Bulletin Daily Paper 12-13-13

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

FRIDAY December13,2013

nsmass m nn an mnrl wemuSiC GO! MAGAZINE

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

5sentence inoesertSun au case

HOSPiCe —Efforts to cut health care costs could reduce Medicare reimbursements for end-of-life care.D1

• President of defunct real estate company gets 7"/2years in prison

Desert Sun vice president,

falsified bank loan and tax documents oncommercial and res-

By Elon Glucklich

employees of Desert Sun De-

The Bulletin

velopment this week in federal court in Eugene.

idential projects across Central New Mexico, 366 days in prison. Oregon, according to a news All the defendants have been release issued Thursday by the

Fitzsimons received the longest sentence: 7/2 years. The

prison once the Federal Bureau

A federal judge has sen-

Kid Culture —Sewing,

tencedthe former president of

crafts and other DIYactivity books.D1

a defunct Bend development company to 90 months in prison, and ordered him to pay $22

others and their sentences are: Bend resi dentsJeffrey Sprague, 46 months in prison; and Shaun Little, five years probation;

on; and Teresa Ausbrooks, of released and must report to

Aiken sentenced 7yler Fitzsi-

Washington state resident Jere-

of Prisons decides where each defendant will serve time, Assistant U.S. Attorney Scott Bradford said. Starting in 2004, Fitzsimons

mons and four other former

my Kendall, 18 months in pris-

and Shannon Egeland, former

million in restitution.

Chief U.S. District Judge Ann

U.S. Attorney's office.

The pair recruited 11 other Desert Sun employees, loan

officers and builders tied to the company, obtaining $19 million

COVER OREGON

Sunday deadline notyet extended

from financial institutions for a

variety of construction projects. SeeSentencing/A5

By Lnuren Dake The Bulletm

PORTLAND-

The man charged with leading the state's troubled

Bethlehem lnn —The homeless shelter wants a loan from the city of Bend to buy the facility it's now leasing.B1

health insurance

OSU-CASCADES

exchange told Cover Oregon board members on Thursday he expects Sunday's key enrollment deadline will be extended to ensure more people are cov-

QuakeS —Oklahoma, not usually known for temblors, is having more. Is the oil andgas industry to blame?A4

ered by the first of

Valley Girl dialect —Lin-

the year. "This is good

guists have like, totally decodedthe'uptalk'used bysome Southern Californians.A3

news; it's more

time," Bruce Goldberg, the interim director of Cover Or-

And a Wed exclusivePolice departments' new push: get officers to wear their seat belts; half of them don't. bemlbuuetin.cnm/extrns

egon, said after the meeting. With the state's

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Oregon State Universi-

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Internet lifts shroud of secrecyon adoptions By Emily Alpert Reyes Los Angeles Times

Gus met his birth moth-

er only once after being adopted. But she watches

his life unfold on Facebook weekbyweek: His first day of preschool, toting a tiny backpack. The purple turkey he sculpted in class. The Katy Perry song he now loves to sing. "You can never be loved enough," said Beth Stapleton, who adopted the 4-yearold with her husband, Joel, right after Gus was born.

The Michigan family created a private page to share photos and videos with his birth mother, and later did

0 Academic buildings

6 Housing

an oldpumice mine and groves of ponderosa pines

8 Student life centers 9 Main entrance 6 Main loop road

The plans were discussed at an afternoon meeting of the Campus Expansion Advisory Committee, agroup charged with developing plans for the campus,and laterbefore an audience of 100 at

a pit that must be filled, into a canvas to highlight the region's ecosystem. Rebranded as a canyon, the pumice mine, which rangesfrom 30to 80feetin depth, may remain largely unfilled, with academic buildings located within its walls.

son Adoption Institute, a nonprofit think tank.

Teens can easily Google their biological relatives. Birth parents can follow

adoptive families on Facebook. In a national survey,

nearly a third of adoptive parents said theyusedthe Internet to stay in touch with birth families of their

kids. Half of those said their child was directly in touch through their own online

account. "The likely end of the era of dosed adoption is one of the most profound changes brought about by the Internet," the institute wrote in

its latest report, based on an online survey of more than

2,000parents, adoptees and professionals. SeeAdoption /A4

For those who met that deadline,

the next step was for Cover Oregon

Note: The university does not have access to 14th Street at this time.

to send them an

enrollment packet,

ly-o%~

which needs to be

'

returned with a chosen insurance plan by Sunday. But as many as 30,000 people

qQi

focuses on turning the pumice mine, first seen as

have yet to receive

cyao<

packets from Cover Oregon, the agency in charge of the exchange. SeeCover/A4

Cascade m, Lakes ~o~ge Broken Top entrance

The Bulletin, gQ)

MASTER PLANTERRACE

Note: The university does not have access to 14th Street at this time.

"We started exploring

House passes budget

4

the site by thinking about

what could grow out of cultivating a sense of place," said Barbara Swift, a landscape architect based

e-

in Seattle and one of three team. "We tried to take a step

according to a new report from theEvan B. Donald-

MASTERPLANCANYON

Hall on the Central Oregon Community College campus. The design team's vision

members on the design

Such connections are

0 0 0 6

an open house in Cascades

daughter. "Why not let them

no longer so rare. The days when adoption was shrouded in secrecy have faded away, and the Internet is abigpart of the reason,

LEGEND --- Property Mi n or access road Q ) O v erlooks and vistas boundary Service road 4 Vernal ponds, wetland,~ B u ilding wet desert meadows ~ Pa r king (onsite) P o nderosa Amphi theatre/outdoor ® Courtyards ~ D eciduous gathering area ® Canyon bottom ~ D esert meadow © Canyon cliffs, rim ~ W ater

FEATURESMARKEDBELOW

take on how to transform

the same for their adopted have those connections in life'?"

ThreevisionsforOSU-Cascadescampus

ty-Cascades Campus on Thursday offered its first

into a campus.

health insurance exchange website still not working, Cover Oregon continues to process paper applications. Nearly 65,000 people met a Dec. 4 deadline to apply to the exchange.

the Mazama province. The land is well suited to the wildlife that thrives in the extreme environment, with dramatic tempera-

Broken Top entrance

MASTERPLANRIM

SeeCampus/A5

sentatives passed a two-year budget

(Proposed easement on county-owned land)

Thursday that eases does not have access to 14th Street at this time.

the mandatory cuts of sequestration and reduces the deficit with a rare

demonstration of bipartisanship. The budget, crafted by House Budget

AO. '

6

Committee Chair-

qQi.

man Paul Ryan,

c~"'

R-Wis., and his Senate counterpart,

g Cascade ~ Lakes Lodge Broken Top entrance

D-Wash., increased 2014 and 2015 spend-

ing levels for both defense and domes-

tic programs. SeeBudget/A4

Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin

INDEX All Ages Business Calendar

Sen. Patty Murray,

O~.

The Bulletiii'

source: osU-cascades

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 41, Low25 Page B6

ing its business for the year, the U.S. House of Repre-

the 56-acre campus. One of

member, called the other plans "much better."

WASHINGTON — Before conclud-

The Bulletiii:

ture changes and little precipitation." The design team presented three visions for the university, intending to offer guiding principles instead of definite plans for the plans, named the "Terraced" plan, calls for filling the pumice mine, but Craig Curtis, a Seattle-based architect and design team

The Bulletin

5 Cascadem, Lakes Lodge o~'

back and look at what ecosystems are growing out of the site already, which is located in the heart of

By Andrew Clevenger

cyao<

D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby D5 Obituaries B5 C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D5 Sports C1-4 In GO! Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies D5, GO!

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt

vol. 111, No. 347,

e2 pages, 6 sections

0

IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329


A2 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

The Bulletin

N xTioN +

O R LD

How to reachUs

Syrian chemical attacks — Chemicalweaponswere usedrepeatedly in theSyrian conflict this year, not only in thewell-documented Aug. 21attack near Damascus, which killed hundreds of civilians, including children, but also in four other instances, including in two subsequent attacks that targeted government soldiers, U.N.experts concluded in areport released Thursday. Prepared bychemical weapons specialists anddoctors who traveled to Syria to conduct interviews and collect samplesamidfighting, the report details facts and allegations surrounding theuseof chemical weaponsduring the conflict between the forces of President BasharAssad andthe insurgents seeking to topple him.

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Student data — Public schools around the countryare adopting Web-basedservices that collect and analyzepersonal details about students without adequately safeguarding theinformation from potential misuse, according to newresearch. Thestudy, which is expected to be released today bythe Center on LawandInformation Policy at Fordham Law School in NewYork, found weaknesses inthe contracts that school districts sign whenoutsourcing Web-basedtasks to service companies. Many contracts, the studyfound,failed to list the type of information collected while others did not prohibit vendors from selling personal details or using that information for marketing purposes.

WASHINGTON — The De-

partment of Transportation will consider banning the use of cellphones for voice calls onboard airplanes, a reaction to widespread public outrage over a proposal by the Federal Communications Commission

si

to loosen the rules.

Together, the two developments mean that consumers will probably soon be able

NEW S R O O M FA X

541-385-5804

NSASpyillg —A presidential advisorycommittee chargedwith examining the operations of theNational Security Agency hasconcluded that its program tocollect data on every phonecall made inthe United States should continuealthough underrestraints intended to increase privacy protections, according to officials with knowledge ofthecommittee's report. Theysaid thereport also argues infavor of codifying and publicly announcing stepstheUnited States will take to protect the privacy of foreigners whosetelephone records, Internet communications or movementsarecollected by the NSA.

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ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337

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ternet on their cellphones at 10,000 feet, but not to make

voice calls. The two agencies said they had heard and wanted to re-

Daniel Rosenbaum/New York Times News Service

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler

speaks Thursday during an open meeting in Washington on the commission's proposal to allow voice calls on planes.

spect public outcry at the prospect of being stuck for hours in close quarters next to a per-

licit comment on whether to

the agenda for the December

son gabbing into a cellphone.

repeal its technical rule that

meeting was met with a flood

"Over the past few weeks,

IIIIl SBIICtiOIIS —Underpressure from Congressto demonstrate continuing sanctions on Iran's oil sector andnuclear andmissile programs,theObama administrationonThursdayannouncedanexpanded list of Iranian companiesand individuals whosetrading activities around the world would beblocked. Amongthe newly penalized aretwo companies based inSingapore, anation with a strong reputation for a carefully regulated shipping industry andbankingsystem.

of phone calls and emails we have heard of concerns for any communications pur- e xpressing outrage at t he raised by airlines, travelers, pose once a flight is airborne. possibility. "This is not a rule about usflight a ttendants, members But all five commissioners say of Congress and others who they share the public's doubts age," Wheeler said. "This is are all troubled over the idea about whether voice calls a rule about technology, speof passengers talking on cell- should be allowed. cifically new technology that "Let me make clear what's now allows cellphones to be phones in flight, and I am concerned about this possi- going on here — nothing will used aloft without interfering bility as well," Transportation be different on your flight to- with on-the-ground wireless Secretary Anthony Foxx said

Thursday. The department will consid-

er whether allowing in-flight voice calls "is fair to consumers" in part by soliciting widespread public comment on the issue.

disallows the use of cellphones

morrow," Tom Wheeler, the new FCC chairman, said. "I don't want to listen to the per-

sonal conversations and the business deals of the person sitting next to me on a flight."

Wheeler and the agency

networks." The move i s

Fake Sign language —Thesign languageinterpreterat Nelson Mandela's memorial says hesuffers from schizophrenia andhallucinated andsawangels while gesturing incoherently just 3 feet away from President BarackObamaand other world leaders, outraging deaf people worldwide whosaid his signs amounted to gibberish. South African officials scrambledThursday to explain howthey cameto hire the manandsaid they wereinvestigating what vetting process, if any, he underwent for his security clearance. "In theprocess, and inthe speed of the event, amistake happened," deputy Cabinet minister Hendrietta Bogopane-Zulusaid.

n e cessary,

Wheeler said, given the commission's statutory responsibilities. "If technology eliminates interference and therefore it eliminates the need for the i n terference protection

The FCC voted 3-2 to go

were blindsided last month when their addition of an item

ahead with a measure to so-

on airborne cellphones to

nate the rule."

rule, then we ought to elimi-

NOminatiOn fight — An all-out procedural warbroke out inthe Senate onThursday, asSenate majority leader Harry Reidhasvowed to continue calling round-the-clock confirmation votesthrough theweekend if Republicans continue todelay the process. A long list of nominees for lower courts andexecutive branch positions are awaiting confirmation, andReidplans to call each of them onacontinuous basis, no matter the hour. Asthey headedinto their secondlate-night session of confirmation votesThursday evening, the Democrats'way of retaliating for Republican delaytactics, senators were chugging RedBull, sleeping in their offices andangrily assigning blame.

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Ooran.........541-363-0360 City Sheila G.Miller ..........541-617-7631 Community Life, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials RichardCoe.....541-363-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-363-0366 Sports Bill Bigelow............541-363-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ...........541-410-9207

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N. I(orea executesleader's uncle By Eric Talmadge and Foster Klug The Associated Press

PYONGYANG, North Korea — North Korea said Fridaythat

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OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints................... 541-363-0356 Obituaries.........................541-617-7625 Back issues ......................541-365-5600 All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may beconverted to anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,Po.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706. The Bulletin retains ownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews orad illustrations.Theymay not be

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spicable methods with a wild

ambition to grab the supreme power of our party and state." It called him a "traitor to the

nation for all ages" and "worse than a dog." The unusually detailed an-

nouncement came only days after North Korea said it had

"eliminated" Jang from all his posts. Despite the strong language and allegations in the announcement Monday of

Kim Jong Un has overseen other high-profile purges since

By mail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outside Deschutes County: Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only: Onemonth: $13

— From wire reports

by all sorts of intrigues and de-

CORRECTIONS

One month: $17 <Printonly:$16)

North Korea has recently

tempting to overthrow the state

The Bulletin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-363-0356.

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His father, Kim Jong Il, took a

CrOSS diSplay —Afederal judge ruled Thursdaythata concrete cross on federal land inSanDiego violated the First Amendment banon a governmentendorsement of religion andordered it removed. Butthe quarter-century fight over the29-foot cross atop Mount Soledad, which has woundthrough the courts sincethe1980s, may not beover. The judge said he would stay theorder if there wereanappeal. Supporters of the cross arguethat it remains awar memorial, not a religious symbol.

much lower public profile when turned to attempts at diploit had executed Kim Jong Un's he rose to power after the death macy with South Korea and uncle as a traitor for trying to of his father, Kim Il Sung, in the United States. But tensions seize supreme power, a stun- 1994. have remained high since ning end for the leader's former Although the h i gh-level Pyongyang'sthreats in March mentor, long considered the purges could indicate confi- and April. Those induded country's No. 2 official. dence, Victor Cha, a former warnings that it would restart In a sharp reversal of the seniorWhite House adviseron nudear bomb fuelproduction. long-held popular image of Asia, said he sees signs of "a lot There was no immediate Jang Song Thaek as a kindly of churn inthe system." word about the fate of Jang's "If he has to go as high as wife, Kim Kyong Hui, the uncle guiding Kim Jong Un as he consolidatedpower, the purging and then executing younger sister of Kim Jong Il. North's official Korean Central Jang, it tells you that every- She was also seen as an imNews Agency indicated that thing's not normal in the sys- portant mentor to Kim Jong Un Jang instead saw the death of tem," said Cha, an analyst at the after herbrother's2011death. Kim Jong Il in December 2011 Center for Strategic and InterThe White House said it as an opportunity to challenge national Studies think tank in could not independently conhis nephew and win power. Washington. "When you take firm reportsof Jang's exeJang had been tried and exe- out Jang, you're not taking out cution, but has "no reason to cuted,North Korea said,for "at- just one person — you're taking doubt" the report from KCNA.

Jang's fall, there had been no sign in North Korean media of

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r


FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

T

A3

T ART • Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day

TODAY It's Friday, Dec.13,the 347th day of 2013. Thereare18 days left in the year.

TRENDING

HAPPENINGS

STUDY

Like, oh myGod, linguists totally explain ValleyGirl speechpatterns

II IV

DungeneSSCrah —Fishermen in Oregoncanbegin setting their pots after the season was delayed.

Nelson Mandola — The former South African leader's body will lie in state for a final day, before his burial Sunday.

By Max Ehrenfreund

glish that speakers are per- increase in pitch was more fectly clear on the difference pronounced and would begin

The Washington Post

Amanda Ritchart is a native speaker of Southern Californian English, the dialect

HISTORY

between a question and a statement.

"You get the stereotype, like, we're all ditzy over here, because we sound so uncertain, but really, it's just the

also known as "Valley Girl talk" — you know, the one

Highlight:In 2000, Democratic presidential candidate Al GoreconcededtoRepublican George W.Bush, a dayafter the U.S. SupremeCourt shut down further recounts in Florida. In1642, Dutch navigator Abel Tasman sighted present-day New Zealand. In1769, Dartmouth College in New Hampshire received its charter. In1862, Union forces led by Maj. Gen.Ambrose Burnside launched futile attacks against entrenched Confederate soldiers during the Civil WarBattle of Fredericksburg; the soundly defeated Northern troops withdrew two dayslater. (It was during this battle that Confederate Gen.Robert E.Leeis said to have remarked: "It is well that war is so terrible, or we should grow too fond of it.") In1918, President Woodrow Wilson arrived in France,becoming the first chief executive to visit Europe while in office. In1928, GeorgeGershwin's "An American in Paris" had its premiere at CarnegieHall in New York. In1937, the Chinesecity of Nanjing fell to Japaneseforces; what followed was amassacre of war prisoners, soldiers and citizens. (Chinamaintains as many as 300,000 people died; Japan says thetoll was far less.) In1944, during World War II, the U.S. cruiser Nashville was badly damaged in aJapanese kamikaze attackthat claimed more than130 lives. In1962, the United States launched Relay1, a communications satellite which retransmitted television, telephone and digital signals. In1981, authorities in Poland imposed martial law in a crackdown on theSolidarity labor movement. (Martial law formally ended in1983.) In1994,an American Eagle commuter plane crashedshort of Raleigh-Durham International Airport in North Carolina, killing 15 of the 20people on board. Ten yearsags: Saddam Hussein was captured byU.S.forces while hiding in ahole under a farmhouse inAdwar, Iraq, near his hometown of Tikrit. Five years ago:TheWhite House weighed its options for preventing a collapse of the troubled U.S.auto industry. One yearage: U.N.Ambassador Susan Ricewithdrew from consideration to replaceoutgoing Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

that's like totally full of the word "like."

way we talk," said Ritchart,

Celebrities and tech icons are supporting the

nizable characteristic might be the rise in pitch that

effort to increase literacy about computer science

speakers at the end of some sentences. When Ritchart, a

who grew up in Temecula, Calif., southeast of Los Angeles. The pair recorded two dozen undergraduates — all

graduate student in linguis-

native southern Californians

The dialect's most recog-

and programming.

— giving directions and retelling a scene from a com-

tics at the University of Cal-

ifornia San Diego, says her name, it sounds like a ques- edy. They found that about tion: "Amanda?" 16 percent of ordinary stateValley Girl talk can give ments made by their subjects t he impression that t h e sounded like questions in speaker is unsure of what he other varieties of English. A or she is saying. Yet Ritchart speaker would raise the pitch and her former adviser, Ama-

of his or her voice at the end

lia Arvaniti, suggest in one of the first rigorous linguis-

of the statement, a pattern linguists call "uptalk."

tic studies of the Southern

Yet when t h e

Californian variety of En-

N ew 2 Jake May/Ttte Flint Journal

Intervention teacher Maureen Kildee works alongside third-grader

S 9, 8 •

of that variety that they're

asking questions when they should be making statements, but in reality, they're making a consistent distinction between the two," Arvaniti said. Arvaniti is from Greece,

not Southern California. Learning to hear the differ-

ence between a question and a statement in Valley Girl talk takes practice for nonnative

speakers, she said. The new study challenges the assumption that people

who speak in Valley Girl talk are unintelligent and insecure.

"These things are arbitrary, and they have to do of speaking," Arvaniti said.

a en

P

Price applicable to stk¹ 93296 VIN: 3VWPP7AJSDM696137 only. Tax, title, dealer fees excluded. Not eligible for 0% or sign and drive through Volkswagen Credit at this price. subject to prior sale.

Janiah McKnuckle, 8, as the youngster learns computer coding skills during an "Hour of Code" session Tuesday in Flint, Mich.

By Lyndsey Layton

sound to nonnative speakers

with who happens to be assos p eakers ciated with a particular way

were asking a question, their

Ik I

earlier in the sentence."It may

III'

• v

million students will have tak-

The Washington Post

en a coding course through "Hour of Code" by the end of of students from kindergarten this week, far outpacing the through 12th grade are learn- goals of organizers. That's a remarkable debut ing computer code this week as part of "Hour of Code," a na- for an idea that was hatched tionwidecampaign embraced just five months ago and evby PresidentBarack Obama idence of a thirst for knowland featuring free tutorials by edge in a country where nine Facebook founder Mark Zuck- out of 10 public schools do not erberg and Microsoft titan teach computer science, ParBill Gates that are designed to tovi said. "It's been a wild ride," he get U.S. students interested in computer science. said Tuesday. "We know that Through its website, "Hour deep in their heart, Americans of Code" offers lessons in com- feel that technology is moving puter coding that are aimed super fast and they're afraid at every age group and ac- their kids are going to get left cessibleon a range ofdevices behind. Ninety percent of from tablets to desktops. En- schools don't even teach comtire schools have been holding puter science. It's important "Hour of Code" sessions for to keep teaching biology and their students; in other cases, chemistry. But in this centustudents also have been log- ry, learning how the Internet ging on at home. works, what a n a l g orithm The lessons teach the basics does, is as least as foundationof computer coding, are highly al as those other subjects. Not WASHINGTON — Millions

interactive and do not require

to mention, it also leads to the

fast broadband.

best jobs in the country." More than 60 percent of the participating students were girls, a trend that surprised Partovi. "Two days ago, the number of girls doing computer science in this country was 18 percent," he said. "This is amazing." The $1 million project is funded by Microsoft, Google,

"Don't just buy a new video

game — make one," Obama urges in the video he recorded on behalf of the campaign. "Don't just download the latest

app — help design it. Don't just play on your phone — program. No one's born a computer scientist, but with a little hard work — and some math

and science — just about anyone can become one." By late Tuesday, an estimated six million students in 167

countries had taken a tutorial, far more than organizers had predicted, said Hadi Partovi of Code.org, a nonprofit organization he founded with his brother, Ali, to encourage computer science in education. Of those participating students, about two-thirds

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In addition to the president,

House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., and Sen. Cory

Booker, D-N.J., made videos promoting "Hour of Code,"as

Sqe now.

did actors Ashton Kutcher and

Angela Bassett, singer Shakira and former NBA player

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have been from the United States, Partovi said.

The tutorials will remain available to the public after

Both Apple and Microsoft are hosting "Hour of Code" sessions at each of their retail stores around the country.

this week, Partovi said. "We're

Partovi estimates that 15

All

going to keep it up forever," he said. "If you did the first hour, thereare 20 more hours of tu-

torials you can do."

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

IN FOCUS:FRACKING

s Llaessae

Budget

a 0ma, scientists

areoo in att eoi an as in List By Henry Fountain

into nearby wells to force the

New York Times News Service

oil out, said Dr. Cliff Frohlich,

O KLAHOM A CI T Y Mary Catherine Sexton has

a University of Texas scientist. In other cases, Frohlich said,

been rattled enough. This fall her neighborhood

just the extraction of oil and gas

in the northeastern part of this

from a long-producing field has been seen to induce quakes.

city hasbeen shakenby dozens of minor earthquakes.

Fracking

"We would just have little

The practice of hydraulic fracturing, or fracking — injecting liquid at high pressures

trembles all the time," she said. Even before a magnitude 4.5 quake Saturday knocked objects off her walls and a stone from above her neighbor's bay

into shale rock — causes very

window, Sexton was on edge.

Nick Oxford/ New York Times NewsService

"People are fed up with the Austin Holland, e research seismologist, looks over data et the earthquakes," she said. "Our Oklahoma Geological Survey in Normen, Okla., where residents kids are scared. We're scared." and officials are worried by adramatic uptick in minor earthquakes. Oklahoma has never been known as earthquake country, with a yearly average of about where more than 340,000 jobs other human activities can in50 tremors, almost all of them are tied to the oil and gas indus- duce earthquakes by changing minor. But in the past three try is what scientists say may pressures underground. That years, the state has had thou- be causing many of the quakes: can have the effect of "unsands of quakes. This year has the widespreadindustry prac- clamping" old sttessed faults been the most active, with more tice of disposing of billions of so the rocks can slip past each than 2,600 so far, induding 87 gallons of wastewater that is other and cause the ground to last week. produced along with oil and shake. While most have been too gas, by injecting it under presThe weight of water behind slight to be felt, some, like the sure into wells that reach per- a new dam in China, for examquake Saturdayand a smaller meable rock formations. ple, is thought to have induced "Disposal wells pose the big- a 2008 quake in Sichuan provone in November that cracked a bathroom wall in Sexton's gest risk," said Dr. Austin Hol- ince that killed 80,000 people. house, have been sensed over a land, the seismologist with the In Australia, a 1989 quake that wide area and caused damage. Oklahoma Geological Survey, killed 13 people was attributed In 2011, a magnitude 5.6 quake who is studying the various in part to the opposite effect— thebiggesteverrecorded in dusters of quakes around the the removal of millions of tons the state — injured two people

state.

and severely damaged more Oklahoma has more than than a dozen homes, some be- 4,000 disposal wells for waste yond repair. from tens of thousands of oil and gas wells. Growing concern "Could we be looking at State officials say they are some cumulative tipping point? concerned, and residents ac- Yes, that's absolutely possible," customed to tornadoes and hail Holland said. But there could are now talking about buying be other explanations for the earthquake insurance. increase in earthquakes, he "I'm scared there's going to added. be a bigger one," Sexton said. Scientists have known for Just as unsettling in a state years that injection wells and

Cover Continued fromA1 During Thursday's meeting, Dr. George Brown, a Cover

Oregon board member, asked Goldberg how confident he was that the exchange would

be able to offercoverage to everyone who qualified. Goldberg said it would depend on how far past Sunday the deadline is extended. He plans to meet today with

Oregon Insurance Commissioner Laura Cali and insurance carriersto discuss the

extension.Goldberg expects to announce more details later today or early next week. "When I havean exact date

about how much more time we've got, I think I can come

back to you with more information about confidence around that," Goldberg told Brown. "At this point, I'm confident

Adoption Continued fromA1 In a report last year, it estimated that only 5 percent of

of coal during more than two

centuries of mining. In other places, including California an d

ters of quakes elsewhere, the

fracking-related earthquakes occurred only over short time periods, scientists say.

Of greater potential concern, scientists say, is wastewater disposal —from fracked or more

conventional wells. Disposal wells linked to quakes have been shut down in a few states,

induding Arkansas and Ohio. Along with oil and gas, water comes out of wells, often in

enormous amounts, and must be disposed of continuously. Because transporting water, usually by truck, is costly, disposal wells are commonly located near producing wells. The oil and gas industry

S w itzerland, points out that many of Okla-

enhanced geothermal projects, in which water is pumped into hot rocks deep underground to produce energy, have caused quakes. In Texas, some earthquakes havebeen connected to the industry practice of "water flood-

homa's disposal wells are in areas with no earthquake activity, and that the practice of

injecting wastewater has been going on foryears. "We've been doing this for a long time and it hasn't been an issue before," said Chad Warm-

ing," increasing the yield of old- ington, president of the Oklahoer oil wells by pumping water ma Oil and Gas Association.

"We've taken a credibility head of Cover Oregon until last week, has taken a medical hit," Baxter said. leave of absence. Goldberg agreed and notAs of Thursday, the state's At th e m e eting, M elissa ed he's also working to hold exchange had enrolled 13,096 Unger, the state director of the contractors of the website people. Of those, 10,627 were the Service Employees Inter- accountable. "We've withheld substantial eligible for the Oregon Health national Union, said the state Plan, the state's version of needed to streamline its paper payment," he said, adding $18 Medicaid. Those eligible for application. million to $19 million has been "It's clear paper is the way withheld. Medicaid do not have to wait "At the same time, I've been for an enrollment packet to we are going to enroll for a pick a plan; they are automat- while," she said. in touch with getting some ically signed up. Consumers are confused by outside legal assistance and The exchange has only en- the 19-page application and expertiseon our contract and rolled 2,424 through private get stuck on questions, she the options we have as an orplans. SBld. ganization to hold our conAnd, Goldberg said at the The board members also tractors accountable," Goldmeeting, the state's health in- told Goldberg what they ex- berg said. surance exchange website is pected from him. In addition, all advertisenot likely to be operational unLiz Baxter, the board chair- ments for the state's health til after January. woman, said she expects more insurance exchange will stop "When afterJanuary, I do transparency. Monday. not know," he said. She told Goldberg she wantBefore they are brought Goldberg said everyone ed a more "cut-t o-the chase" back, Goldberg said, "we have wants to "avoid (forecasting) approach and that she's frus- to determine what we want to a seriesofdatesthatcome and trated getting her news about advertise." go," eroding credibility. Cover Oregon from reading — Reporter, 541-554-1162 Rocky King, who was the the newspapers. Idake®bendbulletin.com we'll get through the vast majority. Our goal is to get through them all."

the Celia Center, a Los Ange- School of Law professor Mary les-based group that counsels Kate Kearney. Parents on both families about foster care and sides of adoption, birth and adoption. She urges adoptive adoptive, told the Donaldson

Aggressive online marketing

parents to establish those relationships before their children

One especially troubling practice — shunting unwant-

A doption Institute that t h e

Web made it easier and less closed. reach their teens. stressful to connect. "If you don't get involved, Nearly three out of four C ommunicating onl i n e adoptees who were surveyed your teenager is going to do "offers a little bit of distance," said they had turned to the In- it for you," said Yoffe, who as said Aaron Winkle, an adopternet to search for biological an adult found her biological tive father in Michigan who family members. More than mother in Argentina after her emails photos and written half said they used the Web brother created a Web page on updates monthly to his daughter's biological mother. "It to learn more without intrud- Yahoo. ing on their lives, keeping tabs As the Internet has pro- brings down the sense of fear. through Facebook or combing pelled more openness in adop- We realize that we long for the through public records online. tion, some parents are trying same things." In some cases, teenagers to work out legal agreements And thanks to that trail of are reaching out to biological laying out how and when they emails, he added, "our daughfamilies without their adop- will c o m municate, i n stead ter will never have to wonder, tive parents knowing, said of avoiding any contact at 'Did my birth mom love me?'" Jeanette Yoffe, director of all, said Widener University The Internet also has perils: recent infant adoptions were

small tremors as the rocks break, releasing trapped oil or gas. The technique has also been linked to a few minor earthquakes — in Oklahoma about a year ago, and in England and British Columbia. Yet unlike the continuing dus-

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voted for it risk incurring the

Continued fromA1 By eliminating waste and fraud, such as gove rnment payments t o dead people, and increasing some fees, such as the security fee for a i rline flights, the deal includes modest deficit reduction of $23 billion over 10 years. The budget passed by a 332-94 margin, with 169 Republicans and 163

group's wrath, which could lead it to support conservative challengers against them in next year's primary election. Walden, noting that while Republicans c o n t ro l the

House, Democrats control the White House and Senate,

agreed that the deal didn't go as far as he would of liked, but it nonetheless reduced the

deficit without raising taxes. "The conservative vote here D emocrats voting i n f a - is to reduce deficit spending," vor. More Republicans (62) he said. than Democrats (32) voted In a prepared statement, against the bill. The U.S. DeFazio said he was thankSenate still must vote on ful that the budget didn't hurt the deal. seniors by slashing Social Oregon's delegation split Security or privatizing Medion the vote, with Reps. care. But he fumed over the Greg Walden, R-Hood failure to extend emergency River; E a r l Bl u m enau- unemployment. "While m y R e publican er, D-Portland; Suzanne Bonamici, D -B e a v er- colleagues think the unemton; and Peter DeFazio, ployed are living the good D-Springfield, all support- life, I suggest they try feeding ing the deal. Only Rep. their family on unemployKurt Schrader, D-Canby, voted against it. Walden, whose district

ment benefits," he said, add-

ed the budget because it alleviates the across-the-

choices that reflect our val-

ing that the deal did not close a single tax loophole for the includes Central Oregon, wealthy. "Budgets are about making said Thursday he support-

ues. Today's budget is a comboard nature of sequestra- promise, but it is also a choice tion's cuts and allows for that says Congress will proflexibility on spending. tect the wealthy and leave "In an era of split gov- the unemployed even further ernment, you do have to behind." govern. I think the responBonamici said she supportsible vote here is one that ed the bill because it was a doesn't lead t o

a n o ther first step toward removing

shutdown," he said refer- the harmful effects of sering to the budget impasse questration. She also voiced that closed th e

f e deral frustration over the provision

government for 16 days in October. "It's one that leads to smarter choices on

spending." Heavy cuts loomed for the Pentagon's budget, and the new budget provides about $20 billion of breathing room for 2014. "Virtually th e w h ole

thatraised revenue by requiring newly hired federal employees to contribute a larger share toward their pensions. "Federal employees are not the cause of our l ong-term

deficit, and they must stop being used as political pawns," she said i n a pr e pared statement.

The bill p rovides some would go against defense short-term relief, but a f t er (spending)," Walden said. 2015, keeps spending at se"At some point, we do the questration levels through country a huge disservice 2023, Schrader noted. if we're hollowing out our "To call this a budget deal capabilities." is making it out to be more While the bill passed than it is," Schrader said in a easily, the compromise did prepared statement. "It does s equester cut t h i s y e a r

not appeal to everyone.

Many Democrats were upset that it did not include an extension of emergency unemployment benefits, which will expire Dec. 28 for a projected 1.3 million people nationwide, including 21,000 Oregonians, according to the Oregon Center for Public Policy. Some conservative organizations, in c l uding FreedomWorks and Heritage Action, recoiled at the prospectof raising spending levels above those set by 2011's Budget Control Act, w h ic h

reduce the effect of sequestration in the short term, but

it pays for it through a budget gimmick by adding an extra two years of sequestration in the long term." The bill now heads to the

Senate, which is expected to vote on it next week. Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff

Merkley, both Democrats, did not provide The Bulletin any indication of

— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

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FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Campus

Sentencing

can renovate an industrial mine." Emily Weidner, a Bend resident who commutes to OSU in Corvallis, said she

Continued from A1 "The most traditional way

Continued from A1 Desert Sun employees used

to prepare the land for a builder would be to just fill it up,"

thought the "Rim" plan was

those funds for personal use, purchasing cars, boats and

Curtis said. "In commercial

the best option.

other items, and started a real

"I like the layout of the

development, you try to get the car as close to the building as possible, but academia offers

a different modeL If we don't fill it, we only need one-third

cording to the news release. Desert Sun filed for bank-

sard. Mike Brasfield, a Bend

forcecars outside ofthe campus environment, which is an advantage." The designers noted that providing parking will be a challenge, but their vision for the campus attempts to minimize a reliance on automobiles in part by enticing students to live on campus.

ruptcy in 2007, as Central Or-

egon's red-hot real estate market began to collapse. A federal grand jury indict-

resident, resisted the uni-

?' •

versity's rebranding of the pumice mine, saying, "Let's

.

call it what it is — a gravel

ed Fitzsimons and the other defendants in late 2009. Fitz-

pit." "They're trying to make i t sound al l

simons pleaded guilty to conspiracy, bank fraud and money launderingcharges in early

w arm a nd

fuzzy," he said. "I'm not saying that they can't do it, and

2012. The other defendants

I'm not saying I don't want

"The more students who live on campus the better," said

were charged with a variety of bank fraud and conspiracy charges. Egeland has a sentencing

a university, I just think we Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Phil Worth, a Portland-based Barbara Swift, the principal at the Swift Company, standing, explains one of the development options t ransportation planner a n d for the new OSU-Cascades campus Thursday during a community presentation in Bend. the design team's third mem-

ber. "It's a lever that is really canyon to serve as what was called "a natural laboratory," with smallbodies of water that

the university's first long-term

C urtis c a l le d a cou n - could store runoff and largty-owned landfill to the cam- er open spaces untouched by

even completed their due dil-

stay on campus."

the construction projects, ac-

a road up on the top," she

t he fill material, and it w i l l

controlled by the university, if they can attract students to

estate flipping scheme, without following through on many of

buildings, the landscaping, and the possibility to have

at the open house, though questions remained about the

design plans, administrators stressed that they have not impact on traffic and the abil-

should call it what it is."

Brasfiel d was also very concerned about the impact not only of more driv-

hearing set for Jan. 29. Another defendant, John Partin,

ers, but of the quality of

is scheduled to be sentenced

those drivers. "Have you ever seen how

March 12. Six other defendants have

already been sentenced. "The illegal actions of these here at the community college?" he asked. "It can get igence on the sites. The uni- pus housing. defendants exemplify the con"I think OSU-Cascades has quite dangerous, especially pus's north the "silver bul- buildings. versity is still waiting on the duct that wreaked havoc in the "We believe the land could results of a geotechnical sur- proposed a really outstanding with them tailgating in the let for parking," noting that mortgage, financial and real surface parking would be serve the specificacademic vey of the land and have not idea," said Scott Steele, a local roundabouts. And given estate industries for the past cheap to build there. Univer- programs of the university," yet finalized their purchases architect. "Most people would how expensive it is to live several years," U.S. Attorney sity administrators said that Curtis said, noting the school's of the plots that comprise the think you need to fill the mine, in Bend, they'll be driving Amanda Marshall said in the county commissioners have a naturalresources and sustain- campus. but they came up with a plan into here from way out." news release. non-binding memorandum of ability programs. Reactions to the "Rim" and to turn it into an amenity. It's — Reporter: 541-633-2160 — Reporter 541-617-7820 understanding that acknowlDespite the emergence of "Canyon" plans were positive a great example of how you tleeds@bendbtdletin.corn eglucklich@bendbulletin.com edges the university's desire to later use the site. SPECIAL 60VoOFF SPECIAL 24.99 SPECIAL 19.99 SPECIAL In all of the design team's DESIGNERJACKETS GEOFFREYBEENE SWEATERS OR JEANS 40/MO'/o OFF plans, residential housing is Special $100-$140. Reg. Reg.52.50-$55, sfter Reg. $49,after special 24.50 ALL JUNIORS'SWEATERS $250-$350, after special special 32.99. Dress shirts Only at Macy's. Sale in placed outside of the pumice Special 14.70<1.40. mine on thecampus's eastern

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residences,classrooms, office space and some retail . The plot has approval for an access road off Chandler Avenue, but officials also hope to receive city approval for additional access off Century, north of the

roundabout. The design team said preserving the existing trees on the site is one of their

main goals. While the f irst f reshman

class could reside and attend classes on the eastern edge of campus, likely until they graduate, the design team is focused on the bigger picture. Of the two plans that do

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*Weblo 1146133.

wall on the mine's north side,

thus exposing the buildings to as much sunlight as possible.

ALL10K & 14K GOLD EARRINGS

SPECIAL 79.99

5 4 1. 3 1 7 . 6 0 0 0

mac s ~mggeglm

> Fine jewelry specials available only at stores that carry fine jewelry. REG. & ORIG. PRICES ARE OFFERING PRICES AND SAVINGS MAY NOT BE BASED ON ACTUAL SALES. SOME ORIG. PRICES NOT IN EFFECT DURING THE PAST 90 DAYS. SUPER SATURDAY SALE PRICES IN EFFECT 12/13-12/14/13. MERCHANDISE WILL BE ON SALE AT THESE & OTHER SALE PRICES THROUGH 1/4/14, EXCEPT AS NOTED.*Intermediate price reductions may have been taken. 4AII carat weights (ct. t.w.) are approximate; variance may be .05 carat. Jewelry photos may beenlarged or enhanced to show detail. Finejewelry at select stores; log on to macys.com for locations. Almost all gemstoneshave been treated to enhance their beauty and require special care,log on to macyscom/gemstones or ask your sales professional. 5pecials available while supplies last. Advertised merchandise may not be carried at your local Macy's and selection may vary by store. Prices and merchandise may differ at macys.com. Extra savings are taken off already-reduced prices; "special" prices reflect extra savings. Electric items shown carry warranties; to seea mfr's warranty at no charge before purchasing, visit a store or write to: Macy's Warranty Dept., PO Box 1026, Maryland Heights, MO63043, attn: Consumer Warranties.N3110044. +Enter the WeblD in the search box at macys.com to order.

St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM

at theNEWStGharlesHealthGare.org/watch Get an inside look at what's going on in Central Oregon healthcare by clicking on our local video library.


A6 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

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Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2013

BRIEFING Sisters driver cited in crash ASisters manwas cited on suspicion of careless driving following a two-vehicle crash Wednesday onU.S. Highway 97 about10 miles north of KlamathFalls. According to the Oregon State Police, Howard Kingman, 70, of Sisters, was driving north shortly after1 p.m. when heattempted to pass a vehicle driven by Robert Burton, 56, of Chelan, Wash.Kingman reportedly lost control on the icy road and struck Burton's vehicle. Both vehicles slid off the road and into an irrigation canal, coming to rest with Burton's vehicle largely submerged and underneath Kingman's vehicle, according to an OSPnews release. Burton and passengers Bree Burton, 20, and BreeBurton's 2-month-old son were taken to Sky Lakes Medical Center in Klamath Falls with minor injuries.

e e em nn examines s e er ro e u r c ase

STATE NEWS Hermiston

Ashland

By Elon Glucklich

Thursday, petitioning for a

Jim Long said. The Bend City

the city.

The Bulletin

$300,000 loan that would

Council also has to approve

pay a fraction of the cost to buy the former Econo Lodge

the loan at an upcoming meeting. The $300,000 would come from about$550,000 col-

Shelter officials have tried for several years to buy the

Bethlehem Inn officials

want help from the city of Bend to purchase the home-

hotel property on Northeast Third Street south of Empire Avenue. The advisory committee

less shelter they have operated since 2007 and began leasing from Deschutes County in 2011.

Shelter administrators

approved the request, but the terms of the loan still have

met with Bend's affordable

to be worked out, Bend Af-

housing advisory committee

fordable Housing Manager

lected over the last year in

1.2-acre site from the county, but the two sides haven't

been able to agree on a price. Deschutes County bought

Bend's affordable housing fund, which gets money from

the Econo Lodge property for $2.5 million in 2007. Beth-

a fee totaling one-third of 1

lehem Inn's lease expires in

percent of the value of each building permit applied for in

June. See Inn/B6

• Ashland:A city attorney has anidea for how to control medical marijuana dispensaries in town, B3

• Hnrmistnn:A heard of pronghornis moved to a wildlife preserve after its stomping grounds undergo changes,B3

Have a story idea or snhmission? Contact us!

SLEIGH RIDING IN SUNRIVER

The Bulletin Call nreporter

Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects......541-410-9207 Salem ....................541-554-1162 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business ..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Nore briefing, B6

Well shot!

Submissions • Letters andopinions: Mail:My Nickel'sWorth or In MyView P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "CivicCalendar" inthesubject and includeacontact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

w

e've been getting glimpses of Santa andsuspect you have, too! Wewant to see your photos of him, hanging out with the elves, making toys, hearing what your kids and grandkids want for Christmas ... • We'll print them on Saturday, Dec. 21, in the Local section, and show you more onour website. • Submit them at bundbullutin.cum/ santasightings • Also, we want to see photos of holiday lights for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbundbullntin.cnm /hulidnylightsand we'll pick the best for publication.

• School newsandnotes: Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Willie, a 17-year-old Belgian draft horse, pulls Sunriver Stables employee Tim Nivison, 30, of Bend, on a sleigh ride along the Deschutes River near the stables Wednesday. Starting Saturday and continuing through Jan. 1, Sunriver Stables will be offering one-horse open sleigh rides along the river. For more information, call the Sunriver Stables at 541-593-6995 or visit http://www.sunriver-resort.com/

oregon-equestrian-vacations.php

New school health clinic planned inSisters

Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academicac hievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details onthe Obituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Community events: By Elon Glucklich

approved a plan to build a

the move is longoverdue. For

The Bulletin

2,700-square-foot dinic on land

the last two years, the Sisters

The city of Sisters will move its school-based health clinic into a newbuildingnextyear, hopingto expandmedical access for Sisters SchoolDistrict

adjacent to Sisters High School. It was donated to the countyby a group of landowners lastyear. Thepropertylies just northof the high schoolnear McKinney

dinichas operated outof a small, two-room modular buildingbetween the high school and middle school. The buildingwas ill-suited

studentsand area residents.

Butte and McKinney Ranch

for patient privacy, Kate Moore,

Deschutes County commissioners on Wednesday

roads. County health officials say

apublic health nurse program manager, told commissioners

this week. Health officials brought the

new-buildingproposal tothe county's budget committee earlierthisyear. But the committee

raised concerns overtapping too deeply into Deschutes Coun-

ty'sgeneralfundtofi nancean expansionof the Sisters dinic. See Sisters /B5

Email eventsto communitylife@ bendbulletin.comorclickon "Submit anEvent" onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-383-0358

Plus: • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to rnndnrphutns© bundbullutin.cum and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the bestfor publication.

Central Oregon offer people

Submission requirements: Include ae much detail ae

who want a Christmas tree a chance to head out into the

possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number.

woods and cut their own. But there's a permit to have,

Photos must be high resolution

(at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

Christmas treehunt requiressomepreparation By Dylan J. Darling

Tree hunting safety tips

The Bulletin

National forest lands around

rules to know and advice to

followbefore settingout on a tree hunt. It's also good to have a plan, said Brian Tandy, forest products program manager for the Deschutes and Ochoco

tmmam ~ 0

I

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V 1uR

MKRRR™g

g06360 HRISTMAS TREE paRiulT

national forests.

Correction In a story headlined, "Giving the gift of joy," which appearedThursday, Dec.12, on Page B1, information about donations to the Oregon National Guardwas incorrect due to incorrect information supplied to The Bulletin. TheOregon National Guard is not collecting gift cards for families of its deployed members. The Bulletin regrets the error.

"I think what people have to

think about first is, 'What kind of tree do you want'?'" he said.

Ponderosapines grow dose to Bend and at lower elevations.

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

A BLM and Forest Service Christmas tree permit costs $5. One

permit is required for each tree, with a five-permit maximumper household. The permit allows the taking of any tree species that is less than12 feet tall.

Douglas and white firs have m ore branches, ma kingthem more popular as Christmas

trees. They're found at higher elevations.

Incense cedars are another option; they're also found at higher elevations. The Sisters Ranger District

is particularly popular for Christmas tree hunters, with a

variety of trees found off state Highway 242 and near Camp

The U.S. Forest Service offers these tips for a safe tree hunt: • Let someone know when and whereyou plan to cut; • Bring warm clothes, a container of hot liquid, water and food; • Carrya flashlight during the hunt; • Carry chains during the drive.

Sherman. Many folks around Central Oregon have aparticular place they like to go and get atree eachyear, but if you're new at tree hunting, it is up to you to pry info from them. "Alot of people have the place they like to go and don't like to divulge it," Tandy said. On the Ochoco National Forest near Prineville, the

woods off of McKay Creek Road and around Walton Lake

are popular places to go, said Patrick Lair, spokesman for the Ochoco. "You can get up in the firs pretty quick," he said. While coming home with a Christmas tree is the goal,

many people in Central Oregonhavemade a fam ily

tradition out of the event that involves more than a tree hunt, said Jean Nelson-Dean,

spokeswoman for the Deschutes National Forest. Some pack sleds or bring chili and make a day of it. "Getting the tree is just part of the fun," she said.

Permits are $5 and available at Deschutes and Ochoco national forest offices around

CentralOregon, as well as a number of retailers. SeeTrees/B2

PUBUCOFFICIAlS U.S. SENATE • SENJEFFMERKLEY04RE 107 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICEBUILDING W ASHINGTON, 0.C. 20510 PHONE:202-224-3753 WEB:http://merkley. senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE208 BEND, OR 97701 PHONE: 541-318-1298 • SEN. RON WYDEN, D-ORE. 223 DIRKSENSENATE OFFICEBUILDING W ASHINGTON, 0.C. 20510 PHONE:202-224-5244 WEB:http://wyden. senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE107 BEND, OR 97701 PHONE:541-330-9142

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • REP. GREG WALDEN, R-HOODRIVER 2182 RAYBURNHOUSE OFFICEBUILDING WASHINGTON,0.C. 20515 PHONE: 202-225-6730 WEB:http://walden. house.gov BENDOFFICE: 1051 N.W. BOND ST., SUITE400 BEND, OR 97701


B2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

WEST NEWS

o vernors resent ma in By Scott Sonner

an

groups and land trusts have expressed interest in the data

tech wildlife habitat mapping project Thursday that they hope will encourage economic development across the

to help make decisions about p rioritizing p r o t ection o f

West, while protecting the

preservation mission. "It provides a common footing for the public and a wide array of stakeholders who are interested in land

erty most valuable to their

use," said Rob Mrowka, an

ex-Forest Service supervisor who now works as a senior

The Western G overnors' Association wants to make it

threat of l i t igation as they

draft plans to build highways, dig gold mines and erect power lines, pipelines or wind farms. Five years in the making, the database will connect 16

westernstatesfrom California and Alaska to Montana and Oklahoma with a f i rst-

of-its-kind online system of colorful GIS maps display-

scientist fo r Scott Sonner /The Associated Press

Chet Van Dellen, the GIS mapping coordinator for the Nevada Department of Wildlife is pictured on Nov. 21 working on a new, high-tech wilidlife habitat mapping project which the Western Governors' Association discussed Thursday in Las Vegas.

"If I'm a transportation planner working in Walla Walla, Wash., and I want to modify a highway for safety concerns along the Washington-Oregon border, I can look at different routes and draw different lines to see what kind of crucial habitat I run into ..."

resources — much of it de-

tailed down to square-mile increments. T he Crucial Habitat A s species of concern in multiple states, like the northern

spotted owl in the Pacific Northwest, the sage grouse in the Great Basin or the prairie chicken in the Southwest. "It's the one-stop shopping feature that is so powerful habitat and t h e i n d ividual Walla, Wash., and I want to about CHAT," he said. species' economic and recre- modify a highway for safety Energy industry leaders ational importance. concerns along the Washing- agreed. "The g o v ernors' i n t e nt ton-Oregon border, I can look "That did not previously back in 2008 really was to ca- at different routes and draw exist," said Robert Veldman, ter to industries within their different lines to see what senior environmental advisstates who need data while at kind of crucial habitat I run er for the Houston-based Nothe same time conserving the into and where it ranks on ble Energy Inc., which drills resourcesthe statesare bless- the scale of one to six," Brown for oil and gas in the Rocky ed with and th e governors sard. Mountains and the Gulf of are charged with preservThe Energy Department Mexico, and recently starting ing," said Carlee Brown, pol- provided a $3 million grant exploration in Nevada. "It will be instrumental in icy manager for the Western and individual states contribGovernors' Association. uted the time of mapping spe- supporting Noble Energy's "It's going to provide that cialists the past three years to commitment to p r otecting first look — a 3 0 , 000-foot help gather, organize and in- wildlife and t h eir h abitats, view of the situation on the put the information, said Joe particularly during project g round. It's meant to b e a Rassenfoss, WGA's commu- planning, inf r a structure starting point for states with nications director. It's expect- route selection and in doing different priorities and dif- ed to be especially helpful for due diligence for acquisitions f erent r e source n e eds t o projects that may encounter and divestitures," Veldman

C entral Or-

egon, 6,768 Christmas tree permits were sold for the two forests, according to Tandy. Of those, 1,298 were sold at U.S. Forest Service offices and

C>h~rtistmi asl i ltW rLeelhPunit~er<s lit,the Sisters anger~D >'istrict~oanlffi~J~different tree l LRR~

s~lgegiesLiil~different~areas C of the

itself, as well as where and how to cut it. One permit is re-

Abbot Butteg

Cedar,firi Ind

Mt. Jefferson Wilderness (No cutting)

s11e

t

Black tte

Suttle Lak

allowed per household, accordingto the Deschutes and Ochoco national forests web-

Cache Mt.

site.Trees should not exceed

Fir

than a foot.

Mt.

Washington Wilderness (No cutting)

11

iSterS To Redmond I

15

Three Sisters Wilderness (No cutting)

Pine

To Bend i

Fir

and

DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST

Pine 19 r e mind

folks to think about taking

0 Three Creeks Lake Source: L.S. Forest Service

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

"So if you don't show up, clothes, food, water and a map. a measuring tape, a handsaw Tandy also recommend- they know where to start lookand gloves. Helpful gear in ed tree hunters tell someone ing," he said. case the tree hunt goes longer when and where they're going — Reporter: 541-617-7812; than expected include warm after a tree. ddarling@bendbulletin.com. up and cutting a tree include

NEws OF REcoRD

The Bulletin will updateitems inthe Police Log whensucharequest is received. Any new information, suchasthe dismissal of charges oracquittal, must beverifiable. For moreinformation, call 541-383-0358.

ERilD POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — Atheft wasreportedandan arrest made at11:23a.m. DO C.10, inthe

tum leap forward," he said after watching the unveiling of the project in Las Vegas. California, Mont a na, Washington, Wyoming and Kansas already are utilizing their own state databases. N evada rolled out it s

n ew

-

HOMES PRICED FROM

lgfEST gogTH + cRosslNG +

$449,000 - $739,900 2203 NW Lemhi Pass Dr. • Central courtyard • Large greatroom • Master on main level • Bright interior • Priced at9649,999

1700 blockof NortheastThird Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at8:27 p.m. Dec.10, inthe1800blockof Northeast U.S. Highway20. DUII — LindseyFrancesLuoto,29, was arrested onsuspicion ofdriving under the influence ofintoxicantsat 8:35 p.m. DOC.10, inthe1300block DfNortheast SharkeyTerrace. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief wasreported at7:50p.m. Dec. 3, in the2100blockof Northeast Sixth Street.

ious stages of compiling their data — A l aska, A r i z ona, Colorado, Idaho, Oklahoma, Nebraska, South Dakota and Utah.

OIRECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd.,

left on NWCrossing Dr., left on NW Lsmhi PassDr.

"Mining companies like to say, 'The gold is where the gold is; that's where we need to go,'" said Chet Van Dellen,

2175 NW Lolo Dr. • Elegant & spacious • Main floor abovestreet • Master on main level • Central courtyard • Priced atsy99,999

GIS coordinator for Nevada's Department of Wildlife. "We

like to say the animals are where the animals are." The "crucial habitat" is not habitat, a legal term when it

DIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd., right on Mt. Washington Dr., right on NW Lolo Dr.

comes to protecting wildlife under the Endangered Spe-

2123 NW Lemhi Pass Dr.

to be confused with critical

cies Act.

• Exceptional finishes • Front paver patio • Open greatroom • Bright island kitchen • Priced at9449,999

Developers and U.S. regulators still must complete environmental assessments as

required by the National En-

«

ttsIs

b ~

I I

DIRECTIONS: West on Skyliners Rd.,

vironmental Policy Act. But

right on NWLemhi PassDr

the habitat maps themselves carry no regulatory authority, and developers will be free to

pursueprojectsregardless of what shows up in the path of their projects, although sometimes with a healthy price tag.

A LL A R O U N D

Bend R, Central Oregon I RIIII K

Tree cutting rules and advice

1900 NW Monterey Pines Dr. • Charming cottages • 28 3bedroom plans • High end finishes • Central location • Homes pricedfrom9929,999

I 4

Along with purchasing a $5 permit at a U.S. Forest Service office Dr permit vendor, forest officials said, Christmas tree cutters should follow these rules and pieces of advice: • One permit is required for each tree, with a maximum Df five permits per household; • Permits must be validated and attached to the tree during transit; • The tree must be Dn public and not private land; • Trees must be 12 feet tall or shorter and

DIRECTIONS: West on NWNewport AveyNWShsvlin Park Rd., right on NW

Pence Ln., left on NW Monterey Pines Dr. Property on right.

19036 Mt. Shasta Dr. • Three Pinesluxury • Master on mainlevel • targe openkitchen • Courtyard Ik patio • Priced at9914,999 DIRECTIONS: West on Shevlin Park Rd.,

left on NWParkCommonsDr., left on Mt. Jefferson Pl., right on Mt. ShastaDr.

20072 Mount Hope Ln. • Vaulted greatroom • Open floor plan • Good starter home • Close to shopping • Priced atst99,999

within 15 feet Df another

tree. Don't cut trees that are wlthin 150 feet Df

16

r

Tr re g But

other developments; within

set out in search of a tree. Handy equipment for sizing

DESCHUTES COUNTY

pine

150 feet of state highways, picnic areas, campgrounds and

care of themselves as they

JEFFERSON COUNTY

alifj

The forests also ask that tree hunters don't cut within

300 feetof streams, lakes or ponds; or within young tree plantations. The forests also don't allow cutting of trees in

Pine

DE CHUTES TIONAL FOREST

Round Lake 0

with a maximum of five trees

within 15 feet of another tree. Stumps should be cut shorter

Fir

-a ml „= pine „

12

quiredforeach Christmas tree

12 feet in height and must be

Lake Chinook

oeschiurites ¹tiona'I Foiest.

5,470 were sold at businesses. Rules pertain to the t r ee

wilderness areas. F orest o f f i cials

Warm Springs Indian Reservation (No cutting)

Wihe>re to find trees

Mart, groceries and country stores.

mapping systems and databases across state boundar-

The other states are at var-

sessment Tool, or CHAT, pro- bring all their information vides layers of data that rate together,"she said before the the resources on a scale of WGA announced details of one to six, from most to least the effort Thursday at its an"cruciaL" I n dividual s t ates nual winter gathering in Las determine t h ose p r i o rities Vegas. " If I ' m a transportation based on their information about the condition of the planner working in Walla

The businesses include Bi-

ty in Arizona. "It integrates the various

maps Thursday in concert with the regional package, — Carlee Brown, with Oregon and New Mexipolicy manager, Western Governors' Association co to follow later this month.

and other valuable natural

Continued from B1

t h e n o n profit

Center for Biological Diversi-

ies. To me, that is the quan-

ing wildlife habitat, wetlands

Trees

'I s)

ts

wildlife or purchasing prop-

region's environmental treasures — an ambitious effort that's winning praise from conservationists and the energy industry. easierto chart paths across large landscapes where developers can expect the least regulatory resistance and

r

t

Count on our group of local real estate professionals to help you navigate.

