each month.

The Builetin

The city of Bend is poised to overhaul how it charges customers for water, but it is unclear whether the average water bill would go up or down under the

proposed changes.

Yet this model would not necessarily mean lower bills for people who use little water, because the city might increase the fixed fee for services that everyone receives, regardless of how much water they use. The city

could also begin charging this

oca s earin u season loa osin 0

By Elise Gross The Bulletin

Two organizations, one a nonprofit and the other a for-profit race manager, are going to court over rights to call their respective Thanksgiving Day runs the Bend Turkey Trot. This year, Smith Rock Race Group and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon plan their own Thanksgiving races at 9 a.m. in Northwest Bend, barring a court order that prohibits the Boys & Girls Clubs from holding its race. The Boys 8 Girls Clubs have sponsored the 3-yearold race, called the Turkey Trot since 2010, in the Old Mill District. The fundraiser attracts hundreds of local runners and walkers. Smith Rock Race Group and the Boys & Girls Clubs previously collaborated on the benefit for Girls on the Run of Deschutes County — an affiliate organization of the nationwide Boys & Girls Clubs. But an ongoing feud has sparked three lawsuits since May. One remains, with a request by Smith Rock for a preliminary injunction scheduled for a hearing at 3:15 p.m. Monday — four days before Thanksgiving. Smith Rock in October asked the court to prohibit the Boys & Girls Clubs from "organizing, promoting, marketing, advertising and taking race registrations from participants of the 2012 BGCCO Turkey Trot." Brian Douglass, president of Smith Rock Race Group, a raceorganizer, alleges the Boys & Girls Clubs do not have ownership of the Bend Turkey Trot, and are causing damage to his company's reputation by holding a Turkey Trot on the same day, thus creating "unfair competition." "He's trying to portray us to be the bad guys and we're not," said Nate Wyeth, the Boys 8 Girls Clubs' marketing and d evelopment director. "Douglass claimed he owned the event, but we felt that (Girls on the Run) started the race." Douglass declined to comment on the lawsuit. See Trot/A5

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Cross-country skier Anna Schulz skis past the gate on Century Drive at Dutchman Flat near Mount Bachelorin several inches of fresh snow Monday morning. The Deschutes County Road Department closes and locks the gate today for its annual closure of the Cascade Lakes Highway from this point to the Deschutes Bridge. It is the last seasonal closure of area roads: The Oregon Department of Transportation has already closed the McKenzie Pass Highway, and the road to Paulina Lodge is closed from Ten Mile Sno-park.

• Bachelor and Hoodoo intend to open around Thanksgiving,depending onsnow By Dylan j. Darling The Bulletin

Snow is stacking up on Central Oregon ski hills, which bodes well for their plans to open next week. Mt. Bachelor ski and snowboard area aims to open Nov. 21, the day before Thanksgiving; Hoodoo Mountain Resort intends to open Nov. 23, the day after the holiday, accord-

ing to the websites for the two ski lift operations. "Right now it is what we

are planning on," said Andy Goggins, spokesman for Mt. Bachelor. As Central Oregon progresses deeper into snow season, highway officials have also put a couple of roads under seasonal closures. The Oregon Department

of Transportation closed McKenzie Pass Highway on Friday, and the Deschutes County Road Department today plans to close Cascade Lakes Highway between Dutchman Flat and the Deschutes Bridge. Mt. Bachelor had a base depth of 11 inches of snow as of Monday, according to the ski area's website, and had received six inches of snow from mid-Sunday to mid-Monday. More snow isexpected to fall throughout this week,

Goggins said, and Mt. Bachelor will announce early next week whether it will indeed open Nov. 21. In determining whether to open, he said ski and snowboard area managers evaluate how much snow has fallen, what kind of snow has come down and how well it has covered the mountain. "There isn't necessarily a

New York Times News Serwce

A skull affixed with tissue-depth markers for facial reconstruction next to a reconstructed image of the face of a woman found dead in 1971.

magic (snow depth) number to shoot for," he said. "... There are a lot of variables that come into play." See Snow/A5

A JaneDoe gets a ackstory

New DNA techniques end

By James Gorman New York Times News Service

mystery of wbat ailsbabyPatrick-By john Lauerman Bloomberg News

BOSTON — Chris Butters

was changing a diaper for his son, Patrick, last November when he felt something in the two-month-old's abdomen. It was about the size of a marble or a peanut M&M candy. "What in the world is that?" he recalled thinking.

Butters and his wife Melissa suspected the growth in Patrick's abdomen was a new chapter in a 36-year-old medical mystery that began in the 1970s, when Melissa herself was a little girl battling unexplained tumors. This time the mystery was solved in a matter of months, thanks to faster, cheaper genetic

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fixed fee to everyone connected to the water system, even if homeowners are out of town or a property is in foreclosure. The City Council is scheduled to discuss the issue again Monday evening. See Water /A4

sequencing that is revolutionizing the diagnosis of rare, previously unexplained conditions in babies. The new approach is spreading through major medical centers and can ease the concern of parents like Chris and Melissa Butters who often embark on painful medical od-

ysseys searching for answers. See Genes/A4

As cold cases go, this one was frozen. Forty-one

years ago a young woman's badly decomposed body

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John Lauerman /Bloomberg News

New techniquesingene sequencing helped the family of Patrick Butters solve a 36-year medical mystery.

INDEX B usiness E1-4 Comics B 4 - 5 Editorials C 4 S p orts D1- 6 C alendar B 3 C o mmunity B1-6 Local News C1-6 Stocks E2 - 3 Classified G1-4 Crosswords B5,G2 Obituaries C 5 T V & Movies B2

was found floating under a highway overpass at the southern end of Lake Panasoffkee, in central Florida, about an hour and a half northeast of Tampa. There was no clue to her identity, but one clear sign of her fate. "A man's belt was wrapped around her neck," said Darren Norris, an investigator with the Sumter County Sheriff's Office. (The original lead investigator was William Farmer, who is now sheriff) She was pulled from the water on Feb. 19, 1971, and detectives spent thousands of hours in a futile effort to determine who she was and who might have killed her. She was buried as Jane Doe. See Cold case/A5

TODAY'S WEATHER Early showers High 46, Low 34 tbbtbt,tbtb tb

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TOP NEWS PETRAEUS: Emails said to shock,A3 SYRIA:Israel responds again,A3


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:

01070s016027045 The estimated jackpot is now $3.2 million.

Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, names in the news — things you need to know to start your day.

TODAY

FOCUS: SCIENCE

o ir s,stormsurviva ison natura

It's Tuesday, Nov. 13, the 318th day of 2012. There are 48 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS

By Natalie Angier New Yorh Times News Service

In the wake of Hurricane Sandy and the spiteful me-too nor'easter, much of the East Coast looked so battered and flooded, so strewed with toppledtreesand stripped ofdunes and beaches, that many observers feared the worst. Any day now, surely, the wildlife corpses would start showing up — especially birds, for who likelier to pay when a sky turns rogue than the ones who act as if they own it? Yet biologists studying the hurricane's aftermath say there is remarkably little evidence that birds, or any other countable, charismatic fauna for thatmatter,have suffered the sort of m ass casualties seen in environmental disasters like the BP oil spill of 2010, when thousands of oil-slicked seabirds washed ashore, unable to fly, feed or stay warm. "With an oil spill, the mortality is way more direct and evident," said Andrew Farnsworth, a scientist at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "And though it's possible that thousands of birds were slammed into the ocean by this storm and we'll never know about it, my gut tells me that didn't

happen." To the contrary, scientists said, powerful new satellite tracking studies of birds on the wing — including one that coincided with the height of Hurricane Sandy's fury — revealbirds as the supreme masters of extreme weather management, able to skirt deftly around gale-force winds, correct course after being blown horribly astray or even use a hurricane as a kind of slingshot to propel themselves forward at hyperspeed. "We must remindourselves that 40 to 50 percent of birds are migratory, often traveling thousands of miles a year between their summer and winter grounds," said Gary Langham, chief scientist of the National Audubon Society in Washington. "The only way they can accomplish that is to have amazing abilities that are far beyond anything we can do." Humans m a y co m p lain about climate change. Birds do something about it. "Migration, in its most basic sense, is a r esponse to a changing climate," Farnsworth said. "It's finding some way to deal with a changing regime of t emperature and food availability." For birds, cyclones, squalls and other meteorological wild cards have always been a part of th e i t i nerant's package, and they have evolved stable s trategies for d ealing w i t h instability. Given the likelihood that extreme weather events will become more common as the planet heats up, Farnsworth said, "the fact that birds can respond to severe storms is to some extent a good sign." Nevertheless, h e a d d ed, "how many times they can do it, and how severe is too severe, are open questions."

• U.S. lawmakers return to the

Capitol for a session that will be dominated by efforts to avert the so-called fiscal cliff. • A total solar eclipse will occur at12:30 p.m. PST, although it will be visible only from northeastern Australia and

parts of the Pacific Ocean.

IN HISTORY Highlight:In 1789, Benjamin Franklin wrote in a letter to a friend, Jean-Baptiste Leroy: "In

this world nothing can besaid to be certain, except death and

New York Times News Service file photo

taxes." Ten years ago:Claiming Iraq was seeking the "path of peace," SaddamHussein's government agreedto

Birds congregate at a protected area for ploversafter a storm in Lido Beach, N.Y., in 2009.

the return of international

"We must remind ourselves that 40 to 50 percent of birds are migratory, often traveling thousands of miles a year... The only way they can accomplish that is to have amazing abilities that are far beyond anything we can do."

opposition leader Benazir Bhutto demanded the

— Gary Langham, chief scientist, National Audubon Society

perching, and the members of this broad taxonomic fraternity all take their perching seriously. When a storm hits, a passerine bird can alight on the nearest available branch or wire with talons that will reflexively close upon contact and remain closed by default, without added expenditure of energy, until the bird chooses to open them again. If you've ever watched a perched bird in a high wind and worried, "Poor squinting thing — could it be blown away and smashed to b i ts down the road?" the answer is not unless the perch is blown away with it.

ing ability to compensate for being pushed off track."

Tracking migrations Researchers have b egun tagging birds with GPS devices and tracking them by satellite to gain detailed insights into how they accomplish their m igratory m a r athons a n d what they do when confronting a storm. In preparation for a p o ssible offshore wind development project, Caleb Spiegel, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and his colleagues at the Bureau of

Ocean Energy Management have attached t r ansmitters to the tail feathers of several types of migratory birds, including the northern gannet, a big waterfowl with a spectacular fishing style of falling straight down from the sky like a missile dropped from a plane. As it happened, one of the gannets was approaching the southern shore of New Jersey at just the moment Hurricane Sandy made landfall there, and Spiegel could catch the bird's honker of a reaction. Making a sharp U-turn, it headed back north toward Long Island and then cut out to sea along the continental shelf, where it waited out the storm while refueling with a few dive-bombs for fish. "The bird has since returned to New Jersey," Spiegel said. "It's pretty much back where it started."

weapons inspectors. Five years ago:Pakistani resignation of U.S.-backed President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, dashing Western

hopes the two would form an alliance to confront

strengthening Islamic extremists. One year ago:President BarackObama dove into a day of summit diplomacy in his home state of Hawaii as he gathered with leaders of 20 other nations of the Asia-

Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Chns Noth is 58.

Actress-comedian Whoopi Goldberg is 57.Comedian Jimmy Kimmel is 45. Actor Steve Zahn is 45. Actor Gerard Butler is 43. — From wire reports

The open ocean Scientists have found that

many migratory birds, especially the passerines, seek to hug the coast and its potential

perches as long as possible,

leaving the jump over open water to the last possible moment. But for birds over the open ocean, hurricanes pose a realchallenge,and they can be blown off course by hundreds of miles. In fact, ornithologists and serious bird-watchers admit they look forward to big storms that might blow their way exotic species they'd otherwise never see in their lifetime. Hurricane Sandy did not disappoint them. As an enormous hybrid of w i nter and tropical storm fronts with a huge reach, it pulled in a far more diverse group of birds than the average hurricane, and websites like ebird.org and birdcast.info were alive with thrilled reports of exceptional sightings — of the European shorebird c a lled the northern lapwing showing up in M assachusetts; of Eastern w ood-pewees that should have been in Central and South America suddenly The avianbarometer appearing again in New York Among a b i r d's w eather and Ontario; of trindade pemanagement skills is the pow- trels, which normally spend er to detect the air pressure their lives over the open ocean changes that signal a comoff Brazil, popping up in westing storm, and with enough e rn Pennsylvania; an d o f advance noticeto prepare for flocksofLeach's storm-petrels adversity. Scientists are not and pomarine jaegers,arctic certain how this avian barom- relatives of gulls, making uneter works, yet the evidence of heard-of tours far inland and its existence is clear. through Manhattan. As just one example, Lang(At least a couple of these ham cited the behavior of the visitors fell prey to New York birds in his backyard in Wash- City's resident peregrine falington on the days before Hur- cons, which either mistook the ricane Sandy arrived. seabirdsforpigeons or were in "They were going crazy, the mood to try a new ethnic eating food in a driving rain cuisine.) and wind when normally they Most of the visitors didn't would never have been out in linger, and once the storm had that kind of weather," he said. passed they took off, presum"They knew a bigger storm ably heading back to where was coming, and they were they wanted to be. "Birds h av e t r e mendous trying to get food while they could." situational awareness," said S ongbirds and t h ei r s o - Bryan Watts, director of the called passerine kin may be Center for Conservation Biolnotorious lightweights — if a ogy at the College of William sparrow were a letter, it could and Mary in Virginia. "They travel on a single stamp — but k now where they ar e a n d that doesn't mean they're as where they're going, they're helpless as loose feathers in able to fly back repeatedly, the wind. Passerine means and they've shown an amaz-

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TOP T ORIES

Concern in I(abul as powerful warlord remobilizes

etraeLiss oc e to earo emais, associatessa I

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By Graham Bowley

Quick reaction Karzai and his aides, however, were not greeting it as an altruistic gesture. The governor of Herat province called Khan's reorganization an illegal challenge to the national security forces. And Karzai's spokesman, Aimal Faizi, tersely criticized Khan. "The remarks by I s m ail Khan do not reflect the policies of the Afghan government," Faizi said. "The government of Afghanistan and the A fghan people do not want any irresponsible armed grouping outside the legitimate security forces structures." In Kabul, Khan's provocative actions have played out in the news media and brought a fiercereaction from some members of Parliament, who saidthe former warlords were preparing to take advantage of the U.S. troop withdrawal set for2014. "People like Ismail K h an smell blood," Belqis Roshan, a senator from Farah province, said in an i n terview. "They think that as soon as foreign forcesleave Afghanistan, once again they will get the chance to start a civil war, and achieve their ominous goals of getting rich and terminating their local rivals." Indeed, Khan's is not the only voice calling for a renewed alliance of the mujahedeen against the Taliban, and some of the others are just as familiar. Marshal Muhammad Qasim Fahim, an ethnic Tajik commander who is Karzai's first vice president, said in a speech in September, "If the Afghan security forces are not able to wage this war, then call upon the mujahedeen." Another prominent former mujahedeen fighter, Ahmad Zia Massoud, said in an interview at his home in Kabul that people were worried about what was going to happen after 2014, and he was telling his own followers to make preliminary preparations.

Kerry considered for top Defensejob

The Associated Press %I

New York Times News Service

HERAT, Afghanistan — One of the most powerful former mujahedeen commanders in Afghanistan, Ismail Khan, is calling on his followers to reorganizeand defend the country as Western militaries withdraw, in a public demonstration of falteringconfidence in thenational government and the Westernbuilt Afghan National Army. Khan is one of the strongest of a group of warlords who defined the country's recent history in battling the Soviets, the Taliban and one another, and who then were brought into President Hamid Karzai's Cabinet as a symbol of unity. Now, in announcing that he is remobilizing his forces, Khan has rankled Afghan officials and stoked fears that other regional and factional leaders will follow suit and re-arm, w eakening support fo r t h e government and i n creasing the likelihood of civil war. This month, Khan r allied thousands of his supporters in the desert outside Herat, the cultured western provincial capital and the center ofhis power base, urging them to coordinate and reactivate their networks. And he has begun enlistingnew recruits and organizing district command structures. "We are responsible for m aintaining security in o u r country and not letting Afghanistan be dest r oyed again," Khan, th e m i n ister of energy and water, said at a news conference over the weekend at his offices in Kabul. But after facing weeks of criticism, he took care not to frame his action as defying the government: "There are parts of the country where the government forces cannot operate,and in such areas the locals should step forward, take arms and defend the country."

By Kimberly Dozier arld Pete Yost TAMPA, Fla. — CIA Director David Petraeus was shocked to learn last summer that his mistress was suspected of sending threat-

WASHINGTON — Presi-

dentBarackObama isconsidering asking Sen. John

Kerry, D-Mass., to serveas his next defensesecretary,

ening emails warning anAriel SchalitI The Associated Press

Smoke rises after shells fired by the Syrian armyexplode Monday in the Syrian village of Bariqa, near the Israeli border. Israel on Monday fired back after a stray mortar shell landed on the Israeli side.

srae re 0 S irec i Son rian ar e By Ariel Schalit and Josef Federmari

ident Bashar Assad has no interest in picking a fight with The Associated Press Israel, they fear the embattled T EL H A Z E KA , G o l a n Syrian leader may try to draw Heights — Israeli tanks struck Israel into the fighting in a a Syrian artillery launcher bout of desperation. Israeli ofMonday after a stray mortar ficials believe it is only a matshell flew into Israel-held ter- ter of time before Syrian rebels ritory, the first direct clash be- topple the longtime leader. tween the neighbors since the The conflict has already Syrian uprising began nearly spilled over into several of Syria's other neighbors — whethtwo years ago. The confrontation fueled er in direct violence or in the new fears that the Syrian flood of refugees fleeing the civil war could drag Israel into bloodshed. More than 36,000 the violence, a scenario with Syrians have been killed in grave consequences for the re- the fighting, according to estigion. The fighting has already mates by anti-Assad activists. spilled into Lebanon, Jordan On Monday, a Syrian fighter and Turkey. jet bombed a rebel-held area "We are closely monitoring hugging the border with Turwhat is happening and will key three times, kiging 15 to respond appropriately. We 20 people, according to a Turkwill not allow our borders to ish official. Separately, eight be violated or our citizens to wounded Syrians died in Turbe fired upon," Prime Minis- key, the official said, speaking ter Benjamin Netanyahu said on condition of anonymity beMonday in a speech to foreign cause he was not authorized to ambassadors. brief the media. While officials believe PresPotentialIsraeliinvolvement

in Syria could be far more explosive. The bitter enemies both possessair forces,tanks and significant arsenals of missiles and other weapons. AlthoughtheIsraelimilitary is more modern and powerful, Syria has a collection of chemical weapons that could wreak havoc if deployed. Fighting between the countries could also drag in Syria's close ally, the Lebaneseguerrill a group Hezbollah, or Islamic militant groups in the Gaza Strip on Israel's southern flank. Israeli p olitical s cientist Dore Gold, an informal adviser to Netanyahu, said neither Israel nor Syria has any interest in escalating the fighting. "I see no indication of Assad wanting to draw Israel in. But if violence comes from the Syrian army, or even forces operating in Syria that are affiliated with al-Qaida, Israel has to do what is necessary to make sure there's no spillover into Israeli territory," he said.

ri a crimerises, Lit as in ton sti us ac By Timothy Williams New York Times News Service

The federal government has cut the size of its police force in Indian country, reduced funding for law enforcement and begun fewer investigations of violent felony crime, even as ratesofmurder and rape there have increased to more than 20 times the national average, according to data. The data, much of it contained in r ecently released Justice Department reports, underscores areputation for chronic lawlessness on Indian reservations,whereunchecked crime has for years perplexed federal agencies,which are largely responsible for public safety on Indian lands. As one illustration of the profound increase in violence in recent years — d espite generally declining crime in much of the rest of the nation — FBI crime data reports that the number ofreported rapes on the Navajo reservation in the Southwest in the last severalyears has eclipsed those in nine of America's 20 largest cities, even though there are only 180,000 people on the reservation. Navajo's 374 reported rapes in 2009, forexample, outpaced even Detroit,for decades among the nation's most violent cities, where there were 335 rapes that year. President Barack Obama has called violence on Indian lands "an affront to our shared humanity." But according to federal figures, his administration has cut both the Indian Affairs budget and spending on reservation law enforcement. Meanwhile, the Justice Department has opened few-

other woman to stay away from him, former staff members and friends told The Associated Press on Monday. Petraeus told these associates hi s r e l ationship with the second woman, Tampa socialite Jill Kelley, was platonic, though his biographer-turned-lover Paula Broadwell apparently saw her as a romantic rival. Retired Gen. Petraeus also denied to these associates that he had given Broadwell any of the sensitive military i n formation a lleged to have been found on her computer, saying anything she had must have been provided by othercommanders during reporting trips to Afghanistan. The associates spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly. Petraeus, who led U.S. military efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, resigned his CIA post Friday, acknowledging his extramarital affair with Broadwell and ex-

part of an extensive rear-

rangement of his national security team that will in-

clude a permanentreplacement for former CIA director

David Petraeus. Although Kerry is thought to covet the job of secretary

of state, senior administration officials familiar with

transition planning said that nomination will almost certainly go to Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. John Brennan, Obama's chief counterterrorism ad-

viser, is a leadingcontender for the CIA job if he wants it, officials said. If Brennan

goes aheadwith his plan to leave government, Michael

Morell, the agency'sacting director, is the prohibitive favorite to take over permanently. Officials cautioned that the White House discussions are still in the early

phasesand that nodecisions havebeenmade. — The Washington Post

pressing deep regret.

FBI agents contacted Petraeus, and he was told that sensitive, possibly classified documents related to Afghanistan were found on her computer. He assured investigators they did not come from him, and he mused to his associates that they were probably given to her on her reporting trips to Afghanistan by commanders began receiving harassing she visited in the field there. The emails in May, according to FBI concluded there was no setwo federal law enforcement curity breach. officials. They, too, spoke only on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter. The emails led Kelley to report the matter, eventually triggering the investigation that ledPetraeus to resign ashead of the intelligence agency. Petraeus, 60, told one former associate he began an affair with Broadwell, 40, a couple of months after he became the director of the CIA late last year. They agreed to end the affair four months ago, but they kept in contact because she was still writing a dissertation on his time commanding U.S. troops overseas, the associate said. New details of the investigation that brought an end to his storiedcareer emerged as President Barack Obama hunted for a new CIA director and members of Congress questioned why the monthslong probe was kept quiet for so long. Kelley, the Tampa woman,

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New York Times News Service file photo

A Bureau of Indian Affairs officerstands in the police station on the Wind River lndian Reservation in Wyoming. Homicides on Indian lands have risen 38 percent, to 133 in 2010 from 94 in 2000. er investigations for violent felonies committed in Indian country than under previous presidents, while p u rsuing violent crime in the rest of the nation far more aggressively than its predecessors. From 2000 to 2010, for instance,as crime on some reservations surged by as much as 50 percent, the number of suspects on Indian lands being investigated for violent crime by U.S. attorneys declined 3 percent, according to Justice Department figures. In contrast, while crime fell D percent nationally during the same decade,federalprosecutions of violent crime outside Indian country increased 29 percent. Further, Indian c o untry had 3,462 full-time police personnel in 2000, a number that now stands at about 3,000, according to Justice Department

statistics. During that time, homicides on Indian lands rose 38 percent, to 133 in 2010 from 94 in 2000; rapes increased nearly 55 percent,to 852 from 550; and arson and robbery rates doubled, according to the FBI. The Justice Department has deployed 37 extra FBI agents and U.S. attorneys to Indian country in recent years. "The attorney general has said this is a priority, and I know he is absolutely committed to the issue," said Brendan Johnson, the U.S. attorney f or South Dakota, who i s also chairman of the agency's Native American Issues Subcommittee. Nonetheless, the f ederal government allocates far less money for public safety on Indian lands than what similarly sized big cities devote to fighting crime.

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

Genes

IN BRIEF Part of Long Island still dark after Sandy HICKSVILLE, N.Y. — Two weeks after Superstorm Sandy, while most utilities have restored electricity to nearly all their customers, there was

one glaring exception: a Long Island power company with more outages— almost 60,000 Monday — than all the others combined. As people on Long Island fumed over the cold and the darkness an d c o m plained that they couldn't get answers from the company, the Long Island Power Authority said in its defense that the storm was worse than anyone could have imagined and that it d i dn't just damage outdoor electrical lines; it caused flooding that touched home and business breaker boxes.

2 BBC executives step aside temporarily L ONDON — T h e BB C s truggled Monday t o c o n tain a spreading crisis over its reporting of a decades-old sexual abuse scandal as two senior executives withdrew temporarily from t heir j obs following the resignation of the corporation's director-general, a move that encapsulated the worst setback to the public broadcaster's status, prestige and selfconfidence foryears. The BBC's website said its director of news, Helen Boaden, and her deputy, Stephen Mitchell, had "stepped aside," the latest moves since a flagship current affairs program, "Newsnight," wrongly implicated a former Conservative Party politician in accusations of sexualabuse at a children's home in North Wales in the 1970s and 1980s. The BBC management said that neither Boaden nor Mitchell "had anything at all to do with the f ailed 'Newsnight' investigation" of the politician, Alistair McAlpine. But it "believes there is a lack of clarity in the lines of command and control in BBC News" because of an inquiry into a separate "Newsnight" debacle — the cancellation of a program a year ago into allegations of sexual abuse by Jimmy Savile, a longtime BBC television host who died last year at age 84.

Indiana blast inquiry focuses on natural gas I NDIANAPOLIS — Th e search for what caused a massive, deadly explosion that rocked an Indianapolis neighborhood turned to natural gas Monday, with officials checking gas lines and a h omeowner saying a problem furnace couldbe to blame. The National Transportation Safety Board sent investigators to check gas main and other lines serving the neighborhood where tw o p eople were killed and seven injured in the weekend blast. Local gas supplier Citizens Energy said it also was checking gas lines and a meter at the home that exploded. But officials cautioned that it was too soon to rule out other causes, saying only that they do not believe a meth lab was to blame for the explosion that obliterated two h omes and severely damaged dozens of others. — From wire reports

Continued from A1 It also holds out hope for eventual treatments, doctors

"Everyone who has a child with an unexplained condition should have access to this. We're at a point where anyone at a medical center with the right people can do this."

say. Babies with baffling conditions shouldhavelargeswaths of their D N A s e quenced, said scientists and doctors at the annual meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics in San Francisco last week. At least 50,000 babies born every year in the United States might benefit, said Jimmy Lin, a geneticist at Washington University in St. Louis. "Everyone who has a child with an unexplained condition should have access to this," said Lin, who established the Rare Genomics Institute to help families pay for their children's sequencing when insurers won't. "We're at a point where anyone at a medical center with the right people can do this."

'Matter of time' While the excitement of solving genetic riddles runs high, the power of sequencing babies also raises concerns. Only in rare cases does knowing the genetic cause of a condition lead to better, let alone any, treatment. Still, parents can at least know what is wrong, and the

hope is that by mapping a baby's genes, scientists may eventually find cures, doctors say. "It's just a matter of time until this becomes a first- line test for babies with undiagnosed disorders," said Columbia University geneticist Wendy Chung. "As costs fall and insurers become more comfortable, this will become the go-to test." The human genome is a code for makingall thebody's cells and proteins. Sequencing all the relevant portion of a child's DNA costs about $2,500, said Lin, at Washington University. That's a fraction of the bill for a day in the neonatal intensive care unit — about $8,000, he said. For Patrick Butters and his parents, who live in East Setauket, N.Y., the new approach meant finally solving th e f a m ily's m edical mystery. Unexplained tumors had tormented Patrick's mother, Melissa, since her birth in 1976. At the time, she had four small growths in her cheek, upper back, armpit and abdomen. Three were cut out, and the one in her cheek, which was never removed, disappeared on its own by the time she was four, leaving her with a small dimple. Melissa's doctors were stumped. Norma W ollnerSternberg, Melissa's pediatric oncologist at M emorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, said she wasn't sure at the time whether Melissa's condition was inherited or whether it would worsen. As Melissa grew, her tumors recurred less frequently and presentedfew problems. She remained healthy and active, and now practices law in her community. After discussions with her husband, it seemed reasonable to have a child. In 2010, to be on the safe side, Melissa approached Columbia's Chung about using DNA analysis to get to the bottom of the condition.

— Jimmy Lin, geneticist

Chung analyzed Melissa's DNA, looking for mutations in genes that were already known to cause the types of tumors that had appeared in her body over the years. The tests yielded nothing. When Patrick was born without any g r owths, the B utters f amily w e r e r e lieved. Then, the first tumor appeared in hi s abdomen. Samples from Patrick's and Melissa's tumors were sent them to H a rvard-affiliated Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, where they were classified for the first time as myofibromas, a type of connective-tissue tumor that usually strikes children. The Butters family is insuredby Cigna Corp. through Chris's employer, a software company, which paid for Patrick's treatment. Chung paid for Patrick's sequencing using about $1,000 in research funds along with time from her colleagues that wasn't reimbursed. After P a t r ick's i n i t i al t umor wa s r e moved, hi s parents found eight more growths on Patrick's head, left shoulder and back. Then, in July, Melissa was playing in the pool with Patrick when he yawned, revealing something unfamiliar and white in his mouth. She looked more closely and reached in with her finger, touching what appeared to be a new growth. Picking up Patrick, Butters rushed to the phone to call his pediatrician. She referred Butters to an ear, nose and throat surgeon, who advised taking Patrick to Memorial Sloan-Kettering as soon as

possible. Patrick was seen by a pediatric surgeon, and within a week, he was in the operating room having the growth removed.

Hunting a cause More and more, the parents were anxious to find out whether the tumors were inherited, and if so, which m utation wa s b e h ind i t . While it was unlikely they'd be able to seek treatment, they hoped the information could be used so that Melissa, or even Patrick, might have a child that wouldn't be affected by the mysterious condition. Chung, at Columbia, redoubled her efforts to find the source ofthe problem, tapping into technology that was making the hunt f or DNA mutations faster every month. She sent samples from Patrick's case to the Columbia Genome Center,opened 18 months ago and run by Olivier Couronne, a computer scientist who had worked on the Human Genome Project. The volume of work done by the center is increasing by a third to a half every three months, he said. Samples come to Columbia's sequencers from across the U.S. and five other countries. Couronne analyzed the Patrick's samples with a process that is rapidly becoming a leading approach to diag-

nosing unknown conditions, calledRNASeq. Thetechnique focuses on a complementary moleculeto DNA, called RNA, which tells cells exactly which proteins to make. By looking for flaws in RNA, scientists can sometimes quickly backtrack to corresponding DNA mutations. The analysis yielded almost 7,000 genes in Patrick's tumors that appeared to vary from known, healthy DNA sequences. While most of these would turn out to be normal variations in DNA and posed no danger, any one of these mutations might be the one that caused the tumors in Melissa and Patrick. To determine which w as causing t h e un e x p lained growths, Columbia scientists then used computer databases of known genes that might be related to tumors like those seen in the Butterses. The researchers quickly narrowed the list to about 10. Then they found the culprit. The most likely genes to be associated with their myofibroma tumors was called PDGFRB, named for its product, a protein called plateletderived growth factorreceptor. It's been related to tumors before. All Patrick's tumors have at least one mutation in the gene. Melissa has a mutation in the same PDGFRB gene. Neither of her parents did. That meant the m u tation l i k ely took place at some point during M e l i ssa's c o nception, Chung said. Patrick inherited that mutation. Late one evening in September, Chung e-mailed Melissa to say that she had located the flaw in the PDGFRB gene. She then reached out to about a half-dozen doctors worldwide who had reported similar disorders in their patients. Did those patients have mutations that matched the Butterses"? The answer came t h r ee weeks ago. A family in Australia and another family that had been analyzed by McGill University scientists in Montreal had the same tumor disorder and the same mutation. The Butters' medical mystery was solved. Now that the gene had been located, what could they do'? While doctors said t h ey c ouldn't stop P atrick's t u mors fro m g r o w ing, t h ey could prevent the mutation from being passed on to future children. SelfReferrals Welcome

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Water Continued from A1 T he City C ouncil h a s not v oted o n wh e t h er to adopt th e c o mmittee recommendations. Currently, residents who pay for year-round water service are subsidizing the cost to keep water available at all times to vacant homes in foreclosureand part-time residents with second homes in B e nd. "The water users who are here, we don't really feel should be subsidizing the folks wh o a r e n't," s aid Frank Turek, an advisory committee member, during a Nov. 7 presentation to the City Council. Turek and other committee members said their rate proposal emphasizes fairness and equity among water users. They h ave been studying the f i x ed and variable costs of the water system to determine which costs increase when people use more water and which costs remain steady, regardless of how m uch water is used. For example, the cost to build a new water treatm ent plant w ould b e a fixed cost and should be divided among all water users asa flat fee,according to the committee. The cost of operating the plant would be variable, since it could rise or fall depending upon demand, so it should be f a ctored into the cost of each cubic foot of water, the committee found. C ommittee mem b e r Nancy Loveland said the city has an obligation to maintain at all times a supply of safe drinking water that is adequate to serve the community. The city must also meet state and federal water quality standards, and maintain "fireflows" necessary for crews to fight fires. "These costs are fixed," Loveland said. "We're saying all customers should get a fixed rate." C ommittee mem b e r Andy High, who i s al so vice president for government affairs at the Central Oregon Builders Association, said fires can occur in homes even when the owners are out of town for an extended time. Under the current system, those people do not pay for water to be available at all

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more revenueburden onto fixed charges, which it says

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charge users only for what they use. How this would affect individual ratepayers' bills is not yet clear.

REVENUEALLOCATION Current P r oposed 56% Fixed costs62%

44% Rated costs38% Source: City of Bend Andyzeigert/The Bulletin

times to fight the fire. City Councilor Mark C apell said it i s c ounterintuitive that people who use little water could actually see their bills increase under a system based more on water usage. T urek a greed, bu t s a i d some of thelarger water users mighthave been subsidizing the fixed costs in the water system. F inance D i r ector S o n i a A ndrews said e a rlier t h i s year that a new water rate structure could take effect in January if the City Council approves. That would be the second rate change to hit residents in one year; rates increased on July I to pay for improvements to the w ater and sewer systems. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

Snow Continued from A1 Like at Mt . Bachelor, the ski hill managers at Hoodoo Mountain Resort west of Sisters are waiting for more snow. A blog on the Hoodoo website lists Nov. 23 as the tentative opening date. "Will it h a ppen?" read a Nov. 5 blog entry. "We're not sure ... yet. Our staff will be ready, the lodge will be ready ... we know that YOU will be ready ... the only thing left to wait for is the snow." Snow is in the forecast for Mount Bachelor this week, while a mix of rain and snow will likely fall at Hoodoo, said Josh Smith, a meteorologist with the N ational Weather Service in Pendleton. About a foot of snow should fall on Mount Bachelor this week, he said. "But if one of the heavier snow showers happens to hit Mount Bachelor, there could be additional (snowfall)," he said. Hoodoo should receive a few inches of snow this week, Smith said. The runs on Mount Bachelor are between the peak of the mountain at 9,065 feet and 5,700 feet, according to the Mt.

Trot Continued from A1

The origins Girls on the Run staged the New Balance Girls on the Run 5K on Thanksgiving 2009 as its primary f undraiser. The nationwide program for girls ages 8-13 teaches life skills

through running games and lessons. At the time, Girls on the Run was not affiliated with the Boys & Girls Clubs. In 2010, Douglass agreed to a request from Girls on the Run to manage the benefit race for free, both Douglass and the clubs agree. Due to sponsorship agreements,the name of the 2010 race was changed to Bend Turkey Trot. In December 2010, Douglass and Smith Rock registered the name Bend Turkey Trot with the Oregon Secretaryof State in order, he said in an affidavit, to establish legal ownership and meet requirements set by West Coast Bank, the Oregon Department of Revenue, the InternalRevenue Service and other agencies. But he registered the name "without any a greement or k nowledge of (Girls on t h e Run)," according to an affidavit filed by the Boys 8 Girls Clubs in May. M eanwhile, Boys & G i r l s Clubs of Central Oregon absorbed Girls on the Run in June 2011. Douglass claims in an a f fidavit that f ormer Girls on the Run program administrator Sue Philip agreed to give Smith Rock "ownership and legal control" of the race if the organization ever dissolved. The Boys 8 Girls Clubs dispute Douglass' claim, Wyeth said. Throughout 2011, Douglass and the clubs attempted to work out a contract in which both would take part in managing the 2011 Bend Turkey Trot and share its proceeds. No agreement could be reached, but both sides staged the event together as they had in 2010. Douglass was given 30 percent of the race revenues, and the remainder went to Girls on the Run, according to Wyeth. "We weren't comfortable with the 30-70 split, but when we started to contest (the split),

Bachelorwebsite.The runs at Hoodoo are from 5,703 feet at the top of Santiam Pass to 4,668 feet, according to the Hoodoo website. T he snow l evel f o r t h e Cascades in Central Oregon was expected to be around 4,000 feet Monday night and should be closer to 5,000 feet the rest of the week, said Ann Adams, assistantforecaster with the weather service in Pendleton. In Bend, the same weather system bringing snow to the m ountains i s e x p ected t o drop rain in town, according to the weather service. A 30 percent chance of rain is expected today, while Wednes-

day should be cloudy and Thursday partly sunny. Rain may return Friday and into the weekend. Temperatures in Bend this week should have highs in the low 50s and lows in the 30s, according tothe weather service. Smith said Monday that the weather serviceforecast only stretchesto the start of next week. "It's tough to say if it will get warmer or colder after that," Smith said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

Douglass refused to do so. The Boys & Girls Clubs were "not a party to our agreement with (Girls on the Run) in the fall of 2010. Thus they have no legal standing in this matter and they have no legal entitlement ... in the Bend Turkey T rot," said Douglass in a n email cited by the Boys & Girls Clubs in a May affidavit. In the same email, Douglass complains that the clubs are pressuring him t o d i stance himself from the Thanksgiving Day race. "We are tired of your client trying to bully us and steal our event," Douglass wrote Bailey. "We raised more that $2IK for (Girls on the Run) in the past two years, and your client has some poor way of showing us respect and

appreciation." In response, the Boys 8 Girls Clubs filed a l a wsuit a gainst Smith R oc k R a c e Group, asking that it "cease operation of the (Turkey Trot) website and cease attempting to undermine (Boys 8 Girls Clubs') relationships with its current sponsors." But in June, the youth organization voluntarily dismissed its complaint. "We wanted to regroup and decide the best approach to benefit the organization," said Wyeth. One month later, Douglass responded with his own lawsuit in small claims court asking for$3,360 from the Boys 8r Girls Clubs for "court costs, legal fees, management consulting fees and company time." The Boys 8. G i rls Clubs asked for a jury trial and a reimbursement for $2,500 that D ouglass allegedly took a s "administrative expenses" in addition to the 30 percent of 2011 Turkey Trot profits. "Today we still don't know what those expenses are for," said Wyeth. Circuit Court Judge Alta Brady in A u gust dismissed D ouglass' sui t o n p ro c e dural grounds; the Boys 8z Girls Clubs d r opped t h eir countersuit. "We are trying to avoid as much conflict a s p ossible," said Wyeth.

Reputations at stake

But neither side shows a w illingness to b ack d o w n. (Douglass) said he owned the Both have scheduled Turkey race and could do what he Trots on Thanksgiving from chose with it," said Wyeth. "He separate starting lines: Smith Rock's on Bonneville Loop and implied that we should feel lucky (for his help)." the Boys & Girls Clubs' at Les Schwab Amphitheater. Both String of lawsuits events will feature 5K and 10K In February, the Boys & races and a "trotter's walk." Girls Clubs informed Douglass Race sponsors have been they would no longer be using forced t o c h oose b etween Smith Rock Race Group's ser- events, which has resulted in vices to run the Bend Turkey a loss of support on both sides, Trot. according to Wyeth and court "We want to ensure 100 per- documents filed by Douglass cent (of the race proceeds) go last month. He claims the Boys to Girls on the Run," said Wy- & Girls Clubs' intransigence eth. He said he is confident the is causing Smith Rock Race Boys 8 Girls Clubs can pro- Group "significant ongoing duce a quality event without economic and non-economic the help of Smith Rock Race damage." Group, as many of their preS ince the Turkey Trot i s vious race sponsorships have Girls on the Run's only annual remained intact. fundraiser, race sponsorship is In May, Boys 8 Girls Clubs essential, said Wyeth. "It's been emotionally taxlawyer James Bailey wrote Douglass asking him to cease ing," he said. "Running a nonadvertising the Turkey Trot, profit, especially one of our stop contacting sponsors and size, in this economy in Central to take down his Turkey Trot Oregon is already difficult ... website. The domain name, but we feel it's worth it in the end." www.bendturkeytrot.com, is registeredunder Smith Rock — Reporter:541-383-0351, Race Group. egross@bendbulletin.com

Cold case Continued from A1 But such cases are not easy to let go. A young woman's life and body had been thrown away. Detectives could not help but think of th e family somewhere who had lost a daughter. In 1986, the body was exhumed, for further investigation, which again led nowhere. What the detectives had to go on, based on forensic science at the time, was frustratingly sketchy: She was 17 to 24 years old, might have had children,and seemed to be white or Native American. It wasn't enough, and as it turns out it was only partly correct. Early t hi s y e ar, N o r r is brought the skeleton of the victim, who early on became known as Little Miss Lake Panasoffkee, to Erin Kimmerle, a forensic anthropologist who directs the Tampa Bay Cold Case Project at the University of South Florida. Kimmerle re c onstructed the woman's face and clothing, took shavings of her tooth enamel and bones, and recruited George Kamenov, a geochemist at the University of Florida in Gainesville, to analyze chemical traces in those shavings of lead, carbon and other elements that can give a surprisingly detailed history of diet and environment. This kind of study, called isotope analysis, is part of the tool kit of geologists, archaeologists and paleontologists, but has only recently been used in criminal cases. Last week Kamenov reported at a meeting of the Geological Society of America in Charlotte, N.C., on his work with Kimmerle and Norris. His conclusions were startling. The young woman was not Native American, he told the society. The best evidence

suggested that she grew up in Greece and came to the United States less than a year before she was killed. (Tarpon Springs, north of Tampa, has a large Greek-American

population.) The research, said N orris, "turned the case upside down." Based on the findings, he provided information for an article that was published Oct. 11 in The National Herald, an international Greek-language

Gregg Matthews / New York Times News Service

Detective Darren Norris,an investigator with the Sumter County Sheriff's Office, is responsible for the 41-year-oid case of a murder victim found in Lake Panasoffkee in Florida. Through isotope analysis — tracing unique geographic signatures of common elements — researchers helped the police pin down the timeline and background of the victim.

AS

ica used leaded gasoline, and so lead ended up in the air, the dirt, the food and the teeth of growing children. But the lead came from different sources, with different signatures. European gasoline had lead from A u stralia, K a menov said. "The whole of Europe was contaminated with this Australian lead," he said. The young woman's tooth enamel showed she had grown up in Europe. But where in Europe? For that, Kamenov looked at another element, oxygen, also incorporated in growing teeth. People living near the sea have more of the heavier oxygen isotopes: When seawater evaporates, the heavier mol-

ecules (hydrogen and oxygen) newspaper. It was accompanied by the new reconstructed image of the victim and her clothing.

bones and other tissues led to Nigeria, and eventually to an area near Benin City. He was eventually identified, but no one has been charged with his Better technique but no ID murder. The case is still not closed. The reason such an analysis The woman's identity has not can be done is that elements been determined,and Norris come in di fferent versions, acknowledges that it is still a called isotopes, that vary by long shot. mass. Rocks and soil in differBut he is confident that he ent geographic locations have is on the right track. "The best characteristic percentages of lead that has ever come in this these isotopes, a kind of signacase came becauseof the sci- ture.Geologists have been docence," he said — science that umenting these signatures for has changed remarkably in years, creating geographic dathe decades since the body tabases. Now, with mass specwas found. trometers, a scientist can read Among the changes are the signature of an element better databases for s k u ll like strontium from a small measurements used todeter- sample of rock, bone, hair or mine ancestry; 3-D identifica- other material and match it to tion software forprocessing a location. In Adam's case, the measurements and aiding in strontium signature matched producing reconstructions of pre-Cambrian rock in Nigeria. a face; and isotope analysis. A forensic investigation can now Following clues involve scientists from an arKimmerle, the Florida anray of fields, including anthro- thropologist, was working on pology and chemistry. human rights cases in Benin "We're all working togeth- City, Nigeria, when she talked er," said Ann Ross, who devel- to the police chief about Adam. "That's what inspired me," she oped the software program 3D-ID and is professor of an- said. She now collects sample thropology at North Carolina isotopes for all her cases. State University. "That's where And that's why she recruitit has changed dramatically." ed Kamenov, a g e ochemOne of the first times isotope ist, to whom she sent tooth analysis was used in a crimi- enamel and bone shavings nal investigation was in the from the remains of the murgruesome caseof the torso of der victim. a young boy, who came to be Lead in the victim's tooth called Adam, found in 2001 in enamelwas whatled Kamenov the Thames River in England. to his first discovery — that Traces ofstrontium and other she grew up in Europe. In the elements that accumulate in 1950s, both Europe and Amer-

fall closer to the coastline. The victim's tooth enamel showed heavier oxygen, which suggested she was from the southern Europe. He also looked more closely at databases showing fine variations of lead isotope signatures in teeth and narrowed

down her probable geographic origin to G r eece, probably south of Athens. But, he cautioned in an email that this is just "the most likely scenario based on all the data." He put the probability at 60-70 percentthatshe was from Greece, but said there could be other locations in the region with a similar lead signature. A final piece ofevidence came from carbon in her hair. Corn and wheat have diff erent carbon signatures an d E u r opeans have a more wheat-based diet than do Americans. In looking at samples from the growing root of the hair and the old t ip, K amenov found a change: "The last hair that grew showed heavier carbon isotopes." The woman had moved to a corn-based diet during the time her hair was growing, less than a year. She was a recent arrival in the United States. And that discovery has given Norrisa slim edge in pursuing a very old, very cold case. People who knew the victim may well be dead now, so such a case is very hard to pursue. (Anyone w it h i n f o rmation may call the Sheriff's Office at 888-231-2168.) But, Norris said, "the advantage is modern science comes along."

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TV& Movies, B2 Calendar, B3 Horoscope, B3 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT Hero nominations being accepted The American Red

Cross-Oregon Mountain River Chapter seeks

nominations of community heroes in advance of its ninth annual

Heroes' Breakfast on March 20. A committee of Red

Cross board members, staff, volunteers and

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others selects each

year's recipients. At past events, as manyas eight awards have been issued to youth, adults,

groups, organizations and animals in the categories of military

service, blood services, CPR, disaster assis-

tance and life-saving events. Ideally, the heroic act occurred during the

past two years, unless the nomination is for an

ongoing commitment to an effort that reflects the mission of the Red

Cross. Proceeds from the event support the

chapter. Nominations are due by Jan.14. Nomination forms are available at

www.mountainriver .redcross.org. Contact: 541-3822142.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Bend photographer Natasha Bacca poseswith several Potato Heads in her kitchen last week. Bacca, 32, hopes to release a book based on her photographs combining potato recipes and plastic parts borrowed from the Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head toys.

Toys for Tots seeks donations The Marine Corps

League is accepting donations for Toys for Tots, a program that distribute Christmas gifts to underprivileged youth. Toy donations

must be unopenedand unwrapped, andcan be dropped at collection

boxes located at various businesses aroundCentral Oregon. A complete listing of donation sites and toy drive events is located on the Toys for Tots website, www.toysfortots.org. No clothing will

• Bend photographer combinesMr. Potato Head-likesculptureswith spudlyrecipesfor cookbook project

be accepted, but books

By David Jasper • The Bulletin

and stocking stuffers

are welcome. Monetary donations can bemade online. Businesses can re-

icasso remixed body parts in cubism. Natasha Bacca mixes body parts — plastic parts, that is — into cubed

quest to be a drop site

potatoes and other dishes.

by contacting Toys for Tots via the website. Contact: www.toysfortots.org or 541-3882604.

Latino association plans breakfast The Latino Community Association will hold a fundraising breakfast Dec. 5.

The association provides connections for the Latino community through education, volunteering and cultural events. The breakfast is free, but the organization will be seeking donations. The breakfast will be from 7:15 to 8:30 a.m. at the Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market

Road. Reservations are required. Contact: www

.Iatca.org.

Contact us with yourideas

Photo courtesy Natasha Bacca

Ketchup isn't the only thingadorning a batch of fries in Bacca's "Potato Head Fries" photograph, part of her "Epicurious Potato Heads" series.

The 32-year-old Bend fine art photographer and Central Oregon Community College art professor i s cooking up a n e w photographic s e ries titled nEpicurious Potato Heads." For the photographs, she adorns potato-based dishes w ith plastic feet, eyes, ears, hands and lips. You may recognize the body parts as components from Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head, the first name in pearshaped plastic couples. However, Bacca ditches the plastic tuber bodies the food toys come with, opting instead for another kind of potato skin. She whips up a spud-related recipe — say, sweet potato muffins — adorns it with toy body-part accessories, then photographs the food in various settings, such as atop a redchecked tablecloth. By anthropomorphizing food and photographing it, Bacca aims to explore American cultureand our relationship with food, to paraphrase from her news release about the project.

nOur anthropomorphic perceptions and ideas influence how we interact with the world," the release reads. "By ascribing human form and attributes to food we can more easily identify with it. An emotional bond is created, and a personal relationship evolves between us and what we eat." With three Potato Head photographs completed for the project, Bacca has launched a fundraising effort on Nov. l using Kickstarter, a crowd-funding website. See her video pitch at http://tinyurl.com/bbtgvzp. See Potato/B6

Have a story idea or event submission? Contact us!

• Community events: Email event information

to events©bendbulletin .com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. • Story ideas: Email

communitylife©bend bulletin.com. — From staff reports

ROMANTIC FIRE HAZARD

Tread carefully wbenbringing uptbe topic of oldflames By Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz Chicago Tribune

Forgive the unpleasant reminder, but chances are your partner has an ex or two or 20. And, chances are, at some point your conversation will turn to past relation-

ships, sending you through a minefield of old flames and

broken hearts. To emerge unscathed, it helps to embrace a few principles. For the person doing the talking: Be honest and reassuring. For the person doing the asking: Know your motivations.

