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Rice at center of storm over Benghazi
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By Anne Gearan The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — A month after the assault on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, a fateful series of television ap pearances by Susan Rice, the American ambassador to the United Nations, is haunting the Obama administration in the face of allegations that it deliberately attempted to play down suspicions of terrorist involvement. Rice made the rounds of the Sunday morning talk shows on Sept. 16, five days after the attack in the Libyan city, and in each one she said the fatal assault appeared to have stemmed from a spontaneous protest over an anti-Islam video. The appearances were part of a gradual increase in the public profile of an adminis tration insider, one eyed as a potential successor to Hillary Clinton as secretary of state. Today, Rice's profile has been raised, but hardly in the way that she or her White House supporters would have liked. See Rice/A5
• Republicans,including Walden, fear an executiveordercould hinder the privatesector's security efforts By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
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increasing national efforts to detect and thwart cyber attacks.
New York Times News Service
KABUL, Afghanistan — The first thing Col. Akbar Stanikzai does when he inter views recruits for the Afghan National Army is take their cellphones. He checks to see if the ring tones are Taliban campaign tunes, if the screen savers show the white Taliban flag on a black background, or if the phone memory includes any insurgent beheading videos. Often enough they flunk that first test, but that hardly means they will not qualify to join their country's man power-hungry military. Now at its biggest size yet, 195,000 soldiers, the Afghan army is so plagued with desertions and low re-enlistment rates that it has to replace a third of itsentire force every year, of ficials say. See Afghan /A5
system — including completion of the Deschutes River Trail. The trail currently ends
sidering an executive order that would allow the private sector and government agencies to voluntarily share information vital to protecting key segments of the nation's infrastruc ture, he said. At the same time, however, congressional Repub licans, including Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, wrote the president to urge him not to issue the or der, which would impose a new level of regulation on companies trying to prevent hostile action in
here at Davis Park, on the river's east bank just downriver from Bend Riverside
cyberspace.
Motel and Suites. A pedestrian bridge spanning the river is planned to provide additional connections to the trail.
"At best, creating a top-down, one-size-fits-all bureaucracy to address cybersecurity will slow our response and impose unnecessary costs on our economy," states the letter, which was signed by 10 other members, including House Energy and Com merce Committee Chairman Fred Upton, R-Mich. "At worst, it will provide a road map to those that wish to do us harm." Walden said Monday he hopes the Obama ad ministration won't limit the capabilities of private sector engineers and computer scientists who under stand the technology and how best to fend off hostile
Rob Kerr i The Bulletin
If Measure 9-86 ls approved by voters, the city will see an expansion of its trail
• The BendParkBtRecreation District wants $29 milion to pay for newprojects. Not everyonethinks that's affordable By Mac McLean The Bulletin
Frank Huebsch's workout often involves a minimum 5-mile run along the Deschutes River Trail each day. "We have a really big running base here," the 65 year-old ultra-runner said as he wrapped up an Oct. 11 run near River Canyon Park in southwest Bend. The Bend Park & Recreation District plans to use almost half the money from a $29 million bond measure coming before voters Nov. 6 to expand the river trail by three miles so it connects the Deschutes National Forest with Tumalo State Park. But Bond Measure 9-86 would also force the typical Bend homeowner to pay an additional $40 in property taxes each year for the next 20 years during a time when the region's economy is just starting to recover. That's a price Huebsch and others have said they simply can't afford to pay. "All of these things add up," Huebsch said. He's opposed to the plan even though it would bring one of his favorite running trails through his neighborhood. "It all costs money and we have to consider what we can afford," he said. Even park district officials admit the most common question they hear about the bond measure is: "Why now?"
The upgrades About 46 percent of the money raised by Bond Mea sure 9-86 would be used to make a series of upgrades to the park district portion of the Deschutes River Trail so that it seamlessly connects the national forest with the state park. See Bond/A6
Debate coverage Watch television coverage of tonight's presidential debate between President
The Bend Park & Recreation District would
complete several projects that have been at the top of its to-do list for a while.
The Associated Press
Safe passage through Colorado Dam 17%
Source: Bend Park &Recreation District
Colorado Dam on the Des
dead.
Andy Z elgert /The Bulletin
create a new park in south east Bend.
ers and tubers to bypass
CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. — Mark Hotton appeared on the high-stakes Broadway theater scene out of nowhere this year, offering to come to the financial rescue of a fledgling Broadway adaptation of the psychological thriller "Rebecca." Although the musical's producers had never heard of Hotton, he successfully sold himself as a globe trotting moneyman with connections to a wealthy Australian named Paul Abrams. That was before Hotton raised suspicions by claiming that A b r ams ha d s uddenly dropped
Simpson Avenue Recreation Center 19%
would include spacefor an ice rink, a farmers market sage that would allow boat
leavesmanfacing federal fraudcharges By Tom Haysand Frank Eltman
Almost half of the money raised through Bond Mea
• Help create a safe pas
Phantom financing
Expand Pine Nursery sports fields 5% Deschutes Buy land for River Trail southeast upgrades Bend parks 13o/o 46%
• Purchase land to expand the Bend Senior Center and
and athletic fields.
See Cyber /A6
by Bond Measure 9-86 to
with OSU-Cascades that
• Build a new recreation
incur sions.
use the $29 million raised
center on SimpsonAvenue
expand the Deschutes River Trail. The rest of it would be used to:
Where: ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox, CNN, CNBC, MSNBC and Fox News.
Parks bond
Where wouldthe money go? sure 9-86 would be usedto
Barack Obamaand challenger Mitt Romney. When: 6 p.m.
Federal prosecutors charged Hotton on Monday with concocting a tale of phantom investors and an untimely death as imaginative as the classic Al fred Hitchcock movie about a man haunted by the memory of his dead first wife — and the basis of the Broadway adaptation. Hotton, 46, also was charged in two other swin dles — one targeting a Connecticut-based real es tate company and another that investigators say involved his wife and sister on Long Island. A judge in federal court in Long Island ordered Hotton held without bail on Monday after prosecu tors argued he was a flight risk. In court papers, the government accused Hotton of creating a web of shell companies they likened to a Ponzi scheme that victimized people across the country to the tune of $15 million. See Broadway /A4
chutes River.
• Add new sports fields to northeast Bend's Pine Nurs
ery Community Park. Source: Bend Park and Recreation District
Debate coverage on A2.
8 P We userecycled newsprint An Independent
Vol. 109,No. 290,
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Meanwhile, President Obama is con- IN D.C.
Shaky Afghan army clouds plans for exit of U.S. forces By Rod Nordland
WASHINGTON — A growing consensus in Wash ington holds that America is increasingly vulnerable to a devastating cyber attack, but officials remain di vided on how best to prevent it. In a speechlast week, Defense Sec retary Leon Panetta urged Congress to pass comprehensive legislation aimed at ,lennwl„
Tsect ions
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TODAY'S WEATHER Breezy High 58, Low 31
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TOP NEWS SCOTLAND: Voters can undo
300 years of union with Britain, A3
A2 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 20'I2
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Oregon Lottery results
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:
Q 10Q 23Q 27Q 29Q 33 Q 38 The estimated jackpot is now $9.2 million.
Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, names in the news — things you need to know to start your day. Until Election Day, this page will focus on politics.
TART
TODAY
PRESIDENTIAL DEBATES: ROUND 2
Town hall ormat coLI reak open race By David Lightman McCfatchy Newspapers
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HAPPENINGS
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HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. — Pres ident Barack Obama and Re publican Mitt Romney face off • s ' n tonight in a "town hall" style • a n • i debate that has the potential to finally break the race's stub born tie as their battle roars into its final, decisive three weeks. The 90-minute debate at Hofstra University, which be gins at 6 p.m., comes with the two men neck and neck after R omney bested Obama i n their first debate, gained in the polls and climbed back into contention. The result could hinge on the way the two men perform, but also on a format that will allow members of the audience to pose questions, with follow-ups from modera o tor Candy Crowley of CNN. Obama, sharply criticized for a listless performance in the first presidential debate on Oct. 3, is expected to more ag Charlie Neibergan /The Associated Press gressively question Romney's Billy Koske, left, and Jose Reyes look at signshanging in the media filing center in preparation shifts in tone and position over for tonight's presidential debate between President Barack Obama and Republican challenger the years — and in some cases Mitt Romney at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y. recent days — on tax cuts, im migration, abortion and other «4p subjects. Libya last month. Cr ga <op "We saw this clearly in the Vice President Joe Biden sa first presidential debate on added to t h e c o n troversy, Oct. 3, as Gov. Romney cyni saying during his debate last cally and dishonestly hid the week with c h allenger Paul self-described 'severely con Ryan that the White House servative' positions he's been was unaware embassy offi running on — and there's no cials wanted more security. doubt he's memorizing more That seemed to c o ntradict deception s as h e p r epares congressional testimony ear for Tuesday's second debate," lier in the week, when a State Obama campaign manager Department official told Con Jim Messina said in a memo gress that she had received Monday. requestsfor more security in Obama, who has been prac Benghazi but that she turned ticing in W i l liamsburg, Va., David Getdman / The Associated Press them down because the de is expected to press Romney Stand-ins for Mitt Romney and President Barack Obamarun partment wanted to train Lib hard on the Republican's con through a rehearsal with moderator Candy Crowley, back to yans to handle the duties. tention that he can cut current camera, ahead of tonight's presidential debate. For Romney, it could be his income tax rates 20 percent claim that he' ll be able to cut across the board without in tax rates enough to stimulate mOr, 'Hey, while we' re on this, Like Obama, theyhad grown creasing the federal deficit. growth but also able to limit Romney, who has been pre could you please explain why used to deference even oppo unidentified deductions so that paring in the Boston area, is this happened or what do you nents show to the president the wealthy end up paying the expected to counter not only think about this'? '" of the United States, and they same amount of taxes. w ith vigorous a defense of his Asked about the kerfuffle s eemed taken aback at t h e Independent analysts have plan but with a recitation of around Crowley and follow-up kind of onslaught they hadn' t been skeptical of the claim. economic woes that he says questions, Obama campaign endured since their last cam Congress' bipartisan J o int the Obama administration has s pokeswoman J e n Psa k i paignsfour years earlier. Committee on Taxation staff helped exacerbate. The more noted therewere "discussions Reagan and Bush recov r eported Friday t ha t e v en informal town hall format is around every debate," but she ered in their second debates eliminating most tax breaks likely to be more comfortable declined to comment on the and went on to win their re would only support a 4 per for the affable Romney. specifics. election bids. But they were cent reduction in rates. The "The president is looking running when the economy Romney campaign called the Follow-up kerfuffle forward to the debate tomor was thriving, and Obama is finding "irrelevant," saying it Crowley will moderate, the row night, looking forward to not. Obama's fate is more dif did not account for the growth first time in 20 years a woman answering questionsfrom the ficult to handicap, as he's be that rate r eductions would has had that role. Undecided American people who will be ing tugged by two conflicting spur. voters in th e a udience, se in the audience, and he is pre historical forces — the slug Obama also has another lected by the Gallup Organi pared for and ready to take g ish recovery has kept h i s tricky task: He has to make a zation, will ask questions, a questions from wherever they popularity down, but it's not fresh appeal to the small slice format first used in 1992 as a come," she said. dismal enough to make him of undecided voters who could way to more directly engage The R o mney c a m paign an underdog. decide the election. They usu voters. would not comment about fol ally have doubts about the New challenges for both Crowley stirred grumbling low-up questions. incumbent but are getting to in both political camps by sug Asked if the campaign pre Both candidates face new know the opponents. They gesting she may go further in fers no f ollow-up questions challenges Tuesday. Republi need time to assess whether her own questioning than the from Crowley, Psaki said: "I'm cans sense this is their first big they can envision Romney as campaigns want. She a l so not going to get into any more chance to question Obama's president. "It's harder for an incum plans to press the candidates specifics than that." national security p o licy, a to actually answer the ques topic that didn't come up in the bent torecapture votes from History favors incumbent tions asked of them. first debate. people who have jumped off "Either go to the next ques Despite losing his lead after For Obama, it could be Lib his ship. Those people have tion or say, 'Wait a second, wait the first debate, Obama has ya. His administration stum begun to say, OK, I'm comfort a second, they asked oranges, some history on his side. In bled in e x plaining circum able with Romney," said Brad you responded apples, could cumbent presidents, notably stances surrounding the death Coker, managing director of you please respond to orang Ronald Reagan in 1984 and of four Americans, including Mason-Dixon Polling & R e es'?'" Crowley told McClatchy G eorge W. Bush 20 years later, the U.S. ambassador, in an as search, which conducts sur Newspapers in an interview. lapsed in their first debates. sault on the U.S. consulate in veys in several states.