Brown said conservation

RENO, Nev. — Governors in 16 states unveiled a high-

® 0

said.

The Associated Press

Last year in

P IREUKIS le l l t X DEPARTlllKI9T DUII —Clayton RayBurkhart, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:07 a.m. Dec. 11, inthe area of Northwest Deer Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at7:39 p.m. Dec.11, in thearea of Northwest10th Street.

a highway, picnic area, campground or other development; wlthin 300 feet of a stream, lake Dr pond; or within a young tree plantation Dr within in a wilderness area; • Cut stumps less than a foot from the ground; • Once a tree is home, cut an inch Dff the bot-

tom and put it in liquid mixed one part sugar to 16 parts water. For more information, go to http://1.usa.gov /1 f5G453.

Find Your Dream Home In

Real Estate

DIRECTIONS: From Parkwaysouthbound, exit Powers Rd,west, left on Powers Rd., left on Blakely Rd., right on Mt. HopeLn.

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• •

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TheBulletin •


FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

REGON

I'OI1

Om er e

rom o

CHEVROLE T

GNC

BUICK

eosie

The Associated Press HERMISTON — Most of the humans are gone from

a U.S. government depot in Eastern Oregon where a stockpile of chemical weapons has been destroyed. Now the pronghorn are gone, too. A helicopterherded 38 of

the antelope into a corral trap

at the Umatilla Chemical Depot on Wednesday, and the

herd was later driven to a wildlife area about 300 miles south in Malheur County for

release. Since 1969, antelope had l ived behind fences at t h e

Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/The Associated Press

19,000-acre government fa- A helicopter herded 38 pronghorn into a corral trap at the Umatilla cility in northeast Oregon as Chemical Depot on Wednesday. The herd was later driven to a a nursery herd, helping to re- wildlife area about 300 miles south in Malheur County for release. build populations of the species native to the Columbia Plateau and high-desert shru-

bland of the region. Oregon now has about 25,000 pronghorn. But the depot finished incinerating a stockpile of nerve

who remain, recalled watchA total of 37 pronghorn ing the animals at the facility, were released after the trip which once used an antelope

to the Beulah Wildlife Man-

image on its logo. He said mat- agement Unit near Ontario ing season was particularly — eight adult males, 22 adult active. females and seven young. One "The bucks would all jockey animal in poor condition was agents in 2011. The plant is being dismantled and its work- for position," he said. "It was a euthanized, the agency said. ers dismissed a group at a big chasing game most of the Plans for the depot site intime. The fences are to come time." clude a wildlife refuge of 5,600 down, and wildlife officials Pronghorn are the fastest acres. said it wouldn't do to have the ungulates in North America, The plot is one of the largest antelope roaming the farms capable of hitting 40 mph, the examples of shrub steppe haband industries nearby. state Department of Fish and itat remaining in the region Maintenance worker Mike Wildlife said in a press release and good for burrowing owls Morehead, one of the few about the move. and other species.

II

'I

Dock workers

Ashland seeking to limit pot clinics By Steve Lundeberg

claim win

A(bany Democrat-Herald

By Steven DuBois

if the panel wanted to pre-

The Associated Press

vent medical marijuana dispensaries from setting up

PORTLAND — The dispute over which union workers at the Port of Portland should

perform the task of plugging and unplugging refrigerated shipping containers has been resolved, but it's unknown if it will be enough to keep the port's most important container carr ierfrom abandoning the city. Gov. John Kitzhaber said

Thursday the work will be assigned to workers represented

by International Longshore 8 Warehouse Union, which has long been trying to wrest the equivalent of two full-time jobs from union electricians. The disagreement ignited a slowdown in the summer of 2012 that backed up truck traffic outside the port and disrupt-

ed businesses throughout the Pacific Northwest. Thoughproductivity has improved, port officials said it hasn't returned to pre-dispute levels, and that fac-

tored into a recent decision by Hanjin Shipping Co. to stop visiting Portland early next year.

City Attorney Jim Dela-

poer told the Albany City Council on Wednesday that

as recreational, remains illegal at the federal level. Mayor Sharon Konopa suggested that the amend-

I I

II

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816,495

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garding where dispensaries cleanest" way to try to do so could be located if the feds is via land use regulations, ever legalize pot. with an amendment to the However, the city attorney development code. told her it was not prudent to And if banning medical set up provisions for operapot is in fact the objective, he tion if the council's goal was recommended taking action to prevent operation. shop in the city, the "best and

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"It would weaken the case

for banning a dispensary if ed by the passage of House you also include measures Bill 3460,entrepreneurs can for fitting it i n," Delapoer start applying to operate said. "It also would be a very state-sanctioned dispensa- d ifficult regulatory fix i f ries on March 3. federal law changes, so it's Delapoer said if the coun- legal." cil waited to take action City manager Wes Hare until a dispensary had set added: "One advantage of up shop, the city would be using the land use process "much more vulnerable to is that it's heavy on process. the argument of regulatory It gives people an opportaking." tunity to t estify. It's very After hearing Delapoer's deliberative." points, the council voted 4-2 Delapoer said if a dispento direct city staff to draft a sary required development code amendment outlawing approval, and went ahead any business that dispensed without approval, the city or delivered any drug in vio- would be able to ask for relief lation of state or federal law. in circuit court in the form of Marijuana, medical as well having the violator enjoined.

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BOmb CaSe Plea — Themanaccused ofbombing a district attorney's office in Medford has pleadednot guilty in federal court. The trial for 46-year-old Alan Leroy McVay, of White City, is scheduled for Feb.11. He entered his pleaWednesday. He'scharged with damaging the building in Medford with an explosion on Nov. 13. Prosecutors said he hoped toavoid sentencing the next day on a burglary charge. Investigators said he taped apipe bomb to apropanetank and threw it at the office window. It reportedly broke the window but did little other damagebecausethe tank did not explode.

High SChOOIkilling — The Oregon Supreme Court has denied the release of amanconvicted as a15-year-old of the1990 rapeand killing of a high school classmate. Thedecision issued Thursday leaves the question of releasing ConradEngweiler to the Oregon Board of Parole andPost-Prison Supervision, which must decide whether he is adanger to others. Engweiler hasearnedmore than five years off his sentence. Hewas convicted in1990 of the aggravated murder of high school classmate Erin Reynolds. He is scheduled to bereleased in 2018, and his attorney argued to the SupremeCourt that he deserved to be released in 2012.

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grant has beenawarded to Portland Fire & Rescue, Murder Charge filed — A man arrested after an allowing it to retain 26 firefighting jobs that were to eight-hour standoff with officers in Marion County be cut because of city budget problems. The grant last month has beenaccused of aggravated murder in awardedThursday bytheFederalEmergency Manthe shooting death of awoman. Prosecutors haven't agement Agency also allows the bureau to reverse decided yet whether to seekthedeath penalty against its plan to close two fire stations. The FEMA grant 24-year-old Dustin Michael Bryant. Bryant was funds the positions for only two years, but City convicted in September of coercion andattempted Commissioner DanSaltzman said he will "make assault against 23-year-old Adrian Bird. Hewas recertain" the City Council comes up with money to portedly on probation and under orders not to contact pay for the positions in the future. The fire departBird when police werecalled to her Turner apartment ment applied for the grant during the summer and on Nov. 22. Officers said Bird was hit by Bryant's after learning about planned layoffs. In a statement gunfire as they arrived andshetried to run. He then Thursday, Fire Chief Erin Janssens thanked firefight- barricaded himself in the apartment with her 2-yearers for keeping their focus this fall even though jobs old daughter. were at risk. — From wire reports

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B4 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

EDj To

The Bulletin

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TRI9NIG EGg ENTAs lcY gHENEIIAAN

NOT REALLY. I SPENT THE LAST SIX WEEKS ON FARMINS RAIDS FOR THIS SWEET, EPIC AXE.

FINDANY TERRORISTSP

misea in in o

owaer e ae he credibility of the opponents and supporters of Bend's Bridge Creek water project rests on accurate information. There's been another dose of the misC

leading. This time it's from CentralOregon LandWatch. In a recent email, Central Oregon LandWatch arguesthat the city could double its annual take of water from Tumalo Creek, if the project goes ahead. But it could also be true if the city does not go ahead with the project. First of all, the city currently has a permit to take 18.2 cubic feet per second from its intake on Bridge Creek. That does not change with the city's new project. The city is not asking to take more than that. Today, the Bend City Council is going to hold a special council meeting, apparently to make a public statement to emphasize that point. Second, right now the city cannot do any fine tuning at its intake at Bridge Creek. It's 18.2 cfs or it's 0 cfs. The valve is either on or off. The new design includes a control valve. The city will be able to

modulate what it takes according to demand.That can be much better for the creek. The real drain on Tumalo Creek is also not what the city is doing. It is the water rights of the Tumalo Irrigation District. The district can take as much as 200 cfs. Of course, the city has not been immune to producing misleading information of its own about Bridge Creek. It grossly mischaracterized the project in 2011, maintaining that it would not affect Tumalo Falls. But, yes, the project does impact Tumalo Creek,because the city diverts water from a Tumalo Creek tributary above the falls. The city clarified what was going on after opponents pointed out the glaring inconsistency. Is it too much to ask that the opponentsnow do the same? Or is misleading good enough if it persuades people?

Wyden's logging bill a worthy step forward

w

hile there are no doubt things to change in Sen. Ron Wyden's, D-Ore., bill to increase logging on 08 C lands in Oregon, there is this: The president has not, as he has with a U.S. House of Representatives bill aiming to do the same thing, threatened a veto. W yden introduced hi s b i l l late last month. It would roughly double the harvest of timber on the former Oregon & California Railroad lands now controlled by the federalgovernment. Current harvest on O&C land, found in some 18 counties in the state, most west of the Cascades but including Klamath County, has averaged about 150 million board feet per year for the last decade. Under Wyden's bill, that would jump to 300-350 million board feet annually. It would do a variety of other things as well. It would set aside old-growth timber from logging, attempt to limit legal action designed to halt sales and model efforts to restore the land on research by foresters from the University of Washington and Oregon State University. The pair is experimenting to create what it calls "ecological forestry." The House version of an O&C

land bill, included in a larger forestry bill and written by Rep. Greg Walden (R-Hood River), Rep. Peter DeFazio (D-Springfield) and Rep. Kurt Schrader (D-Canby), includes whathas become a poison pill for the Obama administration. It would t ur n m a nagement of about half the land over to the state of Oregon, a first for federal timberlands and something the a dministration is u n w illing t o allow. Given that threat and the very real likelihood that the House bill cannot make it through the Senate,the Wyden measure offers a starting point from which to work. It's badly needed. Curry County, one of the 18 O&C counties, is teetering on bankruptcy these days, and it may take the state of Oregon and the state'staxpayers to prevent that. Several other O&C counties, among them Lane, also have been particularly hard hit by logging restrictions on the land. Wyden's bill, even after appropriate changes, will not restore economic good healthto Curry and other hard-hit counties. But it does provide the possibility of getting them off the critical list. That's a goal worth fighting for.

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THE N5A 5PYINS ONSAMER5

ama rei ns in o ivion n explaining the disastrous rollout

t

of Obamacare, President Barack Obama said he had discovered that "we have these big agencies, some of which are outdated, some of which are not designed properly."

CHARLES

KRAUTHAMMER -;®

school and has just announced his unwavering commitment to slaying the dragon of economic inequality, which, like the poor, has always been with us.

Obama's discovery that govern-

An interesting discovery to make

ment bureaucracies don't do things

after having consigned American discover the most elementary workmedicine, one-sixth of the U.S. econ- ings of government. With alarming omy, to the tender mercies of the regularity, he professes obliviousagency bureaucratsat the Depart- ness to the workings of his own govment of Health and Human Services ernment. He daims, for example, to and the Internal Revenue Service. have known nothing about the IRS Most people become aware of the targeting scandal, the Associated hopeless inefficiency of government Press phone records scandal, the by 17 at the department of motor ve- NSA tapping of Angela Merkel. And hicles. Obama's late discovery is es- had not a clue that the centerpiece of pecially remarkable considering that his signature legislative achievement he built his entire political philoso- would fail catastrophically upon phy on the rock of Big Government, launch. on the fervent belief in the state as Hencethe odd spectacleofa presthe very engine of collective action ident expressing surprise and disapand the ultimate source of national pointment in the federal government — as if he's not the one running it. greatness. This blinding revelation of the Hence the repeated no-one-is-moreponderous incompetence of bu- upset-than-me posture upon deplor-

very well creates a breathtaking disconnect between his transformative ambitions and his detachment from

the job itself. How does his Olympian vision coexist with the lassitude of his actual governance, a passivity that verges on absenteeism? What bridges that gap is rhetoric. Barack Obama is a master rhetorician. It's allowed him to move

crowds, rise inexorably and twice win the most glittering prize of all. Rhetoric has changed his reality. For Obama, it can change the country's. Hope and change, after all, is a rhetorical device. Of the kind Obama has always imagined can move mountains.

That's why his reaction to the Obamacare website's crash-onfew weeks after Obama confessed IRS outrage, the AP intrusions and takeoff is so telling. His remedy? that "what we're also discovering any number of scandals from which A cross-country campaign-st yle is that insurance is complicated to Obama tries to create safe distance speaking tour. As if rhetoric could buy." Another light bulb goes off, by posing as an observer. He gives repeal that reality. this one three years after passing the impression of a man on a West Managing, governing, negotiata law designed to force millions of Wing tour trying out the desk in the ing, cajoling, crafting legislation, Americans to shop for new health Oval Office, only to be told that he is forging compromise. For theseplans via the maze of untried online president. this stuff of governance — Obama "exchanges." The paradox of this presidency has shown little aptitude and even This discovery joins a long list that is that this most passive bystand- less interest. Perhaps, as Valerie Jarincludes Obama's rueful admission er president is at the same time the rett has suggested, he is simply too that there really are no shovel-ready most ideologically ambitious in de- easily bored to invest his greatness jobs. That one came after having cades. The sweep and scope of his in such mundanity. "I don't write code," said Obama passed his monstrous $830 bil- health care legislation alone are lion stimulus on the argument that unprecedented. He's spent billions in reaction to the website crash. Nor the weakened economy would be of tax money attempting to create is he expected to. He is, however, ex"jump-started" by a massive infusion a new green economy. His (failed) pected to run an administration that of shovel-ready jobs. Now known to cap-and-trade bill would have given can. be fictional. him regulatory control of the energy — Charles Krauthammeris a columnist Barack Obama is not just late to economy. He wants universal prefor The Washington Post Writers Group. reaucratic government came just a

ing the nonfunctioning website, the

Letterspolicy

In MyViewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyourletters. Letters should be limited tooneissue, containno more than 250words andinclude thewriter's signature, phonenumberandaddress for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar,tasteandlegal reasons.WereIect poetry, personalattacks, form letters, letters submittedelsewhereandthose appropriate forothersectlons of The Bulletin. Writers arelimited to oneletter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30days.

In My Viewsubmissionsshouldbe between550and 650words, signedand include thewriter's phone numberand address forverification. Weeditsubmissions for brevity, grammar,taste andlegal reasons. We reject those publishedelsewhere. In MyViewpieces run routinely in the spacebelow, alternating withnational columnists. Writers arelimited to one letter or Op-Edpieceevery30 days.

Pleaseaddressyour submission toeither My Nickel'sWorth or In MyViewand send, faxor emaithem l to TheBulletin. Write: My Nickel'sWorth/In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

Bipartisan support is necessary in fighting Alzheimer's By Francena Abendroth, M.D.

N

ovember was National A l z-

ical and supportive care. The plan addresses five goals:

heimer's Disease Awareness

• Prevent and effectively treat Alz-

Month and also National Care-

heimer's disease by 2025; • Optimize care quality and efficiency; • Expand supports for people with Alzheimer's disease and their families; • Enhance public awareness and engagement; • Tr ack p rogress and d r i ve improvement. To fulfill the promises embodied in the plan, members of Congress must continue the same collaborative approach they demonstrated when

giver Month. One way to both raise awareness about this devastating

IN MY VIEW National Alzheimer's Plan by includ-

ernment programs will increase to more than $850 billion by 2050.

resources necessary to change the

At the state level in Oregon, in 2012,

committed. Time is of the essence. We must be-

ing an additional $100 million for re- m ore than 167,000 caregiversprovid-

trajectory of Alzheimer's disease are

gin today to fulfill the national stratcare (valued at $2.4 billion). Further, egy we now have and dedicate the disease and honor those who care include these resources in fiscal year the higher health costs of Oregon necessary resources to ensure its sucfor people who have it is to ensure the 2014. caregivers totaled $96 million. These cessful implementation. goals outlined in the National AlzheiIf there is any question about the figures increased from 2011, when Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden mer's Plan are achieved. importance of Alzheimer's funding, more than 166,000 caregivers in Ore- are onthe budget conference commitOn a unanimous, bipartisan baconsider the following statistics from gon provided about 189 million hours tee that is tasked with crafting a budsis, Congress passed the National the Alzheimer's Association. of unpaid care (valued at $2.3 billion) get agreement. We need them to work • A l zheimer's disease is t h e and had higher health costs of $91 with the other conferees to make sure Alzheimer's Project Act in late 2010. This required the creation of the ansixth-leading cause of death in the million. this important investment is included nually updated, strategic National U.S.; Beyond dollars and cents, the in the federal budget. Alzheimer's Plan, which was final• More than five million Americans emotional and physical toll AlzheiAt the end of the day, Alzheimer's mer's disease and other dementias does not care about one's political ized in May 2012. The 2013 progress are living with the disease; • One in three seniors dies with takes on caregivers (more than 15 affiliation; everyone is susceptible to update onthe plan can be found they passed NAPA and commit the at h t t p://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/napa/necessary resources to accelerate and Alzheimer's or another dementia; million across the country, includ- this devastating disease. Truly, AlzNatlPlan2013.shtml. prioritize the government's efforts on • In 2013, Alzheimer's will cost ing the 167,000 in Oregon) cannot be heimer's transcends party lines. In this plan, "Alzheimer's disease," Alzheimer's. the nation $203 billion. This number quantified. We urge our nation's leaders to refersto Alzheimer's disease and reTo make this happen, we need all is expected to rise to $1.2 trillion by These friends and family mem- keep this in mind in the wake of ¹ lated dementias. Individuals withpro- elected officials to put aside partisan 2050. bers are anxiously awaiting strong tional Alzheimer's Disease Awaregressive dementia of any kind, and politics and focus on achieving a biProviding care to people with Alz- implementation of the National Alz- ness Month and National Caregiver their families, face similar challenges partisan agreement on the budgetheimer's disease costs Medicare and heimer's Plan — they need biparti- Month. in finding treatment for the disease which needs to include Alzheimer's Medicaid $152 billion each year. If left san leadership from Congress and — Francena Abendroth, M.D., and appropriate and necessary med- funding. The Senate prioritized the unchecked, the costs to these two gov- the White House to ensure that the lives in Bend. search, education, care and support. It is absolutely critical that Congress

ed about 191 million hours of unpaid


FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B5

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Phillip Bruce Sinclair, of Salem, formerly of La Pine, OR Sept. 25, 1929 - Dec. 8, 2013

Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A service at Willamette National Cemetery was held and a Celebration of Life will be held on Friday, December 13, 2013, at Hoodview Church of God

in Woodburn, Oregon. Robert 'Bob' Burton Baker, of Sisters

Oct. 12, 1938 - Dec. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Remembrance will be held at Rimrock Ranch, 18400 Wilt Road in Sisters, on January 18, 2014, at 11:00 a.m. Contributionsmay be made to:

To spread Bob's generosity and spirit in the widest circle please make any remembrances to the charity of your choice.

Rick Charles Kaseweter May14, 1951 - Dec. 6, 2013 Rick Charles Kaseweter, of La Pine, died unexpect-

edly in his sleep.

Rick was born in Seaside, Oregon and spent his early childhood in Can non Beach. He later m oved t o La Pine. R ick w a s a v eteran of t he Vietnam War, where he earned several honorable medals. He s erved in t h e U . S . A r m y for five y ears as a h e avy equipment repairman and stock control supervisor. W orking a s a mast e r plumber for 37 years, Rick started his career at Tokst ad P u m p & Pl u mb i n g Supply, which he later in h erited a s h i s o w n b u s i ness. In 2002, Rick closed t he business and w ent t o w ork fo r S u m mi t P l u m b i ng, w h er e h e w a s c u r rently employed. He en j o y e d h un t i n g , fishing, fly tying, camping, woodworking an d s p e n di ng tim e w i t h h i s f a m i l y and friends. Rick was happily married

to his wife, Peggy (Tokstad)

f or 37'/z years. He i s s u r vived b y h is w if e ; two daughters, Amber D aggett a nd Tiffany H u g hes; t w o sons-in-law, Fred D a g gett a nd K a sey H u g h es; t w o granddaughters, Emilee and Autumn Daggett; his father, Bill Kaseweter; special father-in-law, B i l l To k s t ad; and sister, Nancy Chappell. He was preceded in death b y h is moth e r , B et t y Kaseweter. A Celebration of Life will b e held i n t h e s p r i ng. I n lieu of f l o w ers, donations c an be made at an y U . S . B ank br anch t o t h e R i c k Kaseweter Memorial Fund. Baird M e m o r ia l C h a p el i n La P in e i s h o n ored t o have served the Kaseweter family.

Commercia lcrabseasonopens Monday after aslight delay

Joe Bihariput early R&B ontorecord By William Yardley

version of "3 O'Clock Blues."

"Most of the artists came t h e B i h a ri into the studio with their own

New York Times News Service

S oon after

brothers started l easing jukeboxes in black neighborhoods of Los Angeles in the early 1940s, they realized they had a problem. While their business had a solid distribution network of

material, things they wrote or picked up," Joe Bihari recalled in an interview includ-

ed in Arnold Shaw's book "Honkers and Shouters: The Golden Years of Rhythm and

Blues" (1978). "The only thing we mighthave done — they

stores, bars and restaurants,

they could not find enough might not have constructrecords to play i n t h eir ed the tune properly — we'd machines. change certain lyrics. On In 1945, they came up with some songs, they had them in a solution. Jules, Saul and their head but couldn't quite Joe Bihari created Modern

the coast did not measure

up duringpreseason testing, ery managers from Oregon, according to a press release Washington and California from the Oregon Department met Dec. 5 and mutually of Fish and Wildlife. decided to open commerHugh Link, executive di- cial crabbing from the Orrector of the Oregon Dunge- egon-California border to ness Crab Commission, said Klipsan Beach, Wash., on there were three areas of con-

turing space and distribution

changed things." The changes, his brother es, the brothers built Modern Jules suggested, were usualRecords (to which the name ly minimal. "I don't think you have to was shortened in 1948) into a force among labels that re- be a genius to record blues," corded black music. Along he was quoted as saying in with Chess, Specialty and "Honkers and Shouters." "All other relatively small labels, you have to do is stick a miModern recorded, pressed crophone out there and let and distributed some of the them play." most influential blues and Turner and King mainrhythm and blues records of tained good relationships the '40s, '50s and '60s. All three brothers helped Modern find new artists. But Joe, who was the last surviv-

with the Biharis, particular-

lyJoe,butthey were among many black artists who have questioned whether they ing sibling when he died Nov. were properly compensated 28 at 88, made the search for their early work by the his specialty, scouring juke Biharis and others. The Bijoints and radio stations haris sometimes used pseudacrossthe country,especial- onyms to give themselves ly the South, to find prom- writing credit on songs. "Some of the songs I ising new acts. In its early years, Modern, which also wrote, they added a name bought master recordings when I copyrighted it," King from other small labels, re- said of the Biharis in a 1999 leased some of the first wide- interview for the magazine ly distributed recordings of Blues Access. "Like 'King blues legends including El- and Ling' or 'King and Jomore James, John Lee Hook- sea.' There was no such er, Etta James and Johnny thing as Ling or Josea. No "Guitar" Watson. such thing. That way, the Most notably, the compa- company could claim half of ny helped make B.B. King a your song." star. The youngest of eight Joe Bihari first recorded siblings, Joseph Bihari was King in Memphis in 1951.

born May 30,1925, in Mem-

Modern had recently severed phis and moved several ties with Sam Phillips, whose times as a boy. His father, Sun Records studio in Mem- Edward, a Jewish immigrant phis they had sometimes from Hungary who worked used, so Bihari created a in sales and later ran a grain makeshift studio at the local

and seed business in XIrlsa,

black YMCA. The session

Okla., died in 1930. Bihari died in Los Ange-

included one of the Biharis' best talent scouts on piano,

les, Michael Bihari said. In

a young musiciannamed Ike Turner. The first record

released from that session became King's first hit, his

to have a date for them to start," He said. "It's good

news, and we'll now have Oregon Dungeness crab for Christmas."

There is one big step remaining in the process. According to Link, fishermen

and processors were to meet earlier this week for negotia-

tions to set an opening price. Those negotiations will be overseen by the Oregon Department of Agriculture.

Concernvoicedat oil train hearing The Associated Press SPOKANE, Wash. — A proposal to ship North Dak ota crude oil by t r ain t o V ancouver, W a sh., d r e w more opponents than sup-

Sisters Continued from B1

up to 360,000 barrels of crude oil a day. Oil arriving by train would be stored temporarily and then shipped to refineries on the West Coast.

The public can submit comments to the evaluation

council through Dec. 18.

$1 million in state and feder- dents and adults facing a varial grants for the five centers, should reduce the amount of

ety ofbehavioral issues.

Servicesoperates five school- erate the center, Deschutes

ioral health issues would keep

County Health Services Direc-

Sisters residents from hav-

ty: the Sisters clinic, one in La tor Scott Johnson said. Con-

ing to commute to Bend for

based cli nics across the counPine,one in Redmond and two inBend.

During a Wednesday work session, Moore and other health services officials told

commissioners about a recently formed partnership with St. Charles Health System, which

would add medical staff to the Sisters clinic. That would mean fewer staff hours and

less money spentby the county to run the facility. The partnership 'will help with the continuity of care in schools," St. Charles family ment, coupled with more than

The St. Charles agree-

complex care, increasing the about $805,000, whichindudes chances that families needing $155,000 for site preparation. help get it. "We have youth walking in The county hopes to start building the dinic next month, (to the dinics) with suicidal ideweather permitting, and wrap ation, depression, issues with up in June. Some of the early bullying. We have some real foundation work on the site is family issues," Moore said. alreadyunderway. Sisters School District offiBlueprints show a l ayout cials say they welcome an exwiththree examination rooms, panded health dinic. A broadtwobehavioralhealthoffices, a er mental health care network lab area, conference room and "has always been an area of nursepractitioner's office. need here in Sisters," SuperSisters and other Deschutes intendent Jim Golden said. County communities are grap- "We're thrilled to be in this pling with rising cases of men- partnership with St. Charles." tal illness, health officials say. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, struction cost is estimated at

The Sisters dinic serves stu-

egluckiich@bendbulletirLcom

Phpllis Beverlp Brow n

P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m.Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

the paper's co-publishers, but he left a lasting impression after 30 years of deadline driving, blue-pencil editing and more or less fulltime living in the newspa-

speaking truth to power, de- native papers in the country bunking corporate journal- and one of the oldest contin- per's office. Staff members ism, promoting rock 'n' roll, uously published ones. — most of them young and and publishing drug advice Rensenbrink, who d i ed working on a newspaper for

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of notefrom around theworld:

Ichiro "George" Azumano, 95: A Japanese-American who was discharged from the Army and confined in an internment

camp during World War II and spent the rest ofhis life working to improveU.S.-Japanese relations. Died Mondayin Portland.

Shane Del Rosario, 30: Was a professional mixed martial art-

that no m a instream news-

Nov. 6 i n

paper would — made it like

81, received offers over the years from chains looking to

him with varying degrees of affection and apprehen-

buy The Aquarian, with its circulation of 45,000. He said

sion as "Oz the Great and

ist since 2006, also competing in kickboxing and muay thai competitions. He won his first 11pro MMA bouts before mov-

Terrible."

ing last year to the UFC. Died

G r a nt s Pass at the first time — referred to

Monday in Newport Beach, Calif. Oregon, he had arranged to Jos Vanslfphout, 62: Born in transfer ownership to an em- values an d a b lu e - collar Belgium, he became interested ployee cooperative. The co- work ethic. He was, by most in golf psychology after reading northern New Jersey store- op has been publishing the accounts, a tough boss. Tim Gallwey's book, "The Infronts and warehouses in paper — in print and online In 2012, about 1,800 issues ner Game of Golf." Professional its 44 y ears, has o utlived editions — ever since. of The Aquarian Weekly golferErnie Els was a former most of its underground coRensenbrink did not keep were archived at the Rock patient. Died Dec. 6 in Sun City, hort. After The Village Voice in touch after leaving, said and Roll Hall of Fame and South Africa. and The San Francisco Bay Diane Casazza, now one of Museum in Cleveland. — From wire reports retired in 1999 and moved to

Cos. for the terminal at the Port of Vancouver to handle

Adding more space for counseling and other behav-

Michele, Lita and Nicole, and

Mail:Obituaries

no each time. By the time he

cil is reviewing the proposal by Tesoro Corp. and Savage

two grandchildren.

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com

Aquarian claimed to be one of the last independent alter-

couver at the end of October.

The Washington Energy Facility Site Evaluation Coun-

county funds needed to op-

Deschutes County Health

doctor Rob Ross said.

Uary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Fax: 541-322-7254

derailments, spills or fires, as well as global climate change from using the oil. Opponents also dominated a public hearing in Van-

porters to a Wednesday night Supporters say the terminal public hearing in Spokane, is needed because there's which could see four more oil no major oil pipeline on the trains a day if the project is route. The companies behind approved. the project say it will meet Most of the 75 people at the regulations. They hope to behearing said they were wor- gin construction by the end of ried about the risk of train next year.

addition to his son, his survivors include three daughters,

Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obit-

by c orporate n ewspaper chains in recent years, The

What came to distinguish Rensenbrink's journal was staying power. The Aquarian Weekly, headquartered in v a r ious

the coast as early as today. Link says the news is a great relief for fishermen. "I think they're all glad

WASHINGTON NEWS

Obituary policy

New York Times News Service

mark counterculture year.

lights of crab boats off most of

r ehearsed with t hem a n d

network that they used to serviceand deliverjukebox-

Guardian were taken over

papers in that high-water-

Dec. 16.

days before the season opens, so ocean watchers will see the

Music Records. Using the same manufac- in recording sessions. We

By Paul Vitello

a thousand other alternative

ria, the release stated. Fish-

Commercial crabbers are allowed to set their gear three

get it together, and there was help. We worked with artists

A 'working hippie,' Rensenbrink, helps publish analternative weekly When James Rensenbrink started an alternative newspaper in 1969, its mission-

Bandon Western World cern, including Astoria and BANDON — Fresh Dunge- Newport, but that recent testness crab will be back on the ing showed "nice, full crab for menu for holiday feasts af- all of the Oregon coast." ter fis hery managers deterThe testing measures the mined the fishery is ready to percentage of meat in the open Monday on the Oregon crab, by weight, and is used to Coast. ensure a high-quality product The commercial Dunge- for consumers. Delaying the ness crab season on the Or- season allowed the crab to fill egon Coast is scheduled to with meat. open Dec. 1 each year but Coastwide, crab quality was delayed this year be- testing showed all areas now cause crab on some parts of meet minimum test c r ite-

R ensenbrink called hi m-

self a "working hippie," shaped by c ounterculture

Phyllis "Bev" Brown, age 86, died on December 9, 2013, in Astoria, Oregon. Bev was born Ma y 2 , 1 927 in Redmond, Oregon, to Norman and Marion Croghan. She graduated from Redmond High School in 1945 and attended Secretarial School in Portland while working at the Paramount Theater. O n September 6 , 1 9 47 , B e v married Jack Brown, her childhood sweetheart and best friend. Bev raised five children while jack served with the Army during the Korean War, attended college and began his teaching career. She started her career with US Bank in 1966, as a teller, and retired as Branch Manager of the Warrenton Branch. Bev and Jack moved to Eagle Crest in 2000. They golfed whenever they could, enjoying their retirement together. Bev's interests were many. She enjoyed golf, travel, and tole painting. Her children and grandchildren were recipients of the many quilts she enjoyed making. Bev was a founding member of the School House Quilt Guild in Astoria and was also a member of the Ridge Rippers of Eagle Crest. Her travels took her to many parts of the US, Canada and abroad along with cruises to Alaska, the Caribbean and Panama Canal. Bev is survived by two sons and three daughters — Barry Brown (Lana) of McMinnville, OR; Craig Brovm (Lorraine) of Warrenton, OR; Linda Pinkstaff (Kcith) of Astoria, OR; Cheryl Miehe (David) and Marcia Gleason (Dennis) of Warrenton, OR; 12 grandchildren and numerous great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Jack; granddaughter, Julie; brother, Clement " Speed" Croghan; and sisters, Norma Miller and Dorothy Hyatt. A Graveside service will be at Redmond Memorial Cemetery in Redmond, OR, on Wednesday, December 18 at 2:00PM. A Celebration of Life will be held at the Astoria Elks Lodge on Saturday, January 18 from 1:00PM until 4:00PM. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Julie Brown Memorial, in care of the Ocean Beach Education Foundation, PO Box 1377, Long Beach, WA, 98631; The American Diabetes Association; The Alzheimer's Association; The MS Foundation or a charity of your choice. An online guestbook may be signed at www.oceanviewastoria.com.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

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

1

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Partly cloudy and cool

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Partly sunny and milder

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Partly cloudy and seasonable

cool

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41/25

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Astoria ........ 46f26/0.24....48/42/sh.....47/45/sh Baker City .29/8/0.00....33/16/sn......30f20/c Brookings St/33/0.00....52/41/sh.....55/43/pc Burns.......... 24/-3/0.00......35/9/c......31/1 5/c Eugene 38/11/trace....46/31/sh..... A4/32/c Klamath Falls ...29/-1/000.....40/17/c.....39/18/pc Lakeview....... .30/0/0.00....38/15/pc.....39/21/pc La Pine........ .42/3/0.00 .... 38/16/rs.....45/23/pc Medford 29/1 6/trace.....46/29/c.....45/27/pc Newport 48/32/0.27....49/41/sh.... AB/43/pc North Bend.....46/30/0.03.....50/38/c.....52/39/pc Ontario 20/-1/0 00....28/16/sn......28/1 8/c Pendleton 29/12/0.00.....41/26/c.....42/29/pc Portland 39f25/0.09....45/36/sh.....45/35/pc Prineville 38f22/0.00.....38/25/c.... A2/29/pc Redmond 39/1 3/0.00.....42/19/c.... A2/23/pc Roseburg 36/28/0.00....44/35/sh.....44/39/pc Salem 35/20/0.03 ....47/32/sh.....44/36/sh Sisters......... 36/1 0/0.00.... 40/21/rs.....47/27/pc The Dages 29/1 6/0.00.....41/30/c.....42/32/pc

Medftird

Yesterday's stateextremes

36/t 5

40li 2

Rome

• 51'

39/t 7

Paisley

Brookings

39/18

Chiloquin 40I22

• Klamath

Ashland ' ' t~

• Lakeview

Fall s

• )0

Fields•

McDermitt

44/I7

38/1 5

Bums

38/t 7

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

-o a

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-13/-22

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alt Lak City Vegas 27/9 55/3

8/14

5

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p CO

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26/3

1 31/24

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Rapid Ci

33/19

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t. Paul

Boise

Int'I FallS, Minn. Sa Francisc

5/-

Thunder Bay 0/-1

Bismarck 7/-3

Billings 36/18

a /36

Hollywood, Fla. • -32 0

p 52 aa

Queb

Winnipe

-9/-18

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• 82'

vwwv

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Saskatoon

'i~geattte

(in the 48 contiguous states):

+

Kansas City 37/21

iladelphia

icag C 1Mmb 29/ t • 32

34/25

• Loui II 41B' ~ Charlotte 51/37 •

St. Loui 35/3 7

47/24

Phoenix, ++Bc

Honolulu ~ 82/69

66/4 m

Tijuana

xxxo~

60/44

s

'

51/43 5

H AWA I I

60s Chihuahua 70/37

La Paz 71/59

Anchorag

'

15/14

Houston 62/55 a

• 5

lando 5/58

• Miami 79/71

Monterrey 65/56a

M a zatlan

, 808 sass

Juneau

'D

36/33

CONDITIONS

FRONTS

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s+++n • 6 4d 44

Cold W arm Stationary

Inn

4 a

" In o r der t o

*

Showers T-storms Rain F lurries S now I c e

homeless students in BendLa Pine Schools.

Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 26 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report

MED IUM HIGH 4

6

8

1ti

Snow levelandroadconditions rePresenting condi tions at 5 P.m.yesterday. Key:T.T. = Traction Tires.

ljmbe~rirne 00 warner canyon........ . . . . . .0.0... no report Pass Conditions Wi gamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0 .0... no report 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1.84 at CabbageHig.......... Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.... ..26-30 Hwy 20atSantiam pass ......Carechains or T'Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0... . ..25-30 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwg 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires Squaw ValleY,California.......0.0... . . .22-24 Hwg 58atWigameue pass.... carrychainsor 7 Tires SunValleY Idaho....... . . . . . . 0 0 . . . . . .15 36 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.lires Hwy.242 atMcKenzi e Pass........Ciosed forseason For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.trip«he«k.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatherPcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partialclouds,c-clouds, hhaze, shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sfsnowflurries,snsnow, i ice,rs rainsnowmix,w wind,f fog, drdrizzle,tr trace

s erve t h e

Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/LORNHt/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hri/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,1X......44/21N.OO .6I33/pc .. 45/27/s GrandRapids....24/1ON06 .. 26/17/sn. 27/15/sn RapidCity.......45/10/000...30/17/c. 35/19/pc Savannah.......6I39N.IN ..60/SNpc...6556/t Akron ...........18/9N.OO . 28/23/sn. 32/24/sn GreenBay.......16/-3N01 ..19/13/sn. 23/11/sn Reno............32/SN.OO .39/18/pc. 41/22/pc Soattle..........41/31N 17 ..46/40/sh. 46/43/sh Albany..........22/12N.01 ..24/It/pc. 21/16/sn Greensboro..... A4/30N.O O...49/34/s...42/38/r Richmond.......39/28N.OO...46/31/s...43/37/r Sioux F885.......29/5/0 00.... I 7/4/c... t 3/-2/c Albuquorque.....41/21N.O O..47/24/sn. 43/24/pc Hamsburg.......29/22/000..31/22/pc...32/29/i RochestuiNY.....1 , 8/9/0.04.. 23/13/sn.23/19/sn Spokane........30/22N.JN .. 33/27/sn...37/28/r Anchorage.......17/6/0.00 ..15/14/sn.. 1Iyfsn Hartbrd,CT.....26/15/000 .. 30/15/pc. 25/21lsn Saoamont o......58/27N.OO...59/37/s..58/3Is SpringfielMO zl .. 37/2N.JN... 37/30/i. 34/jipc Atlanta .........47/31N.OO .52/44/pc. 54/43/sh Helena..........3525/0.00..35/20/sn. 38/26/sn St. Louis........ AO/11N.O O... 35/30fi.. 35/19/c Tampa..........72/59/01N.. 76/63/pc. 79/69/pc AtlanticCity.....2%17N.iN... 3$26/s...45/41/r Honolulu........85/70/0.00 .. 82/69/sh. 82/68/sh Salt lakeCity.....25/SN.00.... 27/9/c.. 27/11/c Tucson..........yt/57/01N...63/39/s.. 64/41/s Austin..........52/31N.iN..Ssy43/pc. 58/33/pc Housto n........56/3$0.00..62/55/pc.60/38/pc SanAnmni o.....55/39N00..57/44/pc.62/36/pc Tulsa.......... A2/15N00..43/31/sh .. 37/21/c Baltimore.......31/23/0.00...3$29/s ..38/33/rs Huntsville.......44/24/000..50/40/pc.53/33/sh SanDiqto.......58/St/0 00... 615$s .. 72/53/s Washington,DC.35/28/0iN...41/31/s ..40/34/rs Billings .........36/27/0.00... 36/1 8/c.. 34/26/c tndianapolis......21/2I000...33/27/c.33/19/sn San imocisco....54/38/0.00... 58/45/s.. 58/44/s Wichita.........47/11N.JN...43/23/c. 33/20/pc Birmingham.... 46/26/000.. 51/43/pc. 58/41/sh Jackson,MS.....51/30N00..51/49/sh. 61/37/sh SanJoso........59RON.00... 60/4Is .. 61/4Ns Yakima.........31/14N 00...37/24/c. 37/2ipc Bismarck.........29/1N.OO.... 7/-3/c ..17/-5/pc Jacksonvile......65/46/0.00 .. 66/57/pc...76/67/t Sama78........38/1 5/0tN ..4llt6/pc. 35/iilx Yuma...........6$53N.OO...69/46/s.. 6I47/s Boise............23/9N 00... 33/19/c .. 28/22/c Juneau..........28/23N.11.. 36/33/rs.. AO/32/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........27/20N00..3I16/pc. 25/24/sn Kansas City.......40/NOO ..37/21/sn. 27/13/pc Bridgeport, CT....29/22N.OO. 32/22/pc. 30/2Isn Lansing..........1IIN.OO.. 26/18/sn. 27/13/sn Amsterdom......41/3?/O.IN...31/30/c.46/40lsh Mecca..........79/72/000 .. 73/56/sh. 75/56/pc Buffalo .........21/11N21 ..25/15/sn. 25/2Isn LasYegas.......55/32NOO..55/39/pc.. 55/38/s Athens..........50/33/0.00.. 5I38/sh .. 54/45/s MeximCity......70/46/0.00.. 72/48/pc.. 72/49/s Burlington, VT.....19/7/0 00.. 17/2/sn.. 14/13/c Lexington.......31/13/000..4l/34/pc..41/28/rs Auckland........72/57/0.00..74/56/pc. 71/58/sh Montreal........1$-2/0.00... 5/4pc.... 5/3/s Caribou,ME...... 2/4YO.OO.11/-12/sn...7/-3/pc Linmln...........33/6/0.00..29/15/sn. 23/1Npc Baghdad........57/46N ........32/19$20.. 35/2Isf..21/14/sf 00... 59/47/c.. 58/41ls Moscow Charleston, SC...57/34N.OO. 59/48/pc...67/56/t Little Rock.......45/23/0.00... 43/35/i .. 47/28/c Bangkok........88/72/0.00... 92/73/s .. 91/70/c Nairobi.........73/59$.73..7055/sh...72/58/t Charlotte........5524N 00... 51/37/s .. A6/41/r LosAngeles......65/48/000...65/49/s .. 73751 ls Boiiing..........34/1BN 00... 34/19/s. 39/25/pc Nassau.........82/72N.OO . 75/71lsh. 80/75/pc Chattanooga.... A4/26/0.00 .. 50/38/pc. 50/37/sh Louisvile........3I1 2/000..41/33/pc. 41/27/sh Beirut ..........52/45N51..50/44/sh.. St/44/s NewDelhi.......73/50N00...76/53/s.. 75/54/s Cheyenne.......53/28N00... 39/19/c. 39/23/pc Madison, Wl.....18/ 1N 00.. 24/17/sn .. 268/sn Berlin...........39/36N.OO .39/28/pc. 39/34/pc Osaka......... Af/37N.OO .45/39/sh .. 43/37/c Chicago.........1I 3$00... 29/26/c.29/17/sn Memphis........45/23N.OO...44/36/c.. 48/29/c Bogota.........66/48N.OO...60/51lt...71/50/t Oslo............39/23N.01 ..27/25/pc..34/25/sf Cincinnati........24/9N 00 .. 37/31lpc..3$25/rs Miami..........82/69N 00.. 79/71lpc. 83/74/pc Budapest........3$28N.OO...32/29/c.. 36/32/s Ottawa......... 16/4/O.JN....0/A/sf.... 7/3/sf Cleveland........208N 00 3026/sn. .. 33/27/sn Milwaukze...... 18I 2NOO..28/24/sn.28/16/sn Buenos Aires.....8$61/0.00... 88/64/s. 93/72/pc Paris............41/25/0.00...45/39/c. 48/4l/sh ColoradoSprings.57/19N 00..46/16/pc. 34/13/pc Minnoapolis......19/1N.OO...15/7/sn ..14/-2/sn CaboSanLucas ..82/66/0.00 ..83/63/pc. 81/63/pc Rio deJaneiro....81/73NiN .. 77/66/sh. 76/71/pc ColumbiaMO , ....44/TN.OO. 36/27/sn .. 33/16/c Nashvile........351 BN00..49/37/pc.. 49/30/c Cairo...........54/46IO 03.. 53/43/sh. 56/42/pc Rome...........57/41N.OO...55/45/s .. 56/46/c ColumbiaSC....54/30N.OO , . 54/41pc...55/4II NewOrleans.....55/440.00 ..66/61/sh. 74/4Ish Calgaiy..........37/3N.OO .23/14/pc. 41/3ipc Santiago........82/57N.iN...87/64/s .. 89/59/s Columh/5 GA...53/36N.OO. 55/47/pc...63/48/t NewYork.......29/23/000 ..31/24/pc. 34/30/sn Caniun.........82/72N.l 5... BI74/t...84/75/t SaoPaulo.......72/63N00..71/62/sh.72/6ipc Columbus, 08....20/11/0.00.. 32/29/pc..3524/n Newark,IU......2522/000 ..32/22/pc. 31/29/sn Dublin..........59I54N.OO .52/39/pc. 48/43/sh Sapporo ........34/27N.JN..29/19/pc .. 28f21lc Conmrd, NH......21/3N 00... 25/2/pc. 18/12/sn Norfolk,VA......4I29NOO...47/31ls...54/44/r Edioburgh.......55/48NOO..St/3$sh.49/41lsh Seoul...........34/I8/01N... 27/22/c. 29/23/pc Corpus Christi....59/48/000..66/57/pc. 64/39/pc Oklahoma City...41/16NOO. 46/29/sh. 36I23/pc Geneva. ........28f25N.OO..35/27/pc..38/34/c Shangh at.......55/32N.OO..48/38/pc.49/43/pc DallasFtWorth.. AB/26/0.00.. SI38/sh.. 46/28/s Omaha..........32/6N00 28/1 .. 4/sn .. 21/9/pc Narare..........86%3N 00.. 76/6ish...72/62/t Singapore.......88/77N.11 .. 86/78/sh. Of/77/sh Daytim ..........20/1N.OO..33/29/pc ..37/22/rs Orlando.........71/55/000..75/58/pc. 82/65/pc Hong Kong......70/61N.OO ..70/53/sh .. 64/4Ic Stockholm...... As/41/0 00... 31/28/s.36/33/is Denver..........56/15$.00..46/20/pc.42/24/pc PalmSprings.....72/46$.00...69/46/5 .. 71/4Is istanbul.........39/32N.40 ..41/37/sh. 46/42/pc Sydney..........79/68/0.00..80/64/pc.89/61/sh DesMoines.......30/2$.00... 27/16/c.. 2I6/pc Peoria...........32/1/000..32/26/sn.31/14/sn Jerusalem.......37/32/1.13 .. 37/35/rs.40/33/sn Taipei...........66/57NIN..69/60/sh. 62/6ish Detroit...........18/5/0.00 .. 28/24/sn. 3I2Nsn Philadelphia.....28/23N.OO .34/25/pc. 37/35/sn Johannesburg....76/SSN 85.. 76/55/sh. 79/60/pc TelAviv.........52/43N85... 45/43li. 47/38/sh Duluth........... 9/4JN.OO.... 9/9/sn ..15/-5/sn Phoeni z.........74/55N.OO..66/45/pc..67/45/s lima ...........73/66/0.00 .. 7E/65/pc.. 75/65/c Tokyo...........55/46N.JN...56/38/s. 48/35/pc El Paso......... A6/37N.02 .. 59/37/pc.. 54/2is Pittsburgh.......22/1 ON00 . 30/26/pc. 35/28/sn lisbon..........59/52N.OO .63/46/sh. 60/45/pc Toronto.........1510NiN.. 16/14/sf. 25/16/sn Fairbanks..........5/2N.OO -12/-24/pc. -7/-12/sn PortlanztME.....2tftONO0...26/3/pc.. 19/14/c London........ AO/30N.OO .48/38/sh .. 45/44/c Vancouver.......41/JON.iN..41/41lsh...45/41lr Fargo...........14/-5/0.00... 5/4sn ..3/-13/sn Proridenc8......27/1 7N00.. 31/17/pc. 27/25/sn Madrid.........52/25/0.00..46/35/sh.. 52/37/c Vienna..........36f32N.iN..35/31lpc.. 38/34/5 Flagstslf........ AO/6/0.00 ..41/12/pc.. 37/14/s Raleigh........ A4/27/0.00... 50/34/s .. AB/42/r Manila..........8579N.OO .85/75/pc. 85/74/pc Warsaw.........37/34N.OO... 32I31/i. 36/32/pc

B e t hlehem I n n ,

LOCAL BRIEFING

R o s s , De s c h utes

conrfnued from B1

tor, said she would r ather

s ities, th e

acquire the property than renew the lease. With 78 single beds, but just five rooms for families, she said Bethlehem

to expand" in the coming After Thursday's meety ears, Wysling t ol d t h e ing, Wysling declined to committee. comment on any possible O n W e d nesday, D e - expansion plans, saying s chutes C o unt y c o m m i s - her focus was on negotisioners signed a letter of ating a purchase from the u nderstanding, broa d - county. l y o u tlining t h ei r s u p Reporter: 541-617-7820, port for an eventual sale eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

meet future demand. She cited recent studies showing hundreds of

L

Susan

growing number of p eople who need basic neces-

be able to

Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:

1

o f th e

Contlnued from B1 Gwenn Wysling, Bethlehem Inn's executive direc-

I nn n eeds t o

Yesterday F riday S aturdayThe higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 pm for solar at noon.

JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

wv w o a a w

Yesterday's extremes

*Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX ~ SKI REPORT

OREGON CITIES

28/I 7

Frenchglen

Sunsettoday...... 4:27 Pzm Fug L ast N e w First Sunrisetomorrow .. 7;33a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 4:27 p.m. Moonri isetoday....218p.m. Moonsettoday.... 3:54a.m. D8617 Dec.25 Jan.1

Mostly cloudy with a slight chance of snow in the mountains.

36/14

400 6

Bl'onklngs ~,

Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Mercur y....6:58a.m......3:53p.m. High /low... ...........39/21 24 hoursending4p.m.*..0.00" Venus.....10:00 a.m...... 7:04p.m. Remrdhigh........ 57 in1980 Month todate.......... 1.78" Ma r s......1243 a m.....1251 pm. Remrd low......... -9in1932 Average monthto date... 087" Jupiter......6:11 p.m...... 9:27 a.m. Average high.............. 39 Year to date............ 6.36" Satum.... ..4:37a.m......2:39p.m. Aver agelow ...............22 Aver ageyeartodate....10.03" Uranus....1249 pm...... 1:19a m. Barometricpressureat4 pm3008 Remrd 24hours ...128in1948

Jordan Iley

Lake -Grants-

Sunrise today...... 7:32 a.m. MOOnphaSeS

Riley

40/13

45 28

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

iNyssa Juntura

Christmas Iley

36777

PorOOrford • Beacg

Valeo

HIGH LOW

46 25

Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain and mountain snow showers.

28ll6

31/1 6 af

HIGH LOW

WEST

38/1 7

36I26

44/35 -

42/t s

La Pine38/16 3@2 Mresc to• • Crescent • Fort Rock4005 Lake

Roseburg

51/37

f

43729

51/38 •

• Bandon

38/1 9

O a kndg

45/30-

Coos Bay

Su iuer

• Pa ma 36/21

46 29

PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION

tario Mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers.

35/1 5

Eugene •

HIGH LOW

43 27 BEND ALMANAC

CENTRAL

Josep

l.a Grande•

• pray40/26

~

• 36/21

37/24

38/26 Union

on 39/2

Wigowdale

47/32•

Enterpris

• Meacham

39/30

39/28

s CamP 36/37

Lincoln Cib' 3 — gaie@

3424

41 /26

Ruggs

Maupin

Governmen

• PendletOn

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HIGH LOW

County property and f ac ilities director, told t h e city's affordable housing

Find It All

MadrasHighcoachback in jail MichaelOsborne,the Madras HighSchool coachcharged with sexually abusing oneofhis players, is backinjail after beingarrestedagain. Osborne,44, wasreportedlyarrested Fridaymorning onsuspicion of tampering with awitnessand violating his releaseagreement. Hewas being held Thursdayat theJefferson County Jail on$350,000bail. Madras Policeinitiallyarrested Osborneon Nov.20aftera high schoolstudent reportedlytold investigators theyhadbeenin asexual relationship since April .Osbornefaces15countsofsecond-degreesexualabuseandhasbeen placed onpaidleavebythe Jefferson County School District.

I n n w i l l n e e d committee.

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N F L, C3 Sports in brief, C2 College football, C4 NBA, C3 Golf, C4 NHL, C3 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2013

SNOWBOARDING

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP SWIMMING

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Dirksen Derdyset for this weekend

Beavers'Cookswins Biletnikoff Award

The seventh annual Dirksen Derby snowboard rally race is scheduled for today through Sundaynear Mt. Bachelor's West Village Lodge. The event is a fundraiser for Tyler Eklund, a 21-year-old Bendsnowboarder who wasparalyzed in a snowboarding

Bulletin staff report LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — Brandin Cooks was named Thursday as the winner of the 2013 Biletnikoff Award as the nation's most outstanding receiver.

accident in 2007.

Late registration is available today from 9 a.m. to noon at the lower level of the West Village Lodge. Entry fee is $45. Practice runs are scheduled for today from11 a.m. to1 p.m. The Dirksen Derby Kickoff Party and Broken Board Auction is scheduled for tonight starting at 6 o'clock at the Domino Room,51 N.W. GreenwoodAve. in Bend. Race format is a parallel banked slalom, as riders will race head-tohead along acourse of banked turns and other features, adjacent to the Sunshine Accelerator chairlift. Racing gets underway on Saturday with the men's, gentlemen's, women's and derby elites qualifiers. A splitboard uphill/downhill race is set for noon. Sunday will include the groms, older-and-wiser and sit-ski divisions, as well as the finals from Saturday's division qualifiers. The derby elites final is set for Sunday at noon. Awards are scheduled for 3 p.m. in theWest Village Lodge. Spectators are welcome at no charge. For more information, visit www.mtbachelor.com.

Oregon State's junior receiver — who was also

jh,

named Thursday to first teams of the 124th annual

rc

Walter Camp All-America Team and to Athlon Sports'

All-America Team — beat out fellow finalists Sammy

r

Watkins of Clemson and

Mike Evans from Texas

PhelanEbenhack/The Associated Press

A&M to win the Biletnikoff Award.

Oregon State receiver Brandin Cooks poses with the Biletnikoff Award after winning the honor in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., on Thursday.

He is the second Beaver to win the award, following Mike Hass in 2005. Cooks

is also the ninth Oregon State first-team selection in the 124 years of the Walter

Inside

Camp All-America Team.

• Texas coach not talking about future with Longhorns,C4

Cooks has been dominant /4!

I

this season.

a

Calif., has amassed a Pac12 Conference record 120

than 200 yards receiving in a game. Cooks learned ofboth honors at the Home Depot

catches and a school-record

Awards Show, which was

1,670 yards receiving this season. Going into the Dec.

broadcast nationally on ESPN. He will participate

24 Hawaii Bowl, Cooks is

in the annual Walter Camp

just 51 yards short of the conference record for receiving yards in a season. In addition, he has tallied eight games of 100 yards or more

Awards Weekend, Jan. 9-11,

and has twice totaled more

on Feb. 8.

The 5-foot-10-inch, 186-pounder from Stockton,

'IC '.

in New Haven, Conn. Cooks will then head to Tallahas-

see, Fla., to be formally presented the Biletnikoff Award

PREP WRESTLING Photos by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Ridgeview's Rachel Haney competes in the 200-meter individual medley, in which she would take second,during a meet against Sisters and Redmond in Redmond on Thursday.

Led by forfeits, Summit cruisespast Madras

CROSS-COUNTRY

Bulletin staff report

Storm's other non-forfeit

victory, topping Trevor Parsons 6-2 at 145 pounds. The upper-weight classes highlighted the nonleague match for the Buffs. Hayden

Summit won nine of 14

matches against visiting Madras on Thursday, including five by forfeit, to take its first wrestling dual of the season 48-26.

XC iliationais in Bend onSaturday The USATFClub Cross-Country National Championships are set to kick off Saturday morning at River's Edge Golf Course in northwest Bend. A community 4,000-meter race at 9 a.m. marks the start of the event, and women's and men's masters national championship races follow at 9:45 and 10:45. The openwomen's national championship competition is set for noon, and theopen men's national title race will begin at12:45 p.m. More than1,200 participants and 100teams are expected for this year's event, which will feature some of the country's top post-collegiate club cross-country teams. Registration for the national championship races is closed, but runners can still sign up for the community 4K — cost is $10 per runner — today at TheRiverhouse from 10a.m. to 8 p.m. or at the course early Saturday morning. The 2K loop course will be open for runners to practice on today from noon to 5 p.m. For more information, visit www.usatf.org. — Bulletin staff report

NBA Biazers continue to win in West Led by LaMarcus Aldridge, Portland gets a111-104 victory over Houston to maintain the top record in theWestern Conference,C3

Manu won by fall at 220

pounds for Madras, as did Miguel Sevilla at 285. Se-

Austin Katter at 152

pounds and Noah Yunker at 195 recorded pins to lead the villa pinned Summit's John host Storm. Summit coach Murphy with 22 seconds left Tom Nelson also pointed out in the first period. It was his the performance of freshsecond win over Murphy in man Grant Leiphart, who six days as he defeated the topped the White Buffaloes' Storm heavyweight 2-1 last Bryce Vincent 4-2 in the Saturday in the C.O. Offi126-pound match. Leiphart's cials Tourney. win was especially impresIan Oppenlander (106 sive as he was coming off pounds) and Jared Dupont back-to-back losses at last (132) also posted non-forfeit weekend's Central Oregon victories for the visiting

• The Outlaws hold off the Ravens and Panthers in adouble-dual Bulletin staff report REDMOND — The swim meet was in Redmond, but it was all about Sisters on Thurs-

day night. With six first-place swimmers

(three girls and three boys), the Outlaws' girls and boys teams defeatedboth Redmond High and Ridgeview to walk away from Cascade Swim Center as the dou-

Officials Open at Mountain

White Buffaloes.