"There are healthy and unhealthy ways people deal with this," said Dr. Diane Rudolph, co-head, with her husband, Dr. Phillip Lee, of the marital therapy program at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/ Weill Cornell Medical Center. Rudolph and Lee, who are psychiatrists, say people

sometimes obsessively dig for gory details about their partner's exes because they are jealous or insecure and want to see how they stack up against them. Other unhealthy agendas stem from wanting to come clean about their own past, or, for the partners delivering the infor-

mation, hoping stories about prior conquests show how desirable they are. Having too great an interest in a partner's past relationships, or in sharing your own, can be counterproductive or a sign that there are other un-

derlying problems. See Exes/B6


B2

THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 'I3, 2012

T

a M O V IES

5 may be falling, but ratings aren't "Doomsday Preppers"

By Neal justin

mechanic, is convinced that terrorists will eventually release a smallpox virus in the U.S. "People will be killing each other over a can of corn," he

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

says.

9 tonight, National Geographic

It's easy to dismiss "DoomsSout h wick has set up a n day Preppers," which focuses e scape center in the nearby o n Americans convinced the m o u nt ains and cajoles his famend of the world ily every couple of is right around Ty gppTL~gHT months to engage in the corner, as yet exercises that cona nother ca b l e sist of loading guns, reality series that encourages g a ther ing up pet chickens that v iewers to laugh at lunatics. they ' l l use for eggs and makAnd then Hurricane Sandy i n g s ure the trailer they'll use to happened. Suddenly, the sur- g e t tosafe shelter has enough vivalist who keeps 1,500 cans b o t tled water to quench an elof food in the basement doesn't e p hant herd. look so crazy. Missouri t eenager Jason "Preppers," which returns B e a ch am has been preparing t onight as the National Geo- f o r a n archy since he was 8. He graphic Channel's top-rated s t ealscanned goods from the s how, isn't the only series with f a m i l y groceries. He keeps a the apocalypse on its mind. g a s ma sk in his school locker. " Revolution," i n w h i c h t h e He m akes his own weapons, ing a "Macebat," a baselights go out on the entire plan- i n c lud et, is NBC's first new hit drama b a l l bat with long nails hamsince 2006's "Heroes." Zombies m e r ed into the wood. More eethreaten civilization in AMC's r i l y , hesuggests to his mother "The Walking Dead," the most that h e might abandon her popular drama on basic cable. w h en t he world goes haywire, One of fall's most ambitious se- b ecause it'll be easier for him ries is "Last Resort," in which a t o mak e it on his own. "I'm n ot afraid t o k i l l ," submarinecrew may trigger a nuclear war. he says with dead eyes in a One could argue that those m o n otone. shows say more about our deTh is kid doesn't need a sire to see the little guy save the su rviv al plan; h e n e eds a d ay than about our fear that s p a n king. the Mayan calendar might be Then there's "Big A l," a a s accurate as a Swiss watch. Nas h ville music producer who But there's no romanticiz- i s c o nvinced that the Russians ing the paranoia that hovers a r e com ing. He's built a underover "Preppers," especially g round shelter in the woods w hen it features the kind of wh e r ehe plans to live on 1,000 p eople you w o uldn't m in d ga l l o ns of water ("I am not goh aving as neighbors. The sea- i n g t o drink my own urine), son premiereintroduces us to 10,000 pounds of wood and his t he Southwicks, a Utah family m i s g uided anger. with six kids, friendly manFor now, th e p a r anoia ners — and animpressive col- shared by Big Al and Jason l ection of haz-mat suits and m a i n l yprovides comic relief. gas masks. At least until the next storm Braxton Southwick, a Toyota c o mes around.

LOCAL MOVIE TIMES FOR TUESDAY,NOV. 13 EDITOR'S NOTES: Accessibility devices are

BEND

available for somemovies

Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend,541-382-6347

ARGO(R) 12:15, 3:15, 5:50 THE PERKS OFBEINGA WALLFLOWER(PG-13) 1, 4, 6:45 SAMSARA(PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7 SEVENPSYCHOPATHS(R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:30 SKYFALL(PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 TROUBLE WITH THECURVE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:15

Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend,541-382-6347

ARGO(R) 12:40, 3:45, 7:10, 10 CHASINGMAVERICKS(PG) 6:55, 9:45 CLOUDATLAS(R) 12:30, 4:20, 8:05 FLIGHT(R) 12:15, 1:15, 3:25, 4:45, 6:35, 7:55, 9:50 HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG) 1:25, 4:30, 7:20, 9:55 HOTELTRANSYLVANIA(PG) 1:30, 3:55, 6:45 THE MANWITH THE IRON FISTS (R) 1:45, 5, 7:45, 10:15 THE METROPOLITANOPERA: OTELLO (no MPAArating) Wed: 6:30 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY4 (R) 9:25 PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 1:10, 4:05, 7:30, 10:15 SILENT HILL:REVELATION(R)

Courtesy Oscilloscope Laboratories

"Samsara," a documentary filmed overfive years, is a continuation of the 1992 film "Baraka." 12:20 SKYFALL(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., l2:50, 3:05, 3:35, 4:35, 6:25, 7, 8, 9:40, 10:10 SKYFALLIMAX (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:20, 9:35 TAKEN 2(PG-13) 1:40, 4:55, 7:40, 10:05 WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) Noon, 1, 3:15, 4:15, 6, 9:05 WRECK-IT RALPH 3-D (PG) 12:05, 3:20, 6:10, 9:15

McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

THE CAMPAIGN(R) 9 PREMIUM RUSH(PG-13) 6 After7p.m., shovvsare21 and older only.Youngerthan21may attend screenings before 7 p.m.if accompaniedby alegalguardian.

869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271

28 HOTELROOMS(no MPAArating) 8:30

REDMOND Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. DdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777

HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG) 4:45, 7 SILENT HILL:REVELATION(R) 5, 7 SKYFALL(PG-13) 3:30, 6:15 WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) 4:15, 6:45

SISTERS Sisters Movie House 720 DesperadoCourt, Sisters, 541-549-8800

ARGO (R) 6:30 PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 6:30

Tin Pan Theater

P~aC1.AssIC COVERINGS

WILSONSefRed mond 541-548-2066

Adjustable

e •

e •

t- • .

MADRAS Madras Cinema 5 1101 S.W. U.S.Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

CHASINGMAVERICKS(PG) 6:40 PARANORMAL ACTIVITY4(R)7:30 SILENT HILL:REVELATION(R) 7:10 SKYFALL(PG-13) 6:30 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 6:50

PRINEVILLE Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014

PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 4, 7 WRECK-IT RALPH(UPSTAIRS — PG) 6 Pine Theater's upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

Q NQRTHWEsT CROSSING

neighborhood

Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies

nn

SKYFALL(PG-13) 6 WRECK-IT RALPH(PG) 6:15

A447ard-44iinning

Also see usfor HIGH DESERT BANK

at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 tI /MAX. • There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand IMAX films. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.

(541) 388-441 8

on Bend's wuson's

M ATTRES S G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084

44testside. www.northwestcrossin)".com

LOCAL TV LI S TINr.S TUESDAY PRIME TIME 11/13/12

ALSO INHD;ADDeeo TOCHANNELNo •

KATU

I'j

'

*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/BlackButte Di ital PM-Prineville/Madras SR-Sunriver L-LaPine

fRRRX~RKHK~RKR2RRRK~RRK~RREK~RKR2RREI~~RRKREEK~XKEH f EHK~RDiRH t 1RK KATU News World News K A TU News at 6 (N) n cc Jeopardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune Dancing With the Stars: All-Stars Happy Endings Apartment 23 Private Practice (N) n '14' ec KA TU News (11:35) Nightline

Nightly News Newsohannel 21 at 6 (N) « Jeop ardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune The Voice Live Results Show'PG' Jay Leno (9:01) Go Dn(N) New Normal (10:01) Parenthood Together 'PG' News News Evening News Access H. Ol d Christine How I Met 30 Rock n '14' NCIS Shell Shock, Part I (N)'PG' NCIS: Los Angeles (N) 'PG' Vegas A dentist is murdered.'14' News Letterman KBNZ 0 K EZI 9 News KEZI 9 News Entertainment The Insider (N) Dancing With the Stars: All-Stars Happy Endings Apartment 23 Private Practice (N) n '14' « KEZ I 9 News (11:35) Nightline K OHD Q 0 0 0 KEZI 9 News World News Videos Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Big Bang Big Bang Rai s ing Hope Ben and Kate New Girl (N) '14' Mindy Project News KFXO IDi IEI IEI IEIAmerica's Funniest Home TMZ (N) n 'PG' The Simpsons Family Guy '14' American Masters JudyGarland's story. n 'PG'« Frontline Assistedsuicide in theU.S. (N) « In the Life 'PG' Koae O B Q B Wild Kratts ae Electric Comp. This Old House Business Rpt. PBS NewsHour (N) n « Newschannel 8 NightlyNews Newschannel 8 News Live at 7 (N) I nside Edition The Voice LiveResultsShow'PG' (9:01) GoDn (N) New Normal KGW 0 (10:01) ParenthoodTogether 'PG' Newschannel 8 Jay Leno S e i nfeld 'PG' S einfeld 'PG''Til Death 'PG' 'Til Death '14' KTYZDT2IEI 0 B lH We ThereYet? We There Yet? King of Queens King of Queens Engagement Engagement H art of Dixie I Walk the Line'PG' Emily Owens, M.D. (N) 'PG' « Mexico/Bayless Simply Ming 'G' New Tricks n ec Jim Thorpe: Greatest Athlete S u mmer Sun Winter Moon n 'G' World News T avis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose (N) n cc PBS NewsHour n cc OPBPL 175 173

KTvz 0 0 0 0 News

*ASIE 130 28 18 32 The First 48ColdandCallous '14' Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars

(3:00) ** "Basic" * "Mission lo Mars" (2000,ScienceFiction) GarySinise, Tim Robbins, DonCheadle. Ateam ** "Poseidon" (2006, Adventure) JoshLucas, Kurt Russell, JacindaBarrett. A ** "Poseidon" (2006,Adventure) JoshLucas, Kurt Russell, JacindaBarrett. A (2003 ) goes to Mars to recoverearl anier expedition. « luxury liner capsizes inthe NorthAtlantic. « luxury liner capsizes inthe NorthAtlantic. « *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Monsters Inside Me 'PG' cc Rattlesnake Republic Mutiny 'PG' River Monsters: Unhooked 'PG' Frontier Earth (N) n 'PG' Wild Hawaii (N) n 'PG' The Blue Planet: Seas of Life 'G' Frontier Earthn 'PG' BRAVO1 37 4 4 Flipping Out Barbie Bitch « The Real Housewives of Atlanta Real Housewives/Beverly Real Housewives/Beverly Flipping Dut Grandma'sHouse (10:01) Million Dollar Decorators What Happens Flipping Dut CMT 190 32 42 53 Roseanne'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc Reba 'PG'cc Redneck Island n 'PG' ChainsawGang BigTexasHeat RedneckIsland n 'PG' CNBC 54 36 40 52 Mob Money: Murders and 60 Minutes on CNBC American Greed Mad Money 'MA' 60 Minutes on CNBC American Greed Tommie Copper Octaspring Ma. CNN 55 38 35 48 Anderson Cooper360 (N) cc P i e rs Morgan Tonight (N ) Ande rson Cooper360 cc Erin Burnett OutFront Piers MorganTonight Anderson Cooper360 cc Erin Burnett OutFront COM 135 53 135 47(4:56) Futurama Always Sunny South Park 'MA' (6:29) Tosh.0 Colbert Report Daily Show W o rkaholics T o sh.0 '14' To s h.0 '14' Tos h.0 '14' Tos h.0 (N) '14' Brickleberry (N) Daily Show C o lbert Report COTV 11 Dept./Trans. C i ty Edition P a i d Program Kristi Miller R e dmond City Council Kristi Miller Ci t y Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Capitol Hill Hearings Capitol Hill Hearings *DIS 87 43 14 39 Austin 8 Ally n Austin 8 Ally n Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie A.N.T. Farm 'G' Shake It Up! 'G' **** "WALL-E" (2008)Voices ol BenBurtt. n Phineas, Ferb Gravity Falls n Phineas, Ferb Austin 8 Ally n Good-Charlie *DISC 156 21 16 37 I (Almost) Got AwayWith It '14' A l aska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier n 'PG' Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier (N) '14' Alaska Marshals (N) 'PG' o« Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' *E! 1 36 2 5 Take Miami K a rdashian A- L ist Listings E! Special '14' E! News (N) Fashion Police '14' Young, Beautiful & Vanished: 15Unthinkable Crimes '14' Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 College Basketball Basketball Col lege Basketball: State Farm ChampionsClassic Sportsoenter (N)(Live) « Sportsoenter (N)(Live) « sportscenter (N)(Livel « ESPN2 22 24 21 24 College Basketball NITSeasonTip-Off: TeamsTBA(N) (Live) College Basketball NITSeasonTip-Oll: TeamsTBA(N) (Live) NFL Live cc NBA Tonight (N) Best of the NFL NPL Presents Football Live ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Bay City Blues « The RayMancini Story The Ray Mancini Story Bay City Blues « AWA Wrestling « College Football Played 11/21/81. « ESPNN 24 63 124203Sportscenter (N)(Live) « Sportscenter (N)(Live) cc SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc Sportscenter H-Lite Ex. H-L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. H.L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. ESP NFC Prese H-Lite Ex. *** "Harry Poller and theGobletoi Fire" (2005,Fantasy) Daniel Radclilie, RupertGrint, EmmaWatson. FAM 67 29 19 41 (3:30) *** "Harry Potter andthe Chamberoi Secrets" (2002)Daniel Radclille. The700Club n 'G' « FNC 57 61 36 50 The D'Reilly Factor (N) cc Hannity (N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren The D'Reilly Factor cc Hannity On Record, Greta VanSusteren The Five *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Best Dishes B est Dishes C h opped Four lirelighters battle. C hopped Chewing the CaulFat C h opped Unsung Heroes ChoppedOui,Oui, Conlit 'G' Cho pped (N) 'G' ChoppedHavea Heart FX 131 How I Met Ho w I Met How I Met Two /Half Men Two/Half Men ** "Twilight" (2008, Romance)Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson, Bily Burke. Sons of Anarchy Crucilixed(N) 'MA' Sons, Anarchy HGTV 176 49 33 43 Million Dollar Rooms 'G' « Million Dollar Rooms 'G' « Hunters Int'I H o use Hunters Love It or List It 'G' « Property Virgins Property Virgins House Hunters Hunters Int'I M i l lion Dollar Rooms (N)'G' « *HIST 155 42 41 36 Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Mankind The Story of All of Us Inventors (N) 'PG' cc Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Abby's Ultimate Dance LIFE 138 39 20 31 Wife Swap n 'PG'« Wife SwapCathrea/Stewart 'PG' Wife Swap Flynn/Orris 'PG' « Abb y 's Ultimate Dance Prank MyMom Prank My Mom Prom Queens Prom Queens MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Ed Show(N) TheRachelMaddow Show (N) The Last W ord The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 Parental Control Parental Control Ridiculousness Ridiculousness Totally Clueless Pranked: Love Jersey Shore n '14' « Teen Mom Wal 2 k theLine 'PG' U nderemployed (N) n '14' « Jers ey Shore n '14' « NICK 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob SpongeBob Spongesob Spongesob Drake & Josh Drake &Josh Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' TheNanny'PG' TheNanny'PG' Friendsn 'PG' (11:33) Friends OWN 161103 31 103Married a Mob. Married a Mob. Married a Mob. Married a Mob. Oprah: WhereAreThey Now? n Dprah: Where AreTheyNow? n Dprah: Where AreThey Now? n Oprah: Where AreThey Now?(N) Dprah: Where AreThey Now?n ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Boat Racing Bensinger Ma r k Few Show Griot's Garage Boat RacingUnl H1 imited Series College Football OregonState at Stanford The DanPatrick Show SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Ink Master SemiNude911 '14' I n k Master n '14' cc Ink Master TattooHerWhat? '14' Ink Master Trick or Freak n '14' I n k Master n '14' « Ink Master StarWars Forever'14' Tattoo Night. Bev. Hills Cop SYFY 133 35 133 45Destination Truth n cc Destination Truth n cc Destination Truth n cc Total Blackout Total Blackout Total Blackout Total Blackout Total Blackout Viral Video To t al Blackout Viral Video TBN 05 60 130 (2:00) Fall Praise-A-Thon Fall Praise-A-Thon Fall Praise-A-Thon *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends n 'PG' Friendsn 'PG' King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld 'PG' Seinfeld 'PG' Big Bang B ig B ang B ig B ang B ig B ang B ig B ang B ig B ang C ona n (N) '14' cc ***"What Price Hol/ywood?" (1932,Drama) Constance (645) ** "OurBetters" (1933,Comedy)Constance Ben- (815) *"Two Against the World"(1932, Drama)Con- ** "Law oithe Tropics"(1941, Drama)Jeffrey Lynn, * " Rockabye" (1933, Drama) ConTCM 101 44 101 29 Bennett, Lowell Sherman. « nett, Gilbert Roland,AnitaLouise. stance Bennett, Neil Hamilton,HelenVinson. ConstanceBennett. stance Bennett,Joel McCrea. *TLC 178 34 32 34 Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Amy's 50th Birthday Little People: DownUnder Little People Big World: Wedding Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Little People Big World: Wedding *TNT 17 26 15 27 Bonesn '14' cc The Mentalist n '14' cc The Mentalist RedBadge n '14' Rizzoli & Isles '14' c~ Rizzoli 8 Isles RememberMe'14' Rizzoli & Isles '14' ~c LeverageTheRundownJob'14' 'TOON 84 MAD 'PG' Ann oying Reg ular Show Wrld, Gumball Wrld, Gumball Looney Tunes Level Up 'PG' Adventure Time King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' 'TRAV 179 51 45 42 Bourdain: NoReservations Biz a rre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food'G' Man v. Food 'G' Dangerous Grounds Haiti 'PG' D a ngerous GroundsBolivia 'PG' Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Bizarre Foods/Zimmern M'A'S*H 'PG' M*A'S*H 'PG' Underdog'G' « M*A*S'H 'PG' CosbyShow Cosby Show Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King ofQueens KingofQueens TVLND 65 47 29 35 B onanza The Law & Order: SVU Law 8 Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Covert Affairs Quicksand (N) 'PG' Law & Order: SVU USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: SVU Couples Therapy rt '14' Chrissy & Jones Chrisey & Jonee T.l. and Tiny T .l. and Tiny B a sketball Wives LA rt '14' Behind the Music Pink(N) 'PG' Storytellers Pink (N)rt 'PG' VH1 191 48 37 54 Couples Therapy n '14' *AMC 102 40 39

Stranded n (Part 2 ol 2)'PG' « ENCR 106401 306401(4:30) *** "Menin Black" rt (6:10) *** "FriendsWithBenefits" 2011 Justin Timberlake. rt 'R' (9:40) **** "The Exorcist"1973,Horror Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair. rt 'R' « FXM Presents ** "Undisputed" 2002,DramaWesley Snipes, Peter Falk. 'R' « FMC 104204104120(4:00) ***"Live Free orDieHard"2007'PG-13' F XMP resents ***"Live Free orDieHard"2007, Action BruceWilis, Justin Long. 'PG-13' « The Ultimate Fighter n '14' Answers UFC Roundtable UFC Tonight (N) UFC Primetime UFC Fight Night UFC: Franklin vs. Le FromCotai Arenain Macao,China. UFC Tonight UFC Primetime FUEL 34 Big Break Greenbrier (N ) Chas i n g Long est Drive Big Break Go l f Central B i g Break Greenbrier Chasing Long est Drive Big Break Sch ool of Golf GOLF 28 301 27 301Big Break Greenbrier "ChristmasMagic" (2011, Drama)Lindy Booth. 'G' « "Mistletoe OverManhattan" (2011)Tricia Heller, Greg Bryk. « HALL 66 33175 33 (4:00) "Angel in the Family" 'PG' * * " A Town WithoutChristmas" (2001) Patricia Heaton. 'PG' « ** "Stuckon you" 2003,ComedyMatt Damon,Greg Kinnear. Conjoined * "Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked" 2011, Com- Treme Desautel's opens;Sonny Boardwalk Empire Nuckyvowsto HBO 25501 425501(430) **"Knight and Day"2010, ActionTomCruise, Cameron Diaz.n 'PG-13' cc twins star on a TVshow with Cher.n 'PG-13' cc edy Voices olJasonLee.n 'G' cc pawns.n 'MA' ec eliminate his nemesis. 'MA' cc *** "Breakdown" 1997,SuspenseKurt Russell, J T. Walsh. 'R' I FC 105 1 0 5 ** "Transporter 3" 2008,ActionJasonStatham. 'PG13' (7 15) ** "Transporter 3" 2008,ActionJasonStatham, Natalya Rudakova.'PG-13' StarTrek ll "Fast Five" 2011, Action VinDiesel, Paul Walker. DomToretto andcom(4:45) * "Supercross:TheMovie" (6:05) ** "Gang Related"1997, CrimeDramaJames Belushi. Twocorrupt ** "Unknown" 2011,SuspenseLiamNeeson, DianeKruger. An accident ** M AX 00508 5 0 82005 SteveHowey. « cops mistakenlykill anundercover DEAagent. rt 'R' « victim finds amanusing his identity, rt 'PG-131« pany ramp upthe action in Brazil. rt 'PG-13' « DoomsdayPreppers BuggedOut Doomsday Preppers (N) '14' Do o msday Preppers '14' DoomsdayPreppere'14' DoomsdayPreppers '14' DoomsdayPreppers BuggedOut Doomsday PreppersBugged Dut N GC 157 1 5 7 A v atar: Air. Pl anet Sheen Planet Sheen Spongesob S p ongeBob A v atar: Air. Av atar: Air. Dr agon Ball Z Iron Man: Armor NTOON 89 115189115Planet Sheen Planet Sheen Ddd Parents Odd Parents A vatar: Air. T e d Nugent H u n t., Country Outdoors TV Wildlife Dream Season Hunting TV M i chaels MRA Truth Hunting Wildlife The Hit List B o w Madness Legends of Fall SOLD Hunters OUTD 37 307 43 307The Hit List * "TheTrouble * "l Don't Know HowSheDoesll" 2011,ComedySarah * "Apollo 18" 2011 Lloyd Owen.Footagefrom amoon *** "Goon" 2011 Seann Wiliam Scott. A bouncer lands Homeland TheClearing rt 'MA' «Dexter Chemistry Dexter andHannah S HO 00 5 0 0 With Bliss" Jess ica Parker. n 'PG-13' « mission reveals aterrifying incident. 'PG-13' a spot on aminor-league hockeyteam. grow closer. n « SPEED 35 303125303Dumbest Stuff Dumbest Stuff Hard Parts Ha r d Parts My Ride Rules My Ride Rules Dumbest Stuff Dumbest Stuff Hard Parts Ha r d Parts My Ride Rules My Ride Rules Unique Whips '14' STARZ 00408 00408Wag theDog (5:20) ** "Click"2006, ComedyAdamSandler. n 'PG-13' « (7:20) ** "Duplex" 2003BenStiller. 'PG.13' « ** usad Teacher" 2011Cameron Diaz. 'R' « (10:35) ** "Bringing Down the House" 2003 « "Dakota Skye"2008 EileenBoylan. Ateenfalls for a girl ** "Conception" 2011, RomanceComedyJennifer Finni- "TheFamily Tree" 2010,ComedyDramaDermot Mul- ** "Skateland" 2010, DramaAshley (4 45) ** "Little Voi c e" 1998, Comedy Drama Brenda TMC 2 5 25 Blethyn, JaneHorrocks. rt 'R' « who has theability to detect lies. 'R' « Greene.rt 'PG-13'« gan, JonathanSilverman. rt 'NR' « roney, HopeDavis, ChiMcBride. rt 'R' « College Basketball GeorgiaSouthern at Charlotte (N) (Live) World Series of Fighting 1 Sports lllustrated 'PG' Poker After Dark 'PG'a« NBCSN 27 58 30 209(4:00) Boxing 'PG' *WE 143 41 174118CSh Miami Kill Clause'14' « CSI : Miami CountOut Mert '14' CS h Miami rt '14' « Csh Miami ShowStopper rt '14' CS h Miami Die bySword the '14' CSh Miami Kill Clause '14' « C SI: Miami Count Me Dut rt '14'


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

B3

ADVICE & ASTROLOGY

Dog pays the pricefor owner's inattention behind the wheel Dear Abby:I want to share my experience with being a distracted driver. One

gorgeous, sunny day a few months ago, I happened to glance down at my iPadand the next thing I knew, I had h it the car i n f r ont of m e . The airbags engaged and hit me and my golden retriever, who was in t h e f r ont seat with me. He was so freaked out he jumped out the window into oncoming traffic. I chased him, but lost him as he darted through traffic on the busy streets. Fortunately, a couple found h im and brought him t o a vet who scanned his chip. I got him back, and it is a gift from heaven — but he was severely injured. With time, he will make a full recovery, but my stupid mistake hurt my most cherished companion. I can't f orgive myself. From now on, those devices go in the trunk. — Reformed Distracted Driver Dear Reformed: That's a start. And in the future, your cherished companion should ride in the BACK seat — with the windows closed and wearing a restraint so that in the event of another traffic problem he won't b e r einjured. Because you are in communication with your veterinarian, ask him or her what type is recommended. Dear Abby:I am a mature, adult woman in my 40s who has never had a good relationship with my mother. Candidly, she is a mean person who has left a lot of hurt feelings in her wake. It makes being close to her impossible. Our entire family feels the way I do about her, including her only surviving sister. I will be remarrying soon. Although I feel that inviting my mother to my wedding is the right thing to do, it could mean

DEAR ABBY potentially i n viting d i saster — literally. I'm having trouble coming to terms with this decision and would love your input. — Needs Guidance in California Dear Needs Guidance:Your mother appears to be a bitter, possibly disturbed woman. If she isn't invited, the hurt and angry feelings could reverberate for years. Because the rest of your family knows the way she is, consider inviting her on the condition that she will be on her best behavior — AND with the understanding that if she "lapses," some family members will escort her out. Dear Abby:My husband has met my co-workers and their spouses at various companyrelated events. He r ecently mentioned that he has seen "Wally," who i s m a rried to one of my co-workers, "Anna," with another woman on more than one occasion. Apparently, Wally didn't recognize my husband. Should I "casually" mention to Anna that my husband saw her husband and where, and let her figure it out for herself? My husband said it's up to me to decide whether to tell her or not. If it were me, I'd want to know. — Older But Not Wiser in Pennsylvania Dear O.B.N.W.:I supposeyou could casually mention it to Anna, but don't be surprised if she casually responds that the woman is his sister, his cousin or a daughter by a f o rmer marriage. It may be perfectly innocent. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Tuesday,Nov. 13, 2012 By Jacqueline Bigar This year you could experience important yet surprising changes. You might even see achange on the professional front or in your relationship status. During the next 12 months, you'll be on somewhat of an emotional roller coaster. Hold on tight, and as a result, you will emerge a stronger person. It will take the full12 months to determine the outcome. You will not be bored this year. If you are single, you meet a lot of potential suitors. Choosing the right person could involve making a mistake or two at first. If you are attached, your sweetie is adjusting to all the changes. Be indulgent and understanding. Another SCORPIOcould challenge you beyond your limits. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * O t hers will not be happy unless you give them the full attention they feel they deserve. Communication falls into the proverbial situation where everyone only hears what they want and nothing more. Try a different approach. Tonight: Relax with a less stressful person. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * D efer to others, as they aresodemanding thatyou have little choice. You might feel as if many people do notunderstand whatyou are sharing. It would be a different story if they weren't so self-involved. Recognize that you are wasting your energy. Tonight: Go with someone else's choice. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * S tay even-tempered, and focuson accomplishing asm uch as possible today. The pace is hectic, butyou are up to it. Clearing up as much as possible now will allow you to accept an invitation that otherwise you couldn't. Tonight: Squeeze in some exercise. CANCER(June 21-July 22) ** * * O t hers could be tumultuous and even exhausting to watch. Communication might be confusing, and your reaction could take you down an odd path as a result. Stop and center yourself, then go over the situation in your mind. Tonight: Let the fun begin. LEO (Jttly 23-Aug. 22) ** * I nstinctively, you want to retreat from others. People could be overly demanding and not into negotiating. You might decide to spend a quiet day at home in order

to steer clear of the uproar; that would be a very smart decision. Tonight: Make it nonstressful. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * * * Y our personality comes out in a discussion, which might surprise a business associate. You always are so professional, and people expect nothing less. Allowing others to see your authentic self won't hurt. Tonight: Have an important discussion over dinner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * Y ou are totally occupied with your finances right now. Unless you have the ability to pull white rabbits out of black hats, you are unlikely to find a money tree in your backyard. Stay realistic. You could getyourself into some trouble otherwise. Tonight: Spend wisely. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * * Y ou could be overwhelmedby the many possibilities you see. As a result of the enormous amount of activity and tasks you have taken on, you have become rather me-oriented. Understand that someone might be needier than you. Tonight: All smiles. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * Lying low is acceptable if you are feeling drained. A discussion with a friend or loved one might help. Actually, your fatigue could be blamed on today's solar eclipse. Be aware that others might be experiencing a similar effect. Tonight: Not to be found. CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * * E mphasize what you want, and focus on that very thing. Friends surround you, but their moods might be volatile and unpredictable. Confusion surrounds a key meeting. Could you be mixing business with pleasure? Tonight: Where the fun is. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * O thers can't seem to concentrate or handle a particular problem. Your popularity skyrockets as others reveal how much they need you and want your support. Be willing to say "no" if need be. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * Believe that there is a solution, and you just have not found it yet. Remain confident and detach from the immediate issue. Your inner sense of confusion could be playing an important role in what is happening. Tonight: Follow the music. © 2012 by King Features Syndicate

O M M U N IT Y

A LE N D A R

Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

TODAY AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Julia Kennedy Cochran presents her father's memoir, "Ed Kennedy's Wan V-E Day,Censorship and the Associated Press"; free; noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Library, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7257. KNOW HUMOR:ISLAUGHTER THE BEST MEDICINE?: Carol Delmonico discusses the power of laughter and how it can reduce stress, boost your immune system and help you enjoy life; free; 4:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1034. "BRINGOUT YOUR DEAD!" LECTURESERIES:Featuring a presentation on "Cranial Injuries and Criminals: Understanding Brain Function Through Mishaps and Mayhem"; free; 6-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7786. THE CALDECOTTAWARD: Learn about the process and criteria for selecting the annual award recipient; free; 6:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-6177099 or www.deschuteslibrary .org/calendan JIM BRICKMAN:The solo pianist, vocalist and composer performs "On a Winter's Night"; $44-$73 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.

Submitted photo

Solo pianist, vocalist and composer jim Brickmanwill perform at 7:30 tonight at the Tower Theatre in downtown Bend. Tickets start at $44.

CHICKSWITH PICKS:Featuring performances by four local femalefronted bands; proceeds benefit Saving Grace; $5; 6-10 p.m.; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 971-570-7199. SERENDIPITYWEST FUNDRAISER: A dinner and a silent auction, with a demonstration by local teens; registration requested; all proceeds benefit the anti-bullying program Challenge Day, organized by the Serendipity West Foundation; $40; 6 p.m. dinner, 5:30 p.m. cocktail hour and auction; Chow,1110 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-382-1093. SUSTAINABLE RESOURCE WEDNESDAY LECTURESERIES: Environmental "REEL INJUN":A screening of activist and journalist Ed Marston the 2009 documentary film, talks about Oregon's conflict with a panel discussion on resolution between ranchers and stereotypes of Native Americans environmentalists; free; 6 p.m.; in film and cinema; free; HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. 6:30-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or Community College, Hitchcock www.highdesertmuseum.org. Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College "HOW DIDWE GET HERE?" Way, Bend; 541-383-3782. LECTURESERIES: Featuring a "THE METROPOLITAN presentation on "Monkey Business: OPERA:OTELLO":Starring The Impact of Global Change on ReneeFleming,Johan Botha Human andMonkey Evolution in and Michael Fabiano in an Africa"; $10, $8 Sunriver Nature encore performance of Verdi's Center members, $3 students, $50 masterpiece; opera performance for series; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon transmitted in high definition; Community College, Hitchcock $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Stadium168 IMAX, 680 S.W. Bend; 541-593-4394. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; "TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD": A 54 I-382-6347. screening of the1962 unrated CAS HALEY: The Austin, film based on Harper Lee's book, Texas-based singer songwriter with an introduction by Robert performs, with Brent Alan; free; Osborne; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or 6347 or www.fathomevents.com. www.mcmenamins.com. AUDUBON SOCIETYBIRDERS' "ASSASSINS": Thoroughly NIGHT:Learn how to invite birds for Modern Productions presents a viewing and play a "Mystery Bird" dark musical comedy portraying photo game; free; 6:30 p.m. social; history's most famous presidential The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. assassins; $21, $18students and Kansas Ave., Bend;541-385-6908. seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2ndStreet "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Productions presents a dark musical Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, comedy portraying history's most 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or famous presidential assassins; $21, www.2ndstreettheater.com. $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Cascades 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Theatrical Company presents Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, the musical comedy about 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or mixing loveand money;$24,$18 www.2ndstreettheatencom. seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Cascades Greenwood Playhouse,148 Theatrical Company presents the N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www.cascades musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 theatrical.org. students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood KITES8 CROWS: The AshlandPlayhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood based indie-folk group performs; Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, www.cascadestheatrical.org. 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; IN THE MOOD:A1940s musical 541-728-0879 or www.reverb revue featuring The String of Pearls nation.com/venue/thehorned Big Band Orchestra, singers and hand. swing dancers; $35-$59 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or THURSDAY www.towertheatre.org. BOBBYJOEEBOLAAND THE THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: CHILDRENMACNUGGITS:The Read and discuss "The Sisters California-based rock group Brothers" by Patrick deWitt; performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned free; noon; La Pine Public Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Library, 16425 First St.; 541Bend; 541-728-0879 or www 312-1090 or www.deschutes .reverbnation.com/venue/ library.org/calendar. thehornedhand. IN THEMOOD:A1940s musical "ROAD TO PARIS": A screening revue featuring TheString of of the 2001 unrated documentary Pearls Big BandOrchestra, singers and swing dancers; $35-$59 plus film about Lance Armstrong's preparations for the third Tour fees; 3 p.m.;TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend;541-317-0700 de France in 2001; $5;9p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, or www.towertheatre.org. 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382THE CALDECOTTAWARD: 5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. Learn about the process and criteria for selecting the annual award recipient; free; 4:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, FRIDAY 56855 Venture Lane; 541-6177099 or www.deschuteslibrary HUMANESOCIETYART .org/calendar. FUNDRAISER: Featuring fine art sale and a social; proceeds benefit "EL MARIACHI":A screening the Humane Societies of Central of the1992 R-rated film about a Oregon and Redmond; free; traveling mariachi mistaken for 4-7 p.m.; Jewel Images Portrait a murderous criminal who must Studio, 550 S.W. Industrial Way, hide from a gang; free; 6 p.m.; ¹45, Bend; 541-330-7096. Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, "SUPERHEROES OFSTOKE": 2600N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; A screening of the Matchstick 541-318-3782. Productions ski film; $12 plus fees;

6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history's most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheatencom. "IT'SONLY MONEY": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www.cascadestheatrical.org. "THE LASTEMPEROR": A screening of the PG-13-rated1987 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. "SUPERHEROESOFSTOKE": A screening of the Matchstick Productions ski film; $12 plus fees; 9 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. JIVE COULIS:The funk-rock act performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing .com.

SATURDAY "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history's most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheatencom. VFW DINNER: A dinner of ham and scalloped potatoes; proceeds benefit local veterans; $8; 5-7 p.m.; VFW Hall,1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. SOUND ANDVIBRATION MEDITATION:Seattle-based artist Pamela Mortensen plays the didgeridoo, featuring chanting and instrumental music by local artists; $15 suggested donation; 6 p.m.; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-330-0334. "SLEEPWALK WITH ME": A screening of unrated comedy by Mike Birbiglia about an aspiring stand-upcomedian's experience with sleepwalking; $9 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. THE NORTHSTAR SESSION:The California-based roots-rock band performs; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Sound Garden,1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www.bendticket.com. "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history's most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheatencom. "IT'SONLY MONEY": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. DEAR RABBIT: The Colorado-based indie-folk artist performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com/ venue/thehornedhand. LOOK GOOD,FEEL GOOD TOUR: Featuring hip-hop music by Zyme,

Jay Tablet and The Knux; $5; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www.astroloungebend.com.

SUNDAY "IT'S ONLY MONEY": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the musical comedy about mixing love and money; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www .cascadestheatrical.org. "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history's most famous presidential assassins; $21, $18 students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or www.2ndstreettheatencom. "SLEEPWALK WITH ME": A screening of unrated comedy by Mike Birbiglia about an aspiring stand-upcomedian'sexperience with sleepwalking; $9 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. WHITE FORT:The Russian jam band performs; free; 8 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703.

MONDAY "FIXING THE FUTURE": A screening of the 2010 documentary about new opportunities that have emerged in the wake of the 2008 financial meltdown; $6; 6 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley Bend; 541-410-9944 or www .relylocal.com. "SLEEPWALK WITH ME": A screening of unrated comedy by Mike Birbiglia about an aspiring stand-upcomedian'sexperience with sleepwalking; $9 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.

TUESDAY Nov. 20 "PLACESYOU'VE NOT LOOKED FOR YOUR RELATIVES": Bend Genealogical Society presents a program by Philip Wittboldt; free; 10 a.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-3179553 or www.orgenweb.org/ deschutes/bend-gs. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Read and discuss "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Rebecca Skloot; free; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-3303764 or www.deschuteslibrary .org/calendan "BRINGOUT YOUR DEAD!" LECTURE SERIES: Featuring a presentation on "Create Your Own Zombie: Bringing the Resilient Undead to Life"; free; 5-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7786. "SLEEPWALK WITH ME": A screening of unrated comedy by Mike Birbiglia about an aspiring stand-upcomedian'sexperience with sleepwalking; $9 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.


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THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 'l3, 2012

Potato

As o f Mo n day, B acca's Kickstarter effort had seven backers and $252 pledged toward her goal. She has ideas for more scenes she hopes to create, but if she doesn't get enough toward the goal, the idea to become a potatoart seller will go back in the cellar. Bacca, who loves cooking

Continued from B1 Her goal: raising $7,500 for a self-published art cookbook that w ould f e ature P otato Head photographs along with recipes for each of the potato dishes. (No, she doesn't expect anyone to eat the plastic.) Bacca grew up in the Central Valley of California, where she began taking art classes in high school. She studied photography at community college in Modesto, then finished her undergraduatestudies at the University of Oregon. After moving to Bend in 2005, she earned a masters in education from E astern Oregon University, "then got lucky with the COCC job," she said last week at her northeast Bend home she shares with her husband, Tony Hnyp. The original inspiration for the Potato Head photos dates back several years, to when she was still in college and Hnyp, not yet her husband, gave her a gift of a Mr. Potato Head. "I don't know where it came from or what inspired him, but it wa s totally random," she said. "He has an excellent sense of humor. I think he may have gotten it at a thrift store or something, but he's not a

and food, is enjoying new recipes, such as one she found for potato salad. " I've been having f u n -

(raising) my own awareness, Natasha Bacca chops potatoes, adorns them with Mr. Potato Head parts and photographs her Potato Head creations.

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Photos by Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

— Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbttlletinicom

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

huge gift-giver in general, so that kind of added to the randomness of it. No flowers, just Potato Head." Soon after, Bacca had a photography assignment in

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typology, the study of symbols and symbolism. "We were sitting at this table, joking and talking about it, and came up with the idea" to combine the plastic Potato Head parts with actual potatoes. That manner of drumming

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up ideas "is probably, maybe, what a lot of artists do. People come up with these jokes of ideas, and just let them go, and then artists go, 'No, I'm actually going to do that.'" That original assignment, however, was black-and-white, which doesn't translate as colorfully as green plastic feet and bulging white eyeballs slathered with ketchup. That initial idea was "really based on the humor," she said, "but people really react to the photos in less than humorous ways. I've heard (people call them) 'disturbing.'

Exes Continued from B1 "The more you s c ratch, the more it itches," Lee said. "It's like having mold in your house, and it spreads." But there is value in having a sense of your partner's romantic resume, or at least the major events, Rudolph and Lee say, because it gives you insight into the forces that shaped him or her. The details about the exes themselves aren't as important as what was learned from the relationship or the breakup. For Rudolph and Lee, who have been "happily married" for 23 years,their personal conversation on the topic followed a typical healthy course: not too much information too soon, gradually reveal more, no terrible surprises. "I think it is important for when you're picking a partner to know about the kinds of relationships they've been in," Rudolph said. "You're choos-

ing a whole package, and who they are in relationships previously is a piece of the puzzle."

Learning from the past That's not to saythat couples who prefer to remain mum and ignorant about previous lovers are necessarily missing out. Reginald Richardson, vice president for evaluation and clinical services at the Family Institute at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in C hicago, said he doesn't care to know his wife's romantic history, or to discuss his own, because "the woman I met and fell in love with was good enough." Richardson doesn't think it's appropriate for people to talk about exes, because usually they just want to compare themselves and confirm they are loved the best. If they need that reassurance, he s a i d, rather than analyze old lovers, it's better to ask: Why did you choose me? The only time there's benefit to knowing about a partner's wild streak in college is if the person still struggles with destructive behaviors, Richardson said. Otherwise, digging into a person's past can set them up to be judged unfairly

right? — when I go to buy potatoes, because a lot of potatoes have different fun shapes to them," she said. "Sweet potatoes have fun stems, or are bulbous." She believes her book idea has legs, not to mention eyes, ears, noses and feet. nYou have the art side of it, where you just have the photographs for people to enjoy or contemplate," she said, "but then there's also the recipe side, where it could be practical, where they can actually use it."

Photo courtesy Natasha Bacca

Bacca sayssome viewers of photographs such as "Sweet Potato Head Muffins," above, have called them "disturbing." "I think a lot of what they're more interest in the food they reacting to is, you know, eye- eat, and relate to their food, balls or hands sticking out creating, in effect, "an awareof their f o od," she a dded, ness of what you're choosing chuckling. to consume," she said. "I think a lot of times we eat Noting those reactions, Bacca has amore serious aim for on the run ... or wolf it down the project in its current form: without really connecting to g etting the v i ewer t o t a k e it or even thinking about the

Whenyourex is still yourfriend Talking about exes is

sticky enough. How doyou handle it when you or your

partner remains friends with an ex? • Be fully transparent about your friendship with

the ex, and include your current partner in plans with him or her, said Emily

Morse, a sexand relationship expert who has remained friends with several

exes. There can be nosecrets here, just reassurance to your current partner that

you are no longer in love with the ex. • Don't forbid your partner from communicating

with or seeing anex, unless there has been a blatant

betrayal or injury, said clinical psychologist David

Wexler. Exerting such control creates resentment and

is a vote of no confidence, which eats away at the relationship. The safer way to address it is to state that you are uncomfortable with the friendship and let the other person take steps to

make you feel moresecure. • Rethink whether if it's

such a good idea.Thesexual tension tends to remain,

tions lead to some positive conclusions about the current relationship. If you reveal you have cheated, for example, emphasize what you learned and why you would never do it again, Morse said. Giving just a string of anecdotes without redemption or self-reflection allows people's imaginations to run wild. "We're like detectives, especially women," said Morse, who is based in San Francisco. "We remember; we take notes. You start to think, 'He's on vacation, and he hasn't called me, so he must be cheating on me.' We tell ourselves stories." D escriptions o f for m e r flames should be kept short and sweet, avoiding examples that might make your current partner feel inferior, Morse said. Never compare, s he warned, o r u s e e x e s manipulatively. "No 'Well, my ex a lways c ame with me to m y w o rk functions, why won't you? u' she said. "That just makes a person feel bad." Any talk of exes, except in the most general terms, should be avoided in the first several dates, Morse said,as people are most insecure in t hose early stages, and it should be a time to set a foundation for the

fact that t his i s s omething that actually assimilates into your body," she said. "Not to be preachy; I have no labels and no rights or wrongs about what you can or can't eat." But she does believe food is more than just mere fuel for the body. "It can be a sin, an escape, a reward, a comfort, or all of these at different times, making a balanced attitude toward food difficult to maintain," as she said in her release. "When we understand what precisely shapes our eating behaviors, we can cultivate a more harmonious relationship with our food." If "Epicurious Potato Heads" sounds half-baked, remember, the potato art medium is not without precedent. One of the most iconic scenes in the 1977 Spielberg classic "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" features a seemingly crazed Richard Dreyfuss sculpting a tower — Devils Tower, to be precise — out of a mound of mashed potatoes. Google image search potato and art, and you'll find everything from carved Buddha figurines to oddly shaped potatoes morphed into bodies and faces via the magic of markers.

measure up, but "you cannot win with this conversation," said Morse, so she recommends keeping numbers out of it. If faced with that question, M orse suggestsyou say it's not relevant and gently steer the talk to what you love about your current sex life. Navigating c o nversations about past relationships gets trickier when one partner is particularly curious and the other particularly private.

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Bacca, who has chipped in on other artists' Kickstarter campaigns, says her own campaign is "a fun way to explore it, and gauge the amount of possible interest before going too far with it."

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Morse has been on plenty of dates that have violated that — connect sex andclosebasic wisdom. ness, so it can be difficult One guy picked her up for a for them to be just friends, first date and started bashing said Reginald Richardson, his ex-girlfriend while they vice president for cliniwere still in the car on the way cal services at the Family to the sushi restaurant. Institute at Northwestern Another guy told her, on Memorial Hospital. If you date two, that he used to have are spending time with the a lot of threesomes with his old relationship to the detriex-girlfriend, who t hen l eft ment of the new relationhim for his best friend. "My mind goes into, 'Why ship, that's a problem. are you telling me this? Are you into threesomes?u' Morse said. She ended the relationon actions that are no longer ship after a few more dates relevant. because, she said, "I would alE mily Morse, host of the ways think about it." radio show and podcast "Sex Morse advises against With Emily" ( sexwithemily. discussing sexual history at all, except to confirm sexual com), said she believes curiosity about a partner's past health such as STDs. People relationships is helpful if the have a masochistic proclivity intention is to understand the to ask how many previous sexperson's emotional g r owth. ual partners there have been, It's best if t h ose conversa- almost always to see how they and men — in particular

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News of Record, C2 Obituaries, C5 Editorials, C4 Weather, C6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

O www.bendbulletin.com/local

LOCAL BRIEFING Blaze guts LaPine metal shop, RV A fire that broke out

Sunday evening in La Pineheavilydamageda metal shop and anearby recreational vehicle, according to the LaPine Rural Fire Protection District.

The fire occurred around11 p.m. on Woodgreen Court. Firefighters arrived to find a metal shop engulfed in flames, with

the blaze spreading to a nearby homeand RV.

ODD JOBS

If you have an idea for this photographic series about unusual vocations O and occupations in Central Oregon, email dguernsey@bendbulletin. com. To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/oddjobs.

Splashing in the therapy pool at Healing Bridge,a Bend physical therapy clinic, Georgia Merrifield works with 2-year-old Lily Moore. Merrifield uses the warm pool to help children develop motor skills. "Water is a good environment," Merrifield says. "It's a gravityeliminated enviroment and that makes it easier to move."

Couple plans to rebuild burned home By Sheila G. Miller

Fire crews were able to

The Bulletin

extinguish the flames,

The Tumalo couple whose home burned Sunday afternoon, killing several of their pets, plans to rebuild. Bend Fire officials on Monday determined the blaze that destroyed the home of Jack and Tina Billings on Gerking Market Road was caused by a candle left burning in the liv-

but not before they had heavily damaged the

shop and RV. The home's exterior

was scorched anda window was broken. The cause of the fire is under investigation. — Bulletin staff report

ing room. Firefighters were able to protect a nearby barn and shop, as well as other outbuildings, but the contents of the home were lost to fire, as well as heat and smoke

STATE NEWS Warrenton

damage. According to a Bend Fire news release, the house was worth an estimated $250,000, and the loss was estimated at $200,000. On Monday, Jack Billings wore a headlamp as he worked with friends and family to move valuables and salvageable property out of the home. The smell of smoke was strong as the group brought out a jar filled with change, as well as files and other valuables from a safe. See Fire/C2

Salem

• Ashland

• Salem:Thefuture of gillnetting on the Columbia River is in the hands of the

Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission.

• Ashland:Insurance companies are suing the owners of property where a 2010fire began that destroyed 11 homes.

• Warrenton:The National Park Service

en lfL 0

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ...

expresses concerns abouta proposed

liquid natural gas terminal near the mouth of the Columbia River. Stories on C3, C6

Following up on Central Oregon's most interesting stories.Email ideas to news® bendbulletin.com.

eorgia Merrifield, a certified

Have astoryidea or sudmission? Contactus!

pediatric physical therapist at Healing Bridge in Bend, has been

The Bulletin

helping children with disabilities for 42 years

Sudmissions:

— in the gym, in the pool, on horseback and

• Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View RO. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

at home. "It is really a great feeling to watch a child grow andchange,and feelthatyou had a positive influence on that child," she says.

• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School news andnotes: Email news items and notices of general interest to news©bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academicachievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin©bendbulletin.com. Details: School coverageruns Wednesday in this section. Contact: 541-383-0358

Merrifield watches as Ellie Gibbons manipulatesa knocker during a therapy session at Healing Reins.

• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbulletin.com

Powell Butte waste site

officially cleanedup Bulletin staff report The hazardous waste site in Powell Butte that took more than two years to remedy is cleaned up to the satisfaction of federal authorities. Crews working under contract for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality removed more than 3,000 tons of waste from the former Cinder Lakes Ranch starting in 2007,according to reports from the time. Federal and state authorities charged D.B. Western Inc. company owner Dennis Beetham with illegally dumping hazardous waste. Beetham and D.B. Western Inc., a maker of formaldehyde, no longer have ownership interest in the site, according to federalcourtrecords. See Waste site/C2

Beetham'sformer property

• Community events: Email event information to communitylife©bend bulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendar appears on Page 3 inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-383-0351

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

Crooked River O'Neil Hwy. -McDaniel Rd.

Ho ston Lake Rd. Merrifield keeps hold of Ellie Gibbons, 7, of Bend,while walking through the therapy course with a Norwegian fjord horse named Hope at Healing Reins, a Bend therapeutic riding center. While Merrifield works with the rider, an assistant controls the horse's movements at Merrifield's direction. "Riding helps with balance and core strengthening," Merrifield says. "They have to change positions, turn to both sides and learn how to control their body."

Merrifield works with Owen Vracin,3, of Bend, at Healing Reins, using a stability ball to help him develop balance by stretching his shoulders and hips. Merrifield says a key to successful therapy with children is making it fun. "It can look like we're just playing," she says. But the progress her patients make says something else is happening, too.