012,
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Surge in donationsputs Romney close to Obamafor September Spokeswoman Andrea Saul tweeted that th e c ampaign WASHINGTON — Repub raised more than $27 million lican presidential challenger in small donations online dur Mitt Romney enjoyed a surge ing the first two weeks, better of donations in S eptember, than any month so far. raking in $170 million for the The rapid pace with which month — a major cash infu the f o r mer M a s sachusetts sion that is helping finance a governor brought in contribu deluge of advertising by his tions in September puts him campaign in the final weeks of on track to join Obama in rais the White House contest. ing more than a record $1 bil R omney came c l ose t o lion for his presidential bid by matching th e $ 181 m i llion Election Day. that President Barack Obama As of Sept. 30, Romney had raised last month — and he pulled in nearly $839 million did so during a rocky period through his campaign, the Re for his candidacy and before publican National Committee his performance in the Oct. 3 and a joint fundraising com debate, an event that greatly mittee, according to Federal energized t h e Re p ublican E lection C o mmission d a t a base. and the Campaign Finance Romney campaign officials Institute. indicated Monday that Octo Obama's campaign and af ber was shaping to be even filiated committees had raised better on th e m oney front. $947 million by the end of Tribune Washington Bureau
September. Romney's m o s t r ec e nt fundraising haul came when he was on the ropes over a leaked videotape of comments h e m ade s u ggesting t h at Obama had the support of 47 percentofthe country because they depend on government aid. As Romney struggled to ex plain the comments, he spent much of the month attending a flurry of fundraisers, leading some Republicans toexpress concern that he was not hold ing sufficient public events. But his cultivation of do nors appeared to pay off. As of the end of September, his campaign and joint commit tees had $191 million on hand to finance the final stretch of the race. Obama's campaign has not yet revealed its most recent cash-on-hand figure.
• President Barack Obama and challenger Mitt Romney
square off in the secondof their three scheduled debates. The two will meet at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y. • New York visits Detroit for Game 3 of the American
LeagueChampionshipSeries.
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By Matea Gold
It's Tuesday, Oct. 16, the 290th day of 2012. There are 76 days left in the year.
IN HISTORY Highlights:In 1793, during the French Revolution, Marie Antoinette the queen of
France, was beheaded. In 1859, radical abolitionist John
Brown led agroup of 21 men in a raid on Harpers Ferry in western Virginia.(Ten of Brown's men were killed and
five escaped. Brownand six followers were captured and executed.) In 1901, Booker T. Washington dined at the White House as the guest of President Theodore Roosevelt, whose invitation to the black
educator sparked controversy. In 1942, the ballet "Rodeo," with music by Aaron Copland
and choreography byAgnes de Mille, premiered at New York's Metropolitan Opera
House. In1943, Chicago Mayor Edward J. Kelly officially
opened the city's new subway system during a ceremonyat the State and Madison street station. In 1962, President
John F. Kennedywas informed by national security adviser McGeorge Bundy that
reconnaissance photographs had revealed the presenceof missile bases in Cuba. In1972,
a twin-engine planecarrying U.S. HouseMajority Leader Hale Boggs, D-La., andU.S. Rep. Nick Begich, D-Alaska, disappeared while flying over a remote region of Alaska; the
aircraft was never found. In 1978, the College of Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church
to be the newpope; hetook the name John Paul II.
Ten years ago:TheWhite House announced that North Korea had disclosed it had a
nuclear weapons program. Five years ago:Barbara West Dainton, believed to be the next-to-last survivor from the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, died in Camborne, England, at age 96.
One yearago:TheMartin Luther King Jr. Memorial
was formally dedicated in Washington, D.C.
BIRTHDAYS Actress AngelaLansbury is 87. Actor Barry Corbin is 72. Sportscaster Tim McCarver is 71. Rock musician C.F.Turner
(Bachman-TurnerOverdrive) is 69. Actress SuzanneSomers is 66. Rock singer-musician Bob Weir is 65. Producer director David Zucker is 65. Actor-director Tim Robbins is
54. Actor RandyVasquezis 51. Jazz musician RoyHargrove is 43. Singer Wendy Wilson
(Wilson Phillips) is 43. — From wire reports
s
THIS IIOIiI DAY
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TOP T ORIES
Supreme Court to take upArizona voter law By Adam Liptak
will remain suspended in the using a federal form that asks, "Are you a citizen of the Unit meantime. WASHINGTON The The state law requires pro ed States?" Prospective voters Supreme Court on M onday spective voters to prove they must check a box for yes or no, agreed todecide whether Ari are citizens by providing copies and they must sign the form, zona may require proof of citi of or information concerning swearing they are citizens un zenship in order to register to various documents, including der penalty of perjury. vote in federal elections. The birth certificates, passports, The question for the jus federal appeals court in San naturalization papers or Arizo tices is whether the state was Francisco had b locked the na driverslicenses, which are entitled to supplement those state law, saying it conflicted available only to people law federal requirements with its with a federal one. fully present in the state. own. A divided 10-judge panel T he Supreme Court w i l l The federal law, the Nation of the appeals court, the U.S. hear arguments in the case al Voter Registration Act of Court of Appeals for the 9th early next year, and the law 1993, allows voters to register Circuit, ruled that the two sets New York Times News Service
NEWS IN BRIEF
Putin's party wins big in elections M OSCOW — Ca n d i dates from the pro-Krem lin party U n ited Russia won nearly all the munici pal and regional elections held across the country, ac cording to results released Monday, though analysts said the p arty's success owed much to low voter turnout. Officials were clearly re lieved by the results, which came after a long decline in United Russia's popularity and a spike in anti-govern ment activism. President Vladimir Putin said that the party's victory showed that Russians supported the current government. "I consider this, after the presidential elections, to be one more serious step towards str e n gthening R ussian statehood, a n d the creation of conditions for energetic, effective de velopment in the coming years," he said M onday, during a visit to the Central Election Commission. United Russia leaders said Sunday marked a decisive failure for the year-old oppo sition movement, which had staked most of its hopes on a mayoral race in the Moscow suburb of Khimki, where there has been a bruising battle o ve r g o v ernment plans to build a highway through a local forest.
Phone books free speech, court says SAN FRA NC I SCO — Phone books, the hefty tomes of telephone numbers that invited consumers to "let your fingers do the walking," are protected by the First Amendment, a federal ap pealscourtruled Monday. A three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals struck down a Seattle ordinance that required publishers of the directories to obtain per mits and pay fees before tossing the thick books on driveways. The fees were supposed
to pay for a program in which residents could opt out of receiving the books, but directory p u blishers said the regulations were unconstitutional. — From wire reports
In a concurrence, Chief Judge Alex Kozinski said he found the case "difficult and perplexing," largelybecause the Supreme Court has not set out principles for how to reconcile federal and state responsibilities for con ducting federal elections. In u r ging t h e S u p reme Court to hear the case, Ari zona v. Inter Tribal Council of Arizona, No.12-71, state offi cials said the federal form, the state wrote, amounts to an in adequate "honor system."
UNDOING 300 YEARS OF UNION
Scots to vote onseparation rom Britain
Philippines signs deal with rebels MANILA, P h i l ippines T he government o f the Philippines signed an agreement Monday w i t h the country's largest Mus lim rebel group that both sides say they hope will lessen the chronic violence a nd poverty t h a t h a v e plagued the southern is land of Mindanao. The 13-page framework agreement creates a new p olitical entity t hat w i l l govern the predominantly Muslim areas of Mindan ao, offering a degree of au tonomy and more access to taxes and natural resourc es. As part of the deal, the 1 1,000-strong military o f the Moro Islamic Libera tion Front will gradually be disarmed. The signing Monday was witnessed by Prime Minis ter Najib Razak of Malay sia, who helped broker the deal.
of requirements "do not oper ate harmoniously" and "are seriously out of tune with each other in several ways." The federal law r equires state officials to "accept and use" the federal form, Judge S andra Ikuta wrote for a n eight-judge majority, while the additional requirements some times make that impossible. The requirements were also at odds with the federal law' s attempt to streamline the reg istration process, she wrote.
By Henry Chn
verdict." The dealbetween Cameron and Sal LONDON — Scottish voters will go mond entailed compromises from both to the polls in 2014 to decide whether sides. Scotland should end more than 300 Salmond had pushed for a ballot years of union with England and Wales that offered both independence and a and become anindependent nation. more moderate alternative granting B ritish P r i m e M i n i ster D a v i d fiscal autonomy for Scotland without a Cameron and Scottish First Minister complete breakaway, which would ap Alex Salmond announced an agree peal to voters uncertain of taking the ment Monday on a referendum that ultimate leap. Success for either option could see the biggest political shake would allow the Scottish government up in the British Isles since Ireland to expand its powers. threw off British rule in the previous But Cameron refused to allow a mul tiple-choice ballot, preferring a simple century. Though the exact wording on the "in or out" referendum. His advisers ballot is to be decided, the people of gave in, however, to Salmond's insis Scotland will essentially be given the tence that 16- and 17-year-olds be al option to say yes or no to remaining lowed to vote in the plebiscite, which part of the United Kingdom. A vote in p ro-independence Scots think w i l l favor of secession would dissolve the boost their chances. marriage of Scotland to England and Up to now, virtually no polls have Wales that has been on the books since found a majority of S cotland's 5.2 1707. million people in favor of full inde Signing the agreement in Edinburgh, pendence. But no one underestimates the Scottish capital, Cameron said a Salmond's campaigning skills or his referendum would pave the way "so passion. "If Scotland becomes independent, that the biggest question of all can be settled: a separate Scotland or a United then you' ll have an example of a coun Kingdom? I will be making a very posi try becoming independent in a totally tive argument for our United Kingdom. civilized, democratic, polite manner," It is now up to the people of Scotland to he said in an interview with the Los make that historic decision. The very Angeles Times last month. "That is a future of Scotland depends on their tremendous thing." Los Angeles Times
GordonTerris / The Associated Press
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron, right, and Scotland's First Minister Alex Saimond, shake hands after signing a referendum agreement Monday during a meeting at St. Andrew's House in Edinburgh, Scotland. Cameron met with the leader of Scotland's separatist administration Monday to sign a deal on a referendum that could break up the United Kingdom.
Girl shot
by Taliban in Britain for care New York Times News Service ISLAMABAD — The Pakistani schoolgirl who was shot by the Taliban last week for advocating girls' education has arrived in Britain for emergency spe cialist care. Malala Yousufzai, 14, left an air base in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, where she was being treated for head wounds in a military hospital, on an air ambu lance sent from the United Arab Emirates. T he plane l a nded a t the Birmingham airport i n c entral E n g l and i n midafternoon M on d a y, news agencies reported. She will be treated at the Queen Elizabeth Hospi tal, a center that has spe cialized in the treatment o f t r oops w o u nded i n Afghanistan, Prime Min ister D a vi d C a m eron's office said in a statement quoted by The Associated Press. The Pakistan military s aid M a lala w o ul d r e ceive i m m ediate t r e at ment for her skull, which was fracturedaftera bul l et passed through h e r head, as well a s " l ong t erm r e h abilitation i n cluding intensive neuro rehabilitation." Pakistan said it w ould pay forher treatment. An intensive care spe cialist from the Pakistani military acco m p anied Malala on the flight, which stopped in the United Arab Emirates for refueling in midmorning.