"The kids wrestled really

View High School in Bend.

ble-dual winners. Mary Stewart finished the

At the same tournament, Vincent went 2-1 and placed third.

200-meter individual medley in 2 minutes, 36.22 seconds to claim the event for Sisters, while

tough," Nelson said about

his squad, which competes in the Springfield Tourna-

"That was a really tough

Emily Christen (50 freestyle) and Brooke Knirk (100 free) each add- Sisters' Trevor Barry placed first in the 50-meter freestyle ed victories. during e meet against Redmond end Ridgeview at the Cascade SeeSisters/C4 Swim Center in Redmond on Thursday.

ment on Saturday. "It was a

good first match." Madras is back on the

match to end the night," Nel-

son said. "Vincent is one of (Madras') best guys."

road Saturday at the Culver Invitational.

Dustin Reyes earned the

RODEO

Redmond'sbarebackrider Peebles conti nuestocashchecksatNFR Bulletin staff report LAS VEGAS — Redmond bareback rid-

two roundsleft.Terrebonne bareback rider Austin Foss did not record a score Thursday

er Steven Peebles kept up his hot streak at the Thomas & Mack Centeron Thursday night, taking second in the eighth round of

night. In th e t e a m r o ping c ompetition, Prineville's Charly Crawford and partner the National Finals Rodeo, the fifth time in Ryan Motes, of Weatherford, Texas, just eight rides at the Pro Rodeo Cowboys As- missed out on a paycheck, taking eighth sociation's season-ending event he has col- in Thursday's eighth round with a time of lected a check. 9.3 seconds. Two teams tied for sixth with Current bareback world leader Kaycee times of 9.1 seconds. Brandon Beers, of

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Feild, of Spanish Fork, Utah, won the round

Powell Butte, and partner Jim Ross Coo-

with an 83.5-point ride. Peebles was the runner-up with a mark of 82.5 points. Former Culver cowboy Bobby Mote placed fourth and earned acheck with a 78.5-point effort, but the bareback average and the 2013

per, of Monument, N.M., did not record a

an end after Saturday night's 10th and final

is fourth in the world standings and is second in the aggregate with two

world title are now Feild's to lose with just

performance.

rounds to go.

time. The ninth round of the NFR begins to-

Bob Click/For The Bulletin

StevenPeebles,ofRedmond, scores82.5 ona horsecalledWonderland

night at 7 o'clock. The 10-day event comes to to place second in the eighth round of the bareback riding. Currently he


C2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY GOLF

Time

EuropeanTour, NelsonMandelaChampionship PGATour, Franklin Templeton Shootout Asian Tour, Thailand Golf Championship

TV/Radie

2 a.m. 10a.m. 8:30 p.m.

Golf Golf Golf

NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at OklahomaCity 5 p.m. Men's college, Arkansas-Little Rock atOregon State 5 p.m. Men's college, Elon atColorado 5:30 p.m. Men's college, lowa at lowaState 6:30 p.m. NBA, Houston at GoldenState 7:30 p.m. Women's college, Wisconsin at Washington 7:30 p.m.

ESPN

BASKETBALL

940-AM

Pac-12 ESPNU ESPN

Pac-12

BOXING

Josesito Lopezvs. Mike Arnaoutis

7 p.m. Fox Sports 1

FOOTBALL

College, NCAADivision I, quarterfinal, Towson at Eastern lllinois HOCKEY College, Colorado College atWisconsin SOCCER Men's college, NCAACollege Cup,semifinal, New Mexico vs.NotreDame Men's college, NCAACollege Cup,semifinal, Maryland vs. Virginia English Premier League, Manchester City FCvs Arsenal FC RODEO National Finals Rodeo, eighth round

5 p.m.

ESPN2

4:30 p.m.

N B CSN

2 p.m.

ESPNU

4:30 p.m.

E S P NU

4:45 a.m.

N B CSN

7 p.m. Great American Country

SATURDAY SOCCER English Premier League, Chelsea FC vs Crystal Palace FC. FIFA ClubWorld Cup, quarterfinal, Guangzhou Evergrande FC vs. Al Ahly SC English Premier League, Hull City AFCvs Stoke City FC FIFA ClubWorld Cup, quarterfinal, Raja Casablancavs. CFMonterrey A-League Soccer, Sydney FC vs. Melbourne Heart

Time 4 a.m.

TV/Radie NBCSN

9:30 a.m.

N B CSN

11:20 a.m. Fox Sports 2 10 p.m. Fox Sports 2

1110-AM, 100.1-FM

Men's college, BYUat Utah 7 p.m Men's college,SouthAlabama atGonzaga 7 p.m

Pac-12 Root

FOOTBALL

Men's college, NCAA Division I, quarterfinal, Coastal Carolina at North Dakota State 9 a.m. Men's college,Armyvs.Navy noon

ESPN

CBS

GOLF

10 a.m. 11 a.m. 8:30 p.m.

Golf NBC

Golf

BOXING

5 p.m.

NBCSN

5 p.m.

CBSSN

HOCKEY

Men's college, Western Michigan vs. Minnesota-Duluth RODEO

National Finals Rodeo, eighth round

Double-dual At CascadeSwimCenter BOYS Team scores — Sisters 81,Ridgeview47; Sisters 93,Redmond51;Redmond 71, Ridgeview54. Top threefinishers 200 medley relay —1, RidgeviewA (Reed Pozzi,OwenHucke, Brett Kelly,TannerSteinbrecher), 2:37.81. 200 freestyle —1, OwenHucke, RV,2:22.28. 2,TrevorStanden,S,3:04.80.3,ShayneBidweff ,R, 3:12.10.

Men's college, Arizona at Michigan 9 a.m. CBS Men's college, W.Kentucky at Louisville 9 a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Virginia Commonwealth at Northern lowa 9 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Youngstown St. at Pittsburgh9 a.m. Root Men's college, Tennessee atWichita State 11 a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Louisiana Techvs. Oklahoma State 11 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Grambling State at ArizonaSt 11 a.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Florida Atlantic at Maryland 11 a.m. Root Men's college, IUPUI atMarquette noon Fox Sports1 Men's college, N. Illinois at Massachusetts noon NBCSN Men's college, Notre Damevs. Indiana 12:15 p.m ESPN Men's college, Oakland at Michigan State 1 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Idaho State atWashington 1 p.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Kentucky at North Carolina 2:15 p.m. ESPN Men's college, FresnoState atCalifornia 3 p.m. Pac-12 Men's College, St. Mary's at Boise State 3 p.m. Root Men's college,Kansasvs.New Mexico 4 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Prairie ViewA&M at UCLA 5 p.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Cincinnati at Xavier 5 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, lllinois at Oregon 6 p.m. ESPN2,

Amir Mansour vs. Kelvin Price

Swimming

7:50 a.m. Fox Sports 2

BASKETBALL

PGA Tour, Franklin Templeton Shootout PGA Tour, Franklin Templeton Shootout Asian Tour, Thailand Golf Championship

Beers,PoweffBute, Ore./Jim RossCooper, Monument, N.MJandDustin Bird, CutBank,Mont./Paul Eaves,Lonedeff,Mo., NT. Today Saddle bronc riding: 1. JakeWright, Milford, Boys baskelbag:Bendat North Medford, 7 p.m.; 85.5pointsonFlying FiveRodeo'sSundance, Summitat SouthMedford, 7 p.m.; Dallasat Red- Utah, mond, 6p.mcRidgeviewat North Marion, 7 p.m.; $18,630; 2.TaosMuncy, Corona, N.M.,84, $14,724; 3. J esse WriMi ght, lford, Utah,82.0,$11,118;4. CascadeatMadras,7p.m.; CrookCountyat Gladstone Tournament,7:30p.m.;LaPinevs.Douglas HeithDeMoss, Heflin, La.,81.0,$7,813;5. Chad at DouglaHi s ghSchool Booster Tournament, 7:30 Ferley,Oelrichs, S.D.,80.5, $4,808;6.(tie) ChetJohnp.m.; Taftat Sisters, 7p.mcCulver at Dufur,6:30 son, Sheridan,Wyo., andBradley Harter, Weatherford, p.m.; CentralChristianatWiffamette Valley Chris- Texas,78.5,$1,502each;8. (tie) JacobsCrawley, Stephenviffe,Texas, andCole Elshere, Faith, S.D., 78; tian, 8p.m. Co rt Scheer, Elsmere, Neb.,75;11. Cody Girls basketball: NorthMedford at Bend,7 p.m.; 10. SouthMedfordat Summit, 7 p.m.; BattleGround Wright,Milford,Utah,71;12. IsaacDiaz, Desdemona, Texas, 69; 13. (tie) TyleCorri r ngton, Hastings, (Wash.) atMountainView,7 p.m.; CrookCounty Sundell, Boxholm,lowa;andSterling at Gladstone Tournament, 7:30p.m.; Ridgeviewat Minn.; Wade North Marion, 7p.mcCascade at Madras, 5:30 Crawley,Stephenviffe, Texas, NS. Tie-down roping: 1. RyanJarrett, Comanche, p.m.; LaPinevs.DouglasatDouglasHighSchool BoosterTournam ent, 6 p.mcCulver at Dufur,6 Okla., 6.7seconds, $18,630;2, (tie) TufCooper, Dec atur ,Texas,andCodyOhl,Hico,Texas,6.9,$12,921 p.m.; CentralChristianatWilametteValleyChriseach; 4. TrevorBrazile, Decatur, Texas, 7.0, $7,813; tian, 7:30p.m.;Lowell atGilchrist, 3:30p.m. Wrestling: Redm ond, Ridgeview, Sisters, Madras, 5. TysonDurfey,Colbert, Wash., 7.3,$4,808;6. (tie) Moore,Aubrey,Texas,andShaneSlack,IdaCulver at Culver Invite, 7 p.m.; CrookCounty, Timber Okla.,7.8,$1,502each;8.ScottKormos,Teague, Redmond at CoastClassicTournament in North bel, Texas,7.9;9. Sterling Smith,Stephenviffe, Texas, 8.8; Bend,TBD Swimming: Centennial atMadras, 4:45p.m. 10. RandalCarl l isle,BatonRouge, La., 9.0; 11.Shane Hanchey, Sulphur, La.,96;12. Justin Maass, Giddings, Texas, 10.4; 13.StetsonVest, Childress, Texas, 11.0; Saturday Boys basketball: Bend at SouthMedford, 12:45 14. (tie)CalebSmidt, Beffviffe, Texas,andClif Cooper, p.m.; Summiatt NorthMedford, 12:45p.m4Cra- Decatur,Texas, NT. Barrel racing:1. SherryCervi, Marana,Ariz., ter at MountainView, 3:30p.m.; CrookCounty at GladstoneTournament, 7:30p.mcLaPineat 13.71seconds,$18,630;2. Jane Melby, Burneyviffe, DouglasHighSchool Booster Tournament, 8a.m.; Okla.,13.77,$14,724;3. ShadaBrazile, Decatur, Texas,13.80,$11,118;4. MicheleMcLeod, Whitesboro, Griswoldat Central Christian,3:30p.m. Girls basketball:SouthMedford at Bend, 12:45 Texas,13.84,$7,813; 5. ChristyLoflin, Franktown, ,13.89,$4,808;6.Kaley Bass,Kissimmee, p.m.; NorthMedfordat Summit,12:45 p.m.;Red- Colo. mond at Marist, 2 p.mcBattle Ground(Wash.) Fla., 14.01,$3,005; 7. Brittany Pozzi, Victoria,Texat Ridgeview,7p.m.; CrookCounty at Gladstone as, 14.09; 8.JeanWinters, Texline, Texas,14.17; 9. Tourname nt, 7:30p.mc LaPine at Douglas High Sydni Blanchard,Albuquerque,N.M.,14.21; 10.Trula School BoosterTournam ent, 8 a.m.; Culverat Churchill, Valentine,Neb., 18.60;11. TaylorJacob, Trinity Lutheran,4:30 p.mcGriswold at Central Carmine,Texas, 18.73; 12.(tie) MaryWalker, Ennis, Texas,andLisaLockhart, Oelrichs, S.D., 18.84;14. Christian, 2p.m. Wrestling: Redmond,Ridgeview,Sisters, Madras, FaffonTaylor,Whitesboro, Texas, 19.03; 15.Sabrina Yeso, N.M.,19.32. Culver at CulverInvite, 9 a.mcBend, Summit Ketcham, Bull riding:1. CodyTeel, Kountze,Texas, 78.5 at SpringfieldTournament, TBD;CrookCounty, Redmond at North BendCoast Classic in North points on JKRodeo's PaleFace, $18,630; 2. Josh Koschel,Nunn,Colo., 70,$14,724;3. ParkerBredBend,TBD Swimming: Bend, Mountain View,Madrasat Bend ing, Edgar,Mont., 68.0,$11,118;4. (tie) J.W.Harris, WinterClassicatJuniper Swim& Fitness Center, Mullin, Texas;ShaneProctor, GrandCoulee, Wash.; noon;Summitat CVCInvitational in Salem,1p.m. TrevorKastner,Ardmore, Okla.; TreyBenton Iff, Rock ds, Lubbock, Texas; Nordic skiing: OHSNO at Mt. Bachelor, Classic, Island, Texas;ChandlerBown Emil's Clearing11a.m. CodyCampbell, Summerviffe, Ore.;ColeEchols, Elm Grove,LacEffiot Jacoby,Fredricksburg,Texas;Tyler Smith, Fruita,Colo.; CooperDavis, Jasper, Texas; PREPS SteveWoolsey, Payson, Utah;andTylerWilis, Wheatland,Wyo.

ON DECK

7 p.m. Great American Country

50 freestyle —1, TrevorBarry,S, 28.76. 2, Keenan O'Hern, S,3017.3,JakeMcAlister, S,3164. 100 bugeriiy —1,lanBaldessari, S,1:19.66. 100 freestyle — 1,OwenHucke, RV,1:01.68.2, Brennan Miler, S,1:03.44. 3, BrettKelly, RV ,1:06.50. 200freestyle relay — 1,SistersA(lanBaldessari, JakeMcAffister, TrevorBarry, BrennanMiler), 201.46.2,Sisters8,20663.3,RidgeviewA,21947. 100 backstroke — 1, BrennanMiler, S, 1:15.48. 2,DanPeplin, R,1:34.70.3, CanaanSettles, R,2:01.50. 100 breaststroke — 1,BrettKelly, RV ,1:18.58. 2, lan Baldessari, S,1:25.80.3, AlexanderCyrus, S, 1:43.86. 400 freestylerelay —1,Redmond A(Ricardo Monroy,ShayneBidweff, AlecCarter, DanPeplin), 5:58.93.

NFR

SOCCER MLS All-StarS to faCe Bayern MuniCh — The2014 Maior League Soccer All-Star gamewill be against legendary German club Bayern Munich, the reigning Europeanand Bundesliga champions. The All-Star gamewill be played in August at Jeld-Wen Field, home of the Portland Timbers.

FOOTBALL FOrmer OSU All-AmeriCan Didion dieS at 66 — JohnDidion, a former All-America football player at OregonState who also played in the NFL,died Tuesday in Portland after suffering a heart attack. Didion starred as acenter at OSU,where he lettered three years (1966-68) and earnedAll-America honors in 1967 and 1968. A member of OregonState's "Giant Killers" team in1967, Didion went on to play professionally for the Washington Redskins (1969-70j and the New OrleansSaints (1970-74). In 1991, hewas inducted into the Oregon State University Sports Hall of Fame. Heis currently a nominee for the CollegeFootball Hall of Fame.

FOOTBALL RangerS draft SeahawkS QB RuSSell WilSOn —Seattle Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson hasbeenselected by the Texas Rangers from theColorado Rockies in theTriple-A portion of baseball's winter meeting draft on Thursday. Wilson, who played minor league baseball for parts of two seasons before becoming an NFL star, will be placed onTexas' restricted list. In two seasons at the Class A level hehit.229 with five homers and 26RBls. — From wire reports

NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AH TimesPST

AMERICANCONFERENCE East W L T P ct PF PA 10 3 0 . 7 69349 287 7 6 0 . 5 38286 276 6 4

7

0 . 4 62226 337 . 3 08273 334

9 0 South W L T 8 5 0 5 8 0 4 9 0

y-Indianapolis Tennesse e Jacksonvile Houston

2 11

P ct PF PA . 6 15313 316 . 3 85292 318 . 3 08201 372 0 . 154250 350

North W L T P ct PF PA 9 4 0 . 6 92334 244 7 6 0 . 5 38278 261 5 8 0 . 3 85291 312 4 9 0 . 3 08257 324 West W L T P c t PF PA x -Denver 11 3 0 .7 8 6535 372 K ansas Cit y 1 0 3 0 .7 6 9343 224 S an Diego 7 7 0 .50 0 343 311 Oakl a nd 4 9 0 . 3 08264 337 GIRLS N ATIONAL CO NFERENCE Team scores —Sisters109, Ridgeview75; East Sisters115,Redmond79;Redmond85, Ridgeview81. W L T P c t PF PA Top threetinishers phia 8 5 0 . 6 15334 301 200 medley relay — 1,RidgeviewA (Rachel Philadel Dallas 7 6 0 . 5 38357 348 Haney,CaseeLantz, HaleyHoughton, Beth Leavitt), N.Y.Giants 5 8 0 . 3 85251 334 221.00.2,SistersA,22369.3,RedmondA,250.15. 3 10 0 . 231279 407 200 freestyle — 1, Haley Houghton,RV, Washington South 2:31. 85.2,MaddiBeottner,S,3;05.95.3,Shawna W L T P c t PF PA Solar,R,4:02.86. Orleans 10 3 0 . 7 69343 243 200 individual medley — 1, MaryStewart, New 9 4 0 . 6 92298 188 S, 2:36.22. 2,RachelHaney, RV,2:36.35. 3, Andrea Carolina TampaBay 4 9 0 . 3 08244 291 Broyles,R,3:20.99. Atlanta 3 10 0 . 231282 362 50 freestyle —1, Emily Christen,S,30.77. 2, North Casee Lanlz,RV,31.30.3,ElizabethMoss,R,32.49. W L T P ct PF PA 100 butterily —1,Rachel Haney, RV, 1:13.78. 2, 7 6 0 . 5 38346 321 MaryStewart,S,1:15.72. 7 6 0 . 5 38368 360 100 freestyle —1, BrookeKnirk, S, 1:16.82. 6 6 1 . 5 00316 326 2, BethLeavitt, RV,1:21.00. 3, SarahRomkema, R, 3 9 1 . 2 69315 395 1:21.89. West 400 freestyle — 1, Haley Houghton,RV, W L T P ct PF PA 5:18.72. 11 2 0 .84 6 357 205 200 freestyle relay — 1,RidgeviewA(Haley xS-Seattle an Francisco 9 4 0 .6 9 2316 214 Houghton,BethLeavitt, CaseeLantz, Rachel Haney), Arizona 8 5 0 . 6 15305 257 2:05.08. 2,SistersA,2:05.82. 3,Sisters 8, 2:32.55. St. Loui s 5 8 0 . 3 85289 308 100 backs troke — 1,Elizabeth Moss,R, playoff spot 1:23.04. 2, MadelynZadow,S, 1:23.14. 3, Codie x-clinched y-clincheddivision Lagao,S,1:27.05. 100 broaststroke —1, CaseeLanlz, RV, Thursday'sGame 2:19.14. 2, AndreaBroyles, R,1:38.14.3, Emily ChrisSanDiego27, Denver20 ten, S,1:41.29 Sunday'sGames 400 freestyle relay —1, Redmo nd A (Brittany Smith,ShawnaSolar, MelissaRockow, Andrea PhiladelphiaatMinnesota,10 a.m. Washi n gton at At l a nta,10a.m. Broyles),7:12.21. SanFranciscoatTampaBay,10a.m. Seattleat N.Y.Giants,10 a.m. Wrestling ChicagoatCleveland,10a.m. Houstonat Indianapolis, 10a.m. Summit 48, Madras26 BuffaloatJacksonyiffe,10a.m. Englandat Miami,10a.m. 1oe — lanOppenlander,M,techfal QuintinMc- New ansasCityat Oakland, 1:05p.m. Coy, S,5;15.113— Christian Renteria, M,winsby K N.Y. Jets at Carolina,1:05 p.m. forfeit.120 —ThomasBrown, S,wins byforfeit.126 Arizona atTennessee,1:25 p.m. — GrantLeiphart, S,def. BryceVincent, M,4-2.132 Orleansat St.Louis,1:25 p.m. —JarredDupont, M,def.JosiahMalesic, S,8-2.138 New reenBayat Dallas, 1:25p.m. — PatrickLeiphart, S,winsbyforfeit. 145—Dustin G C incinnati at Pittsburgh,5:30p.m. Reyes,S,def.TrevorParsons,M, 6-2.152—Austin sGame Katter, S, pinsSamuel Coyle, M,2:15. 160—Jacob BaltimoreatDetroiMonday' t, 5:40p.m. Thompson, S,wins byforfeit.170 —JorgeGarcia, S, wins byforfeit. 182 —JoeyReitz, S,winsbyforfeit. Thursday'sSummary 196 —NoahYunker, S,pinsColton Goss,M,1:16. 220 —HaydenManu,M,pins,JoseLuviano,S,1:31. 286 —MiguelSeviffa, M,pins JohnMurphy,S,1:38. Chargers 27, Broncos20

RODEO

SPORTS IN BRIEF

FOOTBALL

National Finals Rodeo ThomasfkMackCenter,LasVegas Thursday's Results, Round8 Bareback riding: 1.KayceeFeild, Payson,Utah, 83.5 pointsonAndrews Rodeo'sCool Water, $18,630; 2.StevenPeebl es,Redmond,Ore.,82.5,$14,724;3. J.R.Vezain, Cowley,Wyo.,79,$11,118;4. BobbyMote, Culver ,Ore.,78.5,$7, 813;5.WesStevenson,Lubbock, Texas ,74.5,$4,808;6.WillLowe,Canyon,Texas,74, $3,005;7.StevenDent, Muffen,Neb.r 73;8. (tie) Ty Breuer,Mandan,N.D., andJared Smith, CrossPlains, Texas,71;10. Clint Cannon,Waffer,Texas, 70;11. (tie) JessyDavis, Power,Mont.; andCalebBennet, Morgan, Utah,69.5each; 13,(tie) RyanGray, Cheney, Wash.; Austin Foss,Terrebonne,Ore.; andCaseyCoffeti, Pueblo,Colo.,NS. Steer wresging:1. HunterCure,Hoffiday,Texas, 3.8 seconds,$18,630; 2. Matt Reeves, Cross Plains, Texas,4.2,$14,724;3. (tie) TrevorKnowles, Mount Vernon,Ore.,andStanBranco, Chow chila, Calif., 4.3, $9,465 each; 5. K.C. Jones,Decatur, Texas, 4.5, $4,808 ;6.DakotaEldridge,Elko,Nev.,4.6,$3,005;7. LukeBranquinho, LosAlamos, Calif., 4.7.8. (tie) Tyler Pearson,Louisvile, Miss.,andDeanGorsuch, Gering, Neb.,4.8each; 10.BrayArmes, Ponder, Texas, 5.1;11. Jule Hazen,Ashland, Kan., 7.7; 12.WadeSumpter, Fowler,Colo.,9.8;13.StrawsMilan, Cochrane,Alberta, 9.9;14.(tie) CaseyMartin, Sulphur,La.,andJason Miller,LanceCreek, Wyo., NT. Team ropi ng:1.Colby Loveff ,Madisonviff e, Texas /MartinLucero,Stephenviff e,Texas,4.2 seconds,$18,630each;2. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas/ Patrick Smith,Lipan,Texas,4.5, $14,724;3. Kaleb Driggers,Albany,Ga./Travis Graves,Jay, Okla., 4.9, $11,118; 4.LukeBrown,Stephenviffe, Texas/Koffin VonAhn,Blanchard, Okla., 5.3, $7,813; 5. Drew Horner,Plano,Texas/Buddy Hawkins 0, Columbus, Kan.,5.7,$4,808;6. (tie) DerrickBegay,SebaDalkai, Ariz./Cesar de la Cruz,Tucson,Ariz., and Justin VanDavis,Madisonviff e,Texas/Clay O'Brien Cooper, GardnervifferNev.,9.1, $1,502each;8. Charly Crawford,Prineviffe,Ore./RyanMotes, Weatherford, Texas,9.3; 9. RileyMinor, Effensburg, Wash./Brady Minor, Effensburg,Wash., 9.6;10.NickSartain, Dover, Okla./RichSkelton, Llano,Texas,9.7; 11.Turtle Poweff ,Stephenviff e,Texas/Dugan Kelly,PasoRobles, Calif.,9.9;12.ErichRogers,RoundRock,Ariz./ CoryPetska,Marana,Ariz.,10.2;13. (tie)ClayTryan, Billings, Mont./JadeCorkiff, Faffon,NevcBrandon

Ban Diego Denver

3 14 7 3 — 2 7 10 0 0 10 — 20 First Guarter

Den—Caldwell 15 passfrom Manning (Prater kick), 11:51. SD — FGNovak38,5:15. Den—FGPrater 32,1:22.

SecondGuarler

SD—Allen19passfromRivers (Novakkick), 9:46. SD—Allen10passfromRivers (Novakkick), 1:05. Third Ouarter SD — Mathews23run (Novakkick), 11:06. Fourlh Quarler

Den—Caldwell 5 passfromManning(Praterkick), 10:25. SD—FG Novak35,2:36. Den—FG Prater42,:29. A—76,497.

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

SD Den 24 19 3 37 29 5 44-177 11-18 1 60 277 2-11 0-0 0-0 4 -108 1-6 0-0 12-20-0 27-41-1 2 -6 1 - 12 3-42.0 4-46.5 1-0 0-0 4 -35 6 - 43 38:49 21:11

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —San Diego: Mathews29-127, Woodhead 9-29, R.Brown3-12, Rivers3-9. Denver:

Moreno8-19,Ball 3-(minus1). PASSING —San Diego: Rivers 12-20-0-166. Denver.Manning27-41-1-289. RECEIVING —San Diego: VBrown 3-54, Royal3-46,Allen2-29,Gates 2-23, Woodhead1-13, Mathews1-1. Denver: Caldwell6-59, Ball 5-49, Moreno5-36,J.Thomas4-49,D.Thomas4-45, Decker 2-42,Tamme1-9. MISSEDFIELDGOAL~one.

College Bowl Glance AH TimesPST Saturday, Dec.21 New MexicoBowl

At Albuquerque Washington State(6-6) vs. ColoradoState (7-6), 11 a.m.(ES PN) Las VegasBowl FresnoState(11-1) vs. SouthernCal (9-4), 12:30 p.m.(ABC) Famous IdahoPotatoBowl At Boise, Idaho Buffalo(8-4)vs. SanDiegoState (7-5), 2:30p.m. (ESPN) New OrleansBowl Tulane(7-5) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Dec.23 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl At St. Petersburg, Fla. Ohio(75)vs.East Carolina(93),11a m.(ESPN) Tuesday, Dec.24 Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu OreqonState(6-6) vs. Boise State(8-4), 5 p.m. (ESPN ) Thursday,Dec.26 Litue CaesarsPIna Bowl At Detroit BowlingGreen(10-3) vs. Pittsburgh(6-6), 3 p.m. (ESPN ) Poinsetlia Bowl At San Diego Northernfflinois (12-1)vs.UtahState(8-5), 6:30p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Dec. 27 Military Bowl At Annapolis, Md. Marshal(9-4) l vs.Maryland(7-5),11:30 a.m.(ESPN) TexasBowl At Houston Minnesota(8-4) vs.Syracuse(6-6), 3p.m.(ESPN) Fight HungerBowl At San Francisco BYU(8-4)vs.Washington (8-4), 6:30p.m.(ESPN)

Kentucky96, DePaul 85 SE Missouri72,RI.-Springfield56 WichitaSt. 66,ArkansasSt. 47 Far West Colorado83, Denver 61

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPST

EaslernConference Atlantic Division Boston Montreal TampaBay Detroit Toronto Ottawa Florida Buffalo

GP W L OT PlsGF GA 32 22 8 2 4 6 90 64 3 3 19 11 3 4 1 86 73 3 1 18 10 3 39 87 77 3 3 15 9 9 3 9 88 87 3 3 16 14 3 35 90 96 3 3 13 14 6 32 94 106 3 2 10 17 5 2 5 73 106 3 2 7 23 2 1 6 54 94

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA P ittsburgh 32 2 1 10 1 4 3 98 71 W ashington 31 17 12 2 3 6 98 90 C arolina 3 3 1 3 1 3 7 3 3 76 93 C olumbus 32 14 15 3 3 1 82 88 P hiladelphia 32 14 15 3 3 1 72 86 N .Y.Rangers 33 15 17 1 3 1 72 88 N ewJersey 32 12 14 6 3 0 73 82 N .Y. Islanders 33 9 1 9 5 2 3 83 117 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Chicago 3 4 23 6 5 5 1 129 93 St. Louis 3 0 21 6 3 4 5 106 70 Colorado 30 21 9 0 4 2 87 71 Minnesota 3 4 18 11 5 4 1 79 80 Dallas 3 0 14 11 5 33 84 89 Betting line Nashville 3 2 15 14 3 3 3 74 90 Winnipeg 3 3 14 14 5 33 86 94 NFL Pacific Division (Hometeamsin CAPS) PlsGF GA Favorile Opening Cunont underdog Anaheim 3 4 GP 2W2 L7 OT 5 49 108 87 Sunday S an Jose 3 2 2 0 6 6 106 79 FALCON S 5.5 6.5 Red skins os Angeles 32 21 7 4 46 4 6 88 63 49ers 5.5 5 BUCCANEERSL 31 1 8 8 5 41 103 97 Cardinals 3 3 TITANS Phoenix Saints 5.5 6 RAMS V ancouver 33 18 10 5 4 1 88 81 C algary 31 1 2 1 5 4 2 8 81 101 Seahawks 7 7 GIANT S dmonton 33 1 1 19 3 2 5 91 113 BROWN S 1 1 Bears E Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime COLTS 6 6 Texans NOTE: Bills 1.5 2 JAGU ARS loss. Thursday'sGames Patriots 2.5 2 DOLP HINS Bay2, Detroit1, SO 4.5 4.5 VIKINGS Tampa Eagles innipeg3, SO PANTHE RS 11 11 Jets Colorado4,4,W N.Y.Rangers2 Chiefs 3.5 4 RAID E RS Columbus COWBO YS 6 6 Packers Philadelphia2, Montreal1 2, Bufalo1 Bengals 3 3 STEE LERSOttawa St. Louis6, Toronto 3 Monday LIONS Ravens Nashville 3,Daffas1 6 6 Calgary2, Carolina1, OT Phoenix6, N.Y.Islanders 3 College Boston4, Edmonton2 Today sota1 p -Navy 1 0 . 5 12. 5 Army SanJose3, MinneToday' sGames p-Philadelphia NewJerseyat Pittsburgh,4 p.m. Washington at Florida, 4:30p.m. Saturday, Dec.21 Edmonto natVancouver,6p.m. New MexicoBowl sGames Washington St 3.5 3.5 Col orado St Calgaryat BuffaSaturday' lo,11 a.m. Las VegasBowl Los Angel e at s O tta wa , 11 a.m Usc 6 6 Fres no StDallasatWinnipeg,noon . Famous IdahoPotatoBowl hicagoatToronto,4 p.m. Buff alo 2.5 2. 5 S an Dieg oSt C Pittsburghat Detroit,4 p.m. New OrleansBowl T ampa Bayat NewJersey, 4p.m. Tulane PK PK UL- Lafayette Montrealat N.Y.Islanders,4p.m. St. Louisat Columbus,4p.m. Monday, Dec.23 SanJoseatNashyff le,5p.m. Beef O'Brady's Bowl arolinaat Phoenix, 5p.m. E . Carolina 12.5 12 . 5 Ohio C MinnesotaatColorado, 6p.m. BostonatVancouver, 7p.m. Tuesday, Dec.24 Hawaii Bowl Oregon St 2. 5 2.5 Bois e St DEALS Thursday, Dec.26 Transactions Little CaesarsPizzaBowl Bowling Green 5.5 55. Pit t sburgh BASEBAL L Poinsetlia Bowl Major LeagueBaseball N. Illinois 1 . 5 1.5 UtahSt MLB —NamedDaniel Halemexecutive vicepresident, laborrelations. Friday, Dec. 27 AmericanLeague Military Bowl BOSTON REDSOX— Agreed to termswith 18 Marshall 25. 2.5 Maryland Mike Napoli on atwo-yearcontract. DesignatedOF TexasBowl AlexCasteffanosfor assignment. Minnesota 4. 5 4.5 Syracuse OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Sent CDavid Freitasto Fight HungerBowl Baltimoreto completeanearlier trade. SentLHPAnWashington 3 3 Byu drewWernerto Sacramento (PCL). SEATTLE MARINERS—Agreedto terms with 28 Saturday, Dec.28 RobinsonCano ona10-yearcontract. Pinstripe Bowl TEXAS RANGERS— Agreed totermswith INF/OF Notre Dame 16 16 Rutg e rs Brent Liffibridge,INFKevin Kouzmanoff, RHPArmanBelk Bowl do Rodriguez,RH PDougMathis andSSJoshWilson N. Carolina 2. 5 2.5 Cinc innati on minorleaguecontracts. Russell Athletic Bowl TORONT OBLUEJAYS— Agreedto termswith Louisville 3 3 Miami - Fla RHPTom o Ohkaon a minor leaguecontract. Traded Buffalo Wild WingsBowl LHP BrianMoranto theLosAngeles Angels for an Kansas St 3 3 Michi g an International capspace. National League Monday,Dec.30 ATLANTA BRAVES —Agreed to termswith RHP Armed ForcesBowl JordanWaldenonaone-year contract. Named Brian 6 6 MidTenn St Snitkerman agerandGarey Ingramhitting coachof Music City Bowl Gwinnett(IL); JamieDismukehitting coachof MisMississippi 2.5 2.5 Ge orgia Techsissippi(SL);DerrickLewispitching coachof LynchAlamo Bowl burg (Carolina);JonathanSchuerholz manager and Oregon 13 13 Texas GabeLuckertpitchingcoachof Rome (SAL); Randy HolidayBowl Ingleman ager, Dan Meyerpitching coachandCarlos ArizonaSt 13.5 1 3. 5 Te xas TechMendez hitting coachof Danviffe (Appalachian); Rick Albert hittingcoachoftheGCLBraves; DerekBotelho Tuesday,Dec.31 minor league pitching rehabilitation instructor; Rich Advocare V100Bowl Dubeeminor leaguepitching coordinator; Ronnie Arizona 7 7 Bost on CollegeOrtegonminorleaguehitting coordinatorandBobby Sun Bowl Mitchell minor leagueroving ouffield/baserunning Ucla 7 7 Virg i nia Techinstructor. Liberty Bowl CHICAGO CUBS—Acquired OFJustin Ruggiano Mississippi St 7 7 Rice from Miami forOFBrianBogusevic. Chick-fil-ABowl SAN DIEGO PADRES — Acquired LHPPatrick T exas A8 M 12.5 1 2 .5 Duke SchusterfromHoustonforcashconsiderations, which compl e tes an e arl iertrade. Wednesday,Jan. 1 WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Agreedto terms Gator Bowl onatwo-yearcontract. Georgia 9 9 Nebraska with OFNate McLouth FOOTBA LL Heart of Dallas Bowl National Football League N. Texas 6.5 6.5 Unlv CINCINNATI BENGALS—SignedCBChris LewCapital OneBowl is-Harrisfromthepracticesquad.Waived STonyDye. Wisconsin 2.5 2.5 S. Carolina HOCKEY Outback Bowl National HockeyLeague Lsu 7.5 7.5 lowa A NAHEIM D UCKS — AssignedC DavidSteckel Rose Bowl DsAlex GrantandNolan Yonkman to Norfolk Stanford 15 3 MichiganSt and (AHL). Fiesta Bowl CALGARYFLAMES— FiredgeneralmanagerJay Baylor 1 7.5 1 7 . 5 C. Florida Feasterandassistant general manager JohnWeisbrod. CAROLINAHURRICANES—ActivatedFAlexander Thursday, Jan. 2 Seminfrominjured reserve. Sugar Bowl JERSEY DEVILS— PlacedDPeter Harrold Alabama 14. 5 15 Okla homa onNEW injuredreserve,retroactiveto Dec.7. Assigned LW MattiasTedenbyto Albany (AHL)for conditionFriday, Jan. 3 ing. Cotton Bowl NEW YORKISLANDERS — Activated G Evgeni Missouri 1 1 Oklahoma St Nabokov frominjured reserve. Loaned GAndersNilsOrangeBowl toBridgeport(AHL). OhioSt 5 3 Clemson sonOTTAW A SENATORS— Recalled FJean-Gabriel PageaufromBinghamton(AHL). Saturday, Jan. 4 W ASHIN GTONCAPITALS— Loaned GMichael CompassBowl L) fora condttronrngprogram. V anderbilt 3 3 Housto n Neuvirthto Hershey(AH SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer Sunday,Jan. 5 COLUMBUSCREW— TradedDChadMarshallto Go DaddyBowl Seattle for al l o moneyanda 2015third round Ball St 8.5 8.5 Ark ansas StSuperDraftselcation ection.Tradedits 2014fourth round SuperDraftpickto Chicagofortherights to MFDaniel Monday, Jan. 6 Paladini. BCS Championship NEWYOR KRED BULLS— Re-signed F Andre F lorida St. 8. 5 8.5 Aubu r n Akpan. PORTLANDTIMBERS — Acquired MF/D Jorge Viffafanaandthe No.2selection in Stage1ofthe2013 BASKETBALL MLSRe-Entry ProcessfromChivasUSAfor DAndrew Jean-Baptisteandthe No.17 selection in Stage1 of Men's College the Re-En try Process. Thursday's Games SEATTLE SOUNDERS FC— Re-signed GJo East LIU Brooklyn96,NJIT 93 Maryland88,Boston College80 South Coll. ofCharleston68, Coker54 UNCAshevile 92,Bluefield 56 Midwest DePaul81,FAU70 Southwest Arkansas 72,SavannahSt.43

Women's College Thursday's Games East Rutgers83,Wagner 53 South Georgia81,Belmont 55 Middl eTennessee68,Kennesaw St.32 Midwest lowaSt. 83,lowa70 Kansas 105,TexasSouthern 78


FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

NBA ROUNDUP

NBA SCOREBOARD

Aldridge leads Blazers past Rockets The Associated Press

of his mother. Her funeral is scheduled

for today in Minnesota. Assistant coach Kelvin Sampson ran the club against the

PORTLAND — LaMarcus Aldridge

had 31 points and a career-high 25 rebounds, prompting Portland fans to

Blazers.

chant "MVP! MVP!" during the Trail Blazers' 111-104 victory over the Houston

Neither side was able to get in front by more than five points in the first

Rockets on Thursday night.

half. Portland held a 21-20 lead after

the opening quarter. Aldridge was just 1 for 7 from the floor but he had nine

Robin Lopez added 16 points and 10

rebounds for the Blazers, who sit atop the Western Conference standings at

rebounds.

Houston went ahead 32-28 on Parsons' layup and Howard's hook shot,

19-4.

Dwight Howard had 32 points and 17 rebounds for the Rockets, who beat the

and the Rockets led 44-43 at halftime. Neither team shot well, with Portland at 32 percentand Houston at 36 percent. The Rockets had just five first-half

Blazers 116-101 on Nov. 5. That was one

of just two losses at home this season for Portland.

The Trail Blazers led by 10 early in the fourth quarter, but Chandler Parsons hit a 3-pointer to narrow it to 93-88 with 7:07 left. Houston closed to 97-95 after James

assists.

uaI .

The Blazers opened the second half

:-'

with an 11-3 run capped by Matthews' 3-pointer to take a 54-47 lead. Portland

Harden made a layup and a free throw with 4:45 to go. Nicolas Batum's 3-pointer pushed

stretched the lead to 59-49 on Lopez's

Houston Rockets' James Harden, right,

dunk and free throw. Aldridge got rolling with 11 points and eight rebounds.

looks to pass against Portland Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard during the first half of

The Rocketsclosed the gap to 70-68 late inthe third quarter when Howard hit

Thursday night's game in Portland.

a pair of free throws and dunked. Omri

Greg Wahr-Stephens/The Associated Press

Portland's lead to 102-95 before Wesley Matthews' layup and free throw made it 108-96 with 2:04 left and all but put the

game out of reach for the Rockets. Portland was coming off a 105-94 victory in Utah on Monday. The Blazers

C3

Casspi tied it at 70 on free throws with 2 minutes left. Asik, who missed his fourth straight

havescored 100orm orepointsin 10con- game with a bruised right thigh. Houssecutive games. ton did get back guard Jeremy Lin, who Houston had won two straight, inmissed the previous six games with a cluding a 98-88 victory over the Orlando sprained right knee. Magic on Sunday. Rockets coach Kevin McHale was The Rockets (15-7) were without Omer not with the team because of the death

In another game on Thursday: Nets 102, Clippers 93: NEW YORKAndray Blatche and Joe Johnson each scored 21 points in Brooklyn's victory

over the Los Angeles Clippers, making Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett winners in their first matchup with Doc Rivers.

Saturday'sGames LA. Clippers atWashington, 4 p.m. L.A. Lakers atCharlotte,4 p.m. Clevelandat Miami,4.30 p.m. Atlantaat NewYork,4:30 p.m. Torontoat Chicago, 5p.m. Portlandat Philadelphia,5 p.m. Milwaukee atDalas, 5:30p.m. SanAntonioat Utah,6p.m.

Standings AH TimesPST

d-Indiana d-Miami Atlanta d-Boston Charlotte Washington Detroit Chicago Cleveland Brooklyn

Toronto Orlando Philadelphia NewYork Milwaukee

Eastern Conference L P cf 19 3 .864 W 16 11 10 10 9 10 5 6 7 8

6 11 14 12 11 13 12 13 14 13 15 16 15 17

. 727 .500 8 .417 10 .455 .450 .435 9'/r .400 .381 .364 .350 11 .318 12 .304 121/t .286 12I/ .227 14

Summaries Thursday'sGames

Blazers111, Rockets104

Western Conference W L P cf GB

d-Portland d-San Antonio Oklahoma City d-L.A.Clippers Houston Denver Phoenix Golden State Dallas Minnesota NewOrleans Memphis LA. Lakers Sacramen to Utah d-divisionleader

19 17 17 15 15 13 12 13 13 11 10 10 10 5 6

4 . 826 4 .810 4 . 810 9 .625 4]/ 8 .652 4 8 .619 9 . 571 10 .565 10 .565 11 .500 7t/t 10 .500 7t/> 11 .476 11 .476 14 .300 19 .208 fI»

HOUSTON (104) Parsons6-180-014, Jones5-100-010, Howard 14-224-6 32,Beverley 3-103-39, Harden 8-187-9 25, Lin1-43-45, Casspi 2-62-26, Garcia1-60-03. Totals 40-9419-24104. PORTLAND (111) Batum5-113-4 15,Aldridge12-227-931, Lopez 7-9 2-316, Lillard1-105-58, Matthews6-16 4-518, Williams5-102-213, Freeland 1-20-02, Wright2-6 0-0 6,Robinson0-3 2-22. Totals39-692530 111. Houston 20 24 32 28 — 104 PorUand 21 22 33 35 — 111 3-Point Goal— s Houston 5-20 (Parsons 2-4, Harden2-5r Garcia1-5, Jones0-1, Howard 0-1, Lin 0-2, Casspi0-2), Portland8-27 (Batum2-6, Wright 2-6, Matthews 2-8, Wiliams1-3, Lilard1-4). Fouled Dut — None. Rebounds—Houston 53(Howard 17), Portland 61 (Aldridge 25). Assists —Houston 16 (Harden7), Portland 22 (Lillard, Batum6). Total Fouls —Houston 23, Portland 20. TechnicalsBeverley,Houstondefensive threesecond, Ligard. A—19,997(19,980).

Nets102, Clippers 93

Thursday'sGames

Brooklyn102,L.A.Clippers93 Portland111,Houston104

L.A. CLIPPERS (93) Dudley1-71-24, Griffin2-88-1312, Jordan2-3 2-4 6, Paul6-13 6-7 20,Green2-6 3-4 8, Crawford 5-11 7 1219,Jamison3-70 16,Jackson1-51-2 3, Coff ison2-74-48,Hollins2-33-37,Mullens0-00-0 0. Totals 26-7035-5293. BROOKLYN (102) Anderson1-91-1 3,Garnett1-20-02, Lopez6-13 4-416, Williams4-9 5-515, Johnson8-131-2 21, Blatche7-117-8 21, Pierce2-7 4-410, Livingston 1-3 4-4 6, Plumlee1-1 2-2 4, Teletovic2-4 0-04, Shengelia 0-10-00, Taylor0-10-00. Totals 33-74 2640102. L.A. Clippers 25 1 9 18 31 — 93 Brooklyn 20 36 27 19 — 102

Today'sGam es ClevelandatOrlando 4 p.m. CharlotteatIndiana,4p.m. PhiladelphiaatToronto, 4p.m. NewYorkatBoston, 4:30p.m. Washington atAtlanta,4:30 p.m. BrooklynatDetroit, 4:30p.m. L.A. Lakers at OklahomaCity, 5 p.m. MemphisatNewOrleans,5 p.m. Chicagoat Milwaukee,5:30p.m. Minnesota atSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Sacramento atPhoenix, 6p.m. Utah atDenver,6p.m. Houstonat GoldenState, 7:30p.m.

NHL ROUNDUP

Bruins maintain conference lead with win overOilers The Associated Press EDMONTON, Alberta — Jarome

Edmonton was all over Boston's zone, but the Bruins were able to seal

Igl

rll4Ã<>>

Iginla scored a pair of goals, and the the victory on Iginla's empty-net goal Eastern Conference-leading Boston in the final minute. Bruins held on to defeat the West celAlso on Thursday: lar-dwelling Edmonton Oilers 4-2 on Blue Jackets 4, Rangers 2: NEW Thursday night. YORK — Matt Calvert, Artem AniDennis Seidenberg and Brad simov and David Savard scored in Marchand also had goals for the Bru- the first 11:10, and Columbus beat ins (22-8-2), who have won four in a the Rangers, sending New York to its row and eight of 10. Backup goalie fourth straight loss. Chad Johnson made 39 saves. Flyers 2, Canadiens1: PHILADELDavid Perron netted both goals for

the Oilers (I1-19-3), who have lost two of three. They dropped to 6-10-2 at home.

.':: t -'

~~

PHIA — Michael Raffl and Claude

Giroux scored goals, Steve Mason made 20 saves, and Philadelphia edged Montreal. Senators 2, Sabres 1: OTTAWA, Ontario — Craig Anderson stopped

Edmonton goalieDevan Dubnyk whiffed on a long shot from the blue line by Seidenberg, who sent the puck 40 shots in Ottawa's win over Buffalo. in while his team made a line change Bobby Ryan and Zack Smith scored at 10:25 of the first period. for the Senators (13-14-6), who have Boston made it 2-0 with four min-

earned at least a point in four straight

utes left in the opening period on an- games. other long shot goal as Edmonton-arLightning 2, Red Wings 1: TAMea native Iginla scored on a slap shot, PA, Fla.— Martin St. Louis scored in with Milan Lucic providing a screen the sixth round of the shootout, and in front.

when Patrice Bergeron fed Marchand for his fifth goal. The Oilers have allowed an NHL-

high seven short-handed goals this season. Edmonton backup goalieJason LaBarbera replaced Dubnyk to start the second period. The Oilersgot on the board 3:25

Predators 3, Stars 1: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — David Legwand had a goal

and an assist to lead Nashville past Dallas. Patric Hornqvist and Paul Gaustad also scored for Nashville. Avalanche 4, Jets 3: WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Matt Duchene andP.A. Parenteau scored in the shootout, and

Colorado stopped a two-game losing skid by beating Winnipeg. Coyotes 6, Islanders 3: GLEN-

into the second period when Perron gained the zone and beat Johnson DALE, Ariz. — Rob Klinkhammer stick-side with a quick wrist shot for had two goals and an assist, Mikkel his team-leading 13th goal. Boedker scored two of Phoenix's four Edmonton cut the deficit to 3-2 second-period goals, and the Coyotes with 2:33 left in the second. Perron

beat the road-weary New York Islanders to avenge their worst loss of

picked up the puck behind the net and fought off Bergeron with one the season. hand while hooking the puck around Flames 2, Hurricanes 1: CALand into the net. The teams were tied in shots 28-28

through two periods. The Oilers pressed hard for the tying goal in the first 13 minutes of the third period — outshooting the Bru-

Peyton Manning (18) in the fourth quarter of Thursday night's game in Denver.

ar erss un ronCOS NFL

By Eddie Pells DENVER — Peyton Manning wanted more rest. He got plenty Thursday night thanks to Philip Rivers and a San Diego defense that slowed down Manning and handed the Broncos an unexpected and harmful loss. Rivers threw t w o

Rivers finished 12 for 20 for 166 yards in improving to 28-6 in De-

DENVER — Four people were stabbed in the parking lot at Sports Authority Stadium after the Denver Broncos' gameThursday night. The Denver Police Department says on its Twitter pageoneperson is in critical condition. Police say that officers have "parties" in custody andarenot currGntly looking for other suspects. Police say that the incident was called in at 9:55 p.m.

cember. Ryan Matthews matched

his season high with 127 yards on 29 carries.

After Denver's long dry spell

passes to Keenan Allen and kept the Chargers' offense on the field

and though the Broncos (11-3) had overcome double-digit deficits four

for nearly 39 minutes in a 27-20 times this season to win, it wasn't stunner over the Broncos, whose happening this time. easy road to the AFC West title They pulled within seven and and top seeding in the conference Manning got the ball on the Dengot an unexpected jolt. ver 3 with 5:50 left. He moved the Disorganized on defense and Broncos 30 yards in two plays with never able to crank things up on the help of a penalty. But the Charoffense, the Broncos gained 13 gers'maligned defense produced yards on the 13 plays they ran af- some pass rush and forced a bad ter taking a 10-3 lead late in the throw, which linebacker Thomas first quarter. That covered four

scored at 4:56 of overtime to give Calgary a victory over Carolina.

went three-and-out three t i mes and picked up a total of one first down.

Minnesota.

former offensivecoordinator.

t o u chdown on offense,San Diego led 24-10,

fruitless drives during which they

Sharks 3, Wild 1: SAN JOSE, Calif. — Joe Pavelski scored two pow-

Four peoplestadded after Denvergame

The Associated Press

B u tler

GARY, Alberta — Chris

er-play goals, and San Jose ended a ins 10-0 — but were unable to get a four-game losing streak by beating shot past Johnson.

Joe Mahoney/The AssociatedPress

San Diego Chargers linebacker Thomas Keiser (90) reacts after intercepting a pass by Denver Broncos quarterback

Tampa Bay beat Detroit. St. Louis

It was Iginla's first game in Ed- netted the lone shootout goal when monton as a member of a team other he beat Jonas Gustavsson to the stick than the rival Calgary Flames. side. The Bruins took a d o m inating Blues 6, Maple Leafs 3: ST. LOUthree-goal edge with a short-handed IS — David Backes scored twice goal with 1:43 left in the first. and Jaden Schwartz added a goal Philip Larsen's shot was blocked at and two assists to lead St. Louis over the point, allowing Boston to go on a Toronto. 2-on-1 break that was capitalized on

'lg

"The longer you keep the ball

and the less he has it, the better off

— The Associated Press

and two touchdowns — but pad-

ded during desperation time. The Chargers (7-7) got a field As most veterans do, especially goal to go up 10. Denver answered this time of year, he griped about Keiser picked off at the Denver 33.

with a field goal but couldn't re-

the short turnaround between a

cover the onside kick and the

Sunday and Thursday game, the

Broncos lost to an AFC West foe for the first time in 11 games.

you're going to be," said Chargers Manning's final numbers were coach Mike McCoy, Manning's decent — 27 for 41 for 289 yards

likes of which every team has to

make at least once every season. Now, he will get 10 days to rest and chew on this los.

Injuries, losses prompt baseball officials to seek collision ban By Ronald Blum

million, nine-year deal. San

The Associated Press

Francisco wants to ensure that he doesn't have another hor-

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla.

— Baseball officials are up

MLB

time because of concussions this year. "Collisions at home plate winter meetings ended. "Some rific injury like the one that of the things we've seen hap- can significantly alter your ended his 2011 season. pen in the recent past — Bust- ability to win games," said That's why Major League er Posey, concussions with Joe Andrew Friedman, Tampa Baseball's rules committee Mauer, Yadier Molina getting Bay's executive vice president

son are signed to contracts

There were just six trades-

running through 2016 and beyond, with a total of $565.45 million in remaining guaranteed salary, according to calculations by The Associated

two more than during last year's drab session in Nashville, Tenn. As the meetings

ended, the Chicago Cubs acquired Justin Ruggiano from guard their investments. Press. Miami for Brian Bogusevic in Minnesota'sJoe Mauer, a voted this week to p rohibit blown up, they are some of the of baseball operations. "I just MLB watched as the NFL a swap of outfielders, Seattle former MVP and three-time runners from plowing into best players in the game. They think athletes today are bigger, reached a $765 million settle- completed its $240 million, batting champion, is less than catchers. The rule will take mean so much to their teamfaster, stronger, and the catch- ment last summer in a concus- 10-year contract with All-Star halfway through a $184 mil- effect next season if the play- the financial investments in- ers are in significant danger of sion-related lawsuit by former second baseman Robinson lion, eight-year contract. He ers'association agrees,and in volved. And more importantly, long-term injuries that we can players, and a group of hock- Cano, Boston finalized a $32 was limited to 75 games at 2015 if the union doesn't. the health of the individuaL" avoid. I think the heightened ey players sued the NHL last million, two-year agreement "It's a great change. We procatcher this year in a concusBoston's David Ross, De- awareness to concussions in- month over brain trauma. with first baseman Mike Napsion-shortened season. tect our assets," Los Angeles troit's Alex Avila, Oakland's fluences it quite abit." This year's winter meetings oli, and Washington completBuster Posey, another MVP Angels general manager Jerry John Jaso and Kansas City's Eleven players who were likely will be r emembered ed a two-year deal with outand batting champ, has a $167 Dipoto said Thursday as the Salvador Perez al l m i ssed primarily catchers last sea- most for the rules decision. fielder Nate McLouth. front about this: They want to ban home plate collisions to


C4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

COLLEGEFOOTBALL

Stau ac re ectson iseven u seasonwit Navy oot a in1963 Gene Wang

ble, Roger."

The Washington Post

There was a

t i m e w h en

the Heisman Trophy winner could not get recognized in New York City. Such was the predicament

for Roger Staubach 50 years ago when the quarterback became the second player in Navy history to capture college football's most prestigious individual honor. Then a junior, Staubach w as in M a nhattan for t h e award ceremony, and one eve-

ning he andteammate Tom Lynch decided they would visit the Playboy Club. The iconic members-only establishment required a special key for entry, but this was Time

magazine cover boy Roger Staubach, so Lynch figured it would be no problem. Staubach borrowed civilian clothes, including a pair of fartoo-short trousers, from then-

sports information director Budd Thalman, changed out of his dress blues and headed to the Upper East Side with Lynch, Navy's center and captain. Then they waited, assuming that any number of clients entering the club would invite them inside.

"We're standing out there and just making a fool out of ourselves," Staubach, 71, said earlier this year during an interview at his real es-

tate office in Dallas, where he played 11 seasons for the NFL's Cowboys before being inducted into the Pro Foot-

ball Hall of Fame. "People are looking at us, and finally Tom starts saying, 'This guy won the Heisman Trophy.' They're looking at me, and my pants were showing, they're like, 'What is he talking about?' "We never got in the Playboy Club." As if that failed expedition

were not enough, the night before Staubach was standing in full uniform outside a playhouse shortly before he, his parents and future wife Marianne were to attend a production of the Tony Award-win-

ning play, "How to Succeed in Business Without Really TrylIlg.n

Several patrons b egan handing Staubach their tick-

ets, assuming he was an usher. To which Staubach's moth-

er said, 'That'll keep you hum-

was a Navy guy, too," StauThe Midshipmen wound bach said of Kennedy, who With Staubach entrenched up losing, 32-28, but Staubach had enlisted after his graduaas the starter in 1963, Navy became the first Navy quar- tion from Harvard in 1940 and embarked on the most pros- terback to rush for at least had met theteam one year perous season in program 100 yards in a game. From earlier during training camp history by opening with three that point, there was no doubt in Rhode Island. "It was more straight wins. The Midship- Staubach was going to be the of, not an arm's-length relamen outscored those oppo- player on whom everyone tionship, it was a little closer nents 105-20, hanging 51 on leaned when the stakes were than that because he loved West Virginia in the opener. at their highest. Navy football, and then with "To have a guy like that you the chances we wouldn't play It was during the fourth game in which Navy coach respect and love and have so the Army-Navy game, the Wayne Hardin, his staff and much trust and confidence in Heisman just got shoved to the Staubach's teammates first a person that you know inti- side there for quite a while." Kennedy was laid to rest witnessed the fortitude of the mately, and now he's in the future supply officer who, huddle, and he's calling the at Arlington National Cemeinstead of requesting a state- play, everyone feels this is not tery on Nov. 25. The next day, side assignment after being a phony deal," Lynch said. "I with the status of Army-Navy commissioned, volunteered to used to say there's nothing still uncertain, the Kennedy serve a one-year tour of duty that Roger will do on the foot- family requested the game be in Vietnam. ball field that will surprise played. The Pentagon, in an official statement, announced The opponent was South- me." The Midshipmen reeled off t hat Ar my-Navy w ould b e ern Methodist, and the game was played at the Cotton Bowl five straight wins after the pushed back a week to honor in Dallas. One of Navy's as- SMU game, includinga 35- Kennedy's memory. On the s ame a f ternoon, sistants was Steve Belichick, 14 victory over Notre Dame. the late father of current New That would be Navy's last win Hardin brought the team toEngland Patriots coach Bill against the Fighting Irish un- gether in the locker room to reveal that Staubach had Belichick, and he provided til2007. a scouting report indicating The next week, Staubach been awarded the Heisman that the Midshipmen should hurt his knee in a 42-7 throt- Trophy. He became the fourth expect aggressive tactics that tling of Maryland, leaving his non-senior to win the award included hits after the whistle. status in doubt for Navy's fi- after accounting for 15 touchThat meantStaubach need- nal road game at Duke. With downs and completing 107 of ed to be on high alert, and it Staubach wearing a brace, 161 passes for 1,474 yards and did not take long for Navy to Navy escaped the Blue Devils, rushing for 418 yards. So overwhelming were realize the Mustangs were de- 38-25, despite committing 56 termined to knock him out of yards worth of penalties and h is qualifications that t h e Heisman committee had no the game at all costs. losing two fumbles. that made it 10-0.