The Bulletin file photos

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Sources: Crook County GIS department, PBS Engineering and Environmental Andv Zeiaert i The Bulletin


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THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 20'l2

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

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For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials. Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli

CONGRESS

Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And can you tell us a bit about it? Email your color or blackand-white photos to readerphotos®bendbulletin.com and we'll pick the best for publication in the paper and online.

U.S. Senate

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

Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.: 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone:541-318-1298 Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web:http://wyden.senate.gov

Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger

U.S. House of Representatives

Fire Continued from C1 Fires were burning in each of the home's two fireplaces on Sunday. Billings said he built both fireplaces in the home and each had double flues. His wife, Tina, went to a friend's house, and when Billings, a general contractor, arrived home around 3 p.m.from a construction project, he said he puttered around putting stuff away. "It looked like there was smoke in the house," he said. "I looked in and there was just rolling black smoke. I opened the kitchen door and it just blew me back." Billings tried two other entries into the house but was stopped each time by the thick smoke. The family has lived in the Tumalo home for 27 years. The home was originally built in 1916, and Billings said it was either the first or second home on Gerking Market Road. Billings remodeled and a dded onto the home in 1988. The family has insurance, Billings said, and the couple plans to rebuild. In the m eantime, the couple w i l l live temporarily w it h t h eir daughter. "There's so much damage, I can't imagine it can be salvaged," Billings said. "We'll h ave to tear i t d o w n a n d rebuild." Although the couple was not in the home when the fire started,several of their cats

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Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman

Rep. GregWalden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov/

On a recent drive to Culver,Julien Havac, of Bend, enjoyed an early-morning view of the Three Sisters. Havac captured the shot with a Nikon D200 camera and an 80-200 lens at f2.8.

Bend office: 1051 N.W. Bond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

Rep. Mike McLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane

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LEGISLATURE

Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes County) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

Senate e

Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323

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Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District 28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett House

Bend office: 131 N.W.HawthorneAve., Suite 107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

SNOW-DUSTED SISTERS

Sen. Chris Telfer, R-District27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.christelfer@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/telfer

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David Billings walks around the backof the fire-gutted home of his brother, Jack, and Jack's wife Tina on Monday morning.The home on Gerking Market Road burned Sunday afternoon. were. Billings said his wife a

few years ago took a liking to pixie-bob cats, a breed of hybrid bobcat and domestic cat. The family had recently added a young bobcat, which t hey'd had spayed and l i censed. The bobcat, Tanner, and three p i x ie-bobs died in the fire. Two other cats survived. "It's a big loss," Billings said of Tanner's death. The couple traveled to Mon-

tana and purchased the bobcat from a furrier who had planned to raise the bobcat and kill him for his fur. Tanner split his time between a cage outside and playing inside the Billings' home. At the time of the fire, the bobcat was upstairs. "If I'd known that I might have gone on the roof and tried to bust out a window," Billings said. A s he warmed up in t h e

$

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7:30 AM — 5:30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.

shop Monday and prepared to continue salvaging belongings from the home, Billings said he's been amazed by the community support. "I've gotten probably 50 phone calls from people trying to help, and people who are already helping," he said. "We're going to be fine. We'll rebuild it and move on. It's just going to take a while."

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Waste site Continued from C1 Some evidence of barrels

and bags of formaldehyde waste dumped ina cinder cone on the 500-acre property arose during Beetham's divorce proceeding, according to statements by federalprosecutors in the case record. Beetham pleaded not guilty in both cases. The state criminal case against him continues, but thefederal charges were dismissed in August 2010, a year after they were filed. Michael Boykin,emergency response coordinator for U.S. Environmental Prot e ction Agency Region 10, said the actual cleanup is complete. A consultant working under contract with D.B. Western reported the cleanup results to the EPA. "As far as the EPA is concerned, we're satisfied with the cleanup," Boykin said in October. T he EPA came i nto t h e case when negotiations between D.B. Western and the state DEQ over the scope of work required on the property reached a dead end. When the federalagency arrived on the scene, it found the majority of the work already complete. A message left Monday for Beetham was not returned. As for the unrelated criminal case in U.S. District Court in Portland,federal prosecutors conceded in August 2010 that a putty-like form of formaldehyde — p araformaldehyde — discovered at the site

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cover cleanup costs. The state imposed a lien on the property and the case has moved to the DEQ enforcement office for collection. "I know we were in negotiations about a year ago in the courthouse in Crook County, but I don't thinkthat went anywhere," she said in October.

Color may be addedfor $I.OOlday extra! Call today to list your event in Classifieds! e44;

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Andy Tullis/The Bulletin file photo

Workers dig a trench in 2009 to test for buried formaldehyde on property in Powell Butte belonging to Dennis Beetham, owner of D.B. Western Inc., a manufacturer of formaldehyde. More than 3,000 tons of waste were removed from the property, beginning in 2007.

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did not qualify as toxic waste. U .S. District J u dge A n n a Brown dismissedthe case on a government motion later that month. Brown dismissed the case with prejudice, meaning the government may not again prosecute Beetham on the same charges. In Crook County, however, the state continues its case against Beetham and the company. District Attorney Daina Vitolins said her office appealed to the Oregon Court of Appeals the results of pretrial rulings by Circuit Judge Annette Hillman. Lawyers for Beetham and D.B. Western ha d a r g ued that t h e s t at e a l l egations were made beyond the time allowed under the statute of

limitations. Vitolins countered that Circuit Judge George Neilson in September 2010 allowed the state to amend its indictment while tolling, or marking time, on the statute of limitations. The question is before the appeals court for a ruling, Vitolins said in October. The EPA f ound th e s i te cleaned up, for the most part, Boykin said. "There really wasn't anything to clean up other than what had already been dug up out of the ground and disposed of," he said. Marcy K i rk , a n O r e gon DEQ hydrogeologist involved in the cleanup, said the state is still pursuing Beetham and D.B. Western in order to re-

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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REGON NEWS

Insurerssuelandowners over 2010fire in Ashland

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Don Ryan/The Associated Press

A fisherman lays out his gillnet in Young's Bayoff the Columbia River near Astoria. The future of gillnet fishing on the Columbia River will be decided by the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission after a ballot measure to ban the practice failed.

Panel will decide gillnetting's future By Jonathan J. Cooper

and are the primary method being put out of business. of commercial fishing on the They spent nearly $700,000 SALEM — The future of Columbia. but u l t i mately a b a ndoned c ommercial fishing o n t h e Critics contend that they're the effort a f te r K i t zhaber Columbia River is now in the cruel to fish and slow the res- announced hi s b i d f o r a hands of the Oregon Fish and toration of salmon populations compromise. Wildlife Commission after a because they can't differentiThe g overnor p r o posed measure to ban gillnets failed ate endangeredfish from tar- phasing in a ban on gillnets on on Election Day. geted species. the main stem of the Columbia The commission faces the But commercial fishermen while allowing them to contough task o f m e diating a say gillnets have been used for tinue operating on side chanlongstanding conflict between centuriesand the controversy nels and expanding hatchery commercial and recreational surrounding them is drummed operations in those areas. fishing interests by the end of up by sport anglers who want With only o pponents acthe year. to eliminate competition for tively campaigning, Measure After years of s t alemate, salmon. 80 went down last week, 66 G ov. John K i t z haber h a s After unsuccessful attempts percent to 34 percent. asked the commission to come to persuade the Legislature to Commercial f ish e r men up with new commercial fish- ban gillnets, sport-fishing and have taken a skeptical view of ing regulations that p h ase environmental groups went di- the governor's proposal, sayout the use of gillnets on the rectly to the people with a bal- ing there's not enough space Columbia. lot initiative that spooked com- or fish in side channels to acGillnets snag fish by the gills mercial fishermen who feared commodate thedemand. The Associated Press

"We've already given everything that we can give," said Bill Hunsinger, a lifelong commercial fishermen. "If we give away the main stem, there's no way the industry can exist. It just can't." The Fish and Wildlife Commission has fielded dozens of spirited comments from people on both sides of the issue. Washington is experimenting with seine nets, an alternative that's currently illegal in Oregon. Officials say it will be several years before they know whether seines result in a lower mortality rate for endangered fish. Commercial fish e r men question whether seines would be commercially viable on the Columbia.

The Associated Press A SHLAND — In s u r ance companies that paid $1.7 million to six homeowners in a fire blamed on a homeless Ashland man have sued the owners of a vacant property where the fire started. The suit alleges the owners had been told vagrants were camping in the overgrown field behind an Arco gasoline station, starting fires and smoking cigarettes, The Ashland Daily Tidings reported. In all, 11 homes were destroyed in the fire that s wept through th e O a k Knoll neighborhood on a hot, windy day in late August 2010. It has been called the worst fire in a century in the Southern Oregon city. A judge found that the man accused of reckless endangerment and r eckless burning, John Thiry, 42, likely set the fire, but prosecutorsfailed to prove he knew the consequences of his actions. Later, Thiry w a s c onvicted of throwing rocks at two middle school girls and sentenced t o e i g ht months in jail. A prosecutor said he probably suffered from alcoholism and mental illness, but authorities couldn't order treatment because the charges were misdemeanors. After

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serving two weeks, he was released because the jail was overcrowded. H e re m a i ns homeless in Ashland. The suit filed by four insurance companies says the field where the Oak Knoll fire started was in violation of state and city codes, and the owners allowed a "dangerous accumulation of waste and overgrown brush tooccur on the subject property that created an extreme fire hazard." It asks compensation for the insurance payouts. "We denied all of the allegations,n said Jim Wallan, attorneyforthe owners — three San Francisco Bay Area people and a family trust, according to online records. The lawsuit also names a real estate company. "We're not hired to police properties for vagrants. We don't maintain properties. The only thing we are employed to do is market a property," said Jim Rimley of John L. Scott's Medford office.

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By Wendy Owen The Oregonian

BEAVERTON — J e ssica Keskitalo spent f iv e y e ars teaching world history, economics and government at Westview High School. This fall,she found herself teaching seventh-graders at Cedar Park Middle School how to calculate volume and solve algebraic equations. It didn't matter that Keskitalo had never taught math before, much l e s s m i d dle school math. It mattered only that she had a license to teach it. The Beaverton School District has slashed its budget and cut 344 positions. At least 390 teachers have been transferred to fill holes as layoffs created a massive domino effect across the 51-school district. The district estimated about 160 teachers w er e p l aced in "significantly d i f f erent positions." The teachers union and district have no rules for transfers other than licensure. A teacher's competenceyears of experience teaching a grade level or subject — do not have to be considered. Teachers and parents worry that student learning will suffer as expertise is not utilized, or as students cope with a musical chair at the helm of the class. Some classes have been led by three different teachers in the nine weeks since school started. Among the relocated teachers is a high school language arts instructor moved to elementary English language development, an elementary teacher transferred to middle school science, an elementary music teacher moved to English l a nguage d evelopment and a German instructor teaching Spanish. "There is no way you can cut 340 positions and not feel pain," said Sue Robertson, district h u m a n r e s o urces director. Many of the complications in Beaverton are the result of the sheer magnitude of the layoffs and transfers as well as a short timeline, Robertson

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Benjamin Brink/The Oregonian

Jenny Takeda, center, works with Jasmine Lopez Sanchez,left, a fifth-grader and Angelina Oseguera-Torres, a fourth-grader, at Greenway Elementary School in Beaverton. Takeda was the top librarian for the Beaverton School District but was transferred, as part of layoffs and budget cuts, to the elementary school. Takeda is taking a leave of absence and substitute teaching while she reassesses her career. satd. In some cases, the complicated maneuvering ended up merely swapping teacher positions. A D ee r P a r k A c a demy t eacher, who w o rked w i t h seriously ill students at their h omes, was laid off an d a Southridge High math teacher was moved into her job. The first teacher was recalled from the layoff list and put in the second teacher's old position at Southridge High. The district wouldn't allow them to swap back, because it would cause even more disruption in the classroom and cost the district two days of pay, Robertson said. Some teachers trained in International Baccalaureate and Advanced Placement w ere moved to schools without the programs, and those lacking the IB and AP training were moved in, costing the district $30,000 of its $100,000 training budget to get them up to speed. Otherstransferees resigned or took unpaid leaves of absence rather than start as the equivalent o f a fir s t -year teacher ina grade or subject they've never taught. Not only has Keskitalo, 35, never taught math, her only experience with t hi s g r ade

level was a month in a middle school as a student teacher. But her credentials qualify her to teach any subject in middle school. "Seventh-grade math has 12 learning targets and they are brand new to me," she said. "How do you teach something you haven't been trained to teach?" Keskitalo said the district gave her a half-day of math training before she stepped into her classrooms, which average 39 s t u dents. She has relied on t h e s chool's only o t h e r s e v enth-grade math teacher for help and worries about preparing her students. nWe owe it to them to have teachers in the room who are highly qualified to teach in that subject area," she said. Teachers had no choice in their moves and p r incipals were not given a say in who came and went. While state law and union contracts regulate layoffs and how teachersare recalled from the layoff list — seniority and licensure — there is little guidance on transfers, said Karen Hoffman, president of the Beaverton Education Association. "Districts have to do everything possible to save jobs," she said.

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CENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITY COLLEGE HEALTH CAREERS CENTER hanks tothe voters of Central Oregon who, in fall2009, passed a bond measure that helped fund construction of five new buildings for the students ofCentral Oregon Community College. The Health Careers Center, opening this fall, will house programs in nursing, medical assistant, dental assisting, massage therapy, and pharmacy technician.

I

PHARMACY TECHNICIAN The COCC Pharmacy Technician program would like to thank the following pharmacists and their staff for their participation in the Pharmacy Technician program by having COCC students work in their offices as part of their education: St.Charles Medical Center Bend, Inpatient Pharmacy St. Charles Medical Center Redmond, InPatient Pharmacy Vibra Specialty Hospital Portland, OR Volunteers in Medicine Fred Meyer Pharmacy Redmond Mountain View Hospital Pharmacy Pill Box Sisters Drug Bt Gift

cocc.edu

541.383.7700

Redmond Compounding Pharmacy Pharmacy Express Redmond Pioneer Memorial Hospital Pharmacy St. Charles Medical Center Community Pharmacy Clinic Pharmacy Prineville Home Care IV Pharmacy Express Bend

Walgreens Pharmacy

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community college


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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN LNDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

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ov. John Kitzhaber stepped Up to the retirement

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news for taxpayers. Speaking Saturday to the Oregon School Boards Association, the governor said changes are necessary to balance the costs of the Public Employees Retirement System with the need to put dollars in the classroom. Without reform, the cost to educate a child in Oregon will increase by nearly $1,000 in the next budget cycle, he said, with about half of that coming from increased costs of PERS, and little of it improving that child's education. He blamed stagnant funding and PERS for teacher layoffs,larger class sizes and fewer days in the school year. The governor said changes in PERS, plus finance reform and reductions in the costs of health care and public safety, will free millions of dollars to allow for investments in education. We've been waiting for a commitment from Kitzhaber on PERS, hoping he would use his bully pulpit and his union support to lead the way. The speech was a positive sign that he understands the critical problem PERS represents and

his unique position to influence needed reforms. The speech didn't detail how Kitzhaber would seek to change PERS, but he told The Oregonian he supports reducing cost-ofliving adjustments, decreasing or eliminating the so-called "pickup" in which government pays for employee contributions and dropping the tax benefit for retirees who move out of state. Those are among numerous s uggestions made by candidates and reformers as the burden of PERS has become widely understood in recent years. Any successful reform will also need to address two other concerns. First is the legality question. Some previous efforts were rejected by the courts, leaving legislators wary of going down that same road. And second is the fairness question for PERS retirees. These are not insurmountable, but require careful consideration. We urge the governor to engage those with other plans and work to build a political consensus around the most effective package of changes.

M IVickel's Worth Sit where you like in the library

Bowman Dambills need prompt attention iterally years of work could go for naught if the U.S. Senate fails to act on Sen. Jeff Merkley's Bowman Dam bill in the next few weeks. It must be reconciled with Rep. Greg Walden's version of the same legislation, then approved in both houses, all before Congress adjourns in December. If that doesn't happen, new members in the new Congress will have to start all over again next year. The problem is simple. The Crooked River, across which Bowman Dam sits, has been designated wild and scenic under federal law. Unfortunately, in what all now say was a mistake, the boundary marking the end of the designation runs through the middle of the dam, limiting what may be done with the water behind it. Without the change, Portland General Electric cannot build a proposed hydropower-generating plant. The bills by Merkley, D-Ore., and Walden, R-Hood River, agree on that point. They disagree on some details of another issue: freeing water currently held behind the dam for irrigation and other uses.

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Both also would give the city of Prineville the ability to expand its access to groundwater, something it badly needs. But Merkley's bill also puts more emphasis on using water for downstream fish and wildlife, and it isn't particularly clear on how conflicts among competing needs would be resolved. Those arethe sortsofdisagreements that a conference committee should be able to resolve, once the Senate version of the measure passes. It would be a shame to have to start all over again, particularly because the matter is so critical to Prineville and Crook County, which still struggle with the state's highest unemployment rate. Without adequate water, the city cannot attract the businesses it needs to change that. The city doesn't have another nine years — the time already spent on getting the river's designation changed — to wait for its economy to improve. It needs help now, and the Merkley/Walden bills offer the best chance of providing it. If, that is, the work can be done before the end of the year.

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reform plate over the weekend, and that's good

all non-native species must either die or be sterilized. Once we're gone, the wild horses will be one of the I am writing in response to Evelyn few species left on this continent, as Haertel's letter from Nov. 8, "Good many paleontologists believe that reasonsfordesignated areas" in the the horse not only resided here but library. originated here. No one needs to be reminded But it serves little purpose to that the library is a public place dwell on the rightful place of the funded by our tax dollars. Teen- wild horse. They're here. As an imagers and younger kids are allowed portant media player in Central Orto roam and sit a nywhere they egon, maybe The Bulletin could help choose throughout the library. Why increase adoptions by telling folks should adults not be afforded the that the U.S. Border Patrol now presame consideration'? fers wildhorses for mounts along Being a parent and grandparent, I both our northern and southern borunderstand Haertels' concern about ders, due to their physical abilities any child being harassed, bullied, and quiet intelligence. Wild horses etc. in the library, school or any- are now protecting this nation. where else. Proper parenting and You could also mention that wild grandparenting includes educating horses are playing a key humanichildren about how they should re- tarian role in the lives of prison inspond when they are harassed, bul- mates, under the Prison Wild Horse lied, etc. The granddaughter should Gentling Program, which offers have contacted a library staff mem- hope and healing to lives devoid ber immediately, not the next day, of any light. When young men say, and the perpetrator of the harass- "This horse is the only friend I've ment could have been dealt with ever known," it really says it all. You appropriately. The police could have could also tell your readers that one been contacted,ifnecessary. of our local "invasive" wild horses The library staff has the author- just won the United States Dressage ity and ability to permanently ex- Federation's First Place, All Breeds clude incorrigible patrons from the Award. library. After all, the library staff is No one would say t hat, w ith attempting to exclude the general shrinking rangelands and given all public from the so called "teen" area. the "terrible damage" done to the Go to the library and sit anywhere land — less by wild horses than by you desire — it's your library. non-native humans — wild horse Ken Ray herds should expand unchecked. Bend Just consider helping us discover more holistic, sustainable, reasonWild horses need able and fair solutions. Gayle Hunt, a holistic solution

Leave dogs at home Why is it now OK to allow dogs in stores'? Shopping centers are where we

go to shop, not a dog walk or display of dogs. On many recent visits to our localstores,severalpeople had dogs in their arms, in carts or walking them on a leash — walking in the food departments, touching foods. I understand about guide dogs, but this is not the case. Besides the lick-

ing, barking, dodging leashes, possibility of being bitten and being a general nuisance, many people fear dogs — big or little. Also, there are many who are allergic to animals. And the germs, slobber and hair are left in the carts when people leave the stores. The next unsuspecting customer has no idea of the mass of germs in the cart he or she is pushing and putting food in. Not knowing the possibilities of diseasethey've encountered, they take that into their home. I know of a few people who are afraid to voice their concern about this issue, but it is

becoming more of a problem everywhere. I have confronted the service centers and none really cared that I myself and many others are allergic

to dogs. Seems that the world has gone to the dogs, and people's/shoppers' health andwelfare are less important. With the many outbreaks of diseases in Central Oregon, trying to stop the possiblespread of diseases through public shopping centers should be of great concern to more people. Leave the dogs at home, where you can enjoy them. Places where we shop are

Central Oregon no places for dogs.

Looks like we'll all be moving to either Mesopotamia or Ethiopia, if

Wild Horse Coalition, Prineville

Steve Cordle Bend

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Study shows age can attune men to value of relationships t

f you go back and read a bunch of biographies of people born 100 to 150 years ago, you notice a few things that were more common then than now. First, many m ore f amilies suffered the loss of a child, which had a devastating and historically underappreciated impact on their overall worldviews. Second, and maybe related,many more children grew up in cold and emotionally distant homes, where fathers, in particular, barely knew their children and found it impossible to express their love for them. It wasn't only parents who were emotionally diffident; it was the people who studied them. In 1938, a group of researchers began an intensive study of 268 students at Harvard University. The plan was to track them through their entire lives, measuring, testing and interviewing them every few yearsto see how lives developed. In the 1930s and 1940s, researchers didn't pay much attention to the men's relationships. Instead, following the intellectual fashions of the day,

,":Ii

DA V ID BROOKS

they paid a lot of attention to the men's physiognomy. Didtheyhave a"masculine n body type? Did they show signs of vigorous genetic endowments? But as this study — the Grant Study — progressed, the power of relationships became clear.The men who grew up in homes with warm parents were much more likely to become first lieutenants and majors in World War II. The men who grew up in cold, barren homes were much more likely to finish the war as privates. Body type was useless as a predictor of how the men would fare in life. So was birth order or political affiliation. Even social class had a limited effect. But having a warm childhood was powerful. As George Vaillant, the study director, sums it up in HTriumphs of Experience," his most recent summary of the research, "It was

the capacity for intimate relationships that predicted flourishing in all aspects of these men's lives." Of the 31 men in the study incapable of establishing intimate bonds, only four are still alive. Of those who were better at forming relationships, more than a third are living. It's not that the men who flourished had perfect childhoods. Rather, as Vaillant puts it, "What goes right is more important than what goes wrong." The positive effect of one loving relative, mentor or friend can overwhelm the negative effects of the bad things that happen. In case after case, the magic formula is capacity for intimacy combined with persistence, discipline, order and dependability. The men who could be affectionate about people and organized about things had very enjoyable lives. But a childhood does not totally determine a life. The beauty of the Grant Study is that, as Vaillant emphasizes, it has followed its subjects for nine decades. The big finding is that you can teach an old dog new tricks. The men

kept changing all the way through, even in their 80s and 90s. One man in the study paid his way through Harvard by working as a psychiatric attendant. He slept from 6 p.m. to midnight. Worked the night shift at a hospital, then biked to class by 8 in the morning. After college, he tried his hand at theater. He did not succeed, and, at age 40, he saw himself as "mediocre and without imagination." His middle years were professionally and maritally unhappy. But, ashe got older,he became less emotionally inhibited. In old age, he became a successful actor, playing roles like King Lear. He got married at 78. By 86, the only medicine he was taking was Viagra. He lived to 96. Another subject grew up feeling that he "didn't know either parent very well." At 19, he wrote, HI don't find it easy to make friends." At 39, he wrote, HI feel lonely, rootless and disoriented." At 50, he had basically given up trying to socialize and was trapped in an unhappy marriage. But, as he aged, he changed. He became the president of his nursing

home. He had girlfriends after the death of his first wife and then remarried. He didn't turn into a social butterfly, but life was better. The men of the Grant Study frequently became more emotionally attuned as they aged, more adept at recognizing and expressing emotion. Part of the explanation is biological. People, especially men, become more aware of their emotions as they get older. Part of this is probably historicaL Over the past half-century or so, Americanculturehas become more attuned to the power of relationships. Masculinity has changed, at least a bit. The so-called Flynn Effect describes the rise in measured IQ scores over the decades. Perhaps we could invent something called the Grant Effect, on the improvement of mass emotional intelligence over the decades. This gradual change might be one of the greatest contributors to progress and well-being that we've experienced in our lifetimes. — David Brooks ts a columnist for The New York Times.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

CS

WEST NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Sandra A. Lambert, of Redmond July 26, 1938 - Nov. 11, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No service will be held, per Sandra's request. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701. www.partnersbend.org

Robert 'Bob' Marshall Romancier June 12, 1935 - Nov. 7, 2012 Robert Marshall Romancier of Redmond, OR, died at his home on N ovember 7, 2012, at the age of 77. B ob was b or n J u n e 1 2 , 1 935, in S p r i ngfield, M A , to John and Mabel (Cook) Romancier. His early years w ere s p ent i n Ha r t f o r d , C T, an d C u s h m an , M A , just o u t side o f A m h e r st , where he g r aduated fr om h igh school. D u r i n g h i g h s chool B o b ' s i n t e r est i n music grew and flourished, h e heIped f o un d a D ix ieland jazz band and also a s ummertime com m u n i t y b and. H e at t e n de d t h e University o f Mas s a chus etts, s t u d y in g f o r e s t ry , which h e r e a ll y e n j o yed. He was given a full schola rship t o Y a l e w h e r e h e received his master's deree. He then married his i rst wife, Mary Lo u A r m strong. Bob had j o ined th e F orest Service as a Research Forester, for 40 years, first doing hi s o w n r e s e arch, then guiding and directing o thers. I n t h e e a rl y 6 0 s, his son and daughter were b orn while h e w o r ked o n getting his Ph.D. in Forest E cology at D u k e U n i v e r sity. Dur ing this time, Bob a lso made a 6 y e a r c o m m itment t o t h e M i l i t a r y . He later relocated to Portland, OR, where he was an assistant d i r e ctor o f t h e PNW F o r est E x p e r iment S tation. A f t e r 2 y e ar s i n Portland, h e mov e d t o Corvallis t o di r e c t t h e l argest field l aboratory of the Forest Service. In 1980, Bob was ordered to Pennsylvania as deputy director of t h e N o r t heastern Forest Experiment Stat ion, leaving his f amily i n Oregon. H e c o n t i nued to cross th e c o u n tr y t o b e with his children as often as possible. W h i l e he enj oyed hi s w o r k , h e a l s o missed his family. In 1990, he started corres pondence w i t h Gl e n d a F axon, who w a s w o r k i n g i n S e attl e a t t h e t i me . G lenda was his f i nal t r u e love; they married in 1992, honeymooned crossing the country, a nd li ve d i n Broomall, PA, for almost 2 years, then to Portland for 18 months, as he wrapped up his USFS career. T h ey then moved to Redmond, O R, in 1 9 96, w h er e t h ey had a lovely home built in a r e a ll y n e a t n e i g h b orhood. T h e y f o r med good s trong r e l ationships w i t h many o f t h e i r n e i g h bors a nd t he f i ne p eop l e of Re d m o n d Chr i s t i a n Church. B ob i s s u r v i ved b y h i s w ife, G l enda F a x o n R o mancier; three sons, Rob and B a b ett e R o m a n cier, P eter an d T o n y a F a x o n , and Greg and Traci Faxon; seven g r and c h i l d r en, Briana, Z a ck , M c K e n zie, M cKray, M c K o r d , A b b i and Gillen. He was preceded in death b y h i s d a u g h ter , L y n d i ; and his brother, Jack. A Memorial Service will be held Saturday, November 17, 2012, at 2:00 p.m., at Re d m o n d Chr i s t i a n Church. D onations i n h i s n a m e m ay b e m a d e t o Sh e p herds House. P l ease sign our onl i n e g ues t b o ok

n ai ornia,

on ers JamesStone,89,won Medal i s re evance of Honor on a hilltop in I(orea FEATURED OBITUARY

By jim Sanders

By Emily Langer

months, learning only after The Washington Post his release that he had been On the evening of Nov. 21, awarded the medal. "I don't deserve the medal," 1951, James Stone looked out from his hilltop outpost he said, near tears. "It should in Korea and sensed what go to the men of my platoon. w as coming. H e w a s a n They were all so brave. NothArmy lieutenant whose eight ing I could say could tell you months of combat experience how proud I was to be with were enough to alert him to those men on that hill that the imminence of an enemy night." assault. They had arrived hours beThe attackbegan at 9 p.m. fore the onslaught to relieve with ar tillery an d m o r tar another American unit, acfire and raged through the cording to an account by Penight as hundreds of Chinese ter Collier, author of the book "Medal Of Honor: Portraits stormed the hill. By the next day, half the men in the pla- of Valor Beyond the Call of toon were dead and their 28- Duty." Stone knew that he year-old lieutenant had been and his men were in trouble shot three times. as soon as U.S. gunners sent But the lieutenant survived up flares that bathed the hillto spend nearly 30 years in side in light and revealed the the Army, rising to the rank advancing enemy. In short of colonel and receiving the order, Stone's 48 men faced nation's highest military dec- as many as 800 Chinese. oration for valor. Stone "stood erect and, ex"His voice could still be posed to the terrific enemy heard faintly urging his men fire, calmly directed his men to carry on, until he lost con- in the defense," according to sciousness," reads the citation the Medal of Honor citation. for the Medal of Honor CoL When a defensive flameStone received for his actions thrower failed to f u n ction that night near Sokkogae. and the operator was killed, "Only because of this officer's Collier wrote, Stone rushed driving spirit and heroic ac- to the site and restored it to tion was the platoon embold- working order for another ened to make its brave, but operator. hopeless, last-ditch stand." At another point, he reStone died Nov. 9 in Arling- trieved the platoon's last light ton, Texas, the Congressional machine gun an d c a r ried Medal of Honor Society anit from position to position, nounced. The cause was not firing o n C h i nese troops. "Throughout," the citation disclosed. He was 89. After the battle, Stone was reads, "he continued to entaken prisonerand held for22 courage and direct his de-

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Sir Rex Hunt, 86: British governor of the Falkland Islands in the south Atlantic at the time of the Argentine invasion in 1982, he was praised by the British government for his "courage and dignity" during the invasion and brief ensuing war during which

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British forces reclaimed the islands. Hunt was captured by Argentine forces during the invasion and expelled to Uruguay. He returned to serve as governor until 1985. His death was announced by the British government. No cause was given.

Susan Jeffers, 74: A psy-

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Novelist Douglas,91,wrote about nuancesof life in South By Margalit Fox

was usually enacted by women, often middle-class white Ellen Douglas, a M i s sis- women and their black maids, sippi-born writer whose novels joined in wary comradeship explored the uneasy, some- through shared household ritutimes surprisingly tender alli- als. The word "domestic," both ances between black and white as adjective and noun, was an women in the American South, almost audible subtext in Dougdied Wednesday at her home in las' work. Jackson, Miss. She was 91. Throughout h e r ca r e er, Her son Brooks Haxton con- Douglas was praised for her firmed her death. unflinching yet s y mpathetic Ellen Douglas was the pen characterizati ons, and for her name o f J o sephine A y res ear for the nuances of Southern Haxton, whose first novel, "A speech as it varied across the Family's Affairs," drew praise races and the sexes. from critics on its publication Her novel "Apostles of Light," in 1962. about the fate of an elderly That book, as many of Doug- Southern woman, was a finallas' later novels would, explored ist for a National Book Award the epochal divide between the in 1974. Old South and the New, examJosephine Cha m b erlain ining vast, difficult subjects Ayres was born on July 12, — race relations, tensions be- 1921, in Natchez, Miss., and tween the sexes, the conflict reared in Hope, Ark., and Alexbetween the needs of the indi- andria, La. She earned a bachvidual and those of the commu- elor's degree in English from nity — through the small, clear the University of Mississippi, at prism of domestic life. which she later taught writing The domestic life in question for many years. Neve Yorh Times News Service

especially given that voters on Tuesday passed two new SACRAMENTO, Calif. tax measuresraising about $7 What little muscle they had, b i l lionannually. California Republican law GOP l a wmakers and other makers used, blocking ciga- c r i tics are not convinced, sayrette, liquor, oil production i n g D emocrats are eager to and other proposed tax hikes r e store program cuts and owe duing the past few years. plent y of political capital to laOne GOP senator's de- b o r unions and other interest mand as part of a b udget g r o ups that spent millions in deal sparked creation of Cal- l a st Tuesday's election. "There's going to be a treifornia'snewtop-twoprimary election system, which allows m e ndous temptation to tax candidates of the same party o u r way to prosperity," said to butt heads in November B o b Huff, Senate GOP leader. runoffs. Jon Coupal of the Howard Republicanskept a $6 bil- Jarvis Taxpayers Associalion extension of temporary t i o n said he is encouraged by taxes off the ballot last year B r o wn's vow to practice reand nixed plans to award s t r aint,"butl t hink JohnPermiddle-class colez and D a rrell lege scholarships. Steinberg will try T heir resistance j f R~ P u t J jiCotfI S ev e rything t hey toraisingrevenue IA roifI t cfrIy p ossibly can to resulted in large >rI f/ugfI Ct get him to sign off cuts to schools, on tax increases." counties and soSteinberg and cial services in D g m P C I citS, Perez tal k of The Sacramento Bee

Kiss those days

they ought

r anging

goodbye — un- tD dPP jy f D" r less vote-count- jg t g m S hjpS." i ng t r ends r e verse in two tight Assembly races that provide the GOP with its only

fro m

einve sting i n

— »ck pitney, polit i c al science professor, Claremont McKenna

schools to providing middle-class

college scholar-

sh i ps, p r o m o tin g j ob creation, restoring a d u lt «iiege dental care for hope of stopping a De m o cratic the poor, and persupermajority in haps altering the both legislative houses. sales tax formula to lower the Assuming A sse m bl y r a t e but expand the base to Speaker John Perez is correct s e rvices. in declaring victory, RepubliPoli t i cal analysts say Demcans nolonger can press de- ocrats also are likely to cater mands, extractconcessions to interestgroups by pushing or block whatever Democrats f o r a higher minimum wage, want to do if confronted with s t i ffer e n vironmental laws a massive budget hole amid a a n d c o nstruction of h i ghrocky economy. speed rail, and to shy away The GOP won't be get- f r o m b i g c hanges to state ting offers like that accepted w o rker pensions or what the more than a decade ago by G O P calls overregulation of then-Assemblyman Anthony b u sinesses. "When you go to a party, Pescetti, R-Rancho Cordova, who helped pass a Demo- you dance withthe one who cratic-crafted budget after se- 'brung ya,'" said Larry Gercuring nearly $7.5 million for s t on, a government professor projects in his district. at San Jose State University, "If Republicans want any b o r r owing a famous adage "And influence now with Demo- f r o m generations past. crats, they ought to apply for o r g anized labor was incredinternships," quipped Jack i b l y helpful to Democrats in Pitney, political science pro- g e ttingthatsupermajority." fessor at Claremont McKenna It wi l l t ake months for the College. dust to settle and a superRepublicansinrecentyears m a j ority Legislature to take have held just enough seats to shape, because two Demoget courted on budget, tax or c r a tic state senators were other key bills requiring ap- e l ected Tuesday to Congress proval by a two-thirds mar- — Juan Vargas and Gloria gin. Voters began pulling the N e grete McLeod — requiring rug out from under the GOP s pecial elections to fill their in 2010, passing an initiative s t r ongly l eft-leaning seats. permitting state budgets to be A n other Democratic senator, passed by majority vote. They C u r ren Price, is seeking a Los followed that up on Election A n g eles City Council seat. Day by awarding Democrats At bes t , D emocrats will anapparentsupermajorityin ho l d a b ar e minimum AstheAssemblyandSenate. sembly supermajority, 54 of The blows slap a sagging 8 0 seats. The Senate margin state GOP that already was w i l l exceed two-thirds problow in cash, influence and a b l y by just one seat, 28-12. structure. Only 30 percent of I f D emocrats fail to vote as a voters are Republicans. bloc,their power on issues reADemocraticsupermajori- q u i r ing a two-thirds margin ty means no GOP votes would w o uld wane — and growing be neededto raisetaxes,over- numbers of moderate or busiridea governor'sveto,orplace ness-friendly colleagues inconstitutional a m endments c r ease that possibility. "If Democrats are unified on the ballot. Democrats last wielded such power in 1883. o na n issue, they will get what Gov. Jerry Brown, Perez t h e y w ant,"Pitneysaid."The and Senate President Pro c a tch is — 'if Democrats are Tem Darrell Steinberg say u n i f ied.' That's kind of like they won't rush to raise taxes, saying, 'If the weather is sun-

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self-help books, the first of which — "Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway" — became an international best-seller in 1987.Jeffers'thesis in most of her books was that pressing ahead was the only way to erasefear.She died Oct. 27 of cancer at her home in Santa Monica, Calif.

chologist, Jeffers wrote 18

SECLIRITY

pleted platoon in its hopeless defense." According to Collier's account, the Chinese entered U.S. trench lines and Stone "joined his men in a handto-hand fight, at times using his rifle as a club or knifing the enemy with his bayonet." Shot in the neck, he never learned who applied the bandage that saved his life. As th e p l atoon's losses mounted, S t one r o u nded up survivors and told them to rejoin the company. He stayed behind with the most severely wounded and was taken prisoner after he lost consciousness. When U.S. reinforcements retook the hill the next day, Collier wrote, they found 545 enemy dead. "I am not proud of that," Stone told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in 2005. "I hate to see men killed. But it's either you or them." James Lamar Stone was born Dec. 27, 1922, in Pine Bluff, Ark. He studied chemistry and zoology at the University of A rkansas, where he received a bachelor's degree, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. A fter th e K o rean W a r, Stone served in G ermany, o versaw ROTC u nits a n d served a year in Vietnam. "It was a long, hard night of combat," he told the StarTelegram in 2010, recalling the events of 1951. "My men did it... I was just there."

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W EAT H E R

THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 20'I2

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WATER REPORT The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

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......56/29/0 00..62/31/pc.. 66/38/s GrandRapids....55/34/0 24..39/27/pc.44/30/pc RapidCity........38/8/0.00..44/26/sn.49/32/pc Savannah .......77/56/0.00..70/50/sh.. 63/48/c Akron ..........64/37/0.46...39/25/s. 42/29/pc Green Bay.......37/26/0.00..37/27/pc.42/31/pc Repo...........57/25/0.00..56/34/pc. 59/33/pc Seattle..........55/43/0.69..50/42/sh. 50/39/sh Albany..........67/49/000..47/27/sh.. 44/28/s Greensboro......65/54/000..50/34/sh. 53/35/pc Richmond.......74/47/0.00 ..52/34/sh.. 52/34/s SiovxFalls.......33/I8/0 00 ..43/25/pc. 49/31/pc Albuquerque.....49/23/0.00...54/30/s.. 58/36/s Harasburg.......66/44/0.00..50/30/pc.. 48/31/s Rochester, NY....81/52/0.11... 36/31/s .. 41/32/s Spokane........33/30/0.39 .. 40/33/rs .. 41/31/c Anchorage ......32/27/0.00..29/24/pc. 31/26/sn Hartford,CT .....67/43/0.00..50/31/sh.. 46/32/s Sacramento......62/36/0 00 .. 66/46/pc. 68/47/pc Spiingfield, MO ..46/25/0.00... 52/29/5 .. 53/33/s Atlanta .........69/54/0.21...58/39/5.53/40/pc Helena...........29/9/0.00...41/27/c.. 42/24/c St.Louis.........47/30/0.00... 50/31/s.. 52/33/s Tampa..........83/64/0 00 ..82/64/pc. 82/65/sh Atlantic City.....67/43/0.00..54/39/sh.. 52/43/s Honolulu........85/74/0.00...84/72/s.. 84/71/s Salt Lake City....34/21/0.00..42/28/pc. 45/31/pc Tucson..........70/35/0.00... 76/44/s .. 80/49/s Austin..........67/44/0.00..62/38/pc.. 65/37/s Houston ........67/54/0.04..66/43/pc..67/42/s SanAntonio.....66/48/0.00 ..62/42/pc.. 65/41/s Tulsa...........53/26/0.00... 58/32/s .. 60/35/s Baltimore .......69/39/000..52/34/sh.. 48/34/s Huntsville .......65/42/1.04...54/32/s. 55/38/pc SanDiego.......68/47/0.00... 75/54/s.. 72/57/s Washington, DC..72/49/0.00 ..52/36/sh.. 48/36/s Bitings .........37/15/000...44/26/c.. 42/25/c Indianapolis.....57/32/090...42/26/s.. 46/29/s SanFrancisco....63/43/000.. 65/52/pc. 65/54/pc Wichita.........$3/21/0.00... 58/31/s .. 5I36/s Birmingham .....65/47/0 51...57/35/s. 57/41/pc Jackson, MS.... 69/45/1 05 ..59/35/s.. 60/38/s SaoJose........63/39/000..69/49/pc 69/50/pc Yaklma........ 44/34/0.10. 48/35/c. 47/34/pc Bismarck.........24/6/000...31/16/c. 35/21/pc Jacksonvile......78/58/008..76/56/sh. 71/59/sh SantaFe........47/14/0.00... 51/29/s .. 52/34/s Yuma...........70/51/0.00... 78/51/s .. 80/57/s Boise...........42/29/000...52/32/c.. 51/32/c Juneau..........36/32/009..37/34/sh...40/35/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........66/47/000..55/37/sh..46/37/s KapsasCity......45/21/0 00...54/33/s. 55/36/Pc Bodgepo/t,CT....63/44/000..52/34/sh.. 47/35/s Lansing.........61/34/0.27..38/26/pc.43/29/pc Amsterdam......46/39/000 48/41/pc .. 51/41/s Mecca..........99/79/000 .90/73/s.90/72/pc Buffalo .........70/45/0.17...36/29/s.. 42/32/s LasVegas.......60/37/0.00...65/46/s.. 67/48/s Athens..........64/55/0 00 .. 67/54/pc. 62/55/pc MexicoCity .....73/52/000 ..73/47/pc. 74/48/pc BurlingtonVT....70/58/0 00..44/27/sh.. 42/30/s Lexington .......63/34/083...45/25/s.48/26/pc Auckland........63/54/0.00 .. 62/54/sh.64/53/sh Montreal........64/32/000..46/31/pc .. 40/29/s Caribou,ME.....55/33/001 ..54/26/sh.. 39/24/s Lincoln..........44/20/000 ..55/24/pc. 54/36/pc Baghdad........99/57/0.00 ..75/53/sh.73/51/pc Moscow........41/32/0 00 .. 39/30/pc.. 34/27/c Charleston, SC...80/56/000..70/49/sh.. 62/48/c Little Rock.......54/38/000...56/35/s.. 57/36/5 Bangkok........88/79/0.00... 93/75/t...93/78/t Nairobi.........81/61/0.00... 78/57/s...78/57/t Charlotte........73/55/000..55/35/sh. 56/41/pc LosAngeles......73/47/000...75/55/s.. 75/56/s Beiling..........50/34/0.00... 38/25/s .. 38/27/s Nassau.........81/54/0.00 ..83/71/pc. 83/70/pc Chattanooga.....64/45/0 54... 55/33/s. 57/35/pc Louisvile........65/36/047...46/27/s .. 49/28/s Beirut..........70/59/000 .. 71/59/pc.. 73/60/s New Delhi.......82/61/0.00...76/59/s.. 78/59/s Cheyenne.......45/18/000 ..45/25/pc. 49/28/pc MadisonWh....33/25/000..40/28/pc. 44/26/pc Berlin...........48/37/0.00..48/35/pc .. 49/35/s Osaka..........63/50/0 00 .. 59/51/sh. 55/42/pc Chicago.........41/29/001 ..40/30/pc. 46/34/pc Memphis....... 54/42/044 ..55/34/s .. 57/36/s Bogota .........66/43/0.00 64/49/sh. .. 63/51/sh Oslo............39/27/0.00 ..40/38/pc.. 43/39/c Cincinnati.......64/33/040...45/25/s .. 46/28/s Miami..........82/72/0.06 ..82/70/pc. 82/70/pc Budapest........52/43/0.00...51/37/c.51/36/pc Ottawa.........70/30/0.00 ..44/29/pc.. 40/28/s Cleveland.......64/36/042...37/29/s .. 41/34/s Milwaukee......37/28/000 ..39/32/pc. 44/34/pc BuenosAires.....70/52/000..72/61/pc.73/62/pc Paris............46/39/0.00 ..47/35/pc. 50/46/pc ColoradoSpnngs.49/10/000... 53/24/s .. 54/33/s Mipneapolis.....27/19/0 01..41/30/pc. 47/31/pc Cabo580Lucas ..84/61/0 00..84/66/pc. 85/66/pc Rio deJaneiro....86/75/0.00... 78/71/t. 77/68/sh Colvmhia,MO...44/26/000... 51/30/s. 54/34/pc Nashvite........66/41/067... 52/30/s .. 55/32/5 Cairo...........75/61/0.00 ..75/61/pc.. 77/62/s Rome...........73/63/0 00 .. 71/58/pc.. 69/52/c Colvmhia,SC....76/53/000..60/41/sh.. 59/42/c NewOrleans.....72/57/012...61/46/s.. 62/47/s Calgary.........39/27/0.00... 35/26/c.37/22/pc Santiago........84/52/0.00... 80/59/s .. 81/57/s Columbus, GA....78/56/0.34..62/42/pc.. 59/45/c New York.......66/48/0.00..52/37/sh.. 49/37/s Cancun.........82/75/0.00 ..82/72/sh...81/72/t Sao Paulo.......75/66/0.00..71/61/sh. 70/58/sh Columbus, OH....63/37/0.60...42/28/s. 45/29/pc Newark,NJ......67/46/0.00..52/35/sh.. 49/36/s Dublin..........57/43/0.00... 56/49/c ..54/47/c Sapporo ........52/46/0.00..51/37/sh. 50/32/sh Concord,NH.....67/30/000..52/28/sh.. 47/30/s Norfolk VA......75/52/000..58/41/sh.. 51/3B/s Edinburgh.......55/27/0.00... 55/52/c. 55/43/sh Seoul...........48/43/0.00..48/35/sh. 45/30/pc Corpus Christi....75/62/000 ..68/53/pc. 68/58/pc Oklahoma City...51/23/000...61/34/s .. 60/36/s Geneva.........52/39/0.00..54/42/pc. 63/51/pc Shanghai........61/43/0.00...64/43/s.. 61/41/s DallasFtWorth...56/37/000...60/36/s .. 63/36/s Omaha.........41/24/000 ..51/28/pc. 51/36/pc Haiare..........84/59/000..84/63/sh. 84/60/pc Singapore.......86/75/0.00...85/80/t...86/80/t Dayton .........62/32/0.73...41/26/s. 44/28/pc Orlando.........82/62/0.00..82/61/pc.81/62/sh Hong Kong......75/68/000..83/71/pc. 82/73/pc Stockholm.......46/32/0.00...41/37/s.. 47/39/c Denver..........47/14/046..54/27/pc.57/27/pc PalmSpriogs.....72/45/000...79/52/s.. 82/56/s Istanbul.........64/48/0.00...63/57/s.60/54/sh Sydney..........77/57/0.00..73/59/pc.71/58/sh DesMoines......39/21/0 00..47/31/pc. 51/36/pc Peoria ..........39/25/0.00...42/28/s.47/31/pc leiusalem.......59/52/0 29.. 65/52/pc.. 67/53/s Taipei...........70/63/0.00..74/67/pc. 76/68/pc Detroit..........61/35/0 52..38/27/pc. 41/34/pc Philadelphia.....71/43/000..53/37/sh.. 49/36/s Johannesburg....77/59/0.00... 77/59/t...76/57/t TelAviv.........73/61/0.00..72/55/pc..74/58/s Duluth..........25/19/000...38/28/c.. 42/29/c Phoenix.........73/44/000...81/52/s.. 83/55/s Lima...........73/64/0.00... 70/65/c .. 69/64/c Tokyo...........68/54/0.00..63/49/pc.60/44/pc ElPaso..........56/32/000...65/3B/s.. 70/41ls Pittsburgh.......70/41/012...42/28/s.. 43/31/s Lisbon..........61/48/000..59/42/s62/52/pc Toronto.........66/45/0 00 37/26/pc 40/31/pc Faiibapks........1/-18/0.00...-1/-12/s..3/-19/pc Portland,ME.....61/39/0.00..55/33/sh.. 48/31/5 London .........54/39/000...54/52/c. 54/41Ipc Vancpuver.......45/41/0 00..48/45/lh. 50/43/pc Fargo...........23/15/000...37/24/c.. 40/25/c Providence ......68/45/0 00..56/35/sh.. 48/33/s Madrid .........57/39/0.00...61/45/s. 58/51/pc Vienna..........50/46/0.00..50/41/pc.51/38/pc Flagstaff ........42/21/0.00...53/I4/5.. 58/19/s Raleigh.........74/52/000..56/36/sh. 55/36/pc Manila..........86/77/0.00... 85/76/t.. 88/77/c Warsaw.........50/39/0.00 ..43/35/pc.. 43/30/s

• -Sp

• 54/30

FIRE INDEX Wed.

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

• 84p Plant City, Fla.

75/55

Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.19 Record24 hours ...1.50in1951 *Melted liquid equivalent

g%g

20s

Vegas 42/28 'x,65/46 w

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 46/36 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........ 71 m 1933 Month to date.......... 0.27" Recordlow.......... 0in1978 Average monthtodate... 0.45" Average high.............. 49 Year to date............ 7.30" Average low .............. 29 Average year to date..... 8.22"

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

o www m

Concrete, Wash

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:40 a.m...... 4:53 p.m. Venus......4:10 a.m...... 3:26 p.m. Mars......10:02 a.m...... 6:39 p.m. Jupiter......5:43 p m...... 8 52 a.m. Satum......5:22 a.m...... 400 p.m. Uranus.....2:39 p.m...... 257 a.m.