EU upssanctions on nudear Iran By james Kanter and Thomas Erdbrink
j or p owers, i n cluding t h e United States, in nuclear talks New York Times News Service with the Iranians. There have BRUSSELS — The Europe been five rounds of discus an Union toughened sanctions sions since late 2010, the last against Iran over its disputed of which ended in frustration nuclear program Monday, in June. Ashton said the major banning trade in i n dustries powers would keep in contact like finance, metals and natu with Saeed Jalili, Iran's nego ral gas, and m aking other tiator, to assess when to con business transactions far more vene another meeting. cumbersome. The new European sanc The measures were the lat tions were necessary as a re est in a long series of sanc sult of a "continued failure to tions from Europe, the United satisfy the world that the pro States and the U.N. Security gram was for peaceful purpos Council, and were evidence es," said William Hague, the of the worsening damage to British foreign secretary. Iran's economy. But Carl Bildt, the Swedish In a j o int statement, EU foreign minister, emphasized foreign ministers, meeting in the need for a more intensive Luxembourg, expressed "seri diplomatic effort alongside the ous and deepening concerns sanctions. "I think there are voices that over Iran's nuclear program." They added that in continu sound like they want a war," ing to enrich uranium, despite Bildt said. "We don't want war." W estern concerns that it i s aiming for a bomb, Iran was The latest measures make "acting in flagrant violation of business deals between Eu its international obligations." rope and Iran far more com Ahead of the meeting, Cath plicated. The European Union erine Ashton, the European "agreed to prohibit all transac Union's foreign policy chief, tions between European and said: "We want to see a ne Iranian banks unless autho gotiated agreement. But we rized in advance under strict will continue to keep up the conditions with exemptions for pressure." humanitarian needs," accord Ashton representssix ma ing to an official statement.
Turkeyhalts Syria-boundplane Los Angeles Times BEIRUT — A plane headed from Armenia to Syria was grounded Monday at an air port in Turkey, less than a week after the country inter cepted another Syria-bound plane. The plane, described as a ci vilian humanitarian aid plane, was grounded in the eastern province ofErzurum in order for its cargo to be examined, according to the official An adolu news agency. The plane was headed to the besieged
city of Aleppo, which has been the site of clashes since July and the regular target of gov ernment helicopters and fight er jets, leaving many parts of the city destroyed. Turkish authorities will ex amine part of the plane's car go, the news agency reported. A foreign ministry spokes man said that Turkey granted
the plane permission to fly over its airspace only on condition it could search its cargo forpos sible military equipment, the Associated Press reported.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
STOCKTON AFTER BANKRUPTCY
imes are etter, Ll I10 i ' eB By David Siders The Sacramento Bee , r~.
triut "rr+r,
Matt Gouras /The Associated Press
Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer operates a backhoe as he clears a stream under a bridge he built on his ranch in Marysville, Mont.
Montana's governor creates buzzhisway By Matt Gouras
Montana, a state with a strong libertarian bent where bash MARYSVILLE, Mont. ing big corporations and gov A day spent with Montana's ernment are well received. Brian Schweitzer riding four For three y e ars, S c h wheelers and talking politics weitzer has criticized the makes it easy to understand federal health care law as why he's one of the most un an insurance industry give usual — and most effective away. But he also advocates — governors in the country. a single-payer health care At his ranch — and any system like Canada's. where else — Schweitzer, a Schweitzer is a big advocate popular Democrat in a con of coal, and he's not always servative state, never misses friendly with environmental a chance to leave a lasting, ists. But many liberals respect even outlandish, impression. him for his ability to kick Hel He loves every minute of it, ena Republicans in the shins including speculation about and come out ahead. He's adept at getting most his political future once he steps down because ofterm of his budget through hostile limits in January. Republican-controlled Legis The former scientist and latures. Last year, GOP lead mint farmer is proud of his ers caved in when Schweitzer o ff-the-grid g e taway: H e didn't budge in negotiations. built its spring-fed fishing He vetoed a record DO bills ponds, rigged the plumbing and set many of those bills system, designed the rudi aflame with a branding iron mentary battery-and-solar on the Capitol steps. powered panel for the log Some Democrats hoped cabin 40 miles from Helena. he would run for Montana's It has no cellphone service. lone U.S. House seat this cy "Plus I ' m we l l -armed," cle, which he spurned. Oth adds Schweitzer, who hangs ers worry he could mount a a gun on h i s o f fice wall primary challenge in 2014 to d espite a gun ban i n t h e Democratic U.S. Sen. Max Capitol. Baucus, with whom he has a Earlier t hi s y e ar, S ch prickly relationship. weitzer stormed New York' s He says neither fits. "I am not goofy enough Times Square with a bull horn like a political PT. Bar to be in the House, and I'm num, handing outMontana not senile enough to be in made promotional trinkets the Senate," sums up Sch from a semi-truck. He ap weitzer, adding he prefers to peared on Dave Letterman be in charge than pay hom to promote Montana tourism, age tocongressional senior and the state this year is on a ity rules. pace tobreak visitorrecords. Democratic-leaning poll It's not often that a gover ster Public Policy Polling nor from a rural state with has included Schweitzer in no major m e di a m a r ket several early 2016 takes in within 700 miles is consid presidential primary states, ered potential cabinet level where the governor general or even presidential mate ly finishes near the bottom. It's clear Schweitzer is rial. But Schweitzer, 57, is creating that kind of dark considering a run, though he horse buzz with a skillfully quickly discusses things that employed masteryof current could get in the way. "If Hillary runs, she walks affairs and a unique capacity for shamelessand entertain away with the nomination ing self-promotion. and then beats whichever At the Democratic Nation Republican," Schweitzer said al Convention, Schweitzer of Secretary of State Hillary slammed Mitt Romney dur Clinton. "It's lights out." ing a prime-time speech for a Montana Rep u b licans recordhostile to gun owners. beaten many times by Sch Schweitzer a c k n owledged weitzer don't think his "rural that particular comment didn' t cowboy" formula of appeal go over well with many big ing to voters on guns and city Democrats. But it wasn't a coal will play out of state. "He has built his career in mistake — he just had a larger audience in mind. Montana on sounding like a "I don't necessarily say Republican when he wants what pleases the people in to. The Democratic presiden the room," Schweitzer said. tial primary electorate in is "I was saying what all the not interested in that mes independents out there are sage," said Bowen Green thinking, but not hearing." wood, the state Republican That style plays well in Party executive director. The Associated Press
Broadway Continued from A1 Hotton, a former stockbro ker who lost his license last year, managed to "lull some investors into a t e mporary sense of security by allowing them to realize small returns on investments, while the re mainder funded the Hottons' lifestyle, which included plea sure boats registered to others and waterfront property," the
questions about its financial
backing.
Lead producer Ben Spre cher "is extremely gratified that Mr . H o tton ha s b een taken into custody," said his attorney, Ronald Russo, add ing that Sprecher has "coop e rated completely with t h e investigation." "Mr. Hotton's f r audulent conductdid enormous damage to Broadway and to 'Rebecca,'" Russo said. "Mr. Sprecher is papers say. totally committed to bringing He was to appear at another 'Rebecca' to New York." proceeding later in the week According t o a cr i m i nal to face other charges he "per complaint, a "third party" sug petrated stranger-than-fiction gested this year that the pro frauds both on and off Broad ducers contact Hotton to see if way," Manhattan U.S. Attor he could help them with a $4 ney Preet Bharara said in a million shortfall for the musi cal's budget. Even though they statement. In the "Rebecca" case, he "had never met Hotton or heard "faked lives, faked companies of him," they started an email and even staged a fake death," correspondence that convinced the prosecutor said. them hehad secured themoney Hotton's attorney declined from four overseasinvestors, to comment. including Paul Abrams, the The planned $12 million complaint says. production of the 1938 novel The producers agreed to by Daphne du Maurier col pay Hotton $15,000 in fees and lapsed earlier this month amid commissions from March to
STOCKTON, Calif. — Four years ago, as the home foreclo sure crisis ravaged this city but long before it went bankrupt, Barack Obama outperformed the Democratic registration advantage here and carried San Joaquin County by more than 10 percentage points. O bama wil l s u r ely w i n Democrat-heavy C a l i fornia again this year, and he may win in the Central Valley. B ut t h i s el e ctorate i s
changed, deeply colored by the recession and skeptical of the president's ability to improve the economy. Home values have plunged, and the unem ployment rate in San Joaquin County overthe course of last year was nearly 17 percent. Photos byHector Amezcua / Sacramento Bee "It's a nightmare," said Nate Nate Werth, of Stockton, Calif. has battled unemployment since getting laid off in 2009, but Werth, who at th e t ime of remains loyal to Stockton. Obama's election lived with his wife and daughter in a house they owned in central in the gubernatorial election Stockton. "I' ve experienced two years later, the Demo that firsthand." craticcandidate, Jerry Brown, Werth, 39, was laid off in d efeated R epublican M e g 2009 from his job as a pro Whitman by fewer than four gram manager forthe county percentage points. courts. He remained unem The weakness of the econ ployed for about two years. omy is reflected in voter turn " The second year o f i t , " out: Since the recession, said Werth said, "was the year county Registrar of V o ters where it was just depression. Austin E r dman, t h ousands I was so beat up because I just of sample ballots have been couldn't find anything." returned unopened to his of Though Werth and his fam fice from homes that went into ily could "humbly get by" on foreclosure. his unemployment benefits Anthony Enos searches for a jobat a University of the Pacific Earlier this year, Werth and and his wife's salary, he said job fair. Enos, a 43-year-old heavy equipment operator unable his family moved from the "it became very, very evident to find work in construction, most recently worked as a cashier house they owned to one they that even after I started work at Target. could rent nearby. It costs $600 ing that we weren't going to be a month less, and it has more able to sustain our house and room and a pool. He describes keep up the lifestyle that we and we, the evening that it sold Westwerth, could have stayed the move as a "relief." wanted to keep up." and everything went through, in their central Stockton home. At the job f a ir, A nthony At a jo b f ai r r ecently at and Sarah and I are sitting But it was too small for their Enos, a 43-year-old heavy University of the Pacific, near there looking at our computer growing family, Werth said, equipment o p e rator w ho the house Werth used to own, screen, and there' s, we made and the burden of the mort w orked mostrecently as a ca companies acceptedresumes like $130,000 profit from that gage became too heavy. shier at Target, said America "You have to bear in mind has "too many laws and rules, and distributed candy, and house." one set up a sign that read, He said he knew the price that my wife and I are people and that's why there's no in "Yes, we are growing. Yes, we was inflated, that the market who have never had a bad vestment b etween g overn was "ridiculous." They bought credit score in our lives, and ment and private enterprise." are hiring." Perhaps 100 unemployed again, anyway. we are very proud of that, and Enos, a Republican, will people lined up outside, among Miscalculations weretypical we are, you know, normal, de vote for Romney in the fall. them Joshua Ramey, who has in this city of nearly 300,000 cent, upstanding citizens who W erth, a D e mocrat, will been unable to find work in the people. The city itself, wrongly think you have to pay your vote again for Obama. "One of the prominent say construction industry s ince assuming sustained housing bills, and you have to take care the housing market crashed. growth, over-extended on em of those sorts of things in life," ings that you hear from a lot Ramey, a 23-year-old Re ployee benefits and on a mul Werth said. of the Republican side these "So to drop out of such a publican, yearns for a more timillion dollar redevelopment days for this election is, 'Are limited government and will of Stockton's downtown. huge investment is not only you better off than you were vote for Mitt Romney. Ramey Earlier this year, Stockton e motionally taxing fo r y o u four years ago'?' And the an is seeking income in part so b ecame the largest city i n because it's your home, but it' s swer for me is 'Yes,' " Werth that he might leave his par America to file for bankruptcy also emotionally taxing be said. ents' home. He is t h i nking protection. "But that's not really what cause you' re, you know, essen "When theeconomy tanked, tially reneging on the biggest they' re asking, in my opin about moving to Tennessee to find a job. it hit us even worse than any purchase of your life." ion. They' re not asking you At the job fair, too, was Dor other places," said Ann John Werth and his wife sold the if you' re better off than you cil Jones, 35, who moved in ston, the city's mayor. "Here home through a short sale. were four years ago. They' re with her parents in January. it's not just a recession, it bor The rules of the housing mar asking if everything is per She will vote for Obama be ders on a depression." ket had changed, Werth said, fect now, did he f ix , magi cause "his intent is great," she Johnston is a Democrat and "and the way that we ended cally, everything over four said, though she finds his ex will vote for Obama in Novem up justifying it to ourselves y ears. Well, o f c o u rse h e didn' t, and that's why it's an ecution "iffy." ber.She is frustrated, however, was that you have to play "I' ve been on welfare now with an administration and ball with the rules that you' re easy question for them to ask, for two years," she said. "I nev Congress she said could have given." because ofcourse that's not er pictured myself ever being relieved the housing crisis by Werth calls the Central Val true. That's never going to be in this type of situation." forcing banks to modify home ley "California's Midwest," and true." mortgage s. San Joaquin County, though Housing boom Improving t a x r e c e ipts, Democratic leaning, is rela Werth's wife, Sarah West, b usiness openings and t h e tively conservative. Providing unparalled is a schoolteacher. He pro construction of a prison medi service across a variety of Weakened economy posed to her on the stoop of cal facility suggest to Johnston industries since 1983. their home. 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June, the complaint says. He was also paid an additional $18,000 "advance" against his 8 percent commission, it says. While pressing for Abrams to wire the funds in July, Hot ton wrote that the investor had been hospitalized with malaria following a trip to Africa, the complaint says. An email later forwarded to the producers purportedly written by Abrams' secretary — read: "Mr. Hot ton, I'm so sorry to relay such terrible news — Mr. Abrams passed away this evening and the family has asked for your attendance at the services ... as you wereso close to him." In the separate Long Island case, federalprosecutors in Brooklyn accused Hotton and his wife of cheating business clients out of $3.7 million. An indictment alleges that the couple, while operating three electrical contracting companies, created fake in voices showing money owed by third parties. They then sold the purported debts to other companies, the indict ment said.