In the first quarter, Stau-

Six days later, President

issue announcing Staubach

bach handed off on a running play, and well after the exchange, SMU defensive linem an JohnnyMaag delivered a crushing hit. Staubach landed awkwardly on his left side, dislocating his shoulder one of

John Kennedy was assassi- as the recipient even though he had one game left in the nated in Dallas.

the more than a dozen times

Navy went on to beat Army, 21-15, for a fifth consecutive

he would do so throughout his athletic career.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Redmond's Brittany Smith competes in the 50-meter freestyle

during a meet against Sisters and Ridgeview at the Cascade Swim Center in Redmond on Thursday.

Sisters

style relays. Sisters' boys swept the top

Continued from C1

three spots in the 50 freestyle All t h ree a l s o t e amed sprint en route to victories up with Madelyn Zadow over Redmond (93-51) and t o guide th e O u tlaws t o Ridgeview (81-47). Trevor second-place showings in B arry took the win in t h e the 200-medley and the 50 freein 28.76 seconds, fol200-freestyle relays, helping lowed by teammates Keenan Sisters defeat Redmond (115- O'Hern and Jake McAllister. 79) and Ridgeview (109-75). Ian Baldessari logged a For the

P anthers, who victory in the 100 butterfly

edged the crosstown Ravens after clocking in at 1:19.66, 85-81, it was Elizabeth Moss

and Brennan Miller's time

leading the way with a win

of 1:15.48 earned the senior

in the 100 backstroke. Moss' a win in the 100 backstroke. time o f 1 : 23.04 narrowly Dan Peplin recorded the bested Zadow by one-tenth top finish for the Panthers,

of a second. Andrea Broyles who dispatched Ridgeview logged a second-place finish 71-54. Peplin wa s second in the 100 breaststroke, and in the 100 backstroke and Moss and Broyles each add- swam the anchor leg of Red-place 400-freeed third-place showings in mond's first the 50 freestyle and 200 IM, style relay team. Canaan respectively. Settles took third in the 100 Haley Houghton paced backstroke. Ridgeview with wins in the Ridgeview was led by 200 and 400 freestyle rac- Owen Hucke's victories in es, while Rachel Haney (100 the 200 and 100 freestyle racbutterfly) and Casee Lantz es, and Brett Kelly took the (100 breaststroke) each 100 breaststroke. Hucke and picked up a victory. The Ra- Kelly also swam the second vens' trio, along with Beth and third legs, respectively, Leavitt, combined to take the of the winning 200-free relay 200-medley and

2 0 0-free- team.

regular season. Staubach re-

On Nov. 23, 1963, word of Kennedy's passing began to reach the academy, and Hardin had the sobering duty of informing players when they gatheredto dressforpractice. The locker room fell silent

To this day, Staubach is un- as Hardin delivered the news, able to raise his left arm more and practice was canceled. than several inches from his The team came together for a body, and the diagnosis in collective prayer, and immedithe locker room was an in- ately after Lynch led a group jury that could require sea- of players to the Navy chapson-ending surgery. el. Flags at the academy were But given Navy's No. 4 lowered to half-mast. ranking at the time and with The Pentagon subsequently a national championship still announced a mourning pein play, Staubach had train- riod of one month for all feders pop the shoulder back in eral and military institutions, place, and he was back in the meaning th e A r m y-Navy game before the end of the game set for Nov. 30 was in first quarter wearing a har- jeopardy.Whether Staubach ness to keep his arm immo- would win the Heisman bebile. Shortly thereafter, SMU came an afterthought as a nawas at it again, this time rip- tion grieved. "The tragedy was even closping off Staubach's helmet and gouging his face follow- er to us because he was the ing his 1-yard touchdown run commander-in-chi ef, and he

ceived 517 first-place votes, nearly eight times as many as runner-up Billy Lothridge of Georgia Tech. time before falling to topr anked Texas, 28-6, in t h e Cotton Bowl on Jan. 1, 1964. Still, Staubach set then-Cot-

ton Bowl records for completions (21) and passing yards (228). "For a guy who won the Heisman, he was such a hum-

ble guy, a hard-working guy," said Bill Belichick, who as a youth attended practices with

his father and played catch with Staubach. "First one on the field, last one off. Just had

everybody's respect. Everybody knew that he was obviously the star on the team and

had a million demands, but he never put himself above the team. He was always just one

of the guys."

GOLF ROUNDUP

cejka jumpsout to early lead inThailand The Associated Press

three rounds." CHON BURI, T h ailand The fourth-ranked Rose — Four-time European Tour was tied for second with Ar-

champion Alex Cejka of Germany upstaged a starfilled field with an 8-under 64 Thursday to take a

nond Vongvanij of Thailand after picking up three birdies on the front nine before add-

one-shot lead after the first

the Amata Spring Country Club. "I felt like I was reading the green well. My putting felt really sharp," Rose said.

ing four more on the back at

round of the Thailand Golf Championship. The 43-year-old Cejka rolled in his eighth birdie of the day on the 17th hole to

"But you have to stay out of

the roughs on this course." Also on Thursday: Mandeia Cha mpionship delayed again by rain:

take the sole lead from Justin

Rose, who was already in the clubhouseafter a bogey-free round.

Texas' Brownmumon future amid speculation By Paul J. Weber The Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas

football coach Mack Brown declined to say Thursday

in a two-year power struggle over academics on one of the nation's biggest campus-

coach Nick Saban replacing

question about 'getting him,' "

him. The A P r eported last month that after last season

McCombs said. "When Mack

es. He called Brown one of

Texas regents had spoken

came there, budgets were an issue; they are not an is-

the sport'sgreatest coaches

with S aban's agent a bout

sue now. Hell, all the money

the possibility o f r e placbe his final game, amid in- coach'sstatus after regents ing Brown and approached tense speculation following allowed Powers to contin- Brown about stepping down. another disappointing season ue the job he has held since Saban has deflected those that began with the Long- 2006. reports. But McCombs ex"I'm going to focus on this. pressed c onfidence a b out horns talking about becoming national championship We'll discuss football at the Texas' ability to lure him to contenders again. appropriate time," Powers one of the wealthiest athletic " My s i t uation h a s no t said. programs in the nation. "I don't think there is any changed," Brown said. Brown acknowledged that Speaking to reporters for the Longhorns (8-4) did not the first time since multiple finish how they wanted after published reports this week starting the season talking indicated that he might step about competing for a nationdown, the 62-year-old Brown al championship. The Longsaid he has yet to talk with horns last played for a BCS tiwhether the Alamo Bowl will

but declined to address the

e

new Texas athletic director Steve Patterson and the uni-

tle in 2009, but fan frustration

versity's president, Bill Pow-

seasons that failed to meet

ers, about the job he has held since 1998.

expectations. Notably attending Brown's

Brown deflected several o ther questions about h i s

future during a news conference in San Antonio about Texas' Alamo Bowl game against the Oregon Ducks on Dec. 30.

has mounted after a string of

news conference was influ-

ential Texas booster Red McCombs, who is a close friend of Brown's and one of the uni-

versity's most generous donors. McCombs told reporters he hopes Brown comes

"I want to sit down w i th

back next year — but he did

(Patterson) and Bill in the near future and talk about where we're going and where our program is going," Brown sard.

not blink about the caliber of coach Texas could get to re-

In Austin, Powers reassert-

ed his support for Brown and said they planned to speak in the coming days. Powers is among Brown's top supporters, and he received a cautious endorsement later

Thursday from his frustrated chancellor to temporarily quiet speculation about

his own future as university president. Powers has been locked

place him. If th e L o nghorns' j ob comes open, expect more speculation about Alabama

that's not at the Vatican is up at UT." Brown is 158-47 at Texas,

With some of golf's biggest names playing in the Asian

D URBAN,

Tour event this week, few

day to complete the f i r st

S o ut h A f r i c a

— Players will need a third

had expected Cejka to be

round at the Nelson Mandela Championship after rain again disrupted the Euro2002, and he finished 12th in pean Tour event's schedule. Hong Kong last week. After a seven-hour delay "I hit the ball very well to- on Wednesday, only a litday," Cejka said. "The greens tle more than four hours' roll perfect. I took a couple play was possiblebefore big chances and made bird- the M ount E dgecombe ies.... I hope my form will course became unplayable continue like this and we will again because of a heavy see how it goes in the next downpour. atop the leaderboard. His last European Tour win came in

including a national championship in 2005 and another

BCS title game against Alabama four years later. But since 2009, the L onghorns are 30-20 overall and 18-17 in

the Big 12.

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C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2013

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High unemployment and small wage increases have made it difficult for businesses to raise prices. Declining energy costs also have helped keep inflation in check over the past year. Economists project that the latest producer price index, due out today, will indicate that U.S. wholesale prices were unchanged in November from the previous month. The index declined in September and October.

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Contract award update? Ocean Power Technologies' latest quarterly earnings could provide an update on the company's government contracts. The wave-energy technology company is due to report financial results for its fiscal second quarter today. Investors will be listening for details on any new contract awards, as well an update on recent contracts with the U.S. Department of Energy and Depart ment of Homeland Security, among others.

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 15845.11 15703.79 15739.43 -104.10 DOW Trans. 7083.10 7036.12 7059.49 +2.02 DOW Util. 481.36 478.05 478.70 +0.40 NYSE Comp. 9981.81 9925.62 9949.57 -41.88 NASDAQ 401 3.54 3993.57 3998.40 -5.41 S&P 500 1782.99 1772.28 1775.50 -6.72 S&P 400 1288.84 1281.68 1285.16 +0.13 Wilshire 5000 18941.71 18832.21 18871.87 -46.78 Russell 2000 1107.18 1099.66 1103.27 +1.61

DOW

NYSE NASD

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -0.66% L +20.11% t0.03% L +33.03% t0.08% +5.65% -0.42% L +17.84% -0.14% L L +32.42% -0.38% +24.49% t0.01 % +25.94% -0.25% L +25.85% t0.16% L +29.89%

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Eli Lilly (LLY)

Company Spotlight

branded product. The FDA approved six generic versions of the pill from drugmakers including Dr. Reddy's Laboratories, Sun Pharma Global and Teva Pharmaceuticals. The loss of Cymbalta is the latest in a series of patent expirations that have battered Lilly's balance sheet in recent years. The company has said it will counter the revenue loss by developing new drugs, cutting costs and sales in foreign markets. 52-WEEK RANGE

Thursday's close: $49.23

Price-earnings ratio (Based an trailing 12 month results):11 10-YR*: 0% 1 -YR return: 4% 3- Y R*: 17% 5-YR *: 12% Total returns through Dec. 12

AmdFocus

$48

58

Ann. dividend:$1.96 Div. yield: 4.0%

*Annualized

Source: FactSet

SelectedMutualFunds

lamgold

IAG

Close:$3.42 V-0.42 or -10.9% With gold prices falling, the miner suspended its dividend, which had been providing healthy yields, ta conserve cash.

$6

18

5

16

N D 0 52-week range $10.DD ~ $18 .98

S

S

0 N 52-week range

$3.40~

D $ 12.DD

Val.:11.4m (1.6x avg.) PE: 21.9 Val.:26.3m (3.6x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$13.09b Yie l d: 0.9% Mkt. Cap:$1.29 b Yie l d : 7.3% SUNE Close:$11A7 V-1.32 or -10.3% The solar technology company lowered its fourth-quarter and annual outlook, citing soft demand and ongoing market weakness. $15 10

Delta Air Lines DAL Close:$28.21 %0.55 or 2.0% An airline trade group forecast industry profits of $19.7 billion next year, well above the $12.9 billion expected this year. $30 25

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$3.03~

$13 .83

Val.:36.2m (4.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.06 b

P E: . . Yield:..

Facebook

$2 2.94

Val.:19.8m (5.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.2 b

S

D

FB Close:$51.83L2.45 or 5.0% The networking site will join the Standard & Paar's 500, replacing the L +35 . 8 + 2 6.7 6 9 8 7 7 technologycompany Teradyne ina V -17.1 -9.7 1437 10 broader reshuffle. +3 5.8 +35.6 556 44 0.71f $55 V +29. 4 +3 8 .6 3 6 9 2 5 0. 1 8 50 L +39. 3 +4 1 .2 35374 14 1 . 1 2 45 L +47. 7 +5 5 .9 5 3 93 2 6 0 . 96f L +12.8 +19 .5 1 131 16 1 . 2 0 N D S 0 L -4.1 -2.3 28 7 2 0 1 . 84f 52-week range L +24. 0 +2 7 .5 1 350 18 0 .80a $22.97~ $84 .83 L +69 9 +96 9 60 dd Val.: 92.4m (1.2x avg.) P E: 126.4 V -0.4 + 7 . 8 1 341 2 8 1 . 76 Mkt. Cap:$97.13b Yield:... L +33.9 +36 .5 5 3 9 2 3 0. 1 2 L +86. 2 +9 3 .7 2 772 19 0 . 8 0 Ciena CIEN L - 2.1 + 3 . 2 1 9 2 d d 0 . 7 5 Close:$21.31 V-1.69 or -6.9% v +16. 7 +2 2 .2 1 058 25 2 . 0 0 Rising casts cut inta the bottom line L +75.6 +83 .3 1 7 1 1 4 1. 1 0f at the telecommunications company, V +42. 6 +4 5 .3 4 767 34 1 .04f though revenue increased much faster than expected. V +64 . 8 + 6 0.6 1 501 d d $30 L +56. 3 +5 6 .9 1 186 19 0 .60a L + 22.7 +24 .8 8 1 37 1 3 0. 9 2 25 L +37. 7 +4 5 .8 2 2 7 1 6 0 . 40f L +27.3 +34 .2 13489 11 1 . 2 0 L $-6. 5 +9. 1 3 8 75 2 6 0 . 8 8 S 0 N D 52-week range L +18.7 +22 .6 20964 13 0 . 9 0 L +55. 3 +5 9 .6 12897 14 0 . 2 2 V + 53. 7 +5 4 .0 3 9 45 1 3 0 . 66f

's patent expires onCymbalta The patent on Eli Lilly's best-selling drug, Cymbalta, expired Wednesday. The Food and Drug Administration has approved the first generic versions of the blockbuster antidepressant, offering lower-cost access to one of the most widely prescribed treatments for depression, anxiety and other disorders. Cymbalta generated revenue of $4.7 billion in 2012, making it the fifth-highest selling medication in the world. Generic drugs often sell for a fraction of the price of the original

Luv

Close: $18.79L0.82 or 4.6% The airline led a rise across the sectar after a trade group said it expects profits in the industry to jump to a record next year. $20

SunEdison

52-WK RANGE a CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

Alaska Air Group A LK 42.11 ~ Avista Corp A VA 23.52 ~ Bank of America BAC 10 . 46 t -r Barrett Business BB S I 3 4 .38 — 0 Boeing Co BA 7 2 .68 ~ C ascade Bancorp C A C B4 .85 ~ Columbia Bnkg CO LB 1 6 .85 t -r Columbia Sportswear COLM 47.72 — e Costco Wholesale CO ST 96.51 ~ Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 6.11 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 19.91 ~ H ewlett Packard HPQ 13 .60 ~ HomeFederal Bncp ID HOME 10.84 ~ 1 Intel Corp I NTC 19.98 ~ Keycorp K EY 8 .03 ~ Kroger Co K R 2 5 .20 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 3.77 ~ LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ MDU Resources MDU 20 .73 ~ 3 MentorG raphics M EN T 1 3.21 ~ Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.28 ~ Nike Inc 8 N KE 48.40 ~ NordstromInc J WN 50.94 ~ Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 43.67 ~ Planar Systms P LNR 121 ~ Plum Creek P CL 42.38 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ Safeway Inc S WY 17.08 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 Sherwin Wms SHW 146.49 ~ StancorpFncl SFG 34.30 — o StarbucksCp SBUX 52.39 ~ Triquint Semi TQNT 4.31 ~ UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 11.43— o US Bancorp USB 31.29 — 0 WashingtonFedl WAF D 15.64 — o WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 3.02 ~ 4 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~

AP

EURO 1.3745+ -.0043

Stocks fell Thursday for a third straight day, with the sharpest losses coming from companies that sell toothpaste, diapers and other consumer staples. The Standard & Poor's 500 flirted with the break-even level several times throughout the day, but it fell in the final half hour of trading. The loss pulled the index further away from the record high that it set on Monday. The S&P 500 is on track for a second straight weekly loss, following an eight-week winning streak. Economic reports released during the day were mixed: Retail sales last month were stronger than expected, but more workers filed for unemployment claims last week than expected.

$14.14~

Nimble Storage, a data storage company, could make its market debut as early as today. The company plans to sell 6 million shares priced between $16 and $18 each. Nimble Storage is planning to raise up to $150 million from the initial public offering. It plans to use the offering's net proceeds for working capital and other general corporate purposes.

+.06 '

StoryStocks

Southwest Airlines .1" " "J " "

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredcr paid in last12 months. I - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared cr paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.

Nimble's market debut

+

.

1,520. " J.. .'"". J " " . 1"" " A .

NAME J

.

"

16,000"

"

est. -0.1 -0.2 flat

J

.

"

Vcl. (in mil.) 3,324 1,823 Pvs. Volume 3,424 1,866 Advanced 1297 1247 Declined 1777 1301 New Highs 29 45 New Lcws 277 47

0.3

.

15,200

1,600 "

percent chance. seasonally adjusted

0.4

.

15,680" ""' 10 DAYS "

Producer price index 0.6% 06

15 940 .

15,600" 1,680 "

SILVER+

Dow jones industrials

....... Close: 1,775.50 Change: -6.72 (-0.4%)

Eye on prices

-0.2

$122600 ~ -32.50

SstP 500

Friday, December 13, 2013

0.0

GOLD ~

10 YR T NOTE 2.88% ~

1,775.50

P E: . . Yield:..

0 N 52-week range

$10.80~

D $ 29.44

Val.:11.5m (0.9x avg.) PE: 1 1 .7 Mkt. Cap:$24.13 b Yie l d: 0.9%

Lululemon LULU Close:$60.39 V-7.96 or -11.6% The outlook from the yoga retailer sent investors fleeing, though it had a fairly strong quarter and beat expectations. $80 70

60

S

0

N

D

52-week range $39.80 ~

$82.50

Val.:25.6m (9.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $6.95 b

PE: 32.8 Yield: ...

Avanir Pharma.

AVNR Close:$3.15 L0.14 or 4.7% The drug developer continued ta soar higher following a mid-stage study that showed its cancer treatment fared very well.

$5

S

0 N 52-week range

$2.34~

D $ 8.DO

Val.:7.9m (3.3x avg.)

P E: .. .

Mkt. Cap:$458.23 m

Yield : ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU

HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.88 percent Thursday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -mcnth T-bill 6-mcnth T-bill

. 0 6 .0 7 -0.01 L . 0 9 .09 ...

V

52-wk T-bill

.13

L

L L L

L L L L

W .25 W .65 W 1.7 0 L 2.89

.13

L

2-year T-ncte . 3 .31 + 0 .02 L 5-year T-ncte 1 .53 1.50 +0.03 L 10-year T-note 2.88 2.85 +0.03 L 30-year T-bond 3.90 3.89 +0.01 V

BONDS

.06 .11 .15

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.69 3.67 +0.02 W L

L 2.48 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.12 5.12 .. . w w 3.94 Barclays USAggregate 2.40 2.37 +0.03 W L W 1. 7 1 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.58 5.58 .. . w w w 6.14 RATE FUNDS M ccdys AAA Corp Idx 4.66 4.70 -0.04 w w w 3. 6 2 YEST3.25 .13 Barcl ay s CcmpT-Bd l d x 1 . 7 5 1.7 2 +0 . 0 3 L L W . 94 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.21 3.18 +0.03 w w w 2 . 69 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA m 2 3.75 99 +17.9 +18.0 +12.3+14.4 A A B CaplncBuA m57.20 24 +11.3 +11.1 +9.1+11.9 C A C CpWldGrlA m 43.81 22 +20.0 +20.7 +10.2+14.4 C C 0 EurPacGrA m 47.63 32 +15.6 +16.8 +6.5+13.6 C C 8 S&P500ETF 979153 178.13 -.59 FnlnvA m 50. 8 1 11 +25.6 +25.9 +13.7+17.7 D C 8 Facebock 881838 51.83 +2.45 GrthAmA m 43.95 97 +27.9 +28.4 +14.2+17.8 C 8 D SiriusXM 836352 3.47 -.03 M atthews AsianIndia x MIN D X IncAmerA m 20.16 98 +14.5 +14.5 +11.1+14.6 C A A Hilton n 706960 21.50 InvCoAmA m 37.86 17 +27.0 +26.9 +13.5+15.8 C C 0 Cisco 686102 20.51 -.37 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.98 21 +21.5 +22.3 +11.2+16.9 C 8 8 BkcfAm 682304 15.25 WAMutlnvA m38.97 14 +26.7 +26.4 +15.7+16.1 C A C iShEMkts 574788 40.85 -.24 iShJapan 517463 11.89 +.04 Dodge &Cox Income 13.63 -.91 +0.5 +0 .8 +4.6+8.2 A 8 8 MicrcnT 516116 22.54 +.04 IntlStk 41.63 -.36 +20.2 +23.5 +7.6+16.4 A A A SPOR Fncl 380036 21.11 Stock 161.39 -.58 +34.0 +34.7 +16.7+19.4 A A A Fidelity Contra 99.21 - . 1 7+29.1 +29.1 +14.5+18.7 C 8 C Gainers GrcwCc 114 . 18 -.25+31.1 +30.4 +16.0+22.4 8 A A LcwPriStk d 48.85 -.22+29.8 +31.3 +16.1+22.3 8 A 8 NAME L AST C H G %C H G Fideli Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg63.20 -.22+27.0 +27.0 +15.1+17.6 C 8 8 CytRx 6 .12 +2 . 1 0 +5 2 .2 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 39 .. . + 11.2 +11.7 +9.4+16.5 A A A NTS Rlty 7 .00 +2 . 2 7 +4 8 .0 «C GenVec h 2 .28 +.54 +31 . 0 03 InccmeA m 2. 3 6 -. 91 +11.4 +11.9 +9.7+17.0 A A A PointrTel 9 .37 +2 . 1 8 +3 0 . 3 FrankTemp-Templeton GIBcndAdv 13.96 +.92+1.4 +2.5 +5.2 +9.8 A A A UNS Engy 58.51 + 13.11 + 2 8 .9 Do Oakmark Intl I 25.85 -.32 +23.5 +28.5 +11.8+20.4 A A A MediciNcva 2 .64 +.48 +22 . 2 RisDivA m 18 . 88 -.95+21.9+21.9 +12.5+14.3 E D E Mcrningstar OwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer Sigmatr 7 .28 +1 . 3 0 +2 1 . 7 RisOivB m 16 . 91 - .94+ 20.9 +20.8 +11.5+13.3 E E E IderaPhm 3 .27 +.54 +19 . 8 OeFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 16 . 80 -.94+21.1 +21.0 +11.6+13.5 E E E SareptaTh 2 0.71 + 3 .3 0 +1 9 .0 average of stock holdings SmMidValAm 42.69 +.95 +31.7 +32.5 +10.9+19.7 8 E D ImpacMtg 6 .95 +1 . 0 6 +1 8 .0 • Represents 75% of fund's stack holdings SmMidValBm 35.75 +.93 +30.6 +31.3 +10.0+18.7 C E D Losers CATEGORY India Equity PIMCO TctRetA m 10 . 73 -.92 -2.0 -1.9 +4.1 +7.0 D 8 C NAME LAST CHG %CHG MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc x 31.63 -1.97 +25.0 +25.2 +14.1+16.6 D C 8 RATING™ -11.82 -46.5 GrcwStk 50.39 -.97 +33.4 +34.1 +16.2+22.2 A A A SuprtlH pfB 13.61 SuprtlH pfA 5.00 -3.76 -42.9 ASSETS $428 million HealthSci 59.68 -.91 +44.8 +42.8 +29.7+28.6 B A A -1.20 -30.0 SupertlH rs 2.80 EXP RATIO 1.18% Vanguard 500Adml 164.42 -.57 +27.0 +27.0 +15.1+17.6 C 8 8 N wstBic wt 2 . 39 -.61 -20.3 500lnv 164.38 -.58 +26.9 +26.8 +15.0+17.5 C 8 8 MANAGER Sharat Shrcff -.52 -16.9 V iclinM n 2. 5 6 CapOp 46.23 -.99 +37.5 +37.6 +15.4+21.4 A A A SINCE 2006-06-26 Eqlnc 29.60 -.11 +25.0 +24.0 +16.8+16,8 D A B RETURNS 3-MO +13.4 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 28.95 +.94 +35.0 +36.9 +17.7+22.6 A A A YTO -6.7 TgtRe2020 26.91 -.97 +12.9 +13.4 +9.0+12.9 A A C NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR -6.7 Tgtet2025 15.60 -.94 +14.8 +15.4 +9.6+13.7 8 8 C -17.74 - 43 Paris 4,069.12 3-YR ANNL -6.7 TctBdAdml 10.60 -.92 -2.0 -2.0 +3.4 +4.8 D D E London 6,445.25 -62.47 -.96 5-YR-ANNL +15.5 Tctlntl 16.20 -.10 +10.3 +12.4 +4.5+12.2 0 E C -.66 Frankfurt 9,01 7.00 -60.11 TctStlAdm 44.96 -.11 +27.9 +28.2 +15.2+18.7 8 8 A Hong Kong23,21 8.12 -1 20.12 -.51 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TctStldx 44.94 -.11 +27.8 +28.1 +15.0+18.5 8 8 A Mexico Emami Ltd. 6.84 Milan 17,804.87 -1 69.09 -.94 USGrc 27.44 -.99 +29.1 +29.5 +15.1+18.8 8 8 C ITC Ltd. 5.52 -173.24 -1.12 Tokyo 15,341.82 Welltn 38.67 -.12 +16.4 +16.4 +11.3+13.9 8 A 8 5.14 Stockholm 1,255.00 -13.05 -1.03 Dabur India Ltd. Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -40.30 -.79 Sun Pharmaceuticals Industries Ltd. 5.1 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,069.20 Zurich 7,849.62 -1 06.70 -1.34 Kctak Mahindra Bank Ltd. 5.01 redemption fee.Source: Momingstar.

It has been a tough year but FAMILY Morningstar notes this fund has MarhetSummary been a "respectable" performer in AmericanFunds Most Active a declining Indian market and NAME VOL (90s) LAST CHG gives it a silver analyst rating.

Commodities

FUELS

The price of gold fell for the second straight day, and its loss of $32.30 per ounce was its biggest since Oct. 1. The price of silver also fell, while natural gas and crude oil rose.

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

Foreign Exchange

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6347 -.0034 -.21% 1.6157 Canadian Dollar 1.0640 +.0046 +.43% .9839 USD per Euro 1.3745 -.0043 -.31% 1.3079 JapaneseYen 103.27 + . 7 0 + .68% 8 3 . 17 Mexican Peso 12. 9606 -.0441 -.34% 12.7305 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5044 -.0080 -.23% 3.7745 Norwegian Krone 6 . 2000 +.0781 +1.26% 5.6197 SouthAfrican Rand 10.3813 +.0059 +.06% 8.6370 Swedish Krona 6.5 9 9 4 + .0555 +.84% 6.6548 Swiss Franc .8895 +.0027 +.30% . 9 258 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1188 +.0163 +1.46% .9466 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.0715 .0002 -.00% 6.2534 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7535 .0009 -.01% 7.7501 Indian Rupee 61.820 +.505 +.82% 54.320 Singapore Dollar 1.2553 +.0036 +.29% 1.2195 South KoreanWcn 1053.59 + .3 1 + .03% 1072.21 Taiwan Dollar 29.62 + . 0 3 + .10% 2 9 .00

The dollar rose against other major currencies following a stronger-thanexpected report on U.S. retail sales. It climbed against the euro, British pound and

Japanese yen.

55Q QD

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 97.50 97.44 + 0.06 + 6 . 2 -1 6.4 1.83 1.93 2.98 3.02 -1.36 -2.1 4.41 4.34 +1.66 +31.6 2.63 2.66 -0.99 -6.3

CLOSE PVS. 1226.00 1258.50 19.40 20.30 1364.40 1385.20 3.33 3.33 719.80 738.10

%CH. %YTD -2.58 -26.8 -4.41 -35.7 -1.50 -11.3 +0.02 -8.5 - 2.48 + 2 . 4

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.32 1.32 + 0.27 + 1 . 8 Coffee (Ib) 1.1 1 1.09 +1.47 -23.0 Corn (bu) 4.28 4.31 -0.70 -38.7 Cotton (Ib) 0.83 0.82 +0.69 +1 0.5 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 357.60 355.00 +0.73 -4.4 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.46 1.44 +1.53 +26.0 Soybeans (bu) 13.24 13.44 -1.51 -6.7 Wheat(bu) 6.23 6.30 -1.23 -20.0 1YR.


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2013

CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opisnet.com): REGULARUNLEADED • SpaceAge, 20635GrandviewDrive, Bend.............$3.14 • Fred MeyerFuel Center,61535 S. Highway 97, Bend......... $3.20 • Chevron,1095S.E. Division St., Bend......$3.30 • Chevron,3405 N.Highway97, Bend ..... $3.30 • Texaco,2409Butler Market Road,Bend..... $3.36 • Texaco,178S.W.Fourth St., Madras........$3.30 • Chevron, 1210 S.W.Highway97, Madras......... $3.30 • Chevron,398N.W.Third St., Prineville...... $3.32 • Fred MeyerFuel Cen-

oein se ores ru ureresearc By David A. Lieb

competing to assemble Boeing's 777X passenger plane — a much-sought-afJEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Boeing ter facility that could generate thouannounced Thursday that it is shifting sands of jobs. hundreds of jobs to Alabama, MissouBoeing spokesman Daryl Stephenri and South Carolina as part of a re- son said the restructuring of the comstructuringofitsU.S.research opera- pany's research operations has been

300 in southern California, the com-

and networked systems. The St. Louis

The Associated Press

site is to conduct research on systems technology, digital aviation and support technology, and metallic and fabrication development. The South Carolina location is to

tions over the next two years.

pany said. The restructuring is to start early next year and be complete by 2015. After the changes, Boeing will still have about 4,000 employees in its research and technology operations, but they will no longer be concentrated predominantly on the West Coast.

gy, and the Seattle site is to focus on the integration of m anufacturing The Seattle and St. Louis sites will technology. have the most employees, and each Boeing plans to announce a decisite will have specific research tasks. sion by early next year on where it will The Alabama site is to focus on

assemble the 777X airplane. States

in the works for several years and is

The Chicago-based aerospace com- unrelated to the new airplane or Boepany said the reorganization will re- ing's contract negotiations with a Sesult in fewer research jobs in Wash-

ington state and California and is being undertaken to better meet the

attle-area machinists union.

The research restructuring will add 300 to400 employees each in the St. Louis area, Huntsville, Ala., and

focus on

simulation and decision analytics are offering billions of dollars of tax tary and space and security units. North Charleston, S.C. and metals and chemical technology. breaks, property and customized emThe announcement comes as those Research jobs will decline by 800 to The southern California location is to ployee training as part of the competisame states,and several others, are 1,200 in the Seattle area and by 200 to focus on flight sciences, electronics tion to land the assembly plant. needs of its commercial airplane, mili-

MCDONALD'S

Newapp is aimed at younger diners

ter, 944 S.W. Ninth St.,

Redmond ....... $3.20 • Chevron,2005S.Highway97,Redmond...$3.26 • Texaco FoodMart,

'P.

539 N.W. Sixth St., Red-

mond........... $3.28 • Chevron,1501 S.W. Highland Ave., Redmond........... $3.34 • Chevron,1001Railway, Sisters...... $3.32 DIESEL • SpaceAge, 20635 GrandviewDrive, Bend ............. $3.74 • Chevron,3405 N.Highway97, Bend ..... $3.86 • Texaco,178S.W.Fourth St., Madras........ $3.90 • Safeway,80 N.E.Cedar St., Madras... $3.96 • Chevron, 1210 S.W.Highway97, Madras......... $3.88 • Chevron,2005S.Highway97,Redmond...$3.86 The Bulletin

m a nufacturing technolo-

By Leslie Patton Bloomberg News

CHICAGO — McDonald's

is testing a mobile application in 1,000 stores as it tries to lure younger diners at a time when U.S. sales are struggling. Called the McD, the app sends customers offers they

can redeem with their phones at participating stores, Lisa McComb, a company spokeswoman, said in an email. Diners can specify what kind of deals they want to receive, RobKerr/The Bulletin

Wall Street Suites co-owners, from left, Vernon and Gretchen Palmer, and Wendy Kelley, have renovated the former Plaza Motel at1430 N.W. Wall St. and turned it into an upscale lodging. Co-owner Pat Kelley is not pictured.

including "buy a breakfast sandwich get one free or $1 Hot 'n Spicy McChicken sandwich." Users can't order or pay with the McD app.

BRIEFING FDCOhires

venturemanager

ormer a ree m o e un er oes ransormaion

The world's largest burger chain has been experimenting with various mobile programs as it seeks to compete with such chains as Five Guys Burgers and Fries and Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc., which

both offer mobile ordering apps and attract a generally younger and higher-income

Economic Development for Central Oregon crowd. announced onThursday It remains to be seen wheththe hiring of entrepreBy Rachael Rees Olney Avenue and transgree than he initially thought er a mobile app will help draw neurJim Boeddekeras See video coverageand a The Buuetin form it into 17 lodging suites. hewould. millennials, Sara Senatore, the agency's newvenslideshow on TheBulletin's "The more we got into it, When local developers And after about P/~ years of a New York-based analyst at ture catalyst manager. website:hendhulletin.coml Vernon Palmer and Pat Kelley construction and more than the morewe wanted to do," Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., The position was crewallsuites bought the former Plaza Motel $300,000, t he f or mer motel he said. "Itbecame more of a said in an interview. ated in 2010 to increase on Northwest Wall Street out has a new look and a new work of art." Companies with a "younger entrepreneurship in of foreclosure, theyhad their name — Wall Street Suites. property included police cars Overnight lodging is so hoand potentially more affluent Central Oregon, accord"The property was inexwork cut out for them. andyellowtape," Palmer said. mogenized today, Palmer said. customer base" have more ing to the news release. "That's pretty much what you "Oftentimes, when you're They found the 32 rooms pensive, and the location success with mobile apps, Jim Coonan, who in the building — which last doesn't get a whole lotbetter knew about this hotel — drug on a trip and you're just passSenatore said. "The McDonheld the position since ald's customer tends to be served as low-income studio f or a di st ress ed pi ece of pr opdeals gonebad and peoplebeing through that's what you March 2011, is returning apartments — in different erty in Bend," Palmer said. ing injured and fights." want," he said. "But if it's your slightly older." to his full-time residence "When I initiallyput an offer states of di sarra y. But as the hotel prepares to destination, you want it someIn September, McDonald's in Portland, said EDCO Many showed wear with on it, I didn't even know what I house its first guests, Palmer what more special, and that's said some locations in Salt Marketing Manager chipped laminate counterwanted to do with it.... But the hopes it will start earning a what we had in mind for here." Lake City and Austin, TexRuth Lindley. Over the tops and stained teal carpets. more I looked at it, the more I new reputation. Bend is a great destination, as, were trying out a mobile years, she said, hehas Some walls had holes and envisioned something like a From solid granite counhe said; the hotel has a prime payment app. In October, the been commuting to others were yellowed from boutique hotel." tertops, wood cabinetry and location, and visitors won't company named Atif Rafiq to Bend. cigarette smoke. And most The Plaza Motel was built paneling, to slate, marble and know its history. the newly created role of chief Coonan helped in"You're right across the of the rooms contained trash in 1950. It was purchased in sandstone floors and walk-in digital officer. Rafiq, who is crease the funding and and personal items from tran- 2007 and turned into low-inshowers, co-owner Wendy street from the river. You're leading efforts to roll out a number of participants sients who had squatted inthe come housing, becoming a Kelley said, Wall Street Suites five or six blocks from the mobile app nationally, previat the annual Bend space. regular st op f or l aw enf orceis positioned to be a jewel in heart of old Bend and the ously ran Amazon.com Inc.'s Venture Conference, as "This motel really needed ment responding to calls downtown lodging. mountains are right out the Kindle Direct Publishing unit. well as launch Cascade some lovingbecause it had about drug use, assaults, burRooms vary in size from window," Palmer said."All McDonald's sees digital Angels, a regional yearbeen run into the groundglary and graffiti, according about 280-600square feet and they'll (say) is, 'Hey, someand mobile as "increasingly round investment fund, about as much as you can run to The Bulletin's archives. It are priced from $145-$195 a body transformed this old critical in the U.S.," Senatore the release states. it into the ground," Palmer closed in 2010 when the previnight as an introductory rate, hotel into something really said. Creating the chief digital Boeddeker will start sald. ous owner filedbankruptcy, she said. cool.'" officer position is "a recogniDec. 23, Lindley said. Their vision was to gut accordingto the archives. Palmersaidheimproved — Reporter: 541-617-7818, tion that this is a meaningful Boeddeker co-founded "My recollection of this the apartment complex near the property to a higher derrees@bendbulletin.com avenue for driving sales." local business accelerator FoundersPadand currently serves asthe chairman of theTech Alliance, which puts on award earlier this month. BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR Bend's Startup WeekThis is the first time the end. nonprofit has honored a Central Oregon business, Old Mill receives according to a newsreTODAY business; focus onGoogle religion and other issues; Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third St., JAN. 8 $20 for members and firstBend; 541-447-6384 or www. • Oregon Alcohol Server green award lease issuedWednesday. • Network of Entrepreneurial Plus local; registration required; $75 with lunch time attendees, $35 for happyhourtraining.com. Women Sixth AnnualWinter Permit Training:Meets Smith, a recreational The Old Mill District included, $15 discountfor nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 Wonderland Gala: Includes DEC. 30 the Oregon Liquor Control birder, led efforts to and its developer, Bill RelyLocal and BendChamber p.m.; St. Charles Bend, silent and live auctions; Commission minimum • Oregon Alcohol Server create protective habitats of Commerce members; 11 Smith of William Smith Center for Health 8 Learning, all funds benefit Oregon requirements to obtain a.m.-1 p.m.; Kayo' s Dinner Permit Training: Meets for native species. The Properties, have re2500 N.E. Neff Road; an alcohol server permit; Adaptive Sports; sold out; House and Lounge, 415 the Oregon Liquor Control Old Mill District partnered 541-385-6390. ceived a conservation registration required; $35; 6-10 p.m. Seventh Mountain N.E. Third St., Bend; 541Commission minimum with the AudubonSociety award for restoration FRIDAY 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table Resort, 18575 S.W. Century 550-7246 or 406bend.com/ requirements to obtain work on the banks of the to create trails along the seo-workshop-dec-17-2013. Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Drive, Bend; 541-848-8598 • Oregon Alcohol Server an alcohol server permit; river, develop birding Deschutes River. Permit Training:Meets Bend; 541-447-6384 or or www.networkwomen.org. THURSDAY registration required; $35; lists, secure binoculars Oregon Liquor Control East CascadesAuduwww.happyhourtraining. 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Round Table TUESDAY • City Club ofCentral Oregon: the Commission minimum bon Society, a nonprofit for public use andcoordicom. Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., What Do Oregonians Value • SEO Basicsfor Small requirements to obtain that helps promote and nate bird walks along the Bend; 541-447-6384 or and Beli eve? Discussion how Business Owners:Learn • For the complete calendar, an alcohol server permit; protect local bird popproperty. Oregonians value healthcare, registration required; $35; www.happyhourtraining. to use search-engine pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit ulations, presented the — Bulletin staff reports optimization to increase education, the environment, 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; RoundTable com. bendbulletincom/bizral


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-Plus, D2-3 Parents & Kids, D4 Pets, D4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2013

SPOTLIGHT

O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages

"There has been a considerable amount of pressure to shrink hospice spending. And hospices are now being asked to do more

High chair injuries rise

with what appears to be a shrinking reimbursement rate."

High chairs and booster seats are frequently used as secure seats for young children, but a recent study found that 9,400 children visited emergency rooms dueto injuries associated with these chair restraints

— Jon Keyserling, National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization's senior vice president for health policy

between 2003 to 2009.

The studyfrom the Center for Injury Research and Policy examined data involving children age 3and younger. The researchers found injuries from high chairs and booster seats were increasing during the study period. Ninety-three percent of the injuries involved a fall. About two-thirds of the children injured were standing on or climbing up a high chair prior to falling. The most common injuries sustained —accounting for 37 percent of all injuries — were closed head injuries, which include internal head injuries and concussions. Researchers saw a sharp spike in these types of head injuries during the study period, increasing 90 percent from 2003 to 2010. Other common injuries included bumps and bruises (33 percent) and cuts (19 percent). Researchers encourage parents to ensure children are buckled in and to not rely solely on the high chair tray to keep a child in place.

By Mac McLean The Bulletin

Matt Verdieck found

himself trying to answer an extremely difficult

question when he was asked to serve as the Central Oregon Council on

Aging's executive director earlier this month. "How do we continue to

maintain the services we offer in an environment

where our funding is being cut and the need for them is growing?" he said. Verdieck, 56, took the or-

ganization's reins after its previous executive director left Dec. 2.

Founded in 1976, COCOA manages a network of senior support

programs including Meals on Wheels, which delivered 83,000meals to home-

bound seniors this past fiscal year; the Foster Grand-

parent Program, which trains seniors to work in the classroom with at-risk students; and the Senior

Health Insurance Benefits Administration Program,

which helps people sign up for Medicare. SeeCOCOA/D2

Group seeks gifts for seniors Citing a shorter than average holiday shopping season, the organizers of Home Instead Senior Care's "Be a Santa to aSenior" program worry they may not be able to collect enough gifts in time for Christmas. People interested in contributing to the program can pick up awish list from the designated tree at one of the following Central Oregon locations: • Bend Senior Center,

KID CULTURE

Bookshave 'sew' many Photos by Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin

David Caudell looks through a box of family pictures which includes a picture of his late wife, Doane, during their 50th wedding

2075 N.E. Wyatt Court,

Bend; • Ray's Food Place, 635 N. Arrowleaf Trail, Sisters; • Redmond Senior Center, 325 N.W.Dogwood Ave., Redmond; • Rite Aid, 1575 N.E.

Third St., Prineville; and, • Soroptimist Senior Center, 180 N.E.Belknap St., Prineville. Participants should return the present to the business with the gift tag attached. Volunteers will wrap the presents during a community gift-wrapping party from 4 to 7 p.m. Wednesday at St. Charles Bend.The gifts will be delivered to the seniors Thursday and Dec. 20. — From staff reports

fun activities

anniversary. The hospice program that helped care for DoaneCaudell, who died this spring, faces a series of funding cuts. Kid Culture features fun

• Federal spendingcuts could reducehospice reimbursements by15 percent

and educational books and

toysforchildren.Toy recommendations are based onindependentresearch

conducted by The Toy Re-

By Mac McLeane The Bulletin

search Institute.

oane Caudell's family had one request when the 82-year-old Redmond resident was

1600 S.E. Reed Market

Road; • Erickson's Thriftway, 561 S.W.Fourth St., Madras; • Fred Meyer, 61535 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend; • Home Instead Senior Care, 497S.W. Century Drive, Suite 102, Bend; • La Pine Community Health Center, 51600 Huntington Road; • Partners in Care,

COCOA executive aims to maintain services

diagnosed with dementia, adult failure to thrive and other medical problems that made her condition terminal: They wanted her to spend her final days at home so they could be with her when she died. "Piospice of Redmond) put her bed in the living room so we could be with her all of the time," Caudell's husband, David, said as he looked back on the care his wife received before she died this

December at the Des-

chutes Public Library system is "Know DIY" month.

The library has added some great books to inspire kids to create and play.

SEMIMG

SCIMSSIL2 S

past spring. Caudell said the hospice program assigned a specially trained caregiver

Submitted photos

who came by their house at least two

to three times a week to make sure his wife was doing alright. They also made sure someone was on call 24 hours a day to answer whatever questions members of the Caudell family had regarding her care, no matter how early

"Sewing School 2: Lessons in Machine Sewing" By Amie Plumley Don't let the sewing machine gather dust. This

or late it was. "It was excellent," Caudell said. "I re-

book is for both the experi-

ally appreciated having them around because it took a lot of pressure off of

has beautiful color photographs and simple, easy-to-

us.

follow instructions for pat-

enced and novice sewers. It

During 2012, Hospice of Redmond and the United States' 5,500 other hos-

terns for pillows, purses, scarfs and much more.

'I]j>', I ',

pice providers helped about 1.5 million terminally ill patients die in peace, according to the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization.

They did so by using about $14 billion from Medicare's 30-year-old hospice benefit — which last year paid about 84 percent of the country's total hospice Caudell said Hospice of Redmond was a valuable service when his wife, Doane, was costs — and money from other revenue

dylng.

sources such as private donations and health insurance plans. But while

t h ese r eimbursements

account for only 2 to 3 percent of Medicare's total operating budget, they've been caught up in a series of proposals that aim to reduce the amount of money the federal government spends on health care. The series

of cuts could reduce the reimburse- pice providers operate, particularly ment payments hospices receive by as smaller ones like Hospice of Redmond, much as 15 percent over the coming

which treat fewer than 50 patients a

decade. month. Meanwhile, demand for hosAccording to the NHPCO, these pice services is at an all-time high. spending cuts could threaten how hosSee Hospice /D2

"Have Fun with Arts and Crafts" By Rita Storey

Need a series to keep children of all ages engaged and excited? Check out these books. See Books/D4


D2 THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

-PLUS

Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

COCOA

ACTIVITIES CALENDAR

Continued from D1 It is the federally recognized Area Agency on Aging for Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties and receives about half

TODAY BEND KNIT-UP:$2; 10 a.m.-

noon; RosieBareis Community

of its budget — an amount

equal to about $808,000 this past year — from the federal government's Older Americans Act each year. During the summer of

Campus, 1010 N.W.14th St.; 541-728-0050. THE GOLDENAGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.

6ax,

ite

2009, COCOA's board of di-

rectors chose Pamela Norr, a former nonprofit health

SATURDAY

its executive director. Norr left COCOA to take on a

UNITED SENIORCITIZENS OF BEND BINGO:Noon-4p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-323-3344. DAUGHTERSOFTHE AMERICAN REVOLUTION: Speaker is John Baker;1 p.m., noon for lunch; Shilo Inn Suites Hotel, 3105 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; 541-322-6996.

new role as the statewide

executive director of the Oregon Rural Health Care Quality Network. Before she left, Norr hired Verdieck in J uly to serve as COCOA's operations director and to manage the Klamath and

Lake Counties Area Agency on Aging. The newly formed seniorservices org anization split off f r o m the Klamath Basin Senior Center.

Verdieck said running that organization helped prepare him to take on the

challenges that come with his new position. "I'm honored to step in

after (Norr) and contribute to my community in this way," Verdieck said. Before he started working for COCOA, Verdieck spent several years working with Central Oregon's aeronautics industry as a production planning manager, a procurement manager and a contracts specialist. He and his w i fe, Jan,

who works as an occup ational therapist fo r

a

home-based care provider, spent several years caring for his mother, who had

Alzheimer's disease and died about 18 months ago. They also cared for his brother, who has suffered from brain damage since he was ll and lives at an

assisted-living facility in Bend.

Verdieck said he's eager

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

David Caudell points at a photograph of his wife, Doane, at his Redmond home. Doane Caudell, who

died this spring, received care from Hospice of Redmond.

Hospice

payment is gradually being chipped away.

Continued from D1 "There has been a consid- The future erable amount ofpressure to

In 2009, the Centers for

shrink hospice spending," said Medicareand Medicaid SerJon Keyserling, NHPCOs se- vices announced it had includnior vice president for health ed a slight increase in Medipolicy. "And hospices are now care reimbursement rates for being asked to do more with hospicesafter it made some what appears to be a shrink-

changes to how these rates

ing reimbursement rate."

hospice aide. It also needs to

theory that businesses can im-

COCOA has provided to help Central O r egon's growing senior population even though he knows it's going to be challenging given the federal spending climate.

cover the cost of any durable medical equipment, such as Doane Caudell's hospital bed, and medications the hospice

prove their productivity bypurchasing new equipment, updating computer systems and taking other steps to be more efficient. The more productive

Earlier this year, CO-

senior nutrition program

patient needs to treat their terminal condition. issued a report that found the

country's health care costs,

country's average hospice provider is capable of operating

Keyserling said, the federal

with a 6.3 percent profit mar-

absorb any savings hospice providers and other Medicare-reimbursed servicesphysicians, home health care providers and in some cases skilled nursing homes — received from increasing their productivity by reducing their reimbursement rates by about 1.5percent each year.

gin once the money it spends providing these basic services

government set out in 2010 to

through the sequester, a

rates.

series of automatic spending cuts the federal gov-

But Keyserling, of NHPCO, said that estimate neglected to take into account the money a hospice program spends when it provides up to 12 months of But while t hi s e conomic bereavement services to help theory makes sense on paper, its patients' family members Keyserling said, it doesn't realdeal with their loss and the ly workforhospice providers money it spends training vol- becausetheirbusiness modunteers to assist its patients. el is labor-intensive — labor Once these two costs have costs account for about twobeen figured into the equation, thirds of a hospice program's his organization estimates the operating budget — and when average hospice provider now patients are being treated at operates with a profit margin home it is very difficult for of only 4.6 percent. That slim the providers to improve their margin gets even slimmer efficiency. once the sequester — a series Luckily, Keyserling said, of automatic federal spending CMS' recent market basket

to switch its operations to

a week-by-week basis after it nearly exhausted its cash

reserves during the fall's federal government shutdown. A second round of

automatic spending cutsreferred to in some circles as "Sequester Part II"

-

looms if the U.S. Congress fails to adopt the budget proposal announced earlier this week before the end of the year. "We've already been cut to the bone, so (if these cuts go t hrough) that means less meals for

seniors," Verdieck said. He says about half of the money needed to run the COCOA's senior nutrition

programs comes from the federal government. Verdieck says he plans to look at ways COCOA can work with its existing

partners and other programs like Oregon Project Independence, a state

program that provides inhome services to seniors

who may not qualify for Medicaid, to offer its core services in a more efficient manner.

He also envisions advocating fo r

t h e n e e ds

of Central Oregon's seniors at the federal and state government levels in

hopes that elected leaders will think twice about fur-

ther impacting his agency's budget. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

BINGO:12:30 p.m.; American Legion Post ¹44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDENAGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.

not yet ready to be admitted into the full service — so they

will be more prepared when their time comes. "Let's get them on pre-hos-

pice as soon as we can so they are not as sick when they're ready forfull service," she sard.

MONDAY

orgenweb.org/deschutes/bend-gs. BEND KNIT-UP: 6-8 p.m.; Gossamer, 1326 N.W.Galveston Avenue; 541-728-0050.

WEDNESDAY KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: Noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-5485935 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;Golden AgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.

CENTRAL OREGONRETIRED EDUCATORS ASSOCIATION MEETING:$8.50 for lunch;11:30 THURSDAY a.m.; Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 S.W. Black Butte Blvd., THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; Redmond; 541-382-7044. 12:45-4p.m.;Golden AgeClub,40 THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Double S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.

WeeklyArts5 Pntertainment EVery FridayIn naemIIE TheBulletin

PL

•P

This spring, the Medicare they need to function, he said. Payment Advisory Committee Seeking to r e duce the

has been subtracted from

spring. The agency almost had

SUNDAY

have a terminal illness but are

BEND GENEALOGICALSOCIETY: Show and tell for attendees toshare research stories followed bythe annual holiday potluck; bring adish to share; free, public welcome;10a.m.-noon; Williamson Hall (behind Jake's Diner), Rock Arbor Villa, 2200 N.E.U.S. Highway 20; 541-317-9553 or www.

they become the less money

providers in an attempt to absorb the money it lost

ernment enacted this past

sitions program — a pre-hospice program for patients who

were calculated. The federal agency then Partners in Care Executive Narrow margins announced it was going to be Director Eric Alexander said The Medicare program paid phasing out these increases his hospice program, which Hospice of Redmond $165 for — which were included in the serves about 300 to 350 paevery day it t r eated Doane reimbursement rates to make tients each day, is also taking CaudelL sure hospices weren't adverse- steps to brace for the potentialMedicare reimbursements ly affected by the formula ly declining reimbursement — which vary from region to change — resulting in a 4.2 rates. The hospice program region depending on its health percent decrease in the reim- recently stopped offering foot careand labor market costs- bursement rates over the next clinics, a service Alexander make up about 98 percent of seven years. admitted was not tied to its the program's total operating Keyserling said final two original mission, and may also budget, executive director Re- years of the Budget Neutrality drop its flu shot clinics. "We've seen these changes becca Bryan said. Adjustment Factor phase-out, "That's what helps us stay which expires in 2016, will coming," Alexander said, exalive and function," Bryan come at a time when the feder- plaining that like Hospice of said. She says 99 percent al government is also working Redmond, his program should of the patients who turn to to reduce the amount of mon- be able to weather the storm. her agency for help during ey it spends on health care "(These potential rate reductheir final days are Medicare with another rate adjustment tions) aren't a surprise but beneficiaries. called the productivity adjust- that also doesn't make dealing Bryan said that in exchange ment factor. with them any easier." for this money, the hospice Keyserling said the pro— Reporter: 541-617-7816, program is required to pro- ductivity adjustment factor, mmclean@bendbulletin.com vide its clients with access to which was applied to Medicare a 24-hour on-call nurse, a so- through the Affordable Care cial worker, a chaplain and a Act, operates on an economic

to continue the services

COA had to freeze some unfilled positions, cut back on its employees'hours and reduce the amount of money it could pay its

TUESDAY

'P,

care executive, to serve as

deckpinochle;noon-3 p.m.;Golden Age Club, 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. CRIBBAGE CLUB: Newcomers welcome; 6-8:30 p.m.;Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-317-9022. SCOTTISH COUNTRYDANCE CLASSES:Noexperience or partner necessary; $5, first class free; 7-9 p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, 549 N.W. Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-923-7531.

its Medicare reimbursement

cuts that went into effect this spring — is factored into the

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rate increases — an annual

adjustment that, like a cost-ofcalculations. living adjustment, is designed "My math brings (the mar- to make sure providers are gin after the sequester) down not hurt by inflation — have to about 2 t/~ percent," Keyser- been high enough to absorb ling said. The sequester's cuts any rate reductions that came — which seek to reduce Medi- as a result of these new policare's total spending by $123 cies. Though he wasn't sure billion — will be factored in whetherthe federal agency's over the next nine years. new hospice market basket Keyserling said the narrow increases, which are supposed operating margins hospice to be announced today will be providers face as a result of high enough to counteract this the sequester create a danger- trend. ous situation because it interHe also said hospices still feres with their ability to make lose out in this situation beup for any unforeseen costs cause while r eimbursement they may experience if a pa- rates themselves may not tient with extraordinary care be going down — the reducneeds comes their way. tions from the BNAF and the He said this situation is quality adjustment factor are especially problematic for covered by the market basket smaller hospice providers due increase — they are also not to economies of scale — they keeping up with inflation and have less money to cover the increasedcostsforem ployees, costs of treating an expensive equipment and medications. patient simply because they Bryan said that so far, Hostreat fewer patients. piceofRedmond hasbeen able These m argins a r en't to deal with the situation withhelped by the fact that the out having to make any major very reimbursement rate hos- changes. It is also working to piceproviders use to receive enroll more clients in its Tran-

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5 0-P L U S

DATING COACH

FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Businesses step up efforts to hire veterans

Don'tturn bim off

By Linda Moss

The work-study program

The Record (Hachensaclz, N.J)

adies, after speaking with a lot of men older

L with these top 10 turnoffs you

LISA

It took Francisco "Frank" Miranda, a veteran of the war in Afghanistan, about

COPELAND

the civilian world that was

than 50, I've come up

might be doing. Men want to meet the real • you. Ladies, we've been sold a bill of goods when it comes to shape-enhancing undergarments. Yes they'll make you look 10 pounds lighter if they don't cut your circulation off first. But men aren't too happy when they end upin bed with a woman who has a totally different advertising. You want a man

to showing you love, men often

James Lee, a 26-year-old Cliffside Park, N.J., resident,

give it in the form of actions,

not words. When he doesn't feel you need him, he'll move

"That's the respect that

you — being "superwoman" and doing it all yourself or being a woman who can accept helpfrom aman.

we give each other," said Miranda, a 5 0 -year-old Woodland Park, N . J ., DeborahCannon /Austin American-Statesman resident. "They call me Don Ream, a U.S. Army veteran, left, talks with Texas Department by saying, 'Hey, master of Criminal Justice officer Jeremy Young, at the Hiring Red, White sergeant.'" 8 You! job fair eventon Nov.14, in Austin, Texas.