IPOLLEN COUNT

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

(in the 48 contiguous states):

PLANET WATCH

1

• 20p Rome

McDermitt

48I33

46 33

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

North Bend

48/33

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

OREmN m BmEF

Oregon Army National Guard p inned the medals on 8 6 year-old Donald Madsen on Umatilla man pleads power had been shut off be- Sunday. cause residents were having Madsen received the Bronze guilty in shooting trouble with their bills. Star, the Combat Infantryman RICHLAND, Wash. — A The Clackamas Fire depart- Badge and the Prisoner of War 41-year-old Umatilla man has ment was called out Friday, Medal. received a t h ree-month jail and firefighterswere greeted The Statesman Journal says sentence in Washington state by heavy, black smoke. Crews Madsen's friend encouraged for shooting another man in controlled the fire in half an him to find out what medals the chest. hour. he was entitled to. Family and The Tri-City Herald reports Investigators said Monday friendsgathered what records that Edgar Martinez pleaded t hey'd determined that t h e they could find, took them to guilty to a r e duced charge candles touched offthe fire, the state Department of Vetof second-degree assaultin although it's not clear exactly erans Affairsand discovered Franklin C o u nt y S u p erior how. There were several going Madsen earnedthree medals. Court. in the home. Madsen served in the Army's 346th Infantry Regiment, Deputy Prosecutor Frank Nobody was hurt, but four Jenny says the charge was people were displaced. Dam- 87th Infantry Division. reduced from firstdegree as- age was estimated at $80,000. sault in the plea deal partly be- Firefighterssay they recom- Park Serviaewary cause the 29-year-old victim, mend using battery-operated OfphnnedLNGterminal Israel Garcia, refuses to talk to flameless candles. police or prosecutors. WARRENTON The Garcia was shot in the chest National Park S ervice has w hile sitting in h i s ca r o n World War II vet gets expressed concerns about a March 31, 2011. proposed liquefied natural gas long-overdue medals terminal at the mouth of the Candles blamed SALEM — A f ter w aiting Columbia River. for nearly 70 years, an Oregon The Daily A storian says for fire at duplex veteran has r eceived three the park service sent a letter MILWAUKIE — Firefight- medals he earned while serv- to federal regulators saying ers in Milwaukie are blaming ing in the U.S. Army during concerns must be addressed the carelessuse of candles for World War II. in the environmental review a fire in a duplex where the Lt. COL Kevin Dial with the of the Oregon LNG project at

Warrenton. In his letter to the Federal E nergy R e g ulatory C o m mission, park o ff icial Chip Jenkins expressed concerns about the effect on threatened and endangered species and bald eagles, wetlands near or in the park, and threats to historic sites and trails. Local opposition led backers to drop plans for another LNG terminal, upriver from Astoria, in 2010. A third terminal project, at Coos Bay, remains active.

Lane County tops survey of reqtcling EUGENE — A state survey shows that Lane County had the highest recycling rate in the state last year, even better than the greater Portland area. The Register-Guard says the county kept 61.5 percent of waste out of the landfill through a range ofrecycling options. The 2011 survey by the state Department of Environmental Quality shows that the amount

of garbage being thrown away by residents statewide is al-

most equal to the amount be-

ing recyclecL Last year, Lane county residents threw away 215,728 tons Of WaStebttt reCyCled Or Otherwise recovered 269,316 tons. M arion County h a d t h e state'ssecond-highest recovery rate at 60.8 percent, followed by the Portland metro area at 59.3 percent.

ling hope to block General Manager Lee Moore's access to bank accounts. They'Ve tried tO Pttt MOOre on leave, but he's still working.

Robber fires gun, but nets nothing PORTLAND —

robbery at a bar fired two shots but ran off without any money. The police said a bartender had closed up The Daily PlanCLACKAMAS — The lat- et in southeast Portland early est bone of contention in the Monday when the gunman dispute over the water district confronted him and told him serving 80,000 customers in to reopen the place. eastern Portland suburbs is When the bartender had difthe district's cash. ficulty with the door, the robber The Oregonian reports two fired a shot, and when the barmembers of th e C lackamas tender got the door open, the River Water board who staged robber fired another shot. But a six-hour takeover last month police said the robber then fled are planning a visit to the bank out the front door without monto gain control of the district's ey. The bartender wasn't hit. accounts. — From wire reports The dispute has been going on for years and has cost an estimated $1 million in legal fees.There are now two lineHAVEN HOME STYLE ups for the board, normally five members. Fuf"nifuf'e zfnd Geyji n Commissioners Pa t r i cia 856 NWBond • Downtown Bend• 541-330-5999 Holloway and Grafton Sterwww.havenhomestyle.com

Water board battles over district's finances

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police said a gunman pulling a

.

541-382-1795

possible.

HIGH LOW

Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 37,118...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 138,666..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 72,799 . . . . 91,700 Eugene........53/47/0.29.... 53/38/sh ....53/39/sh Dchoco Reservoir..... . . . 16,547 . . . . 47,000 Klamath Falls .. 49/30/001 ....46/31/< ... 49/29/( The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . . 81,862..... 153,777 Lakeview...... 46/28/0.00 ...44/30/sh . ... 46/29/( R iver flow St at i on Cubic ft./sec La Pine........41/32/0.00....47/29/sh . ....47/25/( the need for eye and skin protection. Index is Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 163 Medford....... 52/41/0.10....53/44/sh . ....54/41/( for ar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 250 Newport....... 54/50/0.27....55/43/sh . ...54/43/sh Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 23 MEDIUM HIGH gggg North Bend...... 57/48/NA.... 58/48/sh . ...57/47/sh Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 153 Ontario........35/25/0.06.....48/31/< . ....50/30/c 0 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 673 Pendleton......47/40/0.56.....48/34/< . ...51/34/pc Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . . 813 Portland .......53/44/0.65.... 52/41/sh . ...53/41 lsh Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. .. . . . . . . 34 Prineville.......43/36/0.14....47/34/sh . ....52/31/< Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 76.7 Redmond.......47/35/0.04.... 51/34/sh . ....50/32/c Dchoco CreekBelow Dchoco Res. .... . . . . . 4.33 Roseburg.......56/45/0.09....54/43/sh . ....54/41/< Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 153 Salem ....... 52/47/0 59 ...53/40/sh ... 53/38/c ~~ Sisters.........44/31/0.00....48/32/sh......47/27/c ~YLOIN Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM TheDages......48/41/0.11 ....51/41/sh.....53/39/pc • or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

• 57p

% %453/44 xxxxx x

Tuesday Hi/Lo/W

linger into the night.

Bend,westofHwy 97.....Low Slsters..............................Low Hi/Lo/W Bend,easto/Hwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through 4 pm. Redmond/Madras........Low Prineville..........................Low Astpria 56/48/0 24.... 54/39/sh . ...53/40/sh Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme Baker City 3 2 / 28/0 .....46/27/< 00 . ....46/26/< To report a wildfire, call 911 Brookings...... 54/46/0 24.... 56/49/sh . ...57/48/sh . 34/25/0.13....48/24/sh . ...47/24/sh

Yesterday's state extremes

51/28

Paisley

ii i M edfOFd»» Chiloquin

x 58/51.

50 32

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

EAST Ontario Mostly cloudy 4!I31 skies with isolated Valeo 47/3i • showers possible Nyssa north and east 47/32 Juntura 49/28 today.

Christmas Valley

i

• Bea(

47 30

OREGON CITIES

44/26

Ig

$•

Mostly cloudy

Unity

49/30

• Pau lina43/30

CENTRAL

tered showers possible today.

Baker Cl

, XX X N N ot

•John Day

57/48

48 32

Pi •

skies with scat-

Granite

xxxx 51/3< • Mitchell 40os COFvaiit(Dii x x 6 ' h i%x(% 54/46 %%%%%%%%»4 5/3 i» Yachats~ i i i i i i i b ,i~i i i i • P r lnevllle47/34 55/43 c x iixxx x x x x'xiixxi x x Ststers,xhh Redmond

Florenceuii

Joseph

La Grande•

ondon

i

i iwt~»"afe •

x» 53/40 • s s'x 'Ccccccc i i i i NewpoTL • x i

HIGH LOW

Sunsettoday...... 4 40 p.m N ew First F ull Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:00 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 4:39 p.m Moonrise today.... 6:44 a.m Moonsettoday .... 4:37 p.m Nov. 13 Nov. 20 Nov. 28 Dec. 6

Off and on rain and snow showers are

start and

HIGH LOW

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 6:59 a.m Moon phases

WEST Cloudy and locally breezy with a chance of showers today.

Late evening showers will

HIGH LOW

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I

Variable cloud cover through the day, a touch cool.

' xt)jftt " xtiIII ' 'I(('


Scoreboard, D2 College basketball, D3 NBA, D3 NFL, D3

Comm u nity Sports, D4-D5

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

PREP STATE SOCCER

TRACK & FIELD Bend's Eaton wins Owens Award

Local teams

COMMUNITY SPORTS

Bend's Ashton Eaton

was named themale winner of the 2012

Jesse OwensAward on Monday by USA Track 8 Field. Eaton, whose stellar

prep for

season featured aworld record in the decathlon at the Olympic Trials and a gold medal at

semis

the London Olympics, joined sprinter Allyson Felix as 2012 winners of the award, which is presented annually to the most outstanding U.S.

male and female track performers. Felix, 26 and of Santa Clarita, Calif., won Olympic gold in the 200

meters and as amember of two U.S. women's

relay teams. Eaton and Felix will be presented their awards on Dec. 1 at the Jesse Owens Hall of Fame

Banquetin Daytona Beach, Fla. — Staffand wire reports

tee Kltne/The Bulletin

Bend resident Keith Seaber is a memberof the inaugural class of the U.S. Rugby Hall of Fame and is pictured with one of a number of awards he has received for his service to the sport.

w

TO

Ashton Eaton competesin the 110meter hurdles in the decathlon at the London

Olympics in August.

TENNIS Djokovic takesATP final over Federer LONDON — Even

when Roger Federer had the lead, Novak Djokovic had the answers. The top-ranked Serb

in

• Bend's I(eith Seaber isan inaugural memberof the U.S.RugbyHall of Fame hen it comes to rugby, there is Seaber and three other men, as well little Keith Seaber has not done. as the 1920 and 1924 U.S. Olympic rugby AMAN DA Player, coach, manager, refteams, were inducted into the hall, a vireree andadministrator— Seaber has pertual site that can be found online at usrugformed all of those roles since he first took byhalloffame.org. During my interview up the sport during his boyhood years in with Seaber, he dutifully listed a number Cambridge, England. of his accomplishments over the years, but he appeared to After a lifetime of involvement in rugby, Seaber, who is be a man not overly impressed with his own success. In now 81 and lives in Bend with his wife of 60 years, Doreen, fact, toward the end of our conversation, I commented that in 2011 became a member of the inaugural class of the U.S. he had put together quite a body of work. "Well, it's been fun," Seaber, a distinguished gentleman Rugby Football Foundation's Hall of Fame. "Oh, it is. It's a very big honor, and unfortunately, I'm the with a head of white hair, modestly replied in his refined only living one," Seaber said last week as he chatted with English accent. me in his Bend home. SeeSeaber /D4

recovered from early

Bulletin staff report Three Central Oregon teams will play in Class 5A state semifinal soccer matches today, including two that are going head to head for a berth in the state championships. Boys teams from Bend's Summit and Mountain View face off today at 5 p.m. at Summit High, and the winner of that clash of Intermountain Conference rivals advances to the state championship game Saturday in Hillsboro. Also today, the Summit girls play at Corvallis in a 5:30 p.m. semifinal against the Spartans of the Mid-Willamette Conference. The Storm hope to return to the state finals Saturday at Hillsboro Stadium, where Summit won the 5A girls championship in 2010. See Semis/D4

CLASS 5A SOCCERPLAYOFFS Today's Games Semifinal Round Boys Mountain View at Summit,

5 p.m. Girls Summit at Corvallis,

5:30 p.m. Admission:$7for adults, $5 for students

At stake:Semifinal winners advance to 5A

state championships Saturday in Hillsboro

breaks in both sets and

beat Federer 7-6 (6), 7-5 Monday in the championship match at the ATP finals.

MOTOR SPORTS

Federer broke Djokovic's serve to take a quick 2-0 lead in the first set, and then again

Suspension would end 'Boys, have at it'

to open the second, but both times the world's

No. 1 player rebounded to get back into the match. "Maybe a bit of regret

By Jenna Fryer

becauseIhad thelead twice first before him," Federer said. "At the end of the day, that doesn't matter. You have to get over the finish line in the set and then obviously at the match. He was better at that today." The crowd at the 02 Arena was decidedly in Federer's favor, but they cheered loudly throughout the match as both

made spectacular shots. It was Djokovic's second victory at the yearend tournament for the top eight players in the world. He also won in 2008, when the tournament was in Shanghai. — The Associated Press

The Associated Press

TravieDove/The New YorkTimes

Erik Weihenmayer trainsat the U.S. National Whitewater Center in Charlotte, N.C., in September. Weihenmayer, one of the most accomplished blind athletes in the world, will attempt to descend the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon in a kayak.

Bin a venturer re ares to a a t eCoora oRiver By Erik Olsen

challenges ahead.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Erik Weihenmayer stood on a concrete berm above a gushing crest of whitewater and cocked his head

"I think blind kayaking is a different sport than a sighted person kayaking because you rely on your eyes so much," he said. "I'm trying to feel what's under my boat and what's under my paddle, and to use my ears, and

New York Times News Service

slightly. Novak DIokovicholds up the ATP World Tour

Tennis singles trophy.

FOOTBALL Steelers hold off Chiefs in overtime Pittsburgh still hangs on after QB Roethlisberger hurt in second half,D3

"Sounds gnar," he said. He was referring to the eardrum-rattling roar surrounding him, the sound of 536,000 gallons of water spewing each second through six industrial pumps at the U.S. National Whitewater Center. Weihenmayer, considered among the most accomplished blind athletes in the world, is perhaps best known for being the first person without sight to summit Mount Everest. But his accomplishments reach into other realms of extreme sports, including ice climbing, solo sky diving and paragliding. Now he wants to add kayaking, and he is gravely aware of the

NASCAR had a real dilemma on its hands with this whole Jeff Gordon mess hanging over the season finale. History suggested Gordon could have been suspended from Sunday's race at Homestead-Miami Speedway as punishment for intentionally wrecking Clint Bowyer at Phoenix, sparking a brawl in the garage. That's the punishment Kyle Busch got a year ago for retaliating against Ron Hornaday Jr. in a Truck Series event at Texas. But was NASCAR seriously going to sit the four-time champion? From the season finale? Nope. He instead got a $100,000 fine from NASCAR,

I g4 INlgE$ ~ TURH 4WINES

everything is happening so quickly. Without eyes, it's like sensory overload." Weihenmayer, 44, has come to the whitewater center to train with his friend and paddling coach Robert Raker, and to master the necessary techniques to navigate a small plastic boat over a m oving mountain of whitewater. If the training goes well, he said, next year he will attempt to descend the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon, one of the nation's most challenging stretches of river. It is a feat no blind person has attempted. See Kayak/D4

which also docked him 25 points in the championship standings. Maybe NASCAR should have also thanked him for triggering the fight and frenzied final sequence of events that had half the country talking about the series on Monday. Even without that, the penalty was the right call by NASCAR, which walks a fine line between sport and entertainment — and has only itself to blame. Some viewed Sunday as a black eye for NASCAR, but others were celebrating it as one ofthe best races ofthe season. It wasn't lost on Kevin Harvick, who snapped a 44race losing streak with the victory. SeeSuspension/D4

n

e

P ™ Reb Schemacher /The Arizona Republic

From left, Clint Bowyer (15), Jeff Gordon and Joey Logano crash in Turn 4 during the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Phoenix International Raceway, Sunday, in Avondale, Ariz.


D2

THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 20'I2

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TELEVISION Today

Wednesday

BASKETBALL

SOCCER

1 a.m.:Men's college, Houston

7 a.m.:Men's international

Baptist at Hawaii, ESPN.

friendly, United States vs. Russia, ESPN2. 11:25 a.m.:Men's international friendly, Netherlands vs. Germany, ESPN2. BASKETBALL 5p.m.: NBA, Memphis Grizzlies at Oklahoma City Thunder, ESPN.

3 a.m.:Men's college, Stony Brook at Rider, ESPN.

5 a.m.:Men's college, Northern lllinois at Valparaiso, ESPN.

7 a.m.:Men's college, Harvard at Massachusetts, ESPN.

9a.m.:Men's college, Temple at Kent State, ESPN. 11 a.m.: Men's college, Detroit Mercy at St. John's, ESPN.

1 p.m.:Men's college, Butler at Xavier, ESPN.

7 p.m.:College, Utah Valley at Washington State, Pac-12 Network. 7:30p.m.: NBA, Miami Heat at

Los Angeles Clippers, ESPN.

3 p.m.:Women's college,

FOOTBALL

Kentucky at Baylor, ESPN2.

4 p.m.: Men's college, ChampionsClassic,Kansasvs.

6 p.m.:College, Toledo at Northern lllinois, ESPN2.

Michigan State, ESPN.

5 p.m.:Men's college, NIT Season Tip-off, teams TBA, ESPN2.

6p.m.: Men's college, Georgia Southern at Charlotte, NBC Sports Network.

6:30 p.m.:Men's college, Champions Classic, Dukevs. Kentucky, ESPN.

6:30 p.m.:Men's college, Albany (N.Y) at Washington, Pac-12

ON DECK Today Girls soccer: Class5Asemifinals, Summit at Corvagis, 5:30p.m. Boys soccer: Class 5Asemifinals, MountainView at Summit, 5p.m. Friday Football: Class 5Astate playoffs: CrescentValley at Redmond, 7p.m.; MountainViewvs. Marist at WigametteHighinEugene, 7pm.

Saturday Boys soccer: Class5Astatefinal in Higsboro,TBA Girls soccer: Class 5Astate final in HiUsboro, TBA

PREP SPORTS Soccer OSAAState Playoffs BOYS CLASS6A Semifinals

Today'sGames

Clackamas at Lincoln Jesuit atSunset CLASS5A Semifinals Today's Games HoodRiverValleyat Woodburn MountainViewatSummit 5p.m. CLASS4A Semifinals Today's Games Philomathat McLoughlin Phoenixat LaSale CLASS3A/2A/1A Quarterfinals Semifinals Today's Games OregonEpiscopalat Catlin Gable,4:30 p.m. Riversideat Riverdale GIRLS CLASS6A

Network. 7 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail

Semifinals Today's Games Clackamas at Lakeridge Thurstonat Grant CLASSBA Semifinals Today's Games

Blazers at Sacramento Kings, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.

7 p.m.:Men's college, NIT

Summit atCorvagis,5.30 p.m. Sherwood atWilamette CLASS4A

Season Tip-off, teams TBA, ESPN2.

Quarterfinals Semifinals Today's Games Philomathat Mazama, 4 p.m. Glads toneatScappoose,2p.m CLASS3A/2A/1A Semifinals Today's Games St. Mary'sMedford, , atOregonEpiscopal Glide at Valley Catholic

6:30p.m.:Men'scollege,UC Irvine at UCLA, Pac-12 Network. SOCCER 11:30 a.m.: UEFA Champions

League, Chelsea FC vs. FC Shakhtar Donetsk(taped), Root Sports.

Football

RADIO Today BASKETBALL 7 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Sacramento Kings, KBND-AM 1110. Listingsare the mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changes madeby Tll or radio stations

SPORTS IN BRIEF

Baseball • Trout, Harper voted RookIes of the Year:Mike Trout of

the Los AngelesAngels and Bryce Harper of theWashington Nationals were voted Rookies of the Year on Monday for their

breakout seasons following late-April call-ups from the minor leagues. Trout received all 28 first-place votes from the Baseball Writers' Association

of America's AL panelandwas the eighth unanimous AL pick

and the first since TampaBay's Evan Longoria in 2008. Harper got16 of 32 first-place votes and 112 points from the NL panel. Arizona pitcher Wade Miley was

second with12 first-place votes and105 points, followed by Cincinnati slugger Todd Frazier with three firsts and 45 points.

instead a guaranteed spot was created to give those conferencesaccesstothetopgames.

Golf • Rose teams with Hansofy to win Skills Challenge:Justin Rose of Britain and Peter

Hanson of Swedenwon the Tyco Golf Skills Challenge at the Breakers on Monday in Palm Beach, Fla. Roseand Hanson — teammates on this year's Ryder Cup-winning European team — beat recent U.S. Ryder Cup rivals Dustin Johnson and

Keegan Bradley in the Reverse Scramble finale on abreezy day to secure the title. The Reverse Scramble went to two tee-offs before being decided in a chipoff. Hanson chipped to within 2 feet, 10 inches of the hole, beating out Bradley's chip that was 3

Football

feet, 6 inches away.

• Leach denies that players are adused:Washington State

Basketball

football coach Mike Leach denied

his players aresubjected to any type of abuse, asalleged bystar receiver MarquessWilson. Wilson made the allegations in a letter he released Saturday in which he quit the team and also com-

plained that the coaching staff

• 76ers' Bynum'sreturn to practice pushed toDecember: Hisdebutpushedbackyetagain, Andrew Bynum's first 76ers' game maynot come until 2013. Bynum, Philadelphia's 7-foot center, will miss at least five

more weeks because of abone

bruise in his right knee and could would "belittle, intimidate and hube held out until early January. miliate us." Leach said during his When Bynum was hurt in midregular Monday meeting with reSeptember, the team initially porters: "There is no truth about hoped its newly-acquired star it at all." He described Wilson as a

disgruntled player.Asked if there had beenanyactions by coaches

would be ready for the season

question." • College football playoff to have6games, not7:The new college football postseason system will have six gamesas

Hockey

opener Oct. 31. Late last month, though, the Sixers said he was that could be construed as abuse, out indefinitely. Leach replied: "No, no, no. Next

originally planned, but now a spot in the marquee bowls will

• NHLPA leader: Deal can de quick after breakthrough:A new NHL labor deal might not be as far off as it seems. Steve Fehr, special counsel to the NHL Players' Association, believes the

be reserved for the best team from a group of five conferences collective bargaining agreement that includes the Big East. The can be wrapped up in ahurry tweakto the postseason format once the sides make abreakthat will start in 2014 was made

through in negotiations. "One

Monday during a meeting of thing (deputy commissioner) conference commissioners and Bill Daly and I agree upon is that university presidents. In Sepwhen the moment is right the tember, a proposal was put forth deal could be donevery quickly," to add a seventh game to the for- Fehr said Mondayduring a panel mat that would match the best

team from the BigEast, Mountain West, Conference USA, Sun Beltand Mid-American Conference against a team from the Pac-12 or Big 12. But ultimately

thatplanwasdumped,and

discussion at the PrimeTime Sports Management Confer-

ence. "Oneday, three daysor whatever." Asked later if he agreed with that assertion, Daly replied: "I hope he's right." — From wire reports

OSAAState Playoffs CLASS6A Round 2 Friday, Nov. 16Games Thurston atJesuit Sprague atTualatin RoseburgatSheldon Century at Southridge South MedfordatLakeOswego WestSalematAloha CanbyatTigard, 7 p.m. Sunset at Central Catholic CLASSBA Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16Games CrescentValleyatRedmond, 7p.m. MountainViewatMarist (WigametteHS), 7p.m. WestAlbanyatSi verton, 7p.m. Springfield atSherwood,7p.m CLASS4A Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16Games

BakeratScappoose Philomathat Cascade North Bend(OR Coast Techat Gladstone Ontario at La Salle Prep CLASS3A Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16Games WillaminaatDayton

SantiamChristian atHorizonChristian, 7 p.m. Rainier atScio PleasantHill at CascadeChristian CLASS2A

Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16Games Central LinnatKennedy Oaklan datGoldBeach PortlandChristianat Heppner GrantUnionat LostRiver CLASS1A

Quarterfinals Friday, Nov. 16Games

Triad atSt.Paul Dufur atLowell

Sherman at CamasValley Perrydaleat Imbler

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AH TimesPST AMERICANCONFERENCE East W L T Pcf PF PA NewEngland 6 3 0 .667 299 201 Miami 4 5 0 .444 173 186 N.Y.Jets 3 6 0 .333 175 228 Buffalo 3 6 0 .333 211 285 South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 8 1 0 .889 250 143 Indianapo is 6 3 0 .667 186 201 Tennessee 4 6 0 .400 219 311 Jacksonville 1 8 0 .111 127 246 North W L T Pct PF P A Baltimore 7 2 0 . 778 254 196 Pittsburgh 6 3 0 .667 207 177 Cincinnati 4 5 0 .444 220 231 Cleveland 2 7 0 .222 169 211 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 6 3 0 .667 271 189 San Diego 4 5 0 .444 209 191 Oakland 3 6 0 .333 191 284 Kansas City 1 8 0 111 146 256 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pcf PF PA N.Y.Grants 6 4 0 .600 267 216 Dallas 4 5 0 .444 188 204 Philadelphia 3 6 0 .333 156 221 Washington 3 6 0 .333 226 248 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 8 1 0 .889 247 174 TampaBay 5 4 0 .556 260 209 NewOrleans 4 5 0 .444 249 256 Carolina 2 7 0 .222 163 216 North W L T Pct PF P A Chicago 7 2 0 .778 242 133 GreenBay 6 3 0 .667 239 187 Minnesota 6 4 0 .600 238 221 Detroit 4 5 0 .444 216 222 West W L T Pct PF PA SanFrancisco 6 2 I .722 213 127 Seattle 6 4 0 .600 198 161 Arizona 4 5 0 .444 144 173 St. Louis 3 5 1 .389 161 210

Monday's Game Pittsburgh16,KansasCity13, OT Thursday's Game Miami atBuffalo,5.20p.m

Sunday'sGames

ClevelandatDalas,10 a.m. N.Y.JetsatSt. Louis, 10a.m. Jacksonvige at Houston,10am. Cincinnati atKansasCity,10 a.m. PhiladelphiaatWa shington,10a.m. GreenBayat Detroit,10 a m. Arizona at Atlanta,10a.m. Tampa BayatCarolina,10a.m. NewOrleansatOakland, I:05 p.m. San Diego atDenver,1:25 p.m. Indianapolisat NewEngland,1:25 p.m. Ba timoreat Pittsburgh,5:20p.m.

Open:Minnesota,N.Y.Giants Seatle, Tennessee Monday, Nov.19 Chicag oatSanFrancisco,5:30p.m.

Monday'sSummary

Steelers16, Chiefs13 (OT) K ansasCity

7 3 0 3 0 —13

Pittsburgh

0 10 0

3 3 — 16

First Quarter Kc Charles12run(Succopkick), 8:37. SecondQuarter Kc —FGSuccop22,14.20. Pit —FGSuisham35,9:02. Pit — Wallace7passfrom Roethlisberger (Suisham kick), 3:16. Fourth Quarter Pit —FGSuisham31,12:37. Kc — FGSuccop46,:00. Overtime Pit —FGSuisham23,14;05. A—57,644.

KC Pit 14 14 290 249 35-142 29-95 1 48 15 4 3-17 3-4 5 -102 1 - 23 0 -0 1 - 23 11-26-1 16-32-0 2-6 1-3 8-42.1 6-42 7 1-0 3-1 6 -76 2 - 19 29;18 3 1:37

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

INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Kansas City: Charles23-100,Hillis 10-30, Cassel2-12. Pittsburgh: Dwyer 19-56, Redman 8-21, Roethlisberger1-14, Sanders1-4. PASSING —Kansas City: Cassel 11-26-1-154 Pittsburgh: Roethlisberger9-18-0-84, Leftwich 714-0-73. RECEIVING —Kansas City: Bowe4-55, Moeaki 3-68, Mccluster2-18,Baldwin1-11, Higis1-2. Pittsburgh: Miller4-47,Walace3-14, Sanders2-30, Red-

man2-18,Paulson2-15, Cotchery1-22, WJohnson 1-7, Dwyer1-4. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Kansas City: Succop 33 (WR).

College Top 26Schedule AH TimesPST Saturday No. 1Oregonvs. No.14 Stanford,5p.m. No. 2KansasState atBaylor, 5p.m. No. 3NotreDamevs.WakeForest, 12:30p.m. No. 4Alabamavs. Western Carolina, 9:21s.m No. 5Georgiavs. GeorgiaSouthern, 10:30a.m. No. 6OhioState atWisconsin, 12.30p.m. No. 7Floridavs. Jacksonville State,10 a.m. No. 8LSUvs. Mississippi, 12:30p.m. No. 9TexasA8Mvs. SamHouston State,12:30 p.m. No.10 FloridaStateat Maryland,9a.m. No. 11Clemsonvs. Nc State, 12:30p.m. No. 12SouthCarolina vs.Wofford,10 a.m. No. 13Oklahomaat West Virginia, 4 p.m. No. 15OregonState vs. California, 7:30pm. No. 16Nebraskavs. Minnesota,12:30 p.m. No.17UCLA vs. No.21Southern Cal, noon No.19 l.ouisianaTechvs UtahState,1 p.m. No. 22RutgersatCincinnati, 9 a.m. No. 23Michiganvs. Iowa,9a.m. No. 23TexasTechat OklahomaState,12:30 p.m. No. 25KentStateatBowling Green,9a.m. Pac-12 Standings AH TimesPST North

Oregon Stanford OregonState Washington California

WashingtonState UCLA USC Arizona ArizonaState

ufah Colorado

South

Conf. 7-0 6-1 5-2 4-3 2-6 0-7

Overall

Conf.

Overall

5-2 5-3 3-4 3-4 2-5 1-6

10-0 8-2 7-2 6-4 3-8 2-8 8-2 7-3 6-4 55 4-6 1-9

Monday'sResults EAST

American U.61, Quinnipiac 55 Canisius83, BostonU.75 Lafayette98, LILIBrooklyn 94,OT Providence 81,Bryant49 Rutgers88,SacredHeart 62 Saint Joseph's61,Yale35 SetonHall78,Norfolk St.65 St. Peter's64,CCSU61 UMBC70, Eastern 52 SOUTH Chatt anooga88,Tenn.Temple53 Clemson77, Presbyterian44 Delaware St. 95,Phila. Biblical 46 Florida St95,Buffalo 68

Kennesa wSt.67,ScState65,OT Lipscomb 73,Maryvige(Mo.) 55 Maryland67, MoreheadSt. 45 Memphis81, NorthFlorida 66 Mercer70,Oglethorpe25 NC Central109,Johnson&Wales(Nc) 46 Northwestern St. 71,Campbell 67 Radford76,Cincinnati Christian71,OT S. Illinois 72,NewOrleans 55 Sc-Upstate90, Hiwassee36 Samford59,Martin Methodist40 UNCGreensboro81,Winston-Salem65 UtahValley64, NCABT55 VirginiaTech69,RhodeIsland50 William 8Mary71, Liberty59 Wofford87,Webber54 Youngstown St. 68,Georgia56 MIDWEST Akron97,JohnCarroll 53

Bradley78,Texas-PanAmerican61 Rlinois89,St.Francis(NY)64 RlinoisSt.100, UcSantaBarbara72 Indiana87, N.Dakota St. 61 lowa73,Cent.Michigan61 lowaSt. 98,AlabamaA&M40 Loyola ofChicago64 Rockhurst 41 Minnes ota82,Toledo 56

NotreDam e84, Monmouth (NJ) 57 SE Missouri89,Lyon61

SOUTHWES T Ark.-PineBluff 62, Md.-EasternShore 52 TCU75,Centenary 47 Texas 69, CoppinSt. 46 Texas A&M83, Troy65 FAR WEST CS Northridge96,E.Washington 79 Gonzaga 84,West Virginia 50 Oregon 80, PortlandSt.69 Stanford81,CalSt.-Fulerton 68 UNLV92,N.Arizona54 TOURNAMEN T NIT SeasonTipoff-East First Round Lehigh89, Robert Morris60 Pittsburgh86,Fordham51 NIT SeasonTipoff-Midwest First Round Ala.-Huntsvige78,North Texas75 KansasSt. 79,l.amar55 NIT SeasonTipoff-North First Round ClevelandSt.79, Bowling Green73, OT Michigan91, IUPUI54 NIT SeasonTipoff-South First Round Delaware84, Penn69 Virginia54,Fairfield 45

Monday's Summary

Oregon 80, Portland St. 69

Polls Women's APTop25 The top 25 teamsin theTheAssociated Press' women'scollegebasketball poll, withfirst-placevotes in parentheses, recordsthroughNov.11, total points based on 25 points Ior afirst-place votethroughone point for a 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Baylor(39) 1-0 97 5 1 1-0 931 2 2. Uconn 3. Duke 0-0 883 3 2 -0 838 4 4. Stanford 2-0 81 2 5 5. Maryland 1-0 766 6 6. Kentucky 1-0 74 3 7 7. NotreDame 2 -0 677 9 8. Louisville 1-0 665 8 9.PennSt. 1 -0 615 1 0 10. Georgia 1 -0 548 1 2 11. Oklahom a 12. California 1 0 51 8 13 1 -0 426 1 6 13. Vanderbilt 1 -0 407 1 7 14. West Virginia 2 -0 375 1 8 15. Nebraska 16. Texas A&M 01 331 1 5 1 -1 285 1 1 17. Delaware 1 -0 271 2 1 18. Purdue 2-0 224 19. Texas 20. OhioSt. 01 198 1 9 20. St.John's 1 -1 198 1 4 22.OklahomaSt. 1 -0 164 2 3 23. Miami 1 -0 139 2 4 24. Tennesse e 11 125 2 0 25. Georgetown 2-0 112 Others receivingvotes: Kansas103, MiddleTennessee 82,lowa St.52,GeorgiaTech42,UCLA 26, GreenBay22,DePaul17, Virginia16, NorthCarolina 14, SanDiegoSt. 13, Florida St.12, Chatanooga 10, Rutgers10, Dayton9, LSU8, MichiganSt. 4, Princeton 4,Gonzaga3, SouthCarolina 2.

TENNIS

PORTLAND ST. (1-1) Professionat Moore 4-71-1 9, Parker510 5 615, McMugan 4-110-09, Winston Jr.6-82-315, Harthun1-74-47, ATP WorldTourFinals Hall020-00,Harvey0-00-00,Winston2-52-27, Monday Prosser1-23-35, Cataldo1-10-02. Totals 24-53 At The 02 Arena 17-19 69. London OREGON (2-0) Purse: $8.11 million (TourFinal) Sing er1-53-46, Woods1-45-87, Artis6-130-0 Surface: Hard-Indoor 16, Loyd 2-51-2 6, Moore1-3 0-02, Lucenti 0-00-0 Singles 0, RichardsonIR1-1 0-02, Baker0-00-0 0, Austin Championship 4-61-2 9,Dotson5-81-1 12,Carter1-1 3-45 Emory NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def. RogerFederer(2), 5-9 3-315, Kuemper 0-00-0 0. Totals 27-56 17Switzerland,7-6 (6), 7-5. 24 80. Doubles Halftime—Oregon 51-33. 3-Point Goals—PortChampionship land St.4-11(Winston1-2,WinstonJr. 1-2, Harthun MarcelGranogersandMarcLopez(6), Spain, def. 1-3, McMugan1-3,Hall 0-1), Oregon9-19 (Artis 4-8, Mahesh BhupathiandRohanBopanna (5),India,7-5, Emory2-4, Loyd1-1, Singler1-2,Dotson1-3, Moore 3-6, 10-3. 0-1). FouledOut—None. Rebounds—PortlandSt. 24 (Moore5), Oregon35 (Carter 7). Assists—Portland SOCCER St. 6 (Harthun,Winston2),Oregon16 (Loyd5). Total Fouls PortlandSt. 19,Oregon22.A 5,577.

Polls AP Top25 The top25teamsinTheAssociated Press' college basketball poll, with first-placevotes in parentheses, records throughNov.11, total points basedon 25 points for a first-placevotethrough onepoint for a 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: Record Pts Prv 1-0 1,598 1 1. Indiana (46) 1-0 1,572 2 2. Loui s vi le (18) Betting line 1-0 1,438 3 3. Kentucky(1) NFL 1-0 1,339 4 4. OhioSt. (Hometeamsin Caps) 1-0 1,327 5 5. Michigan Favorite Open Current Underdog 6. N C 1-0 1,278 6 State Thursday 1-0 1,222 7 7.Kansas BILLS 1 1 Dolphins 8. Syracuse 1-0 1,163 9 Sunday 1-0 1,109 8 9. Duke REDSKIN S NL Nl. Eagles 10. Florida 1 0 1,007 10 Packers 3 3. 5 LIDNS 11 NorthCarolina 2-0 94 4 11 Buccanee rs 2 15 PANTHE RS 1 -0 882 1 2 12. Arizona COWBO YS 7 .5 7 . 5 Browns 13. UCLA 1 -0 746 1 3 RAMS 3 3 Jets 14. Missouri 1 -0 716 1 5 PATRIOT S 9 .5 9 . 5 Colts 15 Creighton 1 0 67 8 16 TEXANS 16 16 Jaguars 16. Baylor 2 -0 578 1 9 Bengals 3 .5 3 . 5 CHIEFS 17. Memphis 0 -0 570 1 7 Saints 5 .5 4 . 5 RAIDERS 18. UNLV 0 -0 53 8 1 8 BRONC OS 7 75 Chargers 19.Gonzaga 1 -0 437 2 1 STEELE RS NL NL Ravens 20. NotreDame 1 -0 343 2 2 Monday 0 -1 32 5 1 4 21. Mrchigan St. 49ERS NL NL Bears 22. Wisconsin 1 -0 324 2 3 1-0 262 23. Uconn College 1 -0 152 2 4 24. Cincinnati Wednesday 25. SanDiegoSt. 0 -1 128 2 0 BALLST 3 5 4.5 Ohio U Dthers receivingvotes: VCU75, MurraySt. 64, N. ILLINOIS 10.5 11 Toledo Minnesota58, Pittsburgh36, Saint Louis32, Saint Thursday Joseph's30, Butler22, Texas20, Marquette18, TenN. Carolina 4 3. 5 VIRGINIA nessee18,KansasSt 12, Miami9, Saint Mary's(Cal) Friday 8, FloridaSt.7, NewMexico 7, West Virginia 7, Ohio AIR FOR CE 23 23 Hawaii 6, Alabama 5, Davidson4, N.Iowa4,Stanford 4,BuckFLORIDA ATL 1 (FI) 1 Florida Int'I nell1, Georgetown1,Maryland1. Saturday GEORGIA TECH 1 3 1 3 Duke USAToday/ESPNTop25 Poll ARMY 2 .5 3 Temple The top 25teamsin the USAToday-ESPN men's BDWLINGGREEN 3 2. 5 KentSt collegebasketball poll, with Iirst-placevotes in paVirginiaTech 9 9 BOSTONCOLLEGE rentheses,recordsthrough Nov.11, points basedon NEBRAS KA 18.5 19 Minnesota 25 pointsforafirst-place votethroughonepoint for a MIAMI-FLA 6.5 7 S. Florida 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: Purdue 7 7 ILLINOIS Record Pfs Pvs lowaSt 6.5 6 KANSAS I.lndiana(25) 1-0 768 I MARSHALL 3 3. 5 Houston 2.Louisville(4) 1-0 74 0 2 FloridaSt 30.5 31 MARYLAND 3. Kentucky(2) 1-0 701 3 Buffalo 10 11 UMASS 4. OhioState 1 0 64 8 4 MICHIGAN ST 6 .5 6 . 5 Northwestern 5. Michigan 1-0 638 5 CLEMSON 17.5 I7.5 Nc State 6. N.C.State 1-0 601 6 CINCINNA TI 6 6. 5 Rutgers 7.Kansas 1-0 58 3 7 PENNST 17 5 17 Indiana 8. Syracuse 1-0 522 9 VANDER BILT 35 4 Tennessee 9. Duke 1-0 515 8 C. MICHIGAN 3 3. 5 Miami-Ohio 10. Florida 1 -0 465 1 0 UAB 10 10 Memphis 11. NorthCarolina 2 -0 447 1 2 W. MICHIGA N 13 13 E. Michigan 12. Arizona 1 -0 426 1 1 Oklahoma 10.5 10.5 W. VIRGINIA 13. Creighton 1 -0 360 1 5 Usc 4 4 UCLA 14. UCLA 1 -0 35 1 1 3 BOISEST 28.5 28 Co oradoSt 15. Missouri 1 -0 319 1 7 NAVY 13 13 TexasSt 16. Memphis 0 -0 310 1 6 KansasSt 11.5 11.5 BAYLOR 17. Baylor 2 -0 270 1 8 Nevada 1 0 1 0 NEWMEXICO 18. UNLV 0 -0 24 1 1 9 NOTRE DAME 2 4 2 4 WakeForest 19. Gonza ga 1 -0 221 2 2 OREGO N 22 21 Stanford 20. Wisconsin 1 -0 212 2 1 OREGO NST NL Nl. Ca ifomia 21. NotreDame 1 -0 143 2 3 Smu 3 3. 5 RICE 22. Michigan State 0 -1 135 1 4 E. Carolina 95 10 TULANE 23. SanDiegoState 01 66 20 TULSA 1 -0 6 3 3 3 C. Florida 24. Cincinnati 25. Texas 1 -0 6 0 24 MICHIGAN NL NL lowa Washington Others receivingvotes:Connecticut58, VCU54, 20 2 0.5 COLOR ADO MurrayState34,KansasState19, Pittsburgh15,Saint Byu 4 3. 5 SANJOSEST UNLV NL NL Wyoming Mary's13,Marquette11,NewMexico11, Saint l.ouis Tex-S.Antonio 5 .5 6 IDAHO 8,Tennessee8,Minnesota7,SantaClara6,ColoUTAH NL NL Arizona rado State4, Florida State3, lowaState 3, Stanford MISSOUR I 5 4. 5 Syracuse 3, Buckneg2, Colorado2, Georgia2, Maryland2, s MiddleTennessee1, Ohio1, South OKLAHOM AST 10.5 10.5 TexasTech Saint Joseph'2, Alabama1. UtahSt 2 .5 3 LOUISIANA TECH WISCON SIN 2 3 Ohio St LSU 19.5 19 Mississippi Women's college Utep 3 .5 3 . 5 S. MISSISSIPPI ARIZONA ST 20.5 21 WashingtonSt Monday'sResults ArkansasSt 3 3 TROY EAST UL-MONR OE 95 10 N. Texas NJIT53, Rider51 Mid TennSt 10 10 S. ALABAM A St. Bonaventure 51,Niagara49 UL-LAFAY ETTE 3 .5 3 W. Kentucky St. Francis(NY)59,Army47 (Fl) — Florida International openedasthefavorite. Virginia 68,Penn65 WestVirginia60,BostonU 57 SOUTH BASKETBALL Campbel55, l W.Carolina 40 CoastalCarolina58, Nc Central 39 Men's college Elon 74,VCU58

Saturday'sGames Washingtonat Colorado, 10:30a.m. WashingtonStateatArizonaState, noon USC atUCLA,12:05p.m. StanfordatOregon, 5p.m. Arizonaat Utah,7 p.m. California atOregonState, 7:30 p.m.

Gardner-Webb 86, Tenn.Temple 34 Hampton 56,Mississippi St.48 Indiana63, MurraySt.62 Jackso nville68,Bethune-Cookman54 Longwood 68,Air Force63 l.ouisiana-Lafayette83,LSU-Shreveport 42 Miami69,Richmond63 Northwestern St.55,Alcorn St. 50 SouthAlabam a59,Tennessee St 43 SouthCarolina82,LouisianaTech58 Tulan e70,Louisiana-Monroe60 UAB72,AlabamaA8M53 UT-Martin72, ArkansasSt.62 Vanderbilt 62,Lipscomb45 MIDWEST Bradley66, E.Illinois 65 IndianaSt.55, Marshall 49 Miami(Ohio)63, NKentucky 52 Michigan 62, Xavier 53 Missouri 88ChicagoSt 55 Nebraska Om aha58,NC AB,T44 Oakland70,American U.60 UMKC69,SE Missouri64 SOUTHWES T Lamar 87, Texas-Tyler 42 SMU66,TexasSouthern50 TexasSt.88, NorthTexas83 UALR73,Tulsa 64 UTSA 88, Concordia-Austin 29 FAR WEST CS Bakersfield71, N.Arizona68 Cal Poly72, OregonSt. 62 NewMexicoSt.77, LoyolaMarymount76, OT UC Riverside79,Pepperdine71 UtahValley78 UtahSt. 62

MLS

MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER AH Times PST EASTERNCONFERENCE

Championship Sunday,Nov.11:Houston3, D.c. United1 Sunday,Nov.18:D.CUnitedvs. Houston,1p.m. WESTERNCONFERENCE Championship Sunday,Nov.11:LosAngeles3, Seattle 0 Sunday ,Nov.18:Seattlevs.LosAngeles,6p.m. MLS CUP Saturday,Dec.1. Eastern championvs. Westernchampion,1:30 p m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL COMMISSIO NER'SOFFICE—Suspendedfreeagent RHPRafael Martinez50gamesfor violating the Minor League DrugPrevention andTreatment Program.

AmericanLeague

TEXASRANGERS—Agreed to termswith C Juan Apodaca,OFJim Adduci, LHPNeal Cots, OFAaron Cunningham, andRHPYonataOrtegaonminor league contracts. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Named Randy Readymanager of Gwinnel(IL). t CHICAGO CIJBS—Named PJ.Mainville trainer. LDS ANGELESDODGERS— Named Pedro Avila, GeneGrimaldi, Patrick Guerrero, PatKelly, Jame y Storvick andMikeTosar international scouts;Josh Bard payerpersonnel special assistant;andWilie Fraser andScott Grootprofessional scouts. Reassignedplayerpersonnelspecial assistantBil Mueger to full-timeprofessionalscout. NEW YOR KMETS—NamedJrm Malonestrength and conditioningcoordinator. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association LOS ANGELESLAKERS— Named Mike D' Antoni coach. FOOTBALL

National Football League

BUFFALO BILLS—SignedCBDelanoHowell tothe practicesquad. CAROLINAPANTHERS—Fired special teams coordinatorBrian Murphy.Promoted assistant special teamscoachRichard Rodgersto special teams coordinator. CINCINNATI BENGALS— SignedLBBenJacobsto the practicesquad.ReleasedOTJeff Adamsfromthe practicesquad. DALLAS COWBOYS— PlacedDEKenyonColeman on injuredreserve. DETROILION T S—ReleasedCBAlphonsoSmith. GREENBAY PACKERS— Signed LB Vic So'oto. Placed TBryanBulagaoninjured reserve. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS ActivatedNTJoshChapman fromthe non-footbag-injury list. SignedTEKyle Miller fromthepractice squad.PlacedDTDrakeNevis and CB JerraudPowersoninjured reserve. JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS Signed LB Greg Jones. ReleasedWRAnthonyArmstrong. KANSASCITY CHIEFS— Placed DE Gl enn Dorsey on injuredreserve.SignedCBNeiko Thorpefromthe practicesquad. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— Released LB Jeff Tarpinian. WASHINGTONREDSKINS— Signed CB Buddy Jacksontothepractice squad. MOTORSPORTS NASCAR —Fined Jeff Gordon $100,000 and dockedhim25points forintentionally wreckingClint Bowyer duringSunday' srace.DockedteamownerRick Hendrick 25carownerpoints andfined crewchief BrianPattie$25,000for thesameincident. FinedBrad Keselowski$25,000for havingan electronic device insidethecar. SOCCER Major League Soccer SEATTLE SDUNDERSFC—Announced MFMario Martinezhasbeencaled rnbythe HondurasNatronal Team for theNov.14 friendly againstPeru. COLLEGE PITTSBU RGH Announcedsophomore basketball GJohnJohnsonwiI transfer toanother school. SHENAN DOAH—Fired football coach Paul Barnes. TEXAS Placedwomen's track andfield coach Beverl yKeameyonpaidleave.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

NBA

Lakers intrigued

uickstartleads Oregon over PSU The Ducks stumbled a bit in the second half, as their s hooting p e r centage f e l l from 58.1 percent in the first half to 37.5, and they cooled off from th e 3 -point line, making just one of their final eight attempts. They finished shooting 49.1 percent overall and were nine for 19 on 3-pointers. "We just didn't have five game. guys with the same intensity Two days after needing on the floor," Altman said. a strong finish to put away The Vikings were able to Northern Arizona, the Ducks cut the deficit to single digits (2-0) gave a more complete when Dre Winston made a effort against the Vikings (I- pair of free throws to make it 1), leading by as many as 21 66-57 with 7:28 to play. W inston a n d Re n a do points in the first half. "I thought we took a step in Parker each had 15 points to the right direction," Oregon lead Portland State (1-1). coach Dana Altman said. Also on Monday: No.1 Indiana..... . . . . . . . . 87 Artis was six for 13 from the field and made four of North Dakota State ....... 61 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Oregon'snine 3-pointers. It was the Ducks' long- Cody Zellerscored 22 points range shooting that helped and Remy Abell added a cathem take a 51-33 advantage reer-high 14 to lead Indiana into halftime. past North Dakota State. Oregon made seven of 10 No.17 Memphis.... . . . . . . 81 3-pointers in the first half, North Florida..... . . . . . . . . 66 MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Tarik with Artis making three and Emory making two. Leading Black had 18 points and sev19-12 near the midway point en rebounds to lead Memphis of the half, Emory made a 3, in its season opener. Artis followed with another No.18UNLV ..... . . . . . . . . 92 on Oregon's next possession N. Arizona.... . . . . . . . . . . . 54 and Emory made it three LAS VEGAS — Anthony straight to put the Ducks up Bennett scored 22 points to 28-12. lead five players in double figures for UNLV in its seaA rtis made another 3 pointer in the opening min- son opener. ute of the second half to put No.19Gonzaga ..... . . . . . 84 the Ducks up 54-35, their West Virginia..... . . . . . . . . 50 largest lead of the second S POKANE, W a s h. half. Gary Bell Jr. scored 15 points "I liked how we came out and Gonzaga crushed West and played with good enthu- Virginia. Guy Landry Edi siasm and passion in the first added 14 points for the Bullhalf," Oregon forward E.J. dogs (2-0). Singler said. No. 20 Notre Dame........ 84 Monmouth..... . . . . . . . . . . 57 Oregon, which has only four returningplayers from SOUTH B E N D , Ind . — Garrick Sherman had 22 last season, played 13 on Monday, with the freshman points and seven rebounds to backcourt of Artis and Dot- lead Notre Dame. son standing out with a com- Stanford.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 bined 28 points. Cal State Fullerton..... . . . 68 "We're going to go through STANFORD, C a l if. some growing pains," Alt- Chasson Randle scored 24 man said. "We're going to points, Aaron Bright added have some consistency prob- 16 and Stanford beat Cal lems. That's why energy is so State Fullerton in its home important." opener.

by chance to play for

The Associated Press EUGENE — Dominic Artis scored 16 points to lead Oregon over Portland State 80-69 Monday night. Carlos Emory added 15 points and Damyean Dotson had 12 points and six rebounds for Oregon, which made eight of its first 11 3point attempts to build a big lead and never trailed in the

-

D'Antoni

By Greg Beacham The Associated Press

Don Ryan /The Associated Press

Atlanta Hawks guard Kyle Korver(26) chases down a loose ball with Portland Trail Blazers' Wesley Matthews, left, and Ronnie Price during the second half of Monday night's game in Portland. The Hawks won 95-87.