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Rice Continued from A1 The administration's char acterization only days after Rice's TV appearances that the assault in Libya was a ter rorist attack has raised ques tions about why she attrib uted the incident to a protest that officials now say did not take place. Republicans have pressed for answers on wheth er she simply went too far in her assessment or was reading from an administration script that was designed to protect President Barack Obama's re cord on national security in an election year. In an i n terview M onday with The Washington Post, Rice said she relied on daily updates f r o m i n t e l ligence agenciesin the days before her television appearances and on a set of talking points prepared for seniormembers of the ad ministration b y i n t elligence officials. She said there was no attempt to pick and choose among possible explanations for the attack. "Absolutely not," Rice said. "It was purely a function of what was provided to us" and had been given to Congress the day before. Administration of fi c i als have risen to h e r d efense. On Monday, Clinton said she wanted to "avoid some kind of political gotcha." "I take responsibility" for what happened on Sept. 11, Clinton told CNN in an inter view shortly after arriving in Lima, Peru, for a visit. Republicans have dismissed
Afghan Continued from A1 The attrition strikes at the core of America's exit strategy in Afghanistan: to build an Af ghan National Army that can take over the war and allow the United States and NATO forces to withdraw by the end of 2014. The urgency of that deadline has only grown as the pace of the troop pullout has become an issue in the Ameri can presidential campaign. The Afghan deserters com plain of c o r ruption among theirofficers, poor food and equipment, indifferent medi cal care, Taliban intimidation of their families and, prob ably most troublingly, a lack of belief in the army's ability to fight the insurgents after the U.S. military withdraws. On top of that, recruits now undergo tougher vetting be cause of concerns that enemy infiltration of the Afghan mili tary is contributing to a wave of attacks on i n t ernational forces.Stanikzai, a senior of ficial at the army's National Recruiting Center, is on the front line of that effort; in the six months through Septem ber, he and his team of 17 in terviewers have rejected 962 applicants, he said. "There are drug traffick ers who want to use our units for their business, enemy in filtratorswho want to raise problems, jailbirds who can' t find any other job," he said. During the same period, how ever, 30,000 applicants were approved. "Recruitment, it's like a ma chine," he said. "If you stopped, it would collapse." Despite the challenges, so far the Afghan recruiting pro cess is not only on track, but actually ahead of schedule. Afghanistan's army reached its full a uthorized strength in June, three months early, though there are still no units that U.S. t r ainers consider able to operate entirely with out NATO assistance. According t o B r i g . G e n. Dawlat Waziri, th e d eputy spokesman for th e A f ghan Defense Ministry, the army's desertion rate is now 7 to 10 percent. Despite substantial pay increases for soldiers who agree to re-enlist, only about 75 percent do, he said. (Re cruits commit to three years of service.) Put another way, a third of the Afghan army perpetually consists of first-year recruits fresh off a 10- to 12-week train ing course. And in the mean time, tens of thousands of men with military training are put at loose ends each year, albeit without their army weapons, in a country rife with militants who are always looking for help. "Fortunately there are a lot of people who want a job with the army, and we' ve always managed to meet the goal set by the Ministry of D efense for us," said Gen. Abrahim
suggestions that they are play ing politics. And Rice's expla nation of her remarks, which echoes that of other admin istration officials, including Vice PresidentJoe Biden, has not blunted the criticism. "The facts are there was never a r i ot," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Sunday on "Face the Nation." "My belief is that that was known by the administration within 24 hours and, quite frankly, Susan Rice, on your show on September 16th, the president on the 18th and the 25th, kept talking about an at tack inspired by a video." The White House has said that it turned to Rice to make the administration's case on the Benghazi attack because it made sense to have a top diplomat speak to the loss of the U.S. ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens. Rice has previously said lit tle about the controversy gen erated by her TV appearances. Aides have said that her com ments have been taken out of context and that she stressed at the time that the FBI was still investigating the attack. "Ambassador Rice's com ments wereprefaced at every turn with a c lear statement that an investigation was un der way that would provide the definitive accounting of the events that took place in Benghazi," said Erin Pelton, s pokeswoman for t h e U . S. Mission to the United Nations. The White House has sup ported that explanation but has not specified the intelli gence that underlined Rice's
statements. Instead, officials have deemed as preposterous allegations that Rice or anyone else cherry-picked intelligence and have argued that it would make no sense for the admin istration to knowingly put out a false narrative that could so easily be disproved. In the interview, Rice said in telligence agencies were doing their best to understand what had happened incomplicated circumstances and should not be blamed."What you get Day I, Day 2, Day 14 isn't the whole story," she said. Intelligence agencies col lected "multiple threads" of i nformation t ha t d a y a n d night, and the assessment of those threads changed over time, Undersecretary of State Patrick Kennedy said l a st week before a congressional committee. "If any administration of ficial, including any c areer official, were on television on Sunday, Sept. 16, they would have said what Ambassador Rice said," Kennedy said. In addition to her comments on CBS, Rice told NBC's "Meet the Press". "Our current as sessment is what happened in Benghazi was, in fact, initially a spontaneous reaction to what had just transpired hours be fore in Cairo, almost a copycat of the demonstrations against our facility in Cairo, prompted by the video." During an interview on Fox News Channel the same day, she attributed the Benghazi at tack to a protest gone wrong. R epublican c r i t icism o f Rice's handling of the crisis
full time. Muhammad Fazal Kochai, 28, who deserted from the 1st Brigade of the 201st Corps a year ago but still proudly shows the army ID card he carries in his wallet, had a gettingenough young men," particularly rough time. Dur Ahmadzai said, "just as long ing his year in the army, 25 of as we get that $4.1 billion a his comrades were wounded year from NATO." and 15 killed out of his com That is the amount pledged pany of 100 to 150 men, sta by the United States and its tioned in the dangerous Tangi allies to continue paying to W ardak a re a o f Wa r d a k cover the expenses of the Af province. ghan military. In terms of sol Still, he said, he would have diers' pay, that underwrites stayed had it not been for the $260 a month for the lowest corruption o f h i s o f f i cers: "Everybody is trying to make ranks, which in Afghanistan is above-average pay for un money to line their pockets skilled labor. A soldier who re and buildtheir houses before enlists would get a 23 percent the Americans leave." raise, to at least $320 a month, The final straw came when more if he had been promoted. local villagers pointed him But even as pay rates have out after his unit had killed a risen, so has attrition, which local Taliban commander. "I two years ago was 26 percent. started to get phone calls from The trend is troubling — espe the Taliban saying, 'We know cially the desertions — as Af who you are, and we' re going ghan forces have shouldered to kill you.'" a n increasing share of t h e He deserted and called to fighting. tell the Taliban they did not U.S. officials have tried to have to worry about him any persuade the Afghans to crim longer. inalize desertion in an effort Now Kochai is convinced to reduce it; instead, Afghan the Afghan Army w il l l o se officials have proposed a four once the Americans leave. "The army can do nothing on year effort to order the recall of 22,000 deserters, according their own without the equip to Ahmadzai. m ent and s upplies of t h e Meanwhile, Afghan desert A mericans, without the a i r ers live so openly that they list support, nothing," he said. their status as a job reference. Sher Agha, 25, from the Sar G hubar, 27, who i s f r om kano District of eastern Kunar Parwan province but lives in province, had a similar expe Kabul, deserted from his bat rience. "Unknown g unmen talion with the 1st Brigade in kept bothering my family and Kabul just six months into his three-year commitment. Cit ing his military training, he Ahmadzai, the deputy com mander of the National Re cruiting Center. The country' s 34 provincial recruitment cen ters have a combined quota of 5,000new recruitsa month. "We' re not concerned about
promptly got a job as a secu rity guard. G hubar declined t o g i v e more than his first name, but was not worried about being photographed. "There is no accountability," he said. "If they had any accountability, it wouldn't be such a bad army." Most of his complaints were echoed by the 10 other desert ers interviewed onthe record for this article. "I wanted to serve my coun try, my h omeland," Ghubar said. "But after I joined, I saw the situation was all about cor ruption. The officers are too busy stealing the money to de feat the insurgents." A typical swindle described by thedeserters was the diver sion of the money allocated to commanders to pay for food, which is usually procured lo cally rather than distributed from a central depot. "Half the time we would get rice with a bone in it, with a little fat, no meat," he said. Ghubar added, "People who join the army, they just lose their hope." Ajmal, 24, from Kabul, who also gave only his first name and desertedfrom the same b attalion, said he k new o f commanders who had signed up their sons as "ghosts," en abling them to collect army pay while attending university
comes at a time when the ad ministration appeared to be grooming her for a more vis ible diplomatic position. In recent months, she has represented the United States at a state funeral for a close U.S. ally, Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia, and mixed family sightseeing at the Taj Mahal w ith h i gh-level talks w i t h India's to p f o r eign p o l icy officials. "The president has enor mous confidence in Ambas sador Rice and is extremely grateful for all the important work she does at the U.N. ev ery day," said National Securi ty Council spokesman Tommy Victor. T he spokesman said h e would not "speculate on future personnel decisions." Micah Zenko of the Center for Preventive Action at the Council on Foreign Relations said Rice's political fate large ly rests on whether investiga tions by a State Department panel and by the House Over sight and Government Reform Committee "find compelling evidence she had intelligence that didn't match" the account she presented to the public. "I think it would be very dif ficult for the administration to put her forward for secretary of state if she willfully mis characterized the intelligence," Zenko said. He said he would "find it hard to believe" that Republi cans could muster sufficient opposition to block her nomi nation if the evidence indicates that her account matched the intelligence assessments.
telling them to force me to quit my job andcome back home," he said. Finally, he did. At th e N a tional Recruit ing Center, Stanikzai keeps working, but he admits to a bleak outlook. "The news of the A m e rican w i t h drawal has weakened our m o r ale and boosted the morale of the enemy," he said. "I am sorry to speak so frankly. If the in ternational community aban dons us again, we won't be able to last." The colonel's hunt for infil trators is rooted in realism. Of ten the Taliban cellphone tell tales are adopted by people in rural areas as a protection in case the insurgents stop them, he said, so alone they are hard ly grounds for dismissal. One day last month, his c aseload included a co n victed murderer from Kun duz: Abdullah, a 30-year-old who has only one name. He had neglected to mention his c riminal record, but it w a s discovered through biomet ric files compiled with U.S. assistance. Abdullah pleaded that his offense had been a crime of passion and that the victim' s family had forgiven him and accepted the customary blood m oney. Stanikzai sent h i m back to Kunduz to get a letter from the police chief certify ing him for service. Abdullah tried to kiss the colonel's hand in gratitude. "We are going through a very, very hard time here," he said.