Stay off your cellphone

6 • during a date. Men hate

Home Depot is one of a number of companies

that have stepped up their efforts to recruit U.S. mil-

your current date but texting friends while you're with a Don't complain about the man is just plain rude. You • men in your life.Even if it may love your phone but it was a bad last date or your ex can't snuggle with you at night did something really stupid. or comfort you after a bad day. A man hates when a woman The man in front of you could shows up on a date and the be the one who can, so put the first words out of her mouth phone away for an hour. You involve some type of "male just might be glad you did. bashing." Why? He thinks Don't drink too much on a you'll do the same thing to him after your date. If you love • first date.Pounding down being labeled a Drama Queen, one martini a f te r a n other

2

7

makes a man think you either

But if it's a second date you

have a drinking problem or

skills can benefit an employer. Nationally, unemployment

itary v eterans, helping for veterans has been trendex-service members such ing down, falling to 7 percent a s Mi randa w h o h a v e last year from 8.7 percent in struggled to f ind w ork 2010. "Most of the employers are and to adjust to life back home. The chainof homevery eager to hire veterans," improvement stores em- said New Jersey Labor Comploys 35,000 veterans, missioner Harold Wirths. "I a round 10 percent of i t s always tell them not only morworkforce, and has com- ally is it the correct thing to mitted to hire about 55,000 do, but economically it's great. v ets over th e n ex t f i v e You're getting a highly skilled years. employee.You don't have to And Home Depot isn't worry about telling them how the only b usiness that's to dress. They come to work looking to beef up its staff, on time. They're used to harsh and find innovative ways conditions." beyond job fairs, to connect Wirths also said younger

e ntertaining t h an

keep talking trash about men.

tional Guard in October 2010 as an infantryman, and was stationed in Jersey City, N.J.

low vet employees refer to each other by their former military ranks.

on to someone who does. Decide what's more important to

is more

is about to finish Horizon's program. Lee joined the Na-

at Home Depot in Totowa, N.J., where he and two fel-

and in person.

want with a

climate them to the company's corporateculture,Coons said.

a good fit. Since August, Miranda has been working

who's going to like you exact- competing with your iPhone ly how you are — and you can f or your attention. I k n o w have that by always showing thereare ti mes your phone up as the real you both online

gives Horizon months, rather than 10 minutes at a job fair, to evaluate veterans and ac-

three years to find a job in

body from the one that's been

showing up on dates. It's false

n i c e m an, do he's a bad date. It also impairs

yourself a favor and process your judgment, which leads to your stories about men with No. 8. your female friends, not with other men. Watch what you wear • and do on a first date.If Post current pictures you're looking to hook up on a • of yourself online. This first date, that's fine. Just don't should be an obvious one for expect this to lead to a real both sexes. Be sure to post a relationship; no matter how current picture, as in less than good you are! Also beware of a year old. This includes post- wearing clothing that reveals ing one of your face and your too much of "the girls" or any full body. Men have caught on other part of your body. If you to women who've posted pic- do, don't get upset when he tures of only their faces. They takes a long, hard look at what know you're hiding some- you're displaying. thing from them, and aren't you? I know you have a great Be kind to men who personality and I understand • write you online. They you're probably thinking, "If put themselves out there even he'll just meet me and get to more than you do and women know me, he'll really like me." are constantly rejecting them. That would be nice but that's Even when you feel you're not not how it works. When you a fit, at least thank him for post pictures that don't rep- writing you, let him know you resent who you are, he thinks don'thave enough in common you're a liar. No man wants and then wish him luck on his to start a r elationship with dating journey. If we were all someone who lies. You don't nicer to each other online, it either. By the way, this goes would make dating so much for age, too! If you're 60, stop easier. trying to pass for a 50-yearold. There are plenty of men Appreciate, appreciate 'LJ. and appreciate some who will be interested in dating you just as you are. more whatever he does for you. Always appreciate a man. A man doesn't want you Yes, I know you'd like him to • making him your pet proj- do the same for you and mayect. Even though you m ay hate be he will if you start first. But a man's lifestyle, most men re- I guarantee if you don't, he'll ally do like themselves and the never do another thing for way they live. It bugs a man to you. A thank you and a couple be told how he has to change of meaningful "I appreciate something about himself to fit you"comments go a long way into your life. Either like him in dating and relationships tohow he is or move on. ward getting your needs met by your partner. You may be proud of • what a strong, independent woman you are but don't — Lisa Copeland (s "The Dating flaunt this to an over-50 man. Coach Who Makes Dating Fun Yes, you've done a great job and Easierafter 50!" being "superwoman" and it's hard to give it up but if you

with veterans. ex-service members often go This y e ar , W a l -Mart to college under the GI Bill Stores Inc. pledged to hire and are therefore counted as

vance and is working for a company that shares the same values of the Army — such as loyalty, duty, respect and service. "We really have been proac-

1

4

He was sent to the shore following Superstorm Sandy to patrol and guard against looting. The Horizon program has been a boon in terms of finding employment, Lee said. "A couple of my fellow soldiers I know, they are having trouble finding jobs," Lee said. The GI Go Fund, a Newark-based nonprofit that assists veterans, developed a

work-at-home-training p r ogram for veterans with disabilities. The nonprofit in 2011

receiveda $30,000 grant from

tive trying to recruit military," said Pam Frazier, human re-

t he Kessler Foundation i n

Depot district where Miranda works.

veterans with disabilities get-

West Orange, N.J., and set up lations manager for the Home the training, which led to 50

ting work as home-based customer-service representatives job fairs for veterans at its for companies such as PSE&G stores, and has a "military and Johnson & Johnson. skills translator" on its website The program has been exto help veterans explain how panded and adopted as a modtheir military experience can el by some companies, which be applied at the chain, she are creating U.S.-based call Home Depot holds its own

sard.

centers staffed by

tion-based experience, and

how valuable veterans are

and the resources they bring and their ability to work on their own," said Jack Fanous, executive director of the GI Go Fund. S till, v eterans s uc h a s

Leniw remain disheartened about their lack of job prospects and struggle to make employers recognize their skills. He recalled applying for a job and being told that he, and other vets, hadn't been picked for i n terviews because they didn't have the

keyword "manager" on their resumes — not a c o mmon term in the military.

"If you're in the military

for two or three years, you're

already going to start building your management repertoire once you get two or three ranks under your belt," Leniw said. "You're going to

have people below that you're supervising."

mplements Hsa c '3 vl fcs'I se'J 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com

resume on M o n ster.com for a while, and that went

nowhere. Every job I'm applying for, there's over 100 other applicants."

e

Veterans returning to civilian life have new battles

to fight on the home front. They face a

c ompetitive

job market; are sometimes emotionally challenged by

5

the transition from the mil-

itary; and they often lack the ability to explain and translate how their military

Get A Taste For Food. Home Sr Garden

life, you'd better find space for him and give him the ability to feel needed by taking care of things for you. When it comes

'

TheBulletin

• •

Redefining a classic neighborhood style on Bend's westside Two and three-bedroom luxury cottages from 1,221 to 1,541 square feet sharea xeriscaped common area. Designed for low-maintenance living, they feature high-end finishes and distinctive architectural treatments. A vibrant community ofshops & restaurants is at your doorstep. L OCATED AT 1 9 0 0

25 yoga elasses a week in addition to... Pilates, over 60 youth and family activities a week, over 40 cardio/strength group exercise classes a week, cycling, cardio, aquatics, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only fitness center, and exceptional service from Bend's best professionals.

N W M O N T E REY PINES DR.

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v eterans

"We are looking for knowl- with disabilities. "It really just highlights edgeable, hard-working, solu-

of coursecustomer service is every veteran who wanted unemployed. That can skew a definite plus," Frazier said. a job and who had left the veteran unemployment fig- "We really targeted military service in the prior year. ures, he said, including in New veteransbecause they tend to Horizon Blue Cross Blue Jersey, where the unemploy- stay with you." Shield of New Jersey and ment rate for veterans was 10 power company PSE&G percent last year. At job fairs, Work-stuQ effort participated in two sepa- the commissioner said, he is This year, Horizon Blue rate pilot programs aimed seeing many Vietnam War- Cross teamed up with Rutat matching them with vet- era vets, in the 50- to 60-year gers University-Newark (N.J.) erans to hire, and disabled age range, seeking work. and the nonprofit Workforce vets h a ndled c u stomer Miranda is i n t hat age Opportunity Services for a calls for the utility follow- bracket. He spent 27 years 39-week work-study program ing Superstorm Sandy. in the U.S. Army, serving in for veterans. Roughly a dozA nd l ast m o nth, t h e places such as Afghanistan en veterans were chosen for White H o us e u n v eiled and Kuwait, before retiring in the pilot program, where they "Warriors4 Wireless," an October 2010. The transition are interning for Horizon in initiative seeking to place took an emotional toll on him, Newark during the day and 5 ,000 vets in jobs in t h e Miranda said. taking software development "It was a big adjustment," and business courses at night, wireless telecom industry by 2015. he said. "It was overwhelming said Peggy Coons, Horizon's Alex Leniw, a 33-year- not having that responsibility senior vice president of human old Garfield, N.J., man of commanding and being re- resources. who served 10 years in the sponsible for soldiers." The class is set to graduate Coast Guard, knows firstMiranda worked briefly for around Christmas, and the hand how hard it can be for a supermarket, and eventual- program has been so successa veteran to get a job. When ly applied online for a job at ful that Horizon plans to rehe got out of the service, he Home Depot. Now he works peat it next year. "There's no company that attended Caldwell College about 25 to 30 hours a week, in for two years and graduat- the appliance department and wouldn't say they don't want ed. For a year since then, he "doing the racetrack," running to hire veterans," Coons said. has been hunting for work. from department to depart- "But somehow or other, when "It's just so frustrating," ment to help customers. we went to job fairs, we just Leniw said. "The econoAt Home Depot, Miranda weren't getting the traction, my's not helping. I had my said he has a chance to ad- and we weren't real sure why."

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

PARENTS EeKIDS

Email information for the Family Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylifeibendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

YOUR PET

FAMILY CALENDAR

TODAY I'LL BE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS: A tour of three homes with different themes; proceeds benefit the Bend Heroes Foundation and the Williams Foundati on;$5;10a.m.-4 p.m.; private residence, 21165 Clairaway Ave., Bend; 541-318-6134 or

cbessary©aol.com. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CHRISTMASKAYAKERSFLOAT: Kayaks and canoes decorated with lights paddle around a loop; free; 3:30 p.m. participants gather, 4 p.m. float; Tumalo Creek Kayak 8 Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407 or www. tumalocreek.com. ANTIQUE WALK: Redmond's antique district is open late and features food, wine, music and

more; freeadmission; 6-8 p.m.;

downtown Redmond; 541-526-1161. DIRKSENDERBYKICKOFFPARTY: Featuring live music, an artauction, a raffle andmore; proceeds benefit Tyler Eklund; $5 suggested donation; 6-11 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-598-4519. BACH N' BREW CHRISTMAS CONCERT:Rock violinist Aaron Meyer performs with his fourpiece band; beverages provided by Sunriver Brewing Co.; $35 for nonmembers, $30 for members, $10 forages younger than1818

and younger; 6:30p.m., doors

open at 5 p.m. for special viewing of indoor exhibits; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-593-9310 or www. sunrivermusic.org. HOLIDAYCONCERT: Holidaysongs by local Hawaiian musician Bill Keale; $20 for adults, $22 at the door, free for children 6and younger, registration requested; 7-9 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; TheOld Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541408-0561 or www.billkeale.com. ¹ "THEBISHOP'SWIFE":A screening

of the1947 Cary Grantfilm (not rated), FATHER CHRISTMASVISITSTHE with refreshments; free; 7:30 p.m.; HIGH DESERT MUSEUM: Children Rodriguez Annex,Jeff ersonCounty can meet Father Christmas and Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541decorate sugar cookies in the Hall of 475-3351 or www.jcld.org. Exploration and Settlement; $1 for cookies and cider; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": A HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. performance of the one-man oneHighway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or act play based on aDavid Sedaris www.highdesertmuseum.org. essay; $10 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Featuring crafters, artists and Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. nonprofit organizations; free volcanictheatrepub.com. admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street andEvergreen DANNY BARNES ANDMATT Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191. SIRCELY:The innovative Americana SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL musicians perform, with Moon Mountain Ramblers; $10 plus fees DISTRICT:SeeToday's listing; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 in advance, $12 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; The Belfry, S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-8159122 or www.belfryevents.com. THE TWELVEBANDSOF "THELION,THE WITCH AND THE CHRISTMAS:A Christmas party with Santa, an elf, raffle and prizes, WARDROBE": The Redmond High School drama department presents free hot cocoa and cider for children, local live music and more; proceeds its winter play; $8, $5 for students; 8:30 p.m.; Redmond High School, benefit Operation Elf Box; free; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; St. Clair Place, 675S.W.RimrockWay; 541-9234800 or www.rhs.redmond.k12.or.us. 920 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.

BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and

more; freeadmission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. I'LLBE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS: See Today's listing; $5;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; private residence, 21165 Clairaway Ave., Bend; 541-318-6134

MONDAY

more; $5; 7p.m., doors open6:30

SCIENCEPARTY, ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. "THE ROYALBALLET, THE NUTCRACKER":A screening of the classic holiday tale; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. CHRISTMASCONCERT:Featuring the Bend Cello Collective and the Gospel Choir of the Cascades; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend;541-390-2441 or www.freewebs.com/bendgospel.

p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E Sixth St.; 541-556-6335 or www. centraloregonyouthorchestra.org.

SUNDAY LEGO LEAGUEROBOTICS TOURNAMENT: Watch teams of students ages 9-14 compete with LEGO robots; free; 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-7883564, Ikasari©bendcable.com or www.ortop.org/fll. HOLIDAYRANCH CHRISTMAS: Featuring a toy drive, a Christmas bazaar, children's activities, Rim Rock drill team performance, concessions and more; proceeds benefit Toys for Tots; $5 per family or toy donation; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Rafter J Ranch, 65950 93 St., Bend; 541-777-9615 or kami.

operationelfbox.com.

SATURDAY

Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889 or www.northsidebarfun.com. "THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE":SeeToday's listing; $8, $5 for students; 7 p.m.; RedmondHighSchool,675 S.W . Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.rhs.redmond.k12.or.us. CENTRAL OREGONYOUTH ORCHESTRAFALLCONCERT: Featuring the Phoenix String Quartet, guest students from the CascadeSchoolofM usic and

"THE LION,THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE":SeeToday's listing; $8, $5 for students; 2 p.m.; RedmondHighSchool,675 S.W . Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.rhs.redmond.k12.or.us. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8

CHRISTMASTREELANE:See Saturday's listing; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:SeeToday's listing; $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:SeeSaturday's listing; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CANDLELIGHTBAROQUE CONCERT: The Summit High School Chamber Orchestra performs; free; 7 p.m.; Grace First Lutheran Church, 2265 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-355-4186.

benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 or cbessary©aol.com. S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. SENSATIONAL SATURDAY, HOLIDAYTRADITIONS:Discover COMMUNITYHOLIDAY PARTY: the multicultural holiday traditions Free photos with Santa, live music celebrated throughout theWest; and performances, local food and included in theprice of admission; $12 beverage vendors and more; Goodwill adults, $10ages 65and older, $7ages will be accepting donations; free 5-12, freeages4and younger;10a.m.admission; 3-6 p.m.;C.E.Lovejoy's 1 p.m.; HighDesert Museum, 59800 S. Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber U.S. Highway97, Bend;541-382-4754 Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-388-1188 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. or www.celovejoys.com. CHRISTMASTREELANE:Visit HOLIDAYJAZZSHOW:A familySanta and shop for a Christmas tree, friendly show featuring Lisa Dae, with complimentary face painting, Lori Fletcher, Michelle Van Handel hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo and an All-Star Jazz Band, with a and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 raffle; proceeds benefit Cascade p.m.; DD Ranch,3836 N.E.Sm ith School of Music; $10, $25 VIP; $5 Rock Way, Terrebonne; 541-548children12 and younger; 5-8 p.m.; 1432 or www.ddranch.net. Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd

$5 for nonmembers;11 a.m.and

1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org.

TUESDAY

Submitted photo

The purr-fect pet Meet Kloee, asweet, 8-yearold domestic longhair/mix. She loves her silky coat stroked and will purr on your lap all day long. She is one ofseveral cats at the shelter that would like a new home for the holidays. Cats that are 8 months and older are only $5. If you would like to meet Kloee oranyother animal available for adoption at the HumaneSociety of Central Oregon, visit 61170S.E.27th St., Bend. All adoptions include spay or neuter surgery, a free health exam at alocal vet, microchip ID, collar, leash or carrying box, ID tag, training DVD and free food. Contact: 541-382-3537.

PETS

WEDNESDAY

tdperformancehorses©gmail.com.

Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds

SCIENCEPARTY, ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members,

CALENDAR

SCIENCEPARTY, ELECTRICITY!: See Tuesday's listing $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org.

THURSDAY SCIENCEPARTY, ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers;11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. CHOIR CONCERT: The Summit High School music department group performs; raffle proceeds benefit the music department and students; free; 7 p.m., 6:30 p.m. concert; Summit High School, 2855 N.W.Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-815-5333 or www. friendsofmusic-shs.org.

EVENTS BEND SPAYANDNEUTER PROJECTWALK-IN PREVENTIVEWELLNESS CLINIC:Vaccines, microchips, toenail trims and deworming available; 10a.m.-1:45 p.m. Saturday; Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 S.E. Wilson Ave. Suite B-1, Bend; 541-617-1010 or www.bendsnip.org. SANTA CLAUSISCOMING TO TOWN:Photosand cookies with Santa, and furry friends from BrightSide Animal Center; donations accepted for animal center; 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Dec. 14 and 21, noon-4 p.m. Dec.15 and 22; Nolan Town Center, area of Rimrock Way and Highland Avenue, Redmond.

STORY TIMES For theweekof Dec.13-19. Storytimes arefree unless otherwise noted. f''

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2690 N.E. U.S. HIGHWAY20, BEND; 541-318-7242 • ONCE UPON ASTORYTIME: All ages; 11 a.m. Friday. I

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19530AMBER MEADOW DRIVE, BEND;541-388-1188 • STORY TIME: All ages; 11 a.m.Thursday. 'II

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175S.W.MEADOW LAKES DRIVE, PRINEVILLE;541-447-7978 • PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: Ages 3 and older; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and11 a.m. Thursday. • WEE READ: Ages 0-3; 10 a.m. Monday and Wednesday. I I

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601 N.W. WALLST.; 541-617-7097 • PRESCHOOLPARADE:Ages3-5;10:30a.m.Friday J

and library youth events Museum; 9:30 a.m.Tuesday. • OLD FASHIONED FAMILY GAMEDAY:All ages; 2 p.m. Saturday. • MIDDLEGROUND:Ages 9-12; gingerbread; 2:30 p.m. Wednesday. • ROCKIE TALES PUPPET SHOW: Ages3-5;9:30 a.m .Thursday.

$ •

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59800S.U.S.HIGHWAY97, BEND; WWW. HIGHDESERTMUSEUM.ORG;541-382-4754 • UNLESSNOTED, EVENTS INCLUDED WITH ADMISSION ($12 adults, $10ages 65and older $7ages 5-12, freeages 4and younger) • WILD WEDNESDAYS: Ages 7-12; treasure hunt;12:30 p.m. to close Wednesday. • BACKPACK EXPLORERS:Ages 3-4; explore museum's animal habitat, share stories andsongs; 10to11 a.m. Thursday; $15 per child nonmembers, $10per child members. • TOTALLY TOUCHABLETALES:Ages 2-5; storytelling about animals and people of the HighDesert; 10:30 a.m.Tuesday. I

62080 DEAN SWIFT ROAD;541-330-3760 • SATURDAY STORIES:All ages; 10 a.m. Saturday. • ANIMALADVENTURES: Ages 3and older; with High Desert

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• SPANISHSTORYTIME: All ages; 1 p.m.Wednesday

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16425 FIRSTST.; 541-312-1090 • ANIMAL ADVENTURES: Ages 3and older; High Desert Museum; 12:30 p.m. Monday. I

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827 S.W. DESCHUTES AVE.; 541-312-1054 • ANIMAL ADVENTURES: Ages 3and older; High Desert Museum; 10a.m. Monday. • KNOW DIY:All ages; gingerbread houses; 6:45 p.m. Tuesday. • MIDDLEGROUND:Ages9-12; makeholiday gifts; 4 p.m. Thursday. •

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110 N. CEDAR ST.; 541-312-1070 • ROCKIE TALES PUPPET SHOW: Ages3-5;10:30 a.m .Tuesday.

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241 S.W. SEVENTH ST., MADRAS;541-475-3351 • BABIES AND TODDLERS STORY TIME:10:10 a.m.Tuesday. • PRESCHOOLAND OLDER STORY TIME:Ages3-5;10:30a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tuesday.

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56855 VENTURE LANE;541-312-1080 • TEEN TERRITORY: Ages12-17; make gingerbread houses and play games; 3:30 p.m.Tuesday.

HWY 20E & Dean SwlftRd. (1 block West of Costco)

541-828-S011 • StsrkS.COm Sewing Machine Repair 8 Service

A Free Public Service

Books Continued from D1 These simple projects include easily accessiblematerials that are lingering in your drawers or cabinets. Create animals, trucks, dinosaurs, pirates, fairies and so much

more. II

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Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties

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Submitted photo

"Draw out the Story: Ten Secrets to Creating Your Own Comics" By Brian McLachlan McLachlan created a wonderful resource for kids who

love to draw and read comic books. He begins the book describing comicsthen gives thereader great suggestions and descriptions on shaping ideas i nto t h e ir v e ry o w n

comic. — Recommendations from Sheila Grier,community librarian Deschutes Public Library system

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FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D5

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

eevision et owns o of writers who think they need

4."Girls"

to outdo other crime shows in the gore department.

The second season of Lena Dunham's endlessly discussed HBO dramedy left me feeling underserved. But I could be lured back with a season focused mainly (only?) on Adam Driver's portrayal of Hannah's moody ex-boyfriend. In which

TV SPOTLIGHT By Hank Stuever The Washington Post

2. "Mad Men" Season6

Television letdowns of 2013:

1.Murder asinstallation art This has become a real personal peeve, as shows like

Claire Danes, left, and Mandy Patinkin star in the Show-

A f i nger-drumming, donothing wait for something — anything — to happen. It

NBC's "Hannibal," Fox's "The Following," AMC's "The Kill-

ing" keep treating a crime

did, when Don melted the Her-

shey's account, and possibly his case the show could be called career. Also, I was stunned to "Guy." see "Mad Men," with its reputa-

scene like it's an MFA thesis tion for details, appear so clumexhibit. Murder i s h o r rible sy with costuming hippies and

enough all on its own ("Broad- psychedelic fashion trends.

5."Homeland" Showtime's

4

time series

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"Homeland." The anti-ter-

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ror drama has proven to be a real mess. Showtime

1

ed by the stunt casting, make-

(and now cliched) byproduct

up and bedazzled hissy fits.

Carol (Melissa McBride) and see what else could be found.

7. The fall season

Marine to Tehran to take out anti - t error the leadership?

Networks continued their

skid toward oblivion with tep6."The Walking Dead" id offerings, especially in the Walking in circles, most- comedy department. Among ly, despite its huge popularity the worst: "Dads" (Fox), "Wel(and, I admit, a satisfyingly come to the Family" (NBC), disruptive midseason finale "The Goldbergs" (ABC), "We last week). Still, though, raise Are Men" (CBS), "The Michael mess. And, h onestly, w i th your hand if you wanted to J. Fox Show" (NBC) ... need I some recent real-life diploma- get in that stationwagon with go on?

Harrelson). Sam Rockwell, Christopher Walken, Tom Waits, Abbie Cornish, Olga Kurylenko and Harry Dean Stanton also star in this oddball 2012 comedy written and directed by Martin

treasure.

Language:A teensy hit of Middle Earth profanlty. bits. And Elves. With plenty of Setu A joke about "what's in my dwarfs and a wizard and dragon for trousers."

Th e kld attractor factor: Hob-

McDonagh ("In Bruges").

sequences ofintensefantasy g ood measure actionviolence,andfrightening Goodlessons/Indlessons:The ~mages. smallest among us can turn out to

Pnrents'ndvlsory Theviolence fantastical and stylized, is a bit Whnt it's ahout:A hobbit and his be the toughest and most cunning much, and it's too long for the very dwarf companions battle a dragon Vi o lence: Quite a lot of stabbings, young to sit through — OK for10 as they seek to rescue an ancient t h r oat slashings and decapitations. and older.

Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

lan McKellen in a scene from "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug." See the full review in today's GO! Magazine.

eenwantstowe onine eaLi

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject fo change after press time. t

Dear Abby: My 1 7 -year-old forcollegeshould bediscussed,and daughter, "Erica," is planning to whether Erica will be able to conmarry her24-year-old boyfriend. tinue her education if she should I use the term "boyfriend" loosely become pregnant. It may give her a because their relationship consists glimpse of exactlywhat she's letting entirely of texting, talking on the herself in for BEFORE the wedding. phone and the Internet. There has

been no dating or getting to know each other in person. Erica is intent on marrying this man even though

tendencies. Does he exhibit them in

any other ways'? A man who mistreats animals might also abuse children if they should get in his way or he is in a bad mood. Dear Abby:My sister informed

Of course the three of you will me today that her children have w ant t o m e e t a s registered at Toys R Us, and has

many of his family instructed me to purchase only the and friends as pos- toys on their registry for Christsible. Because Erica mas! Apparently, this is the new won't listen to reason, way to shop. he has lied to her sevperhaps S E EING Abby, I have never told anyone eral times in addition will bring her back what to buy my kids, and I'm apto having lied to us. She is planning down to earth. This will also give palled by this new idea of a Christto attend a four-year college. you (all) a chance to find out what mas registry. I try very hard to buy I'm not sure how to handle this. else her"boyfriend" may have been great Christmas gifts that myloved She hid the relationship from us lying about, including his age. ones will enjoy. Am I wrong to

DF P,R

for more than six months. I realize

Dear Abby: What do I do about

Erica needs to make her own mis- my husband's cruelty to our cat? takes, but I'm not sure how to make My children love "Miss Kitty," her understand my very real con- but their dad kicks her and terrorcern about this. izes the poor little thing to the point She is unwilling to discuss the where I don't think I can protect possibility of waiting. Any advice her any longer, especially when I'm not home. I have told the kids would be appreciated. — Needs Hel p in Virginia that Dad is wrong and not to be like Dear Needs Help:If Erica were him, but I'm afraid eventually they my daughter, I'd suggest that be- may think it's OK to mistreat anicause this relationship is so serious mals. What should I do? it's time you both paid a visit to her

— California Animal Lover

intended. Assuming her father is in Dear Animal Lover:Find Miss Kitthe picture, he should be there, too. ty a good home ASAP! Your husThe subject of who will be paying band appears to have sociopathic

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, DEC. 13, 2013:This yearyou openup to new opportunities once you eliminate your resistances. A partner or a dear loved one encourages you to take grounded risks. Laughter often surrounds the two of you. TAURUS often adds to your workload.

ARIES (March Starsshowthe kind 21-April19) ofdayyou'llhave *** An older ** * * * D ynamic relative could be ** * * Positive changing, and ** * Average this adds to your ** So-so difficulty relating to * Difficult him or her. Let go of your judgments and accept this person as he or she is. Get out at lunch or some other appropriate time and run some holiday errands. Tonight: Meet friends for some holiday cheer.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

the hair salon. Others naturally warm up with food. Express your love to people you care about. Make a point to spread good cheer with holiday cookies. Tonight: Whatever you choose, go with others.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * * You will assume a leadership position. You might want to push a friend a little off his or her safe, rigid path so that he or she can function within the parameters of a project. Trust that this tactic will be successful. Tonight: Change your job description to leader of the gang.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * * Y our mind drifts to the possibility of going off and doing something new, probably involving the holiday. At the TAURUS (April 20-May20) same time, a new friend might feel a bit ** * * * You know when you hit a wall. put out. This person might be wondering if you will make time for him or her. Keep Accept others as they are, especially if the peace. Tonight: Where the action is. you can't get them to broaden their perspectiv es.Giveuppushing them. When LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) you do, manypeoplewill relaxand open ** * * Deal with a loved one directly up because they won't feel challenged. who might have been touchy recently. Tonight: Join friends first. Make plans to spend some quality time GEMINI (May 21-June 20) with this person in the very near future. ** The less said, the better, especially Choose your time for a talk with care. with what you might be thinking. Go off You are a student in the art of diplomacy. Tonight: Share some eggnog with a loved and do your thing, whether it is running errands or just getting your hair cut. Don't one. get so uptight about a money matter. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) Trust in your ability to find a solution. To- ** * * Refuse to cause a problem. Don't night: Finish up holiday errands. try to manipulate or control someone else. Expect a backfire with that attitude. CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * * B ring a morning snack for Try to understand this person's position others, whether you go to the office or to first. Resist deciding that you already

8 p.m.on BRAVO, "Styledto Rock" —For the first time, the designers receive no input from their mentors as they create looks inspired by old Hollywood for Khloe Kardashian to wear at a Grammy Awards afterparty. They use what they've learned so far to guide their own work and critique one another's.

a ruthless gangster (Woody

T his guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday. It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13areincluded, along with R-ratedfilms that may have entertainment or educational value for older children with parental guidance.

Rating:PG-13 for extended

— to scathing, alcohol-fueled mind games at a late-night gathering.

8 p.m.on SHO, Movie:"Seven Psychopaths" —A struggling screenwriter (Colin Farrell) finds himself caught up in Los Angeles' criminal underworld when his bumbling buddies kidnap a dog that belongs to

PARENTS'GUIDETOIVIOVIES, "THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAIIG"

7:45 p.m. onTCM, Movie: "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" — Edward Albee's Broadway play about the cocktail party from hell reaches the movie screen with most of its corrosive power intact. A frustrated wife and her ineffectual academician husband (Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton) subject a younger professor and his wife — (George Segal, Sandy

Dennis) — as well as eachother cy breakthroughs with Iran, is this such a good time for a TV show to be sending a fictional

drama still has its occasional chuch" made it as simple as moments (I loved the episode a boy's body at the foot of a 3."Behind the Candelabra" where much-missed fugitive cliff); it doesn't need art direcA sordid, unfeeling and cer- Nicholas Brody arrives at the tion, wires, costumes, paint, tainly overpraised HBO movie Caracas slum-scraper), but glitter, branches, antlers, about the sad end of Liberace. just about everyone agrees feathers, etc. The idea of the I guess viewers were distract- this season has been a real killer-as-curator is a desperate

TV TODAY

think this is rude?

— Appalled Shopper Dear Appalled: Iagree your sister's request is presumptuous.

But I suppose a Christmas registry is a natural progression from wedding and baby registries. There wouldn't be a ToysR Us registry if it wasn't a successful sales tool for people who don't like to

shop. Because you are not one of them, and Christmas shopping brings you pleasure, I suggest you do as you wish. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

know where he or she is coming from. Tonight: Where there is Christmas

music. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec.21) ** * You'll be driven to get your to-do list done. Consider whether the fast pace is worth it; you don't want to be too exhausted to enjoy Christmas. You'll feel good when you can scratch an item off your list. Tonight: Meet a friend for munchies in between doing some shopping.

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * * W here others' resourcefulness falls flat, you'll save the day with a wonderful idea. Use your creativity well. You can delight friends and loved ones by expressing your originality. Several people will meet you halfway. Tonight: Let the intensity build with a partner.

AOUARIUS(Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * A personal matter could demand more attention than you are ready to give. You understand that this issue might need to be resolved quickly. Consider handling it first, if you want to be effective. A family member or roommate can be asstubborn as youare!Tonight:Head home.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * You'll draw others toward you, butyou might not want to hear everything they're saying. Distance yourself gently from someone who feels as though he or she is bombarding you. Do not take

a loved onefor granted; youwon't appreciate the outcome. Tonight: Use your imagination! © King Features Syndicate

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ing, Nick andHank(Russell Hornsby) suspect anevil Santa

from Wesen folklore might be the culprit in the new two-hour episode.

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BLUEIS THEWARMEST COLOR (NC-17)6,9:50 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) 1, 3:25 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 1:20, 4:30, 7:35 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 11:20 a.m., 2:10, 7:20,10:05 • FROZEN(PG)11:10 a.m., 12:55, 3:35, 6:25, 9:05 • FROZEN3-D (PG) 11:05 a.m., 1:45, 4:25 • THE H088IT: THEDESOLATIONOFSMAUG(PG-13) 11 a.m., 12:45, 2:30, 4:20, 6, 7:55, 9:30 • THEH088IT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG 3-D(PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 9:45 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG HIGH FILM RATE 3-D (PG-13) 12:15, 3:45, 7:15 • THE H088IT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG IMAX 3-D (PG-13) 11:45a.m., 3:15, 6:45,10:15 • HOMEFRONT (R) 10 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) 11:25 a.m., 2:40, 4:40, 6:05, 7:05, 9:20, 10:20 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:20,4:55, 7:25 • NEBRASKA (R) 11:15a.m., 2, 7:55 • OUTOFTHEFURNACE(R)I:30,4:15,7,9:55 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD(PG- I3) 1:55, 4:45, 7:30, 10:10 • TYLER PERRY'8 AMADEACHRISTMAS (PG-13) 1:10, 3:55, 6:35, 9:10 • High Frame Rate movies record and play visuals at twice therateor higher than normal. • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

9 p.m. on 5 8, "Grimm" — A deadly crime spree has Nick (David Giuntoli) investigating an urbanlegend basedin Portland's sewers. Adalind (Claire Coffee) meets Prince Viktor (Alexis Denisof), who is seeking justice for his late cousin. When several delinquent teenagers mysteriously go miss-

10 p.m.on SHO, "AnotherOay, Another Time: Celebrating the Music of Inside Llewyn Davis" —This new special features highlights of a concert held in September at New York's Town Hall to benefit the National Recording Preservation Foundation. Among the performers are Joan Baez, Patti Smith, Jack White, Marcus Mumford and cast members from the new film "Inside Llewyn Davis" — including Oscar Isaac, who plays the title character, a1960s folk singer. © Zap2it

HIGH DESERT BANK

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • PRISONERS(R) 9 • RUSH(R) 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guadian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE ARMSTRONG LIE(R)9 • MR. NOBODY(R) 6 • MUSCLESHOALS(PG) 3:30 I

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Redmond Clnemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FROZEN(PG) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THEH088IT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 2:15, 3, 5:30, 6:15, 8:45, 9:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)2:45, 6:15, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 4, 6:45 • FROZEN(PG) 4:30, 7 • THEH088IT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 4:15, 7:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)4,7

REDMOND OW

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EVERGREEN' H OM E L O A N S OregonB ranchucenseML3213-10 © 2013BsgreenHomeloans isaregisleel trade~ nameofE veemuoneymrceMortgag eCompany'. w

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Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.LI.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • FROZEN(PG) 4:50, 7:20, 9:40 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 3:10, 6:30, 9:45 • THEH088IT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG 3-D(PG-13) 3, 6:15, 9:30 • HOMEFRONT(R) 5:l0,7:30,9:50 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)4,7,9:55 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt.,541-416-1014 • 12 YEARSASLAVE(Upstairs — R) 4, 7:30 • THEH088IT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 3:10, 7, 10:30 • THEUPSTAIRS SCREENING ROOMHASLIMITED ACCESSIBILITY.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today's 0 GO! Magazine

• Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at hendhulletln.com/movies

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Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 2013 • •

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Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

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Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

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Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

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

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

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• Q u l l e t i n :

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

202

Want to Buy or Rent

CASH for dressers, dead washers/dryers 541-420-5640

203

Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

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C h a n d l e r

Holiday Bazaar Friday only, 12/13, 10-3 Suntree Mobile Park Community Center 1001 SE 15th St., Bend. Handmade stocking stuffers, jewelry, cards & misc.; Mary Kay, specially priced Miche products, Avon. 204

Santa'e Gift Basket A cabin west of Bend isolated by winter snow. Three victims. The Trapper Murders, A True Central OregonMystery. Link to site: www.christmasvalle .net

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245

249

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Antiques & Collectibles

Golf Equipment

Art, Jewelry & Furs

Computers

Travel/Tickets

Reber's Farm Toy Sale! Each Sat. & Sun., 10-5 until Christmas, 4500 SE Tillamook Lp., Prineville. 541-447-7585 The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

The Bulletin

Senentt Central Crretrensince fetts

210

215

Furniture & Appliances

Coins & Stamps

CHECKYOUR AD

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn corn rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

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

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Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 205

Items for Free Wanted Free refrigerator, I'll pick up. Call 541-615-9936

14-kt white gold ladies wedding band with a bright polish finish, 1.66 carat diamond Hearts and arrows, round cut, Sl -1 Clarity, F color. Appraised at $15,000. Very unique piece. Asking $9500. 541-261-7615

T HE B ULLETIN

r e - Advertise V A CATION quires computer ad- SPECIALS to 3 milvertisers with multiple lion Pacific N o rthad schedules or those westerners! 29 daily selling multiple sys- newspapers, six tems/ software, to dis- states. 25-word clasclose the name of the sified $540 for a 3-day business or the term a d. Ca l l (916) "dealer" in their ads. 2 66-6019 o r vis i t Private party advertis- www.pnna.com for the ers are defined as Pacific Nor t hwest those who sell one Daily Co n nection. computer. (PNDC) 260

USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

Mlsc

A cabin west of Bend isolated by winter snow. Three victims. The Trapper Murders, A True Central OregonMystery. Link to site:

Private collector buying Find exactly what postagestamp albums 8 collections, world-wide you are looking for in the The Bulletin Classified and U.S. 573-266-4343 CLASSIFIEDS 541-385-5809 (local, cell phone). 541-260-7355 www.christmasvalle .net G REAT GIFTS! S u n USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Mountain Oregon golf 257 Find exactly what bag, $125. 4 pair new Musical Instruments you are looking for in the Door-to-door selling with golf shoes, size 10, $25 Oil painting by fast results! It's the easiest ea. New Ping putter, $75. noted NY artist Julie way in the world to sell. 541-306-0166 Heffernan, 22nx16n Dining table, m aple, framed, $500. TURN THE PAGE round, with leaf, $45. The Bulletin Classified 541-548-0675 541-420-2220 541-385-5809 For More Ads Bend Indoor Swap The Bulletin Meet - A Mini-Mall full Freezer, Frigidaire up253 240 Mason & Hamlin of Unique Treasures! right, 2 yrs old, 13.7 cf, Baby Grand Piano. Crafts & Hobbies TV, Stereo & Video 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. $175. 541-647-2227 246 Beautiful black lac10-5 Thure-Fri-Sat. Guns, Hunting G ENERATE SOM E 100 ceramic models, D irecTV - O ve r 1 4 0 quer finish. Still unEXCITEMENT in your Buylng Dlamonds & Fishing c hoice $ 2 eac h . channels only $29.99 der warranty. 208 206 neighborhood! Plan a 541-420-2220 a month. Call Now! A great Christmas /Gold for Cash Pete & Supplies • P ets & Supplies garage sale and don't Ammo/Accessories: 150 Triple Saxon's Fine Jewelers savings! Gift! $25,000 forget to advertise in rds .360, $50. 200 rds $636.00 in Savings, 541-369-6655 (orig. $47,000) 3rd Holiday Fair English Bulldog female classified! .223/.556, $70. 150 rds Free upgrade to Geswingroll61 Ogmail. coming to Sisters, at The Bulletin recomt/2 mos old, puppy,3 541-365-5609. BUYING 9mm, $65. 100 rds .40, nie & 2013 NFL Suncom Outlaw Station mends extra caution $2200. 541-362-9334 Lionel/American Flyer $35. NEW AR N2 30-rd day ticket free!! Start 541-312-2425 IHShoppingenter when purc h asNEED TO CANCEL enchantabull.com trains, accessories. mag pull, $10; N3, $15. today! close to Ray's Food 20-rd N3, $15 ea, 10-rd, saving YOUR AD? ing products or ser541-406-2191. 1-600-259-5140 German Wirehaired Place, Hwy 20. vices from out of the The Bulletin Tact vest, $25. pups, AKC, 7 F, Opening 11/29 thru $15. (PNDC) Classifieds has an area. Sending cash, 1Pointer BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP 541-306-0166 M, $800. 541-454-2132 12/22, Mon.-Thur. "After Hours"Line checks, or credit inDISH T V Ret a iler. The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are 10-4, Fri. Sat. Sun. CASH!! f ormation may b e Lab puppies black and Call 541-363-2371 Starting ai still over 2,000 folks in our community without 10-6.Vendors For Guns, Ammo & subjected to fraud. yellow pur e bred, 24 hrs. to cancel $19.99/month (for 12 permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift wanted! Please call Reloading Supplies. For more informamales and females your ad! 541-595-6967 mos.) & High Speed camps, getting by as best they can. 541-406-6900. tion about an adver- ready to go now. $250 R olltop desk w it h 7 I nternet starting a t The following items are badly needed to tiser, you may call Call 541-771-5511. drawers, medium oak, People Look for Information $14.95/month (where help them get through the winter: the O r egon State Lab Pups AKC,black & $250. 541-546-4051 AGATE HUNTERS available.) SAVE! Ask Ct CAMPING GEAR: Used tents, sleeping bags, About Products and Attorney General's yellow, Master Hunter Ponshers • Saws About SAME DAY In- tarps, blankets. Services Every Day through Office C o nsumer sired, performance pedis • • s • CALL Now! CtWARM CLOTHING: rain gear, boots, gloves. The Bulletin Classiffeds stallation! Protection hotline at ree, OFA cert hips & el1-600-306-1563 Repalr& Supplles 1-677-677-9392. ows, 541-771-2330 (PNDC) PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT www.kinnamanretrieveracom IOW'~MI TMIII THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER The Bulletin Sylvania 19 n digital LCD Senrtntt eentrei Oregonsrnce tette People Look for Information 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. 241 TV/DVD, w / r emote About Products and Please help,you can make HANCOCK & DO YOU HAVE $75. 541-546-6642 Bicycles & a big differencein our community. Adopt a rescued kitten Services Every Daythrough MOORE SOFA SOMETHING TO or cat! Fixed, shots, ID The Bulletin Classifietfs Salmon/Coral cheAccessories SELL chip, tested, m o re! nille fabric with diaFOR $500 OR N onprofit rescue at Labrador puppies, AKC, mond pattern. TradiLESS? chocolate, $350. 65460 76th St., Bend, tional styling with Non-commercial 541-977-6644 T hurs/Sat/Sun, 1 - 5 , loose pillow back, advertisers may 541-369-6430; k i tten Labradors AKCdown-wrapped seat place an ad foster appts 541-615- Chocolates & yellows, cushions, roll arms, with our 7276, www.craftcats.org shots, wormed, health skirt, two matching "QUICK CASH 2005 Maverick ML7e guarantee. 541-536-5365 p illows an d ar m SPECIAL" M ountain Bike, 1 5 www.welcomelabs.com covers. L ike new 1 week3lines 12 frame (small). Full 280 282 266 Labradors AKC puppies, condition. $1 500. or' suspension, Maverick blacks & yellows. OFA 541-526-1332 e e eke 2 N Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend ~ Estate Sales s hock, SRAM X O hips & elbows certified. Ad must drivetrain & shifters, 9 Both parents on site. price of Fri-Sat-Sun, Bam-3pm, Moving Sale - Fri-Sat, HUGE MOVING SALE, speed rear cassette, eninclude AUSSIES! Registered Great field & family dogs. The Bulletin no earlybirds, please! 9-2, 1255 NW SagiEverything must go! 34-11, Avid Juicy disc ~ le temnitenn ASCR miniature Aus- $500. 541-390-7464 recommends extra ' or less, or multiple Tack, generators, pumps, naw. Leaving country, Fri. 8 Sat. 6 4, 62602 brakes. Well t aken tralian Shepherds, 2 red M INI-AUSSIE l caution when pursnow tires, dirt bikes, Montara Drive, dining p u p s, chasing products or, items whose total so everything goes! c are o f. $950 . tri females, 2 black tri blue merle 8 black Kawasaki Mule, home does not exceed room table, outside tri. services from out of I 541-766-6227. females, 1 blue merle furnishinqs, sports equip, furn., pottery, paint$500. male, 1 blue merle fe- $350. 509-460-6260 the area. Sending I and TONS more! ings, appliances and 242 266 male, 2 black tri males, Pomeranian puppy, cash, checks, or 65475 Tweed Rd Call Classifieds at much more. For de1 blue tri dilute, $500 & male, wolf sable, 10 l credit i n f ormation Exercise Equipment (between Bend/Sisters) Sales Northeast Bend tails 541-390-6845. 541-365-5609 up. 541-761-6267 or may be subjected to wks old. Real sweet Credit/debit cards OK. www.bendbulletin.com 541-546-5449. 292 heart.$275 l FRAUD. For more ** FREE ** 541-460-3160 information about an I Sales Other Areas Aussie-Tzu male pups. Just bought a new boat? Just bought a new boat? may l Sale Kit Will be ready with 1st POODLE pups AKC toy, advertiser, you Sell your old one in the Sell your old one in the Garage all t h e Oregoni Place an ad in The ESTATE/MOVING SALE shot & worming on tiny teacup, cuddly people I c classifieds! Ask about our classifieds! Ask about our State Atto r ney ' Bulletin for your ga1066 Collier Glacier Jan. 3. $350 each. dogs. 541-475-3669 Super Seller rates! Super Seller rates! O f f i ce rage sale and reDr. in Sisters! Kelly 541-604-0716 or Just bought a new boat? l General's 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 Consumer Protec• Life Fit R91 ceive a Garage Sale Quality living room & 541-469-3237 Sell your old one in the tion h o t line at I bedrm furn antiques Recumbent BikeKit FREE! classifieds! Ask about our i 1-677-677-9392. Absolutely like new I R gerRedLabel 1 Look What I Found! collectibles, j e welry, Super Seller rates! 20 ga. 0/U English with new batteryKIT INCLUDES: more! Fri-Sat 9-4. You'll find a little bit of 541-385-5809 choke tubes • 4 Garage Sale Signs I TheBulletin I operates perfectly! l stock, For pics & info, go to everything in Serrrng Cenrrei Oregon sincetees beautiful $1000; • $2.00 Off Coupon To Clean, always www.atticestatesanQueensland Heelers The Bulletin'9 daily housed inside home. l Browning BPS 12 ga Use Toward Your dappraisals.com Standard 8 Mini, $150 garage and yard sale I pump 26" w/ choke 212 Next Ad $2100 new; & up. 541-260-1537 Hwy 20 W to Sisters, to section. From clothes • 10 Tips For "Garage tubes, beautiful Dachshund minis, male & www.rightwayranch.wor selling for $975. McKinney Butte Rd. to Antiques 8 to collectibles, from Sale Success!" female avail 12/14 $350Great Christmas gift! i $425; Springfield The Pines. dpress.com housewares to hardCollectibles 1911 A1 45acp6 $450. 541-506-0366. 541-647-2227 Attic Estates 8 ware, classified is I mags, work done to I Rodent issues? Free Appraisals always the first stop for PICK UP YOUR Donate deposit bottles/ adult barn/ shop cats, 3 Oil Lamps, in excel541-350-6822 cost-conscious GARAGE SALE KIT at cans to local all vol- fixed, shots, s o me lent condition, $40 Nordic Trac A2350. consumers. And if unteer, non-profit res- friendly, some not. Will each. 541-280-4459 1777 SW Chandler Estate sale! All must go! Presents beautifully. you're planning your cue, for feral cat spay/ deliver. 541-369-6420 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Fri. to Wed. 9-6, Hardly used. A own garage or yard neuter. Cans for Cats 296 NW Harwood St., TURN THE PAGE perfect holiday gift. Check out the ScottishTerrier AKC puptrailer at Bend Pet sale, look to the clasThe Bulletin Prineville serrmg CenrrerOregon srnce l903 $350.00 For More Ads classifieds online Express East, across pies, born 11/19. Black, 1 sifieds to bring in the Cash and carry. male, 3 female. parents Moving Sale, Fri.-Mon., www.bendbulletin.com from Costco; or doThe Bulletin buyers. You won't find 541-390-1713. $ 6 00-$700. 9-6, 512 S. Ash, Sisnate Mon-Fri at Smith on s i te. a better place Updated daily 541-615-0594 Huge vintage colSign, 1515 NE 2nd; or Call/text Antiques wanted: tools, for bargains! People Lookfor Information ters. lection! 5 4 x3 2 big at CRAFT in Tumalo. smashingsuccesaOmen.com furniture, marbles,early Proform Crosswalk 360 Winchester .06 Model Call Classifieds: About Products and screen TV, 5 rooms of Call for Ig. quantity Siberian-Husky pup, B/W photography, old treadmill, like new, only 1 70, BSA 3-9, $450. 541-365-5609 or Services EveryDaythrough furn & wares, wom's HD sports gear, cowboy hour of usage! $275 obo. Marlin 12 ga., Model 26 pickup, 541-369-6420. AND Wolf-Husky pups, email The Bulletin Classifleds www.craftcats.org items. 541-369-1576 541-406-0646 leathers & access. $400 ea. 541-977-7019 $275. 541-617-5997; classified © bendbulletin.com A1 Washere&Dryere

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Pets & Supplies Yorkie 2-yr old male, 9 Ibs, for Stud Service. Call 541-416-1615 264- Snow Removal Equipment Yorkie 6 mo old male, 265 - BuildingMaterials reat personality, $500. 266- Heating and Stoves an deliv. 541-792-0375 267- Fuel and Wood Check out the 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers classifieds online 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment www.bendbulletfn.com 270- Lost and Found Updated daily GARAGESALES Yorkie 9-wk male, tail 275 - Auction Sales docked, dewclaws, $450. 280 - Estate Sales Can deliv. 541-792-0375

281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

A v e . , • Be

3rd Holiday Fair Coming to Sisters at Outlaw Station Shopping Center close to Ray'9 Food Place, Hwy 20. Open11/29 thru 12/22, Mon. Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. Sun., 10-6. Vendors wanted! 541-595-6967

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Can be found on these pages:

476

Employment Opportunities

EMPLOYMENT 416 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools endTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 476 - Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 567- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 526- Loans endMortgeges 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