OSin S i COntinueS

asBazers a toHaw s The Associated Press PORTLAND — Josh Smith was sick. It hardly showed. Fighting a stomach illness, Smith had 19 points and 11 rebounds for his sixth straight double-double against Portland, and the Atlanta Hawks snapped a two-game skid with a 9587 win over the Trail Blazers on Monday night. "It feels good," Smith said. "The crowd is out-

standing (in Portland), and I get geared up for games like this." Kyle Korver added 16 points and Al Horford had 15 points and 10 rebounds for the Hawks, who closed with an 8-0 run. Atlanta was playing the second game of a four-game West Coast swing after losing 89-76 to the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday. "This was a really gutsy win by our guys," Hawks coach Larry Drew said. "We fell into a similar situation last night in L.A., where we played well for three quarters and then in the fourth quarter collapsed. Tonight we weathered the storm." J.J. Hickson had 19 points and 18 rebounds, and Nicolas Batum scored 19 points to lead Portland, which dropped its fourth straight. Wesley Matthews had 17 points and made all 10 of his free throws. Trail Blazers All-Star LaMarcus Aldridge finished with 14 points on four-of-13 shooting. He added eight assists, but had just seven points in the first three quarters. Portland's run of 195 consecutive home sellouts ended, team president and CEO Chris McGowan announced beforethe game. The streak dated back to Dec. 21, 2007. Portland's bench, outscored 63-4 in a loss to San Antonio on Saturday, struggled again. The Hawks had a 26-6 advantage from their reserves. The Hawks didn't show any noticeable effects from playing back-to-back games until midway through the fourth quarter, when the Blazers went on a 15-2 run to go up 82-80 with 5:40 remaining. The game was tied at 87 with 2:38 left, but Horford made a hook shot, Jeff Teague scored on a driving layup and Korver hit two free throws as the Hawks pulled away.

Standings DonWright/The Associated Press

The Pittsburgh Steelers celebratewide receiver Mike Wallace's (17) touchdown catch in the second quarter of Monday night's game in Pittsburgh.

Steelers hang onto beat Chiefs,16-13 The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — T h e ir franchisequarterback on his way to the hospital, the momentum firmly on the other side of the field after a stunning last-minute rally by one the NFL's worst teams, the Pittsburgh Steelers appeared lost. Then linebacker Lawrence Timmons provided a reminder that — Ben Roethlisberger or no Ben RoethlisbergerPittsburgh's identity begins and ends with defense. Timmons i nte r cepted Kansas Cit y q u a rterback Matt Cassel on the second snap of overtime and Shaun Suisham drilled a 23-yard field goal one play later to lift the Steelers to a 16-13 victory over the hapless Chiefs. "We just stayed positive," Timmons said. "It's easy to get down on yourself, but we are not like that. We stand up, face adversity." Good t h i n g , be c ause there's plenty to go around.

The Steelers (6-3) have won four straight but played most of the second half with-

NFL out Roethlisberger, who left with a right shoulder injury in the third quarter after getting sacked by Kansas City linebackers Tamba Hali and Justin Houston. C oach M i k e Tom l i n w ouldn't speculate on t h e severity of Roethlisberger's injury and his status for Sunday's showdown with AFC North leader Baltimore is uncertain. "It didn't seem like a tough hit ... but he came to the sideline and next thing you know he was gone," Pittsburgh left tackle Max Starks said. "I'm hoping it was nothing serious. Honestly it didn't seem like it." V eteran backup B y r on Leftwich came on in relief and completed seven of 14 passes for 73 yards in his

first regular season game in nearly two years. "It wasn't a pretty body of work by any of us, but his consistencyremainsthe same in terms of being a stabilizing force for us," Tomlin said.

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. Pau Gasol got home from the game and read about it on Twitter, while Dwight Howard got a m i d n ight message on his BlackBerry. They shared most Los Angeles Lakers fans' mix of surprise, trepidation and anticipation. Just when e v erybody thought the Lakers were getting back together with Phil Jackson, they switched course in the middle of the night and went with Mike D'Antoni. What a weekend in Hollywood — and the real drama isn't over yet. The Lakers reacted with ample excitement and a little bewilderment Monday to their front office's surprising decision to hire D'Antoni as coach Mike Brown's replacement over Jackson, the 11-time champion who discussed the job at his home Saturday and apparently wanted to return. D'Antoni didn't even interview for the job in person, speaking to the Lakers over the phone. "It has been crazy, but all this stuff will just make this team stronger," said Howard, who has been in a Lakers uniform for about six weeks. "Everything that we've been through so far, it's going to make us stronger, and we have to look at this as a positive situation." The Lakers' third coach in four days won't take over the team until later in the week. D'Antoni still hadn't been cleared to travel Monday after undergoing knee replacement surgeryearlier in the month, although the Lakers are optimistic the former Knicks and Suns c oach will arrive in L o s Angeles on Wednesday. So interim coach Bernie Bickerstaff was still in charge Monday when the Lakers gathered for an informal workout ahead of today's game against San Antonio. Just two weeks into the r egular season, the Lakers (3-4) are about to start over with a new offense and another coaching staff — and a renewed certainty they're expected to compete for a title this season. "It's been a zoo," said forward Antawn Jamison, a 15-year NBA veteran who played for D'Antoni on a U.S. national team. "But as I was telling somebody, it's just a typical day here in L.A. It's interesting.... It should be a lot easier to adjust to than the system we were trying to get adjusted to early on in the season. We've got Steve (Nash) that can help us out." Two Lakers who supp orted both B r own a n d his two potential replacements weren't a v ailable in El Segundo to weigh in on the hire.Nash missed the workout while getting treatment on hi s i njured leg, while Kobe Bryant left before it ended to share a helicopter ride back home t o Orange County w i t h point guard Steve Blake, who needed an exam on his abdominal injury. And the tall coach with all the rings wasn't at the Lakers' training complex at all. Just 24 hours after Jackson seemed headed back to his oversized chair on the Staples Center bench, D'Antoni had the job. "I think everybody had expectations about it, and they were all pretty high," Gasol said of Jackson's potential return. "We all understood what Phil brings to the table ... and what he means to the city and the franchise. It just couldn't work ou t f o r w h a tever reason." -

NBA ROUNDUP "We knew they were going to go on a run, but it just shows you how this team is a veteran team," Smith said. "We didn't get rattled, we took our time even when they took the lead, and we figured out a way to score the basketball down the stretch." In other games on Monday: Heat..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 Rockets ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 HOUSTON — LeBron James scored a seasonhigh 38 points, Chris Bosh had 24 points and 10 rebounds, and Miami rallied to beat Houston. Celtics..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 Bulls ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 CHICAGO — Rajon Rondo had 20 points, nine rebounds and 10 assists to lead Boston over Chicago. Jazz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140 Raptors..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 TORONTO — Paul Millsap scored seven of his 34 points in the third overtime, Al Jefferson had 24 points and 17 rebounds, and Utah beat Toronto for its first road win of the season. Thunder.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 Pistons.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — Russell Westbrook scored a season-high 33 points and keyed a fourth-quarter comeback as Oklahoma City rallied to beat winless Detroit. Bucks.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 76ers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 PHILADELPHIA — Br a n don J e nnings scored 33 points and Monta Ellis had 18 to lead Milwaukee past Philadelphia. Timberwolves..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 Mavericks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 DALLAS — Nikola Pekovic scored 20 points before leaving with an injury and short-handed Minnesota beat Dallas. Suns ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Nuggets ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 PHOENIX — Goran Dragic scored 21 points to lead seven Phoenix players in double figures as the Suns snapped Denver's four-game winning streak.

NBA SCOREBOARD

By Will Graves

D3

NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

ConferenceGlance AllTimesPST EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB d-NewYork 4 0 1. 0 00 d-Miami 6 2 .75 0 d-Milwaukee 4 2 .667 t'/~ Brooklyn 3 2 600 1'/~ Philadelphia 4 3 .571 Boston 4 3 .57 1 1I/2 1'/~ Chicago 4 3 .571 Atlanta 3 3 .50 0 2 Indiana 3 4 .429 21/2 Charlotte 2 3 400 21/2 Orlando 2 4 333 3 Cleveland 2 5 286 31/2 1 6 .143 41/2 Toronto Washington 0 5 .00 0 41/2 Detroit 0 8 .00 0 6 WESTERN CONFERENCE W t Pct GB d-SanAntonio 6 1 857 I/2 Memphis 5 1 833 d -Okl ahoma City 6 2 . 7 50 I/2 d-L.A. Clippers 5 2 .714 1 Minnesota 5 2 .71 4 NewOrleans 3 2 .60 0 2 4 4 .50 0 21/2 utah Phoenix 4 4 .50 0 2'Iz Denver 4 4 .50 0 21/2 2'Iz Dallas 4 4 500 LA. Lakers 3 4 429 Golden State 3 4 .429 Houston 3 4 429 4 3 Portland 2 5 286 Sacramento 2 5 .28 6 d-divisionleader

Monday'sGames Milwaukee105,Philadelphia96 Utah140,Toronto133,30T Oklahoma City 92, De troit 90 Boston101,Chicago95 Miami113,Houston00 Minnesota 90, Dallas82 Phoenix110,Denver100 Atlanta95, Portland87

Today'sGames

Washington at Charlotte, 4p.m. TorontoatIndiana,4p.m. NewYorkatOrlando,4 p.m. ClevelandatBrooklyn, 4:30 p.m. PortlandatSacramento, 7p.m. SanAntonioat t A. l.akers,7:30pm.

Summaries Monday'sGames

Hawks 95, Blazers 87 ATLANTA (95) Stevenson 2-40-06, J.smith9-221-1 19,Hottord 6-10 3-415,Teague4-11 5-613, Korver5-82-216, To liver1-32-24, LWiliams3-75-611, Harris2-3

0-1 4,Pachulia1-60-02, Morrow2-50-05, Johnson 0-00-00. Totals 35-7918-2295. PORTLAND (87) Batum8-170-019, Aldridge4-136-914, Hickson 8-143-519, Lillard5-180-012, Matthews3-910-10 17,Price1-3 0-02, Leonard1-42-2 4, Barton0-0 0 00, Freeland050-00, Pavlovic0-00-00 Totals 30-83 21-2687. Atlanta 28 28 19 20 — 95 Portland 22 25 20 20 — 87 3-PointGoals—Atlanta7-18(Korver4-6,Stevenson2-4, Morrow1-2,Teague0-1,Toliver 0-2, LWiliams0-3), Portland 6-23(Batum3-B, Lilard 2-7, Mathews1-6, Leonard 0-1, Price0-1). FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Atlanta49 (J.Smith11), Portland57(Hickson18). Ass<sts—Atlanta20 (Teague 8), Portland15 (Aldridge8). Total Fouls—Atlanta 22, Portland l9. A—19,095(19,980)

Heat 113, Rockets 110

Thunder 92, Pistons 90 OKLAHOMA CITY(92) Durant 8-2210-1026, Ibaka4-93-311, Perkins 0-21-2 t, Westbtook11-2511-1533,Setolosha0-2 2-22, Collison1-2002, Martin2 88-813,Maynor 1-30-02, Thabeet0-02-22,Lamb0-00-00.Totals 27-73 37-4292.

DETROIT (90)

Prince 4-123-512, Maxiell 5-103-613, Monroe 7-143-417, Knight2-132-28, Stuckey7-13 4-619, Jetebko1-61-1 3, Bynum2-71-1 5, Drummond2-3 0-04, Singlet 351-29. Totals 33-8318-27 90. Oklahoma City 2 52 0 17 30 — 92 Detroit 23 28 22 17 — 90

Bucks105, 76ers 96

MIAMI (113) James14-265-838,Battier 2-30-06, Bosh10-14 4-424, Chalmers1-51-1 4,Wade8-183-719, Allen 3-70-0 8,Haslem 5-60-010,Cole1-60-02,Lewis 1-40-02. Totals 45-8913-20113. HOUSTON (110) Parsons8-174-425, Patterson8-141-217, Asik 4-8 0-1419, Lin 3-81-2 9, Harden6-179-11 22, Morris 3-40-08, Delfino3-100-08, Douglas1-20-0 2, TJones0-00-00. Totals 36-8026 33110. Miami 25 31 26 31 — 113 Houston 19 33 33 25 — 110

MILWAUKEE (105) Harris 4-52-2 10,llyasova1-5 0-0 2, Dalembert 4-5 0-0 8,Jennings12-21 5-533, Ellis 8-201-1 18, Dunleavy4-6 3-5 13, Sanders1-20-0 2, Udoh2-5 3-37, Udrih3-40-06, Daniels2-72-26. Totals4180 16-18 105. PHILADELPHIA (96) Tumer3-8 2-4 8, T.Young4-6 3-4 11, Allen0-2 0-0 0, Holiday10-184-425,Richardson 8-161-2 20, Hawes3-0 006,Wright5-120014,Ivey26005, NYoung26 2-27 Totals 37-8512-16 96. Milwaukee 34 28 21 22 — 105 Philadelphia 26 24 3 3 13 — 96

Celtics101, Bulls 95

Suns 110, Nuggets100

BOSTON (101) Pierce4-132-210, Bass5-6 6-616, Garnett6-

15 3-3 15,Rondo10-16 0-0 20, Terry5-102-2 13, Sullinger1-20-03, Wilcox2-2 3-37, Lee2-3 0-04, Green 3-7 0-0 7,Barbosa 3-70-0 6.Totals 41-tn 16-16 101.

CHICAGO (95) Deng u -203-526, Boozer7-141-315, Noah610 5-5 17,Robinson 3 74-4 u Hamilton 3 8 2-2 8, Teague1-43-45, Mohammed0-1 0-0 0, Belinelli 2-60-05, Gibson1-42-44, Butler0-04-44. Totals 34-74 24-31 95. Boston 33 25 24 19 — 101 27 19 24 25 — 95 Chicago

DENVER (100) Gallinari 6-161-215, Faried6-72-414, Koutos 2-3 0-0 4,Lawson5-8 2-212, Iguodala6-8 2-417, McGee 8-12 0-0 16, Brewer3-90-0 7, A.Miler 2 7 3-48,Chandler3-61-27,Mozgov0-00-00.Totals 41-7611-18 100. PHOENIX (110) Beasley7-151-216, Scola5-132-212,Gortat410 4-612, Dtagic7-123-421, Dudley7-150-015, Morris 5-112-2 13, Brown7-165-5 19,Telfair 1-2 0-02, Tucker 0-00-00 Totals 43-9417-21 110. Denver 27 30 21 22 — 100 Phoenix 23 31 29 27 — 110

Jazz140, Raptors133 (3 OTj T i mberwolves 90, Mavericks 82 UTAH(140)

Ma.Williams6-9 4-617, Millsap 0-16 9-10 34, Jefferson9-205-624, M.Wiliams6-162-217, Hayward4-u 2-212, Tinsley0-10-00, Favors6-123-6 15, Foye4-78-920, Kanter0-11-21. Totals 46-93 34-43 140.

MINNESOT A(90)

Kirilenko 7-121-2 16,Williams 1-2 2-2 4, Pekovic 8-134-5 20, Ridnour3-9 7-815, Lee2-60-0 4, D.Cunningham 6-9 2-214, Shved3-12 9-1116,

Stiemsma 0-1 0-00, Conroy0-01-21, Amundson 0-10-00. Totals30-6526-3290. DALLAS(82) Crowder1-50-0 3, Brand2-5 0-04, Wright 1-3 0-0 2, Collison5-1ij 11-1221,Mayot-18 2-2 18, Kaman 5-152-412, Carter1-72-24,Murphy2-61-1 5, Beaubois0-30 00, DaJones2-42-47, James3-4

TORONTO (133) McGuire2-31-25, Bargnani5-178-919, Valanciunas3-34-410, Calderon8-162-2 20,DeRozan16334-737, Lucas3-60-07,Davis2-40-04,Johnson 5-8 1 311, Kleiza7 163 320, Ross0-1 0-0 0,Gray 0-1 0-0 0.Totals 51-108 23-30133. 0-0 6. Totals 29-80 20-2582. Utah 26 26 3022111015 — 140 Minnesota 25 20 21 24 — 90 Toronto 28 2 9 30171110 8 — 133 Dallas 17 22 19 24 — 82


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

Soccer

View played Jesuit to a 0-0 overtime tie for w hat w as

Continued from D1 Summit's boys are seeking their first-ever appearance in a state final. To get there, th e S t o rm , 1 2 -1-3 overall and No. 2 in the Oregon School Activities Association 5A rankings, will have to get past Mountain View, whose No. 3 Cougars

then the Class 4A (large-

(10-4-2) played Summit to a 2-2 tie in the IMC regularseason finale at M ountain View on Oct. 18. In early October, the Storm took a 1-0 decision from the Cougars at Summit. Mountain View has been to the state final twice before, most recently in 2009, when the Cougars lost 3-2 to Corvallis. In 1999, Mountain

school) state title. So far in th e 2012 state playoffs, Summit has shut out two teams from Portland schools, beating Franklin I0 in the first round last week and defeating Cleveland 2-0 on Saturday in the quarterfinal round. Today's match will be the third consecutive home playoff game for the Storm. Mountain View's two playoff victories also have come at home. The Cougars blanked Wilson of Portland 4-0 in the first round, then on Saturday came from behind to win 3-2 in overtime against Crescent Valley of Corvallis. The Mountain View-Sum-

mit winner will play in the state final against either topranked Woodburn or No. 4 Hood River Valley. Those two teams meet tonight in Woodburn in the other 5A boys semifinal. Summit's undefeated girls (13-0-2) take the state's No. I Class 5A ranking into this evening's semifinal at Cor-

vallis (12-4). The No. 5 Spartans are the No. 2 team from the Mid-Willamette Conference, whose champion, Crescent Valley, was drubbed 8-1 by Summit in a quarterfinal match Saturday in Bend. The Storm g i rls, champions of the Intermountain Conference, opened t h eir postseason run last Tuesday with a 4-0 home-field win over Cleveland.

Kayak

make the descent. tive things ends up with him "There are some places having to process too much," Continued from D1 where you can't even use Raker said. "We keep it down Along with R aker, Wei- a satellite phone," Weihen- to very few commands like henmayer is being instructed mayer said. "Communication small right, small left and by two O l ympic paddlers, throughout the trip is going hard right, hard left." Casey Eichfeld, a member of to be very spotty." Small right or left means "This is 10 times scarier a 90-degree turn and hard the U.S. team who competed in mens slalom canoe at the than the scariest thing I've right or left means turn a full 2008 and 2012 Olympics, and ever done, and I 'v e d one 180 degrees. Charge means Pablo McCandless, a mem- some pretty scary things," he to paddle ahead furiously. ber of the Chilean Olympic added. The system has worked well kayaking team who competWhile he is probably best on small rapids, but it became ed in Beijing in 2008. k nown fo r h i s a s cent o f insufficient when they moved "It's amazing to watch him Mount Everest in 2001, which up to the rougher rapids of progress," said McCandless, landed him on the cover of the Green River in Utah. who has been helping Wei- Time Magazine, and subseOn a trip l ast year, the henmayer hone his combat quent successful efforts to team employed two-way raroll, perhaps a k a y aker's scale the tallest peak on each dios that were designed to m ost necessary skill, a n d of the continents, known as f unction u n derwater. B u t one regularly employed by the Seven Summits, many of the radios did not work. On the best kayakers. The com- his other accomplishments, one particularly treacherous bat roll is the move a kayaker while less publicized, are ar- stretch of Class IV whitewauses to right himself after be- guably more impressive. ter, which is a class of rapids "I think some of the ice ing capsized. for more advanced paddlers Unlike many of the nation's climbs he's done are the most because ofthe intense raprivers where dangers lurkbe- impressive because techniids, Weihenmayer became low the surface of the water, cally and athletically they separated from Raker and obstructions like rocks and are far more challenging the radio's signal diminished logs that can snag a foot and than doing Everest," Raker in the churning current. Rakhold a person underwater or said. Indeed, in 2008 Weihen- er's voice became a muffled smack a skull, the whitewa- mayer scaled a 3,000-foot ice mess. "It w as l i k e Ch a r l i e ter center was designed to waterfall in the Himalayas be as safe as possible, while called Losar. Brown's teacher yelling at "Everest is a huge, respect- you," Weihenmayer said. also providing kayakers the opportunity to paddle world- able accomplishment," said Weihenmayer survived by class rapids. The U.S. Olym- Conrad Anker, a mountainpaddling hard and executing pic canoe and kayak team eer who ha s d one L osar. a combat roll when a monster trains here. For Weihenmayer to pull it wave capsized his boat. Rak"The rapids are very con- off "was just phenomenal," er caught up to him and they sistent, and so you can go he added. "For most people navigated safely to shore. But through them one after the that would be their lifetime the experience left Weihennext and you can keep doing achievement." mayer shaken. "My brain was so overit all day long until you're exWeihenmayer began padhausted," Weihenmayer said. dling a kayak four years ago whelmed," he said. "I was hy"It makes whitewater acces- by learning to do a combat perventilating, and I was like sible in a way that, knock on roll in a mountain lake. He paddling into the eddy and wood, it's not going to kill and Raker eventually moved saying I gotta get out of this you." on to slow-moving water on kayak." The Grand Canyon will the Upper Colorado River He cannot prepare for situoffer no such luxuries. Con- near Grand Lake, where they ations like that at the whitesidered one of the world's live. Over time, the two de- w ater center. On h i s l a st premier w h itewater spots, veloped a simple system for run recently, Weihenmayer the run features boulders the communicating that would dropped through a 6 - foot size of Volkswagens that can help Weihenmayer navigate falls called Sunset that sent create waves 15 feet high. a river's rapids. him hurtling into a wall of While Weihenmayer and his Raker, a n e x p e rienced roiling whitewater. The wave team will be accompanied by kayaker, p a ddles b e h ind knocked him over and he exa raft, ample supplies and a Weihenmayer and calls out ecuted a perfect combat roll, satellite phone to reach Na- the direction he wants him to righting his kayak and spintionalPark Service rangers, turn and how far. ning off into a swirling eddy, "We try to k eep the inthe team will be essentially w here he stopped tocatch his cut off from civilization for f ormation t o a mi n i m u m breath. "Gnar," he said. almost three weeks as they because too many descrip-

Suspension

threeraces of probation. The boys have been allowed to Continued from D1 have at it ever since. "The sport was made on There has been bumping fights. We should have more and banging, and Tony Stewfights," he said. "Fights are art's threats to wreck each what made NASCAR what and every driver who blocks it is." him from now until the end NASCAR heard the com- of time. There's an occasionplaints from fans that driv- al flare-up, an intentional act ers had become too corpo- or two, and NASCAR interrate, the sport had strayed venes when needed. Then came last November too far from its rough and tumble roots and scores at Texas, when Busch blawere no l onger settled at tantly put Hornaday, a chamthe track. The 2009 finale pionship contender, into the at Homestead was one of wall under caution. those throwback races, and Unlike Edwards, he abthe crowd roared as driv- solutely d eserved t o be ers used their cars to deliver suspended. old-school justice. W here N A SCAR e r r ed President Mike Helton said was in insisting that Busch at the time: "We didn't cer- had been suspended solely tainly intend to make it too for the Hornaday incident sterile, but the drivers were when he had been out of conafraid to be themselves, and trol most of last season and that's not good." arrogantly behaving as if his So NASCAR relaxed at talent made him u n touchthe start of the next season, able. In fact, Hornaday had using a "Boys, Have At It" called for Busch to be suspolicy that allowed the driv- pended for that weekend's ers to police themselves. Cup race, an option Busch The boys tested NASCAR seemed to dismiss in an injust four races in when Carl terview after the accident. Edwards waited 153 laps for B y suspending him t h e his crew to fix hi s car for next m o r n ing, N A S CAR the sole purpose of getting s ent a message it wa s i n back on the track at Atlanta charge and B u sch b etter to wreck Brad Keselowski. start behaving. Edwards' high-speed conGordon's d e c i sion to tact sent Keselowski's car wreck Bowyer — h e says airborne, and there were im- B owyer deserved it f o r a mediate calls for Edwards to season'sworth of misdeeds — is more like the Edwards be suspended. But doing so would have incident. Or perhaps more been the immediate end of like another i n cident last the policy, and Edwards in- season, when Brian Vickers s tead got off w it h a m e r e promised retaliation against

Matt Kenseth and then rode Kenseth's back bumper until Kenseth turned into the wall. Vickers got no penalty. Gordon, however, seemed to have zero regard for others on the track. The wreck also collected Joey Logano and Aric A l m i rola, championship contender Keselowski had to dodge his way around it and the whole thing was a direct contributor to the lastlap wreck. NASCAR needed to take a ction a gainst t h e c r e w c hiefs, and di d b y f i n i n g Brian Pattie $25,000 for failing to maintain control of Bowyer's crew and placing Alan Gustafson on probation through the end of the year because he's responsible for Gordon's crew. With that, NASCAR was done with the matter. "There's no doubt that a unique setof circumstances combined with a c h a mpionship battle on the line resulted in raw emotions coming into play," said NASCAR vice president of competition Robin Pemberton. "We consider the penalties appropriate and those involved understand our decision and we expect them to abide by them." It was the appropriate response from NASCAR. Either the series is going to be about immediate paybacks and justice — you know, the stuff that's got everybody talking and moves the meter — or there's no such thing as "Boys, Have At It" anymore.

Seaber Continued from D1 "It's hard to know about his accomplishments because he really won't talk about (them)," John Chunn, administrator for the Bend Rugby Club, said about the understated and soft-spoken Seaber, whom he met after Seaber moved to Central Oregon in 1995 and offered to help coach the club. "It makes it very difficult to peel away those layers and find out about the things that he's done." But make no mistake: Seaber's influence on rugby in the United States goes to its modern roots. Before moving to Central Oregon in 1995, he and Doreen spent 31 years in St. Louis. He belonged to the St. Louis Ramblers Rugby Club, which he told me is the secondoldest club in the country. And he recounted how, in the Midwest union, he fulfilled roles such ashead ofreferees,president, and a coach of the union's select side. On a broader scale, he started traveling all across the country to officiate matches, from Florida to Boston, from Washington, D.C., to Seattle, and from New York to San Francisco. It was a labor of love: Back in those days, Seaber noted,rugby was "100 percent amateur." "Occasionally, I would get my expenses paid, but most of that came out of my own pocket," said Seaber, who operated a machine and tool company while he lived in St. Louis and decided to move to Central Oregon after visiting the area when his two sons lived in Bend. In 1975,Seaber became a founding member of the United States of America Rugby Football Union, the national governing body now known as USA Rugby. Over the years with the national organization, Seaber served in capacities such as vice president, secretary, chairman of the national selectors (who chose the members of the national teams), and administrator

of the national rugby sevens program. (Rugby sevens is a smaller-sized game in which teams field seven players rather than the standard 15. It will make its Olympic debut in 2016.) He also coached the U.S. national team the first time it played Canada and managed the national team numerous times, he said. "The reason I got the lifetime achievement award ... and then inducted into the founders circle and then into the hall of fame is pri-

marily because of my administration work," Seaber explained, referring to several of the awards he has received through his involvement in rugby. Perhaps just as impressive was that, as Seaber reminisced, the depth and breadth of his rugby knowledge became readily evidentnames and clubs from the international level, the sport in the United States and even in CentralOregon peppered the conversation. "His knowledge of the game is encyclopedic. He follows it devoutly. He watches film," Chunn said. "He is a junkie on the various sports networks, so he can watch games all of the time, and he has a tremendous knowledge base about the game worldwide — not just the United States, but worldwide. He knows all of the really good players and what teams are doing well at any one particular time." And now he is seeing the fruits of his efforts, as across the country, where not just men but women and childrennow play the game. "The thing I'm most enthused about in rugby in the United States now is the youth program," Seaber noted."We have tremendous youth programs playing all over the country, both youth teams and high school teams." During his years in Central Oregon, Seaber has been involved in organizations such as Kiwanis International and the Oregon Community Foundation's Central Oregon Regional Action Initiative Committee and Central Oregon Leadership Council. These days, he is retired from his rugby duties. ("At my age, I think I should be," he quipped.) But he still fervently follows the game, watching matches on TV and online. He also cares for Doreen, who has Alzheimer's disease, and he is, as he put it, a social member of the Bend Rugby Club. "Fabulous game to play," Seaber said about his chosen sport. "You have the freedom to run with the balL You have the freedom to tackle your opposition. It's just great." Words straight from the mouth of a living

rugby legend who now makes his home right in our own Central Oregon backyard. "He is known not just through Oregon, obviously, and not just the United States, but he's known throughout the world," Chunn said. "People know Keith Seaber's name from virtually all the rugby countries in the world." — Reporter: 541-383-0393, amileslbendbulletin.com.

CoMMUNITY SP0RTs IN BRIEF

Running • Central Oregonianswinstate event: Bend'sMax Kingand Kimber Mattox were the open men's

Nov.29,and Dec.3through Dec. 6. Quantities are limited, and passes will not be available for sale at Mt. Bachelor ticket windows.

The passesare available at a

200 fly, 200 IM and 400 IM for

short-course yards. Healso ranked among the top five in the

400 free, 100 backe, 200back, 200 fly, 200 IM and 400 IM in

and women's winners Saturday

number of retailers in Bend, Sunriv-

long-course meters.

at the USA Track 8 Field Oregon XC Championships, staged at Portland's Pier Park. King won the men's race in 24

er and Redmond.For alist of those retailers, go to mtbachelor.com.

For a complete list of the BSC swimmers and their events, see

More information is alsoavailable

Community Sports Scoreboard,

minutes, 44 seconds,whichwas 49 seconds faster than runner-up Jordan Welling, of Portland. Mattox, a former state prep crosscountry champion out of Bend

at bendlapineschoolsfoundation.

D5.

org or by calling 541-355-5660.

High School, captured victory in the women's field in 21:16, six seconds better than Kristen Rohde, of Portland. Bend resident Kari Strang was 38th in 25:59. Complete results are available

at oregon.Usatf.org. • Youth runnersperformwell atstate meet:A numberof Central Oregon youths competed Saturday in the USATrack & Field

State Junior Olympic Cross Country Championships, staged at Pier Park in Portland, and a number of them finished high in the standings. Running for the Central Or-

egonRunningKlub,KelseyW ashenberger won the midget girls division, for girls born in the years 2000 and 2001.Washenberger covered the 3-kilometer course in 11 minutes, 47.18 seconds, narrowly defeating Bowerman AC's

Greta Anderson (11:48.47). Two other CORK runners, Sarah

Reeves andThomas Schoderbek, finished as the runners-Up in their respective divisions. Reeves

placed second, just in front of teammate Olivia Brooks, in the youth girls race (birth years1998 and1999), and Schoderbekwas second amongyouth boys (birth years1998 and1999). CORK's Jack Strang also posted atop-

Swimmers

Volleyball • New Redmond club:A new

• BendSwimClud memdersto be honored: Twenty-two members

club program in Redmond, Ju-

of the Bend Swim Club are sched-

playing opportunities for girls ages 8 to16.

uled to be recognized byOregon Swimming this Sunday in Canby.

These swimmers posted marks that ranked in the top five in events

niper Volleyball Club, is offering

The club will focus on fundamentals, motor skills, self-discipline and work ethic. Club co-di-

in their respective agegroups rectors are ChameseChristianson amongOregonandsouthwest and Amy Remick. Washington swimmers during the A player/parent and registration 2011-2012 short-course yards and

long-course meters seasons. Emma Bradyand Brandon

meeting for the 2012-13 season

has been scheduled for Wednesday, starting at 7 p.m. in the

Deckard posted the most top-five

marks amongBSCswimmers.

commons area atRidgeview High School in Redmond. Formore in-

Brady, 10, ranked in the top five in the100 freestyle, 200 free, 50 breaststroke, 100 butterfly, 100

formation about Juniper Volleyball Club, email junipervolleyballclub@

individual medleyand 200 IMfor short-course yards. In long-course meters, she madethe list in the 100 free, 200 free, 50 breast, 100 breast, 100 fly and 200 IM. Deckard, 16, made the rankings in the 500 free, 100 backstroke, 200 back, 100 breast, 200 breast,

mplements

— Bulletin staff reports Providing unparalled service across a variety of industries since 1983.

541-389-1505 400 SW Bluff Dr Ste 200 Bend, OR 97702

E~vress ENPLOYNENT PROFESSIONALS

HOME INTERIORS 70 SW Century Dr. Suite145 Bend, OR 97702 r 541 322 1337 www.complementshome.com

three finish by taking third place in the bantam boys division (birth

gmail.com.

www.expresspros.com

Oregonians agree

**:

years 2002 and2003). Additionally, in the sub-ban-

tam boys, bantam boys, midget boys, youth boys, midget girls and youth girls divisions, CORK teams finished in the top three in the standings and advanced to the regional meet, scheduled for this Saturday in Spokane, Wash. The top 35 individuals in each race also qualified. For results of Central Oregon finishers at the association meet, see

Community Sports Scoreboard, D5.For complete results from the meet, go to oregon.usatf.org.

Snow sports • Fundraiser on tap:The

Mt. Bachelor Ski for Schools fundraising program is back for the 2012-13 winter sports season. The program raises funds for the education foundations for Bend-La Pine and Redmond

schools. Through Dec. 2, snowsports enthusiasts may purchase one-day lift passes to Mt. Bach-

elor ski area for $25. Thosepasses may be redeemedat the ski area on any date from Nov. 26through

I

/ . ;.

I

I

< I

YOIi haVearight to knOW W hat yOur gOVernment iSdOing. Current Oregon law requirespublic notices to beprinted in a newspaper whose readers are affected by thenotice. But federal, state,and local government agencies erroneouslybelieve they can savemoney by posting public notices ontheir web sites instead of in the local newspaper. lf they did that, you'd have to know in advance where, when, and how to look,and what to look for, in order to be informedabout government actionsthat could affect you directly. Less than 10% of the U.S. population currently visits a governmentweb site daily,* but 80% of all Oregon adults read a newspaper at leastonceduring an average week, and 54% read public noticesprinted there.**

Keeppublic notices inthenewspaper! ' U5 Cenms Bureou Moy 2009 " Amen<anOprn>onResearch PnncetanNj 5eprember2010


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

COMMUNITY SPORTS SCOREBOARD

COM M U N ITY SPORTS CALENDAR

Bowling Please email Community Sports event information to sports® bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" on our website at bendbulletin.com. Items are published on a spaceavailability basis, and should be submitted at least 10days before the event. 7-8 p.m.; RAPRDActivity Center, Redmond; students will train in a complete martial arts system; BEND ELKS CAMPS: Second of uniforms are required and will be eight winter camps (mostly one-day available for purchase; $69; 541camps)isSunday;Bend Fieldhouse, 548-7275 or raprd.org. Bend; 9 a.m.-noon p.m. for players CIVILWAR BROADCAST: Saturday, 12 and younger, 12:30 p.m.-3:30 Nov. 24;Pine Theater, Prineville; p.m.; for players 18 and younger with University of Oregon assistant annual Civil War rivalry game between the Oregon Ducks and coach Dean Stiles; camp will be staged outside, weather permitting; Oregon State Beavers football programs; $10 per person, includes $75; bendelks.com/Fieldhouse/ lunch and (nonalcoholic) drink, Upcoming+Camps/default.aspx. beer also available; prineville PEE WEE T-BALLLEVELI: Ages pinetheater©yahoo.com. 3-5; Wednesdays, Nov. 28-Dec. WINTER FENCING:High Desert 12;11 a.m.-11:30a.m. or12:20 FencinginBendwelcomes youths p.m.-1 p.m.; RAPRDActivity Center, age 10 and older and adults for Redmond; work on throwing, competitive training and fitness; catching, base-running and hitting Mondays,4 p.m.-7 p.m., and off of a tee; glove not needed; 541Tuesdaysthrough Thursdays,5:30 548-7275; raprd.org. p.m.-7 p.m.; introductory coached PEE WEE T-BALLLEVELII: Ages fencinglessononM ondays at4:30 3-5; Thursdays, Nov. 29-Dec. 13; p.m. for new members; Randall, 11 a.m.-11:30 a.m. or12:20 p.m.541-389-4547;Jeff,541-419-7087. 1 p.m.; RAPRDActivity Center, ADULT OPENPLAYROLLER Redmond; prerequisite is Level I Sundays, 6:30 p.m.-8 class (see above); work on throwing, HOCKEY: p.m5 $5; Cascade Indoor Sports, catching, hitting off of a tee and Bend; www.cascadeindoorsports. base-running; glove not needed; com; 541-330-1183. $17; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. BENDTABLETENNIS CLUB:Evening playMondays;6 p.m .-9 p.m .(setup BASKETBALL 30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost is $60; at Boys 8 ADULT OPEN GYM: Age 18and Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall older;Mondays and Wednesdays St4 drop-in fee, $5 for adults, $3 for through Dec. 19; 7 p.m.-9:30p.m.; youths and seniors; Jeff at 541-480subject to school closures and 2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean activities; no drinks besides water in at 267-614-6477; bendtabletennisO water bottles or food allowed; $3 per yahoo.com;www.bendtabletennis. visit; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. com. MOUNTAINVIEWGIRLS CENTRALOREGONBASKETBALL ORGANIZATION TRYOUTS: For girls RUNNING in grades five through eight who live CORK YOUTHCROSS-COUNTRY: in the Mountain View High School For youths in grades two through attendance boundaries;today and 12;Mondays, Wednesdays Thursday;6 p.m.-8 p.m.; Mountain View High School west gym, Bend; and Fridaysthrough the end of November; 4:45 p.m.-6 p.m.; Drake $150-$180 for COBO season, Park, Bend; training for Junior includes uniform; Steve Riper, 541Olympics races;coachesareMax 355-4527, mvgirlsjuniorcougars@ King, Kevin Cornett, Kari Strang gmail.com. and Andrew Jensen; free; 541-389FITKIDS AMERICATHANKSGIVING 9199; cork.youth.running©gmail. PRE-TURKEYBASKETBALLCAMP: com; centraloregonrunningklub. Monday, Nov. 19-Wednesday, Nov. Ol'g. 21;9 a.m.-10:30 a.m. for grades one NUTRITIONFOR ATHLETES CLINIC: through five; 10:30 a.m.-noon for grades sixthrough10; Athletic Club Wednesday;7 p.m 4FootZone, downtown Bend; presentation of Bend, Bend; work on passing, presenting nutrition guidelines for catching, shooting and rebounding before, during and after competition; skills, as well as positioning, ball with Bend cross-country skier handling, team concepts and tactics; $69 athletic club members, and ultrarunner Stephanie Howe; footzonebend.com/events/nutritjon$79 otherwise; full-day camp also for-athletes-clinic. availa ble 9a.m.-3 p.m.each day; $150 for athletic club members, FOAM ROLLERCLINICS:Saturday, $180 otherwise; registration 8:30a.m.; Sunday, Dec. 16; 9:45 deadline isM onday;Jason a.m4 FootZone, downtown Bend; Lawrence,541-977-1923,Jason© taught by Ashleigh Mitchell, CPT; fitkidsamerica.org; Sue Brown, learn basic myofacial release with 541-322-5800, ext.120, susan© a foam roller; bring yoga mat and athleticclubofbend.com. foam roller if you own them; foam rollers available for purchase; HIGHSCHOOL BASKETBALL limited to15 participants; $5; LEAGUE:For players not register at FootZone; footzonebend. participating in their high school com. basketball programs; one league for freshmen and sophomores, COCCTURKEYTROT: Saturday; 13th annual event; 10 a.m 43and one league for juniors and seniors;Sunday mornings, Dec. mile run/walk starts at COCC track; registration begins at 9 2 through mid-March;Pilot Butte Middle School, Bend; recreational a.m. at Mazama Gym; benefit for COCC Foundation; free for COCC league with T-shirts, officials and OSU-Cascades students, and scorekeepers provided; registration deadline is Tuesday, $10 otherwise; Bill Douglass, Nov. 27; $54 park district residents, bdouglass@cocc.edu. $73 otherwise;541-389-7275; I LIKE PIE:Thursday, Nov. 22; bendparksandrec.org. 9 a.m 4 start is directly behind FootZone in downtown Bend, on Brooks Alley; untimed 2K, 5K and 10-mile runs; recommended $5 HORSES cash or check and five cans of CHARLEYSNELLHORSEMANSHIP food for Neighbor Impact; piefor CLINIC: Friday-Sunday;Weston participants; footzonebend.com; Equine Services, LLC, 68810 541-317-3568. Holmes Road, Sisters; $50-$125 BGCCOTURKEYTROT: Thursday, per day and $15 haul-in fee, $20 per Nov. 22;9 a.m.; Les Schwab person to audit; Alison Weston; 541- Amphitheater, Bend; 5K and 10K 728-7004; westonequineservices. runs/walks, 1.5-mile trotter's com; charleysnellhorsemanshipv. walk; benefitfor Girls on the Run vpweb.com. and Boys & Girls Clubs; $15-$25, EECO JUMPERJACKPOT:Saturday; technical T-shirts available for $20; 10:30 a.m 4Fruition Farm 5707 541-617-2877; info@bgcco.org; S.W. Quarry Ave., Redmond; indoor bgccoturkeytrot.com. facility; $15-$20 per class and BEND TURKEY TROT: Thursday, $10-$20 arena usage fee per horse; Nov. 22;Bend; 5Kand10K runs/ 541-410-9513; turi@ykwc.net; walks,1-mile walk; donation of coeventers.com. one bag of nonperishable food ROLLINGRANCHIN SISTERS: Open encouraged; $15 for 5K, $20 for10K, for trail-course practice and shows; $7 for walk; bendturkeytrot.com. ongoing; $10 per horse; 69516 SISTERSTURKEYTROT: Saturday, Hinkle Butte Drive, Sisters; Shari, Nov. 24;11 a.m.; Sisters, 5K 541-549-6962. and 10K runs/walks, 1-mile walk; donation of one bag of nonperishable food encouraged; MISCELLANEOUS free; sistersturkeytrot.com. DESCHUTESMATCLUB PLANTARFASCIITIS CLINIC: WRESTLING:All youths in grades Wednesday, Nov. 28; 7 p.m.; on through eight welcome;through FootZone, downtown Bend;with Saturday, Feb. 2;age divisions for physical therapist Steve Leary of kids in grades one through three Hands On Physical Therapy; learn and four through eight; $115-$165 well-rounded approach to treating for season; registration is ongoing this injury; free; 541-317-3568; throughoutthe season;online footzonebend.com. registration and more information JINGLEBELL RUN/WALK FOR available at bendwrestling.com. ARTHRITIS: Saturday, Dec. 1;11:40 YOUTH WRESTLING: Forkids a.m 5 downtown Bend; 5K and kids in grades three through eight; run; $15-$25; online registration Tuesdays, Thursdays andFridays available through Nov. 27, in-person through Jan. 29;5:30-7:30 p.m 4 registration available at packet Bend High School; $99 for park pick-up Nov. 29-30 and on race day; district residents, $134 otherwise; klowery@arthrjtjs.org; jinglebellrun. Bend Park 8 Recreation District, kintera.org. 541-389-7275, bendparksandrec. CANYONRUMBLEFROZENHALF: Ol'g. Saturday, Dec. 8;10 a.m 5Madras; ACROVISIONTAEKWONDO: half marathon trail race; includes Age 6 and older;Tuesdays and free1-mile run; $25; https://sjtes. Thursdays, Nov. 13-Dac. 11; google.com/site/madrasrunners/

BASEBALL

canyon-rumble-frozen-half. SCREW YOURSHOES WORKSHOP: Thursday, Dec. 13; 6 p.m.-7 p.m.; FootZone,Bend;with local ultrarunner Jeff Browning; "winterize" a pair of running shoes with some studs, which won't hurt the shoes and are removeable; learn to do it yourself or enjoy full stud service; 541-317-3568; footzonebend.com.

SNOW SPORTS MIDDLESCHOOL NORDIC DEVELOPMENTTEAM: Form iddle schoolers ages 11-14;Wednesdays, Saturdays andSundays, Nov. 14-March10;participants to ski in small groups based on ability and improve classic and skate techniques in a fun, friendly atmosphere; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter breaks; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. HIGH SCHOOLNORDIC DEVELOPMENTTEAM:Forhigh schoolers ages14-18; weekday or weekend enrollment options, Nov. 14- March10;improve skiing efficiency by working with coaches and teammates in small group; participants are encouraged to fully participate in their high school nordic teams; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter break; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. SKI WAXCLINICS: Tuesdays, Nov. 20, Dec.11, Jan.1 and 15, Feb. 5 and19, and March 5 and19;7:30 p.m4 Pine Mountain Sports, Bend; clinics will cover the basics on tuning and waxing skis; participants do not need to bring own equipment; free; call 541-3858080 to sign up (required). TUESDAYNIGHTSKATESKI: Beginning inNovember,depending on snow conditions; 6 p.m.; meet at Pine Mountain Sports in Bend and carpool to Virginia Meissner Snopark; outings of 60-90 minutes; all abilities welcome; bring a headlamp and a few dollars for the donation box at the sno-park; skate ski demos available on a first-come, first-serve basis (come 30 minutes early and show a credit card and drivers licences); free; sign up required, call 541-385-8080. SHE'S ONSKIS:Skate ski program for advanced beginner women and above; Session 1 isWednesdays or Saturdays, Nov. 28-Dec. 22;Session 2 isWednesdays or Saturdays, Jan. 2-Feb. 9; combined session also available; Mt. Bachelor ski area; $95$295; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. DAWN PATROLFOR WORKING PARENTS:With Dave Cieslowski; Wednesdays, Dec. 5-Feb. 14;10 a.m.-11:30 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area; limited to 10 advanced nordic skiers; weekly work on technique and specific workouts; $155$175; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. NORDICYOUTHCLUB:Ages 711;Saturdays and/or Sundays, Dec. 8-Feb. 24;includes a camp during winter break; introduces basic skate and classic techniques through games and adventures; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. MINI NORDIES:Development program for kids ages 3-6; for skate group and for classic group, Session1 isSaturdays, Dec. 8, 15, and 29 andJan. 5, and Session 2 is Saturdays, Feb. 2-23;classic group meets11 a.m.-noon, teaches basicmovements, no experience necessary; skate group is1 p.m.-2 p.m., for skiers with some prior classic experience; for combined skate and classic group, Session 1 is Sundays, Dec. 9,16, and 30, and Jan. 6,and Session 2 is Sundays, Feb. 3-24, 1 p.m.-2 p.m., for experienced beginners, such as those who participated last winter or who have prior formal ski instruction; participants must provide own skis, boots and poles; bendenduranceacademy.org. NORDIC MASTERS:For adults; Tuesday, Thursday or Sunday morning enrollment options; skate technique;Dec. 11-Feb. 17;join a lively, social group to improve skiing efficiency through successful technique progressions; bendenduranceacademy.org. BABES INSNOWLAND:Ages 4-5; Sundays, Dec. 16-Feb. 24;11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m 4Mt. Bachelor ski area; introduces kids to nordic skiing in a fun, safe environment; $175; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. K'S FORKIDS: Ages 6-8; Sundays, Dec. 16-Feb. 24;10:15 a.m.-11:15 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area; skiers should be able to cover 5K in one hour; learn the Mt. Bachelor trail system and track distances covered; $125-$175; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. INTROS TO SKATESKIING/CLASSIC SKIING:Four-week programs start at the beginning of each month; for beginning nordic skiers; Mt. Bachelor ski area; $120-$160; 541-382-1709, ext. 2211; mtbachelor.com. SKI CONDITIONINGCLASS: Tuesdays andThursdays, 6 a.m.; Wil)Power Training Studio, Bend; work on core strength, anaerobic conditioning, leg strength and

DS

more; 12 hour-long classes, $80; 541-350-3938. MT. BACHELORSPORTS EDUCATIONFOUNDATION ALPINE, NORDIC, FREERIDEFALL DRYLAND TRAINING:Started in early September; 54 I-388-0002;mbsef O mbsef.org; mbsef.org. MT BACHELORSPORTS EDUCATION FOUNDATIONALPINE SKIING:Now accepting enrollments for alpine winter term and full-time athletes age13 and older; 541-388-0002; mbsef©mbsef.org; mbsef.org. MT. BACHELORSPORTS EDUCATIONFOUNDATION NORDIC SKIING:Nowaccepting enrollments for Stevenson Youth Program, ages 7-11; middle school program, ages 11-14; winter term and full-time program, age14 and older; 541-3880002; mbsef@mbsef.org; mbsef.org. MT. BACHELORSPORTS EDUCATIONFOUNDATION FREERIDESKIAND SNOWBOARD: Now accepting enrollments for development program, ages 8-14; competition program, age10 and older; full-time program, age13 and older; call 541-388-0002; mbsefrN mbsef.org; mbsef.org. BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY MINI NORDIES:Ages 3-6; sessions duringwinter breakand in Fabruary;introductory ski skills and fun games with small class sizes; four one-hour practices per session; bendenduranceacademy.

Leaguestandingsandhigh scores Lava Lanes,Bend Oct.29-Nov. 4 CasinoFun—Hi Lows, MickeyMoldenhauer,

258/664;TeresaMcDonald,177/470.

His and Hers — SquarePegs; RoyFuller, 267/706,DeeStearns,203/570. Guys andGals Fire Ball; Toby Cundeg, 278/701;NomaRugg, 203/557. Rejects —ThePossibles; DougGray,246/672, LucyGrittman,180/459. Lava LanesClassic —Team12;Terry Lussier, 249/676, BevSunderlin, 202/581. Wednesday Inc High Desert AutoSupply; Jett Kaser, 276/752; Curtis Mann,277/702. Tea Timers —Split Ends; Nina Ladd,

NORDICCOMPETITION PROGRAM: Ages14-23;Tuesdays through Sundays throughMay1; times vary; instruction in varying activities to improve strength, technique, coordination, agility, and aerobic and anaerobic capacities with the goal to apply these skills to ski-racing environments; transportation provided; ben@ bendenduranceacademy.org or 541-678-3864; enroll online at bendenduranceacademy.org.

12:18.50. 34, Eli Vossler, 12:54.66. 41, Ethan butterfly, 200individual medleyand400individual medley,long-coursemeters). Barker,14:06.56.42, Nathan Monday 14:20.31. Suzanne Foster,17 (200butterfly, 200individual Youth (birth years 1998-1999) — 2, ThomasSchoderbek, 13:57.97. 14 WiliamFetrow, medley and400individual medley,short-course 15:07.15.22, Quintin, Mccoy,15:32.94. 32,Travis yards). Martin, 16:02.94.43, Kambel Quatre, 16:57.94.57, Tai Mercer, 12 (200backstroke, short-course JakeVossler,18:08.88. yards). Girls Teresa Cobb, 12 (50 breaststroke, 100 3 kilometers breaststroke and200breaststroke, short-course Midget (birth years 2000-2001) — 1, yards). Josh Monroe,12(1,000freestyle and200 butKelseyWashenberger,11:37.18 6, TaylorVandenborn, 12:03.12.13,Dagny Donohue, 12:25.06. 14, terfly, short-course yards).