Two U.S.economists capture NobelPrize By Catherine Rampell
advantage. In older matching systems, T wo A m ericans, A l v i n a student would apply to his Roth and L l oy d S hapley, first-choice school, w h ich were awarded th e N o bel was often popular. If the stu Memorial Prize in Economic dent did not get in, then the Science on Monday for their application would be sent work on market design and on to the student's second m atching t h e ory, w h i c h choice. But if that was also relate to how p eople and a popular choice, then that companies find and school's p r o gram select on e a n other would have already i n everything f r om filled up by the time marriage t o s c hool his application was choice to jobs to organ even considered, and donations. the p r ocess w ould Their work primar Shapley repeat itself with his i ly applies to m a r third-choice s c hool kets that do not have and so on. prices, or at least have Even i f s t u dents strict constraints on were qualified to get prices. The laureates' into one of their top breakthroughs in schools, they could be volve figuring out how R o ht shut out because they to properly assign d id not r a n k t h e ir people and things to preferences strategi stable matches when prices cally. This created an incen are not available to help buy tive to try to game the sys ers and sellers pair up. tem by listing a less popular Roth, 60, has put these school as their first choice theories to practical use, in because that way they would his work on a program that at least have a chance of get matches new doctors to hos ting in somewhere. pitals and more recently for Roth designed a system a project matching kidney in which students had an in donors. Public school sys centive to tell the truth about tems in New York, Boston, where they wanted to go. A Chicago and Denver, use an centralized office could then algorithm based on his work assign them to a school best to help assign students to suited for them, based both schools. A professor at Har on their own preferences and vard, he recently accepted a the preferences of the schools new position at Stanford. they were applying to. "Al has spent the last 30 The school systems he years trying to make eco helped create use a "deferred n omics more like a n e n acceptance algorithm," gineering discipline," said which wa s d eveloped by Parag Pathak, an economics Shapley's theoretical work. professor at MIT who has The system works by ten worked on school match tatively accepting students ing systems with Roth. "The to their top-choice school. idea is to try to diagnose why It holds off on the final as resource allocation systems signment until it has gone are not working, and how through all the other appli they can be engineered to cations to make sure there aren't other students who produce something better." Shapley,89, a mathema have a higher claim to a spot tician long associated with at that given school (because game theory,is a professor of higher test scores, a sib emeritus at the University ling at the school or what of California, Los Angeles. ever other criteria the school He made some of the earliest prioritizes), even if those stu theoretical contributions to dents happened to rank the research on market design school lower on their list of and matching in the 1950s preferences. "The idea is to level the and 1960s. In a p aper w it h D a vid playing field," Pathak said. Gale in 1962, Shapley ex "You want to make sure that plained h o w i nd i v iduals not only d o s o phisticated could be paired together in a players not have to spend the stable match even when they time learning the strategies disagreed about what quali and different heuristics that ties made the right match. will get them ahead, but also The paper focused on de that unsophisticated players signing an ideal, perfectly are not hurt by the fact that stable m a r riage m a r k et: they are not aware of all this having mates find one an information." other in a fair way, so that no Shapley was born in Cam one who is already married bridge, Mass. He received would want (and be able) to his bachelor's degree from break off and pair up with Harvard and his a Ph.D. in someone elsewho isalready mathematics at P r inceton, married. where he studied alongside In the 1980s, Roth ap John Nash, a fellow Nobel plied this work to matches laureate. He is married and for medicalresidency pro has two sons. grams and eventually school Roth received his bache choice. He was i nterested lor's from Columbia and his in how to keep matches fair master's and doctorate from and how to keep more so Stanford, all in operations phisticated players from ma research.He isalso married nipulating the system to their with two children. New York Times News Service
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
Cyber
on the Internet, Cunningham sa>d. "The folks who are doing Continued from A1 "I'm concerned that the ad real cyber operations have ministration is headed down a got to protect the intelligence path that is very prescriptive, they' re gathering, but if you' re and will put more government not sharing everything, you' re b etween cybersecurity a n d putting the defenders at a real the bad guys," he said. disadvantage," he said. "This is As chairman of the House literally the wild, wild West." Subcommittee on C o m mu In his speech, Panetta in nications an d T e c hnology, voked Pearl Harbor and 9/11 — the most infamous Walden has held three h earings o n cy b e r military and t errorist security, including one surprise attacks in U.S. on threats to communi history — as he detailed r cations networks. recent hostile i n t r u O ne thing h e h a s sions in cyberspace and heard over and over Wal d en warned that A merica from members of the must secure its hold private sector is, "Do no harm, ings on the Internet. "A cyber attack perpetrated d o not overregulate in t h i s area," he said. by nation-states or violent ex "It moves too rapidly, it's too tremistgroups could be as de dynamic, government can' t structive as the terrorist attack keep up," he said. of 9/11," Panetta said. "Such Walden said he hopes the a destructive cyber t error Senate will act quickly and ist attack could paralyze the pass its own bill, so that the nation." differences between it and the Rival legislation House bill can be worked out in conference. Consequently, the U.S. mili "I think for now, what we tary protects the country's vir passed (in the House) solves tual borders just as it defends the problem, or at least gets American soil from f oreign us a lot closer without going adversaries, Panetta said. "But we won't succeed in over the line and overregulat ing," he said. Currently, the preventing a c y b e r a t t ack privatesector and the govern through improved defenses ment can't really communi alone," he said, noting that cate about potential threats, he a recent cyber attack on Ar sard. amco, the state oil company of eYou need a very secure Saudi Arabia, forced the com handshake a n d cl e arance pany to jettison 30,000 infect between the government sec ed computers. "If we detect an tor and the private sector," he imminent threat of attack that sard. will cause significant physical While private companies destruction or kill American may find it hard to admit they citizens, we need to have the were the victims of embarrass option to take action to defend ing — and financially damag the nation when directed by ing — cyber attacks, everyone the president." would quickly learn that shar Last s u mmer, C o ngress ing information is an effective tried to pass legislation autho way to stave off further hostile rizing more vigorousdefense incursions, he said. measures, but the House bill "I think you would find that — the Cyber Intelligence Shar collaboration would take hold," ing and Protection Act — was he said. "No one wants to lose not taken up by the Democrat their bank account, their intel controlled Senate. The Sen lectual property, their address ate's bipartisan bill, the Cyber book." security Act, stalled in August after it failed to gain the 60 Cyber battlefield votes needed to advance. Chase Cunningham, a for The Senate bill would autho mer Navy cryptologist who is rize the Department of Home now chief of cyber analytics land Security to set minimum for Decisive Analytics Corp., cybersecurity r e q u irements said taking immediate steps to protect essential infrastruc to protect vital infrastructure ture, including the electrical is absolutely necessary, given grid, water supplies, financial the recentadvances in the ca systems and nuclear power. pability of hostile entities to Panetta urged Congress to strike America in cyberspace. pass the Senate bill, and said "The simple fact is, in 2009, President Obama is consid the Department of Defense ering issuing a n e x ecutive finally declared cyberspace order that would enhance cy a warfighting domain," Cun bersecurity measures by au ningham said, meaning the thorizing and requiring more U.S. will defend its interests communication about online there just as it would on land, threats between the private sea or air. "(Key American in sector and the nation's nation frastructure) is being targeted al security agencies. "There is no substitute for by the bad guys all the time." Communication b e t ween comprehensive legislation, but the government and the pri we need to move as far as we vate sector i s c o m plicated can in the meantime," Panetta by the U.S. intelligence com said. munity's use of cyberspace The U.S. has no choice be to conduct surveillance, he cause the threat is already said. It can be tricky to share here, he said. "Congress has a information that would help responsibility to act." prevent a cyber attack without — Reporter: 202-662-7456, revealing a spying operation aclevenger@bendbulletirt.corn
Bond Continued from A1 " This i s a Deschutes River-centric project," park district Executive Director Don Horton said as he dis cussed the bond package in a meeting last week. The park district plans to add a '/~-mile extension to the river trail's south ern tip t hat w o uld t a ke it from R iver Ri m P a rk past a cinder cone close to Huebsch's home in south west Bend's Elk Meadow
neighborhood. The extended trail would then cross the Deschutes River on a 6 0 -yard-long footbridge and connect with an existing trail in the Des chutes National Forest that runs past Benham Falls on the way to Sunriver. The park district plans for the river trail's northern boundary are focused on extending it from A r chie Biggs Canyon to Tumalo State Park. Horton said this extension would take trail users past Gopher Gulch Ranch, a 122-acre tract the park district acquired in 2010 and the site of a his toric homestead and stage coach stop at the northern city limit. The final set of river trail upgrades, the downtown section, involves the park district purchasing enough land and rights-of-way to extend the river trail from Drake Park under the New port Avenue Bridge and along the east riverbank to Pacific Park and the Port land Avenue bridge. Park d i strict o f f i cials also plan to extend the trail from Pioneer Park to Davis Park, where it would cross the Deschutes River over a bridge by the First Street Rapids that is being built with federal funds. From there, the trail would con tinue along the river at the base of Awbrey Butte. Trail users who want to get from Drake Park to the First Street Rapids must now follow an unmarked path that takes them across Newport Avenue just north of the Bend Brewing Co.,
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Recent improvements to the Deschutes River Trail are visible in Pioneer Park. Bond Measure 9 86 seeks $29 million from voters, much of which would be used to complete trail improvements. past a power substation be hind the Liquid Lounge and through a residential neigh borhood sandwiched between the Portland Avenue bridge and the spot where a marked, graded section of river trail re sumes at the First Street Rap ids park. Once allthe upgrades are complete, Horton said, the riv er trail would stretch 17 miles from the park district's south ern boundary to its northern boundary. In addition, he said, the fin ished project will give trail us ers the opportunity to travel 40 miles along the banks of the Deschutes River — when riverside trails in the national forestand state park are fig ured into the total.
Bend. LaPlaca said trail systems like the river trail are the most popular and accessible way for people to enjoy the outdoors when they visit the city. Horton said t h ose state ments match the results of surveys in which community m embers c onsistently p u t completing the river trail at the top of their wish list for future park development projects. The river trail draws an esti mated 800 visitors a day at its busiest point, the park district executive director said. While expanding the river trail is a popular idea, it's also a costly one. According to Hor ton's calculations, paying back the bond measure would force Bend homeowners and busi nesses to pay an additional 24 Why now? cents per $1,000 of assessed Many people and busi value in property taxes for the nesses have voiced their sup next 20 years. port for th e b ond measure The median h o meowner simply because they believe a — whose property is worth 40-mile stretch of r i verside $ 164,930, according t o t h e trail could boost the city's at county assessor'soffice traction for tourists, said Jan would see his or her property Taylor, the park district's com tax bill increase by $36.28. "It's tough to increase taxes munity development manager. "The No. 1 reason people during lean times," said Ed visit Bend is for outdoor rec Barbeau, one of 12 candidates reation," said Doug LaPlaca, for Bend City Council this president and CEO of V isit year.