476 CAUTION: Ads published in Employment Loans & Mortgages A ptA!flultiplex NE Bend "Employment O p 54'I -548-7141 Opportunities portunities" include LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Call for Specialsl Lost men's wallet while employee and indesecured trust deeds & Limited numbers avail. Plumber, Journeymen note, helping disabled vehicle pendent positions. some hard money 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. needed for on NE27th in Bend. Call Ads fo r p o sitions loans. Call Pat Kelley W/D hookups, patios new construction. 541-526-1022; or ask for that require a fee or 541-382-3099 ext.13. or decks. Start immediately! Emma at 541-241-7693. upfront investment MOUNTAIN GLEN, 673 must be stated. With 541-383-9313 any independentjob Business Opportunities Professionally opportunity, please managed by Norris & REllllEMBER:If you i nvestigate tho r Classified ad is an Stevens, Inc. caution when purhave lost an animal, oughly. Use extra EASY W A Y TO Place a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES don't forget to check c aution when a p - I chasing products or I REACH over 3 million foronly$15.00 par week. Starting at 3 lines The Humane Society plying for jobs on- • services from out of • Pacific NorthwesternBend line and never pro- I the area. Sending ers. $5 4 0/25-wordUSE THE CLASSIFIEDS! *UNDER '500in total merchandise OVER '500 in total merchandise 541-382-3537 vide personal inforc ash, checks, o r c lassified ad i n 2 9 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Redmond mation to any source I credit i n f ormation daily newspapers for Dcor-to-door selling with 541-923-0882 you may not have I may be subjected to 3-days. Call the Pa- fast results! It's the easiest 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 P 1 e llle FRAUD. cific Northwest Daily way in the world to sell. researched and ellllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 541-447-7178; For more informa- I Connection deemed to be repu(916) 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special or Craft Cats tion about an adver• 288-6019 or e m a il The Bulletin Classified table. Use extreme 541-389-8420. 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcall for commercial line ad rates) c aution when r e - I tiser, you may call elizabeth©cnpa.com 541-385-5809 for more info (PNDC) s ponding to A N Y the Oregon State 286 online employment I Attorney General's Extreme Value Adver Office C o nsumer s Sales Northeast Bend ad from out-of-state. A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: 668 Protection hotline at l tising! 29 Daily newsWe suggest you call papers $540/25-word Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Houses for Rent the State of Oregon I 1-877-877-9392. Horse Property Estate classified 3- d ays. Consumer Hotline Sale!62826 Stenkamp BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) Redmond Reach 3 million PaLThe Bulleh'n at 1-503-378-4320 Rd., Bend. Fri-Sat, 9-4. cific Northwesterners. REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well 1972 Chev p/up fully re- For Equal OpportuFor more information Spactous 1800 sq.ft., 3 stored, 1986 Jaguar, nity Laws c ontact as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin call (916) 288-6019 or bdrm, 2 bath home w/ 2-horse trailer, 2007 Oregon Bureau of Looking for your next 2 car garage located bendbulletin.com email: reserves the right to reject any ad at Kubota tractor and tracLabor 8 I n d ustry, employee? in S W Re d mond. elizabethOcnpa.com any time. is located at: tor implements, leather Civil Rights Division, Place a Bulletin help Large living room and for the Pacific Northfurn., bdrm sets, saddles, 971-673- 0764. wanted ad today and 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. west Daily Connec- utility room. Fridge garage items, 21' Larson reach over 60,000 incl. $1200 mo. + sec. tion. (PNDC) ski boat, 2 dining sets, The Bulletin Bend, Oregon 97702 readers each week. dep. 615-400-8915 gersingCenirei Oregonsince igia buffets, room rugs, toys, Your classified ad 541-385-5809 nice exercise equip., will also appear on foosball table, desks, PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction bendbulletin.com [Q:-gg@lk Where can you find a and other nice quality Add your web address is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right which currently furniture, decor, Irg helping hand? to your ad and readto accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these receives over 1.5 lants, so much more ers onThe Bulletin's newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party From contractors to million page views ics & descriptions at web site, www.bendClassified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. every month at yard care, it's all here www.farmhouseestatebulletin.com, will be no extra cost. sales.com in The Bulletin's able to click through Bulletin Classifieds 260 260 260 267 automatically to your "Call A Service Get Results! Misc. Items Misc. Items Illisc. Items Fuel & Wood website. • Call 385-5809 Professional" Directory 632 or place Development Director BUYING & SE LLING Hovv to avoid scam *REDUCE YOUR Apt./Illultiplex General your ad on-line at WHEN BUYING for KPOV, High Desert All gold jewelry, silver and fraud attempts CABLE BILL! Get an bendbulletin.com Community Radioand gold coins, bars, VBe aware of internaAll-Digital Sa t e llite FIREWOOD... rounds, wedding sets, part time. Closes system installed for Office/Retail Space fraud. Deal loTo avoid fraud, December 18. Details class rings, sterling sil- tional FREE and programcally whenever posThe Bulletin for Rent ver, coin collect, vin41: w~ww.k Dv.er m ing s t arting a t sible. payRm(jmam tage watches, dental $ 24.99/mo. FRE E recommends Y Watch for buyers ment for Firewood FINANCE MANAGER gold. Bill Fl e ming, 500 sq.it. upstairs HD/DVR upgrade for only upon delivery (PART-TIME) who offer more than 541-382-9419. office on NE side of callers, SO CALL and inspection. 326 Sisters-Camp your asking price and new on the first day it runs town, private bath, all NOW (877)366-4508. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Sherman Fire District who ask to have to make sure it isn cor- util. paid. $500 month Hay, Grain & Feed Just bought a new boat? (PNDC) n 4' x 4' x 8' money wired or rect. Spellcheck and plus $500 d eposit. Sell your old one in the Receipts should additional informahuman errors do oc541-480-4744 First quality Orchard/Tim- Fortion classifieds! Ask about our handed back to them. Suiitcases: 2 blck, used • include and application name, Fake cashier checks 1x. $45 ea. or 2/$80. cur. If this happens to othy/Blue Grass mixed Super Seller rates! package visit: and money orders exc. 541-390-6935. phone, price and hay, no rain, barn stored, your ad, please con541-385-5809 kind of wood 528 are common. $250/ton. Patterson Ranch www.sistersfire.com tact us ASAP so that Just bought a new boat? Where can you find a Sell your old one in the • g'Nevergive out perpurchased. Sisters, 541-549-3831 corrections and any Loans & Mortgages • Firewood ads sonal financial inforhelping hand? adlustments can be classifieds! Ask about our FOOD SERVICE Super Seller rates! MUST include mation. made to your ad. Cook 1 - Work in resiFrom contractors to WARNING Looking for your 541-385-5809 species & cost per s/Trust your instincts 541-385-5809 dential High School The Bulletin recomnext employee? yard care, it's all here cord to better serve and be wary of The Bulletin Classified kitchen environment mends you use cauPlace a Bulletin our customers. in The Bulletin's someone using an by preparing food, tion when you prohelp wanted ad escrow service or storing left o vers, vide personal Pressroom "Call A Service today and agent to pick up your Professional" Directory cleaning kitchen, suinformation to compaNight Supervisor Classic Stallion gereingCenner Oregon sinceSia reach over merchandise. nies offering loans or p ervise/instruct c a The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrBoots 60,000 readers dets while supporting credit, especially egon, is seeking a night time press superviThe Bulletin Offers Ladies size 77/a, The Bulletin Free each week. a Food Service Manthose asking for adserving central oregon since 1907 sor. We are part of Western Communications, Private Party Ads TURN THE PAGE seldom worn, Your classified ad ager. Starting salary. vance loan fees or Inc. which is a small, family owned group conlines - 3 days Paid $1100; People Lookfor Information •• 3Private For More Ads will also companies from out of $2112. Exc. benefit sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon Party Only selling for $290. About Products and appear on pkg. See full details state. If you have The Bulletin and two in California. Our ideal candidate will • Total of items adver541-480-1199 and apply at concerns or quesServices Every Daythrough tised must equal $200 bendbuHetin.com manage a small crew of three and must be www.ore on'obs.or tions, we suggest you able to l e arn o u r e q uipment/processes which currently The tfvlletin Classiffeds or Less 1 cord dry, split Juniper, OMD13-035R consult your attorney receives over quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for FOR DETAILS or to $200/cord. Multi-cord EOE. or call CONSUMER our 3 7/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ PLACE AN AD, 1.5 million page discounts, 8 7/a cords HOTLINE, leadership experience preferred. In addition to Call 541-385-5809 views every available. Immediate HOTEURESORT 1-877-877-9392. our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuFax 541-385-5802 delivery! 541-408-6193 month at no The Riverhouse Hotel merous commercial print clients as well. We extra cost. and Convention Cen- BANK TURNED YOU Wanted- paying cash a competitive wage and opportunity for Bulletin ter is see k ing a DOWN? Private party offer Find exactly what for Hi-fi audio & stuadvancement. • • C al l 5 4 I -385-5809 Housekeeping SuperClassifieds will loan on real esdio equip. Mclntosh, you are looking for in the If you provide dependability combined with a visor. Prior supervi- tate equity. Credit, no Get Results! JBL, Marantz, D ypositive attitude, are able to manage people CLASSIFIEDS sory experience in a to r o m ot e o u r service Call 541-385-5809 problem good equity naco, Heathkit, Sanand schedulesand are a team player, we hotel operation is pref- is all you need. Call or place your ad sui, Carver, NAD, etc. would like to hear from you. If you seek a fered. Please go to on-line at Oregon Land MortCall 541-261-1808 A-1 Dry Juniper Handyman stable work environment that provides a great Adult Care Riverhouse.com to fill gage 541-388-4200. $185 split, or $165 rnds bendbuHetin.com out a n ap p lication place to live and raise a family, let us hear 263 Multi-cord discount; on-line, or come to you. Life Tree Personal ERIC REEVE HANDY Cut your S T UDENT from Tools Delivery. 541-977-4500 Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at Service LLCSERVICES. Home 8 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend, 341 LOAN payments in Senior Concierge Service Commercial Repairs, to apply in person. HALF or more Even if anelson@wescompapers.com with your comHorses & Equipment • Errands• Home Mgmt. All year Dependable Submit a resume with Late or in Default. Get piete resume, r eferences an d s a lary Carpentry-Painting, Newin box, • Organizing 541-389-2591 Firewood: Seasoned; your application. history/requirements. No phone calls please. Pressure-washing, FAST. Much or nearly new Cedar, Sp l i t, D el. Competltive wage, vaca- Relief prior to employment. Honey Do's. On-time LOWER payments. Drug test is requiredEOE. Craftsman Tools: Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 tion, bonus, and use of promise. Senior Building/Contracting Call Student Hotline • 10 n Stationary for $365. Lodgepole resort facilities. Discount. Work guar855-747-7784 radial arm saw, Pre-em lo ment dru 1 for $205 or 2 for 2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H NOTICE: Oregon state anteed. 541-389-3361 Model ¹31 5.2201 00, (PNDC) slant Shilo, great $385. 541-420-3484. screen is re uired. or 541-771-4463 law requires anyone Pressman c ondition. $ 5 9 00 $375. Bonded & Insured n who con t racts for • 10 Stationary table obo. 541-317-0988. Experienced press operator 269 Nnlelng CCB¹t 81595 construction work to saw w/guide rails, be licensed with the Gardening Supplies Our Smith River, CA. production plant is seekConstruction Contrac- Home Repairs, Remod model ¹31 5.228590, A BIT LESS TACK & Equipment ing an experienced Goss community press $325. tors Board (CCB). An els, Tile, Carpentry n 20% OFF sale on se• 6-1/8 Jointer operator. We have 8 units that have been well active license Finish work, Mainte lected items. 2500 HEALTH PLANS maintained and added to during the past sevmeans the contractor nance. CCB¹168910 planer "Professional" BarkTurtSoil.com sq. ft. of gently used eral years including rebuilt quarter folder. We model ¹351.227240, Mana er- Utilization Mana ement is bonded & insured. Phil, 541-279-0846. English & Western have CTP operation with Kodak equipment as $250 obo. We are seeking an RN leader for our UtilizaVerify the contractor's saddles, show clothPROMPT DELIVERY well. Call 541-504-6413 tion Management team. Manage the team CCB l i c ense at Landscaping/Yard Care ing, bridles, saddle 54XN89-9663 daytime hours. www.hirealicensedworkflow, responsible for program developpads, Home Deco. We are Western Communications, lnc. a famcontractor.com ment, process improvement, and ensure comGift Certificates. 165 Oregon Landily owned company that has 7 newspapers in or call 503-378-4621. NOTICE: pliance. If you have 7 years clinical experi266 Check out the NE Greenwood Ave scape Contractors Law California and Oregon. Our company provides The Bulletin recom- (ORS 671) requires all ~ Building Materials ence and a minimum of 3 years direct health Bend 541-323-3262 classifieds online a great culture and work environment. This mends checking with businesses that adplan experience in case management, utilizawww.tgendbtrffetin.com plant prints 2 of our publications plus a limited the CCB prior to con- vertise t o tion management, or disease management pe r form La Pine Habitat amount of commercial printing, which we hope Updated daily tracting with anyone. Landscape ConstrucGarage Sales this may be the opportunity for you! Prior suRESTORE to grow. This is a 4-day, 32-hour shift that reSome other t rades tion which includes: Building pervisory experience is required. Excellent Supply Resale Garage Sales quires hands on community press experience also req u ire addi- l anting, benefit package and salary $80k to $90k. deck s , For newspaper Quality at and ideal candidate will be willing to assist in tional licenses and ences, arbors, LOW PRICES delivery, call the Garage Sales other areas outside the pressroom such as certifications. NurseCase Mana er Bend water-features, and inCirculation Dept. at 52684 Hwy 97 prepress and mailroom as needed. If you have a broad clinical background and stallation, repair of ir541-536-3234 541-385-5800 Find them would like to enhance patients' quality of life Debris Removal rigation systems to be Open to the public . To place an ad, call Smith River is centrally located between Cresin and maximize health plan benefits, this posil icensed w it h th e 541-385-5809 cent City, CA, one of our papers that prints evtion may be the opportunity for you! PacificLandscape ContracPrineville Habitat JUNK BE GONE or email The Bulletin ery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday a.m. with ReStore Source Health Plans is seeking an RN to join tors Board. This 4-digit classified@bendbulletin.com I Haul Away FREE approximately 5,000 circulation, and BrookClassifieds our team as Nurse Case Manager. The ideal number is to be inBuilding Supply Resale For Salvage. Also ings, OR. Our Brookings publication is also cluded in all adver1427 NW Murphy Ct. The Bulletin candidate will have a current Oregon RN liCleanups & Cleanouts approximately 5,000 circulation that prints on 541-385-5809 tisements which indicense and five years nursing experience with 541-447-6934 Mel, 541-389-8107 Wednesday andSaturday a.m. Both Crescent varied medical exposure and experience. cate the business has Open to the public. City and Brookings provide excellent quality of a bond, insurance and Case management, utilization, and/or health life to raise a family. 266 Accounting workers compensaDomestic Services plan experience preferred. tion for their employHeating & Stoves If this sounds like you, we would like to hear ees. For your protecA ssisting Seniors a t Review the fulljob description and from you. Please send resume with refercomplete the online application at Home. Light house tion call 503-378-5909 NOTICE TO ences and salary requirements to: David Dekeeping & other ser or use our website: ADVERTISER www.pacilicsource.com/careers. longe, Qu a lit y Con t ro l Sup e rvisor www.lcb.state.or.us to Since September 29, vices. Licensed & ( ddelonge@triplicate.com), PO B o x 2 7 7 , EOE Bonded. BBB Certi check license status 1991, advertising for Credit Assistant Crescent City, CA 95531. before contracting with used woodstoves has fied. 503-756-3544 the business. Persons been limited to modWill provide support and assistance to Tire doing lan d scape which have been Centers and customers in all areas of credit Drywall maintenance do not els CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE certified by the Orreporting and general maintenance of Immediate opening in the Circulation departr equire an LC B l i - egon Department of Serving Ceniral Oregon since 1903 WALLS R US cense. i n clude ment for an entry level Customer Service RepEnvironmental Qual- accounts r eceivable. D uties Hang tape, texture, resentative. Looking for someone to assist our Advertising Account Executive ity (DEQ) and the fed- reviewing credit reporting information, scraping old ceilings, Rewardingnew business development subscribers and delivery carriers with subNelson eral E n v ironmental reporting corrections to credit bureaus, & paint. 25 yrs. exp. scription transactions, account questions and ana l yzing f i n ancial Landscaping & Protection A g ency reviewing a n d Call Bob, 760-333-4011 The Bulletin is looking for a professional and delivery concerns. Maintenance (EPA) as having met statements and completing UCC-1 forms. driven Sales and Marketing person to help our Serving Central smoke emission stan- Requires a h i g h s chool diploma or customers grow their businesses with an Essential: P o s i tive a tti t ude, s tro n g Find exactly what Oregon Since 2003 dards. A cer t ified equivalent. Prior banking or accounting expanding list of broad-reach and targeted service/team orientation, and problem solving woodstove may be experience preferred. Must have good you are looking for in the Residental/Commercial products. This full-time position requires a skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a identified by its certifikeyboarding and 10-key skills; good verbal background in consultative sales, territory fast-paced, performance-based customer call CLASSIFIEDS Sprinkler Blovfrouts cation label, which is and written communication skills; ability to management and aggressive prospecting skills. center environment and have accurate typing, Sprinirler Repair permanently attached make decisions, work independently and Two years of media sales experience is phone skills and computer entry experience. to the stove. The Bul- establish an d m a i ntain c o operative preferable, but we will train the right candidate. Most work is done via telephone so strong Electrical Services Fall Clean Up letin will not k now- working relationships. communication skills and the ability to multi ingly accept advertisThe position includes a competitive task is a must. Mike Dillon Electric SnoW RemOVal ing for the sale of Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent compensation package, and rewards an Electrical troubleshootuncertified ing. 24 yrs experience. Schedule for 2014 customer service and over 400 stores in aggressive, customer-focused salesperson with Work shift hours are Monday through Friday woodstoves. PWeekly & Monthly unlimited earning potential. Lic/ Bonded ¹t 92171 the Northwest. We offer competitive pay, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Holiday Special Maintenance excellent benefits, retirement, and cash • •Landscape I Email your resume, cover letter Must be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, $45/hour I bonus. Resumes will be accepted through 503-949-2336 Construction and salary history to: weekends or early morning hours might occaDecember 18, 2013. .Water Feature Jay Brandt, Advertising Director sionally be required. Pre-employment drug Meet singles right now! 'brandtObendbulletin.com Installation/Maint. testing required. Please send resume and Handyman No paid operators, OI' •Pavers salary requirements to: just real people like •Renovations drop off your resume in person at Please send resume to: ZYLSHuman.Resources@lesschwab.com I DO THAT! you. Browse greet•Irrigation Installation 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; ahusted©bendbulletin.com Emails must state Home/Rental repairs ings, exchange mesOr mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. "Credit Assistant" Small jobs to remodels sages and connect Senior Discounts The Bulletin No phone inquiries please. Serving Cenfrel Oregonsince 1983 Honest, guaranteed live. Try it free. Call in the subject line. Bonded & Insured work. CCB¹151 573 541-815-4458 now: 8 77-955-5505. No phonecall s please. EOE EOE / Drug Free Workplace EOE/Drug free workplace Dennis 541-317-9768 LCB¹8759 (PNDC)

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wjll sbprtz

C L U B F riday, m Dece ber 13,2013

Lost opportunities

ACROSS i African city of 4+ million whose name means, literally, "haven of peace" iz Seeing things i4 "Why such a fuss?" is Start of a Jewish holiday? ir Put one's two cents in? is Arizona's Agua River io Not natural for zt Like Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 6or 22 34 Tilting figure: Abbr. Zs Xim f inez (dessert sherry) zs Manipulative health care worker ZoSmash letters

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Whether we're talking business or bridge, opportunities are seldom lost. Somebody will always come along and grab the ones you miss. In today's deal, East had overcalled in hearts, so West led the seven against 3NT. South played low from dummy, and East took the king. South expected a heart return, but East placed him with a heart trick on the bidding and knew dummy's diamonds would soon ptovide a host of tricks. So East shifted to the deuce of spades.

you rebid two diamonds and he tries three clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: You have no attractive bid, but since partner's new-suit bid is forcing, you must act. A rebid of three diamonds is possible, but your two diamonds already promised a six-card suit. Bid three hearts or, if your partner has a sense of humor, try a "fourth-suit" bid of three spades. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 451064

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DOWN ONE

0 A 10 9 8 5 2 4A8

South won and cashed the K-A of diamonds. When East threw a heart, South had to lose a diamond to West, and a spade return gave the defense three more tricks. Down one. E ast made th e m o s t o f hi s opportunity, but South didn't. I f South considered before playing to the first trick (my topic this week), he would grab the ace of hearts and start the diamonds. West would win a diamond trick, but South would have five diamond tricks, two clubs and a heart, and would be sure of a ninth trick in spades or hearts.

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By Micbael Wieseaberg and David Steinberg (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

72

12113113


THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

)

s

I •

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

s

fe •

HDFatBo 1996

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

Redmond Homes

744

Open Houses Open House Sat. 12-3, 1605 NE Diablo Way, Bend. $249,500. Join us for cookies and cider. Vonnie Green, Broker, Alleda Real Estate. 541-615-0097 745

Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

750

'- 9&R@Ra ~a MkS

• Farms & Ranches • Burns, OR. 447 acres, Ranch FSBO $365,000 541-589-1630. Info at www.elkridgecabin.co m/447AcRanch.html

SHEVLIN RIDGE 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, approved plans. More details and photos on craigslist. $159,900. 541-389-6614

850

Snowmobiles 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149. Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

762

All real estate adver- Homes with Acreage tised here in is subject to th e Federal F air H ousing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reli- 18989 Couch Market Rd. ion, sex, handicap, Tumalo Equestrian Facility! amilial status or national origin, or inten- 14.56ac, 144x72 indoor arena w/15 stalls & tion to make any such preferences, l i mita- guest quarters+ 5 stall barn, 3.476 sf home, tions or discrimination. indoor pool, fenced We will not knowingly 7.22 irr, awesome mtn accept any advertisviews. $699,900. ing for real estate Call Peter at which is in violation of 541-419-5391 this law. All persons GoellaCa ialnom ~ are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available People Look for Information About Products and on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulle- Services Every Daythrough tin Classified The Bvllelin Claseifleds

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

$17,000

¹201536.

$4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend

DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

21' Sun Tracker Sig. series Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp, live well, fish fndr, new int, extras, exc cond, $7900. 541-508-0679 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939

The Bulletin Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

ited, LOADED, 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32,000 in bike,only $23,000obo. 541-318-6049

Motorhomes

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, 20 0 8 , Fleetwood D i scovery N ayion R V professionaly winter40' 2003, diesel mo- Sprinter chassis 25'. ized every year, cuttorhome w/all Mercedes Benz diesel, off switch to battery, options-3 slide outs, 24,000 miles, pristine plus new RV battersatelhte, 2 TV's,W/D, cond., quality throughies. Oven, hot water etc. 32,000 m i les. out, rear slide-out w/ heater & air condiWintered in h e ated queen bed, d e luxe tioning have never captain swivel f ront shop. $84,900 O.B.O. been used! seats, diesel generator, $24,000 541-447-8664 obo. Serious awning, no pets/ smokinquiries, please. ing. $78,500 o b o . Stored in Terrebonne. Ready to deal! Financ541-548-5174 ing avail.

Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1986 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

www.centraloregon houseboat.com. 875

ATVs

Watercraft

similar model & not the actual vehicle)

Ads published in nWa tercraft" include: Kay

s hift, n e w tir e s , $2500, 541-980-8006.

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Lim-

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Motorhomes

541-548-0318 Beautiful h o useboat, (photo aboveis of a $85,000. 541 -390-4693

865

Honda TRX 350 FE 2006, 4 wheel drive, electric start, electric

541-548-5511

880

Motorhomes

People Lookfor Information Ads published in the About Products and "Boats" classification Services Every Daythrough include: Speed, fishThe Bulletin Clessileds ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class875. 541-365-5609 Senrtn9 Central Oregon since 1903

Where can you find a helping hand'? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

880

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Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin 2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384

18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755

541-546-4807

860

FACTORy SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J andM Homes

LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

Motorcycles & Accessories

Homes for Sale

NOTICE

870

aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 670. 541-385-5609

The Bulletin

Sernrng Cenfral Oregon since t903

870

880

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Sunchaser Pontoon COACHIIIIAN boat - $19,895 Freelander 2008 20' 2006 Smokercraft 32' Class C, M-3150 cruise, S-8521. 2006 Pristine - just 23,390 75hp. Mercury. Full miles! Efficient coach camping e n closure. has Ford V10 541-546-5511 Pop u p cha n ging w/Banks pwr pkg, JandMHomes.com room/porta-potty, BBQ, 14' slide, ducted furn/ swim ladder, all gear. AC, flat screen TV, Trailer, 2006 E asy- 16' awning. No pets/ Rent/Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Harley Davidson Sport- loader gal v anized. smkg. 1 owner$2500 down, $750 mo. ster 2 0 01 , 1 2 0 0cc, P urchased new, a l l a must see! $52,500. OAC. J and M Homes 9,257 miles, $4995. Call records. 541-706-9977, 541-548-4969 541-548-5511 Michael, 541-310-9057 cell 503-807-1973.

NATIONAL DOLPHIN 1997, loaded! 1 slide, Corian surfaces, wood floors ikitchen), 2-dr fridge, convection microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in shower, new queen bed. White leather hide-abed & chair, all records, no pets or smoking. $28,450. Call 541-771%800 37'

Head south for the winter!

1997 Tropical by

National RV. 35-ft, Chevy Vortec en-

gine, new awnings, everything works, excellent condition, 1 owner, non-smokers, $15,000 OBO. 541-408-7705

Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019

Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $8700. 541-815-9939

Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. n 17 Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900

• 'I •

Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243 881

Travel Trailers

Fleetwood Wilderness N.W. Edition 26' 2002, 1 slide, sleeps 6, queen bed, couch, stove/oven, tub/ shower, front elec. jack, waste tank heatTIFFINPHAETON QSH ers, s tabilizers, 2 2007 with 4 slides, CAT prop. t a nks, no 350hp diesel engine, smoking/pets, winter$125,900. 30,900 miles, i zed, g oo d c o n d. new Michelin tires, great $8500 OBO cond! Dishwasher, w/d, 541-447-3425 central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150 Keystone Laredo31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS slide-out. Sleeps 6, Search the area's most queen walk-around comprehensive listing of bed w/storage underclassified advertising... neath. Tub & shower. real estate to automotive, 2 swivel rockers. TV. merchandise to sporting Air cond. Gas stove & goods. Bulletin Classifieds refrigerator/freezer. appear every day in the Microwave. Awning. print oronline. Outside sho w er. Slide through storCall 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com a ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 The Bulletin Snnng Central Oregonsince tstg

541-4947-4605

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash? Need some extra space the garage?

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

To receive your FREECLASSIFIED AD, call 385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SWChandler Ave. (on Bends west side) *0!ler allows for 3linesoi textonly. Excludesall service,hay,wood,pets/animals, plants,tickets,weapons,rentals andemployment advertising, aridall commercial accounts. Mustbeanindividual itemunder$200.00aridpriceoi individual itemmust beincludedinthead. Ask yourBulletin SalesRepresentativeaboutspecial pricing,longerrunschedulesandadditional features. UmitI adperitemper 30daysIo besold.


E6 FRIDAY DECEMBER 13 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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

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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 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

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882

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

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00 Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541416-1388

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687. »» • » w •

• • 5 Lt

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located

© Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, © $400/mo.

931

933

975

975

975

975

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessorie

Pickups

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Cadillac El Dorado 1994 Total Cream Puff! Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with Body, paint, trunk as hardtop. 50K miles, showroom, blue factory Porsche leather, $1700 wheels new 6 mos ago with w/snow tires although motor 18 mo factory warFord Supercab 1992, car has not been wet in ranty remainina. brown/tan color with 8 years. On trip to $37,500. m atching full s i z e Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., 541-322-6928 canopy, 2WD, 460 $4800. 541-593-4016. over drive, 135K mi., full bench rear seat, Subaru STi 2010, 4 P205/75R-14 studded slide rear w indow, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snow tires on 115mm bucket seats, power snow whls, stored, oneGM wheels, used 2 mos, seats w/lumbar, pw, owner, $29,000, $375. Bob, 541-548-4871 HD receiver 8 trailer 541.410.6904 brakes, good t ires. 4 P205/75R-15 studCorvette 1979 Good cond i tion. ded t i res, 8 5 -90% L82- 4 speed. tread, asking $275. $4900. 541-389-5341 TURN THE PAGE 85,000 miles Bob, 541-548-4871 For More Ads Need to get an Garaged since new. Avalanche Extreme studI've owned it 25 The Bulletin ad in ASAP? ded tires on rims, 215/60years. Never damYou can place it R16, used 1 seas, gd cond aged or abused. $200. 541-604-0963 online at: $12,900. Compact C3 Spike-Spi- www.bendbulletin.com Dave, 541-350-4077 der traction devices, $160. 541-848-8230 541-385-5809 Peerless car tire cables ¹0172955, good cond, $20. 541-848-8230 (4) 235/65-17 Wintercat studded tires, like new, $400. 4 chrome rims from 2002 Jeep Grand Cherokee, $100 . 541-280-0514 (4) 235/65-R17 studded tires, good tread, low miles, $375. 541-385-5663

Les Schwab Mud & Snow blackwall Nurano P245/50/R-20 102T Observe G02, used 1 winter. Pd $1200. Will take reasonable offer. 541-306-4915 932

Antique & Classic Autos

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190

Sprinter, 35' 2008 Rear living, large refrigerator, walk-in shower, queen bed, lots of storage inside & out, newtires, electric jack, excellent condition, only used 3 times. Cali tosee! 541-318-6919

For Sale 1990 5th Wheel Transporter Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500. Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34'

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121 '-

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fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & out. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5 tis

years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.

WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearance in good condition. Smoke-free. Tow with i/s-ton. Strong suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266

Iillonaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ft.; 3 s lides; immaculate c ondition; l arge screen TV w / entertainment center; reclining chairs; center kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. Find exactly what $18,000 OBO. you are looking for in the (541) 548-5886 CLASSIFIEDS

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250 Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

sults! Call 385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass A lpenlite 1993 29 f t . shower, 10 gal. wa5th wheel/gooseneck. ter heater, 10 cu.ft. Slide, queen b e d, fridge, central Onan gen e rator. s atellite dish, vac, 27' Needs refrigerator re- TV/stereo syst., front paired. $ 6 000/obo. front power leveling Bend. Mes s age: jacks and s cissor 541-306-1961 stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566 882 Fifth Wheels

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Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 58, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call or text541-325-1956. CHECK YOURAD

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

VIIILL DELIv/R RV space avail. in Tumalo, 30 amp hk-up, $375. 541-419-5060

Garage Sales on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. »Spellcheck» and

human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

Volkswagen Touareg 2004

Meticulously mainGT 2200 4 cyl, 5 tained. Very clean speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible inside and out. V6. Recently servicedaround in this price 60 point inspection range, new t ires, sheet. $7900 wheels, clutch, timCall 541-480-0097 ing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside Advertise your car! and out. Fun car to Add A Picture! drive, Must S E E! Reach thousands of readers! $5995. R e dmond. CRII 541-385-5809 541-504-1993 The Bulletin ClassiBeds

1000

1000

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF BEND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON FEES

A public hearing on proposed fee changes forthe City of Bend, Deschutes County, State of Oregon, will be held in the Council Chambers at City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend. The majority of the proposed fee changes will be effective January 1,

the personal representative. Date of first publication: December 6, 2013. SHERR ON URBAN, A T TORNEY AT L AW, PO Box 1135, BEND, OR 9770 9 -1135, 541-617-1918, sher-

at t h e ra t e of 0.00000% per annum from May 25, 2013 until paid; plus all accrued late c harges thereon; a n d all Trusteels fees, fore-

closure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursu-

ronu@bendcable.com ant to the terms of LEGAL NOTICE T r ust D e e d. NOTICE TO INTER- said Call The Bulletin At herefore, no t i ce 1 owner, only 68,100 ESTED PERSONS. W 541-385-5809 hereby is given that, 1921 Model T miles, new tires, always I nternational Fla t NOTICE IS HEREBY Place Your Ad Or E-Mail the undersigned serviced, no smoking/ Delivery Truck Bed Pickup 1963, 1 GIVEN that the unw i l l on At: www.bendbulletin.com Restored & Runs pets. Like new, $3950. ton dually, 4 spd. dersigned has been Trustee 4/11/2014 at the hour 541-330-4344 or trans., great MPG, appointed P ersonal $9000. 01:00 PM, Stan541-420-6045 could be exc. wood Representative of the of 541-389-8963 of Time, as es2014. hauler, runs great, E state of R i c k A . dard by Section new brakes, $1950. Kobbe, Deceased, by tablished 187.110, Oregon ReThe hearing will take 541-419-5480. the Deschutes County vised Statues, at the place on December Circuit Court of the entrance to the 1 8, 2013 a t 7 : 0 0 State of Oregon pro- front 1 /3 interest i n w e l l935 Deschutes C o unty p.m. The purpose of number Courthouse, 1164 bate equipped IFR Beech BoNW Sport Utility Vehicles t he hearing is t o 13PB0148. All p e rnanza A36, new 10-550/ Honda Accord LX, d iscuss the p r o- sons having claims Bond St., Bend, OR 2004 Automatic, prop, located KBDN. Buick Skylark 1972 County of Desposed fee changes 4-cylinder. Silver, against the Estate are 97701 $65,000. 541-419-9510 Matchless! 17K oriqinal sell at public with interested per4-door, charcoal cloth required to p resent chutes, miles! Sunburst yeTlow/ to the highest sons. Copies of the interior. 67,800 miles. white vinyl/Sandalwood. them, with vouchers auction for cash the proposed fee Well cared for & within four (4) months bidder 15 factory options includinterest in the s aid changes are availmaintained. No acciing A/C. 'Sloan docuafter the date of first described real propable for review at dents, no damage. mentation." Quality re- BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K publication of this no- erty which the Grantor City Hall, 710 NW Recently detailed. paint. COMPLETELY ori- miles, premium packtice to t h e u n deror had power to Wall Street, during Excellent condition. inal interior & trunk area age, heated lumbar signed or the claims had convey at the time of normal bu s iness may be barred. All Located in NW Bend. PRISTINE). Enqine com1/5th interest in 1973 partment is VERY MUCH supported seats, panthe execution by him hours. OBO. persons whose rights of th e s a i d T r ust moo nroof, Call$9K Cessna 150 LLC original. No r ust, no oramic 202-391-2508 may be affected by Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe150hp conversion, low leaks, evervthinc works! together with LEGAL NOTICE the proceedings may Deed, non headlights, tan & time on air frame and $19,900. 541-3Z3-1898 interest which the CI R CUIT obtain additional in- any black leather interior, Classic 1995 Jaquar XJ6/ IN T H E engine, hangared in Grantor or his sucTHE f ormation from t h e cessors in re a r Vanden Plas, $1900 obo. COURT O F Bend.Excellent per- Chevy 1955 PROJECT n ew front & interest ac541-526-5854 STATE OF OREGON brakes @ 76K miles, records of the court, formance & affordcar. 2 door wgn, 350 quired after the exFOR D E SCHUTES one owner, all records, the undersigned or small block w/Weiand able flying! $6,000. COUNTY. I n the the attorneys for the ecution of said Trust dual quad tunnel ram very clean, $16,900. 541-410-6007 Deed, to satisfy the 541-388-4360 Matter of the Estate of undersigned. DATE foregoing with 450 Holleys. T-10 obligations George Milton Smith, and first published: thereby secured 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Deceased. Case No. December 13, 2013. t he costs an d and Weld Prostar wheels, ex13 PB 0128. NOTICE Priscilla Kobbe, Perextra rolling chassis + of sale, inTO IN T E RESTED sonal Representative penses extras. $6500 for all. Chevy Tahoe 2001 cluding a reasonable PERSONS. NOTICE c/o Thomas J. Sayeg, charge 541-389-7669. Jaguar XJS 1990, by the 5.3L V8, leather, P e t ersen rustee. Notice V-12 co n v ertible, IS HEREBY GIVEN Karnopp is air, heated seats, that the undersigned LLP, 1201 NW Wall T auto, I m peccable given that any fully loaded, 120K mi. 1974 BeHanca have been appointed S treet, S u ite 2 0 0 , further cond., 56,600 mi., named in Sec$7500 obo 1730A co-personal r e pre- Bend, Oregon person black w/ tan leather 541-460-0494 tion 86.753 of Oregon sentatives. All p e r97701-1991, T EL : interior, tan top, A/C, PriceReduced! Revised Statutes has sons having claims (541) 382-3011, FAX: the 2180 TT, 440 SMO, cruise, PS, PB, air right to have the Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 180 mph, excellent bag, Pirelli t i res, against the estate are (541) 388-5410 Of engine, power everyforeclosure proceedrequired to p resent A ttorneys fo r P e r condition, always s ame owner 1 3 ing dismissed and the thing, new paint, 54K them, with vouchers sonal Representative. years. $14 , 500. hangared, 1 owner orig. miles, runs great, Trust Deed reinstated attached, to the unCall Jeff for 35 years. $60K. exc. cond.in/out.$7500 by payment to the LEGAL NOTICE dersigned c o per541-410-0671 obo. 541-480-3179 The Pines M o bile Beneficiary of the enFord Bronco II 4x4, 1989, sonal representatives In Madras, auto, high miles, runs at: Linda Knight, 1009 Home Park give no- tire amount then due Lexus RX 450h 2010 call 541-475-6302 rsonal (other than such porgood. $1700. Willowdale A venue, tice t ha t p e"Propcharcoal Gray, 55,500 tion of said principal (the 541-633-6662 Medford, OR 97501 property mi. ¹019646 $36,988 erty" described below as would not then be and David W eathDramatic Price ReducLexus RX300 2000, due had no default is abandoned. The erred, 4128 S. Belletion Executive Hangar 120k miles. ¹104318. t o gether grove Lane, Spokane, property will be sold occurred), at Bend Airport (KBDN) GMC Yi ton 1971, Only ith t he cost s , 60' wide x 50' deep, WA 99223 within four by private b idding. w or attorney's 541-598-3750 w/55' wide x 17' high bi- $19,700! Original low months after the date Sealed bids will not be Trustee's www.aaaoregonauto- of first publication of accepted. The Prop- fees and curing any fold dr. Natural gas heat, mile, exceptional, 3rd source.com t his notice, o r t h e erty is described as a other default c o moffc, bathroom. Adjacent owner. 951-699-7171 of in the No541-598-3750 to Frontage Rd; great claims may be barred. 2001 Skyline Green- plained of Default by tenwww.aaaoregonautovisibility for aviation busi- r;~ All persons whose brier, 3b2b, 2 7x44. tice f dering the P late ¹ 254201, V i n source.com ness. 541-948-2126 or r ights may b e a f performance required ¹21910262NAB. The email 1jetjock@q.com fected by t h e p r oM ercedes ML 320 the obligation or ceeding may obtain tenants that owned under 2001, 115,000 mi. Deed, at a ny Piper Archer 1 980, additional information the home were Gil- Trust based in Madras, al- GMC Sierra 1977 short from the records of berto and B e atrice time prior to five days Lincoln LS 2001 4door the date last ways hangared since bed, exlnt o r iginal the c ourt o r the Ramirez. The home is before sport sedan, plus set new. New annual, auto cond., runs & drives 610 0 0 set for sale. In conco-personal r e pre- l ocated a t of snow tires. $6000. struing this notice, the pilot, IFR, one piece great. V8, new paint Brosterhous R o ad, sentatives. Date and 541-317-0324. windshield. Fastest Ar- and tires. $4750 obo. Space ¹15, Bend, Or- masculine gender in541-598-3750 first published Dethe feminine cher around. 1750 to- 541-504-1050 www.aaaoregonautocember 6, 2013. Linda egon 97702. Bids will cludes and the neuter, the tal t i me. $ 6 8,500. be taken up to Desource.com B. Knight, Co-PerIBII 541-475-6947, ask for sonal representative cember 16, 2013 at singular includes plu975 Rob Berg. ral, the word "Grantor" and David Weath- 9:OOAM. To inspect includes any succesAutomobiles erred, C o - Personal the property contact sor in interest to the Harvey Beriant ReRepresentative. Grantor as well as any gional Manager at Lincoln Zephyr 2006, V6, CO-PERSONAL 29,000 miles, silver, It REPRESENTATIVES: 61000 B r osterhous other persons owing Jeep CJS 1979, stone leather seats, good Linda Knight, 1009 Road, Bend Oregon a n o b ligation, t h e Original owner, 87k Phone performance of which cond, priced to s ell, Willowdale Avenue, 97702. miles, only 3k on new ¹541-382-8558. is secured by said $9700. 541-549-2500 Medford, OR 97501, Save money. Learn 258 long block. Clutch Trust Deed, the words (541) 848-7653 and LEGAL NOTICE "Trustee" and »Bento fly or build hours package, Warn hubs. David W e a therred, TS CorvetteCoupe No eficiary" includes their with your own airExcellent runner, very 1996, 350 auto, Vehicle? 4218 S. B ellegrove OR08000024-13-1 c raft. 1968 A e ro dependable. Northrespective s u ccesCall The Bulletin Lane, Spokane, WA APN 140634 TO No sors 135k, non-ethanol Commander, 4 seat, man 6trk' plow, Warn in interest, if any. and place an ad fuel/synthetic oil, 99223, (509) 8202726 TRUSTEE'S 150 HP, low time, 6000¹ winch. $7900 today! 448-5123. A T T O R- N OTICE OF S A L E Dated: 12/5/2013 First garaged/covered. full panel. $23,000 Title Insuror best reasonable Bose Premium Gold Ask about our NEY FOR CO-PER- Reference is made to American obo. Contact Paul at offer. ance Company By: "Whee/ Deal"! SONAL REPRESENsystem. Orig. owner that c e rtain T r u st 541-447-5184. 541-549-6970 or for private party TATIVES: Charles N. Deed made by, Bev- CINDY ENGEL, AUmanual. Stock! 541-815-8105. SIGNOR advertisers Fadeley, CHARLES erly Arline Highfill as THORIZED $10,500 OBO. By: Authorized SigFADELEY, P.C., AtRetired. Must sell! G rantor to Firs t natory First American torney at Law, Post American Title Ins Co. Title Insurance Com541-923-1781 Office Box 1408, Sis- as Trustee, in favor of pany c/o TRUSTEE ters, OR 97759, (541) Seattle Mor t gage CORPS 17100 549-0125, Company as Benefi- GILLETTE AVENUE fade@bendbroadciary and recorded on IRVINE, CA 9 2 6 14 Porsche 911 SuperhavvkPlymouth B a rracuda band.com (e-mail) 02/18/1998 in Book 949-252-8300 SALE Carrera 993 cou e 1966, original car! 300 Only 1 Share 480, on Page 2373 of INFORMATION CAN hp, 360 V8, centerAvailable Just bought a new boat? official records in the BE OBTAINED ON lines, 541-593-2597 Sell your old one in the Economical flying BMW M-Roadster, O ffice of t h e R e AT www.prioriclassifieds! Ask about our corder of Deschutes tLINE in your own 2000, w/hardtop. yposting.com F O R USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Super Seller rates! IFR equipped C ounty, Oreg o n $19,500 AUTOMATED SALES 541-385-5809 Cessna 172/180 HP for to-wit: APN: 140634 INFORMATION 57,200 miles, Door-to-door selling with only $13,500! New Titanium silver. Not LOT 10 IN BLOCK 7 1996, 73k miles, PLEASE CALL: PriorGarmin Touchscreen fast results! It's the easiest OF FOREST VIEW, ity Posting and Pubmany M-Roadsters LEGAL NOTICE Tiptronic auto. avionics center stack! way in the world to sell. available. (See NOTICE TO INTER- DESCHUTES transmission. Silver, lishing at at Exceptionally clean! COUNTY, OREGON. 7 14-573-1965 T H I S Craigslist posting id ESTED PERSONS blue leather interior, Hangared at BDN. The Bulletin Classified ¹4155624940for Judy Sechrist h as Commonly known as: COMMUNICATION moon/sunroof, new Call 541-728-0773 additional details.) been appointed per- 52900 Sunrise Boule- M AY BE F RO M A 541-385-5809 quality tires and Serious inquiries sonal representative v ard, La P ine, OR battery, car and seat DEBT COLLECTOR 916 only. 541-480-5348 of the Estate of Mary 97739 Both the Ben- ATTEMPTING covers, many extras. TO Josephine Sevestre, eficiary a n d the Trucks & Recently fully serCOLLECT A DEBT. Trustee have elected Deceased, by the Cirviced, garaged, ANY INFORMATION Heavy Equipment cuit Court, State of to sell the said real OBTAINED MAY BE looks and runs like Oregon, Deschutes property to satisfy the U SED FO R T H A T new. Excellent conCounty, under case obligations secured by PURPOSE. dition $29,700 VW Bug Sedan, 1969, number 1 3 PB0144. said Trust Deed and P 1073883 541-322-9647 12/ 1 3 , fully restored, 2 owners, All persons having a notice has been re12/20, 12/27, with 73,000 total miles, corded pursuant to claim against the esBuick LaCrosse CXS 01/03/2014 $10,000. 541-382-5127 tate must present the Section 86.735(3) of 2005, loaded, new Porsche 911 Turbo Peterbilt 359 p o table c laim w i thin f o u r Oregon Revised Statbattery/tires, perfect 933 water t ruck, 1 9 90, months of t h e f i rst utes. The default for The Bulletin is your $8495. 541-475-6794 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Pickups publication of this no- which the foreclosure » hoses, p ump, 4 - 3 Employment tice to Sherron Urban, is m ad e is the camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Attorney at Law, PO Grantor's failure to 541-820-3724 Box 1135, Bend, OR p ay: failed t o p a y Marketplace 9 7709-1135, Att n : taxes which became 2003 6 speed, X50 929 1966 Ford F250 Judy Sechrist, or they due Principal Balance added power pkg., Call Automotive Wanted 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, may be barred. Addi- of $137,057.84 Inter530 HP! Under 10k P/S, straight body, tional information may est due $3,040.75 By miles, Arctic silver, Buick Regal S CusDONATE YOUR CARruns good. $2000. be obtained from the this reason of said 541 -385-5809 gray leather interior, tom 1994, 6 1,752 541-410-8749 FAST FREE TOWc ourt records, t h e default the B e nefinew quality tires, mi., exc. cond., V6, ING. 24 hr. Response personal representa- ciary has declared all to advertise. and battery, Bose 3.1 L, fuel injected, Tax D eduction. tive or the followingobligations secured by premium sound stedr., FWD, exc. all UNITED BR E A STChevy 1986, long bed, 4 said Trust Deed imnamed attorney for reo, moon/sunroof, tires, new CANCER FOUNDA- four spd., 350 V8 re- season m ediately due a n d www.bendbuiietin.com car and seat covers. and alternaTION. Providing Free built, custom paint, battery payable, said sums Many extras. Gator, very clean, exc. TURN THE PAGE M ammograms & great t i r e s and a/c and heater, pb, being the following, raged, perfect conBreast Cancer Info. wheels, new t a g s, pw an d s t eering. dition $5 9,700. t o-wit: The sum o f For More Ads 888-592-7581. $5000 obo. $4000. 541-419-5575 $137,057.84 together serving central oregon»inr»rSSi 541-322-9647 The Bulletin 541-389-3026 with interest thereon (PNDC) 541-948-2963

Orbit21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.

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M U S I C:Two great acts visit The Belfry in Sisters, PAGE 4 A R T S: 'A Baroque Christmas' at the Tower, PAGE 12


PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE

C ONTAC T

US

EDITOR

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

in ez

Cover photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures

Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377 bsalmonObendbulletin.com

REPORTERS Beau Eastes, 541-383-0305 beastes@bendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasperObendbulletin.com Megan Kehoe, 541-383-0354 mkehoe@bendbulletin.com Karen Koppel, 541-383-0351 kkoppel@bendbulletin.com Jenny Wasson, 541-383-0350 jwasson@bendbulletin.com

DESIGNER Althea Borck, 541-383-0331 aborckObendbulletin.com

RESTAURANTS • 20

• • • • • • •

• A review of Hong Kong Restaurant • News from the local dining scene

Christmas concerts abound Steve Poltz plays in Sisters Danny Barnes at The Belfry Rippin' Chicken visits the Dojo Dirksen Derby party is tonight Lino plays house concert in Bend Floater concert rescheduled

OUT OF TOWN • 22 ARTS • 12

• Volcanic hosts Songcrafters • The Sagittarius Sessions at Dojo • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more

• Mastersingers sing Christmas tunes • "LesMiserables" auditions coming up • Artists Gallery Sunriver plans show • Youth orchestra to perform • Violinist Aaron Meyer performs tonight • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits

MUSIC RELEASES • 9

HOLIDAY BAZAARS • 15

• Britney Spears' album • Plus Glen Hansard and more

• Places to purchase seasonal stuff

GOING OUT • 8

SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life LLS. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

CALEMDAR • 16

ADVERTISING 541 -382-1811

Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. e

MUSIC • 3

e tn

DRIMKS • 10

• A week full of Central Oregon events

• • • •

PLANMIMG AHEAD • 18

Beer lovers' gift guide Ever heard of beer cocktails? FootZone puts on a happy hour Crux bottle release party

• Beethoven's Ninth on tap in Portland • A guide to out of town events

MOVIES • 25 • COVER STORY: "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug" hits theaters • "Nebraska,""The Armstrong Lie,""Blue is the Warmest Color" and "Tyler Perry's u A Madea Christmas also open in Central Oregon • "Despicable Me 2," "Fast & Furious 6," "Adore," "The Angels' Share," "Battle of the Year,""The Hunt,""Man of Tai Chi" and "Touchy Feely" are out on Blu-ray and DVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon

• A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classes listing

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American Red Cross Oregon Mountain River Chapter

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F ire H u r t s . Re d C r o s s H e l p s . Everyday the Fire Department is prepared to respond to devastating house fires. Once the fire is out, Red Cross is there. Red Cross provides emergency food, clothing, shelter, and comfort. Help your neighbors in Central Oregon by supporting the Fire Hurts, Red Cross Helps campaign.

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Donate at your Erikson's Thriftway or go online: www.redcross.org/firehurtscentraloregon

The Bulletin

Donate today and Service Master will match your donation.

ServiceinsrER Ctean


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

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By Ben Salmon •The Bulletin

n last week's GO! Magazine, we

Bill Keale

Wonderful World" medley made him busiest — Lisa Dae, Lori Fletcher and posthumously world famous. Michelle Van Handel — will gather Satian folk-pop, Bill Keale, will put on his Anyway, Keale carries on in a sim- urday night for a show at one of the busfifth annual holiday concert tonight at ilar tradition: Gentle, engaging folk- iest music venues in Bend, Northside The Old Stone. pop songs delivered via exquisite gui- Bar & Grill. Busy, busy, busy! If you're in the spirit of the season, tarpicking and a strong, reverberant Dae is a powerhouse vocalist who you'll no doubt enjoy Keale's musical voice. Just think how that'll sound in- has been holding down regular gigs at selections. And if you're already tired side a 101-year-old church. the Northside for years. Fletcher sings of the ol' Central Oregon weatherBill Keale Holiday Concert; 7 to- classic, soulful jazz and fronts her own and who isn't, this year'? — then you night, doors open 6 p.m.; $20 in ad- band, Deco Moon Jazz. And Van HanBend's beloved bastion of Hawai-

told you about a whole bunch of the holiday performances and events happening in Central Oregon between now and Dec. 25. But this week is a particularly big week for Christmas-themed concerts, especially a handful that didn't get a ton of ink last week. So we're going to round 'em up again! Put on your Santa pants, here we go-ho-ho!

can let Keale's warm, island-vibe aes-

vance at Big Island Kona Mix Plate

del's a veteran of the Bend scene whose

thetic carry you away to somewhere (541-633-7378) or the website below, most recent album "Goodbye Blues" tropical, at least for a little while. $22 at the door, free for children 6 pairs her silky smoothy voice with Latin-groove jazz. Keale was born on Oahu, where he and younger;The Old Stone, 157NW. discovered music and writing, thanks Franklin Ave., Bend; www.billkeale The threewomen willbe backed by in no small part to some well-known .copl. an all-star band, and the show is a benrelatives: Uncle Moe was a popular

entertainer, and Cousin Israel Kamakawiwo'ole's uke-fueled "Somewhere Over th e

R a inbow/What a

Holiday jazz Show

efit for the wonderful Cascade School

of Music. Raffles and other fun stuff is There are a handful of good female planned. jazz singers in Bend, and three of the Continued Page 5


music

PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

Sisters venuehosts great showstonight and Saturday STEVE POLTZ

DANNY BARNES " F IlESH A1LABLEAr )CAL STOEE

Submitted photo

Danny Barnes, left, and Matt Sircely will perform tonight at The Belfry in Sisters.

• Fringe roots musiciawi n ll haveyou clapping By Ben Salmon The Bulletin

D Submitted photo

Steve Poltz has recorded a bunch of his own music, though his best-known composition is the Jewel hit "You Were Meant for Me."

• California folk-pop singer bringstouch ofhumor, greattunesto liveshows By Ben Salmon The Bulletin

very year, it seems like there is an artist or t h ree that

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plays the Sisters Folk Fes-

tival and leaves town with some seriouspost-festbuzz.

This year, the chatter centered on Steve Poltz, a Southern Cali-

fornia folk-pop singer-songwriter whose Sunday-afternoon set at Angeline's Bakery was apparently a wild 'n' wooly sight to behold. I heard the guy crowd-surfed. I

Ifyou go What:Steve Poltz When:8 p.m. Saturday, doors open 7 p.m. Where:The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters Cost: $20plusfeesinadvance at www.bendticket.com, $25 at the door Contact: www.b elfryevents.com

made a career out of bringing But the bakery's namesake, An- fresh perspective to a traditional geline Rhett, was. And she can. medium: Poltz is known for infusShe sent me a photo. ing his guy-and-guitar folk with Crowd-surfing at a folk festival. not only oodles of melody and don't know what is. The guy has

and reserved." Poltz isn't new to the scene. He

first made waves as a member of the San Diego indie-rock band The Rugburns, and he co-wrote the massive Jewel hit "You Were Meant for Me." He has released

several solo albums since 1998, most recently 2012's "Noineen Noiny Noin," which Popmatters

wasn't there, so I can't confirm.

If that isn't positively Poltz-ish, I

mor. "His legendary live show has earned him a ferocious global fan base," says his bio, "that makes soccer hooligans seem coquettish

unconventional song structures, but his irresistible sense of hu-

called "as playful as its title suggests, but (with) the weight of solid songwriting, strong vocals, and a steadyhand atthe roots rock wheel." — Reporter: 541-383-0377, bsalmon@bendbulletin.com

anny Barnes is one of the coolest musicians around. Here are three

reasonswhy: 1. He owns and operates Minner Bucket Records, a small in-

die label that releases music on vinyl and cassette. Its releases include mostly B arnes' ow n

music, plus a handful of other lo-fi and experimental artists, including "Initial Transmissions from the Lost Continent of Mu"

If yougo What:Danny Barnes and Matt Sircely When:8 tonight, doors open 7 p.m. Where:The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters Cost:$10 plus fees in advance at www.bendticket. com, $12 at the door Contact:www.belfryevents .com

by Atomic Duo, a project of call the resulting sound "banmate in '90s alt-country heroes jotronics." You can hear his Mark Rubin, Barnes' old bandthe Bad Livers.

2. He runs a blog called Cassette Anarchy, at which he reviews tape releases, posts pictures oftape players,passes along articles and info about tapes. The guy loves cassettes,

latest creation, an album called "Shri 108," at w w w.dannyba-

rnes.bandcamp.com. Barnes may not be a household name, but he is one of the

most renowned and respected playerson the fringes ofAmerand not in that ironic sort of way ican roots music. And tonight, that's fueling lots of "cassette he'll stop at The Belfry for a show revival" stories. He really, really alongside his friend Matt Sircely. loves cassettes, and I think he The two swap original songs and loves 'em more if there's weird pay no mind to genre lines; their music on 'em. 3. He's an adventurous artistic

new live album, recorded earlier this year in California, is the 12th

spirit who loves to run his vitu- Minner Bucket release. — Reporter: 541-383-0377, osic banjo playing through an array of electronic effects and bsalmon@bendbulletin.com


musie

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 5

STAY TUNEDIN TO CENTRAL OREGON'S MUSIC SCENE! Visit The Bulletin's music blog, Frequency, for news, reviews, videos, photos, streaming tunes andmore fun stuff for your eyes and ears. FOLLOW ALONGIN THEWAY THAT SUITSYOU BEST:

KI FACEBOOK.COM/FREQUENCYBLOG ~ TWITTER.COM/FREQUENCYBLOG I BENOBULLETIN.GOM/FREQUENGY 2014 Sisters Folk Festival Early Bird Tickets '95 Get them while they last! 541-549-4979

Si s tersFolkFestival.org

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~MARQUEE

From Page 3 Holiday Jazz Show, with Lisa Dae, Lori Fletcher and Michelle Van Handel; 5-8 p.m. Saturday; $10, $5children 12 and younger, $25 family and VIP, available in advance at www

.ccschoolofmusic. org; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860Boyd Acres Road, Bend; w w w .northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889.

being dominated by — the same old Here's the lineup: 11-11:40 a.m. — Organic Music Christmas songs you hear everywhere this time of year. Farm Naomi Hooley & Rob Stroup's 11:50 a.m.-12:20 p.m.— The Josh Winter Wonderland Tour; 7 p.m. Hart Project Wednesday; free; McMenamins Old 12:30-1 p.m. —Quiet Culture St. Francis School, 700 NW. Bond St., Bed; www.mcmenamins.com.

12 Bands of Christmas Well here is a fun idea: The 12 Bands of Christmas! It's exactly what

Naomi Hooley

1:10-1:50— Chris Beland 2-3 p.m. — Lori Fletcher's Deco Moon Jazz

3:10-4:15p.m. —Chiringa

4:30-5:15p.m. — Franchot Tone 5:30-6:20 p.m. —Justin Lavik

6:30-7:15p.m. Cascade School of it sounds like, which is 12 bands getand Rob Stroup will b r ing their ting together and playing throughout Music's School of Rock 7:30-8:15p.m. —Bobby Lindstrom Winter Wonderland tour to Bend's the day to accompany Operation Elf 8:30-9:15p.m. —Redwood Son branch of the McMenamins empire. Box's free Christmas party inside the 9:30-11p.m. —Soul Benders Presumably, the tour is based on St. Clair Place building, downtown at That's a nice mix of locals and popthe duo's "Winter Wonderland" al- the intersection of Bond Street and On Wednesday, Naomi Hooley

bum, released this year and avail-

Minnesota Avenue.

ular out-of-towners, not to mention

able for sampling at the CD Baby website. "Wonderland" is a sweet,

Besides the music, Operation Elf Box will be taking donations of new, unwrapped toys to go to needy families in Central Oregon. Santa Claus will be there from noon to 4 p.m., and

genres from jammy blues to folk-pop

easy-on-the-ears

c o l l ection of

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DECEMBER 21-22 ATowerChristmas IEN" 24 ChristmasEveServices 30 Peter Gabriel: "NewBlood"

JANUARY 3 DIYGuitarFest 11 RedMolly 13 Paul McCartney:"Rockshow" 18 BluesHarmonicaBlowout 21 Bend2030

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22-30 BendGuitar Blast

to jazz to Latin dance music. And all

for a good cause! Christmas-y folk-pop tunes pow12 Bands of Christmas;11 a.rrL-II ered by piano and acoustic guitar, p.m. Saturday; free admission; St. plus Hooley's lovely voice. there will be free hot cocoa and cider Clair Place building, 920 NW. Bond This promises to be a smooth and forkids, ahot tamalebar, donuts, cup- St., Bend; wwwoperationelfbox.com. — Reporter: 541-383-0377, satisfying evening of holiday cheer, cakes, raffles, prizes andmuchmore. and without — or at least without Also: 12 bands playing all day! bsalmon@bendbulletin.com

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PAGE 6 + GO! MAGAZINE Dirksen Derby party is tonight

raised more than $18,000 for

which means tonight, it's Dirk-

donation; Domino Room, 51 NW. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-598-4519.

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

Eklund and his family. Dirksen Derby Kickoff ParThis weekend, it's Dirksen ty, with SteaiHead and more; Derby time at Mt. Bachelor, 6-11 tonight; $5 suggested sen Derby kickoff party time! For the third year in a row,

the partywill lead into a weekend of snowboard racing on the mountain. Or maybe the

snowboard racing will follow a night of live music (by StealHead and special guests), a silent auction for broken snowboards turned into art, a raffle and food by Parrilla Grill and Primal Cuts Meat Market. (Up for auction is an electric guitar signed by longtime lead guitarist for The Eagles, Don Felder.) The whole thing — open to all ages — is a benefit for Tyler Eklund, the Bend snowboard-

Floater concert rescheduled ./

The Floater concert that was postponed on Dec. 6 due to in-

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clement weather has been rescheduled for next Friday, Dec. 20. The other details remain the same: It'll be at the Domino Room. Local rockers Jones

Road will open for the beloved Oregon hard-prog band. Showtime is 9 p.m., doors open

8 p.m. Tickets cost $15 plus fees in advance or $18 at the door.

er who was paralyzed from Tickets for the Dec. 6 show will the neck down after a fall at a be honored. national competition in 2007. More info, induding where Over the past three years, the

you can buy tickets, is at www

Dirksen Derby kickoff has

.randompresents.com.

Lino plap house

jazz, New Age and Latin There is a $10-$15 suggestsounds, among others, into ed donation to attend, and the concert ln Bend his lush s i x-string-scapes. money will go to the artists JoAn Mann will host her fi- You can dig deeper at www and a local charity. Be sure to nal house concert of 2013 Sun- .linomusic.com. RSVP via the contact info beday when local guitar wizard Also performing: Janelle low, not only because it's poLino performs as part of her and Lindsey Johnson, two sis- lite — this is someone's home, Music in The Glen at Newport tersfrom Sisterswh o areprod- after all — but also so that Hills series in Bend.

ucts of that school's Americana

JoAn knows much chicken

Lino is a dazzling dassical Project program, and who play tortilla soup to make! guitarist who i ncorporates winsome folk-pop music. Continued next page iI»" 'Qs I

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P E A K T QP E A K resta u r a n t

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musie

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 7

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet suy' 'e".

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Dec. 21 —DownNorth (funkrock),The Astro Lounge, Bend, www.p44p.biz. Dec. 27-28 —OregonPiano Summit(jazz),The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www.jazzattheoxford.com. Dec. 31 —Worth and Jeff Crosby(New Year's soundtrack),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Jan. 8 —Brothers and Sister (Americana),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Jan. 9 —The California Honeydrops(soul),Sisters High School, www.sistersfolkfestival. org. Jan.11 —David Jacobs-Strain (folk-blues),HarmonyHouse, Sisters, 541-548-2209. Jan. 17-18 —Arturo O'Farrill Afro-Latin Septet (jazz),The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www. jazzattheoxford.com. Jan. 22 —Sophistafunk (funk), The Astro Lounge, Bend, www. p44p.biz. Jan. 25 —Higstomp (bluespunk),The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com. Jan. 30 —The Devil Makes

Three (whiskeygrass),

Midtown Ballroom, Bend, www. randompresents.com.

From previous page Lino, with Janelle and Lindsey Johnson;7 p.m. Sunday, potluck at 6 p.m.; $10-$15 suggested donation; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 N.W. Stannium Drive, Bend; RSVP requested a t ho u s econcertsintheglenl bendbroadband.com or 541-480-8830.

63595 Hunnell Road, Suite 100 • 541-330-MEAT (6328) W WW.PONOFJLRN. C O N

Having Guests This Winter? Let's show them why you live here.

Rippin'Chicken visits the Dojo If you're like me, you've been driving around the west side of Bend for years thinking that Flaming Chicken at the 14th/

Galveston roundabout looks mighty lonely. Here is his/her chance to find true love: Tonight at the Dojo downtown, Seattle's Rippin' Chicken will strut into Bend for a

4 Nightly Starlight Snowshoe Tours +D aily Shoes, Brews S Views +H alf-day Snowshoe S Desert Cave Tours +B onfire on the Snow Events Dec. 23 S 26-30 @ Dec. 31 New Years Eve Grand B o n f i r e

night of fully charged funk. The best-known name in this band is

guitarist Ben Bloom, who also plays in Seattle vintage-funk kings Polyrhythmics. But Rippin' Chicken's MVP may be Delvon Laamar, the keyboardist whose old-soul organ work takes the group's deeply groovy mix of funk, soul and jazz to another lev-

el. You can hear that level at www.reverb nation.com/rippinchicken. And then you can hear 'em shift into yet

another gear tonight at Dojo. Just don't get in the Flaming Chicken's way if he/she is turning the dance floor into a mating dance floor. Rippin' Chicken;10 tonight; free; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; www.dojobend .com. — BenSalmon

Find Your DreamHome TheBulletin

www.wanderlu s t t o u r s .com

541-389-8359


PAGE 8 + GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at H bendbulletin.comlevents.