SOFTBALL CASCADEALLIANCESOFTBALL: Cascade Alliance and Summit High School are teaming up to hold winter pitching and catching practice at the Summit High Gym in Bend;Sundays, Nov. 11 and18, Dec. 2and 9, Jan. 6and 27, Feb. 3,10and 24, and March3and17; girls 12 and younger, 4 p.m.-5 p.m.; older girls, 5 p.m.-6 p.m 5pitchers must bring their own catchers and own "softie" softball; tennis shoes appropriate for gym use are required; cascadealliance.org.

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BendSwimClub Swimmerswithtop-five marksinOregon andsouthwestWashmgton for the 2011-2012season Name, age,(events) AnnaHornbeck,8 (25breaststroke, short-course yards). 174/517 AnneSouther,17(200backstroke, short-course Latecomers — Split Ends; Tami Smith, yards). 209/517. AudrieStephens,12(200buterfly, short-course TNT — Team 17; Romme Sundita, 258/637; yards;100butterfy, ong-coursemeters). TamiBonneru,182/474. Ben Brockman, 13(200 freestyle, 500 freeProgressive — U-Duh-Man; Al Larson, style,100butterf yand200butterfly, short-course 266/663 Free Breathers —Pin Heads;Cecil Mann, yards; 100freestye, 200freesty e, 400freestyle, 100 butterfly and200butterfly, ong course-me278/639,Sue Snedden,198/554. T.G.I.F.— Man Dn;DaveGrimes, 289/726; ters). Emily Brockman, 12(50 breaststrokeand100 Patti Sundita,232/601. Have-A-Bau — Team 1; AubreyGarrett, breaststroke,short-courseyards; 100freestyle, 246/646;BriannaMarler,165/450 50 breaststroke, 100 breaststroke,200 breastDraft — Coming For You; Michael Sima, stroke and200individual medley,long-course 251/612;RandiRippy,158/402. meters). RimrockLanes, Bend Gharret Brockman, 8 (50 backstroke,short(Teamscratchgame;teamscratchseries; courseyards). men's scratchgame;men's scratch series; DurganMckean8 (50freestyle, short-course women's scratchgame;women' sscratch yards). series) Elli Ferrin, 13 (200backstroke, short-course Week5 yards). Friday NightSpecials —SassyDogs, 739; Emma Brady,10(100freestyle,200freestyle, 50 TheGrayMayers,2,388,Ricky Mayers,235;Doug breaststroke,100butterfly, 100 individual medley Gray,700;AriMayers,202JulieMayers,612. and 200individualmedley,short-course yards,100 Week10 freestyle,200treestyle,50 breaststroke,100 breast50+ or -—SNAFU,631,Fire Bagers,1,999, stroke, 100buttergy and200 individual medley, Mike Koivisto,226; MattHawes, 638;Laura Hawes, long-course meters). 200; StellaDja,517. HannahPeterson,12 (100backstroke, 200backGrizzly Mountain Men's — NoBoundaries, stroke, 50buttertly, 100butterfly and200butterfly, 1,024; KBW Engineering, 3,031; GeneMcKenzie, short-courseyards). 268; ChrisHorn,676. Jennifer Robeson,15 (400 individual medley, short-courseyards). John Hartmeier,14(100backstroke,200 backRunning stroke and400 individual medley,short-course USATrack &Field State Junior Olympic yards; 100backstrokeand 200 backstroke, longCross CountryChampionships coursemeters). Saturday Julia Stafford, 8(50 butterfly, long-coursemePier Park,Portland ters). Central Oregonfinishers KennedyBright, 12 (100 breaststroke,shortBoys courseyards). 2 kilometers MackenzieHagigan, 14 (500 freestyle, 1,000 Sub-bantam (birth years 2004-2005) 5, Ireestyle, 200butterfly and400 individual medley, SamuelVossler,9:27.60. 8, JackDeaver, 9:56.80. short-courseyards; 400 freestyle, 800 freestyle, 9, BenjaminStrang, 10:07.20. 10, NolanVihstadt, 1,500 freestyle, 200butterfly and 400individual 10:09.50. 16, AbramCaba, 11:39.80. 17, Grant medley,long-coursemeters). Caba,14:25.90 Maria Wold, 9 (200individual medley,short3 kilometers yards; 100breaststroke, 50butterfly and Bantam (birth years 2002-2003) —3, course Jack Strang,12:06.72. 4, EvanVihstadt, 12:10.97. 200 individualmedley,long-coursemeters). Matthew Carpenter, 16 (1,650freestyle, short6, FisherBien,12:29.91. 11, DylanWashenberger, courseyards;400freestyle, 800Ireestyle and100 12:58.41. 13, Aidan Donohue, 13:0372. 14, backstroke, l o ng-coursemeters). JesseVandenborn, I3:07.56. 19,RobertGorman, BrandonDeckard, 16 (500freestyle, 100back13.29.18.20,Sam Hatfield,13:30.78.24,Benjamin stroke, 200 backstroke, 100 breaststroke, 200 Caba,13:57.50.29, Peter Davio, 15:33.59. Midget (birth years 2000-2001) —4, breaststroke,200butterfly, 200individual medley ZachryWeber,11:24.18.6, DanielMaton,11.37.50. and 400 individual medley,short-courseyards; 400 freestyle,100backstroke,200backstroke, 200 9 Jett Ballantyne,11:41.59.25, SamSchoderbek,

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EmmaBrooks, 12:30.03. 16, MichaelaGorman, 12:45.15 38, JordynChase,14:23.03.43, Gilian Handley,15:19.97. 4 kilometers Youth (birthyears1998-1999) — 2, Sarah Reeves,15:22.31.3, Olivia Brooks,15:27.03. 10, SadieAnnGorman, 17:09.09. 11,MeganCornett, 172041.12, Ciara Jones,17:23.78.

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Show your appreciation to your customers by thanld.ng them in a group space ad that vvill run

Nov. 22nd, Thanksgiving Day, the mOSt-rend PePeP O f the yenv! This special one page group ad will showcase your business along with a message of thanks to your customers.

Ad sizes are 3.33" x 2.751" and are only 8 9

in cl u d ing full colog".

ONLY 18 SPOTS WILL BE AVAILABLE! Deadline for ad. spaceand. copy: Thursday, November 15, 2012 Publishes on Thursday, November 22nd

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Contact your Bulletin Advertising Representative for more information Tonya McKiernan: 541-617-7865 email: tmckiernan@wescompapers.com

Nena Close: 541-383-0302 email: nclose@wescompapers.com

WWW.bendbulletin.Com


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Stock listings, E2-3 Calendar, E4 Deeds, E4

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

T NASDg q GLosE~,so4.~8 IN BRIEF Kodak reaches bankruptcy deal Struggling photo pio-

neer Eastman KodakCo. said Monday that it has

reached anagreement to borrow $793 million,

an important step in letting itleave bankruptcy protection in the first

half of next year. The deal is contingent on Kodak being able to

sell its patent portfolio for at least $500 million.

The company hasbeen trying to sell that asset for more than a year. In

GLosE • DOII INES

CHANGE+.18+.01%

• BONDS Tr~s s~p NOCHANGE •

GOL DNOCHANGE ' T SILVERCHANGE $'o o77

Retaiers an e easto Llres o ers • Stores are opening several hoursearlier for Black Friday,honing online strategies Bulletin wire reports NEW YORK — Retailers from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. to Limited Brands Inc.'s Victoria's Secret are unveiling Black Friday dealsearlierthan ever or using such attention-getters as teen heartthrob Justin Bieber to lure more holiday shoppers. Holiday-season sales are crucial for retailers across the

board, since they represent the industry's biggest quarter in terms of both sales and profit. With Hurricane Sandy pounding the mid-Atlantic and Northeast region and hurting sales in the first week of November, it also remains a question whether chains such as Macy's Inc. and Kohl's Corp. that had to shut stores could

fully make up their lost sales. Meanwhile, concerns about the U.S. going over the "fiscal cliff" also may overshadow holiday demand closer to Christmas, analysts have said. Target Corp. will kick off the

She said that 9 p.m. struck "a perfect balance" for its customers. Target plans to offer deals that include an Apex 32-inch LCD TV for $147 and a Nikon digital camera for$99.99for the earlier opening. From 4 a.m. to noon, the next day, customers who spend $50 or more on clothing, accessories or home products will earn a $10 Target gift card to use toward a future purchase. SeeRetail/E3

holiday shopping season at 9 p.m. on Thanksgiving, three hours earlier than a year ago. "We thought long and hard about when the right opening time would be," said Kathee Tesija, Target's executive vice president of merchandising.

astatement,Kodaksays it is "confident it will achieve" that require-

EXECUTIVE FILE

ment. Kodak filed for bank-

Report: U.S. to be top oil prodUcer in 5years By Elisabeth Rosenthal New Yorh Times News Service

The United States will overtake Saudi Arabia as the world's leading oil producer by about 2017 and will become a net oil exporter by 2030, according to a report released Monday by the International Energy

Agency.

ruptcy protection in

That increased oil production, combined with new U.S. pohcies to

January after struggling to adapt to the world of digital photography.

improve energy efficiency,

lay a plan to charge foreign airlines for greenhouse gasemissions

means that the United States will become "all but self-sufficient" in meeting its energy needs in about two decades — a "dramatic reversal of the trend" in most developed countries, the report says. "The foundations of the

for one year, potentially

global energy systems are

removing one of the

shifting," Fatih Birol, chief economist at the Parisbased organization, which produces the annual World Energy Outlook, said in an interview before the release. The agency, which advises industrialized nations on energy issues, had previously predicted that Saudi Arabia would be the leading producer until 2035. The report also predicted that global energy demand would grow by 35 to 46 percent between 2010 and 2035, depending on whether policies that have been proposed are actually put in place. Most of that growth will come from China, India and the Middle East, where theconsuming class

EU seeks delay on emissionscharges The EuropeanCommission said Monday that it would seek to de-

most contentious issues clouding trade relations with China, India and the United States. The system, which

requires airlines usingan airport in Europe to obtain or buy permits corre-

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sponding to theamount

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of gases they emit, had

generated intenseopposition amongforeign governments. They accused theEuropean

BANANg, ,,. IILPPLE CRISP . BREAD

Union of violating their

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airlines from developing countries by imposing its environmental standards on the world. Europe had insisted

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, SLIT-Z .'" Andy Tullisi The Bulletin

Patricia Bartelson, co-owner of Straw Propeller Gourmet Foods,started her company in September 2011. Now, she manufactures 15 different flavors of oatmeal from a Redmond warehouse and distributes them throughout the nation and world.

the law was necessary

NOT YOUR AVERAGE

because of a failure to control pollution from air traffic, which repre-

sents about 3 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions and is growing much faster than efforts to cut them.

Verizon to pay $8.5B dividend Verizon Wireless said Monday that it will

pay a dividend of $8.5 billion next month to its

owners, Verizon Communications lnc. and Vodafone Group PLC., by the end of the year. It's the second dividend payment from Verizon Wireless this year. In

January, VerizonWireless ended apolicy of using its cash to paydowndebt, which freed upmoneyto pay a $10 billion dividend to both owners. Vodafone, a British

cellphone companywith wide international inter-

ests, owns 45 percent of the very profitable Verizon Wireless, the largest

cellphone carrier in the U.S. Yet until January, Vodafone hadn't

received anycashfrom the U.S. carrier in years.

• Redmond company attributes its rapid expansion to unique flavors, quality ingredients By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

n little more than a year, Patricia Bartelson's oatmeal has made its way into 35 different Central Oregon locations, across the country, and to Canada and Guam. In fact, since her company, Straw Propeller Gourmet Foods, started in September 2011, Bartelson said, sales have increased 5,000 percent, with the company producing more than 11 tons of oatmeal in total volume each month. "I think our rapid expansion in the marketplace is due to our i n novative flavors, along with using unique, allnatural ingredients to achieve those flavors," said Bartelson, who co-owns the Redmond-based company with her husband, Tony. "It is not typical, predictable oatmeal."

Where:Redmond

son was a stay-at-home mom who would bring her oatmeal to ball games and other family events. When she would share her oatmeal, she found friends and family w anted more, and suggested she starther

Employees:Five

own company.

Phone:541-526-5677 Toll Free:855-507-8729 Website:www.strawpropeller

Bartelson took their advice. The oatmeal, packaged in 12-ounce portable containers, is now sold in 20 states,Canada and Guam, and can be found at about 15 Central Oregon coffee shops, the Redmond Airport and multiple grocers including Ray's Food Place, Nature's General Store and the Thriftway stores in Madras and Terrebonne. A 12-pack of the oatmeal containers costs $39 on the company's website. The cost of individual containers varies from $2.75 to $3.50, depending on the retail location, Bartelson said. SeeOatmeal/E3

The dasics What:Straw Propeller Gourmet Foods

gourmetfoods.com

From curry-flavored oatmeal to Blueberry Blitz, featuring natural yogurtcovered blueberries,and PB8 J, containing all-natural peanut butter chips and freeze-driedstrawberries,the 42-year-old Redmond resident said she likes to take oatmeal and give it a gourmet flair. Before starting the company, Bartel-

is growing rapidly. The consequences are "potentially far-reaching" for global energy markets and trade, the report said. Birol noted, for example, that Middle Eastern oil once bound for the United States would probably be rerouted to China.U.S.-mined coal, facing declining demand in its home market, is already heading to Europe and China instead. There are several components of the sudden shift in the world's energy supply, but the prime mover is a resurgence of U.S. oil and gas production, particularly the unlocking of new reserves of oil and gas found in shale rock. The widespread adoption of techniques such as hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling has made those reserves much more accessible, and, in the case of natural gas, resulted in a vast glut that has sent

prices plunging. The report predicted that the United States would overtake Russia as the leading producer of natural gas in2015. See Oil /E4

— From wire reports

Trade deficit

Ayear in, YouTube'schannels not must-see TV— yet

U.S. exports K ~I I minus imports, in billions, by month, seasonally adjusted: SEPT. '11

By Jake Coyle The Associated Press

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Though a year later such a cultural sea change isn't palpable — and likely shouldn't be expected so soon — YouTube's developing platform of original programming is gradually taking shape, building steadily into

NEW YORK — When Google announced its plans to fund some 100 new channels of original programming on YouTube, many expected a transformation in television. TECHFOCU5 an e normous, global video Google had disrupted other ecosystem wherein the tools industries and TV appeared to to produce a mini TV station be next in line. The YouTube channels are anyone's. were trumpeted as the next iteration in YouTube is now doubling down on television: Just as a handful of networks its investment. It recently expanded begat a few hundred cable channels, into Europe with another 50-plus chanYouTube would now foster the birth of nels. And now, YouTube is reinvesting thousands of channels online. in 40 percent of the channels that have The revolution has not yet been already launched. YouTubed. SeeYouTube/E3

Felix Baumgartner leaves the capsule during his deathdefying jump from a balloon 24 miles above Earth. Some 52 million people watched YouTube's live stream of event. The Associated Press


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Oatmeal

hopes to change over to an even faster m a nufacturing Continued from E1 line in the near future. "It takes 30 seconds to a Many of t h e i n g redients m inute (to make), and it i s come from Oregon businesses, ready to be eaten," she said. she said. For example, Straw "Add hot water, stir it up and P ropeller G o u rmet F o o ds you're ready to go." gets oats from Bob's Red Mill The c o mpany p r o duces and Grain Millers Inc., both about 32,000 containers of in the Willamette Valley. The oatmeal each month, and uses company also works with six 50,000 pounds of oats annu- Central Oregon suppliers and ally, she said. businesses,including Cascade The oatmeal is made in a Lavender in Madras. 5,000-square-foot R e dmond In addition to f i nding as warehouse with a c u s t om many local sources as posfood-manufacturing filler that sible, she said, one of the cominserts the oatmeal and ingre- pany's founding principles is dients into the cups. giving 10 percent of its profits Bartelson said 15 different to others in the community. flavors are produced, includEvery quarter, she said, the ing several that are gluten company partners with area free. Depending on the flavor organizations that help serve being made and the number others. So far, the company of flavors being produced that has donated to Neighborlmday, she said, the time for the pact, St. Vincent de Paul of oatmeal to g o t h r ough the Redmond, Grandma's House manufacturing line varies, but of Central Oregon Inc. and averages about 15 seconds. Sparrow Clubs USA. To meet the growing deAlthough the company has mand, she said, the company already entered international

markets, Bartelson said she has no intention of slowing down. Next spring, she said, Straw P r o peller G o u rmet Foods will release a new product that isn't currently in the marketplace. However, other than hinting that it is both savory and sweet, and that it will take the place of oatmeal for the warmer months, she refused to reveal details. "We have more ideas than we have time to implement," she said.

YouNbe

is the channel, and you tune into the channels that you care about." Sometimes lost in the fanfare over YouTube's channels initiative is that it's only a drop in the bucket for all of YouTube's channels. Through ad revenue sharing, more than I million content creators are earning money through YouTube, from pennies to hundreds of thousands of dollars. The channels that have received funding from YouTube a ren't separated f ro m t h e tens of millions created sans financial backing by u sers, upstart production outfits and large media companies. Those funded by YouTube are just seedlings in endless pastures of video, planted with the hope of spouting more.

Continued from E1 That means more than half of the channels have failed to catch on, yet it is still a rate of success that any network programmer would kill for. But for YouTube, success at this stage is measured less by view counts than by changing perception. "What we're trying to do is galvanize the creative and advertising community," Robert Kyncl, YouTube's global head of content and the leader of its channels initiative, said in an interview. "And we're succeeding at that." Since it was founded in 2005, YouTube has been predominatelythe home ofuser-created video. But by putting out a welcome mat to Hollywood, the site is trying to lure viewers to stay for longer and coax advertisers to pair their brands with known talent. Kyncl says the first year has been one of defining where YouTube's channels fit into the media landscape. "I feel we're 300 percent smarter than we were in January," he says. YouTube has declined to make public the size of its investment. The initial channel launch was reportedlyfueled by $100 million, a n u mber YouTube executives dispute. Kyncl will go no further than to confirm the $200 million he

pledged to spend marketingthe channels at YouTube's TV-style upfront presentation to advertisers in May — a flashy event

capped by a performance by Jay-Z, who recently launched a lifestyle channel called Life and Times. Jamie Byrne, director of content strategy, said the second round of funding would be relatively similar to the amount of the first round, on a per channel basis. Those not being offered more money aren't canceled; they are encouraged to keep going, but will have to pay their own way.

From videos to channels A simple glance at the site reveals how central the channels initiative is to YouTube. The fabric of the video behemoth — where 72 hours of video are uploaded every minute — has been reorientedto emphasize a user's playlist of channels, a move that has increased channel subscribers by 50 percent, executives say. It may sound like a small tweak, but behind it is the mission to alter the very nature of YouTube. "Up until now, the primary noun on YouTube has been video. You watch a video, you share a video, a video has view counts and so o n," Shishir Mehrotra, director of product management at YouTube, said in a separate interview. "We're gradually shifting the site so the primary noun on the site

• W here did t h e n a m e • Straw Propeller Gourmet Foods come from'? I have two boys, Caleb • and Ethan, who love to do craft products. We were trying to build a n a i rplane out of a shoebox, and I said I would build them a straw propeller for the front of the plane. I used drinking straws for the propeller and it worked. Our family still laughs about the whole project to this day. When it came time to name the busi-

A•

Few breakthroughs Thefirstharvest, though, has not impressed some onlookers. Forresteranalyst James McQuivey, who specializes in digital video and was among those who predicted YouTube's channelswould be a landmark shift, has not seen the progress he expected. He would like to see YouTube try to produce some mainstream originals, as Netflix and Hulu have, in order to attract mass audiences, not just niche ones. "If the requirement for showing progress for Google is that they've disrupted television, then they haven't met that con-

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ness,the name "straw propeller" came up, and it stuck. is your f avorite Q•• What part about the business?

A

• The people that I meet, • t he people I h a ve a s employees, the people I get to serve and our charity piece — the people we give to. As the company expands in sales, volume and product line, giving to charity will expand as well. • Where do you see your • business in two years'? I see it c ontinuing to • grow. We will keep listening to the consumer and marketplace to create healthy meals on-the-go. We plan on producing new product lines and continuing to grow with the distribution channels. As the business grows, any further expansions will be within Redmond. Hopefully we'll be adding moreemployees.

A•

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesCbendbulletin.com

dition," says McQuivey. "They haven't really changed the way people watch TV. That said, to have expected to do that in a year would have been kind of crazy. "I see nothing in what's happened so far that says, 'Yep, Google has definitely sewn this up. Two, three years out, they will have changed the future of television,'" he says. "I think they've laid the groundwork from which they had learned how to do this, but it's

going to require significant investment." Perhaps the closest a YouTube channel has come to a mainstream viewing event was Red Bull's October 14 webcast of daredevil Felix Baumgartner's free-fall jump from space. Some 52 million watched the channel's live stream, a viewership that far outpaced the 7.6 million who watched it on the Discovery Channel in the U.S. Such breakthroughs have been seldom, though. Most

programming hasbeen more of the talk show variety. Rainn Wilson gets metaphysical on his channel "Soul Pancake." Amy Poehler g ives y oung w omen a r ol e m odel w i t h "Smart Girls." The most popular few channels typically draw 5-10 million viewers weekly. M ost channels,though, receive less than 100,000 views per week a nd some draw just a f e w thousand.

Retail

Getting the online piece right is crucial for retailers Continued from E1 as more spending shifts to Target is also preparing that channel, especially with additional ea r l y -morning the popularity of mobile despecials, including Leapfrog vices. Forrester on Thursday Explorer software for $15. said it expects U.S. online Wal-Mart, t h e wo r l d 's sales this holiday season to largest retailer, said l a st jump 15 percent to $68.4 bilweek that it will open its big lion, with the average U.S. Black Friday promotions in shopper spending an estitoys, games and apparel at mated $419 online, a 12 per8 p.m. on Thanksgiving, two cent boost from last year. Macy's, which on Wedneshours earlier than last year. The retailer cited customer day reporteda third-quarter demand as the reason for comparable sales gain of 3.7 pushing up the sales times. percent, noted 2.2 percentWal-Mart's closely age points of that increase watched electronics deals came from o n l in e s ales, will also be available earlier, which shot up 40 percent. at 10 p.m. instead of midRetailers also are trying night, featuring promotions to preempt and combat the such as a 60-inch Vizio LED phenomenon o f s h oppers TV for $688, a $310 savings. using their smartphones to Wal-Mart also said that comparison shop and use for the first time it will guar- stores as so-called showantee pricing a n d a v a i l- rooms. Best Buy Co. and ability before Christmas on Target Corp., for instance, three electronics items — the said they will match prices 16GB Apple iPad 2 with Wi- with select online retailers Fi for $399, which includes a this holiday season. Toys R $75 Wal-Mart gift card; the Us, which unveiled a hotEmerson 32-inch 720p LCD toy reservation feature this T V for $148; and the L G holiday, requires that reserBlu-rayPlayer for $38 — for vation be made in person in all shoppers who are in line stores. between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m., C hains also ar e t r y i ng even if the store sells out of to turn physical stores into its stock. their advantage and be pro"Wal-Mart i s p ositioned active w i t h s m a r tphonewell for the holidays," ana- t oting s h o ppers. O n l i n e lyst Joe Feldman of Telsey Advisory Group told MarketWatch. "We like the com-

pany's approach." Sears Holdings Corp. will open its n amesake chain at 8 p.m. on Thanksgiving, ahead of its normal opening on Black Friday. Toys R Us stores will open at the same time;thefirst200shoppers in line at each Toys R Us store T hanksgiving n i gh t wi l l

get a free goody bag. Target Corp. announced Monday its stores would open at 9 p.m. on Thanksgiving. Following the footsteps of Macy's and Nordstrom Inc., Kohl's also said it's testing w hether it can f u lfill a n d ship online orders directly from its stores and expects the initiative to be "very beneficial" come next holiday. For Macy's and Nordstrom, that option is part of their online strategy this holiday season, analysts said. "The beauty of the whole thing is you have incremental inventory without taking the incremental inventory risk," which leads to profiteroding discounts, said JPMorgan analyst Matthew Boss in an interview. "It helps you turn your inventory risk."

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3.25 3.25 3.25

Nasdag

Most Actlve (sc or more) Most Acttve (ss or more) Most Acttve (st or more) Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg S&P500ETF 873534 138.27 +.1I BkofAm 665767 9.39 - 04 iShEMkts 377302 41.16 +.16 Chimera 370579 2.77 +.22 SprintNex 329460 5.61 +.06

Vringo 5 2 077 3.65 +.26 Facebookn 660655 20.07 +.86 CheniereEn 47211 1419 -.49 Microsoff 594906 28 22 -.61 NwGold g 20538 10.67 -.03 SiriuSXM 483029 z78 +.03 Rentech 15346 z74 Pwshs QQQ 281768 63.42 -.01 Grantrra g 12859 5.75 +.18 Cisco 27 9558 16.86 +.04

GainerS (S2ormore) GelneIs (S2 or more) Gainers IS2or more) Name L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %Chg

52.Week High Lo w

Net Last Chg

N ame

13,661.72 11,231.56 Dow Jones Industrials 5,390.0 4,53t79 DowJonesTransportation

499.82 42z90 8,515.60 6,898.12 2,509.57 2,IOz29 3196.93 2,44t48 1,474.51 1,158.66 15,43z54 12,158.90 868.50 666.16

DowJonesUtilities NYSE Composite AmexIndex Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire5000 Russell2000

793.76

World markets

Losers (S2ormore) Name

Losers (S2or more)

L a s t Chg %ChgName

Advanced Declined Unchanged Totalissues NewHighs NewLows

2.18 -.28 -0.4 BostPrv wt 3.33 -.67 -16.8 3.25 -.38 -10.5 BecoveryE 3.30 -.63 -16.0 15.60 -1.73 -10 0 Inteliquent 2 96 -.55 -15 7

15.00 -1.48 -9.0 Omeros

Diary 1,420 Advanced 1,594 Declined

u 7 Unchanged 3131 Total issues 75 New Highs 89 New Lows

6.99 -t23 -15.0

Diary 186 242 32 460 19 16

Market

L a s t Chg %Chg Amsterdam 1z50 -8.99 -41.8 Brussels

z51 -.39 -13.4 Clovison n

BeazerH rs 13.77 -z87 -17.2 MeetMe BeazHTEq 24.40 -3.72 -13.2 ComstkMn Penney I7.97 -2.67 -12.9 eMagin PrUVxST rs 2760 -4.10 -129 ImpacMtg MesaRoyl 21.01 -3.09 -1z8 GoldResrc

Diary

Losers (S2or more)

L a s t Chg C '%%d hg Name

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

1,u2 1,292 121 2,525 23 96

Paris London Frankfurt HongKong Mexico Milan NewZealand Tokyo Seoul Singapore Sydney Zurich

Close

'/0Change

33z33

+.12 s -.06 -.35 t -.04 +.07 s +.21 s +.45 s -.39 +1.79 s -.93 I -.19 -.07 -.28 t -.33

2,355.24 3,411.65 5,767.27 7,168.76 21,430.30 40,860.49 15,121.70 3,983.99 8,676.44 1,900.87 3,007.57 4,469.86

6,16z68

12,815.08 5,058.47 443.99 8,054.04 2,386.01 2,904.26 1,380.03

14,43z36

TitanMet 16.50 +4.93 +4z6 Vringo 3. 6 5 + .26 +7.7Celgenert 5.90 +z79 +89.6 ChinaDigtl 3.89 +.90 +30J Docusec z84 +.14 +5.2 Sareptars 27.13 +4.38 +19.3 iPBetalMet 41.17 +5.39 +15.1 CKX Lands 14.24 +.50 +3.6 Myrexis 2 . 7 6 + .42 +17.9 Jefferies 16.27 +2.00 +14.0 SilvrCrst g 2.93 +.10 +3.5 Manntch rs 6.21 +.79 +14.6 Here is how key internationalstock markets CSGlobWm 8.43 +1.02+13.8 GranTrra g 5.75 +J8 +3.2 ConsuPff 3.99 +.49 +14.0 performed Monday.

P r i me rate

Metal

Amex

NYSE

Indexes -.31 +40.19 -4J2 +.47 +.62 -.61 +J8

-4.29 -1.26

YTD 52-wk % Chg %Chg % Chg +4.89 +6.09 +.80 + . 77 +z35 -.92 -4.45 -.72 +.01 +7.72 +7.48 +.03 +4.73 +5J0 -.02 +11.48 +9.30 +.01 +9.74 +10.25 -.03 +9.42 +9.74 -J6 + 7.13 +8.31

Currencies Key currencyexchangerates Monday compared with late Friday inNewYork. Dollarvs: E x changeRate Pvsoay AustraliaDollar BritainPound CanadaDollar ChilePeso ChinaYuan EuroEuro HongKongDollar

Japan Yen MexicoPeso RussiaRuble So. KoreaWon SwedenKrona SwitzerlndFranc TaiwanDollar

1.0429 1.5882 1.0007 .002082 .1604 1.2714 .1290 .012585 .075598 .0316 .000917 J480 1.0549 .0344

1.0391 1.5903 .9996 .002084 .1602 1.2713 .1290 .012586 .075814 .0317 .000919 J484 1.0541 .0345

Selected mutual funds YTD H iYldBd 7.95 +1 3 7 LgCap p 16.62 + 11.2 Fidel 34.78 i0.01 +12.3 TotMktAd r40.21 -0.01 +11.7 CapApp 41.31 +0.08+11.1 Lord Abbelt C: RisingDivA16.83+0.01 i8.4 EmMktS 32.15-0.01 +12.8 TotRetBdl 10.30 + 12.0 Windsor 48.65 0.08 +14.1 Name NAV Chg%Ret Cohen &Steers: FPA Funds: R tRateHi r 9.93 + 5 . 9U SBond I 11.97 +4. 5 IVA Funds: S hourlncct4.68 + 5 . 4S&MdCpVI30.84+0.03 +4.1 Eqlnc 25.60 -0.03 +12.8 Templeton Inslit: WdsrllAd 50.88 0.09 +12.5 Rltyshrs 6623 -015 +106 N ewlnco 10.63 +2 . 1 G NMA 11.79 +2. 9 First Eagle: Wldwide Ir1610 -002 +48 Lord Abbelt F: Oppenheimer8: Eqlndex 37.26 t11.5 ForEqs 18.67 -0.04 +9.7 VanguardFds: Amer Centuy Inv: FPACres 28.27 -0.04 +6.5 Govtlnc 1066 +30 GIbIA 4840 -0.17 NA InvescoFundsA: ShtDurlnco 464 RisingavB1521 +001 +75 Groe(h 36.31t0.12 t14.1 Thornburg Fds: Capopp 32.92+0.02 +11.6 Eqlnc 7 .76 -0.01 +8.7 ColumbiaClassZ: 2190 -0.09 NA CmstkA 17.04 -0.02 +13.3 MFS FundsA: S&MdCpVI2606+003 +3.4 HlthSci 41.51+0.40 +27.3 IntValAp 25.96 -0.01 i9.1 DivdGro 16 32-0.01 +7.0 G rowthl 26.97 +9. 8 AcomZ 3031 +003 +113 Fa<rholme30.42 -0.21 +31.4 GroCO 91 65 +009 +133 OverseasA Federated Insll: IncBui l dC p18.49 -0.02 +7.8 Energy 58 73 -04 AcomlntZ 39.64 -0.07 +16.2 Grolnc 2049 -001 +139 Forum Funds: EqlncA 9.04 -0.01 i10.1 T otRA 14.94 +8 . 7 Oppenhei m er C&M: HiYield 6.88 +12.6 Ultra 25.22 i0.13 +10.0 Credit SuisseComm: TotRetBd 11.67 NA GrowCOF9169+009+135 A bsstrl r 11.20 +1 . 4 GrlncAp 20.40 -0.04 i10.9 ValueA 24.76 i0.01 +12.0 RisingDvCp15.15+0.01 +77 InstlCpG 18.05+0.09 +12.0 IntValueI 26.55 -0.01 +9.5 Eqlnc 23 63 -002 +102 American FundsA: Frnk A: OppenheimerRoch: Explr 7714 +0.01 +80 AmcpAp 20.87+0.10 +11.3 ComRett 810 -002 -1.0 StrValDvlS 4.92 -0.02 +4.5 GrovrthCO K91 67+009 +13 4 Frank/Temp HYMuA 10.18 + 1 3 .7MFS FundsI: IntlBond 10.09 t5.7 Tweedy Browne: Fidelity Advisor k Valuel 24 87 +1 2.2R cNtMuA 7.M +1 8 .1 Intl G&l 12.38-0.02 +7.5 GblValue 24.70 -0.02 +13.0 GNMA 10 99 t1.9 AMutlAp 2777 -0.02 +9.2 DFA Funds: aghlnc r 9.25 + 1 2.4FedTFAp 12.86+0.01 +94 Ivy Funds: +5. 0 GrwlhAp 48.75 +0.11 +9.2 AssetSCt 2426+003 +12.2 MFS FundsInsll: oppenheimerY: HYCorp 6.04 t12.1 BalAp 1995+0.03 +112 IntlCorEq 988 -001 +92 Nwlnsgh p21.95 +0.03 +11.3 IntBd 11.18 IntlStk 13.74 -002 +u.8 VanguardAdmiral: 1188 + 1 16 S trlnA 12.73 +8. 9 I ntmMu 10.73 +5. 3 HYTFAp 11.04 <0.01 +11.5 AssetStAp25.12 +0.03 +12.8 IntlEq 17.89 -0.05 +12.4 DevMktY 3361 +004 +160 MidCap 57.48+002 +90 B alAdml 23.36 +8. 9 HlthCre 144.62-0.13 t12.5 BondAp 1299 +59 U SCorEq1 IntlDisc 31.44 -0.04 +13.9 IncomAp 2.17 -0.01 +9.6 AssetStrl r 25.38+0.03 +13.1 MainStay Fundsk IntlBdY 654 +9.3 MCapVal 2441 +14.'I C AITAdm 11.83 + 7 . 1InflaPro 15,03A.01 t7.5 CaplBAp 5196 -007 +85 USCorEq211.75 -0.01 +12.1 Fidelity Advisor I: Davis Funds A: Nwlnsgtl 2226+0.03+11.5 InvGrBd 1'l.73 +0.01 +5 8 R>sDvAp 3689 +003 +60 JPMorgan A Cl a ss: avldBA 6 08 + 1 1 .2 IntGro|NY 2909 -008 +14.0 NAsia 1629 +004 +17.' I CpopAdl 76.06 +0.03 +11.6 IntlGr 18.24 t11.6 CapWGA p35.58 +0.02 +13.1 InvGB 8 04 +0 01 +6.5 S tratlncp 10.68 + 1 05 C oreBdA 1216 +5. 0 ManagersFunds: PIMCOAdmin PIMS: r -0.03 +10.3 IntlVal 29.35+0.05 +10.2 CapWAp 21.54+0.01 +7.0 NYVenA 35.18 -0.08 NA Fidelity Freedom: NewEra 42 01 -0 12 -0 1 EMAdmr34.48 FF2010 1412 +81 LgCapVal 1104 -002 +96 U SGovAp 682 -0.3 ITIGrade 10.52 +1 2 JP MorganInsll: Yacktman p18.62 -0.03 +7.7 T otRtAd 11.61 +9. 5 N Horiz 3421 -0.01 +102 Energy 110.30 +9.2 EupacAp 39.30 -0.04 i11.8 Davis FundsY: +82 LowPr 3825 -012+121 Frank/TmpFrnk Adv: MdCpVal 27.66 -0.01 +16.5 YacktFoc 20.02 -0.02 +7.2 PIMCOInstl PIMS: N Inc 9 9 8 +59 EqlnAdmn4954 -004 +103 LifeCon 1710 +71 FdinvA p 3934 +0.05 +12.2 NYVenY 3561 -008 NA FF2010K 1294 Delaware Invest A: F F201 5 11 80 + 8 3 Manning&Napier Fds: ExtdAdm 43.77 -0.05 +113 LowPnKr 38.24 -012 +122 GlbBdAdv 13.41 -0.01 +12.7 JPMorgan R Cl : AIASetAut r11 26 N A OverS SF 8.11 -001 +108 LifeGro 23 01 +99 GOVtAp 1460 +22 +6 . 7 F F201 5K 13 00 + 8 4 Magelln 71.31 +0.06 +13.5 IncmeAd 2.16 + 1 0.3C oreBond 12.16 +5 . 4 WldoppA 736 +001 +11.1 AIIAsset 1267 -001 NA R2010 16.44 +95 500Adml127.55 +0.02 +118 LifeMod 20 62 +85 GwthAp 3307+015 +151 a verlncp 9.47 F F2020 14 26 +9. 0 MidCap 28.82 -0.05 +10.3 Frank/Temp + 1 . 3ComodRR 6.78 -0.01 +6.1 R201 5 12.76 +20 LTIGrade 11.22 Frnk C: S htourBd 11 02 +1 . 9 M ergerFd 15 79 +102 GNMAAd 1099 t139 H ITrAp 1123 +12 1 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 1899 -003 +11.6 FF2020K 1339 -001 +91 JPMorgan Sel Cl s : Metro Wesl Fds: D ivlnc 12 25 +1 3 .1 GrwAdm 35.51 +0.03 +127 Munilnc 13.67 +0.01 i8.2 I ncomC t 2.20 + 95 R2020 17.64-001 +109 Morg 19.29+0.04 +10.4 IncoAp 17.75 -0.02 +8.9 +9 8 N|NMktr 17.78 i0.01 +17.2 Frank/Temp Mll A&B: C oreBd 12.15 +5. 2 TotRetBd 11.11 + 1 0.8 E mgMkCurl0.44 + 6 . 6R2025 12 90 +11 4 HlthCr 61 04 -0.05 +125 Mulnt 14.49 i6.1 IntBdAp 13.80+0.01 +2.8 EmMktV 2818 -006 +99 F F2025 11 84 +99 OTC 56.58 +0.13 +3.4 SharesA 21.82 -0.04 +10.9 HighYld 8.10 +1 2 .2 TotRtBdl 11.11 + 1 1 .0EmMkBd 12.38 +14.3 R2030 18 50 +1 2 2 PrmcpCor14.78 ICAA p 29.89 +0.05 >11.8 IntSmVa 1482 -003 +11.0 FF2025K 1350 +11 9 H >YldCp 6.04 +9.6 + 1 0 0100lndex 9 92 +0.01 +12.5 Frank/Temp ShtourBd 11.01 -0.01 +1.6 Mutual Sesies: H iYld 9 .5 4 +12 .0 R2035 13 06 NEcoA p 28.12+0.10 +18.3 USLgVa 21.87 -0.01 +157 FF2030 14 09 Tempk +12 0 InfProAd 29.51 +0.01 +75 Prmcp r 68.16t0.05 +10.4 USSmall 22.55 -0.03 +10.6 FF2030K 13.63 + 1 0.2 USLCCrPl s 22.38 +002 +1 3 4 GblD>scA 2919 -005 +9.2 InvGrCp 11.38 + 1 4.1 I TBdAdml 12.25 +7 . 3 SelValur 20.69-0.09 +11.3 NPerAp 2988+0.04 +'l4.2 Puritn 19 13 +1 0 9GIBdAp 13.45 -002 +125 R2040 18 57 +12 1 GlbDiscZ 2963 -005 +9.5 L owou 10.65 +5 . 8 ShtBd 486 +3 . 0 STAR 20 44 +0.01 +'I0.1 NwWrldA 5226 403 +133 USSmVa 25.99 -0.01 +12.7 FF2035 11.62 -0.01 +10.3 PuritanK 19.13 +0 01 +111 GrwthAp 18.42 -003 +13.1 Janus TShrs: +28 I TsryAdml 11.83 qF1262 +002 +124 WorldAp 15.33 -0.01 +11.6 PrkMCVal T2142 -0.04 +61 SharesZ 22 04 -0 04 +11.2 RealRtnl 1275 +0.04 +9.9 SmCpStk 3477-011 +11.3 IntGrAdm 58.08+0.02 +11.7 STIGrade 1088 A3 SmCpAp 3839 403 +157 InilSmCo 14.95 -0.04 +9.9 FF2035K 13.66 -0.01 +10.5 SAIISeCE +0. 9 F F2040 8.11 +1 0 .4 SCmdtyStrl 8 90 -0 02 -0 7 Frank/Temp Tmp8&C: John HancockCI1: Neuberger&BermFds: ShortT 99 0 +3.2 SmCapVal3795 -015 +101 I TAdml 14.49 +6. 1 StratEq 20 56404 +121 TxExA p 13 25 +91 F>xd 10.35 I ntVa 15.34 + 6 8 FF2040K 13.69 -0.01 +10.4 SCmdtystrF 8.93 -0.02 -0.4 GIBdC p 1348 -0.01 +12.1 LSBal a nc 13.31 + 10.3 Genesl n st 49.48 -0.09 +6.6 T otRt 11 61 + 9. 8 -001 +88 I TGrAdm 10.52 + 9 . 3 TgtRetlnc 1217 +69 WshAp 30.52 +0.04 +9.2 Specln 12 95 Glb5Fxlnc 1131 +47 Fidelity Invest: SrslntGrw 11.37 -0.04 +12.5 GMOTrusl III: LSGrwth 13.18 +0.01 +10.7 Northern Funds: PIMCOFundsA: +2. 0 TgRe20102422 +SO Arlisan Funds: Value 25 59 -003 +13.5 L tdTrAd 11.19 HiYFxlnc 745 NA AIIAstAut 11.19 2 YGIFxd 1014 +1. 0 AIISectEq 1260+0.02+122 SerlntlGrF 11.41 -0.04 +12.7 Quahty 22.68 -0.06 +8.7 Lamrd Instl: t NA Principal Inv: LTGrAdml11.22 +1 4.0 TgtRe201513.34 +8.5 I ntl 23 . 21 AMgr50 16.15 +0.01 +8.8 OakmarkFundsl: Dodge&Cox: SrslntVal 9.02 + 1 1 .6GMO TmslIV: EmgMktl 1912 402 +138 RealRtAp 12.75+0.04 +9.6 LgGGlln 988+003+113 L TAdml 11.90 +8. 5 TgRe202023.61 -0.01 +8.9 IntlVal r 28.90 A Mgr20 r 13.31 + 5 . 9 Eqtylnc r 28.73 -0.02 NA B alanced 75.51 N A SerlntlValF 9.05 + 1 1.9 IntllntrVI 1975 -001 +5.7 Longleaf Partners: T otRtA 11.61 + 9. 4 Putnam Funds A: MCpAdml 98.10 -0.10 +10.1 TgtRe202513.42 i9.4 MidCap 36.84 MUHYAdm1136 +96 TgRe2030 MidCapVal 2091 Income 13.94 NA Balanc 19.80 +0.01 +10.2 SrlnvGrdF'I'l.73 +58 GMO Trusl Vl: Partners 25.76 +0.02+12.6 Intl I r 18.94 -0.06 +14.4 PIMCOFundsC: GrlnAp 14.1922.98 +9.8 Oakmark 4832+001 NA TotRtCt 1161 PrmCap r 70.76 +0.05+105 TgtRe203513.80 Bernstein Fds: Intlstk 32.46 NA BalancedK19.80+0.01 +10.4 STBF 8 6 0 +2 2 EmgMkts r11.12 -0.01 +8.1 Loomis Sayles: +87 RoyceFunds: +10.3 BlueChGr 47.63 +0.10 +12.3 LSBondl 1503+0.01 +125 Old Weslbury Fds: ReitAdmr 90.12 -0.18 +124 -0.01 +10.4 I ntour 14 30 +56 Stock 116 40 NA Stratlnc 11.40 +92 GoldmanSachsInsl: PIMCOFunds 0: PennMul r 1154 TgtRe204022 64 CapAp 28.82 +0.04 +17.1 T otalBd 11 06 +1 3 . 1StrlncC 1531 +94 Globopp 748 +1 1.3T Rtn p 11 61 S TsyAdml 10.79 + 07 TgtRe204514 +'I05 DivMu 14 97 +0.01 +3 6 Doubleune Funds: +6 5 H >Yield 7.34 +9. 5 Premierlr 198322 +1 3 .1USBI 11 97 LSBondR 14.97+002 +122 GlbSMdCa p14.56 -0.03 +10.0 PIMCOFunds P: STBdAdml 1067 + 2 0 BlackRockA: T RBd I 11.39 +8 7 Cplnc r 9.34 +4 4 HarborFunds: SchwabFunds: USGro 20 47+0.05 +134 Contra 75.29 +0.08 +11.6 Value 7265 -0.10 +14.5 Bond 13 05 StrlncA 15.22 + 1 0.1LgCapstrat 9.54 -0.01 +8.8 AstAIIAuthP11.25 NA 1000lnvr 39 41 + 1 1.4 S htTrAd 1594 +1. 1 Wellsly 24 42 Eqtyoiv 1940 401 +84 T RBdpN 11.39 + 8 .6 +90 ContraK 75.31 +0.08 +11.7 Fidelity Sparlan: CapAplnst40.58 Loomis Sayles Inv: Oppenheimerk T otRtnP 11.61 +9. 7 S&P Sel 21 87 +4. 4 Welltn 33 7S+001 +10.0 GIAIAr 1923 4.01 +6.6 Dreyfus: + 1 1.8S TIGrAd 1088 BlackRock 8&C: Aprec 43.16 -0.04 +7.8 avlntl 28.69 -0.03 +12.4 500ldxlnv 49.00 + 11.8 Intllnv t 57.77 InvGrBdY 12.76+001 +109 DvMktAp 3392+005 +15.7 Perm PortFunds: ScoutFunds: SmCAdm 37.02 -0.06 +10.9 Wndsr 14.42 -0.02 +14.0 GIAIC t 17.87 -0.01 +5.9 Eaton Vance I: DivrslntKr28.69 -0.02 +12.6 500ldx I 49.01 +0.01 +11.8 Intl r 5 8.47 Lord Abbetl A: GlobAp 6047 +1 1 .9Permannt 4882 +004 +5.9 Intl 31 .1 2 +1 2.1T tlBAdml 11.21 +4. 4 Wndsll 28.66 -0.05 +12.4 BlackROckInsll: FltgRt 9 1 0 +7.4 DivGth 29.04 + 1 3.0Fidelily Sparl Adv: Harllord FdsA: AffilA p 11 56 GblQrlncA 4.32 + 1 1.6 Price Funds: Sequoia 161.71 +0.45+11.1 TStkAdm 34.48 + 1 1.7Vanguard IdxFdS: EquityDv 19.44 -0.01 +8.6 GblMacAbR981 -005 +3.3 Eq Inc 45.83 -0.01 +13.2 ExMktAd 38.96 r -0.04 +11.1 CpAppA p 32.47 +0.13 +127 BdDebAp 8.04 IntBdAp 6.54 -0.01 +8.9 BIChip 43.99 +0.20+13.8 TCW Funds: W ellslAdm 59.16 + 9 . 1ExtMktI 108.04-0.12 t11.3 GlbAllocr 19.33 -0.01 +6.8 FMI Funds: EQII 19.07 -0.01 +11.4 500ldxAdv49.01 +0.01+11.8 Harllord HLSIA: ShDurlncA p4.65 MnstFdA 36.11 +0.04 i12.3 CapApp 22.94 +0.01+11.3 EmMktln 9.30 +0.01 +18.4 WelltnAdm58.35 +0.02 +10.1 MidCplstPI106.90-0.11 +10.1

TotlntAdmr23.57 -0.01 +9.7 Totlntllnst r9421 -0 06 +9.8 TotlntllP r 94.29-0 06 +9.8 500 1 27.53t0.01 +11.7 TotBnd 11.21 A.3 Totllntl 14 09-0 01 +9.7 TotStk 34.46 -0.01 +11.6 VanguardlnstlFds: Ballnst 23.36 +8.9 DevMklnst 924 +9.7 Extln 43.77 -0.05 +11.3 Grwthlst 35.51w0.03 +12.8 InfProlnst 12 02 +7.5 Instldx 126 71+002 +11.8 InsPI 126.72+0.02 +11.8 InsTStPlus31.21 +11.8 M>dCplst 21 67-002 +10.1 STIGrlnst 10.88 +4.4 SClnst 37.02-0.06 +10.9 TBlst 11 21 +4.4 Tslnst 3448 +11.7 Valuelst 22.24-0.01 +10.8

VanguardSigna 500Sgl 10536+00'I +11.8 M>dCpldx 30.96-0.03 +10.1 STBdldx 10.67 t2.0 SmCpSig 3335-0.05 +10.9 TotBdsgl 11.21 +4.4 TotStkSgl 33.27-0.01 +11.7 Virlus FundsI: EmMktl 9 83 +0.0'I +13.8

Weslem Asset: CorePlus I 11.72

+8.4


E4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323,email business@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication.

MARI<ETPLACE BUSINESS CALENDAR

TODAY

FRIDAY

DEEDS

BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. MEMBER SUCCESSBRIEFING: RSVP required; 10-11 a.m.; Bend Chamber of Commerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-382-3221, shelley@bendchamber or www.bendchamber.org. KNOW WORD Iii: Reservations recommended;free;2-3:30 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 23:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 3-4:30p.m.;Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschutes library.org. SMALL-BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free oneon-one small-business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentral oregon.org.

HEALTH CARE REFORM 2014, THE NEXTBIG WAVE OF CHANGE: WHAT DOESYOUR BUSINESS NEED TO BE READY?: Town hall breakfast forum; $30 for members and $40 for nonmembers; 7:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541382-3221. COFFEECLATTER: 8:30-9:30 a.m.; Redmond Senior Center, 325 N.W. Dogwood Ave.; 541-548-6325. KNOW DIGITALDOWNLOADS: Reservations recommended; free; 10:30 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary .Org. CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. LEADER LUNCH:Reservations required; cost of your lunch and tip; noon; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W. Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541-382-3221 or www.bend chamber.org. KNOW INTERNETFOR BEGINNERS:Reservations recommended; free; 1-2:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. DIGITALDOWNLOADS: Reservations recommended; free; 2 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. FREE TAXFRIDAY:Freetax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax .com;free;2-4 p.m.;Zoom Tax,963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite100, Bend; 541-385-9666. KNOW CRAIGSLIST:Reservations recommended;free;3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.