The Associated Press
GUANTANAMO BAY NA VAL BASE, Cuba — Five Guan tanamo prisoners charged in the Sept. 11 attacks returned be fore a military tribunal Monday, forgoing the protests that turned their last appearance into an unruly 13-hour spectacle. But the apparent cooperation of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who has said he masterminded the worst terrorist attack on U.S. soil, and four codefendants did little to speed up proceed ings that have stuck in a legal and political morass for years. D efense l a w yer s s p e nt hours arguing that their cli e nts shouldn't have t o a t tend the hearing, saying they dredge up bad memories of their harsh treatment in CIA detention. The military judge ruled that the men would not have to attend the hearings for the rest of the week. "Our clients may believe that ... I don't want to be subjected to this procedure that transports me here, brings up memories, brings up emotions of things that happened to me," said Jim Harrington, who r e presents Ramzi B inalshibh, accused of helping to provide support to the hijackers who crashed planes into the World Trade
Center, Pentagon and a field in Pennsylvania on Sept. 11, 2001. The five men sat quietly at the defense tables under the watchful eyes of military guards and several 9/11 fam ily members at the U.S. base in Cuba. Mohammed, his beard dyed a rust color with henna, serenely read legal papers. Two others responded politely to the judge when asked questions. All seemed to cooperate with their attorneys in a specially designed high-tech courtroom that allows the government to muffle sounds so spectators behind a glass wall cannot hear classified information. Harrington told the court that the defendants may want to boycott future court sessions because they don't recognize the U.S. government's authority, or because their transportation from their high-security cells may remind them of the harsh treatment they endured when confined in the CIA's overseas network ofsecret prisons be forethey came to Guantanamo in September 2006. Prosecutors want the men to be requited to attend court ses sions. Army Col. James Pohl ruled that Mohammed and his codefendants could not attend hearings that were scheduled to run through the end of this week.
— Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmcfean@bendbulletin.corn
S. Dakota executesinmate who killed prison guard The Associated Press SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — A South Dakota man who beat a prison guard with a pipe and covered his head in plas tic wrap to kill him during a failed escape attempt was put to death Monday, in the state' s first execution since 2007.
Eric Robert, 50, received lethal injection and was pro nounced dead at th e state penitentiary in Sioux Falls. He is the first South Dakota inmate to die under the state' s new single-drug lethal injec t ion method, and only t h e 17th person to be executed in
the state or Dakota Territory since 1877. Robert was put to death in the same prison where he killed guard Ronald "RJ" Johnson during an escape at tempt on April 12, 2011. Rob ert was serving an 80-year sentence on a k i d n apping
conviction when he tried to break out with fellow inmate Rodney Berget, 50. Robert pleaded guilty to Johnson's slaying and asked to be sentenced to d eath, telling a judge last October that he would otherwise kill
again.
Meet our latest commitment to ' your health.
9/11 defendantscansit out hearings,judge says By Bert Fox
B arbeau said the tax i n crease could hurt city r esi dents when they could have to pay higher water and sew er bills, gas prices and food prices. But the candidate, who describeshimself as an avid stand-up paddleboarder, also understands how strong rec reational offerings can boost a city's bottom line. H orton said most of t h e people he's talked to share this split opinion about the bond measure: They support the project upgrades, he said, but they worry about whether city taxpayers will be able to han dle the additional burden. "The biggest question we hear is 'Why now?'" Horton sa>d. He answers by telling peo ple that interest rates, land prices and construction costs currently are at an a ll-time low. This means that while it may cost the parks district $29 million to complete the work spelled out in the bond measure right now, the proj ect's total price will only in crease asthe economy starts to recover and costs associ ated with any of these three items go up.
Rebecca Sherer,MD St. Charles Infectious Disease St. Charles Health System welcomes Dr. Rebecca Sherer to our team of physicians, Dr, Sherer attended medical school at Tulane University and trained at Tripier and Walter ReedArmy Medical Centers. Her broad academic and military training, including a deployment as a staff combat physician in Iraq, enable her to tackle the toughest of infections in her patients. Dr. Sherer frequently coiiaborates with her husband, puimonologist Kevin Sherer, to treat patients with the most severe and life threatening infections. When not at work, Dr, Sherer enjoys horseback riding along Oregon trails and spending time with her husband and two children.
St. Charles INFECTIOUS DISEASE 541-706-4878
StCharlesHealthCare.org QB
TV& Movies, B2 Calendar, B3 Horoscope, B3 Comics, B4-5 Puzzles, B5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
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SPOTLIGHT Equine Outreach fundraiser set Tickets are available
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organization. Jazzgroup the Groove Merchants will play while attendees
enjoy hors d'oeuvres, a wine flight and a choco
late sampler designed for the event. A raffle will
be under way, aswell.
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Tickets cost $25.
One day, Mossy was standing by Lilypad Pond when
Ticket and raffle pro ceeds and aportion of
the water rippled and two ruby-red eyes looked up at her.
garden was pretty, but it was Mossy who made his heart beat
It was a handsome turtle she hadn't seen before.
fast. She was breathtalting.
retail sales will go to
Scoot had never seen a lady turtle lilte Mossy. He thought her
ABOVE:One of the pages from Jan Brett's new book, "Mossy." Brett, who is known for her lush illustrations, will be in Bend on Saturday.
Equine Outreach, which seeks to rehabilitate
abused andabandoned horses. Bend d'Vine is locat ed at 916 N.W. Wall St.
Contact: benddvine .corn or 541-323-3277. — From staff reports
YOUR PET
• Popular children's author JanBrett will sharethe inspiration for herlatest book, 'Mossy,' during hervisit to Bend By Alandra johnson • The Bulletin
Submitted photo
Gabi will get it
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est-selling children's author
Say hello to Gabi,
dog park in theOld Mill District, where she will assist the other dogs in
gathering their toys from the water for hours. To submit a photo for
publication, email a high resolution imagealong with your animal's name, age and speciesor breed, your name,age, city of residenceand contact information, and a few words about what
makes your pet special. Send photos to pets© bendbulletin.corn, drop them off at1777 S.W.
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Chandler Ave. inBend, or mail them to The Bulletin Pets section, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Contact: 541-383 0358.
, $.0$,$y.'
Jan Brett was sitting by a pond when she noticed a dark green clump of plants moving at the bottom of the pond. As the ob ject got to the surface, she was delighted to realize what she saw was more than just a cluster of plants. The plants were moving because they were attached to the back of a turtle. This experience gave Brett the inspiration for her newest book, "Mossy." It is the story of a box turtle who has an entire garden growing on her back. Brett will talk about the book, her inspira tion and the process of writing and illustrat ing the story at the Tower Theatre in Bend on
a 21/2-year-oldgolden retriever who lives in Bend with Bill and Debra Wood. Gabi is currently the social director at the
Submitted photos
hildren's author and illustrator Jan Brett has sold more than 37 million books. She gets inspiration from nature and travel. C
ADOPT ME = . ; ~
> Brett is traveling ~ a c ross the country in a tour bus.
illustrators and authors because of her dis tinctive, lush style, and because many of her books have such delightful whimsy in them." Saturday (see "If you go"), hosted by the Des McNeil pointed out Brett's book "The Mit ten" as a classic that is popular with teach chutes Public Library system. Brett, who h a s a uthored more t h an ers, librarians and storytellers. Several of 30 popular children's books, has a distinc her books focus on Hedgie, a sweet hedge tive style — marked by intricate watercolor hog. She often bases her books on real plac illustrations that fill every page. es and frequently travels to those locations Heather McNeil, the youth services coor to ensure she gets small details of the setting dinator for Deschutes Public Library sys just right — from foliage in Martinique for "The Owl and the Pussycat" to the color of tem, says Brett is "a big deal, well-known and loved." houses in Norway for "The Hat." "Jan Brett is one of the most popular See Brett/B6
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Cr;Wbnt. Jnn Brett talks, draws andsigns books W~gWhen:10a.m. Saturday - W >/Z~
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I love other dogs, cats and you Meet Pistol Annie, a 3-year-old shepherd/
husky mix. Shecame to the shelter because she was taken out into
the grasslands andshot. Lucky for her, whoever did it was a bad shot and
only hit her ear. Shewill require a very patient owner that understands
her history and will be able to keep her in the
house; she startles eas ily and will run if given the chance. She loves
other dogs and is great with cats. If you would like to visit Pistol Annie, or any
other animal available for adoption through
Jefferson County Ken nels & DogControl, contact the organization at 541-475-6889, or visit its website at
www.jefferso neo unty .petfinder.corn.
PETS
Wounded Marine hasnew, 'pawsitive' mission • Minnesotanonprofit, CanDoCanines,trains assistancedogsfor peoplewith disabilities By jeff Strickler (Minneapolis) Star Tribune
MINNEAPOLIS — A gre nade explosion might have put an end to Dan Carbonneau's effort to serve his country, but he hasn't let it sway his deter mination to serve others. He found a new mission: training assistance dogs. The former Marine from Excelsior, Minn., spends 20 hours a week at Can Do Ca nines in New Hope, Minn., teaching dogs to do every thing from punch elevator call buttons to open kitchen drawers.
"The dogs help people with
disabilities," he said. "It's nice to know that you' re doing something positive for the
community." He came within inches of being someone who might need one of the dogs rather than train them. On Sept. 17, 2009, he was serving in Afghanistan when a hand grenade exploded a foot away from him. "Most of the shrapnel went away from me for some rea son," he said. "The rest was
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absorbed by my (body armor) protection. A friend who was next to me wasn't so lucky. He took it in the chest." Carbonneau, 24, was far from unscathed. He was knocked unconscious and his eardrums were blown out. When he reached the hospital, a traumatic brain injury was
*
Jeff Wheeler! Minneapolis Star Tribune
Dan Carbonneau, who suffered a brain injuryserving as a Marine in Afghanistan, has Erma retrieve a phone. Erma is a helper dog that Carbonneau is training for Can Do Canines, an organization that provides service dogs to those with disabilities. diagnosed and Carbonneau was transferred to the Wound ed Warrior Battalion at North Carolina's Camp Lejeune for
treatment. Three years later, he still suffers from daily headaches and tinnitus, but you have to
pull that information out of him. Complaining isn't his strong suit. See Assistance/B6
B2
THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, OCTOBER 'I6, 2012
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a M O V IES
Streep'sdaughterforges own path with TVseries TV SPOTLIGHT "Emily Owens M.D." 9 tonight, CW By Yvonne Villarreal Los Angeles Times
L OS ANGELES — M a mie Gummer is her mother' s daughter. And maybe that' s part of the problem. She's so aware that you' re so aware that her mother is Meryl Streep, it's as if she has developed a stopwatch in her head ready to irritably clock the minute her 6 3-year-old mother wil l g e t m e ntioned — she's noticeably tense and briefwith her responses. But at 29, Gummer needn't feel de fined by the link. The actress has managed to steadily establish her own identity since her tender debut in "Heartburn," opposite her mother and Jack Nicholson, more than two decades ago. She now finds herself headlin ing her first TV series, "Em ily Owens, M.D.," on the CW, which premieres tonight. "I' ve been the star of my own show forever — it's just now people can tune in once a week to watch me," she quipped. That's not to say Gummer is flashy. Yes, in this moment, hot pink lipstick tints her thin lips,
and she's wearing body-hug ging blush leather pants while also navigating the sleek tiled floor of a hotel lobby in Ruthie Davis metallic stilettos, but the leggy actress is in promotion mode, ready for the obligatory photo shoot. Otherwise, she' s reserved. "All this," she said, refer ring to the media blitz that comes with heading a show, "is weird." Gummer, born Mary Wi l la and the second eldest of Streep'sfour children, perks
up when discussing the young adult drama. In it, she plays the title character: a shy, love struck medical student who quickly realizes working at a big hospital is eerily similar to high school. Emily is awk ward, passive and thinks too much — resulting in a lot of voice-over exposition. "She was just sort of jumping around the page and at me," Gummer saidof the character. "It felt like a great opportunity to carry a show for myself — to play on a bigger leveL" Gummer, who studied the ater at Northwestern Univer sity, had honed her stage per sona in plays such as "Mr. Mar malade," opposite Michael C. Hall, and "The Water's Edge." "I think that if that's your norm, then that's what you do," she said of wanting to be an ac tress. "There was no, like, bright and shiny spotlight that came down and hit me one day. The spotlight was all I ever saw." After a fe w s mall movie roles and a part in HBO's 2008 Emmy-winning mi n i s eries "John Adams," Gummer gravi tated toward television — part ly, and surprisingly, for practi cal reasons: "I'm not going to lie to you. The last play I did in New York, I got paid $330 a week," she said. "So I was like, 'OK, I love this, but this can' t realistically sustain me.'" She landed guest s t ints on CBS' "A Gifted Man" and Showtime's "The Big C." But none played to her strength quirkiness — quite like CBS' "The Good Wife." "She's so honest, so vulner able, so raw," said the show's c reator, Jennie Snyder Ur man. "And that makes her so likable. She brings this sort of naivete to the role that is subtle and elegant.... When I think about her, I don't think about her mom."