• VOLCANICHOSTS SONGCRAFTERS

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TODAY DOWNHILLRYDER: Americana;6 p.m .; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. HOBBSTHEBAND: Blues-rock; 6 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 6 p.m.; Wild Rose, 150 N.W.Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-382-0441. DIRKSENDERBY KICKOFF PARTY: W it h StealHead; benefits Tyler Eklund; $5 suggested donation; 6-11 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-598-4519. (Pg. 6) HOLIDAYCONCERT:Featuring Hawaiian musician Bill Keale; $20-$22, free for children 6 and younger, registration requested; 7 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-408-0561 or www.billkeale.com. (Pg. 3) JASON CHINCHEN: Americana; 7 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse,19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-728-0095. PATTHOMAS:Country; 7-10 p.m.; Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. RENO HOLLER:Pop; 7-10 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. FRIENDS OF LENNY: Rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. THE RIVERPIGS: Rock, blues and folk; 7:30 p.m.; Kelly D's, 1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. DANNY BARNES ANDMATT SIRCELY: Eclectic roots music, with Moon Mountain Ramblers; $10-$12; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters;

www.belfryevents.com. (Pg.4)

OPEN FORMAT FRIDAYS: WithDJ Majik; 8 p.m.; Seven Nightclub, 1033 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-760-9412. THE REPUTATIONS:Classicrock;8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. LIVECOMEDY: Joe Fontanot;$10;9 p.m.; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage,125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-749-2440 or www.bendcomedy.com. STRONGHOLD:Rockand blues;9-11 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com. RIPPIN' CHICKEN: Thefunk band performs; free; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or

www.dojobend.com.(Pg. 7)

ROBOLIQUIDPOP:DJs Lyfe, III Efekt, Rada and Ells; 10:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com.

SATURDAY THE12 BANDS OFCHRISTMAS: With Chris Beland, Redwood Son and several local bands; benefits Operation Elf Box; free; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; St. Clair Place, 920 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.

operationelfbox.com. (Pg.3)

HOLIDAY JAZZSHOW: With Lisa Dae, Lori Fletcher, Michelle Van Handel and an All-Star Jazz Band; benefits Cascade School of Music; $10, $25 VIP; $5 children12 and younger; 5-8 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889 or www. northsidebarfun.com. (Pg. 3) LIVEWIRE: Country/rock classics; 6-8 p.m.; Scanlon's, 61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend; 541-382-8769. PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 6 p.m.; Wild Rose, 150 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-382-0441.

TheVolcanicTheatre PubonBend'swestsidehas started a cool newmonthly series of shows. It's called Songcrafters, and essentially what you get is local artists playing their music andalso talking about their songs. I'd imagine the parameters for the latter — the talking part — are pretty broad: the stories behind the songs, the songwriting process, inspiration, self-effacing humor, etc. This month's edition happensWednesday andfeatures three busy local tunesmiths: Mark Quon(of The Quons and Parlour), Jason D.Schweitzer (of The Rumand The Sea) and RandBerke, pictured at left, a seasoned folk-pop songwriter with a sardonic point of view

A CHRISTMASTRIO:Joe Schulte and friends play holiday faves; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 N.W.Pence Lane,Bend;541-728-0703. PAT THOMAS:Country; 7-10 p.m.; Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. RENO HOLLER:Pop; 7-10 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. TERENCENEAL:Folk-pop; 7 p.m.; portello winecafe, 2754 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-385-1777. FRIENDS OF LENNY: Rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. STEVE POLTZ:Folk-pop; $20-$25; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. (Pg. 4) CANNEDFOODANDTOY DRIVE: With Open Defiance, The Hooligans, E.F.A., Oblivorous, Halo Haven and more; 8 p.m.; Big T's, 413 S.W.Glacier Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3864. THE REPUTATIONS:Classicrock;8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. HOUSEPARTYSATURDAYS:with DJ Majik; 9 p.m.; Seven Nightclub, 1033 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-760-9412. SAGITTARIUSSESSIONS:Funk, pop 'n' rock,withGabeJohnson,Keez,J Ballou and more; 10 p.m.;Dojo,852 N.W . Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091. ANDY FRASCO AND THE U.N.: Funk'n' more; 11 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116.

SUNDAY PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 3 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Co., 6 S.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-330-6061.

and a tendencytowardunconventionalsoundsand song structures. If you've ever met him, you know the guy will have noproblem talking about his art, and mean I thatinagoodway.Goseehim andthe other two guys. Details below.

• THE SAGITTARIUS SESSIONS AT DOJO Hey baby, what's your sign? Saturday night at Dojo, the answer is "Sagittarius," as abunch of local musicians will get together and jamunder the name The Sagittarius Sessions. Ontap: GabeJohnson, Keez, J Ballou andmembers of Elektrapod, 2nd HandSoldiers,Hobbs,Jaccuzi,ToneRedandmore. Details below.

HOUSE CONCERTSINTHE GLEN: Classical guitarist Lino, with Janelle and Lindsey Johnson; $10-$15, reservation requested; 7 p.m., 6 p.m. for potluck; The Glen at Newport Hills,1019 N.W. Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-480-8830 or

ja©prep-profiles.com. (Pg.6) STRINGTHEORY MUSIC STUDENT HOLIDAYRECITAL AND JAM: 7-9 p.m .; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 N.W.Pence Lane, Bend;541-728-0703.

— Ben Salmon

Hideaway Tavern, 939 S.E. Second St., Bend; 541-312-9898. SONGCRAFTERS:With Mark Quon, Rand Berke and Jason Schweitzer; $5; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com.

THURSDAY

BOBBY LINDSTROM AND EDSHARLET: Rockand blues;5-8 p.m.;Faith, MOMDAY Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 OPEN MIC:8 p.m .,signupsat7:30 p.m .; N.W. Lower Bridge Way,Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. LINDY GRAVELLE:Country and pop; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle TUESDAY Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. LISADAE AND THE ROBERT LEE TRIO: ACOUSTICOPENMIC/JAM WITH Jazz standards; 6 p.m.; Northside Bar DEREK MICHAELMARC: Rock and 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; blues; 6 p.m.; Cross Creek Cafe, 541-383-0889. 507 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; PAUL EDDY:Twang-pop; 6 p.m.; The 541-548-2883. Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W. PAUL EDDY:Twang-pop; 6-8 p.m.; Rat Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. Hole Brew Pub, 384 S.W. Upper Terrace CHRISTMASCONCERT:With the Bend Drive, Bend; 541-389-2739. Cello Collective and the Gospel Choir oftheCascades;donationsaccepted;7 LIVE COMEDY:Marc Yaffee; $10; 7 p.m.; p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680 Kayo's DinnerHouseandLounge, 415 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-390-2441 or N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520 or www.freewebs.com/bendgospel. www.bendcomedy.com. OPEN MIC:8 p.m.; Northside Bar & WEDNESDAY Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. NAOMI HOOLEY& ROB STROUP'S WINTER WONDERLAND TOUR: Holiday CLAIR CLARKE:Blues; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 folk-pop; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or St.FrancisSchool,700 N.W .Bond www.dojobend.com. St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. LADIESNIGHT WITH MC MYSTIC:9 mcmenamins.com.(Pg. 3) p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond OPEN MIC:7-9 p.m.; River Rim St., Bend; 541-388-0116. Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow • SUBMITAN EVENT by em ail ingevents© Drive, Bend; 541-728-0095. bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before PAUL EDDY:Twang-pop; 7 p.m.; The publication. Include date, venue, time and cost.


GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

musie reviews Spotlight:Britney Spears

Danielle Bradbery

urricane," or "Endless Sum- bear a credit by Jaren Johnston,

"DANIELLE BRADBERY" Big Machine Label Group o O f all th e critiques lobbied

a gainst music-competition rea lity shows — t hey're stilted,

mer," where she throws shade n t he path not chosen: "I could h a ve stayed in our hometown, m arried you and settled down w i th a picket fence/ Would have

they're unimaginative, they're h ad a couple kids by now." ineffective at finding stars — the A t best, this antiseptic and a rgument that they don't reveal e x t emely r competent album is much about their concountry by the numtestants has always gg f ' q b ers. Bradbery h a s been the least convincskipped right past the ing. Sometimes, record example of early Taylor labels grow young talSwift into choppier wapublic sight, but shows like "American Idol" Michelangelo Di Battista/ RCA Records

"BRITNEY JEAN" RCA Records

Such potholes dot "Britney Jean," which

t h e 3 2 -year-old

Like Wile E. Coyote realizing

Spears has described as her most too late that he's walked off a diff personal and open album yet. "Passenger" features Spears' and is standing on thin air, "Britney Jean," the new studio album voice so digitally overworked that from Britney Spears, is marked she doesn't sound like herself. with so many sleights of hand, "Body Ache" lazily pairs sex and dubious lyrics and bombastic but sweaty dancing with fifth-grader boringly simple melodies that the rhymes: "I know you feel my fire/ too-rare levitation of its better mo- Draw you into my flame/ Tonight ments seems an animawe take it higher/ What tion trick. I got ain't no game." Item one: "It Should It all adds up to a Be Easy," a song that drag, considering the practically wallows in its shimmering promise of own failure. Featuring the first track, "Alien." a cameo by the album's

Filled with cool UFO

executive pr o ducer, will.i.am, the track casts doubt on his utility, as evidenced by these lazy lines: "Love, it should be easy/ It shouldn't be complicated/ It should be easy." Deep insight, indeed, augmented with the rocky syllabic mess in the chorus' kicker:

sounds and vast-as-

"I don't know how or where else to

say it." Here's an idea: Rather than

the-cosmos echo, the

song introduces our heroine by acknowledging self-obsession in her past through a voice so coated in

electronic effects that it's rendered nearly pixilated. Whatever unique skills Spears once had — what were they again, anyway? - "Britney Jean" sug-

surrender and admit you don't know how to say it, follow the advice in "Work Bitch" and "work

gestsshe better prepare herselffor

hard, like it's your profession."

— Randall Roberts, Los Angeles Times

the reality that she's losing them fast.

a

a

" The X

F a ctor" a n d

"The Voice" show all the seams, all the pimples. Who you are for several weeks in front of a national audience is very likely who you'll be when you take a shot at yourrecordingcareer. No shock, then, that

~+

ONfR EIF GOLo

— JoeCaramanica, The New York Times

JakeOwen "DAYS OF GOLD"

Owen's capacity for open heartache, epitomized by the ballads on his previous album, like "The One That Got Away" and "Alone With You."

What are the keepers? For starters, "Life of the Party," a

solid new entry in the putting-

Life's a beach — an

endless blur of

You," another that contemplates

stirring the embers of a dead romance. "Thought I'd be fine to see you one more time," Owen

sings. "Yeah, right." — Nate Chinen, The New York Times

RCA Nashville

t h em,

really — on "Days of bum of Danielle BradGold," the fourth album bery, the prim winner by the affable country of the fourth season rogue Jake Owen. And of "The Voice" in June, arrives it's clear that we should have without a scratch on it. Bradbery seen this coming. Last year is 17 going on Faith Hill, singing around this time, Owen released with a precisely calibrated voice an EP, "Endless Summer," that without a hint of risk. On "The included a mildly suggestive Voice," she was reliable to a fault come-on ("Summer Jam") and with her Pam Tillis and Carrie a set of instructions ("Pass a Underwood covers: clean, crisp, Beer"). Dtrns out that was just dull. Her most memorable and the warm-up. credible performance was ofJesOwen, 32, grew up in Vero sica Andrews' statement of fa- Beach, Fla., so this is his native milial pride "Who I Am," which habitat. Some of the songs on made sense: It's a young wom- "Days of Gold," notably the suman's empowerment anthem. mer-bliss title track, hail surf and Given that, it's odd that the am- sand as a beau ideal, a state of ple songwriting talent assembled mind. Elsewhere, things get a lot for this album — Sarah Buxton, more literal: "Beachin'," with its Josh Kear, Gordie Sampson and dismal, rapped verses and raiseothers— mostly give her songs your-cup chorus. about cutting loose: "Wild Boy," Strikingly, Owen had no hand about someone who "takes you in writing any of these songs: on a ride like a paper airplane in About half the album's tracks

OIFTCARDS AVAILASLE!

Their best efforts home in on

words, she's exactly as Nobody)," which feels like a she was on "The Voice." worthy sequel to "Alone With

the self-titled debut al-

a

of first-call Nashville songwriters like Dallas Davidson, Ashley Gorley and Shane McAnally.

ters that her voice, and on-a-good-face subcategory of her mien, don't com- heartbroken country songs, and municate. Or in other "One Little Kiss (Never Killed

ent in petri dishes out of

Britney Spears released her eighth album, "Britney Jean," on Dec.3.

and others bear the fingerprints

a

Glen Hansard "DRIVE ALL NIGHT" ANTI- Records Trying to out-earnest Bruce Springsteen on one of his most

earnest songs, "Drive All Night," isn't easy, but veteran Irish sing-

er-songwriter Glen H ansard manages it with help from Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder and Springsteen's sax man Jake Clemons. Many know Hansard from his work in the 2006 movie "Once,"

and removed from his former partner Marketa Irglova, he skews serious and heavy-handed. But all four of the songs on this EP aren't bad: "Pennies in

the Fountain" uses fingerpicking to advance its folkie loneliness, and the a cappella "Standing In the Shadows" has a change-isgonna-come heft. A portion of the "Drive All

Night" sales go to music-education nonprofit Little Kids Rock. — Steve Knopper, Newsday

a

a

NE W RELEASES 4 SOWN T O WN BENS SPE C IAL ORSERI FOR OIR 1 7 YEARS!


PAGE 10 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

rinks heads up • It's beginning to look a lot like Christmas,so maybe theseoptions will easeyourfretting

At the dreweries

• •

•r

I

••I •

• •

By Megan Kehoe

a

The Bulletin

t

I

n case you were wondering, you're down to 12 days. T hat's r i ght .

s

L ess t h an s •

two weeks to get those presents wrapped and under the tree. But if you're struggling to come up with gift ideas for the beer enthusiast in your life, take a breath-

I •

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gs

er. There are plenty of beer-relats

ed trinkets to be found locally at the last minute (you know, other

rI

than beer itself, which never goes

out of style.) So whetheryou're looking for

stocking stuffers to r ound out

your shopping list, or more substantial gifts, these beer-related

items are sure to please.

r

y

lr

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W For the pub foodie fiend What: IPA Sweet Fire Mustard

How much: $8.95 Where to find: Navidi's Olive Oils and Vinegars in Bend This India Pale A l e-infused

mustard is like bringing the pub

(~Q)

home in a jar. Perfect slathered on a sandwich, this IPA mustard has

a spicy disposition that just begs to be quenched by a hoppy beer.

carrier made by a company out of San Francisco will say even more.

beer in their life 24I7

A sophisticated option to the typi-

What: LeCol's Soap Bar's Bone-

($10)

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

For the beer lover in your life, consider gifts including, clockwise from bottom left, soap made with beer, beer shampoo, IPA-infused mustard or a T-shirt listing Bend's many breweries.

Where to find: Tres Jolie in Bend A couple of great stocking stuffers for someone who loves beer supposedly add body and beer so much, they want to bathe shine to hair as welL

ing their allegiance to just one of CentralOregon's breweries.And

in it. LeCol's Soap Bar's Bone-

while the list of breweries is ever

yard Beer line comes in a variety of "flavors," including Oatmeal Stout, Diablo Rojo and Double

> For your out-of-towner friend who dreams of getting back to Beertown, USA

growing, one day, this gift receiver can say that they were hip to the High Desert's craft scene when

What: Brewery shirt

How much: $20.95

there were only 20-something breweries in the area.

to know that hops not only add

Where to find: Cascade Cottons in Bend

W For the sophisticated

This shirt says it all for the friend who has difficulty giv-

What: Wood Thumb's wood six-

ritated skin. The amino acids in

cally flimsy cardboard carrier.

W For the beer enthusiast onthe go What: Hydro Flask growler How much: $49.99

Hoppiness. And your friend will be happy a pleasant bitterness to beer, but they also supposedly soothe ir-

pack carrier How much: $46 Whereto find: Lone Crow Bungalow The kind of beer a person brings to a party says a lot about them, but this sleek wood six-pack

W For the friend who wants yard Beer Double Hoppiness soap ($5); Sudz Citrus Beer Shampoo

Looking for other beer specific gifts? Local breweries have plenty of merchandise available through their online stores. Here's a list of brewery sites heavy on gift items. Crux Fermentation Project: shop.cruxfermentation.com/ Boneyard Beer: www .boneyardbeer.com/boneyard beer/SHOP.html Guudlifu Brewing Cu.: store .goodlifebrewing.com Worthy Brewing Cu.: www .worthybrewing.com/swag.html Duschutes Brewery: store. deschutesbrewery.com Bend Brewing Cu.: www.bend brewingco.com/shop/default .aspx McMeuumins Brewery: www .shopmcmenamins.com Merchandise from most other Central Oregon breweries, such as10 Barrel Brewing Co.and Silver Moon Brewing, can be purchased at the brewpub's location.

party-goer

Where to find: Visit www.hydro

flask.com/stores for a full list. Designed specifically to keep beer carbonated, the 64-ounce Hydro Flask growler is a must-have for the serious growler drinker. And, on the off chance your friend likes to enjoy drinks other than beer,such as coffee or lemonade,

the growler works just as well. — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mhehoe@bendbulletirt.com

Courtesy Crux Fermentation Project

Banished series bottles from Crux Fermentation Project.

FootZone to host happy hour Saturday FootZone (842N.W.Wall St., Bend) is hosting ahappy hourfrom 4-6 p.m. Saturday to celebrate the end of theUSATrack & Field National ClubCrossCountry Championships, being held inBend. The happy hour is free andopen to everyone, including both racers and spectators. Reservations are not required, but they are encouraged.Youcan RSVP at www.footzonebend.com.

Bottle release party Saturday at Crux Crux Fermentation Project plans its second Bottle Release Partyfrom9to11 a.m. Saturday at its tasting room (50 S.W.Division St., Bend). Coffee, breakfast, "beer-titos" and music by Michael Lewis Martinez will be onhand. Bottles of three newly-released beers in the Banishedseries will available for purchase: Freakcaku Barrel-Aged Dud Bruin Alu — aged in bourbon barrels, with figs, dates, cranberries and other dried fruits added. Duublucruss Dark Belgian Alu — aged in pinot barrels for complex flavors of dried fruit, vanilla and sherry. Half Hitch Imperial Mosaic IPA — Flavors ofguava,mango,stone fruit and lemon might unravel your idea of what an Imperial IPA should be, says the brewery. These Banishedseries beers are hidden awayfor months in oak barrels, allowing flavors to mature, meld and mellow, according to the brewery. Some of themalso contain live yeast, making themgood candidates for cellaring at home. The party will also include a second release ofTough LoveBarrel-Aged Imperial Stout. — Bulletin staff


drinks

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

on the scene

what's happening?

The new world of 'beertails' eer cocktails are not a novel idea. B Hipsters in Portland have been pushing PBRmartinis for more than a decade, and in some parts of the Midwest, a red beer is considered fancy drinking. But for the most part, beer cocktails tend to be a letdown. Like a tribute album made up of your favorite bands, beertails look great on paper but never live up to their potential. Instead of basking in a great underground find, you end up regretting not just buying the original White Album or Obsidian on nitro. Until now. Celebrating the holiday season — and an expanded liquor licenseSilver Moon Brewing & Taproomis offering up a rum and pumpkin beer drink affectionately called the OneEyed Pumpkin. Using their Twisted

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1

GourdPumpkinAleasabase, bartenders/mad scientists at Silver Moon add spicedrum from Bend's Oregon Spirit Distillers, brown sugar and maple syrup to create an epic end-of-the day drink. Served in a snifter glass, the $7 wunderdrink may be the first of many htt-all-local beertails from the longtime Bend brewery, which has been revamping just about everything but its name since new owners Matt Barrett and James Watts took over this past summer. (The $10 Burger and a Pint Night onWe dnesdays rocksandthe Christmas gift card beer label on their winter seasonal is brilliant.) The brewpub is experimenting Submitted photo with other beer+ spirits = goodness The One-EyedPumpkin cocktail concoctions, so keep aneye out for uses Twisted Gourd Pumpkin Ale more outside-the-pint-glass ideas. with a touch of spiced rum, maple — Beau Eastes syrup and brownsugar.

IIIOW ~

TODAY WINE TASTING:Featuring five to six wines of both white and red varietals; $1 each; 3-6 p.m.; Silver Leaf Cafe (Eagle Crest), 7535 Falcon Crest Dr., Suite 300, Redmond; 541-604-0446.

STOUT RELEASE: The bourbon barrel-aged Darkside Stout is released; 6 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com. SATURDAY CENTRAL OREGON WINTER BEER FESTIVAL: Featuring winter ales from more than15 local breweries; $10, includes glass and tasting tokens; 2-8 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-728-0749 or www. goodlifebrewing.com. BEERTASTING:Featuring 10 barrel-aged and hand-picked beers

poured over three hours; $20; 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Platypus Pub, 1203 N.E. Third St. (downstairs), Bend; 559-860-9998. WEDNESDAY RED CHAIRCELEBRATION: Featuring the multiple awardwinning Red Chair Northwest Pale Ale, special culinary delights, photos with Santa, swag and more; free; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery 8 Public House,1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-9242 or www. deschutesbrewery.com. THURSDAY

BEER TASTING:Featuring ales and lagers from the Sierra Nevada Brewing Co.; free; 5-7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541728-0703 or www.btbsbend.com. • SUBMIT ANEVENTby emalling drinks@ bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-3830377.

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pour over all the latest brew news at www.bendbulletinecom/drinks


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arts

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

'Les Miz' production seeks male actors

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13

From previous page As a result, however, peo-

ple in Bach's time viewed his music "as a bit old-fashioned

Organizers behind the September 2014 production of "Les Miserables" will hold au-

ditions for male singers Mon-

and just a little bit too heavy and thick." In other w o r ds, B a ch

day at the Pinckney Center for the Arts at Central Oregon

may have had something to prove.

Community College.

"It may be that when he started the job he was very

The production team is look-

ingformen who areBroadway/ opera-style singer-actors. Appointments for auditions can

be made by emailing shore thingprods®gmail.com. For more details on the audi-

tions and production, contact www.shorethingproductions

Submitted photo

Members of the Central Oregon Youth Orchestra practice earlier this season. The orchestra will perform its fall concert Saturday evening at Bend High School.

.com or 541-526-0233.

by Dvorak and Beethoven, as well as themes from the "Harry Potter" films, along with performances by the Phoenix Readers of GO! Magazine String Quartet and guest stuare probably familiar with dents from the Cascade School Red Chair Gallery and High of Music. Desert Art Gallery, two artAdmission is $5 at the door. ist-run galleries in Bend. A Contact: www.central similar business model is also oregonyouthorchestra.org. going on down south at Artists Gallery Sunriver, collectively Bach'n Brew concert run by 30 artists working in a partners with HDM variety of mediums, including glass, sculpture, photography, For the 2013 Bach 'n Brew painting, fiber and wood. Christmas Concert, Sunriver From 4-7 p.m. Saturday, the Music Festival is partnering gallery will hold its monthly with H igh D esert M useum Second Saturday art recep- (59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, tion, with wine and food and Bend) to feature classical rock new works from the artists. violinist Aaron Meyer and guiArtists Gallery Sunriver is tarist Tim Ellis and their fourlocated at 51700 Beaver Drive, piece band. Building No. 19, in the SunrivThe museum will open er Village. its doors at 5 t onight for Contact: artistgallery ticketholders, with the concert sunriver@gmail.com, ww w set to start at 6:30 p.m. Beer .artistsgallerysunriver.com or will be provided by the Sunri541-593-4382. ver Brewing Company. Tickets are $35, $30 for COYOconcertfeatures members of either the Sunriv'Harry Potter'themes er Music Festival or the High

Second Saturdayset at Sunriver gallery

motivated to prove himself," said Thompson. "The most extraordinary creative peri-

"(Bach is) the one

and the one we're doing. It's

just a brilliant piece." There will be 10 featured

that pretty much

sums up everything

soloists in the concert, and

"Magnificat" features five of them — Trish Sewell,

that had happened

in Western music up

Katy Hays, Melissa Carter,

to that point, pulled

Christian Clark and Danny

it all together and broughtit to a new

Brown. A 24-piece orchestra

level."

two other pieces on the con-

cert program. The program also fea-

— Clyde Thompson, director

tures Mannheim Steamroll-

er's arrangement of "Deck

Bach would remain on the cantatas, which "served as the Halls," with Scott Mijob for 27 years, but in those weekly musical sermons," chaelsen and Ben Larson as first two y ears he w r ote Thompson said. soloists on keyboards. " That's more than o n e about 120 cantatas. Michaelsen, who did muThe baroque cantata was cantata a week, which is just sical direction for "Spamaa m u l ti-movement w o r k phenomenal," he said. "He lot" this fall, also wrote an written for singers accom- wrote a cantata for every arrangement of "We Three panied b y in s truments, Sunday and every special Kings" that Thompson inThompson explained. "(It's) feast day." cluded on the program.

portant form of vocal music during the baroque period, especially because of Bach's output." Bach also wrote a handful

of secular cantatas, but he was very focused on church

In 1733, Bach

— Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com

r e vised

"Magnificat" from its original form — E-flat major-

a half-step to the key of D, "which is a more brilliant, kind of a celebratory key," Thompson said. "That's the one that's mostly done now,

Food. Home & Garden In

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Desert Museum. Youth 18 and

Central Oregon Youth Or-

chestra will be in performance at 7 p.m. Saturday at Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.

younger get in for $10. www.sunrivermusic.org.

The concert will feature works

G IFT PACKS FOR GOURM ET S

— David Jasper

Gourmet Salt Collection • Chili! Chile! Curry Collection • Best ofBaking 8r more!

Chops 5 Bones BBQ • Wranglin' Rubs Seafood Lovers• Best ofBBQ & more!

LO lN < j~e

Szecl~uan l lunali• Cantonese Cuisine

www.reddragonchineserestaurant.t om

local AAA office with the...

Aohday %'armt6 'Drive for the ShephesttI's House We are coliecting the

followingitems: Coats • Jackets Rain Gear Boots• Shoes Socks • Mittens Gloves • Hats Scarves • Tents Sleeping Bags St Backpacks For the remainder of Z013, I will pa an additional $50." to you, or make a donation to the Shepherd's House, for every referral I receive that purchases a new or used car.

The Hot Pack 4 Fabulous Hot Sauces

Ortfagon Auta!Iobrts

Bob Hoffman

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Cannot be combined with specials, Chef recommended,wonton soup,orangechicken,blackpepperbeef

61247 S. Hwy 97• Bend • Next to Bend Walmart

Hot Chocoiates • Salt Bricks • Cocoa Powderss Microplanes, Spiceware & Local Offerings

4 Big12 fl zoBB Q Blends

'1~ OFF LullCll of $6.50 or more s1" OFF Dinner of $9.95 or more

Dine In, Take Out ~ 541-389-9888

STOCKING STUFFERS 8KGIFTS

The Big 4 Gift Pack

Help us sttpport our

AN EASIER llFAY TO B A CAR!

GIFT PACKS FOR GRILLMASTERS

C(10leSe P>eSt clLri cll1f 8

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Thank Ytnt for your past and continued suPPort.

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Contact: 541- 5 93-9310, tickets@sunrivermusic.org or

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arts

PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE

HOP N BEANPIZZERIA: Featuring landscape art by Larry Goodman; 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; 541-719-1295. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAULDESIGNS: Featuring

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ART ADVENTUREGALLERY: "Water and Wood" featuring watercolors by Sharon Bean and woodworking by John Scheideman; through December; 185 S.E. Fifth St., Madras: 541-475-7701. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring the artwork of 30 local artists; reception 4-7 p.m. Saturday; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19; www. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. THE ART OFALFREDA. DOLEZAL:Featuring oil paintings by the Austrian artist; Eagle Crest Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond; 434-989-3510 or www. alfreddolezal.com. ATELIER 6000:Featuring "Darkness Into Light," an exhibit exploring mythology, ritual and astronomy associated with the winter solstice; reception 10 a.m.2 p.m. Saturday; through January; 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite 120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. BEND CITY HALL:"Reflections on Mirror Pond — Past, Present, Future," featuring multimedia artwork; through early March; 710 N.W. Wall St.; 541-388-5505 or

rchristie©bendoregon.gov.

CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito;1024 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYON CREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or 541-549-0366. CIRCLE OFFRIENDS ART & ACADEMY:Featuring mixed media, furniture, jewelry and more; 19889 Eighth St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. DON TERRAARTWORKS: Featuring more than 200 artists; 222 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-

custom jewelry and signature series with unique pieces; 1006 N.W. Bond St., Bend;

www.johnpauldesigns.com or

Submitted photo

"Who Broke Who," by Faye Taylor, is showing at St. Charles Redmond through

Dec. 31. Taylor is a cowboyartist who began her career as a fashion illustrator In California. 549-1299 or www.donterra.com. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring "Gratitude," a themed exhibit in various wallhanging media; through March 3; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-9846. FRANKLINCROSSING: "Beyond the Demos: Oregon Artists Who Teach," the Oregon Art Education Association's eighth annual exhibition; through Dec. 29; 550 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-383-7511. GHIGLIERI GALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. THE GREATFRAME UP: Featuring prints and framed artworks by Jennifer Lakes; through December; 61535 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-383-2676.

541-318-5645. JUDI'SART GALLERY: Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson; 336 N.E. Hemlock St., Suite 13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. KAREN BANDYDESIGN JEWELER:"Field Guide" exhibition and custom jewelry by Karen Bandy; through December; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155. LA MAGIE BAKERY &CAFE: Featuring landscape watercolors by Patricia W. Porter; through December; 945 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-241-7884. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend;www.lubbesmeyerstudio. com or 541-330-0840. MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY:"Four

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

ONE STREETDOWNCAFE: Featuring "A Little Bit of Christmas" by L. Carol Picknell; through December; 124 S.W. Seventh St., Redmond; 541-647-2341. THE OXFORDHOTEL: Featuring fine art prints by Ann Bullwinkel; through Dec. 28; 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. PATAGONIA O BEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 N.W. Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring a spotlight on Russian art; through December; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.paulscottfineart.com or 541-330-6000. PRONGHORN CLUBHOUSE: Featuring the "48th Annual Transparent Watercolor Traveling Exhibition" by the Watercolor Society of Oregon; through Jan. 27; 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend; 541-693-5300. RED CHAIR GALLERY:"A Few of My Favorite Things," featuring gallery artists; through December; 103 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend;

www.redchairgallerybend.com or

541-306-3176. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: "Winter Exhibition 2013," works by local two- and threedimensional artists from Central Oregon, through Dec. 27; "A Tapestry of Wilderness and Landscape," photography by Cory O'Neill in the silent reading room, through January; 827 S.W. Seasons," featuring oil paintings Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. by Troy Collins and Bart Walker; through December; 869 N.W. Wall SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING AND GALLERY:Featuring mixed media St., Bend; www.mockingbirdgallery.com or 541-388-2107. by Ron Raasch; through January; 834 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; MOSAIC MEDICAL:Featuring 541-382-5884. mixed-media collage paintings by Rosalyn Kliot; 910 S. U.S. SISTERS AREACHAMBEROF Highway 97, Suite 101, Madras; COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by 541-475-7800. Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 541-549-0251. MUSEUM ATWARM SPRINGS: Featuring the annual tribal member SISTERS GALLERY &FRAME SHOP:Featuring landscape art exhibit with a variety of art, bead work, weavings and silver photography by Gary jewelry; through Jan. 5; 2189 U.S. Albertson; 252 W. Hood Ave.; Highway 26, Warm Springs; www. www.garyalbertson.com or 541-549-9552. museumatwarmsprings.org or 541-553-3331. SISTERS PUBLIC LIBRARY: Featuring paintings of horses by Kimry Jelen in the community the arf of room and "Rusting Nostalgic,"

Alfred A. Dolezal Featvring eclectic art from Austrian artist, Alfred Dolezal - much more than a painting!

Eagle Crest Resort Village Square 7525 Falcon Crest Drive

suite 100 Redmond, Oregon 434-989-3510 www.alfreddolezal.com

photography by Lynn Woodward, in the computer room; through December; 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070. ST. CHARLESBEND: Featuring "Interpretations: Working in a series," and feature works by the High Desert Art League; through Dec. 31; 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321. ST. CHARLESREDMOND: Featuring paintings by cowboy artist Faye Taylor; through Dec. 31;1253 N.W. Canal Boulevard; 541-548-8131. SUNRIVER AREAPUBLIC LIBRARY:"Jewels of Nature," featuring the work of photographer Michael Jensen and jewelry artist Teresa Bowerman; through January; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVER LODGEBETTY GRAY GALLERY:Featuring collage worksand mixed media by Marjorie Wood Hamlin in the upper gallery and oil landscapes by Joanne Donaca and Janice Druian in the lower gallery; through Jan. 5; 17600 Center Drive; 541-382-9398. TBD AGENCYGALLERY:"Snow Wild," featuring an eclectic mix of artwork with a wilderness theme from local and regional artists; through December; 1000 N.W. WallSt.,Bend;858-668-8999. TOWNSHEND'S BEND TEAHOUSE:Featuring woodwork by lan Herdell and Laura Childers; through December; 835 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-312-2001 or www. townshendstea.com. TUMALO ARTCO.: "Winter Salon," featuring small fine artworks by gallery artists; through December; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO ANDGALLERY: Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculpture and more; 222 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www.vistabonitaglass.com. WERNER HOME STUDIO& GALLERY:Featuring painting, sculpture and more by Jerry Werner and other regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541815-9800 for directions.

Find YourDream Home InReal Estate •

TheBulletin


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

holi ay azaars C HMST34AS TREE I AX E TODAY

December 2nd — 22nd Open Daily 9AM — 5PM

EVERGREEN CHRISTMASBOUTIQUE: Featuring handcrafted items, daily raffles, silent auction, coloring contest and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Square, 54538 U.S. Highway 97; 541-536-2170. THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local handcrafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967.

Visit Santa 8E, Complimentary Face Painting llam - 3pm on Dec. 7,14, 15, tS E,21

Dec. 7, 14, 15 & 21 ONLY • Hay Rides • Pony Rides • PettingZOO• DD Dirt Express • Kids Corral filled withslides, rope swings, and lots of room for kids to run • Hamburgers, Cheeseburgers and More (Cafe Open 1 1 am-3 pm)

SATURDAY CHRISTMAS BAZAAR:Featuring jewelry, beads, metal art, bread, wood crafts and more; concessions on site; free admission; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Crescent Community Center, 420 Crescent Cut-off Road; 541-815-5085. LITTLEHELPERS ONE STOP SHOPPING: Shop a large variety of home-based business vendors as well as handcrafters; free admission; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Historic New Redmond Hotel, 521 S.W. Sixth St.; 541-977-5880. CRAFT-0 HOLIDAYBAZAAR: Featuring arts and crafts from local artists; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; The Old Ironworks Arts District, 50 S.E. Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/IronHolBaz. EVERGREEN CHRISTMAS BOUTIQUE: Featuring handcrafted items, daily raffles, silent auction, coloring contest and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Square, 54538 U.S. Highway 97; 541-536-2170. POWELL BUTTEART SHOW AND SALE: Featuring jewelry, paintings, wearable art, pottery, pillows, felted and knitted items, cards, holiday decorations and other hand-crafted items; food will be available

for purchase; freeadmission; 10a.m.-4 p.m.; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 S.W. Reif Road; 541-419-9253. THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local handcrafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967. WARM SPRINGS CHRISTMAS BAZAAR: Featuring beaded items, jewelry, baked goods and more; free admission; 10 a.m.4 p.m.; Warm Springs Community Center, 2200 Hollywood Blvd.; 541-553-3243. HOLIDAYVILLAGE MARKET: Featuring crafters, artists and nonprofit organizations; free admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street

and EvergreenAvenue,Redmond; 541-923-5191.

SUMDAY CHRISTMASBAZAAR:Featuring jewelry, beads, metal art, bread, wood crafts and more; concessions on site; free admission;

.

(A Great Selection of Noble Firs1

Grass Finished Beef, Natural Pork, Local Honey, Wreaths, Garlands 8E Hand-MadeCrafts by local Artisans available in our Country Store.

DD

Raraeh Raising Healthy Stock To Feed Healthy FamiTies

www.ddranch.net S41-S48-1422

3836 NE Smith Rock Way Terrebone, Oregon

Thinkstock

Sudmityourdazaar This is a list of bazaars submitted to The Bulletin. It will publish weekly in GO!Magazinethrough the holiday season. To submit a bazaar that does not already appear, sendinformation to communitylife©bendbulletin. com or mail it to TheBulletin, Holiday Bazaars, RO.Box6020, Bend, OR97708. Information must be received nolater than a week before eachFriday's list. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Crescent Community Center, 420 Crescent Cut-off Road; 541-815-5085. THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local handcrafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967. CRAFT-0 HOLIDAYBAZAAR:Featuring arts and crafts from local artists; free admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Old Ironworks Arts District, 50 S.E. Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/IronHolBaz.

MOMDAY THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local hand-

crafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967.

TUESDAY THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local handcrafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967.

WEDMESDAY THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local handcrafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967.

THURSDAY

uwuaze z' Me Away! pedicure • Milk Bath Soak

• Sweet Cream Sugar Scrub • Caramel Shea Butter Lotion

THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local handcrafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967.

DEC. 20-22 THREE SISTERSLIONS CLUB HOLIDAY FAIRE:Featuring items by local handcrafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967.

W Gift Certificates Available!

g ive in. . . OPEN7DAYsAwEEKQ©

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PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE

TODAY I'LL BEHOMEFORCHRISTMAS: Atour of three homes with different themes; proceeds benefit the Bend Heroes Foundation and the Williams Foundation; $5;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; private residence, 21165 Clairaway Ave., Bend; 541-318-6134

or cbessary©aol.com. SANTALAND ATTHE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Take a photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CHRISTMASKAYAKERSFLOAT: Kayaks and canoes decorated with lights paddle around a loop; free; 3:30 p.m. participants gather, 4 p.m. float; Tumalo CreekKayak & Canoe, 805 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; 541-317-9407 or www.tumalocreek. com. ANTIQUEWALK:Redmond's antique district is open late, with food, wine, music and more; free admission; 6-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-526-1161. DIRKSENDERBYKICKOFFPARTY: Featuring live music, an art auction, a raffle and more; proceeds benefit Tyler Eklund; $5 suggested donation; 6-11 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541-598-4519. (Story, Page6) "DOWNTON ABBEY" PARTY: Featuring trivia, costume and teacup contests with refreshments; free; 6:30 p.m.; Barnes & NobleBooksellers,2690 E.U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242. BACH N' BREW CHRISTMAS CONCERT: Rock violinist Aaron Meyer performs with his four-piece band; beverages provided by Sunriver Brewing Co.; $35 for

THE BULLETIN• FRIDP

Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. "EVILDEAD THE MUSICAL (DEAD FOR THE HELLIDAYS)":Join Ash and his friends for a trip to a cabin in the woods where they accidentally unleash anevil force; $22 for adults, $19 for students and seniors, $25 for the splatter zone; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. DANNY BARNESANDMATT SIRCELY:

The innovativeAmericanamusicians

perform, with Moon Mountain Ramblers; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or

www.belfryevents.com.(Story, Page4) "THELION,THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE":The Redmond High School drama department presents its winter play; $8,$5forstudents;8:30 p.m .;Redmond High School, 675 S.W.Rimrock Way; 541923-4800 or www.rhs.redmond.k12.or.us. RIPPIN' CHICKEN: Thefunkband performs; free; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091 or www.

dojobend.com.(Story, Page7)

SATURDAY Dec. 14

"THE METROPOLITANOPERA: FALSTAFF":Starring Ambrogio Maestri as the blustery Sir John Falstaff in the Verdi opera; performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. (Story, Page28) BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND nonmembers,$30for members, $10for SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and 18 and younger; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 5 crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's p.m. for special viewing of indoor exhibits; activities, music and more; free admission; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor SwapMeet, Highway 97, Bend; 541-593-9310 or www. 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. sunrivermusic.org. (Story, Page 13) I'LL BE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS: 10 a.m.HOLIDAYCONCERT:Holiday songsby 4 p.m. at a private residence in Bend;see local Hawaiian musician Bill Keale; $20, Today's listing for details. $22 at the door, free for children 6 and SENSATIONALSATURDAY: HOLIDAY younger, registration requested; 7 p.m., TRADITIONS:Discover the multicultural doorsopen 6 p.m.;The Old Stone,157 holiday traditions celebrated throughout the N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-408-0561 or West; included in the price of admission; www.billkeale.com. (Story, Page3) $12adults, $10ages65andolder, $7ages "THE BISHOP'SWIFE": A screening of 5-12, free ages 4andyounger; 10 a.m.-1 the1947 Cary Grant film (not rated), with p.m.; High DesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. refreshments; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or www. Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 S.E. highdesermuseum.org. t E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld. CENTRAL OREGONTOYRUN: Adrive to org. collect toys, food and money, with a bike "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": A parade through downtown Bend, raffles, performance of the one-man one-act play seasonal music,kids'games,barbecue based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $10 plus and more; after-party at Northside Bar fees in advance, $10 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; and Grill at 5 p.m.; proceeds benefit

children in Central Oregon; donation of new unwrapped toy requested; 11a.m.-4 p.m.; Wildhorse Harley-Davidson, 63028 Sherman Road, Bend; 541-280-0478 or

I•

centraloregontoyrun©gmail.com.

CHRISTMASTREELANE: Visit Santa and shop for a Christmas tree, with complimentary face painting, hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo andmore; free admission;11 a.m.-3 p.m.;DD Ranch,3836 N.E. Smith RockWay,Terrebonne; 541-5481432 or www.ddranch.net. FATHERCHRISTMAS VISITSTHE HIGH DESERT MUSEUM:Chid lren can meet Father Christmas anddecorate sugar cookies in the Hall of Exploration and Settlement; $1 for cookies and cider;11 a.m.-3 p.m.;High DesertM useum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend;541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. HOLIDAYVILLAGEMARKET:Featuring crafters, artists and nonprofit organizations; free admission; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Streetand EvergreenAvenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191. SANTA AT NOLANTOWNCENTER:Take a photo with Santa, enjoy a cookie and meetsome furryfriends; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center; free, donations accepted; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; NolanTown Center, 2116 Highland Avenue,Redmond; 541-923-0882. SANTALAND ATTHE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Take a photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy andmore; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. THE12 BANDSOFCHRISTMAS: A Christmas party with Santa, raffle and prizes, free hot cocoa andcider for children, local live music and more; proceeds benefit Operation Elf Box; free; 11a.m.-11 p.m.; St. Clair Place, 920 N.W.Bond St., Bend; www. operationelfbox.com. (Story, Page3) "THELION,THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE": TheRedmond High School drama department presents its winter play; $8,$5forstudents;2and 7p.m .;Redmond High School, 675 S.W.Rimrock Way; 541923-4800 or www.rhs.redmond.k12.or.us. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben &Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. COMMUNITY HOLIDAY PARTY: Free photos with Santa, live music and

performances,local foodandbeverage vendors and more; Goodwill will be accepting donations; free admission; 3-6 p.m.; C.E.Lovejoy's Brookswood Market,

TODAY-SUNDAY "Evil Deadthe Musical": A different kind of red for the holidays.

SATURDAY Steve Poltz:Ask for the story behind the Jewel hit "YouWereMeant for Me"!

SATURDAY & SUNDAY Masterslngers concert:A high note for the holidays at theTower.

TUESDAY Christmas concert:Cellos and gospel at First United Methodist Church.

THURSDAY "It's Not Aboutthe Gun":A bang-up lecture at the HighDesert Museum.

19530Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541388-1188 or www.celovejoys.com. HOLIDAY JAZZ SHOW:A family-friendly show featuring Lisa Dae,Lori Fletcher, Michelle VanHandel and anAll-Star Jazz Band, with a raffle; proceeds benefit Cascade School of Music; $10, $25 VIP; $5 children12 and younger; 5-8 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 BoydAcres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889 or www. northsidebarfun.com. (Story, Page3) BRADY'S LOVE: Featuring live music and a silentauction; proceeds benefit Braydon

Dunn's medicaltreatment costs; $7,$4

for children; 6-9 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E.Fifth St.; 541-419-4204. WESTERNMOVIENIGHT:View a classic western and learn about guns from Margaret Lee in the "Frontier Firearms" exhibit; cash bar; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers, reservation requested; 6

p.m.; High DesertM useum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend;541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. BEND COMMUNITYCONTRADANCE: Featuring caller Ron Bell-Roemer andmusic by the High Country DanceBand; $8 atthe door; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall St.; 541-330-8943 or www. bendcontradance.org. CENTRAL OREGONYOUTH ORCHESTRA FALLCONCERT:Featuring the Phoenix String Quartet, guest students from the CascadeSchoolofMusicand more;$5; 7 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; BendHigh School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; 541-556-6335 or www.centraloregonyouthorchestra.org.

(Story, Page13) "A BAROQUE CHRISTMAS": The Central Oregon Mastersingers perform a holiday concert; $18 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7

IY, DECEMBER 13, 2013

accepted; noon-4 p.m.; Nolan Town Center, 2116 Highland Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-0882. "A BAROQUE CHRISTMAS": TheCentral Oregon Mastersingers perform aholiday concert; $18 plusfees; 2p.m., doors open at1 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 orwww.towertheatre.org. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOL D MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben &Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. "EVILDEAD THE MUSICAL (DEAD FOR THE HELLIDAYS)":Join Ash and his friends for a trip to a cabin in the woods where they accidentally unleash anevil force; $22 for adults, $19 for students and seniors, $25 for the splatter zone; 4 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. CANDLELIGHTBAROQUE CONCERT:The Summit High School ChamberOrchestra performs; free; 7 p.m.; GraceFirst Lutheran Church, 2265 Shevlin Park Road,Bend; 541-355-4186.

MONDAY Dec. 16

openat6:30 p.m .;TowerTheatre,835 N.W . Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. (Story, Page12) "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": A

p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E.Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com.

Rafter J Ranch, 6595093 St., Bend; 541777-9615 or kami.tdperformancehorses©

(Story, Page 4)

gmail.com.

performanceof the one-manone-act play

SUNDAY

based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $10 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. "EVILDEAD THE MUSICAL (DEAD FOR THE HELLIDAYS)":Join Ash and his friends for a trip to a cabin in the woods where they accidentally unleash anevil force; $22 for adults, $19 for students and seniors, $25 for the splatter zone; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E.Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. STEVEPOLTZ:The Southern California folk singer performs; $20 plus fees inadvance, $25 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at7

Dec. 15 LEGO LEAGUEROBOTICS TOURNAMENT: Watch teams of students ages 9-14 compete with LEGO robots; free; 9:30a.m.1:30 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-788-3564, Ikasari@bendcable.com or www.ortop. org/fll. HOLIDAYRANCH CHRISTMAS: Featuring a toy drive, a Christmas bazaar, children's activities, Rim Rock drill team

performance,concessions andmore; proceeds benefit Toys for Tots; $5 per family or toy donation; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.;

CHRISTMASTREELANE:Visit Santa and shop for a Christmas tree, with complimentary face painting, hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DDRanch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. SANTALANDAT THEOLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.5 p.m.;SantaLand,330S.W . Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. SANTA AT NOLANTOWN CENTER:Take a photo with Santa, enjoya cookie and meet some furry friends; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center; free, donations

SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "SOUTHERN BAPTISTSISSIES":A screening of the 2013 film by director Del Shores, presented by LGBTStars and Rainbows; $5, reservations requested; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, payingitforward©gmail.com or www.

volcanictheatrepub.com.(Story, Page28)

TUESDAY Dec. 17 SCIENCE PARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend;541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "THE ROYALBALLET:THE NUTCRACKER": A screening of the classic holiday tale; $15; 7 p.m.; RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. (Story, Page28) CHRISTMASCONCERT:Featuring the Bend Cello Collective and the Gospel Choir of the Cascades; free, donations accepted;

7 p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-390-2441

or www.freewebs.com/bendgospel.

WEDNESDAY Dec. 18 SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: FALSTAFF"ENCORE:Performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. NAOMI HOOLEY& ROB STROUP'S WINTER WONDERLAND TOUR: The Portland-based folk-pop duo performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W .Bond St.,Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

(Story, Page3)

THURSDAY Dec. 19 SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "IT'SNOT ABOUTTHE GUN:VIOLENCE AND THEPACIFICATION OF THE AMERICANWEST": Learn the role of violence in the culture of the American West; free for members, $3 for nonmembers, reservation requested; 6 p.m.; High DesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. CHOIR CONCERT: The Summit High School music group performs; raffle proceeds benefit the music department and students; free; 7 p.m., 6:30 p.m. concert; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-815-5333 or www.friendsofmusic-shs.org. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": The oneman one-act reading features Derek Sitter in the David Sedaris play followed by a screening of "Bad Santa"; $10 plus fees in advance, $10at the door, $15 for both events; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.bendticket.com. • SUBMITAN EVENT at www bendbulletin.com/ submitinfo or email events@bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.


PAGE 18 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

planning ahea DEC. 20-26 DEC. 20-23 — SANTALAND ATTHE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Takea photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree ofJoy andmore; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11a.m.-5 p.m.;SantaLand,330 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-312-0131. DEC. 20-24, 26 — SCIENCE PARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers;11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway97, Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. DEC. 20-21 — "THESANTALAND DIARIES":A performance of the one-man one-act play based ona DavidSedaris essay, followed by ascreening of "Bad Santa"; $10 plus fees inadvance, $10at the door, $15 for both events; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. bendticket.com. DEC. 21-23, 26 — CARRIAGE RIDES IN THEOLDMILL DISTRICT: Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; weather

dependent ;donationsaccepted;proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; 2-5 p.m.; Ben& Jerry's, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. DEC.21-22 — A TOWER CHRISTMAS: HOME FOR THEHOLIDAYS: Anoriginal production featuring holiday stories, dances and songs; $12for adults, $8 for children12and younger, plus fees; 7 p.m. Dec. 21, 3 p.m.Dec.22; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC.21-22 — OREGON STATE SILVER GLOVES BOXINGCHAMPIONSHIPS: The Deschutes County ROCKSboxing teamhosts the event; winners advanceto regionals and nationals; prize drawings, food and drink available; $10, free for children 6 andyounger; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-678-2286 or www.deschutescountyrocks.com. DEC. 21-22 — SANTA ATNOLANTOWN CENTER:Takea photo with Santa, enjoy a cookie and meetsomefurry friends; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center; free, donations accepted;11 a.m.-4

p.m. Dec.21,noon-4 p.m.Dec.22; Nolan Town Center, 2116HighlandAvenue, Redmond; 541-923-0882. DEC. 20 — THIRDFRIDAYSTROLL: Featuring music, art, food and drinks; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www. visitredmondoregon.com. DEC.21— BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET AND SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; freeadmission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; BendIndoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847.

Submitted photo

Learn how to make mixes in a jar for holiday gifts at the La Pine Public Library on Sunday. See below for details.

Talks 8 classes

Submitted photo

Brodie Stewart Band will perform at Maverick's Country Bar & Grill in Bend on Dec. 21. DEC. 21 —CHRISTMASTREELANE: Visit Santa andshop for aChristmas tree, with complimentaryface painting, hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo andmore; free admission; 11a.m.-3 p.m.; DDRanch, 3836N.E.Smith RockW ay,Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. DEC. 21 —BEERTRAVELER FUNDRAISER: Afundraiser for equipment to shoot a trailer connecting people who love craft beer andthose who make it; live music, raffle and more; free; 6-9:30 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W. PenceLane,Suite1, Bend; 541-7280703 or www.btbsbend.com. DEC.21— HOLIDAY BREWGRASS JAMBOREE: Anevening withThe Bluegrass All-Stars; proceeds benefit the local Kiwanis FoodBank; donation of canned or nonperishable food items accepted; 7-11:30 p.m.; TheBelfry,302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. DEC. 21 —BRODIESTEWARTBAND: The California country band performs; $5 plus fees; 9 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend;541325-1886 or www.maverickscountrybar.

com. DEC. 21 — DOWN NORTH:TheSeattle, W ash.-based funkband performs;$5; 10 p.m.; TheAstro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend;541-388-0116 or www. astroloungebend.com. DEC.22— COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS: Breakfast and a traditional Christmas dinner, with a visitfrom Santa Claus;

free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m., 1 p.m.SantaClaus visit; Bend's Community Center,1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. bendscommunitycenter.org. DEC.24— THE COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS EVESERVICE:Hosted by Bob Shaw, with carols, family fun, a choir

performance,AvenueHandmore; $6 plus fees; 3 p.m., 5 p.m.and 7p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC.25— MERRY CHRISTMAS!

DEC. 27- JAN. 2 DEC. 27-JAN. 2 —SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum. OI'g.

DEC.27-30— CARRIAGE RIDES IN THE OLDMILL DISTRICT: Ridein the Cowboy Carriage, located betweenBen& Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donati onsaccepted;2-5 p.m.;Ben & Jerry's, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. DEC. 27-20 — JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: The Oregon PianoSummit, with two

pianosandGordonLee,RandyPorter, Ben Darwish and Darrell Grant; $45 plus fees; 8 p.m. Dec. 27, 5p.m. and8:15 p.m. Dec. 28; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W.Minnesota

AARP SMARTDRIVERCOURSE: Registration required; $12 for AARP members, $14 for nonmembers; 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday; St. Charles Redmond,1253 N.W. CanalBlvd.; 503-206-1799. GYOTAKU FISH PRINTING: Learn the traditional method of Japanese fish printing; ages13 and older; $36, $30.60 for members; 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday; Art Station, 313 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-6171317 or apm.activecommunities. com/artstation. KNOW D.I. Y.:GIFTS FROM THE KITCHEN:Learn how to make gifts using Mason jars and a selection of dry ingredients; free, registration required; 1:30 p.m. Sunday; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541312-1090 or www.deschuteslibrary.

org. Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. jazzattheoxford.com. DEC.28— BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET AND SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; freeadmission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor SwapMeet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. DEC. 28 —LASTSATURDAY:Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food and drinks and apatio and fire pit; free; 6-10 p.m.; TheOld Ironworks Arts District, 50 S.E.Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/lastsat. DEC. 30 — "THECROODS":Ascreening of the 2013 animated comedy (PG);free;1 p.m.; RodriguezAnnex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. DEC. 30 — "PETERGABRIEL:NEW BLOODLIVE IN LONDON2011": A screening of a film combining animation and on-screen graphics with Gabriel's voice and a46-piece orchestra; $12

MIX IT UP!:Learn how to make and decorate healthy holiday food mixes in a jar; $15 includes recipes, samples and supplies, registration required by Monday; 10 a.m.-11:30 p.m. Thursday; OSUExtension Service, 3893 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-6088 or katherine.ahern©oregonstate.edu. GREAT DISCUSSIONS:STAYING BRIGHTTHROUGH THE HOLIDAYS: Join in a lively discussion with other seniors; free, registration requested; 1-2:30 p.m. Thursday; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-617-7080 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. DOTERRA PUREESSENTIAL OILS LECTURESERIES: Learn how to incorporate essential oils into daily routines; free; 7-9 p.m. Thursday; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-3300334 or www.hawthorncenter.com. general admission, $48club pass, plus fees;7 p.m.,doorsopenat6p.m .;Tower Theatre,835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC. 31 — NEWYEAR'S DANCEPARTY: Eugene's TheSugar Beets perform; $18 plus fees in advance,$23 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E.MainAve., Sisters; 541-815-9122. DEC. 31 — REDSOLOCUPNEWYEAR'S EVE PARTY:Featuring a live broadcast of Times Squareandprizes; $3 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend;541-325-1886 or www.maverickscountrybar.com. DEC. 31 —NEWYEAR'S EVEATOLD ST. FRANCISSCHOOL:Jeff Crosby & The Refugeesperforms in thetheaterand Worth performs in Father Luke's Room;$5 for music; 9 p.m.-midnight; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww.

mcmenamins.com.


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PAGE 20 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

restaurants

S

S

Andy Tune/The Bulletin

Patrons eat lunch at Hong Kong Restaurant, a longtime Bend Chinese food eatery.

• Changes to food quality could only help the Hong KongRestaurant By John Gottberg Anderson

There are changes that could As well, a more careful selection be made to launch the restaurant of quality meats and poultry would et's face it: There is no out- back in the right direction. One be a big plus. I found far too many standing Chinese restau- would be to offer fewer battered bites of beef, pork and chicken to rant in Central Oregon. and deep-fried recipes, and where be tough and gristly. There was a time when the Hong they are appropriate, to batter less On the plus side, the price is Kong Restaurant vied for that label. heavily and drain off the oil more right. An individual can eat heartFrom its establishment in 1976 un- thoroughly. ily at Hong Kong, and escape with til a change of ownership in 2000, Another would be to limit the leftovers, for less than $15. The atthe longtime eatery on Southeast use of bulk canned vegetabl es mosphere is pleasant, if relatively Third Street at Wilson Avenue of- — peas, carrots and sliced mush- unchanged since my last review fered Cantonese,Mandarin and rooms in particular, for I know visits. An etched-glass room diSzechuan food as good as any- that such items as water chestnuts vider continues to be the center of where on this side of the Cascades. and baby corn are not otherwise attention in the main dining area, No longer. I was disappointed available. Fresh broccoli, zucchini and contemporary Chinese inlay in the Hong Kong when I last re- and carrotsare used in many of art hangs on the walls, although I viewed the restaurant, more than Hong Kong's dishes, so why can- could do without the seasonal carsix years ago, and two recent visits not market-fesh r produce be used ols as I eat. did little to alter my opinion. in everything? Continued next page The Bulletin

L

HongKongRestaurant Location:530 S.E.Third St., Bend Hours:11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday to Friday, noon to10 p.m. Saturday and Sunday Price range:Lunch menu$6.95, all-you-can-eat buffet $7.75; dinner starters $5.95 to $9.95, main dishesandcombinationmeals$8.25 to $13.95 Credit cards:American Express, Discover, MasterCard, Visa Kids' menu:Child and senior meals start at $6.75 Vegetarianmenu: Requestvegetable plates with tofu Alcoholic beverages:Full bar Outdoorseating: No

Reservations:Recommendedfor larger parties Contact:www.hkrestaurantbend .com or 541-389-8880

Scorecard OVERALi.:C

Food:D.Poor preparation of many dishes, including overcooked meats and too-heavy batters. Service:B+. Much improved: Friendly, attentive, though diners may not be told of substitutions. Atmosphere:B. Pleasant but unchangedinmanyyears,withan etched-glass room divider. Value:B+. An individual can eat well, with leftovers, for less than $15 — if you want leftovers.


restaurants

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

From previous page

poultry sauteed with onions in brown gravy. Probably my favorite buffet offering was beef with mixed vegetables. Although the beef was thinly sliced and generally tender, some bites were more gristly than oth-

Service has improved over the

years. Once borderline rude, it is now friendly and attentive — even if some ingredients are substituted for others without informing diners.