Deschutes County Metlife Home Loans, a division of Metlife Bank N.A., to Steve G. Barlow andDeborah A. Meier,Copper Canyon, Phase1, Lot 6, $195,000 DeannaS.Wise to George E. and Carol M. Dodd, trustees for Dodd Family Living Trust, Mountain Pines P U.D., Phase1, Lot 95, $227,000

WEDNESDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541749-0789. BUSINESSSUCCESS PROGRAM: This presentation will cover the top 10 common mistakes made by employers, from hiring through termination, and howto comply with the law and hopefully avoid liability; reservations recommended; free; 7:30 a.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-3221 or www.bend chamber.org/events. KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: Reservations recommended; free; 9:30 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. THRIVE LIVE:Bring out the best; cutting-edge performance reviews and how to leverage team talent; $35 includes lunch; 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W. Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541388-8526 or http://moementum .com/webinars.php. UNDERSTANDINGAND MANAGING CREDIT: 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; call 541-318-7506, ext. 309 to reserve a seat. NEWBERRYEGSPUBLIC OUTREACH MEETING: AltaRock Energy is nearing completion of hydroshearing at the Newberry Geothermal demonstration project to create geothermal reservoirs at the site; this meeting will have a presentation on this phase of the project as well as an open forum to discuss questions and concerns; free; 6-8 p.m.; La Pine Senior Activity Center, 16450 Victory W ay; 855-872-4347 orinfo@ altarockenergy.com.

THURSDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-610-9125. EFFECTIVE WINTERIZATION: Oregon CAI invites association managers to attend breakfast and a presentation on effective winterization; registration required; $10 for CAI-CORCmembers and $15 for nonmembers; 7:30-9 a.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.caioregon.org. OUTCOMES ANDOUTLOOKS, FROM THEELECTION TO THE ECONOMY:A post-election look at global and local economies and capital markets; $45 per individual memberand $55 fornonmembers; 7:30-9:30 a.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541382-3221 or www.bendchamber .org. EXPLORETHE BENEFITS OF WORKINGWITH SCHWAB:Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 2-3:30p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.

SATURDAY OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.

MONDAY KNOW DIGITALDOWNLOADS: Reservations recommended; free; 10:30a.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. FORECLOSURE PREVENTION CLASS:Learn about Neighborlmpact's Housing Center tools and services that can assist individuals struggling to pay their mortgages; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-318-7506, ext. 309, karenb@neighborimpact.org or www.homeownershipcenter.org.

TUESDAY Nov. 20 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 54 I-420-7377. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 3-4:30p.m.;Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschutes library.org. BUSINESS AFTER HOURS:4:305:30 p.m.; DynaCore Fitness, 444 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-7060760. CROOKEDRIVER RANCHTERREBONNECHAMBEROF COMMERCE NETWORKING SOCIAL:Hosted by Judy LaPora, owner of Artistic Letter Photography; you do not have to be a chamber member to attend; free; 5:30 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Administration Building, 5195 S.W. Clubhouse Drive; 541-548-8939. SMALL-BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free one-on-one small-business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentraloregon.org.

WEDNESDAY Nov. 21 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 9:30-11 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.

Oil

NEWS OF RECORD

Kenneth C. Kalbfleisch, trustee for Kenneth C. Kaldfleisch Revocadle Trust, to E.G. Paul and KimC. MaxxoHni,Rivers Edge Village, Phase 5, Lot 31, $425,000 Ross T. andDeannaL. Chambers to AnnT. and William A. Lincoln, trustees for Lincoln Revocable Trust, Hollow Pine Estates, Phase 2, Lot 37, $256,500 Jason E. Gerard andDanieHe A. MacBain to Lisa Parsons, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 7 and11, Lot300, $434,900 Joshua WestfaH to Terry N. and Jeanne H. Trent,McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot4, $166,000 Federal National Mortgage Association to Dale W. and Cathy J. Harper,Sterling Pointe, Phase1, Lot 29, $175,000 Kris B. and Kip L.Virgin to Jack H. and Melissa B. Paul,Tillicum Village, Lot 5, Block 5, $230,000 Yelas Developments lnc. to Daniel G. DugganandClaudia Coke,Summershade, Lot 3, $275,000 Lance K. AndersonandTiffany J. Paulin to John E.andSharal R. Cross, trustee for Cross Revocable Trust,Township 16, Range 12, Section 12, $397,000 Pahlisch Homeslnc. to Andrew N. Moore andGwen M. Bee, Renaissance at Shevlin Park, Lot 39, $416,000 Alan and Deborah L. Laurie to Michael Lavasani,Partition Plat 1998-17, Parcel 2, $580,000 William D. andConstance E. Chapman to Radu C.andloana S. Moisa,Mountain Village East 5, Lot17, Block 34, $230,000 Rodert S. Miller Jr. to Jeffrey A. and Christine E. Silna,Deer Park 4, Lots18-20, Block 24, $1,100,000 Beatrice M. O'Neal, trustee for Beatrice M. O'Neal Revocable Living Trust, to Roy W.Geiger, Township 18, Range 12, Section 12, $160,000 Cynthia R. Brus toJeanne Giersdorf,Yardley Estates, Phase 4, Lot 79, $272,500 Northwest Trustee Services lnc. to INGBank FSB,Mt. Vista First Addition, Lot 7, Block1, $311,328 Jeanne S. Innis, personal representative for the Estate of Charles Wacker, to Ronald E. Goodrich andGeraldine L. Swan,Williamson Park, Lot10, Block 2, $175,000 Stewart and Verle Weitzman, trustee for Weitzman Living Trust, to Thomas B.and Elizadeth S. Gewecke,East Meadow Homesite Section, First Addition, Lot 54 and 55, $1,300,000 Gregory J. Schwab toDarryl R. and Sue A.Olson, Second Addition to Snocap Vista Estates, Lot1, Block 7, $275,000 Robert A. and Diane K. Seay to John M. andJanine M. Stassen,Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 22, Lot11, Block 20, $157,500 Northwest Trustee Services lnc. to CombinedResources LLC,Park Addition to Bend, Lot 4, Block16, $167,000 Maryanne Freedmanand Dennis J. Magill to Donald W. and Judith F. Fisher,Awbrey Glen Homesites, Phase 6, Lot 131, $726,500 BMB Equity LLC to Peter Alexander,trustee forthe Peter Alexander Separate Property Trust,Township15, Range13, Section 20, $855,000 C Corporation to Richard A. and Donna R.Canright, Ridge at Eagle Crest 27, Lot 66, $372,686 Edwin L. DunnandMary E. Martin to Kenneth Lynn, Woodriver Village, Lot 4, Block 18, $190,000 Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation to Wells Fargo Bank N.A. successor bymerger to Wachovia Mortgage FSB fka WorldSavings Bank,Deschutes River Woods, Lot 24, $174,374 Arthur G. SpahrJr. and Karen M. Kjemhus-Spahr to AmyL Volz,River Park Condominiums, Unit 3, $222,000 David B. andCheryl Pease to

Richard E. andCarol C. Ipsen, trustees for lpsen Family Trust, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 15, Lot 681, $495,000 Bank of America N.A. to Christopher M. and Rebecca J. Sheldon,Otter Run, Lots16 and 17, $390,000 Edwin and LuanneShackelford to ZopeDevelopment LLC, Ballpark View, Lot 6, $159,000 Dayna K. Ralston, who acquired title as Dayna K. Ward, andJake T. Ralston to John H.Rowan, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 2, Lot164, $649,000 Heritage N.W. Properties LLCto Edward F. Davis,Deschutes River Woods, Lot 33, $275,496 Kelly L. and Amber L.Shults to Tomas andNickila L. Robertsson,Parks at Broken Top, Lot 26, $425,000 KennethW. and Mar thaS. Johnson to Patrick J. and Alyson P. Richards,Mountain Village East 5, Lot12, Block 38, $343,500 HaydenHomes LLC toJeffreyS. and Annette C. White,Aspen Rim No. 2, Lot187, $188,702 Shari L and Ed P.Huffmaster to Brian andAnneliese Cabaud, trustees for Flying Peacock Family Trust,Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit 2, Lot 27, Block 21, $500,000 Charles M. Van Vleet to Peter C. and Elizadeth T. Gilmore,Stage Stop Meadows, Fourth Addition, Lot 4, $223,500 M ichael R.and Laura G.Dodson to Carolyn A. Thompson, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 5, Lot 426, $226,750 Gary S. andConnie M. Kelley to M. Louis PengueJr., trustee for M. Louis PengueJr. Revocable Trust, and Dianne L. Pengue, trustee for Dianne L. Pengue Revocable Trust,Highlands at Broken Top, Phase 2, Lot 35, $1,300,000 Michael and Lisa Soldati to Ronald J. and Leslie E. Keller, Eaglewood at Sunriver, Lot 22, $210,000 Rex A. HoHoway to Gilda L. Bonar, trustees for Survivors Trust created under the Bonar

Living Trust,Stonehaven, Phase 1, Lot 25, $249,900 Salvesen HomesLLCto RexA. HoHoway,NorthWest Crossing, Phase 16, Lot 733, $374,900 OrviHe L. andDeborah A. Wray to Travis B. Barlow,Partition Plat 2002-61, Parcel 1, $280,000 Thomas S. andAmyM. Blanchard to Joshua J. andEmily K. Brungardt,RiverRim P U.D., Phase 8, Lot 225, $348,000 Patricia D. Rudideaux to JohnD. and Meredith K. Kellogg,Timber Ridge, Lot14, Block3, $243,000 Jesse N. andErinL Felder to Susan Felder,NorthWest Crossing, Phase1, Lot54, $434,725 Philip G. andJulie A. Peterson to Edward R. andMarilee J. Carson,East Bluff, Lot 5, Block1, $250,000 Carol W. Trump, trustee for Trump Revocable Living Trust, to William A. and Marcia K. Roig, Equestria n Meadows, Phase2,Lot 19, Block 2, $480,000 Louise M. Slye to Julia Wessels, Starwood, Lot31, Block 6, $202,000 DKS LLC to Joshua and Kristie WestfaH, Lava Ridges,Phase4, Lot 96, $245,000 Gorilla Capital Co. 5 LLC to John D. Huddleston,Forest View, Lot 16, Block 5, $199,900 Allison V. Vogt to Brandon Moore,Tamarack Park East, Phase 3, Lot 56, Block1, $155,000 David M. Hite and Nikki S. Lamb to Jason W. andChristy L. P. Dimmig,Shevlin Commons P.U.D., Phases 4 and 5, Lot 54,$345,500 Robert and Louise Markland to CoHin andJennifer Robinson, Morningstar, First Addition, Lot 3, Block 3, $245,000 Frederick W. andMary C. C. SeHeck, trustees for Frederick William SeHeckand MaryColleen Cheever SeHeckTrust, to Thomas J.andSharonLYork,Ridgeat Eagle Crest 24, Lot 30, $280,000 Deschutes Properties LLC to State of OregonDepartment of Transportation,Township 18, Range 12, Sections 17 and 18, $1,061,000

Continued from E1 The strong statements and specific predictions by the en-

ergy agency lend new weight to trends that have become increasingly apparent in the past

year. "This striking conclusion confirms a lot of recent projections," said Michael Levi, seniorfellow for energy and environment at the Council on Foreign Relations. Formed in 1974 after the oil

crisis by a group of oil-importing nations, including the United States, the International

Energy Agency monitors and analyzes global energy trends to insure safe and sustainable

supply. Levi said that the IEA report was generally "good news" for the United States because it highlights the nation's new sources of energy. But he cautioned that being self-sufficient did not mean that the country would be insulated from see-

sawing energy prices, since those oil prices are set by global markets. "You may be somewhat less vulnerable to price shocks and the U.S. may be slightly more protected, but it doesn't give you the energy independence some people claim," he said. Also, he noted, the agency's projection of U .S. self-sufficiency assumed that the country would push ahead with improving gas mileage in cars and energy efficiency in homes

and appliances. "It's supply and demand together that adds up to this striking conclusion," Levi said. Birol said the agency's prediction of increasing U.S. selfsufficiency was 55 percenta reflection of more oil production and 45 percent a reflection

of improving energy efficiency in the United States, primarily from the Obama administration's new fuel economy standards for cars. He added that even stronger policies to promote energy effi ciency were needed in the U.S. and many other countries.

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Garden, F5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

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Scott and Gitta Ramsay's midcentury vintage tablefeatures French multicolor crystalline stemware, Franciscan "Autumn Leaf" pattern dishes, vintage pictures in antique flower frogs, an Art Deco sterling silver candelabra, Russel Wright dishware and a linen tablecloth, among other items from Casarama. Full list and prices on Page F4.

• Ideas for craftsman/bungalow, midcentury vintage andmodern/contemporary, :Mo«»»le

F4 -.

MODERN By Alison Highberger For The Bulletin

hanksgiving is all about food, family, friends and for some of us, football, but a beautiful dining table is a hallmark of the day, too. A special meal deserves a special setting. Some families have a tradition of always decorating the same way, with favorite table linens, dishes and candlesticks. Others like to switch things up each year, trying different plates,

color combinations and decorations. ferent, but all three have design eleFor inspiration for your table this ments and products that transcend a year, we asked three of Central Ore- specific time or look, so they appeal gon'shome decorating experts to set to a wide variety of tastes. a Thanksgiving table according to Our store owners and decor extheir favorite styles. perts shared their thoughts about Bend Bungalow's Karen Letour- how grandmother's dishes and famneau opted for a Craftsman/bunga- ily heirlooms can fit right in with low style, Scott and Gitta Ramsay of each of the featured tables. Casarama decorated in midcentury In thisseason of thanks, we're vintage, and furnish's Noelle Teu- grateful for our experts' decorating ber created a modern/contemporary ideas that can help us to create a Turlook. All three created gorgeous ta- key Day table that's as memorable bles worthy of the fall feast. as the meal. The styles are distinctive and difSee Tables /F4

FOOD

CRAFTSMAN

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Joe Kline /The Bulletin

GARDEN

Ideas for before the Take some time Thanksgiving feast to rethink your garden By Alison Highberger For The Bulletin

If you're hosting and cook-

ing Thanksgiving dinner, one of the dilemmas is what to serve your guests before the

big meal. You don't want to spoil their appetites with a lot of appetizers, but if family and friends are having drinks an hour or two before dinner, they are likely to need something to nosh on. The oven is busy, so hot appetizersdon't make sense.

TODAY'S RECIPES

Cheese and crackers seem a little dull. Dips and chips aren't special. We've got a selection of easy and elegant Thanksgiving hors d'oeuvres, thanks to Steve and Cheri Helt, owners of Bend's Zydeco Kitchen 8 Cocktails Restaurant. They're the geniuses behind Zydeco's "small plates" concept, where patrons can make a meal from small portions of "starters," or choose a more traditional entree. See Appetizers /F2

By Liz Douville

design and come spring,

For The Bulletin

won't be as apt to make the emotional mistakes most of us made as new transplants. She has already given up on the thought of recreating her voluptuous hosta garden of the past. During the late 1990s the term "re-engineering" was popular. Corporations used it to make decisions on how to make improvements based on what they could do with what they already had. See Rethink /F5

I recently visited with an avid gardener newly moved to Bend from the Eugene area. She is feeling a little overwhelmed with the change of growing climate, the selection of plant material and the difference of soil structure. Much to her credit, she is taking the fall and winter months to think through the complete process ofgardening in Central Oregon. She will study and

• Zydeco's Hawaiian Garlic Shrimp,F2

• Zydeco's Dungeness CrabDeviled

• Spicy Maple Walnuts,F2

• Zydeco's Radish Dip,F2

Eggs,F2 • Crostini with Beef 8 Horseradish

• Easy Mushroom Stroganoff,F6

• Goat Cheese, Pesto & Sun-Dried Tomato Terrine,F2

Cream,F2

• Kale Tabbouleh,F6

AT P R O N G H O R N

Are you l o o k i n g f o r a n e x q u i s it e T h a n k sgiving m e al

w ithout any of th e wo rk ? O u r T h a n k sgiving br u n c h w i l l f eature lo cal t u r k ey and o t h e r f ar e as well as our c h e f ' s wonderful pumpkin cheesecake.

Seatings available by reservation between /DOOam and 3:OOPm

P RO N G H O R N A n A u b e rg e Res o rt

656oo Pronghorn Club Dr l 5 4 I - 6 9 3 - 5 3 00 l ww w.pronghornclub.com

R eservations Required. Please call54/- 6 9 3 - 5 3 0 0 .


F2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

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Next week: Easy gratins for Thanksgiving

The Hawaiian Garlic Shrimp recipe from Zydeco in downtown Bend makes for a good Thanksgiving appetizer for a couple of reasons: Shrimp provide protein andbig flavor, and they cook quickly on the stovetop.

Zydeco's Dungeness Crab Deviled Eggs Makes about 22-25 halves. 15 hard-boiled eggs (see Note

1 TBS chopped parsley '/4 tsp red Tabasco sauce ~/4 C kosher pickle relish (squeeze it dry in a paper towel) 2 TBS minced chives '/4 tsp kosher salt '/4 tsp black pepper ~/4 tsp honey

on eggs) ~/2 C mayonnaise '/t C Dungeness crabmeat for the filling ~/2 C Dungeness crab claw meat for the garnish on top 2 TBS French's yellow mustard (see Note on mustard)

Continued from F1 The Helts shared their restaurant recipes for Hawaiian Garlic Shrimp, Radish Dip and Dunge-

ness Crab Deviled Eggs (see recipes).

Gently squeeze the mixture into each of the egg whites.

The shrimp is a quick saute, withgarlic oilmade afewdays before,and allthree Zydeco recipes have make-ahead components that make them easy to assemble before company comes over. "You have a lot of cooking to do on Thanksgiving, you don't want to bog yourself down with tedious appetizers. You just have to have something that's delicious and quick to make," Cheri Helt said. Fine Cooking Senior Editor Denise Mickelsen also has great tips and recipes for appetizers that are easy but impressive. She talked to us about three recipes from F ine C ooking's comprehensive new paperback, "Thanksgiving Cookbook: Recipes for Turkey and All the Trimmings" (The T aunton Press, 2012): Spicy Maple Walnuts, Goat Cheese, Pesto & Sun-Dried Tomato Terrine, and Crostini with Beef and Horseradish Cream (see

Topeacheggwith Dungenesscrabclaw meat.

recipes).

Store in the refrigerator until you're ready to serve.

They sound fancy, but they're all surprisingly simple. "The spicy nuts are sweet and delicious, and come in and out of your oven days before, but stay nice and crispy. That's one of those make-ahead secret weapons," Mickelsen said. To save even more time, put the nuts in a holiday servingbowl after you've cooked and cooled them, and cover it with plastic. They'll be ready for guests when it's appetizer time on Nov. 22. "The goatcheese terrine looks elegant, but it's really rustic. Make it ahead, pop it out of the bowl (on Thanksgiving), and let it sit at least a half hour before serving. It's an elevated cheese plate idea," Mickelsen told us in a phone interview from her Fine Cooking office in Newtown, Conn.

Bring a pot of water to a boil.

Gently place eggs in the boiling water and cook for 11-13 minutes. Place in ice water to stop

cooking. Remove shells from the

eggs. Cut eggs lengthwise and gently remove the yolks. Place yolks in mixing bowl. Place egg white halves on a Submitted photo serving plate. With a whisk, chop up the egg yolks, and then add all the remaining ingredients except the crabmeat to the bowl. Stir with the whisk until just combined. Do not over mix! Fold int/~ cup crabmeat with a spatula until combined.

Andy Tnllie

The Bulletin

Place the mixture in a pastry bag with a large star tip (or a plastic bag, and snip off a corner).

Note on mustard:Wedon't use Dijon mustard because we don't want to overpower the crab flavor. Noteon eggs:15 eggswouldmake30 halves,butsome oftheeggs break, so this recipe yields about 22-25 halves. Even if the eggs break

while boiling, use all of the yolks.

Zydeco's Hawaiian Garlic Shrimp Makes about 45 shrimp.

Crostini with Beef & Horseradish Cream

1 C extra-virgin olive oil

~/4 C minced garlic Makes16 servings. A little sprig of feathery frisee (curly endive) is a fresh counterpoint to the

2 Ibs (about 45) best quality 2 T B S brandy large (size 21/25) head-on 2 T BS butter shrimp, unpeeled (see note)

topping. Watercress, another green with an agreeably bitter edge, would

substitute nicely. Thebeef can becooked a few hours ahead and refrigerated. Bring it to room temperature andslice just before serving. Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper ~/4 C creme fraiche or sour cream 2 to 3 tsp prepared horseradish 16 pale, inner pieces of frisee (curly endive), washed and dried

FOR THE CROSTINI(TOASTED BREAD SLICES): 16 baguette slices, between ~/4 and ~y2inch thick (from about A/2baguette) 2 cloves garlic, halved 2 to 3 TBS extra-virgin olive oil Kosher salt FOR THE TOPPING: '/2 Ib beef tenderloin (about a 1'y2-inch steak)

Note:For best flavor, make this garlic oil three days ahead.

Over medium heat, warm up /~cup of the olive oil and the garlic in a saute pan. Cook the garlic until golden brown, and then remove the pan from the heat and add the remainingt/2 cup olive oil to stop the garlic from cooking more. Store in the refrigerator.

Right before serving: In alarge saute pan,warm up /3cup of thegarlic oil. (Stir up the garlic oil before warming it, to make sure there are garlic pieces in the dish.) Once the oil is warm, add the shrimp and saute until they're about half done, just turning pink (about 2-3

minutes). Remove the pan from the stove, carefully add the brandy, and place the pan back on the burner. WARNING: You will ignite the brandy, so keep your body and face away from the pan. Light the pan with a stick lighter,

and once the flamehasgone out, add the 2 tablespoons of butter, and stir it until melted, about1 minute, then remove the pan from the heat. Don't overcook the shrimp!

Place the shrimp in aserving bowl and serve. Note on shrimp:The Helts think the best head-on shrimp comes from Hawaii.

Make the crostini: Position an oven rack 6

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inches from the broiler and turn the broiler to

Zydeco's Radish Dip

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high. Rub one side of

Makes about1t/~ cups.

each bread slice with the

garlic and set on a bak-

8 oz cream cheese, softened '/4 C butter, softened ~/4 tsp smoked or Hungarian paprika '/4 tsp kosher salt

ing sheet lined with foil. Brush the garlic side with the oil and season with salt. Broil until the bread is browned, 1 to 2 minutes. Flip and broil the

other side for another 1

~/4 tsp fresh ground black pepper 1 tsp L&P Worcestershire sauce

1~/4 C grated radishes (squeeze the grated radishes dry with paper towels) ~/4C minced chives Cucumber rounds, cut into '/4inch thick slices

Add everything except the radishes andchives to a food processor. Blend until well combined andsmooth. Remove from food processor and place in amixing bowl.

minute. Make the topping:

Photo courtesy Scott Phillips

Heat a small, heavy skillet over high heat for 1 minute. Season the beef with '/4 teaspoon salt and some pepper. Turn the exhaust fan to high and sear the beef, flip-

With a spatula, fold in the grated radishes and minced chives.

Store in the refrigerator until cool, and then placethe mixture in a pastry bag with a star tip (or a plastic bag, with a corner snipped off). Place cucumberslice rounds on aserving tray, and put asmall amount of radish dip onevery slice andserve.

ping after 3 minutes, and then cook, flipping every couple of minutes until it's done to your liking, about 10 minutes total for medium rare. Transfer to a cutting board, let rest for 5 minutes, and then slice the beef thinly.

Mix the cremefraiche (or sour cream) and horseradish in asmall bowl; season with '/4 teaspoon salt and a few grinds of pepper.

Goat Cheese, Pesto Sc Sun-Dried Tomato Terrine Makes1t/2cups. This savory layered spread is a pretty addition to the holiday buffet. Making it one day ahead allows the flavors

To assemble, top the crostini with a slice of beef, a dollop of the horse- to marry and the cook to breathe easier onThanksgiving Day. radish cream, and asmall piece of frisee and serve. — From"FineCooking's Thanksgiving Cookbook Recipes forTurkeyandallthe Trimmings," TheTaunton Press, 2072

Ar.tistr.y in D~esign' '

Appetizers

10 oz goat cheese '/4 to '/2 C heavy cream ~/4 C pine nuts, toasted in a dry skillet over medium-low heat, stirring a few times, until golden, then coarsely chopped

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper 3 TBS basil pesto (homemade or store-bought) 5 oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes, drained and finely chopped

Extra-virgin olive oil for drizzling Pita chips or crackers for serving

Line the inside of a 2-cup sharply sloping bowl (about 4 inches across the top) with plastic wrap; let the ends extend over the sides a few inches. In a medium bowl, mash together the goat cheese and '/4 cup of the

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cream with a fork, then seasonwith '/4 tsp. salt and afew grinds of pepper; add morecream if the cheese hasn't softened enough. Spoon about one-third of the cheese into the lined bowl and pack it into an even layer. Spread the pesto almost completely to the sides over the layer of cheese. Top with another third of the cheese, the sunwith the remaining cheese. Packdown, fold the dried tomatoes, and all butt/~ tablespoon of the pine nuts. Top plastic over, and refrigerate for at least 30 minutes. Half an hour before serving, take the bowl out of the refrigerator. Pull on the edges of the plastic to loosen the

terrine from thebowl. Invert the terrine onto a plate, drizzle with a little olive oil, and let sit for half an hour to warm up. Sprinkle with the remaining pine nuts, season liberally with pepper, and serve with the pita chips or crackers. — From "FineCooking's Thanksgiving Cookbook: Recipes for Turkeyandall the Trimmings," The TauntonPress, 2072

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Go easyon apps Mickelsen and Helt both warn that it's a mistake to go overboard with hors d'oeuvres before a big meal. They give us permission to offer only one or two items. "If you had one thing out before the meal, that's fine. Plan for two piecesfor each person, and it's OK if you run out of hors d'oeuvres;there's a whole meal coming," Mickelsen said. Another reason to go easy on the appetizers is because the fridge will be full after the feast. "There are going to be a lot of leftovers from the Thanksgiving meal, so you probably want all of the appetizersto be consumed," Helt said.

Big flavors, small bites Great appetizers for a big meal should be small, but bold, according to our cooking experts. "I always go with the theory of taste versus quantity. I want to have something that tastes really good, as opposed to something that's filling. An appetizer should be a punch of flavor before you sit down to eat. It gets your taste buds going," Cheri Helt said. Zydeco's Radish Dip fits that bill. It's light and spicy, served on thin cucumber slices. "We had the Radish Dip at 28 (the Helts' first restaurant in Bend, now closed), and it had a cult following! It's very, very good," Helt said. Because turkey has a m i ld flavor, the other dishes served on Thanksgiving can be bolder — even the appetizers. "The beautiful thing about turkey is that it's a blank canvas. It opens itself up to all the side dishes, and when you start with bigger lavors for appetizers,itgets your f appetite going," Mickelsen said.

Think protein

P eel-your-own shrimp, l i k e Zydeco's Hawaiian Garlic recipe, These nuts continue to toast a bit from the intense heat of the glaze, so don't overbake them. Leave the ginger slices and thin slices of beef on toasted in the nut mixture for adelicious surprise. Pecansand hazelnuts arealso great inthis way.Youcan store the cooled bread with a savory sauce like nuts at room temperature in airtight containers for up to two days or in the freezer in zip-top bags for two weeks. Fine Cooking's Crostini of Beef with Horseradish Cream are pro'/4 tsp Tabasco sauce, or to '/4 C ('/2 stick) unsalted butter 1 TBS water tein appetizers that will quell hun1/3 C pure maple syrup 1 tsp ground ginger taste ger pangs, but perk up the palate. "I always have a little bit of 6 quarter-size slices fresh 1 tsp kosher salt 1 Ib (4 C) walnut halves ginger, halved protein with m y T h a nksgiving hors d'oeuvres, even though In a conventional oven: Heat the oven to 300 degrees. Combine all the ingredients except the nuts in a small we're having turkey. You don't saucepan and slowly simmer over low heat for 2 to 3 minutes. Put the nuts in a large bowl, pour over the want people to be ravenous," glaze, and stir and toss to coat them with the glaze. Line a rimmed baking sheet with foil and spread the nuts Mickelsen said. If you're in charge of Thanksin a single layer on it. Bake for 30 to 40 minutes, stirring at 10-minute intervals. When the nuts look light and almost dry as youtoss them, they're done. Don't touch them; the caramelized sugar is extremely hot. Slide the giving dinner, you've got a lot to foil onto a wire rack and let the nuts cool completely. think about and a lot to do, from In a microwave: Put the butter in the largest shallow dish that fits your microwave. Heat on high for1 minute planning and shopping to cook-

Makes 4 cups.

to melt the butter. Add the remaining ingredients except the nuts and heat for 3 minutes on high. Stir to com- ing and chopping. We hope you bine. Add the nuts, stirring and tossing to coat them with the glaze. Microwave on high for up to 9 minutes, can stress less about the opening stirring at 2-minute and then 1-minute intervals to redistribute the coating and prevent scorching. When all the act now, and enjoytime withyour liquid has caramelized, they're done. Don't touch them; the caramelized sugar is extremely hot. Carefully slide guests along with some delicious the nuts onto a foil-lined wire rack to cool. and easy appetizers. — From "Fine Cooking's Thanksgiving Cookbook: Recipes for Turkeyand all the Trimmings," The Taunton Press, 2072 — Reporter ahighberge~ mac.com.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • T HE BULLETIN F 3

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F4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

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Next week: In the kitchen with ... Bette Fraser

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Casarama's midcentury vintagetadle

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chairs:$200 each Russel Wright dishware: $4 to $120 per piece Franciscan "Autumn Leaf" dishware:$3 to $79 per piece Art Deco sterling silver

Rogers &Bros. "Flair" candelabra$250 French multicolor crystalline stemware:$8 per stem

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$59 Vintage flower frogs:$5 to $12each Vintage photographsfor place cards:25cents each All items are available at Casarama, 1814 N.E. Division St Bend, 541-312-2808, www

.casarama.com Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Noelle Teuber's modern tablefeatures Chilewich white linen napkins with napkin rings, Blomus tealight holders, a Brink wine glass holder spider and Chilewich "Silver Dahlia" place mats, among other items. See list at right for a full rundown and prices.

BendBungalow's craftsman tadle Table runner:6-foot, 100 percent cotton, $25 Velvet pumpkins: handcrafted in Oregon,

variety of sizes, $11and up Pine conebowl: handcrafted in Oregon, food safe, $28 Woodenserving tongs: handcrafted in Pennsylvania of sustainable cherry wood,

$38 Pinecone candlesticks: iron with a matte finish,

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two sizes, $21 each Pine conevase: handcrafted in Oregon, variety of colors, $95 Hand-carved pillar candles:$42 and up Tapers:hand-dipped,

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unscented variety of

colors and sizes, $3 each All items are available at Bend Bungalow, 937 N.W Wall St., Bend, 541-383-2992, www .bendbungalow.com L

furnish'smodernl contemporarytadle Joe Ktine /The Bulletin

Karen Letourneau's craftsman table features pine cone bowls, wooden serving tongs, velvet pumpkins, hand-carved pillar candles and a cotton table runner, among other items. See list at right for a full rundown and prices.

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By Karen Letourneau, Bend Bungalow. 937 N.W. Wall St., Bend, 5 4 1 -383-2992, ww w .bendbungalow.com "Warm colors, nature motifs and handcrafted"are adjectives Letourneau uses to describe the Craftsman or "bungalow style" of home decor that she specializes in at her store, Bend Bungalow. This decorative style started in the mid-19th century in England and has had a resurgence in popularity in the past several decades. (Bend's NorthWest Crossing is a Craftsman-style

neighborhood.) Letourneau told us that her Thanksgiving table is nbungalow with a twist," because she chose amore modern table runner to go with the natural materials and motifs of the dishware, candles and serving pieces. "There's nothing particularly 'bungalow' about the table runner, but the colors look good. Bungalow style is so natural that it tends to work with and complement whatever style you're using," Letourneau said. Many of the items onthis table arehandcraftedintheNorthwest and California, from the velvet pumplans and hand-carved candles to the pine cone vase. Letourneau said she thinks it's important to personalize a special table. "If you like bungalow style, and modern style, too, use a few items of each. Workinthingsthat speak to you. Bungalow style is so easy to work with, it's easy to blend in other items," she said.

Midcentury vintage By Scott and Gitta Ramsay, Casarama. 1814 N.E. Division St., Bend, 541-312-2808, www .casarama.com If you're a nMad Men" fan, y ou'll di g S cott a n d G i t t a Ramsay's midcentury vintage Thanksgiving table. He and his wife, Gitta, owners of Casarama for the past nine years, used two different midcentury dishware patterns and multiple colors to create an autumnal feel.

Chilewich "Boucle Coffee" rectangle place mats:$15 each Chilewich "Silver Dahlia"

place mats(ontopof rectangles):$10each Chilewich white linen

"We mixed up three different colors of Russel Wright dishware to give it a festive feeling, instead of one homogeneous color. That's our philosophy in the store and at home. I don't like to have one style of anything," Ramsay said. The Franciscan "Autumn Leaf" pattern dishes are right out of the 1950s, too. "Autumn Leaf has some colors, and it brings in the fall with the pattern. It's not grandma's oak leaf; it's this hip, urban oak leaf, and it softens up the sleekness of the Russel Wright dishes," Ramsay said. Casarama is an eclectic antique, furniture and home decor store, hence Ramsay's choice of a 1920s Art Deco-style candelabra for the table. "It's a low profile, cool amorphic shape. I like to keep things low on a holiday table so everything is interesting, but you can look over it all,n Ramsay said. Classic, t urn - of-the-century fl atware is an unexpected touch, but Ramsay said you could use grandma's silverware on a 1950s style table like this and it'll look great. "When you bring something that's not modern into the mix, it looks more modern. Some people are afraid to take chances, but I relish that. You can bring all periods into a setting like this," he said. Place cards made from vintage photos secured in antique flowerfrogs are a cooltouch. "You can buy ol d photographs for about 25 cents each, and write the guests' names on them. It's a great conversation starter," Ramsay said.

Modern/contemporary By Noelle Teuber, furnish 761NW. Arizona Blvd., Bend, 541-617-8911, www furnish

design.com What makes a Thanksgiving table "modern"? "The modern part for me is a look that's clean and not cluttered," said Noelle Teuber, owner of Bend's contemporary furnishings store, furnish, with her husband, Jed. Her modern/contemporary Thanksgiving table features layered Chilewich polyvinyl

napkins:$8.50 each Chilewich napkinrings: white basket weave with

stainless steel edge,$18set oftwo

Blomustealight holders: stainless steel and frosted

glass, $39.99 set of three Magnetic vases:$45.99 set of five vases with five metal plates

Brink wineglass holder spider:sits on top of bottle

and holds four glasses, $18.99 Blomus "Fresca" white porcelain salad bowl with

stamless steel servers. $43.99 All items are available at furnish, 761 N.W. Anzona Ave., Bend, 541617-8911, www.furnishdesign.com

place mats in brown and silver, with black and white in the color scheme, along with stainless steel touches. Magnetic vases that hold a single flower provide a pop of color. The vases stand on metal plates that can be hidden under a tablecloth or leaf, so the flowers look like they're floating. "The overall look is refreshing and calm, simple and elegant. The modern style lets your table shine. Adding a touch of color makes it feel warmer, and when food is on the table, the food is your showcase," Teuber said. She added that the black plates she chose might be a little sleeker than the average person would want for Thanksgiving. "Plain white china would look beautiful, or adding an element of antique or patterned dishes would look stunning," Teuber said. C ontemporary h om e d e cor can sometimes feel a little stark,so Teuber adds tiny fresh pumpkins on her Thanksgiving plates or table. "A touch of color makes it feel warmer. But with the clean lines of the modern style, your house shines with simple furniture, your food shines, and it's not so visually hectic with so many things," Teuber said. — Reporter: ahighberger @mac.com.


TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 • THE BULLETIN

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Floral designer Don Hayniecame up with a "Partridge in a Pear Tree" centerpiece.

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'Partridge in a Pear Tree' centerpiece By Kathy Van Mullekom Daily Press (Newport News, Va.)

The Bulletin file photo

Greenhouses and raised beds,as shown in Ralph Dow's Redmond garden, are ways to protect tender gardens from low temperatures. Now is the time to plan these types of protected cultivation devices.

Rethink

you're outta here," not so easy to say to our kids. So we live Continued from F1 with what we have, maybe for Maybe it is time to do some too long. re-engineering of our existAs we look back over the ing landscape and, like the s ummer p erformance a n d gardener from Eugene, spend what wasn't satisfying, we s ome t im e s t u dying a n d need to look at what can be planning. c hanged. The full su n b ed I t t a kes t i m e t o th i n k has now become a partial sun through what the problems area, so we need to rethink might be, and it takes even lon- the planting for next year. The ger to admit to the corrections nice tidy hedges that defined that mayhave to be made. an area have grown into each Like children, landscapes other and become a tangled grow up. They start out look- mass of half-dead branches. ing like the cute little toddler; At some point we need to reall fresh, full of life but need- alize we no longer need the ing a n e x o rbitant a m ount sandbox and the tired looking of care and training. As the jungle-gym. If grandchildren years pass, the preteen years come for a visit, we can take set in — a little on the gangly them to one of our many chilside, but filling out nicely with dren's play parks. Re-engineering has menjust enough cuteness left to bring back memories of how tally begun. At this time of and why certain plants were year, we study and plan. No planted. Good memories that pruners or saws required. In bring a smile. fact you could do severe damBefore you know it, the gar- age to deciduous trees. The den/landscape has r eached only equipment you need is the high school status; sweet a method of recording your and accommodating one thoughts, be it paper or elecw eek, obnoxious an d u n - tronic — write it down. kempt looking the next week. Re-engineering our l a ndThere are days we say to our scape means more than tidyplants, "enough is enough, ing up and changing a few

plants. We need to address changing lifestyles and impending health issues. We all know how quickly life can present issues that r equire changes and maybe this is the year to put some thought into the what ifs. What can be done to make the outdoor living space continually more comfortableand accessible? Should a deck have a ramp, maybe in addition to the steps? Maybe it is time to add extra lumber or cinder blocks to increase the height of a raised bed and ease an aching back. Do you need to rework a walkway and create asmoother, wider surface to accommodate a wheelchair or a walker or a child with a push toy or a tricycle? All homes have problem areas. Most often it is the north side that gets neglected, Think about a collection of glazed pots, different sizes but the same color filled with shadeloving plants. Or reverse the idea with d i f ferent colored pots but using the same color shade plant in each pot. The same general idea can be used as a focal point on a deck or patio using appropri-

ate light requirement plants. Gardens, as well, need focal points. A focal point draws the eye to a special feature or planting and helps give the rest ofthe garden a more orderly look. A focal point can be as simple as a gazing ball, a birdbath or a trellis crafted from the branches you have trimmed in the spring. Tall plants grouped in a mass and surrounded by shorter plants can create a focal point in a garden bed, as can a contrast in color or plant type. I have a very large boulder that acted as my focal point and looked magnificent until t his year, when the one offset clump of ornamental grass spread to the point of obliterating the boulder. So that will be one item for the spring to-do list. A new f r esh look w o n't happen all at once, but having a well-thought-out plan will help keep us on track. I think the biggest problem with all of us is taking out the materials that have served their usefulness. We have such a desire to always try and rejuvenate the sickest twig. — Reporter: douville@ bendbroadband/com.

TO-DO LIST

Fa c oresto et ourea or winter By Mary Beth Breckenridge A jtron Beacon Journal

Ready to hunker down for winter'? Not so fast. Now's the time to tackle a few chores that will help your house and yard ride out the cold season ahead. Here are a few to check off your to-do list.

Inspect the chimney

NEWPORT N EW S , Va. — Don Haynie can take a lot of little nothings and turn them into a big something. Give the floral designer s ticks from the y ard o r woods, a small clay pot and faux pears and within minutes he whisks the pieces into a centerpiece he calls "Partridge in a Pear Tree." "Anykind of twigs work,"

says Haynie. "Lilac is a h ard w ood that's good. V itex, a l so called chaste tree, is nice. Old wood from a fig works, too. Just go out and prune in the garden and you'll come up with w hat y ou need." Haynie, who had a floral business in Warsaw, Va., and formerly ran the Buffalo Springs Herb Farm in the Shenandoah Valley, moved to W i l l iamsburg,

'Partridge in a Pear Tree' 4 wood sticks, 14 inches, 8'/2 inches, 7 inches and5~h inches long 6 faux pears 2M inch claypot,sponged with any color acrylic craft paint to give it vintage look 1 sm faux partridge Wood glue Clear-drying glue, or glue gun Plaster of Paris, or some similar material to fill and secure clay pot Decorative sm gravel, or moss 1 stem faux leaves, or fresh bay leaves 1 sm faux garland, optional

Using a small handsaw, notch the 14-inch-iong stick and the three other shorter sticks so they

fit snug and form a "mast," much like you see on a sailing vessel. Glue the sticks in place. Fill the clay pot with Plaster of Paris, or whatever material you choose that will help the pot stand

Va., a few years ago.

upright when the topiary is com-

He now shares histime and talents with Colonial Williamsburg, e specially duringthe holidays, helping decorate colonial taverns with botanical creations. He recently created a "Partridge in a Pear Tree" topiary for Williamsburg's annual Holiday Symposium. It can be made in any size — larger for the center of a table or for the ends of a sideboard, with smaller ones as accents. You can also change the look, using faux apples or ornaments, and colors to coordinate with your decor. For instance, a red bird would look good with r osy-colored apples. Bells and red bows can even be used to embellish the topiary. Miniature p in e c o n es could be used for Thanksgiving, t h e n swi t c hed

pleted. Immediately insert the "mast" into the pot while the piaster is soft, before it hardens. Using clear string, like fishing

line, attach a faux pear to eachend of the three horizontal sticks.

Using clear glue, or a glue gun, attach a faux leaf on either side of each pear. You may need to use scissors to trim down leaves or fashion smaller leaves from larger leaves to suit the scale of your to-

piary. Glue faux partridge to top of tree.

Loosely wind faux garland around vertical stick. Embellish top of pot with smail

decorative gravel. o ut f o r so m ething m o r e Christmas-like. "It's a good project for kids to do, and is fun to make," he

says.

Some people are motivated

by saving money. Some are

motivated by saving lives. Either one should be an incentive to get your chimney inspected. ts riÃ~M"- 'Chimney inspections help u prevent both hazards and expensive repairs by spotting problems early, said Melissa Heeke, a spokesperson for the Clean the gutters Chimney Safety Institute of Gutters and downspouts diAmerica. The inspector looks rect rainwater away from your for creosote buildup,cracks house. That keeps water from and obstructions such as birds' pooling around the foundation Thinkstock nests anddebris — problems and leaking into the basement, Cleaning your gutters can prevent problems down the road. that can contribute to chimney or freezing in the gutters at the fires or carbon monoxide. roof line and causing damagThe institute recommends ing ice dams. so you don't compact the clog. your lawn mower before you an annual inspection, Heeke But those gutters and downstore it for winter, but that's said. It also recommends havClean up the garden s pouts can't do their job i f not enough, said Mark Stiles, ing thechimney cleaned when they're clogged with l eaves Even though plant growth owner of Bath Tractor. creosote builds up to thickness and other debris. winds down this time of year, Gasoline o f ten c o n tains of one-eighth inch. After the trees have finished diseases don'tnecessarily go ethanol, which pulls moisture The inspection g uideline shedding their leaves, get up away. Many pests and patho- from the air. If you leave the goes for all exhaust flues, inon a ladder and clean that stuff gens spend the winter on dis- gas in the tank for an extended cluding flues for furnaces, gas out. Plug the top of the down- eased plant parts, lying in wait time, that moisture can cause water heaters and other despout with a rag first to keep forthe chance to launch a new metal to corrode, he said. In vices that involve combustion, debris from going down the attack in spring. addition, the ethanol and wa- Heeke said. A flue inspection That's why plant experts ter can settle to the bottom of spout, and wear heavy gloves may or may not be part of a to protect your hands. p reach th e i m p ortance of the tank over time, causing en- furnace inspection, so be sure Reader's D i gest A s soci- cleaning up d i seased plant gine problems and damage. to ask. ation's "1001 Do-It-Yourself material. Prune out affected Gasoline shouldn't be left Most people need a basic Hints 8 T i ps" r ecommends stems,remove diseased leaves in a lawn mower or other gas- chimney i nspection, w hich removing the debris with a and pick up any plant debris powered equipment for more involves a visual examination plastic sand shovel or garden that's lying around. Diseased than two months, Stiles said. and check of accessible parts trowel, or you can fashion a annuals should be removed Before you store that equip- of the fireplace and chimney. scoop from a plastic milk jug. completely. ment, run the engine until it's The inspector will also look Dump the debris into a buckThe affected plant material out of gas, he advised. for obstructions and identify It's a good idea to clean your the type and extent of comet instead of pushing it over can be composted, but only if the lip of the gutter to avoid the pile gets hot enough to kill mower, sharpen the b l ade, bustible deposits on the inside dirtying the siding, the book pathogens. Most home com- change the oil, lubricate the of the chimney. suggests. post piles don't get sufficiently engine and clean or replace Choose an inspector who's When the gutter is clean, hot, but municipal composting the air filter, too, mower maker certified by the CSIA, Heeke Lawn-Boy recommends. run some water into it from a facilities do. said. You can find one near garden hose. Clear a clogged Store the mower in a cool, you on its website, www.csia. downspout with a plumber's Store your mower dry place, Lawn-Boy says. If org. She noted that only the insnake or a blast from the hose, You may be in th e habit you coverit,use cloth,because dividuals listed on the site are working from the bottom up of adding fuel stabilizer to plastic can trap moisture. certified, not their companies.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012

eat an wenessti s or ovem er Easy mushroom

stroganoff, and lighter than usual

allergens and i r r itants that would normally be blocked out can dig deeper into the epidermis," says Peter Schalock, assistant professor of dermatology at H a r vard M edical rom fitness and diet to School. This means that anyyour m akeup r o utine, thing from the chromium in three tips for a feel-good green eye shadow to the carmonth. mine in your favorite lollipopr red lipstick may cause rashes, Rally feet redness and other reactions. K neading your f eet w i t h Sticking to gentle cosmetics a tennis ball can help allevifree of known irritants can ate stiffness in the lower legs help prevent problems. and prevent plantar fasciitis, Eyes: Look f o r m i n erala common cause of foot pain, based eye shadow pigments, 15 x says Frank L i pman, M .D., a nd avoid green and b l ue founder and director of Eleven Tony Cenicola/New YorkTimes News Serwce dyes, which may be made with Eleven Wellness Center i n Consider adding vitaminsto your daily routine. metals that can trigger an alNew York City. With the ball lergic reaction. Beeswax-free on the ground in front of you, mascara is best, since natural place one foot on top, and genThe cardiologist: Lynne Per- have more nutrients, I sprinkle beeswax can contain propolis, tly roll it from toe to heel. Re- ry-Bottinger, assistant profes- a teaspoon on my cereal." a derivative of tree pollen. peat with the other foot. sor of clinical medicine at CoThe orthopedic surgeon: RaFace: Opt for powder forlumbia and Cornell Universi- chel Rohde, spokeswoman for mulations that rely on neutralLook into a doctor's pillbox ties: "Multivitamins are great the American Academy of Or- hued, mineral-based pigments There has long been debate because they offer something thopaedic Surgeons: "It's vita- such as zinc, titanium and about whether supplements for everyone. For me, as a pre- min D3 for me every day. Our iron oxides in lieu of bright are necessary. Some experts menopausal woman, t h at's bodies need it to absorb calci- synthetic dyes o r c r e amy say they're not if you eat a bal- iron, which improves my enum, so it helps keep our bones concoctions. anced diet. But interestingly ergy levels. A multi is easier strong and protects us from Lips: Reach for beeswaxenough, a survey of 900 health for your body to absorb when fractures. Everyone should be free glosses with nourishing care professionals (funded by taken with food, so I pop mine taking some D, but check with ingredientssuch as shea buta dietary-supplement trade right after breakfast." your doctor to determine the ter, coconut oil or jojoba oil. The dermatologist: Macrene right dose for you." And since UV exposure can group), found that 57 percent of cardiologists, 73 percent of Alexiades-Armenakas, a deraggravate sensitive lips, use a Keep calm and carry onsun-protective balm containdermatologists and 75 percent matologist in New York City: of orthopedic specialists take "I love flax for its omega-3 and with your makeup routine ing a physical blocker such as vitamins, such as vitamin C omega-6 fatty acids, which Ragweed pollen abounds zinc or titanium dioxide. and calcium. The f i n dings trigger skin-cell production. during th e w i nd y a u tumn — Questions of general interest were published in Nutrition It's also rich in antiaging anmonths, making allergy-prone can be emailed to mslletters® Journal. We asked three doc- tioxidants c a l le d l i g n ans. skin even more sensitive, esmarthastewart.com. For more tors which supplements they They're available as oil cap- pecially to makeup. "If skin is information on this column, visit take and why. sules, but since the whole seeds inflamed for any reason, the www.marthastewart.com. V;

. MARTHA STEWART

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By jnhe Rothman

bellas, chanterelle and oyster mushrooms that I picked up June Hubit f rom S anta at the farmers' market, but Rosa, Calif., was looking for just about any mushroom a recipe for the mushroom would be delicious in this stroganoff that was served dish. As the chef suggested, at a little restaurant called I served this lighter, meatless Henderson's Grandmother version of the classic dish in Corte Madre, Calif., in the over buttered egg noodles 1980s. She said it was along with a green salthe best she has ever ad, and had the perfect tasted and that she still comfort food meal for craves it, but nothing a crisp fall evening. she has tried has come Requests close. The Baltimore Sun

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Unfortunately, I did R ECIPE L orr a i ne B ro w n not have any success FlN PER fr o m B altimore i s locating the restaurant looking for a recipe or the precise recipe for making "spingi" Hubit was in search of. However, I did find what I thought was a wonderful recipe by the chef Marcus Samuelsson for an easy version of mushroom stroganoff. The chef said he developed this recipe last winter as a lighter alternative to traditional beef stroganoff. "To keep the stroganoff flavorful, but light, I used a dry red wine instead of cognac and replaced the sour cream with plain yogurt," he said. "The fresh rosemary, oregano and thyme do the bulk of the flavor work here. The result is a succulent and satisfying winter light meal." When I tried the recipe, I used a combination of baby

that a

S i cilian co-worker

gave her years ago and she has lost. The dessert included cooked rice and yeast t hat was deep f r ied a n d then rolled i n p o w dered sugar and honey. Anne Calhoun from Baltimore is looking for a recipe for making a cookie similar to the Apple Newton that Nabisco used to make and has since discontinued. — Looking for a hard-to-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun,501N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278,or email baltsunrecipefinder@gmail.com. Names mustaccompany recipes for them to be published.