LOCAL MOVIE TIMES FOR TUESDAY,OCT.16
BEND Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S.Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347
ATLAS SHRUGGED:PART II (PG-1 3) 12:30, 3, 6:30 BEASTS OFTHESOUTHERN WILD (PG-13) 1, 7:15 THE BESTEXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG-13) 4 IN THE FAMILY(no MPAA rating) Noon, 3:30, 7 THE MASTER (R) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 THE PERKSOFBEINGA WALLFLOWER(PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6 SEARCHINGFOR SUGAR MAN (PG-1 3) 1:15, 4:15, 6:45
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680 S.W.PowerhouseDrive, Bend, 541-382-6347
ARGO (R) 12:40, 3:50, 6:55, 9:45 THE BOURNE LEGACY(PG-13) 3:40, 6:40, 9:50 END OFWATCH(R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:35, 10:10 FRANKENWEENIEIMAX (PG) 1:55, 4:45, 7:40, 10 FRANKENWEENIE(PG) 12:15, 3:15, 6, 9:05 HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG) 12:35, 3:30, 6:25, 9:15 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(PG) 12:25, 1:25, 3:25, 6:15, 7, 9 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA3-D (PG) 3:45, 9:20 HOUSE ATTHEENDOFTHE STREET (PG-13) 1:40, 4:30, 7:05, 9:45 LOOPER(R) 1:15, 4:15, 7:15, 10:05
Rebel Wilson plays Fat Amy, left, and Anna Camp plays Aubrey in "Pitch Perfect."
EDITOR'S NOTES: Accessibility devices are
available for somemovies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 168 /MAX. • There may be an additional fee for 3-0
movies. • IMAX films are $15.50 for
Universal Pictures
adults and $13 for children
(ages 3 to 11)and seniors (ages 60 andolder). • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 6:50, 9:40 SEVENPSYCHOPATHS(R) 1:45, 4:25, 7: IO, 9:55 SINISTER(R) 12:50, 3:35, 7:20, 10:20 TAKEN2(PG-13) Noon, l,3,4,6:30, 7:30, 9:30, 10:15 TROUBLE WITHTHE CURVE (PG 13) 12:10, 3:10, 6:05, 9:10 W ON'T BACK DOWN (PG)12:55
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
THE DARKKNIGHT RISES(PG-13) 5:30 MOONRISEKINGDOM(PG-13) 9:30 After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only.Youngerthan 21may attend screenings before 7 p.m.if accompanied by a legalguardian.
KATU
I'j
Madras Cinema 5
1535 S.W. DdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
1101 S.W. U.S.Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
FRANKENWEENIE (PG) 5, 7 HERE COMESTHE BOOM (PG) 4:45, 7 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(PG) 5:15, 7:l5 TAKEN 2 (PG-13) 4:30, 6:45
SISTERS Sisters Movie House 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
ARGO (R) 6:15 HOTEL TRANSYLVANIA(PG) 6 THE MASTER(R) 6 TAKEN 2 (PG-13) 6:30
As of press time, the complete movie ti mes for the Tin PanTheater were unavailable. For moreinformation,
PRINE VILLE Pine Theater 214 N. Main St., Prinevilie, 541-416-1014
LOOPER(R) 4, 7 TAKEN 2 (LIPSTAIRS —PG-13) 6 Pine Theater's upstai rs screening room has limited accessibility.
visit www.tinpan theater corn.
Q NoRTHWEsT CROSSING
A44rard-44tinning
on Bend's HAVEN HOME STYLE 'Furniture and Gesf jn 856 NW Bond• Downtown Bend• 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyie.corn
ALSO INHD;ADD600 TOCHANNELNo '
ARGO (R) 7 FRANKENWEENIE 3-D (PG) 6:50 HOUSE AT THE ENDOFTHESTREET (PG-13) 7:30 TAKEN 2 (PG-13) 7:10 TROUBLE WITHTHE CURVE (PG I3) 7:20
869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271
neighborhood
•
MADRAS
Redmond Cinemas
Tin Pan Theater
Warehouse Prices a
447eS tSide. www.northwestcrossing.corn
•
•
tt' bm C Totatcare'" Bend Memorial Clinic i~
for appointments
call
541-382-4900
•
•
LOCAL TV LI S TINr.S TUESDAY PRIME TIME 10/16/12
REDMOND
*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. /Sports programming mayvary. BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte Di ital PM-Prineville/Madras SR-Sunriver L-La Pine
•
tRRRX~RKHK~RKR&t RRK~RRK~RREK~RKR2RREI~~RRKREEK~XKEHt EHK~RDiRH t 1RK KATU News World News P residential Debate AtHoistra University. (N) n (Live) Dancing With the Stars: Aii-Stars Zumba Dance Shark Vac Jeo pardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune KATU News (11:35) Nightiine
Nightly News Presidential Debate AtHofstra University. (N) (Live) The Voice (N) n 'PG' « Jeopardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune Dateline NBC n 'PG' « News Jay Leno News Evening News Presidential Debate AtHoistra University. (N)(Live) NCIS: LosAngeles Crimeleon'14' NCIB: Los Angeles TheDebt'14' How I Met 30 Rock n '14' News Letterman KEZI 9 News World News P residential Debate AtHofstra University. (N) n (Live) Dancing With the Stars: Ail-Stars Entertainment The insider (N) KEZI 9 News(N) « KEZI 9 News (11:35) Nightiine Videos Presidential Debate At Hoistra University. (N ) Big B an g Rais ing Hope Ben and Kate Two/Half Men Big Bang New s KFXO IDi IEI IEI IEIA merica's Funniest Home TMZ (N) n 'PG' The Bimpeons Family Guy 'PG' NOVArt 'PG' cc(DVS) NOVAVolcaniceruptions. n 'PG' Race 2012 (N) n 'PG' « VOCESon PBSn 'PG' Koae O B O B Wild Kratts ne Electric Comp. Presidential Debate AtHofstra University. (N) (Live) NewsChannei 8 Nightly News Presidential Debate AtHoistra University. (N)(Live) The Voice (N) n 'PG' cc Carol Burnett inside Edition Dateline NBC n 'PG' cc Newsohannei 8 Jay Leno KGW 0 Emily Owens, M.D.Pilot (N) 'PG' Seinfeid n 'G' Seinfeid 'PG' 'Tii Death 'PG' 'Tii Death 'PG' KTVZDT2IEI 0 B lH We ThereYet? We There Yet? King of Queens King of Queens Engagement Engagement H art of Dixie (N) n 'PG' « Mexico/Bayiess Simply Ming 'G' New Tricks n ac Microioan UBA POV Give Up Tomorrow n '14' cc Presidential Debate AtHofstra University. (N) PBS NewsHour n cc OPBPL 175 173
KTvz 0 0 0 0 News
KBNZ 0 KOHD Q 0 0 0
Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars (4:00) ** "Survival of the Dead" * " F riday the 13th,Part 2" (1981,Horror) AmySteel, JohnForcy. A hulking * "Friday the 13th Part 3" (1982, Horror) DanaKimmeii, PaulKratka. Kiler (10:15) * "Friday the13th: TheFinal Chapter" (1984, Horror) Kimberly Beck, *AMC 102 40 39 (2009)AlanVanSprang. killer stalks counselors atCampCrystal Lake.a« Jason terrorizesteens anda biker gang. « Peter Barton,CoreyFeldman. *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Monsters Inside Me'MA' cc Gait-Wiidman Gait.Wiidman Gator Boys Alligator Face-Off 'PG' Gator Boys Love atFirst Bite 'PG' Gator Boys n 'PG' cc Fatal Attractions n 'PG' cc Gator Boys AlligatorFace-Off'PG' BRAVO1 37 4 4 Flipping Out Jeff upsetsGage. H o usewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NJ Housewives/NJ Flipping Out CleaningHouse(N) What Happens Flipping Out CMT 190 32 42 53 Roseanne 'PG' Roseanne 'PG' Reba 'PG' cc Reba 'PG' cc Reba 'PG' cc Reba 'PG' cc Reba 'PG' cc Reba 'PG' cc World's Strictest Parents n '14' World's Strictest Parents n '14' World's Strictest Parents n '14' CNBC 54 36 40 52 Your Money,Your Vote (N) Pre s idential Debate Hofstra At University. (N)(Live) Money, Vote Mad Money The Coffee Addiction American Greed Paid Program Paid Program CNN 55 38 35 48 (4:00) DebateNight in America Presidential Debate At Hoistra University. (N ) Deba te Night in America(Li (N) ve) cc Presidential Debate AtHofstra University. n Debate Night in America cc CQM 135 53 135 47(4:58) Futurama Always Sunny South Park '14' Tosh.0 '14' Co l bert Report Daily Show W o rkaholics T o sh.0 '14' To s h.0 '14' Tos h.0 '14' Tos h.0 (N) '14' Brickleberry (N) Daily Show C o lbert Report COTY 11 Dept. /Trans. City Edition P a id Program Morning Oregon Redmond City Council Morning Oregon City Edition Call-In for DebateReaction (N)(Live) CBPAN 61 20 12 11 (4:00) DebatePreview (N) (Live) Presidential Debate At Hofstra University. (N) (Live) Call-In for Debate Reaction (N) P r esidential Debate AtHofstra University. Capitol Hill *DIS 87 43 14 39 Good-Charlie Good. Charlie Phineas, Ferb Good-Charlie A.N.T. Farm 'G' Shake it Up! 'G' Austin lt Ally n "TwitchesToo"(2007) Tia Mowry. n 'PG' cc Austin & Ally n Phineas, Ferb A.N.T. Farm 'G' My Babysitter *DISC 156 21 16 37 Alaska: ice Cold Killers n '14' Al a ska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' Yukon Men n 'PG' « Alaska: The Last Frontier n '14' *E! 1 36 2 5 ** "She'sOutof MyLeague" (2010)Jay Baruchei, Alice Eve. Jones Jonas Jonas Jonas E! News(N) Keeping UpWiththe Kardashiane Chelsea Lately E! News ESPN 21 23 22 23 30 for 30 (N) 2012 World Series of Poker 201 2 World Series of Poker Spo r tsoenter (N) (Live) « Sportsoenter (N)(Live) « sportscenter (N)(Live) « sportscenter (N)(Live) « ESPN2 22 24 21 24 Soccer College Football Louisiana-Lafayette atNorthTexas(N) (Live) Baseball Ton. 30 for 30 (N) 2012 World Series of Poker Wor l d/Poker ESPNC 23 25 123 25 Bay City Blues « NBA Finals game 3, fromJune 17,2012. (N) Bay City Blues « AWA Wrestling « NBA FromDec.8, 2010. (N) H-Lite Ex. H-L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. H.L i te Ex. EBP NFC Press H-Lite Ex. H-L i te Ex. ESPNN 24 63 124203SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc Sportecenter (N)(Live) cc Sportsoenter (N)(Live) cc ** "Alicein Wonderland" (2010)JohnnyDepp, MiaWasikowska. *** "Harry Potter andthe Gobletof Fire" (2005,Fantasy) Daniel Radcliffe, RupertGrint, EmmaWatson. FAM 67 29 19 41 Reba 'PG' « The700Club n 'PG' « The O'Reiiiy Factor cc FNC 57 61 36 50 The O'Reiiiy Factor (N) cc Presidential Debate AtHoistra University. (N)(Live) Hannity On Record, Greta VanSusteren The Five *FOOD 177 62 98 44 Best Dishes P a ula's Cooking Chopped NoKidding! Cupcake WarsBigTimeRush Cupcake Wars MaryPoppins Chopped Duck forDinner'G' Chopped (N)'G' ChoppedNopaies, NoProblem FX 131 How I Met Ho w I Met How I Met Two /Hatt Men Two/Hatt Men ** *"TheSocial