Dinner for two

ers. But I liked the saute of green

My companionand Ibegan our most recent dinner with a combination platter of four different appetizers. Best of the bunch were

the sli ces ofbarbecued pork;even though a couple of bites were chew-

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21

peppers,sliced carrots and zucchini, onions and water chestnuts in Andy Tullis/Ttte Bulletin

The lemongrass shrimp plate at the Hong Kong Restaurant in Bend.

a brown ginger sauce. And it was even better with pork-fried rice.

r e

— Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com

mustard and sesame seeds more than compensated.

The other three apps went uneaten after initial bites. The batter on fried shrimp was much too

heavy. The wonton wrappers used for the crab puffs, filled with artificial crab and cream cheese, were

NEXT WEEK: LITTLE BITE CAFE

heavy and dry. The filo pastry of the deep-fried spring rolls, stuffed with cabbage,celery and carrots, Luncheon buffet was more pasty than crispy. I was terribly disappointed with I returned solo for an all-youmy order of walnut shrimp, usu- can-eat buffet lunch — just $7.75 for ally one of my favorite Chinese adults — to try a bit of everything. restaurant dishes. Overcooked, It was a cold day, so I warmed up the prawns were basted with hon- by first sampling both soups, egg ey, but they didn't have the cream flower and hot-and-sour. The fors auce that u sually c omes w i t h mer was completely forgettable, a

honor Brown's mother, a native of Culiacan, Mexico, who previ-

Seating is limited so RSVP by phone or online today!

to 2006. Open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.

I 'I

Monday to Thursday, 11 a.m. to 9

seed, the dish had no real flavor. H ong Kong lo mein was a

unremarkable. It was far better than tiny maki

ver establishment. The new eatery

t h e s t an- sushi rolls, made with cooked pork dard-issue noodle dish, featuring rather than seafood: The meat was

Join us in our L o u nge or Award Winning Restaurant!

ously owned El Burrito from 1985

that come from an occasional chile house combination of

Pudding R Fresh Baked Bread

$21.9$ for a 10ozCut or $27.9$ for a 14oz Cut

335 N.E. DeKalb Ave., Bend; 541678-5360, w w w. f acebook.com/ rosescocina.

red chilies, but except for the heat

Twice-Baked Potato • Seasonal Vegetables Au Jus ' Creamed Horseradish & Yorkshire

tic Mexican cuisine," is named to

mushrooms and egg drops, but with no depth of flavor. I preferred the mildly spicy hot-and-sour soup, made with fresh carrots and celery, along with tofu and black fungi. I merely glanced at several of the buffet items — cucumber salad, green salad (with iceberg lettuce), dinner rolls, crab puffs, egg rolls and two gravies. I tried the coarsely chopped slaw and found it

rots, baby corn and water chestnuts. It was f i nished with d r ied

— Each Dinner Includes-

cessor closed its doors. Owners Nan Brown and Anne Birky plan an official grand opening Jan. 4. The cafe, which promises "authen-

that was more confectionery than

from a can, including peas and car-

Our delectable Roast Prime Rib of Beef is hand-seasoned, slow roasted to perfection and then chef cut to order.

former El B u r r ito s pace, fewer than two months after its prede-

p.m. Friday, 4 to 9 p.m. Saturday.

most of the other ingredients came

EVERY WEDNESDAY 5:00-8:00 PM

gon. Rose's Cocina has announced plans to open this weekend in the

thin potage with bulk peas, carrots,

Kung pao chicken had freshly sauteed chicken, peanuts and coarsely chopped zucchini, but

PRIME RIB NIGHT

ican restaurants in Central Ore-

this dish. The result was a flavor subtle.

z'

SMALL BITES • It's a big week for new Mex-

For readers' ratings of more than150 Central Oregon restaurants, visit I bendbulletin.ceml restaurants.

n

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ier than I w ould have liked, hot

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62000 Broken Top Dr. 5 4 1-383-8200 ' www.brokentop.com

• Hola! is scheduled to open a new

Redmond restaurant — its fifth in the region — this weekend. Own-

er MarcosRodriguez said the cafe will offer the same "Nuevo Latino" menu of Mexican and Peruvian

foods as its three Bend (downtown, Old Mill, east side) and one SunrireplacesKim and Karla's Spuds and Suds and seats about 40. Open 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday to Thurs-

bits of shrimp, chicken and beef

paired with cucumber in vinegar day, 11 a.m. to midnight Friday and with a few vegetables. It needed rice and wrapped in nori seaweed, Saturday. 514 N.W. G reenwood seasoning. then served with soy sauce that al- Ave. (at Fifth Street), Redmond; 541-923-7290, A vegetable dish f rom t h e ready had wasabi mustard added. www.holabend "healthy delicious choice" menu Nothing on the buffet was more .com. • A new cookbook featuring stooffered a choice of any four veg- objectionable than tempura vegegies with one of five sauces. We tables. Carrot, zucchini and mush- ries and recipes from restaurants requested green beans, eggplant, room were heavily battered and and chefs in Seattle, Portland tofu and bok choy with black bean deep fried, but they were not prop- and Bend has been released for sauce. But the kitchen was out of erlydrained and as a result were the Christmas shopping season. eggplant, so we settled for black very greasy. Small cakes that I "Sizzle & B u zz: What's Cookin' mushrooms. And the bok choy was thought were crab cakes had a very in the Region's Hottest Restaumysteriously replaced by broccoli thick and crusty batter; I learned rants" features full-color photogwhen it was served. later they were egg foo yung. One raphy and stories about many of We really hadn't wanted broc- bite was enough. the Northwest's leading chefs. It coli, but were pleased that neither The buffetoffered four chick- was produced by John Herbik, that green veggie nor the beans en dishes and three of them were publisher of "The Where to Eat were overcooked. On the other batteredand deep-fried — orange Guide," and written by Bend auhand, the tofu and especially the chicken, sweet-and-sour chicken thor Sarah Daily. A portion of mushrooms were chewy. and sesame (orMorfar) chicken. proceeds from the book's sale will The steamed white rice that Not of them exactly burst with fla- benefit th e H u n ger P r evention came with our o rders was fine. vor.Batter and deep-frying make Coalition in Bend. The cookbook But we passed up our leftovers and foods taste alike. I much preferred may be purchased online at www went home. a fourth chicken dish, chunks of .sizzleandbuzz.com.

.

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CHIRISTMAS '. SPECTACUILAR SAVIIIOIS EXTRAVAOIANZA! '

' RO lo off sterewi uke!!! NOV. 29TH THROUGH DEC. 24, 2013„

339SWEvergreenAve, Redmond ' 'ry " +', 541.279.4867 ~ www.beyond-the-ranch.com,~

': .pq Mon-Sat10:30am-5:30pm,Sun Noon-5pm 'e s


PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."

CONCERTS

CourtesyofO regon Symphony

French horns play in a previous performance of the Oregon Symphony.The orchestra will tackle Beethoven's Ninth Symphony on Dec. 30-31 in Portland.

• Oregon Symphony marks NewYearwith Beethoven's Ninth By Jenny Wasson

Chorus. The evening will also include music by

The Bulletin

pianist Thomas Lauderdale, director Gus Van

he Oregon Symphony is ringing in the ven's Symphony No. 9. TFeaturingguestartists,therecentlyadded"Ode New Year in grand fashion, with Beetho-

Sant and vocalists China Forbes, Storm Large (on Dec. 30 only), the von Trapps and cantor Ida Rae Cahana.

Beethoven's Ninth Symphony premiered in to Joy: A Holiday Spectacular" runs Dec. 30-31 at 1824 in Vienna. At the time of its creation, "Beethe Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Portland.

thoven was totally deaf and emotionally isolated

"Beethoven's Ninth Symphony is one of the because of that deafness," accordingto the news most loved pieces of music ever written," said release. music director Carlos Kalmar in a news release. The Oregon Symphony last performed the "I'm looking forward to performing this trium- composition in February to sold-out crowds. phant and monumental work to celebrate the Tickets are currently on sale and selling fast. New Year with the community." Prices range from $22 to$98,dependingon the The program features soloists Angela Nieder- seat location. To purchase tickets, visit www loh, Carl Moe and Richard Zeller, along with the .orsymphomy.org or contact800-228-7343. Portland State University Chamber Choir, the

Pacific Youth Choir and the Portland Gay Men's

— Reporter: 541-383-0350, j wasson@bendbulletin.com

Through Dec. 15 —Holidays with the * Trail Band,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Dec. 13 —Midlake, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Dec. 13 —Pink Martini Holiday Concert,Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Dec. 14 —Wonder Ramble — An Evening of Americana,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF" Dec. 15 —The DandyWarhols Holiday Show,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Dec. 16 —Third EyeBlind, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Dec. 19 —X, Roseland Theater, * Portland; TW Dec. 19 —"RockabiRy Winter Ball" with Big Sandy &His FlyRite Boys, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Dec. 20 —Christine Lavin & Uncle Bonsai,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Dec. 20 —An evening with1964The Tribute,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Dec. 20 —Icona Pop, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 20 —Portland Cello Project Holiday Sweater Spectacular,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Dec. 21 —Darol Anger — Keep-ItIn-The-FamHoliday Show, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec.22— Tomassen Foley'sA Celtic Christmas,Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Dec.27— RedFang,Wo nderBallroom, * Portland; TF Dec. 27 —Straight No Chaser,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Dec. 27-28 —Beats Antique, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Dec.28— The Motet,Mc Donald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Dec. 31 —Bass OdysseyNYE2013, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec. 31 —The Motet, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 31 —A NewYears Eve Dance Spectacular with Pink Martini and Chervona,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Dec.31 —ZeppareHa, McDonald

Theatre, Eugene; TW* Jan. 3 —Floater, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 4 —Dead Moon,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 4 —Ramble On,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan. 9 —Martha Davis & the Motels, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Jan. 10 —The Reverend Horton Heat, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 11 —AndyMcKee, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 11 —Hell's Belles/Floater, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Jan. 11 —Thao & TheGet DownStay Down,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 15-17 —Garcia Birthday Band, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Jan. 16 —Tribal Seeds, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 17-18 —"Six Pack Live," Roseland * Theater, Portland; TW Jan. 18 —A GalaNight With David Garrett,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 18 —Southern Culture on the Skids,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT

Jan. 19 — JonnyLang, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Jan. 19 —Mark Hummel's Blues Harmonica Blowout,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan. 21 —Colin Meloy, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 22 — Jake Bugg,Mc Menamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 22 —Lord Huron,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 24-25 —Josh Ritter, Aladdin Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT(Jan. 25); TF*

Jan. 28 —The Devil Makes Three, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Jan. 30 — Washed Out, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 31 —The Devil Makes Three, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT

Jan. 31 — Zappa Plays Zappa, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb.4 —ThePianoGuys, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 7 —The WoodBrothers, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Feb. 14 —The Presidents of the United States of America,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 15 —AmosLee/Black Prairie, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW


out of town

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013 Feb. 16 —AmosLee, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb.17 —Hot lUna/David Lindley, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Feb. 18 —HotTnna, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb.18 —John Butler Trio, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 19 —AniD!Franco, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb.19 —Pixies, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 20 —SunKil Moon, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF

LECTURES 8c COMEDY Dec. 13 —WYMPROVI: Eugene's four-women comedy improv troupe; Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www.octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Jan. 10 —Charlie Murphy, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan.17 —David Koechner,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Jan. 24 —Jerry Seinfeld, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Jan. 24 —Mike Birhiglia, Newmark Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Jan. 25 —Mike Birhiglia, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW*

SYMPHOMY 5 OPERA Through Dec. 15 —"Gospel Christmas": Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec.14 —Pink Martini: Portland-based band will perform songs from their holiday album, "Joy to the World"; presented by the Eugene Symphony; Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 21 —"Natalie Cole Christmas": Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 22 —"Comfort R Joy: A Classical Christmas":Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec.30-31 — "Odeto Joy:A Holiday Spectacular": The OregonSym phony performs Beethoven's Ninth Symphony; also includes music by Thomas Lauderdale, China Forbes, Storm Large (Dec. 30 only), thevon Trapps,GusVan Santand cantor Ida Rae Cahana; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 31, Jan. 3, 5 —"La Traviata": Eugene Opera, Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter. org or 541-682-5000. Jan. 11-13 —"Emanuel Ax/Bach R Strauss": Featurin g musicby Beethoven,Bach and

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23

*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www.ticketswest .com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly.com or 877-435-9849

CT:CascadeTickets, www .cascadetickets.com or 800-5143849 Strauss; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan.18,20— "Sihelius'Symphony No.1": Featuring music by Glanert, Wieniawski and Sibelius; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 19 —Itxhak Perlman in Recital: Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 25-26 —"Red Hot Blues": Pop Series Concert featuring vocalist Dee Daniels and trumpeter Byron Stripling; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan.31, Feb,2,6,8 —"Luciagi

Lammermoor": Tragic opera by Gaetano Donizetti; Portland Opera; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.ortlandopera.org or 866-739-6737. Feb. 9-10 —"Beethoven's SymphonyNo.7": Featuring music by Lutoslawski, Schumann and Beethoven; Oregon Symphony;Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Feb. 14-15 —"A Storm Large Valentine": Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.

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THEATER 5 DAMCE Through Dec. 22 —"Camelot": Lerner and Loewe's 1960 musical recounts the tragic and morally-rich story of King Arthur, Queen Guenevere, Lancelot and the Knights of the Round Table; part of the 2013 Shedd Theatricals season; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Through Dec. 22 —"It's A Wonderful Life":Stumptown Stages; Brunish Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Through Dec. 22 —"Twisf Your Dickens": A complete send-up of the holiday classic, fully festooned with the improvisational genius behind the legendary comedy troupe The Second City; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs. org or 503-445-3700. Through Dec. 29 —"The Santaland Diaries":Based on the outlandish and true chronicles of David Sedaris' experience as Crumpet the Elf in Macy's Santaland display; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700.

Continued next page

Sylvan of Bend

S'tl->Il'f-'fSSS Sylvan of NWX

S'fl->II'f-'fSSS bendsylvanOqwest.net

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out of town

PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

From previous page

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Through Dec. 29 —"XMAS UNPLUGGED": Double-bill featuring "The Reason for the Season" and "The Night Before Christmas"; Artists Repertory Theatre; Morrison Stage, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Through Jan. 11 —"Noises Dff": Third Rail Repertory Theatre; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Dec.13 —Popovich ComedyPet Theater, Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 13 —Wanderlust Circus "A Circus Carol,"McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Dec.14-24 —"George Balanchine's The Nutcracker":Oregon Ballet Theatre; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.obt.org or 888-922-5538. Dec. 14-29 —"Beauty and the Beast": Broadway show based on theAcademy Award-winning animated feature; Newmark Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Dec. 20-22 —"The Nutcracker with DrchestralNEXT":Eugene Ballet; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Jan. 7-12 —"Evita": Tony Award-winning musical by Tim Rice andAndrew Lloyd Webber; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www. portlandopera.org or 800-273-1530. Jan. 9-26 —"3x3": An original architecturallybased work of contemporary dance; showtimes run Thursday through Saturday; The Leftbank Project, Portland; www.povdance.org. Jan. 17 —"Disney Junior Live onTour! Pirate & PrincessAdventure," Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Jan. 23-25 —Phillip AdamsBalletLab: Part of the White Bird DanceSeries; Portland State University, Portland; www.whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. Jan. 23-Feb. 2 —Fertile GroundFestival of New Work:Featuring more than 75 newacts of creation in theater, dance andmultidisciplinary arts; www.fertilegroundpdx.org. Feb.15-16 —"Scheherazade and Bolero": Featuring choreography by Dennis Spaight and Toni Pimble; Hult Center, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 22-March1 —"Reveal": Featuring choreography by Christopher Stowell, James Kudelka, Christopher Wheeldon and Nicolo Fonte; Oregon Ballet Theatre; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.obt.org or 888-922-5538. Feb. 26 —Cedar LakeContemporary Ballet: Part of the White Bird DanceSeries; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. whitebird.org or 503-245-1600.

EXHIBITS Through Dec. 15 —Portland Art Museum: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Ordinary World: American Landscape Photography and Modern Documentary Style" (through Dec. 15), "Samurai! Armor from the Ann and Gabriel Barbier-Mueller Collection" (through Jan. 12), "2013 Contemporary Northwest Art Awards" (through Jan. 12)

and "APEX: Charles Gill" (through Jan. 26); Portland; www.portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Through Dec. 24 —Holiday Gift Sale, Portland Japanese Garden, Portland; www. japanesegarden.com or 503-223-1321. Through Dec. 29 —Sea of Lights: An afterhours holiday light show; after opening weekend (Dec. 6-7) the lights will be on display Saturdays and Sundays only;OregonCoast Aquarium, Newport; www.aquarium.org or 541-867-3474. Through December —"The Sea & Me": A new children's interactive exhibit; Oregon Coast Aquarium, Newport; www.aquarium.org or 541-867-3474. Through Jan. 5 —"The International Exhibition of Sherlock Holmes":World

premiere; OregonMuseumof Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through Jan. 5 —ZooLights: Featuring close to1.5 million colorful lights; Oregon Zoo, Portland; www.oregonzoo.org or 503-226-1561. Through Jan. 11 —"The Toolat Hand": The Chipstone Foundation invited14 contemporary artist to make a work of art using only one tool; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through Jan. 25 —"Slip Slab Coil Pinch Press Throw":Exhibit features more than 24 artists from around the country; Eutectic Gallery, Portland; www.eutecticgallery.com or 503-974-6518. ThroughJan.26— Jordan SchnitzerMuseum of Art:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Traditional and Contemporary Korean Art from the Mattielli 8 JSMA Collections" (through Jan. 26), "Korda and the Revolutionary Image" (through Jan. 26), "Ave Maria: Marian Devotional Works from Eastern and Western Christendom" (through July 20), "Transatlanticism" (through Feb. 9) and "Art of the Athlete II" (through Feb. 9); Eugene; jsma. uoregon.edu or 541-346-3027. Through Feb. 8 —"Quality is Contagious: John Economaki andBridge City Tool Works": Thecom pany'sproducts,sketches and tools from the past thirty years will be on view; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft. org or 503-223-2654. Dec. 7-8, 14-15, 21-22 —Victorian Christmas at TheBeekman House:A lookathow Christmas was celebrated during the late1800s; Jacksonville; 541-899-1231, ext. 312. Jan.25-26—SagebrushRendezvous Charitable Art Show & Sale: Featuring juried art of every genre; Running Y's Convention Center, Klamath Falls; www.exchangeclubofkf. com or 541-891-8618.

MISCELLAMY Through Dec. 22 —Christmas in the Garden,The Oregon Garden, Silverton; www. oregongarden.org or 503-874-8100. Jan.24— Good EarthHom e,Garden & Living Show,Lane County Convention Center,

Eugene;www.eugenehomeshow.comor 541-484-9247.


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

movies

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Martin Freeman portrays Bilbo Baggins, left, and John Callen stars as Oin in "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug."

• 'TheDesolation ofSmaug'doesn't dilydally,and the charactersareabsorbing andfun to watch You see that which would bestow upon you the right to rule. The quest to reclaim a homeland and tedious table-setting exercise that slay a dragon."

RICHARDROEPER

nd here I thought I was all but Hobbited out. After the well-made but

was "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey," I wasn't too keen about

Ah, but th e

g ood news: In

"The Hobbit: The Desolation of two more prequel films — some Smaug," there's far less fussing 5'/z additional hours of hobbits

about. We're starting to get to the

and dwarves and orcs and elves and wizards and trolls, all questing for destiny, and destined for questioning, with characters saying things like: "Where does your journey end'?

point. No doubt I'll be consulting the "One Wiki to Rule Them All" and other entries in the 5 ZILLION Internet guides to all things Tolk-

ien as we sift through some of the

"The Hohhit: TheDesolation of Smaog" 161 minutes PG-13, for extended sequencesof intense fantasy action violence and frightening images

some of us are just traveling down different aisles of the Library of the Geek Universe.) It's not easy to play a king who's always looking up at taller creatures while bellowing about his

Joining Thorin on his journey: a small band of loyal and courageous dwarves, the hobbit known

Richard Armitage is terrific as Thorin Oakenshield. Doggedly, sometimes stubbornly determined, Thorin seeks to return to

as Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) and, on occasion, Gandalf himself (lan McKellen), though the great wizard gets called away on other duties. (McKellen is, of course, grandly entertaining as Gandalf, who appears frail and weary in some close-ups — and

Lonely Mountain, enlist Bilbo to

then we cut to some action se-

right to rule the mountain, but

swipe a magical gem known as the Arkenstone from beneath a major plot details here, so strap in sleeping dragon and reclaim the and hang on. (This stuff comes kingdom for his people. (This is as naturally to hardcore Hob- WAY harderthan any challenge

quence where the old wizard is outrunning everyone else, and we hear McKellen's voice while watching what has to be a

bit-heads as baseball and football stats come to me. We're all nerds;

Gandalf.)

anyone's ever had to do on "The

Amazing Race.")

30-year-oldstunt man dressed as

Continued next page


movies

PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

Peter ackson on expanding 'The Hobbit' and Tolkien's world By Gina Mclntyre

in $1 billion worldwide at the box dren's book, and faithfully adapt

Los Angeles Times

office.

LOS ANGELES-

it'? Or do we make a film that

Detractors seemed saddened will live alongside the other three

C

harting a course through that the soaring sense of adven- m o v ies that we made? We are Middle-earth can be nearly ture and heart that had defined the t h e s ame storytellers, Philippa, as taxing as surviving an in- "Rings" films had gone missing, re- Fran and I, we're the same people ternational media tour for an end- placed by flatulent trolls, moments working on it. We're trying to be of-year blockbuster. Peter Jackson of slapstick humor and sluggish faithful to the style and the tone." knows this better than anyone. pacing.Only the sequence featur- That Jackson returned to anWarner Bros. Pictures via The Associated Press His film journeys through the vast ing the creature Gollum o ther Tolkien film at Director Peter Jackson, left, instructs barrels full of dwarfs during filming realms of J.R.R. Tolkien's writings was universally praised all was somewhat un- of "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug." are familiar terrain. as matching Jackson's "We ate e xpected. After t h e " Rings" tr ilogy, h e Just last week, his salt-and-pep- earlier, Oscar-winning f / Ie Sg/Tle per curls fell at slightly unruly achievements directed aremake of homeland Erebor, which has been cluding Luke Evans' human Bard Sgp'>'~e//eyS By "King Kong" and "The usurped by the evil dragon Smaug the Bowman, who resides in the angles and his white dress shirt contrast, Love ly Bones," an ad- (Benedict Cumberbatch). Ian Mc- enclave of Lake-town, which sits looked more comfortably lived in "Smaug" is brimming ... Wel'e 5/7e than freshly pressed as he posed with action, including SgfTI e pepp/e aptation of Alice Se- Kellen's wizard Gandalf has more in the shadow of the Lonely Mounbold's bestseller, though of a solo role to play, ferreting out tainnearthedeserted areaknown on a giant chair flown in from a show-stopping fight k +~ New Zealand from the set of his sequence filmed along neither caught fire in a great, ancient evil that is settling as the Desolation of Smaug. Narratively, Jackson said he felt latest film, "The Hobbit: The Des- New Zealand's Pelo- it . W e're the same way his Mid- over the land. olation of Smaug." rus River. In its grand $yyjrig gp Qe dle - earth movies had. Bilbo and Thorin's travels take greater freedom with this installHe'd been set to pro- them to the forest of Mirkwood, ment than with"Unexpected JourStill, the director was in good scope and serious tone, duce "The Hobbit" as a where they encounter not only gi- ney" or the upcoming "There and humor. "Smaug" opens in theaters it feels far more akin to this weekend but is already win- Jackson's original tril- St g'Ie Brl6 htle two - parter helmed by ant, woodland spiders but also a Back Again." He neither had to esGuillermo del Toro, but race of Sylvan elves that inciudes tablish the story and introduce the ning high marks from a chain of ogy than its immediate ~pfle " admirers, many of whom compare predecessor. once Del Toro stepped Orlando Bloom's regal Legolas (a characters nor deliver "an exciting — Peter Jackson down in 2010, it wasn't featured member of the "Rings" climax" for the trilogy. its jovial spirit to the high-water The story primarily long before Jackson ensemble) and Evangeline Lilly's But there was dragon anximark of Jackson's career, his epic centers on the middle "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy. portion o f To l k i en's assumed the reins, ex- warrior Tauriel. She is the first ety. He acknowledged that he felt "Quite a few people are saying landmark 1937 youth novel, but panding the project to three mov- character wholly invented for a some apprehension over finally that," said Jackson, 52, sipping tea Jackson and his writing partners i e s. (The third, "The Hobbit: There Tolkien film by Jackson, Walsh bringing Tolkien's great red-goldbetween photo shoots at a Beverly Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens and Back Again," is set for release and Boyens (Del Toro also is cred- en beast to the screen. "You keep hearing all this ited as ascreenwriter on"Smaug"). Hills hotel. "We are consciously have expanded the narrative to D ec. 17,2014.) "For some reason that I don't expectation," Jackson said. "'I trying to deepen the characteriza- include new characters and moIn th i s s econd portion of the tions and conflicts without stray- mentsreferenced in theappendix- saga, Martin Freeman's good-na- quite understand, a lot of women want to see Smaug, I want to see es of "The Lord of the Rings." ture d H o bbit, Bilbo Baggins, love these stories more than other Smaug.'Ihadn'tseen Smaug up ing too far from Tolkien." "That was one of the decisions continues on his quest to help the types of fantasy," Jackson said."We until a few months ago, really, not Yet last year, when "The Hobbit: A n U n e xpected Journey" we made at the very beginning," dwarf king Thorin Oakenshield just felt it was a bit male-heavy, and in his current form! "Those things," he added with a opened, many fans struggled to Jackson said. "Do we take a chil- (Richard Armitage) and company we could do somethingaboutit." There are other new players, in- laugh, "are a bit of a pressure." embrace the film, even as it raked dren's book, a very simplistic chil- reclaim the treasure of their lost

From previous page hates orcs more. Peter Jackson's 3-D visuals are There's also an extended seas breathtaking as ever, whether quence in the sick, evil forest of we're looking at location shoots, Mirkwood, which is populated by elaboratesets,CGI or some com- huge, wonderfully disgusting spibination thereof. Dwarves and hobbits and elves share the screen

with giant spiders, oversized bees and other amazing creatures, and it all looks hyper-realistic. At times, "The Desolation of Smaug" is like a Western done up Tolkien-style, with the dwarves

and Bilbo trying to stay one step ahead ofthe relentless posse of orcs hell-bent on killing them before they reach the mountain. The dwarves get some help from Beorn the skin-changer (and we get some helpful exposition about Beorn the skin-changer's back story), who hates dwarves but

work their movie magic. Perhaps myfavorit e character in "Smaug" is Evangeline Lilly's Tauriel, a gorgeous elf warrior who's the most skilled fighter of ders. That's followed by a thrillanyone in this saga, and that ining and hilarious sequence in an cludes Orlando Bloom's Legolas, elvish prison, where Bilbo engi- who clearly has a thing for her and neers an escape that's like some- simmers with jealousy when she thing right out of a classic silent becomes smitten with ahandsome movie. dwarf. (Now there's a romantic Some of this stuff exists only triangle we don't see every day) so Jackson can stretch a 276-page Tauriel is smart and stubborn and book into a three-movie, eight- lovely and heroic. She rocks. hour trilogy. Sure, every time As for the bad guys, here's the the dwarves clear a seemingly thing about these orcs. Despite insurmountable obstacle, they're their classic evil-creature growjust a little bit closer to the Lone- ly voices and their fearsome ly Mountain — but some of the appearance and their thirst for diversions and distractions are blood, they seem to suck at actuthere mainly so Jackson and his ally fighting. Marauding through team of technical wizards can the town of Esgaroth, they're no

match for Legolas and Tauriel,

overlong. I still feel this whole

who take out dozens of them with-

Hobbit tale could have been told

out ever mussing up their hair. Smaug. Now there's a formidable foe. Voiced by Benedict Cumberbatch, slithering about while bantering with Bilbo, this is a dragon as Bond villain. He's evil and he loves being evil, and he loves to talk about being evil and how he's going to make these stupid little creatures pay for their insolence. As much as I enjoyed Cumberbatch's line readings, there's something silly about a talking dragon, even one that breathes

in one great, three-hour movie. At least this leg of the journey features giant spiders and a hot elf. Can't miss with that.

Note: In the upcoming "August: Osage County," the violence doesn't extend beyond the smashing of a few plates and a wrestling match over a bottle of pills. But

that film is rated R because of frequent use of the F-bomb, where-

as "The Desolation of Smaug" is PG-13 despite the intense action, much carnage and even some beheadings. I guess as long as you're lopping off the heads of orcs and

fire and knows Tolkien-speak. It detracts from the feeling of real not cute dwarves, spry hobbits or peril. And even though "Smaug" gorgeous elves, you're OK. — Richard Roeper is a film critic moves at a faster pace than the first part of the journey, it feels

for The Chicago Sun-Times.


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27

e ras a'is a eaU i

w

80

e have a tendency to think our

parents' lives started when we were born, or at least when

RICHARDROEPER

they were married. If there's a photo of

young Mom and Dadhanging on the wall above the staircase or on the mantle, odds are it's a weddingportrait.

By that measure, for parents it has to be strangewhen your children are in their 40s — much older than you were

"Nebraska" 115 minutes R, for some language

whenyou hadthem. Is it any wonder the dynamicbetweenparents andtheir mid- phony of small, subtle notes. dle-aged children is often so strange? Convinced he's won a million dollars "Nebraska" taps into that. "Nebraska" in one of those hokey magazine subtaps into a lot of universal truths while scription sweepstakes in which the fine telling a story about the kind of ordi- print explains that in all likelihood you narypeople not often showcased in 2013 most certainly did NOT win a million movies. dollars, Woody is determined to make it With a touch of "The Last Picture from Billings, Mont., to Lincoln, Neb., to Show" and a running story line you collect his winnings. Will Forte from "Saturday Night might have found in a Preston Sturges film, "Nebraska" is a stark, sad, beautiful Live" is a revelation as Woody's son Daand memorable film. This is a modern vid, one of those nice, slightly sad guys American classic about the dynamic be- whose name you forget two minutes tween a father from the generation that after meeting him. Whether he's at his didn't speak about its feelings, a grown nowhere job trying to sell sound systems son who's still trying to get his father to to smart-ass kids, awkwardly attemptexplain himself, and a distant past that ing to win back his wife, enduring the explains more than the old man would bleating criticisms of his mother or lookever care to talk about. ing out for his ungrateful father, David It's not often an actor gets thebest role perseveres. of his career at age 77. Especially when Also turning in terrific supporting that actor is Bruce Dern, who has more work is June Squibb as Woody's acidic than a dozen great performances on a wife, whose runningcommentary about resume that dates back to the 1960s. But various relatives and townsfolk is viin Alexander Payne's latest film, Dern is ciously funny; Bob Odenkirk as David's nothing short of magnificent. What a joy older brother, Ross, a Nebraska anchorit is to watch him playing such a misera- man; and Stacy Keach as Woody's forble SOB. mer business partner,wh o gotthe best Shot in beautiful tones of black and of Woody a generation ago and isn't too white (and silver and gray), "Nebraska" pleased when Woody shows up on his is steeped in nostalgia, regret and bitter- wayto collecting amillion-dollar prize. In some ways "Nebraska" follows a sweet moments. Yet it's also a pitch-perfect cinematic poem about the times we classic road-trip map, with David doing livein. everything he can to appease Woody Dern plays Woody Grant. (Grant and also get some kind of dosure with Woodpainted"American Gothic," which, his old man. But there's also an extendlike "Nebraska," seems to tread the line ed stay in Woody's hometown of Hawbetween straightforward portrayal and thorne. Somehow, some way, the townsmaybe just a tad of wry commentary) folk come to believe Woody has actually He's one of those crabby, boozy, some- won that million dollars. Payne's camera paints a bleak, stark times delusional old guys who probably were crabby, boozy and maybe even de- and yet hauntingly beautiful portrait of a town time has passed by. It's here we lusional when theywere 40. Walk into any small-town tavern learn some heartbreaking truths about or VFW Hall and you'll find a guy like Woody'spast,and we come to underWoody, who just wants you to get out of stand why he is the way he is. With a nomination-worthy screenhis way and leave him alone — at least on the surface. Dern gets him just right, play by Bob Nelson, Payne's nimble difrom the "I don't give a (bleep)" crazy rection, and brilliant work from Dern hair to the blunt way of expressing him- and the supporting cast down to the last self to the occasional flicker of genuine bitplayer, "Nebraska" is film as true art. — Richard Roeper is a film critic emotion in his eyes. From an actor who's never been afraid to go big, it is a symfor The Chicago Sun Times.

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PAGE 28 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

O N LO C A L S CREEN S

WHAT'S NEW

"The ArmstrongLie" — It would be too easy to dismiss Alex Gibney's "The Armstrong Lie" as atwo-hourand-three-minute exercise in moral relativism and rationalization, too late to the party about a cheating athlete we've already madeup our minds about — again. But the Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger Oscar-winning Gibney ("Taxi to the Dark Side") had access to Lance Moore, unless otherwise noted. Armstrong before hewascaught cheating, and after. His cameras captured the seeds of Armstrong's HEADS UP undoing. And while heallows plenty of screen time to condemnthe "Ancherman 2:The Legend corrupt, arrogant, bullying Tour de Continues" — San Diego's newsman, France champ, he is just as interested Ron Burgundy, played byWill Ferrell, in bringing back the context, the takes over the nation's first 24-hour "everybody was doing it" argument news channel with his co-anchor that Armstrong has fallen back on and wife (Christina Applegate), himself. Gibney, with footage from weatherman (SteveCarell), man on 2009 and fresh interviews with the street (Paul Rudd) andsports Armstrong's victims, shows the guy (David Koechner). Thefilm opens Wednesdaywith a few early Maryse Alberti / Sony Pictures Classics /The Associated Press intimidation Armstrong used to keep his myth intact and keepthose screenings Tuesday.Regal OldMill Lance Armstrong's doping scandal is the subject of a newdocumentary directed by Alex Gibney, rumors at bay. Most despicably, Stadium 16 & IMAX isalso screening "The Armstrong Lie." Armstrong was never shyabout a double feature Tuesdaywith the playing the cancer card, suggesting original, "Anchorman: TheLegendof that there was an "ends justify the Ron Burgundy." (PG-13) the English countryside in the midmovie theaters around theworld. The "The RoyalBallet: TheNutcracker" means" logic to his chicanery and — Synopsis from film's website 20th century. Ambrogio Maestri — A young girl's enchanted present events screens at9:55 a.m. Saturday self-righteous pose. Gibney, knowing "The MetropolitanOpera: Falstaff" singsthe title role of the blustery Sir at the RegalOldMill Stadium16 & leads her on awonderful adventure what to look for in that old footage, John Falstaff, opposite a marvelous IMAX in Bend. An encore screens at i n this classic ballet, accompanied by — An undisputed master of Falstaff, plays a wonderful game of catch-up ensemble that includes Angela Meade, 6:30 p. m. Wedne sd ay . Ti ck e t s ar e $2 4 Tchaikovsky's glittering score. From Music Director JamesLevine here. He is never less than blunt Stephanie Blythe, Lisette Oropesaand for adults, $22 for seniors and$18 the very first notes of Tchaikovsky's conducts Verdi's opera for the first about the scope of the cover-up Franco Vassallo. "TheMet: Live in HD" for children. 200 minutes. (noMPAA overture to "The Nutcracker," a sense and the corruption of the sport and time at the Metsince2005. Robert series features10 operaperformances rating) of mystery and magic pervadesthe Carsen's production — the first new those who monitored it. This is a transmitted live in high-definition to — Synopsis f/om National CineMedia theatre as Herr Drosselmeyer sets Met Falstaff since1964 — is set in real inside-cycling "how they did in motion the events that will see his it" expose. Rating: Three stars.123 beloved nephew,HansPeter, freed minutes.(R) — Moore from the enchantment of the evil Mouse King by the resourceful Clara. "Blue is the WarmestColor"Say this for "Blue is the Warmest "The Nutcracker" unfolds over two Color," the Cannes award winner glorious acts. Peter Wright's classic that is as famous for its long, production, first seen atCovent explicit sex scenes as it is for its Garden in1984, is anessential part of honors and actresses: It earns the Christmas for audiences of all ages. NC-17 rating the MPAA imposed Part of The RoyalOpera HouseBallet on it. This overlong, somewhat Series, the ballet screens at 7p.m. Tuesday at the RegalOld Mill Stadium sad-faced account of a lesbian romance, from its beginnings to 16 & IMAX inBend. 130minutes. Fri.-Sat. Diec. 13-14 its end, features what has already Cost is $15. (no MPAA rating) become the most notorious lesbian — Synopsis f/om National CineMedia sex scene in screen history — 10 "SouthernBaptist Sissies" — The minutes of grappling, groping and bare-skin slapping that flirts with 2013 film is the story of four boys Sw,n,. Dgt.-c. 15 who are gaygrowing up in the pornography. We meetAdele (Adele Southern Baptist Church andhow Exarchopoulos) as a17-year-old high school junior with a lot of they each deal differently with the conflict between theteachings of girlfriends given to franktalk about the church andtheir sexuality. This boys and sex. In a long first act, we film is a live production of the actual see the bookish Adele, all mussed hair and lips that default to a sort play. Del Shores updated thescript of depressed pout, deal with the and directed the play with multiple cameras in front of live audiences, confusion she feels amid the peer and then filmed additional days for pressure to hook up. Thomas 'e (Jeremie Laheurte) is interested. close-ups andcoverage to make it so •s s s But he doesn't do it for her. Adele's the final film feels as though it was •• i, e • eeshot in one live showwith fifteen erotic dreams are about the girl with cameras. Presented byLGBTStars the short, blue hair she glimpsed in a crowd. And when she finally meets and Rainbows, the film screens at 7 p.m. Monday atthe Volcanic Emma (Lea Seydoux), Adele learns Theatre Pub inBend. Cost is $5, and what chemistry is all about. Director reservations are requested. (no MPAA and co-writer Abdellatif Kechiche pours most of his effort into the rating) — Synopsis from film'sFacebookpage signature sex scenes. Everything else exists to establish Adele's character, her pragmatic life, her state of mind. But Exarchopoulos is a revelation, wearing her neediness, vulnerability and arousal with every muscle in her face, her posture, even her hair. It's an utterly naked performance, literally and figuratively. Rating: Three stars. 177 minutes. (NC-17) —Moore

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movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29

From previous page "The Hebbit:TheDesolation of Smaug" —There's far less fussing about in this moviethan in its precursor "TheHobbit: An Unexpected Journey," andalthough "Smaug" moves at afaster pace, it still feels overlong. At least this leg ofthe quest features giant spiders and ahot elf. Can't miss with that. Martin Freeman, lan McKellenandRichard Armitage return to star, andPeter Jackson's 3-D visuals are asbreathtaking as ever. The film is available locally in 3-D,High Frame Rate3-D and IMAX3-D. Rating: Three stars.161 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "Nebraska" — What ajoy it is to watch BruceDernplaying such a miserable SOB in the best roleof his long career.WoodyGrant is a crabby, boozy,sometimes delusional old guy on aroad trip with his son (Will Forte) to collect asweepstakes prize. AlexanderPayne's latestfilm is a modernAmerican classic about the dynamic between a father from the generation that didn't speak about itsfeelings and agrown son who's still trying to get his father to explain himself. Stark, beautiful and memorable. Rating: Fourstars. 115 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Tyler Perry's A Madea Christmas" — Coaxed into helping afriend payher daughter a surprise holiday visit, the stern, sassy matriarch Madeashakes up a small rural town preparing for its annual Christmas Jubilee.WithTyler Perry, Kathy Najimy,ChadMichael Murray andAnna Maria Horsford. Written and directed byPerry. This film was not reviewed inadvancefor critics. 100 minutes. (PG-13) — Synopsis fromLosAngeles Times

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Francois Duhamel / Fox Searchlight /The Associated Press

Michael Fassbender, left, Lupita Nyong'o and Chiwetel Ejiofor star in "12 Years a Slave." featuring some of the bravest performances you'll ever have the privilege to witness. Chiwetel Ejiofor stars as a freeman inNewYork state in the1840s, who is kidnappedand shipped to the South, where heis beaten, given anew nameandforced into slavery. Unflinchingly directed by Steve McQueen,"12 Years aSlave" is what we talk about when we talk about greatness in film. With Michael Fassbender, Benedict Cumberbatch and Paul Giamatti. Rating: Four stars. 134 minutes.(R) — Roeper "All Is Lost" —Thesailor played by Robert Redford in "All Is Lost" is never named, but his fierce determination to survive makesfor one of the most engrossing and unforgettable one-manadventures in the history of cinema.There are times during the man's solitary struggles at seawhenwe literally have to remember to breathe. Anexpertly

STILL SHOWIMG "12 Years aSlave" —"12 Years a Slave" is a film about great bravery,

paced thriller that never misses a note. Rating: Four stars. 107 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Blue Jasmine" —CateBlanchett divesinto ashowcaseroleandknocks it out of the park. In WoodyAllen's latest, the upper-crust world of an investment guru's wife falls apart, and she moves in with her working-class sister. One ofthe liveliest, funniest and sharpest movies of theyear. With Alec

Baldwin andSally Hawkins. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 98 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "The Book Thief" — Thefilm is a wondrous, richlytextured, sometimes heartbreakingly effective movie about good Germans inWorld War II, including a remarkable little girl and the couple whotook her in while sheltering a teenageJewish boy in their basement. Geoffrey Rush

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and Emily Watson deserveOscar consideration for their lovely, layered performances. Oneof the year's best movies. Rating: Four stars. 131 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Dallas BuyersClub" —Matthew McConaughey plays RonW oodroof, agri my,shady,homophobic, substance-abusing horndog in1985 Texas who learns he's HIV-positive and procures unapproved means of treatment. McConaughey's masterful job of portraying oneof the more deeply flawedanti-heroes in recent screen history reminds us whyhebecame amoviestarin the first place. We start out loathing this guy and learn to love him. Jared Leto disappears into the role of a transgender drug addict andJennifer Garner is Ron's empathetic doctor. Rating: Threeand a half stars.117 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Free Birds" —A start-up division called Reflex Animation did "Free Birds." Relativity is releasing it. They makethe same mistakes that generations of animators made before them, having acute idea and a feeble script to go with it, lining up a "name" voice cast to overcompensate. OwenWilson, Woody Harrelson, Amy Poehler andGeorge Takei — funny folks, one andall. Yet there's barely a laugh in it. Wilson voices Reggie, a scrawny Jeremiah at his turkey farm, the oneguy to figure out why he andhis flock are being fattened up.

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movies

PAGE 30 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

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Anna (voiced by Kristen Bell), left, and Kristoff (voiced by Jonathan Groff) walk through an icy world in "Frozen."

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The few gags there areseemborrowed from better, earlier films — short attention span turkeys inspired by Dory of "Finding Nemo," o Bravehearto battle scenes, mismatched "buddies" from a hundred better buddy comedies. But the sight gags fall flat and much of the screenplay seems like arough draft that the filmmakers — JimmyHayward directed the superioraHorton Hears aWho" — expected the actors to fix. And they didn't. Frozen, under-cooked andsorely lacking much in the wayof aall the trimmings," this turkey isn't ready to serve. Rating: Oneand a half stars. 91 minutes.(PG) —Moore "Frozen" — When aqueenwith icy powers (voice of Idina Menzel) accidentally freezes her kingdom, she runsaway and her intrepid sister (Kristen Bell) goes to find her. Sureto delight children andcaptivate adults, Disney's musical "Frozen" is the instant favorite for the animated feature Oscar, anddeservedly so. The film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 102 minutes. (PG) — Roeper "Hemefront" — A widowedex-DEAagent (Jason Statham) andhis adorable daughter get a hostile reception upon moving to asmall Louisiana town. Director Gary Fleder knows his way around this kind of material, and the screenplay by noneother than Sylvester Stallone hassome salt in it, but ultimately, aHomefronto flies off the rails. James Franco's not right as the villain, and themovie travels awfully familiar turf. Rating: Twostars. 100 minutes. (R) — Roeper "The HungerGames:Catching Fire" — The proceedings in this sequel gooverthe top, but the actors —Jennifer Lawrence, Woody Harrelson, newcomerPhilip SeymourHoffman — are major talents taking their roles seriously. This is aworthy sequel to the original and a fitting setup to thefinale of the series. Evenwith all the wondrousspecial effects andfuturistic touches, at heart this is thestory of agirl thrust (against her wishes) into theforefront of a revolution. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 146 minutes.(PG-13) —Roeper

"Last Vegas" — There's virtually nothing subtle or surprising about this story of old guys at a LasVegas bachelor party, and yet one can't but smile throughout, watching Michael Douglas, Robert DeNiro, Morgan Freeman, Kevin Kline andMary Steenburgen — AcademyAward winners all — breezetheir way through anobvious but lovely andfunny adventure. Rating: Threestars.104 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "Mr. Nobody" — Framedwithin the flashbacks of "the last mortal on Earth," 118-year-old manNemoNobody (Jared Leto) interviewed byboth his future (2092) shrink (Allan Corduner) and ajournalist (Daniel Mays), it's about love andlife and entropy and decayandthe fateful choices you makeandwhatyou might could if you could chooseagain. Writer-director Jaco Van Dormael a( Toto the Hero") spins flashbacks and time-lapse photography, stunning montages, whirling, circling camerasand stunning underwater, deepspace and Martian landscape photography into a film that is as intentionally opaque as it is overlong. "Mr. Nobody" takes agood 70minutes to get to the point whereyouguess where it's going. And that's only the halfway mark. But it is fascinating to chew onand mull over, a cryptic "puzzle picture" set in the playground of the psyche, amovie about the present, the past and the future andthe wonder of how any of us is strong enough to makeachoice, a decision, about anything. Rating: Twoanda half stars. 140 minutes. (R) —Moore "Muscle Shoals" — Muscle Shoals, Ala. this dinky little berg on theTennesseeRiver was the home tomusicians, producers and studios that launchedeveryone from Aretha Franklin to the Allman Brothers, Percy Sledge to Jimmy Cliff. Everybody whowasanybody in music from the 1960s through the '80s did transformative workthere. Andeven today music's best and historically brightest make the pilgrimage to the little town on the Alabama/Tennesseestate line to record and soak up a little of that gritty, funky"Muscle Shoals Sound." Director Greg "Freddy" Camalier presents anelegiac, picturesque -

documentary about a placethat rivals any in North America in its importance to popular music, then andnow. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 112 minutes.(PG) —Moore "Out of the Furnace" — Oneof the best movies I've seenthis year is astark, bleak, intense dramaset in adying corner of the Rust Belt. As asolid guy recently released from prison and looking out for his tinderbox brother, Christian Bale strikes many different notes andhits each with the same precision. Rating: Four stars. 116minutes. (R)— Roeper "Prisoners" — When his daughter and her friend go missing, Keller Dover (Hugh Jackman, more impressive thanever) becomesa man possessed.Themasterful script takes us through amazeof plot complications and possible suspects. "Prisoners" is a white-knuckle, nearmasterpiece of athriller, falling short of greatness only because it goes ontoo long. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars.153 minutes. (R) — Roeper "Rush" — "Rush" ranks amongthe best movies about auto racing evermade, featuring great performances from Daniel Bruhl as detail-obsessed FormulaOnedriver Niki Lauda andChris Hemsworth as his cocky rival, JamesHunt. Even if you don't know Formula Onefrom the Soap BoxDerby, Ron Howard's"Rush," like all great sports movies, is foremost about getting to knowand understand the characters. This is one of his most impressive efforts. Rating: Four stars. 123 minutes. (R) —Roeper "Thor: The DarkWorld" — Fires on all cylinders at times, with fine workfrom returning stars Chris Hemsworth andNatalie Portman, a handful of hilarious sight gags and some cool action sequences. But it's also more than a little bit silly and quite ponderous and overly reliant on special effects that are more confusing than exhilarating. Let's face it, Thor's kind of a boreandnot nearly as intriguing as his deeply conflicted adopted bro, Loki (Tom Hiddleston). Rating: Twoanda half stars. 112 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

MOVI E

T I M E S • For t:he meekof Dec.13

• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

The Associated Press

The lovable Minions share a

laugh in the sequel "Despicable Me 2."

NEW O M D V D 8 a BLU-RA Y The following movies were released the week ofDec. 10.

"Despicable Me 2" — Former supervillain Gru's transformation to the light side alreadywasunofficially complete when hebecameafather of three orphansandan incalculable number of giggling alien-like minions in the first "Despicable Me." But with his recruitment bythe Anti-Villain League to savethe world from the clutches of anewevil mastermind, it's now official. With respect to Gru's conflicted feelings, it's clear almost immediately where "Despicable Me 2" probably is headed. Interms of genuinelyfunny slapstick, the minions can stand tall next to anybody, real or animated, yet"DM2's" sharply funny script never feels dependent on that slapstick bailing it out. The two work in perfect, brilliant tandem, and the results are soentertaining that it doesn't matter if we all know how the story ends. DVD Extras: Two featurettes andaudio commentary; Blu-ray Extras: Fouradditional featurettes, three minion shorts and deleted scenes.This film wasnot given a star rating. 98 minutes. (PG) — Billy O'Keefe, McClatchy Tribune News Service "Fast & Furious 6" — Against all odds, the "Fast &Furious" franchise is actually picking upmomentum, with "FF6" clocking in asthe fastest, funniest andmost outlandish chapter yet. Whether we'reseeing stunt work or special effects or acombo platter, director Justin Lin keepsraising the bar, going for intentional laughsand thrilling moments ascars pull off impossible maneuvers. DVD Extras: Five featurettes, deleted scenesand audio commentary; Blu-ray Extras: Eight additional featurettes. Rating: Three and ahalf stars.130 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper

Also available this week:

"Adore," "The Angels' Share," "Battle of the Year," "The Hunt," "Man ofTai Chi" and "TouchyFeely"

Next week:

"Ain't Them BodiesSaints," "Elysium," "The Family," "Kick-Ass 2," "The LoneRanger," "OneDirection: This is Us," "Percy Jackson: Seaof Monsters" and "Prisoners"

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31

• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium f6 ft IMAX

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend,800-326-3264. • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) Tue: 9,10 • ANCHORMAN DOUBLEFEATURE (PG-13) Tue: 7 • BLUE IS THEWARMEST COLOR (NC-17) Fri-Tue: 6, 9:50 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 1, 3:25 • THE BOOK THIEF (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 1:20, 4:30, 7:35 • DALLAS BUYERS CLUB(R) Fri-Mon: 11:20 a.m., 2:10, 7:20, 10:05 Tue: 11:20 a.m., 2:10, 7:20 • FROZEN (PG) Fri-Mon: 11:10a.m., 12:55, 3:35, 6:25, 9:05 Tue: 11:10a.m.,12:55, 3:35, 6:25 • FROZEN 3-D (PG) Fri-Tue: 11:05a.m., 1:45, 4:25 • THE HOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11 a.m., 12:45, 2:30, 4:20, 6, 7:55, 9:30 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue:11:15 a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 9:45 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUGHIGHFILM RATE3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:15, 3:45, 7:15 • THE HOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG IMAX3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11:45a.m., 3:15, 6:45, 10:15 • HOMEFRONT (R) Fri-Mon: 10 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE (PG-13) Fri, Sun-Mon: 11:25a.m., 2:40, 4:40, 6:05, 7:05, 9:20, 10:20 Sat: 11 a.m., 2:40, 4:40, 6:05, 7:05, 9:20, 10:20 Tue: 11:25 a.m., 2:40, 4:40, 7:05, 10:20 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) Fri, Sun-Mon: 11:40a.m., 2:20, 4:55, 7:25 Sat: 2:20, 4:55, 7:25 Tue: 11:40 a.m., 2:20 • THE METROPOLITANOPERA: FALSTAFF (no MPAArating) Sat: 9:55 a.m. Wed: 6:30 • NEBRASKA (R) Fri-Tue: 11:15a.m., 2, 7:55 • OUTOFTHEFURNACE(R) Fri-Tue: 1:30, 4:15, 7,9:55 • THE ROYAL BALLET: THENUTCRACKER (no MPAArating) Tue: 7 • THOR: H TE DARK WORLD (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 1:55, 4:45, 7:30, 10:10 • TYLER PERRY'S A MADEACHRISTMAS (PG-13) Fri-Tue:1:10, 3:55, 6:35, 9:10 • High Frame Rate movies record and play visuals at twice the rate orhigher than nonnal. • As of press time, complete movie timesfor5' ednesdayand Thursday were unavailable. CheckTheBulletin's Community Life section thosedays for the complete movie listings. I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St.,Bend,541-330-8562 • FREE BIRDS (PG) Sat, Wed:3 Sun: 11:30 a.m., 2:15 • PRISONERS (R) Fri-Sun, Tue-Thu: 9

21

The Associated Press

Chris Hemsworth, left, and Daniel Brlihl star in "Rush." • RUSH (R) Fri-Sun, Tue-Thu: 6 • TheNFLfootballgamescreensat5:40 p.m. Monday. • After 7p.m.,showsare2fandolderonly. Youngerthan 2fmayattend screenings before 7 p.m. ifaccompanied by alegal guardian.

• THE BOOK THIEF (PG-l3) Fri: 4, 6:45 Sat: 1:15,4,6:45 Sun: 12:45, 3:30, 6:15 Mon-Wed: 6:15 Thu:6 • FROZEN (PG) Fri: 4:30, 7 Sat: 1:30, 3:45, 6 Sun:1, 3:15, 5:45 Mon-Tue: 6:15 Wed: 6 Thu: 3:30,6 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF SMAUG (PG-13) Fri: 4:15, 7:30 Sat: 1, 4:15, 7:30 Sun: 12:30, 3:45, 7 Mon-Wed: 6 Thu: 3:15, 6:30 • THE HUNGERGAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 4, 7 Sun: 3:30, 6:30 Mon-Tue: 6

BESTTIRE IIAI.IIE PROIRISE t•

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Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, CONTINUES(PG-13) Bend, 541-241-2271 Wed-Thu: 4:30, 7:10 • FROZEN (PG) • THE ARMSTRONG LIE(R) Fri: 4:50, 7:20, 9:40 Fri, Sun: 9 Sat: Noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:20, 9:40 Sat:1,9 Sun: Noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:20 Mon-Tue, Thu:3:30 Mon-Thu: 4:50, 7:20 • MR. NOBODY (R) • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF Fri-Sun:6 SMAUG (PG-13) Mon-Tue, Thu:8:30 Fri: 3:10, 6:30, 9:45 • MUSCLE SHOALS (PG) Sat: 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:30, 9:45 Fri-Sun: 3:30 • The "Spaghetti Iflfestem" will scteenat 6:30 Sun: 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 3:10, 6:30 p m.Wednesday(doors openat6p.m ) • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF andincludes anall you-can-eatspaghetti SMAUG3-D (PG-13) dinner. Fri: 3, 6:15, 9:30 I I I Sat: 11:40 a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:30 Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Sun: 11:40 a.m., 3, 6:15 Mon-Thu: 3, 6:15 Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • HOMEFRONT (R) • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND Fri: 5:10, 7:30, 9:50 CONTINUES(PG-13) Sat: 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30, 9:50 Wed-Thu: 4, 6:30 Sun: 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:30 • FROZEN (PG) Mon-Tue: 5:10, 7:30 Fri: 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Sat-Sun:11:15 a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THE HUNGERGAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45 Fri: 4, 7, 9:55 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF Sat: 1',4,7,9:55 SMAUG(PG-13) Sun:1,4,7 Fri: 2:15, 3, 5:30, 6:15, 8:45, 9:30 Mon-Thu: 4, 7 Sat-Sun: 11a.m., 11:45 a.m., 2:15, 3, 5:30, 6:15, 8:45, 9:30 Mon-Tue: 4, 6:30, 7:15 Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt., Prineville, Wed-Thu: 4, 7:15 541-416-1014 • THE HUNGERGAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) • 12 YEARS SLAVE A (UP — R) Fri: 2:45, 6:15, 9:30 Fri:4,7:30 Sat-Sun: 11:30a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 9:30 Sat-Sun: 1, 4, 7:15 Mon-Thu: 3:45, 7:15 Mon-Tue: 4, 7:15 • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND CONTINUES(PG-13) Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Wed-Thu: 4, 7:30 Sisters, 541-549-8800 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF SMAUG (PG-13) • ALL IS LOST (PG-13) Fri: 3:10, 7, 10:30 Sat:1:45 Sat: 11:30 a.m., 3:10, 7,10:30 Sun:1:15 Thu: 3:45 Sun:11:30a.m., 3:10, 7 • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND Mon-Tue: 3:10, 7 Wed-Thu (UP): 3:10, 7 CONTINUES(PG-13) Wed:6:30 • Theupstairsscreeningroom (VP)has Thu: 4, 6:45 limited accessibility •

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PAGE 32 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 13, 2013

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