Easy Mushroom Stroganoff Makes 4 servings.

L

3

2 TBS butter 2 TBS extra virgin olive oil ~h C Vidalia onion, diced 4 cloves garlic Salt and cracked black pepper, to taste 2 TBS fresh rosemary, oregano, and thyme, chopped

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8 oz baby bellas, cleaned and sliced ~/4 C plain yogurt 'h C beef stock '/4 C dry red wine such as pinot noir 2 tsp all-purpose flour

Add butter and olive oil to a large saucepan over medium-low heat Stir in onions and garlic and season with salt and pepper. Saute I

I

I

onions and garlic until the onions become fragrant and translucent, about 5-10 minutes. Add rosemary, oregano and thyme. Add in mushrooms and saute until the mushrooms are slightly

browned, stirring occasionally Add yogurt and beef stock to the pan, stirring until the yogurt is fully incorporated. Add in red wine. Let the sauce simmer for about 5

minutes, stirring occasionally. Be sure not to let the sauce come to a boil. If the sauce begins to boil, turn down the heat. Remove about 2 tablespoons of cooking liquid into a cup and stir in

flour until dissolved. Add more cooking liquid or stock if needed. Dis-

a

solving the flour before adding it to the heat ensures that you will have a lump-free sauce. Add flour mixture back to the pan and simmer until

sauceisthickened. Season again with salt and cracked black pepper, to taste.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com Andrew Scrivani /New York Times News Serwce

TheBulletin

When it comes to using raw kale,for instance in a salad, the key often is slicing it finely enough

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Five years ago, before kale saladsbecame stapleson practically every restaurant menu in New York, I knew kale as a wholesome vegetable that you only ate cooked. As soon it appeared in the raw, a star was born. Kale became the "it" vegetable, especially when it was served in a salad that glistened with creamy Caesar dressing. A great kale salad requires more finesse than just plopp ing any old variety of t h e green into a bowl and tossing it with vinaigrette. While this works well with tender, young kale, and with Tuscan (aka black or dinosaur) kale, which has particularly supple leaves, it can backfire with the more common curly variety. That is because curly green kale has leathery leaves that need tobe softened before you

can servethem raw. A gentle massage works — just rub the leaves with dressing until they relax. So does marinating the kale in dressing for at least 15 minutesbefore serving. But the easiest and quickest way to raw green kale satisfaction is just slicing it finely enough. The tougher, older and thicker the leaves, the smaller you need to cut them. So I knew what to do to with a wrinkly bunch of, let us say, mature kale: I chopped it right up. True, I could have easily cooked it, but I wanted salad. The pile of chopped, dark green bits reminded me of parsley, and a mountain of c hopped parsley made m e think of tabbouleh. Here's the thing about tabbouleh salad: Most of the ones I have had invert my preferred proportion ofbulgur to parsley. What you usually get is a bowl of tabbouleh studded with bits

of parsley. I like a salad that is mostly parsley, studded with grains of tabbouleh. I pictured a generous ratio of green to tan, but with kale standing in for parsley. It has a hint of parsley's pleasing bitterness, but is far milder, which means that this tabbouleh salad didn't have to be just a side dish, one best eaten in small portions. Instead, I could eat a whole bowl of it — a dream for a raw kale devotee. S o I m i xed m y h eap of chopped kale with shallots, radishes and soft bulgur. It melded together seamlessly. This salad also smacks of practicality. Like regular tabbouleh salad, kale tabbouleh can be made up to a day before and still retain its appealing character. How many other dressed green salads can you say that about'? And finally, it converted my husband, who thinks parsley

Makes 4 to 6 servings. Y C extra-virgin olive oil, more as needed 1 bunch kale, stems removed, leaves finely chopped (6 C) 2 ig ripe tomatoes, diced (about 2 C)

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% C torn mint leaves 'A C diced radish Black pepper, as needed

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Cook bulgur according to packageinstructions. Cool. In a small bowl, whisk together lemon juice, shallot, cumin andsalt. Whisk in olive oil. In a large bowl, toss together bulgur, kale, tomatoes, mint and radish. Toss in dressing. Season with black pepper and more salt if you like, and drizzle with additional oil if desired.

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Kale Tabbouleh % C fine bulgur 3 TBS lemon juice 1 shallot, finely chopped 2 tsp ground cumin 1'/4 tsp fine sea salt, more as needed

should be used as a garnish and nothing more, into a tabbouleh salad lover. Really, kale in the raw has so much to recommend it, it is a wonder anyone cooks the stuff at all.

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THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY NOVEMBER 13 2012 •

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Bulletin Classifieds gua r antee, You Can Bid On: 541-598-5488; Info at Beauty Items & Machinery Complete set of Buying Diamonds appear every day in the $850+, 541-316-0005. Holiday Bazaar www.craftcats.org. Ladies Cleveland print cr on line. /Goid for Cash & Craft Shows purebred female, Bloom (Berry), W anted Use d F a r m Boxer Pups, AKC / CKC, Labradoodies -Mini & Yorkie, Saxon's Fine Jewelers Bid NotN! Call 541-385-5809 black/tan, 8 mos, $500. Equipment & Machin14 piece set. 1st shots, very social www.BulletinBidnBuy.com 541-389-6655 www.bendbulletin.com med size, several colors 541-419-1318 Artisan, Crafters, ery. Looking to buy, or Pro Golf of Bend $700. 541-325-3376 541-504-2662 Antiques & More! consign of good used (Bidding ends BUYING 210 Saturday Market thru B unny, free t o g o o d www.alpen-ridge.com renng central oregon knre fgia Nov. 13, at 8pm) quality equipment. Lionel/American Flyer March 30, 9- 4. MaFurniture & Appliances Deschutes Valley home. 208-939-2921 Labradors: beautiful puptrains, accessories. sonic Building, be541-408-2191. Equipment (cell, Bend). pies, born 9/11, ready for Bid Now! Golf cart Club Car, full hind 7-11 at 8th 8 8 o 541-548-8385 www.BullettnBtdnBuy.com loving families. Shots A1 Washers&Dryers top,windshield, new batt, Greenwood, Weekly Chihuahua pups, very current, vet checked. 2 BUYING & SE L LING Buy New...Buy Local $150 ea. Full war$1175. 541-497-3858 $25 drawing gift cer- tiny, 1st shots/dewormed. black females, 2 yellow All gold jewelry, silver You Can Bid On: ranty. Free Del. Also tificate. 541-977-1737 2 @ $250. 541-977-4686 males, 5 black males, and gold coins, bars, Hay, Grain & Feed wanted, used W/D's One Cool Sculpting 246 rounds, wedding sets, $300. 541-610-2270 541-280-7355 Treatment Guns, Hunting class rings, sterling silCentral Oregon Blue Grass Hay ver, coin collect, vinLhasaApso/ShihTzu Pup & Fishing I P ets & Supplies Dermatology 3 x 4 bales, tage watches, dental Buy New...Buy Local Simply gorgeous! $275. Bid Now! (Bidding ends 1300-Ib avg, $80/bale. 503-888-0800 (Madras) gold. Bill Fl e ming, 1 2g Mossberg h o me You Can Bid On: www.BulletinBtdnBuy.com Nov. 13, at 8pm) 541-419-2713 541-382-9419. The Bulletin recom22' X 22' Stick Built defense sho t gun, mends extra caution $200. 541-647-8931 Garage ttisa Good horse hay, barn +ata 249 COWGIRL CASH CORGI PUPS! when purc h asHiLine Homes stored, no rain, $225 We buy Jewelry, Boots, a ing products or ser- AKC 3F $800. Champ & Art, Jewelry (Bidding ends ton, and $8.25 bale. Vintage Dresses & Obed lines, Dam traBid Now! vices from out of the Nov. 13, at 8pm) Delivery ava i lable & Furs www.BulletinsidnBuy.com More. 924 Brooks St. area. Sending cash, cable 33 gen., ready Nov 541-410-4495. 541-678-5162 checks, or credit in- 12. Vax/ Micro/Vet check S ktgkSS Buy New...Buy Local 541-604-4858 Maltese, 25 wks, shots/ aw www.getcowgirlcash.com Sisters Habitat ReStore Wanted: Irrigated farm f ormation may b e Bid NotN! Building Supply Resale wormer UTD, h o use You Can Bid On: subjected to fraud. www.BullettnBidnBuy.com ground, under pivot ir$2500 Gift Quality items. Greenwood Cemetery For more i nforma- Dachshund AKC mini brkn, crate trained, 4lb 9 rigation, i n C e n tral Certificate LOW PRICES! grave space (1), $650 oz. Purebred w/o papers OR. 541-419-2713 tion about an adver- www.bendweenies.com M. Jacobs Fine cash. 1-507-835-0909 150 N. Fir. $425. 541-508-4558 $475. 541-504-5509 tiser, you may call Furniture 541-549-1621 Wheat Straw: Certified 8 Buy New...Buy Local the O r egon State (Bidding ends Wanted- paying cash Open to the public. BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! Beddinq Straw & Garden You Can Bid On: Attorney General's Nov. 13, at 8pm) for Hi-fi audio & stucold weather is upon us and sadly there are Straw;Compost.546-6171 $200 Fishing Gear Office C o n sumer The dio equip. Mclntosh, still over 2,000 folks in our community without & Tackle Protection hotline at Buy New...Buy Local J BL, Marantz, D y Fuel & Wood • permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift Dining room set, dark Gift Certificate 1-877-877-9392. You Can Bid On: naco, Heathkit, Sanoak round table, clawcamps, getting by as best they can. Ken's Sporting Horses & Equipment I $500 Toward Hearts foot design, matching sui, Carver, NAD, etc. All Year Dependable The following items are badly needed to Goods on Fire Diamond chairs, with c u stomCall 541-261-1808 Serving Central Oregon t nre 1903 Firewood: Sp lit, Del. help them get through the winter: 2 Registered Paints, 13 (Bidding ends Jewelry made protection pad. All Bend. Lod g epole, yrs 8 9 yrs, $800 each. Nov. 13, at 8pm) @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ Saxon'sFine WHEN YOU SEE THIS excellent condition. $350 Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 541-639-1376 Jewelers Adult companion cats New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. obo. 541-322-9833 for $350. Cash, check OO FREE to seniors, dis- 8 WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. (Bidding ends Buy/Sell/Trade an fire~ or credit card O K. GENERATE SOME exabled 8 veterans! Tame, Nov. 13, at 8pm) arms. Bend local pays 541-420-3484. PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT citement i n you r altered, shots, ID chip, Farmers Column cash! 541-526-0617 THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER neighborhood! Plan a On a classified ad more. Will always take 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. Split Dry People Look for Information garage sale and don't go to back if c ircumstances CASH!! Wanted: Irrigated farm Lod~egole About Products and forget to advertise in www.bendbulletin.com change. 389-8420. Visit For Special pick up please call For Guns, Ammo & $20 / ord, ground, under pivot irServices Every Day through Sat/ Sun 1-5. Photos, Ken I 541-389-3296 classified! Reloading Supplies. to view additional Delivery included! rigation, i n C e n tral TheBulletin Classifieds info: www.craftcats.org. PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. 541-385-5809. 541-408-6900. 541-923-6987, Iv msg. OR. 541-419-2713 photos of the item.

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The Bulletin

More PixatBendbuletin,crjm


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

G2 TUESDAY NOVEMB ER 13 2012 •THE BULLETIN

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD No. 1009

Edited by Will Shortz ACROSS 34 of S h aron 64 Turn down 1 2 3 4 1 Shooter through 35 Overexcited 65 Metalworker's whitewater tool 13 14 37 Immediately, on rapids a memo 66 Horse-pulled 5 Cold war inits. cart 41 Converge 9 Neatnik's 20 42 Common opposite DOWN blockage locale 23 24 25 13 Visitor for the 1 Air balls miss it holidays, maybe 43 On both sides 27 28 2 Santa 15 Soothing plant 47 Symbol on a 3 People in "This way" sign 16 Kri s hna 1-Acrosses, e.g. 32 49 "I kiss'd thee 17 New Zealand 4 Alpine lake 34 native I kill'd thee": 5 Rhythmic Othello 41 18 Minor collision 6 Something of reminder 50 Kind of scan interest to Miss 43 44 19 Wall Street Marple 51 20-, 27- and Journal 4 7 4 8 43-Across 7 "And" or "or": 20 On the front Abbr. locale, in slang 51 23 Habitual drunk 8 Antifur org. 56 Boneheaded 56 25 Ship unit or 9 Drinks with 57 Gang woman shipping unit straws 61 58 Macaroni, e.g. 10 CBS series for 26 Plow driver's 17 seasons handful 61 And others: 64 Abbr. 11 The Hunter 27 On the back 62 The thought that 12 Jack's purchase Puzzleby John Guzzetta 32 Buenos in a children's counts? 36 For the present 33 Greedy person's story demand 63 Compassion 37 Feel unwell 14 C, D and EEE

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE AT L A S W O P I A N O A P P E N N Y D U S E A B E D S R E E L G AR B A G E T ON I O N H B OO R C R U I D S L O OM B AS E B A CC E P T S T RA C E M T A C K L E B O I ST O W O V CH I N E Y E

M B I A NG A L A L I R UC I K E D E A A L L P O O E G A X D E O S F

S T R E A K

A R E A S

S I E V E

2 1Le

Sole i l

38 Establishment that might sell 9-Down and 53-Downs

H 22 Motley 0 23 White dwarf, S e.g. E 24 The S Allegheny and

39 Glow

40 [Hey, buddy!]

Monongahela l A M

28 Like Willie I M A T Winkie G AME 29 Evacuate H 30 Furrow maker T O N A M U P 31 Hockey I N K S defender Bobby L I E S

Can be found on these pages :

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans aitd Mortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities

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476

Schools & Training

Employment Opportunities

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TRUCK SCHOOL www. IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free

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CAUTION READERS:

Use extra caution when

potentiaI.

We will be holding interviews for 2 days only from 1pm —3pm on Tuesday and Wednesday, November 13th and 14th at:

Smolich Motors - Hyundai Store 2250 NE Htrvy20 Bend, OR 97701 541-749-4025

If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin 541-385-5809

The Bulletin DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day!

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Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Fr i d ay. . . .. . • • • • • • . • • • • • • . • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3: 0 0 pm FrI • Sunday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5$00 Pm FrI •

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541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:

Independent Contractor

*Supplement Your Income*

Starting at 3 lines

++++++++++++++++++

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

© Call Today © We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:

* Prineville *

42 Miss Marple,

52 Arab ruler

43 Winner of 1948

53 Drink with a straw

e.g.

45 Iguana feature

54 Naughty Goose and Moose Drool

46 Sphere

55 Readied to play

47 Supplementary

59 Cy Young's was

44 Not stable

MUSt have reliable, inSured VehiCle. Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933

during business hours

apply via email at online©bendbulletin.com

OVER '500in total merchandise

Garage Sale Special

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

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

(caii for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( * ) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbuhetin.com any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

2.63, in brief 60 Pig's home

CC lX

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

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Employment Opportunities

Houses for Rent General

50rj0 605

Roommate Wanted Share cozymobile home in Terrebonne, $275+ t/2 utils. 503-679-7496 630

Rooms for Rent

Room with a view in SW Resi d ent Bend! Own bath, healthy

M anager. Must b e lifestyle preferred; gaable to pass criminal rage. $500 includes most background c h e c k.utilities. 541-905-9247 541-447-5773. Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ Call a Pro cable, micro & fridge. Utils & l inens. New Whether you need a owners. $145-$165/wk fence fixed, hedges 541-382-1885 trimmed or a house built, you'll find Get your professional help in business The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" a ROWI N G Directory 541-385-5809 with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service The Bulletin Recommends extra Professional" caution when purDirectory chasing products or I services from out of •

I

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

I $299 1st mo. rent!! I GET THEM BEFORE ARE GONE! I THEY 2 bdrm, 1 bath $530 & $540 I Carports & A/C included! Fox Apts. I (541)Hollow 383-3152

LTlxe Bulletin

J

I

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

*

Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co *Upstairs only with lease

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris 8 Stevens, Inc. 636

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 2 Bdrm, frplc, micro, DW, W&D incl. W/S/G & cable pd. Completely remod. $700/mo, $700 dep. no smkg. 541-383-2430 Quiet 2 bedroom, oak cabinets, DW, W/S/G & cable paid, laundry facilities. $650, $500 dep. No smkg. 541-617-1101

gQrj Q rj Loans & Mortgages 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.

DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200. LOCALMONEYtwe buy secured trust deeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.

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PUBLISHER'S

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NOTICE All real estate adver- RENTALS tising in this newspa- 603- Rental Alternatives per is subject to the 604 - Storage Rentals F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal 605 - RoommateWanted to a d v ertise "any 616- Want ToRent preference, limitation 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges or disc r imination 630- Rooms for Rent based on race, color, 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent religion, sex, handicap, familial status, 632 - Apt./Multiplex General marital status or na- 634 - Apl./Multiplex NEBend tional origin, or an in- 636- Apt./Multiplex NWBend tention to make any 638- Apl./Multiplex SEBend

) • •

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682 - Farms, Ranches andAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Spacefor Rent REALESTATE 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 & Townhomesfor Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 -Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mld. /Modile Homeswith Land

such pre f erence, limitation or discrimi- 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend nation." Familial sta- 642 - Apl./Multiplex Redmond tus includes children 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished under the age of 18 648- Houses for RentGeneral living with parents or 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend legal cust o dians, Bend pregnant women, and 652- Houses for Rent NW people securing cus- 654- Houses for Rent SEBend Bend tody of children under 656- Houses for Rent SW 18. This newspaper 658- Houses for Rent Redmond will not knowingly ac- 659- Houses for Rent Sitnriver cept any advertising 660- Houses for Rent La Pine for real estate which is for Rent Prineville in violation of the law. 661 - Houses O ur r e aders a r e 662- Houses for Rent Sisters hereby informed that 663- Houses for Rent Madras all dwellings adver- 664- Houses for Rent Furnished tised in this newspa- 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent per are available on an equal opportunity 675- RV Parking Mobile/Mfd.Space basis. To complain of 676 discrimination cal l 675 745 775 HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-877-0246. The RV Parking Homes for Sale Manufactured/ toll f re e t e l ephone Mobile Homes number for the hear- RV Space for rent, 50 NOTICE ing im p aired is amp, cable, dump, pav- All real estate adver- FACTORY SPECIAL 1-800-927-9275. ers, n e a r O l d M ill. tised here is subNew Home, 3 bdrm, $475/mo + e lectricity. ject to t hin $46,900 finished e F e deral 541-389-9268 650 on you site,541.548.5511 F air H o using A c t , www.JandMHomes.com Houses for Rent which makes it illegal 676 to advertise any prefNE Bend Mobile/Mfd. Space Good classified ads tell erence, limitation or the essential facts in an discrimination based Newer Home, 3 bdrm, • Space rent $180 mo. interesting Manner. Write on race, color, reli- from 2.5 bath, loft/TV area, • Homes for rent the readers view - not gion, sex, handicap, near Forum shops 8 $350 - $495 mo. the seller's. Convert the familial status or namedical centers, No • Large treed lots tional origin, or inten- facts into benefits. Show smoking. $1095/mo. • J.D. Riverfront lots tion to make any such the reader how the item will Call 541-550-0333. • Playground and preferences, l i mitahelp them in someway. Community Center tions or discrimination. This • Next to Thriftway 658 We will not knowingly advertising tip • RVs Welcomed, Houses for Rent accept any advertisbrought to you by Riverside Home Park ing for r eal e state Redmond 677 W. Main, The Bulletin which is in violation of ter eg Centraoegoe s ncelte John Day, Oregon this law All persons 1550sq ft 3 bdrm 2 bath, Call Lisa 541-575-1341 are hereby informed Rent iown W/D hkup, gas frplce, riversidemhp.jimdo.com that all dwellings ad- 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes close to RHS, fenced yd vertised are available $2500 down, $750 mo. w/garden, 2-car garage. 687 on an equal opportuOAC. 541-548-5511 $925. 541-604-4694 Commercial for nity basis. The Bulle- www.jandmhomes.com Rent/Lease tin Classified 4 bdrm 2yz bath, 3-car USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! garage, fresh paint, 2640 Restaurant Pu b for NE 9th. $1250/mo.; Door-to-door selling with lease. SW corner of $1500 security dep.; no Check out the pets. Call 503-804-5045 3rd and Greenwood. fast results! It's the easiest classifieds online Formerly Cheerleadway in the world to sell. www.bendbulletin.com ers, now Taylors SauNewer 2326 sq.ft. deluxe Updated daily home, 3/3, gas fire- sage. Over 3000 sq The Bulletin Classified place, 7500' lot, fenced feet. Lottery r oom, 541-385-5809 yard, 1655 SW Sara- wired & running 4 masoda Ct. $ 1 195/mo. chines now. 20-ft bar, 541-350-2206 10 tap handles. 4-pan hot well, Ansell hood, automatic dishwasher.

KOZA K Property Management, Inc.

BANK TURNED YOU

Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours.

'UNDER '500in total merchandise 7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00 *Must state prices in ad

528

Operate Your Own Business

Place a photoin your private partyad for only $15.00 perweek.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

66

www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e Noon Mone Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e Noon Tuese a

I

llcwl

Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e 5:00 pm Frie

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full-time

I

At Smolich Hyundai we are looking for sales professionals from all career fields. Previous automotive sales experience is not required. What is required is a willingness to commit yourself to a rapidly growing industry, start your new career

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

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• Guaranteed Income While Training • Paid Medical Insurance • 401K Retirement Plan • Drug Free Work Environment • Central Oregon's Largest New 8t Pre-Owned Inventory • $75,000 Annual Earning Potential

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applying for jobs online and never provide personal inforAutomotive Sales mation to any source you may not have researched and deemed ASTART YOUR NEW CAREERA to be reputable. Use I extreme caution when Central Oregon'5 Largest Auto Group of New and r esponding to A N Y Pre-owned automobiles, Sm o lich H y u n dai online e m ployment Store, is looking to fill positions within our expandI the area. SendingI ad from out-of-state. ing auto network. Smolich Motors is an industry c ash, c hecks, o r leader with 8 new car franchises and Central I credit i n f o rmation We suggest you call Oregon'5 finest choice of pre-owned vehicles. We the State of Oregon I may be subjected to offer the opportunity for you to achieve the levels FRAUD. Consumer Hotline at of success and job satisfaction. We are looking for For more i nforma1-503-378-4320 highly motivated individuals to join our team of protion about an adverfessionals. You must have excellent verbal skills, For Equal Opportunity I tiser, you may call display a professional and positive demeanor, sales the Oregon S tate L aws: Oregon B u experience is helpful, but not necessary. We proreau of Labor 8 In- I Attorney General's vide all of the tools you need to succeed, including Co n s umerI dustry, C i vil Rights Office a professional training program that will give you I Protection hotline at I Division, the knowledge and confidence to maximize your 971-673-0764 I 1-877-877-9392. We Provide:

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readers on The Bulletin' s web site will be able to click through automatically to your site. Resident Manager Prineville Senior Care Home is looking for

Ads published in "Employment Opportunit ies" i n c lude e m ployee and i ndependent po s i 421 470 tions. Ads for posiSchools & Training Domestic & tions that require a fee or upfront investment In-Home Positions Oregon Medical Trainmust be stated. With ing PCS Ph lebotomy any independent job classes begin Jan. 7, Will do housecleaning in opportunity, p l ease 2013. Registration now Terrebonne 8 Crooked investigate thorRiver Ranch. Have P ": openings Tues, Wed. oughly. medicaltrainin .com Thurs. 541-379-1741

15

Livestock Truck Driver Must have CDL,2yrs exp, progressive co., 401k, $50,000/yr, insurance NW only. 541-475-6681 Remember.... A dd your we b a d dress to your ad and

1-888-387-9252

541-343-3100

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puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordpiay. Crosswords for young soivers: nytimes.com/iearning/xwords.

35 Egg layer

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may have one

JZI:~ M & J JI7JI/J~

0

7

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past

H I DE

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

6

48 A FedEx driver

41 Whimper

join to form it

5

ShOW YourStuff .

Terry, 541-415-1777

tayloreaueage@frontiernet net

541-382-0053

Sell Your Stuff. In The Bulletin's print and

AVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath Apt. Near Hospital - Private setting. On site laundry. New carpet. Lots of storage. No Pets. $625.00 yyST • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath SE Duplex -Single garage. Small fenced, natural back yard. Fireplace. W/D Hookups. New carpet & paint. No Pets. $650.00 H/ST • Furnished 1 Bdrm/2 Bath Condo - next to Pioneer Park. Laundry facilities. Indoor Pool. Murphy bed. Gated community. No pets. $675.00 fAII Utilities includedexcept cable) • Furnished 1 Bdrm/1 Bath Condo - Mt. Bachelor Village. Murphy bed, too! Great place to transition or relax. Access to pool 8 Jacuzzi. Free Wi-Fi. No pets.$675.00 yyST • Lovely Condo on the River -2 Bdrm, 2 Bath. Gated community. Single garage. Extra storage room. Gas FP. Vaulted ceilings. W/D Hook-ups. Great Floor plan.$1000.00 H/S • Nice 3 Bdrm/2 Bath off OB Riley Rd. - Extra room for RV behind fence. Large back deck. Open spacious great room feeling. 1674 sq. ft., double garage.$1100.00 •Open spacious 3 Bdrm/2.5 Bath SW Home Near schools. Office at entrance. Hardwood floor. Lots of built-ins 8 pull outs. Large gas fireplace. Vaulted ceilings. Large upstairs laundry room. Fruit trees. Pets? $1450.00 AVAILABLE REDMOND AREA RENTALS

3 Bdrm/2 BathSW Home - Fenced back yard with large patio. Dbl. garage. New paint, carpet,*** appl., EFA + A/C. 1120 sq.ft. $825.00 *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES

CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office at 587 NE Greenwood, Bend

online Classifieds.

prj Ij 745

Homes for Sale 10 HOUSESin BurnsAll rented, $231,000 for all 10.Any offers considered — must liquidate now. 541-413-1322 BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/Pics!

www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate 20967 yeoman, bend or

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

No Reserve Timed Online AUCTION

Ends Nov.14th Building Lot in Prongh orn S u b . 23 0 1 3

Canyon View Loop Selling to the Highest Bidder 28 Properties in 5-States! www.corbettbottles.com 208-377-5700

GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, W8 are three adorable, loving

puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. 3500.

Add

Full Color Photos For an additional '15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks* ('Speciai private party ratesapply fo merchandise and automotivecategories.)

Clas'sifjeds To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 385-5809


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

Q

oQ00 Snowmobiles

Boats & Accessories •

Wate r craft

THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012 G3 •

Motorhomes •

882

931

Fifth Wheels

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: KayNEED HOLIDAY $$$? ks, rafts and motorWe pay CASH for Ized personal Junk Cars & Truckst new uph o lstery, watercrafts. For Also buying batteries & $3900 obo. Bend. • " boats" please s e e catalytic converters. Monaco Dynasty 2004, Pilgrim In t e rnational 707-688-4523 Class 870. Serving all of C.O.! loaded, 3 slides, die- 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, • 541-385-5809 Call 541-408-1090 sel, Reduced - now Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 $119,000, 5 4 1-923- Fall price $ 2 1,865.Studded tire, mounted, 8572 or 541-749-0037 541-312-4466 5 bolt, P235/75R15 off Chevy 1/2 ton Pickup. L ike N e w , $3 5 0 . -L I Ij I gl. 17' Seaswirl 1988 open bow, r ebuilt Chev V 6 e n g ine,

The Bulletin

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541-410-2186

18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Volvo Penta, 270HP,

low hrs., must see,

$15,000, 541-330-3939 t l

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-.kW-'P--.Q.%" Snowmobile trailer 2002, 25-ft Interstate & 3 sleds, $10,900. 541-480-8009 860

Motorcycles & Accessories Harley Davidson SoftTail De luxe 2 0 0 7, white/cobalt, w/passenger kit, Vance & Hines muffler system & kit, 1045 mi., exc. cond, $19,9 9 9, 541-389-9188.

Harley Heritage Softail, 2003 $5,000+ in extras, $2000 paint job, 30K mi. 1 owner, For more information please call 541-385-8090 or 209-605-5537

HD FAT BOY 1996

20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast

w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $19,500.

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pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at $132,913; Country Coach Intrigue asking $93,500. 2002, 40' Tag axle. Call 541-419-4212 400hp Cummins Diesel. tw o s l ide-outs. 4 1,000 m iles, n e w Travel Trailers • tires & batteries. Most options.$95,000 OBO 541-678-5712

tremeEdition 38' 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all

maple cabs, king bed/ bdrm separated w/slide glass dr,loaded,always garaged,lived in only 3 mo,brand new $54,000, still like new, $28,500, will deliver,see rvt.com, ad¹4957646 for pics. Cory, 541-580-7334 Canopies & Campers

541-389-1413

BOATS &RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyciesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 541-593-2247 881 - Travel Trailers Winter Tires 4 Bridge- 882 - Fifth Wheels s tone 2 2 5/55 R 1 6 95W on alloy rims, 885- Canopies and Campers Southwind 35.5' Triton, Regal Prowler AX6 Ex- like new, tire pres- 890 - RVs for Rent 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du'05, •

Arctic Cat (2) 2005 F7 Firecats: EFI Snowpro 8 EFI EXT, exlnt cond, $3700 ea; $7000 both.

sure monitors incl. (Retail@$1900) $650. In Bend 619-889-5422 932

Antique & Classic Autos

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

Elkhorn 8.5' 2003, self Pioneer Spirit 18CK, contained, oven, ste2007, used only 4x, AC, r eo, v e r y cle a n. electric tongue j a ck, $8500. 541-389-7234 Econoline RV 1 9 8 9, $8995. 541-389-7669 fully loaded, exc. cond, 20.5' Seaswirl Spy35K m i. , R e ducedROUA Digorgio 1971 der 1989 H.O. 302, 0 $17,950. 541-546-6133 fridge, heater, propane 285 hrs., exc. cond., & elec. lights, awning, stored indoors for 0 D , 0 2 spares, extra insulife $11,900 OBO. CAN'T BEAT THIS! lation for late season 541-379-3530 Look before you Chevy C-20 Pickup hunting/cold weather buy, below market 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; camping, well maint, value! Size & mileauto 4-spd, 396, model Ads published in the very roomy, sleeps 5, aqe DOES matter! CST /all options, orig. "Boats" classification reat f o r hu n t ing, Class A 32' Hurriowner, $22,000, include: Speed, fish2950, 541-410-6561 cane by Four Winds, 541-923-6049 ing, drift, canoe, 908 2007. 12,500 mi, all house and sail boats. Aircraft, Parts amenities, Ford V10, For all other types of cherry, slides, & Service watercraft, please see Ithr, like new! New low Class 875. price, $54,900. 541-385-5809

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541-548-521 6

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 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Honda Cwic LX 2006 4-dr sedan, excellent cond, 31K miles, AC, power steering, dr locks & w indows, premium wheels, new s tudded G MC Yukon XL S L T tires, chains, AM/FM-CD, 2004, loaded w/facall records from 2009, VW Thing 1974, good mpg, $13,000/ofr. cond. Extremely Rare! tory DVD, 3rd seat, 24-40 $6950.. 541-280-6947 Local: 503-806-9564 Only built in 1973 & 1974. Mercury Tracer 1996, 4 $8,000. 541-389-2636 dr., 91K, auto, exc. $2000. 541-389-6167 Mitsubishi 3 00 0 GT • Pickups 1 999, a u to., p e a r l w hite, very low m i . Chevy '/~-ton 1992, PS, Jeep Willys 1947,custom, $9500. 541-788-8218. PB, AT, new plates, runs small block Chevy, PS, grt, $1500. 541-923-4338 OD, mags+trailer. Swap for backhoe.No am calls please. 541-389-6990

Nissan Sentra, 2012-

Dodge 2500, 1996, V10, WITH 1979 Conestoga

camper, great cond, Lincoln Navigator 2005 $5500. 541-420-2323 great cond., 124k mi., 3 rows seats, DVD player, $11,500 cash f/

12,610 mi, full warranty, PS, PB, AC, & more! $16,000. 541-788-0427

Springdale 2005 27', 4' Chevy Wagon 1957, only. 541-475-3274 slide in dining/living area, Gulfstream Sce n i c sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 4-dr., complete, ~ Oo Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, obo. 541-408-3811 $7,000 OBO, trades, Porsche 911 1974, low M Ore p j t aj tjjt!IIIIIIIlletjn.CO m Cummins 330 hp dieplease call mi., complete motor/ 1/3 interest in Columsel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 541-389-6998 Ford 250 XLT 1990, trans. rebuild, tuned bia 400, located at in. kitchen slide out, suspension, int. & ext. 6 yd. dump bed, Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Chrysler 300 C o upe with o u r sp e c ial HD Screaming Eagle tires,under cover, refurb., oi l c o o ling, Call 541-647-3718 rates for selling your I new 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, 139k, Auto, $5500. Electra Glide 2005, hwy. miles only,4 door shows new in 8 out, 541-410-9997 auto. trans, ps, air, 103" motor, two tone ~ boat or watercraft! fridge/freezer iceperf. m ech. c o n d. frame on rebuild, recandy teal, new tires, maker, W/D combo, Much more! ~ & a e a painted original blue, f Place an ad in The Springdale 29' 2 0 07, 23K miles, CD player, Ford F250 2002 Interbath t ub 8 B ulletin w it h ou r original blue interior, Supercab 7.3 diesel, Porsche Cayenne 2004, $28,000 541-420-2715 hydraulic clutch, ex'V shower, 50 amp pro- slide,Bunkhouse style, 86k, immac, dealer PORSCHE 914 1974, f 3-month package original hub caps, exc. sleeps 7-8, excellent cellent condition. 130,000 miles, great pane gen & m o re! maint'd, loaded, now Roller (no engine), chrome, asking $9000 condition, $ 1 6 ,900, Highest offer takes it. ( which includes: shape with accesso$55,000. $17000. 503-459-1580 lowered, full roll cage, 541-390-2504 1 /3 interest i n w e l l - or make offer. 541-480-8080. ries. $14,900. 541-948-2310 5-pt harnesses, rac*5 lines of text and 541-385-9350 equipped IFR Beech Bo541-923-0231 day or ing seats, 911 dash & Honda Elite 80 2001, a photo or up to 10 nanza A36, new 10-550/ 541-923-2582 eves. 1400 mi., absolutely [ lines with no photo. Vans instruments, d e cent prop, located K BDN. shape, v e r y c o ol! like new., comes w/ *Free online ad at $65,000. 541-419-9510 carrying rack for 2" I bendbulletin.com $1699. 541-678-3249 Hunter's Delight! PackChrysler SD 4-Door Executive Hangar receiver, ideal for use *Free pick up into age deal! 1988 Win1930, CD S R oyal at Bend Airport Need to get an w/motorhome, $995, The Central Oregon ~ nebago Super Chief, Ford F250 XLT 4x4 Standard, 8-cylinder, 272RLS, 2009 (KBDN) 541-546-6920 3 8K m i l es , gr e a t Sprinter ad in ASAP? ( Nickel ads. Lariat, 1990, r e d, 29', weatherized, like 60' wide x 50' deep, body is good, needs shape; 1988 Bronco II n ew, f u rnished & w/55' some r e s toration, 80K original miles, You can place it Moped, elect w/charger, wide x 17' high 4" lift with 39's, well Chevrolet G20 Sportsstreet-equipped, like new, I Rates start at $46. I 4 x4 t o t o w , 1 3 0 K ready to go, incl Wine- bi-fold door. Natural runs, taking bids, online at: mostly towed miles, maintained, $ 4 000 Call for details! $600. 541-497-3858 ard S a tellite dish, gas heat, office, bath- 541-383-3888, man, 1993, exlnt cond, www.bendbulletin.com nice rig! $15,000 both. 541-815-3318 obo. 541-419-5495 541-385-5809 26,995. 541-420-9964 $4750. 541-362-5559 or room. Parking for 6 541-382-3964, leave 541-663-6046 c ars. A d jacent t o msg. Softaii Deluxe 541-385-5809 Frontage Rd; g reat LIlleting Ford F350 2010 Super gThe B 2010, 805 miles, ' t I I F II visibility for a viation duty 4x4 crew cab Chevy Astro Black Chameleon. bus. 1jetjockOq.com long bed. $36,995 Toyota Camry'sr I Cargo Van 2001, $17,000 541-948-2126 GENERATE SOME ex¹827661 1984, $1200 obo; pw, pdl, great cond., Call Don © citement in your neigWeekend Warrior Toy business car, well 1985 SOLD; 541-410-3823 borhood. Plan a gaHauler 28' 2007, Gen, maint'd, regular oil FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 1986 parts car, Oregon rage sale and don't fuel station, exc cond. changes, $4500. AutoSnurce door panels w/flowers $500. forget to advertise in Jayco Seneca 2 007, sleeps 8, black/gray Please call 8 hummingbirds, 541-598-3750 Call for details, classified! 385-5809. i nterior, u se d 3X , 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy 541-633-5149 aaaoregonautosource.com white soft top 8 hard 541-548-6592 IBoats & Accessories 5500 d i e sel, to y $24,999. top. Just reduced to 541-389-9188 hauler $130 , 000. Serwng Central Oregon srnce1903 ONLy 1 OWNERSHIP $3,750. 541-317-9319 1994 Chev full size van, 541-389-2636. 'IQ 13' Smokercraft '85, SHARE LEFT! or 541-647-8483 seats 7, sleeps 2. SuLooking for your Economical flying in good cond., 15HP per condition, 128K, Used out-drive next employee? your ow n C e ssna gas Evinrude + famous 350 m o tor, parts - Mercury Place a Bulletin help lL@'n aii 172/180 HP for only runs & looks like a milMinnkota 44 elec. OMC rebuilt mawanted ad today and $ 10,000! Based a t lion! Ready for fun & motor, fish finder, 2 rine motors: 151 reach over 60,000 Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, travel. Limit 1! $4000. Toyota Camry SE, 2002, BDN. Call Gabe at extra seats, trailer, readers each week. $1595; 3.0 $1895; 7 1K, X- c ab , X L T, Bob, 541-318-9999 Professional Air! 56,200 miles, moonroof, extra equip. $3200. 4.3 (1993), $1995. Your classified ad a uto, 4 . 0L , $ 8 400 541-388-001 9 spoiler, $11,900; incl 4 Ford Galaxie 500 1963, will also appear on OBO. 541-388-0232 541-388-9270 541-389-0435 Immaculate! studless snows on Toy2 dr. hardtop,fastback, bendbulletin.com Beaver Coach Marquis ota whls. 541-388-1112 Automobiles • 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 14' boat 8 trailer, $300 which currently re40' 1987. New cover, Trucks & radio (orig),541-419-4989 875 Toyota Corolla 2004, or best offer. No moceives over 1.5 milnew paint (2004), new Heavy Equipment Buick Lucerne CXL tor. 541-389-1324 auto., loaded, o ng. lion page views evWatercraft inverter (2007). Onan Ford Mustang Coupe I nternational 2009, $12,500, low Fla t owner, non smoker, ery month at no 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, 1966, original owner, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 low miles; 2000 Buick exc. cond. $7000 firm extra cost. Bulletin 17' 1984 Chris Craft parked covered $35,000 V8, automatic, great Century $2900. You'll Prineville 503-358-8241 2007 SeaDoo ton dually, 4 s pd. obo. 541-419-9859 or Classifieds Get Re- Scorpion, 140 HP shape, $9000 OBO. not find nicer Buicks trans., great MPG, 2004 Waverunner, 541-280-2014 sults! Call 385-5809 Toyotas: 1999 Avalon inboard/outboard, 2 530-515-81 99 One look's worth a excellent condition, could be exc. wood or place your ad 254k; 1996 Camry, depth finders, trollthousand words. Call hauler, runs great, LOW hours. Double Call The Bulletin At on-line at 98k, 4 cyl. Lots of ing motor, full cover, Bob, 541-318-9999. Ford Ranchero trailer, lots of extras. new brakes, $1950. bendbulletin.com miles left in these EZ - L oad t railer, 541-385-5809 Diamond Reo Dump for an appt. and take a I979 541-419-5480. $10,000 cars. Price? You tell $3500 OBO. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 with 351 Cleveland drive in a 30 mpg. car 541-719-8444 me! I d guess 541-382-3728. yard box, runs good, At: www.bendbulletin.com modified engine. $2000-$4000. $6900, 541-548-6812 Fifth Wheels • Body is in Cadillac Seville STS Your servant, Bob at 2003 - just finished excellent condition, 541-318-9999, no 28' HR Alumascape 6 K E A T $2500 obo. $4900 engine work charge for looking. 1998 with slider, very 541-420-4677 by Certified GM menice, clean. $6500. VW Beetle, 2002 chanic. Has everyBend, 206-915-1412. S-spd, silver-gray, black Hyster H25E, runs thing but navigation. RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L leather moonroof CD Ford T-Bird 1966 well, 2982 Hours, hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, Too many bells and loaded, 115K miles, 390 engine, power am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. w histles t o l i s t . $3500, call Call 54I 385 4809 topromoteyour service Advertise for 28 daysstarting at'l40!nesrecralpackageisnv avarableonourwebsitej well-maintained 541-749-0724 everything, new 541-420-3634 /390-1285 bought a new one. (have records) paint, 54K original $4900 extremely clean, miles, runs great, 935 541-420-1283 $4850 obo. excellent cond. in 8 Building/Contracting H o me Improvement Landscaping/Yard Care Sport Utility Vehicles 541-546-6920 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 out. Asking $8,500. by Carriage, 4 slide541-480-3179 WHEN YOU SEE THIS NOTICE: Oregon state Kelly Kerfoot Const. N OTICE: O RE G O N outs, inverter, satellaw req u ires any- 28 yrs exp in Central OR! Landscape Contraclite sys, fireplace, 2 Peterbilt 359 p o table ~Oo one who c o n tractsQuality 8 honesty, from tors Law (ORS 671) flat screen TVs. for construction work carpentry & handyman r equires a l l bus i water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, M Ore P iX a t Bendbuleti).COm $60,000. to be licensed with the jobs, to expert wall cov- nesses that advertise 3200 gal. tank, 5hp On a classified ad 541-480-3923 C onstruction Co n - ering install / removal. to p e rform L a n dChrysler Sebring 2006 pump, 4-3" h o ses, go to Buick Enclave 2008 CXL Fully loaded, exc.cond, www.bendbulletin.com tractors Board (CCB). Sr. discounts CCB¹47120 scape C o nstruction camlocks, $ 2 5,000. AWD, V-6, black, clean, A n active lice n se Licensed/bonded/insured which inclu d es: 541-820-3724 very low miles (38k), to view additional GMC ~i~ton 1971, Only mechanicall y sound, 82k means the contractor 541-389-1413 / 410-2422 p lanting, decks , always garaged, photos of the item. 925 $19,700! Original low miles. $21,995. i s bonded an d i n - Autumnridge Const. fences, arbors, transferable warranty Call 541-815-1216 mile, exceptional, 3rd s ured. Ver if y t h e Quality custom home w ater-features, a n d Utility Trailers incl. $8600 owner. 951-699-7171 contractor's CCB installation, repair of 541-330-4087 improvements. No job Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 0 c ense through t h e too big or small. Vet & Sr. irrigation systems to Fleetwood Wilderness 4x4. 120K mi, Power be licensed with the 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, CCB Cons u mer Discounts! CCB¹198284 0iAscs S3 seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd Ford Crown Vtc. Website Landscape Contrac- rear bdrm, fireplace, Call 541-300-0042 row seating, e xtra www.hireahcensedcontractor. 1997 4 door, 127k, t ors B o a rd . Th i s AC, W/D hkup beauBig Tex Landscap Mercury M o n terrey tires, CD, privacy tintCom d rives, runs a n d 4-digit number is to be tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. ing/ ATV Trailer, 1965, Exc. All original, ing, upgraded rims. or call 503-378-4621. Landscaping/Yard Care included in all adverlooks great, extra dual axle flatbed, 4-dr. sedan, in storFantastic cond. $7995 The Bulletin recomset of winter tires on 7'x16', 7000 lb. tisements which indiage last 15 yrs., 390 Contact Timm at mends checking with rims, only $3000. cate the business has GVW, all steel, High C o m pression 541-408-2393 for info the CCB prior to con541-771-6500. a bond,insurance and $1400. engine, new tires 8 lior to view vehicle. tracting with anyone. Z~r/dd zQuaEiip workers compensa541-382-4115, or c ense, reduced t o Some other t r ades 541-280-7024. tion for their employ$2850, 541-410-3425. Legal Notices also req u ire addi- Za~<0a ~/,. Ford Explorer 4x4, ees. For your protec- K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 90N'INISSIHIS tional licenses and 1991 - 154K miles, tion call 503-378-5909 slide, AC, TV, awning. More Than Service 931 LEGAL NOTICE certifications. rare 5-speed tranny or use our website: NEW: tires, converter, ADOPT-Abundance Peace Of Mind Automotive Parts, 8 manual hubs, Ford Crown V i ctoria www.lcb.state.or.us to 1995, LX sedan, 4 dr., of love to offer a Debris Removal clean, straight, evcheck license status Service & Accessories eryday driver. Bring V8, o r ig . ow n e r, child in stable, seFall Clean Up before con t racting nu r turing 70,300 mi., studs on, cure & Don't track it in all Winter 2200 dollar bills! JUNK BE GONE with th e b u s iness. (4) 185/70R-14 studded •Leaves B a r racuda Bob, 541-318-9999 reat condition. home. Contact Jen tires on wheels, used, Plymouth I Haul Away FREE Persons doing land(800) 571-4136. •Cones 3000. 541-549-0058. For Salvage. Also scape m a intenance $ 120 ob o . Jerr y 1966, original car! 300 • Needles 541-382-0956 hp, 360 V8, centerCleanups & Cleanouts do not require a LCB • Pruning lines, (Original 273 license. Mel, 541-389-8107 • Debris Hauling (4) Snow tires, 3 mo. eng 8 wheels incl.) old, P195 65R15, FIND ITI MONTANA 3585 2008, 541-593-2597 Handyman exc. cond., 3 slides, $270. 541-410-0206 SUY IT! Gutter PROJECT CARS: Chevy king bed, Irg LR, ArcSELL IT! 4 studded tires, ERIC REEVE HANDY Cleaning 2-dr FB 1949 & Chevy tic insulation, all op225/75R-15, $150 SERVICES. Home & The Bulletin Classifieds Coupe 1950 - rolling tions $37,500. obo. 541-382-3456 Commercial Repairs, chassis's $1750 ea., 541-420-3250 Compost 'Oo Nelson Landscape Carpentry-Painting, Chevy 4-dr 1949, com4 studded tires on rims Applications Pressure-washing, Nuyya 29 7LK Hi t ch- for Toyota Camry, used piete car, $1949; Ca- x Maintenance Use Less Water Hiker 2007, 3 slides, 1 y ear, $ 3 50. C a ll dillac Series 61 1950, 2 Honey Do's. On-time Serving O 32' touring coach, left 541-593-2134 promise. Senior dr. hard top, complete $$$ SAVE $$$ Central Oregon kitchen, rear lounge, w/spare front c l ip., Discount. Work guarImprove Soil Residential many extras, beautiful 4 Studless winter trac$3950, 541-382-7391 anteed. 541-389-3361 c ond. inside 8 o u t, tion tires on 5-lug 4.5" & Commercial or 541-771-4463 2013 Maintenance $34,499 OBO, PrinevBonded 8 Insured wheels, 225/60R-16, TURN THE PAGE Package Available ille. 541-447-5502 days $350. 541-410-0886 CCB¹181595 weekly, monthly For More Ads 8 541-447-1641 eves. and Just bought a new boat? 4 used Hankook studded Call theBulletin ClassifiedDept. The Bulletin Sell your old one in the one time service snow tires, 205/65R15's • Snow Removal classifieds! Ask about our 541-385-5809or541-382-1811 mounted on custom tl' MISSTHIS DDN Super Seller rates! • Sprinkler Repair black modern wheels, EXPERIENCED forratestoday! 541-385-5809 $475. 541-382-6773 • Back Flow Testing Commercial VW Karman Ghia •Fall Clean up & Residential I DO THAT! Cooper winter studded 1970, good cond., •Weekly Mowing Home/Rental repairs Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th 215/60/1 6 t i re s + new upholstery and Senior Discounts Small jobs to remodels wheel, 1 s lide, AC, chains $150. Toyo all convertible top. Senior Discounts Honest, guaranteed Bonded & Insured 205 / 60/16 $10,000. TV,full awning, excel- season work. CCB¹151573 541-390-1466 541-815-4458 lent shape, $23,900. tires $125. Low mile- 541-389-2636 Dennis 541-317-9768 Same Day Response LCB¹8759 541-350-8629 age. 541-330-8285. Completely rebuilt/ customized, low miles. Accepting offers. 541-548-4807

The Bulletin

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

G4 TUESDAY NOVEM BER 13 2012•THE BULLETIN

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Jumbo Pack Not to Exceed 15% Fat

16 oz Selected Varieties

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32 Oz, HALF 5 HALF

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10Oz Selected Varieties

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6 Count

EGGNOG 64 Oz Regular & Lite

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FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, NOV 13,2012 IPAGE 3


Oper 1,000 NEW Chech Out Our HetII

MEAT

PROGD0Ut E Department

PR DUCTS! I

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GRANNY

NEWYORK STEAK

SMITH

Boneless Beef

New Crop

LB

BOTTOM ROUND STEAK Boneless Beef

GOLDENRIPE

APPLES

~48!

LB

FRESH CELERY

HERMISTON 4

r

48!

SWEET ONIONS /

LB

SIRLOIN PORK CHOPS

LB

California Grown

LB

LB

CHICKEN

BREASTS Southern Grown Boneless, Skinless

Boz

98!

NAVEL ORANGES

Boneless

MIISHROOMS

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BONELESS PORK LOIN

YAMS 8

Whole In Bag

SWEET

'1BB

POTATO ES Mix 8 Match

RESER'S GOLD RIISH

LB

HILL'SPORK SAUSAGE LINKS Skinless, Frozen

Summer Sausage

LB

27 Oz

$4$8

ROMA

TOMATOE S

DAILY'S BIG BUY BACON

Red Ripe Best Flavor

8 88 LB

Y our L o c a l l y O wne d Ad Items Subject To Avoilobility PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, NOV 13,2012 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

16 Oz

siss

LB

PRICES EFFECTIVE: I

18 19 2 0

$3455 Hwy. 97 N., Bend • 541-388-2100

25 26 27

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14 1 5 1 6 17 2 1 22 23 24


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