Network" (2010)Jesse Eisenberg, AndrewGarfield. Premiere. Sons of Anarchy (N)'MA' Sons of Anarchy 'MA' HGTV 176 49 33 43 Extreme Homes'G' « Million Dollar Rooms 'G' « Hunters int'I H o use Hunters Love it or List it Gallagher 'G ' Pr o perty Virgins Property Virgins House Hunters Hunters int'I M i l lion Dollar Rooms (N)'G' « *HIST 155 42 41 36 Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' Pawn Stare 'PG' Pawn Stars 'PG' The MenWhoBuilt America A NewWarBegins (N) 'PG' cc Counting Care Counting Cars Abby's Ultimate Dance Abby's Ultimate Dance LIFE 138 39 20 31 Dance MomeSolo Fever 'PG' Da n ce Mome 'PG' cc Dance Competition Prank MyMom Prank My Mom Prank My Mom Prank My Mom MSNBC 59 59 128 51 MSNBCSpecial Coverage(N) P r esidential Debate At Hoistra University. (N)(Live) MBNBC Special Coverage DebateAnalysis (N) (Live) Presidential Debate AtHoistra University. Spot Coverage MTV 192 22 38 57 Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Awkward. '14' Underemployed Pilot (N) n '14' (11:04) Underemployed Pilot '14' NICK 82 46 24 40 BpongeBob SpongeBob Bpongesob Spongesob FigureI tOut'Y' Drake&Josh Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' TheNanny'PG' TheNanny'PG' Friendsn 'PG' (11:33) Friends OWN 161 103 31 103Prison Wives AnnikaPoweii 'PG' Prison Wives n 'PG' « iyania, Fix My Life n 'PG' « iyan ia, Fix My Life n 'PG' « iyan ia, Fix My Life n 'PG' Oprah: WhereAre They Now? n iyania, Fix My Life n 'PG' « ROOT 20 45 28* 26 College Football Ball Up Streetball GuestcoachChaunceyBilups. College Football KansasStateat iowaState Bensinger T h e Dan Patrick Show SPIKE 132 31 34 46 Repo Games n Repo Games n Repo Games n Repo Games n Tattoo RescueJust Deadly'PG' i n k Master n '14' « ink Master SemiNude911 '14' i n k Master (N) n '14' « Tattoo Night. T attoo Night. SYFY 133 35 133 45Face Off The artists usevehicles. Face Off Face Off Creatingmonsters. '14' Face Off '14' Face Off JunkyardCyborg'PG' H o t Set Basementoi Horrors'14' Face Off Junkyard Cyborg'PG' TBN 05 60 130 BehindScenes JoyceMeyer J osephPrince RodParsley P r aisetheLord'Y'« ACLJ Full Flame Kim Clement C r efio Dollar P r aise the Lord 'Y' cc *TBS 16 27 11 28 MLB Baseball NewYorkYankees at Detroit Tigers AmericanLeagueChampionshipSeries, Game3. (N) (Live) inside MLB(N) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Con a n (N) '14' cc ** "Eyesinthe Night" (1942)EdwardArnold. Blind pri- ** "23 Paces io Baker Street" (1956,Suspense) VanJohnson, Vera Miles. A *** "Johnny Be/inda" (1948,Drama)JaneWyman,LewAyres. A doctor *** "The Miracle Worker" (1962,Biography) AnneBan TCM 101 44 101 29 vate eyewith guidedogflushes Nazi spies. blind Londonplaywright overhears akidnap plot. brings love to adeaf-mute rapevictim in NovaScotia. ~c croft, Patty Duke,Victor Jory. «(DVS) *TLC 178 34 32 34 Extreme Cou Extreme Cou Extreme Cheapskates 'PG' « Sec ret Princes rt 'PG' « Breaking Amish Goodvs. Evil '14' 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids-Count Extreme Chea. Extreme Chea. 19 Kids-Count 19 Kids-Count *TNT 17 26 15 27 Bones TheFinger in the Nest'14' The Mentalist At First Blush '14' T he Mentalist n '14' « The Mentalist n '14' ec The Mentalist n '14' c~ Rizzoli & Isles MoneyMaker'14' Leverage 'PG' cc 'TOON 84 MAD'PG' Reg ular Show Halloween Spooktakuiar "Dear Dracu/a" (2012)Premiere. Looney Tunes Adventure Time King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' 'TRAV 179 51 45 42 Bourdain: NoReservations Biz a rre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food 'G' Man v. Food 'G' Bizarre Foods America 'PG' Air p ort 24/7: Mi Airport 24/7:Mi Bggage Battles Bggage Battles Toy Hunter 'PG' Toy Hunter 'PG' M'A'S*H 'PG' M*A'S*H 'PG' Hayburner 'G' « M*A*S'H 'PG' CosbyShow Cosby Show Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond King ofQueens KingofQueens TVLND 65 47 29 35 B onanza The Law & Order: SVU Law 8 Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Covert Affairs (N) 'PG' Law & Order: SVU USA 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: SVU T.i. and Tiny T .i. and Tiny R ehab With Dr. Drew rt '14' Beh i nd the Music rt 'PG' « Basketball Wives LA rt '14' VH1 191 48 37 54 Couples TherapyOpening Up'14' Chrissy & Jones Chrissy & Jones Basketball Wives LA rt '14' *ASIE 130 28 18 32 The First 48 'PG' cc
•
Gulliver's Travels rt (Part 2 oi 2)'PG' « ENGR 106401 306401(405) ** "The Fog"2005 « ( 5 50) ** "Batman Forever" 1995 Val Kiimer. rt 'PG13' « (9:40) *** "TheThomasCrownAffair" 1999PierceBrosnan.'R' (11:35) Timecop ** "Darkness Falls2003, " Horror ChancyKiey. 'PG-13' « * "Shutter" 2008 'PG-1 3' « * "Shutter" 2008,Horror JoshuaJackson. 'PG-13' « FMC 104204104120** "DarknessFalls" 2003, HorrorChancyKiey. 'PG-13' « The Ultimate Fighter n '14' UFC Unleashed UFC Tonight (N) UFC insider U FC Fight Night UFC:Maynardvs. Guida UFC Unleashed UFC Tonight UFC Tonight FUEL 34 Big Break Greenbrier (N ) Chas i n g Long est Drive Big Break Go l f Central B i g Break Greenbrier Chasing Long est Drive Learning Center inside PGA GOLF 28 301 27 301Big Break Greenbrier Lit t le House onPrairie the 'PG' L i ttle House on thePrairie 'PG' L i ttle House on the Prairie 'PG' L i ttle House on the Prairie 'PG' Frasier n 'PG' Frasier n 'G' F rasier n 'PG' Fraeier n 'PG' HALL 66 33175 33 The WaitoneTheSermon'G ' The Making Of: The Weight of the Nation Part 3: (6:45) TheWeight of the Nation Part 4:ChallengesThe *** "TheDescendants" 2011,DramaGeorgeCiooney. A mannavigates Treme The Greatest LoveAntoine Boardwalk Empire Rothstein vents to HBO 25501 425501 Unstoppable n Children in Crisis 'PG' cc nation's obesity epidemic. 'PG'ec unfamiliar watersafter hiswife's accident. n 'R' cc does a gooddeed. n 'MA' ec Nucky.n 'MA' cc I FC 105 1 0 5 *** "LittleMissSunshine" 2006Greg Kinnear, SteveCareii. 'R' (7:15) ** "TheBrothers Grimm"2005, Fantasy MattDamon,HeathLedger. 'PG-13' (9:45) *** "Little MissSunshine" 2006,Comedy-DramaGregKinnear. 'R' (4:10) *** "TheMatrix Re/oaded"2003KeanuReeves. ** "TheChange-up" 2011,ComedyRyanReynolds. Anoverworked lawyer ** "Transit" 2012 JimCaviezei. Bank robbersstash their *** "Bridesmaids" 2011, ComedyKristen Wiig, MayaRudolph. Amaid oi • M AX 00508 5 0 8Freedomfighters revolt against machines. and his carefreebuddyswitch bodies. rt 'NR' « loot in a vacationingfamily's car. rt 'R' honor's life unravels as the big day approaches. rt 'NR' « DoomsdayPreppers BuggedOut Hard Time Mental Hell (N) '14' T a boo Old Enough? (N)'14' Taboo OldEnough?'14' Hard TimeMentalHell '14' DoomsdayPreppers BuggedOut Wild Justice Gold Diggers'14' N GC 157 1 5 7 A v atar: Air. O d d Parents O dd Parents S pongesob S p ongeBob A v atar: Air. Av atar: Air. Dr agon Ball Z iron Man: Armor NTOON 89 115189115Odd Parents Odd Parents P lanet Sheen Planet Sheen Avatar: Air. T e d Nugent H u n t., Country Outdoors TV Wildlife Dream Season Hunting TV M i chaels MRA Truth Hunting Wildlife The Hit List B o w Madness Legends of Fall SOLO Hunters OUTD 37 307 43 307The Hit List State oi Independence Dexter Dexter tries to bring Debraon S HO 00 5 0 0 (4:30) ** "Dr.7 8the Women"2000, Romance-Comedy (6:45) * "The TroubleWithBliss" 2011 Michael C.Hall. A 35-year-old begins * "Apollo 18" 2011 Lloyd Owen.Footagefrom amoon Homeland rt 'MA'cc Richard Gere,HelenHunt. n 'R' dating a formerclassmate's 18-year-oid daughter. 'PG-13' mission reveals aterrifying incident. 'PG-13' board. n 'MA' « SPEED 35 303125303Dumbest Stuff Dumbest Stuff Hard Parts Ha r d Parts My Ride Rules My Ride Rules Dumbest Stuff Dumbest Stuff Hard Parts Ha r d Parts My Ride Rules My Ride Rules Unique Whips '14' * "Ghost Rider: Spiritof Vengeance" 2012« STARZ 00408 00408(3:45) Boss 'MA' (5:40) BossClinch n 'MA' « (6:40) *** "TheRock" 1996,Action SeanConnery, Nicolas Cage.n 'R' « (10:40) ** "Underworld: Awakening" 2012 n 'R' "Lucky"2011,ComedyColin Hanks,Jeffrey Tambor, Mimi Rogers. Awan- *** "Traffic" 2000, CrimeDramaMichael Douglas,DonCheadle, Benicio DelToro. Thewar on "Paper Soldiers" 2002Kevin Hart. Mishapsoccur when' (4:25) "Thanks" 2011, Comedy Paul TMC 2 5 25 Dooley.rt 'NR'« nabe serial killer wins the lottery. rt 'R' « drugs bringsmanycasualties andiew victories. rt 'R' bumbling thievesmentor aninept upstart. 'R' Onward Notre Dame Sports illustrated 'PG' Poker After Dark 'PG'a« NBCSN 27 58 30 209Return to London: XXXOiympiad Return to London: XXX Oiympiad Return to London: XXXOiympiad Sports illustrated 'PG' *WE 143 41 174118Csi: Miami rt '14' « Csi: Miami PresumedGuilty '14' Csi: Miami Sink or Swimrt '14' C s i: Miami Divorce Party rt '14' C s i: Miami Flight Risk'14' « Gho s t Whieperer Voices rt 'PG' Amazing Wedding Cakes'PG'
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
B3
ADVICE & ASTROLOGY
Man hopeswife outgrows drunken girls' nights out Dear Abby: My wife and I have been married for eight months. She has anoccasional habit that makes me wonder whether we got married too young. (She's 23, I'm 27 and we're both in graduate school.) She likes to go out with a group of her friends from high school or with her sister and her sister's friends, get drunk and stay the night. It doesn't happen all the time — several times a year — and I'm not worried about her c heating on me. I try not to be the con trolling husband and say she "can' t" go out. But it bothers me that she wants to spend the night with her single friends and get drunk. If I try to talk to her about it, she gets angry and says she doesn't get to see herfriends very often. I don't understand why her socializing always has to in volve drinking and staying out all night. Her sister is my age and has a career in education, but still l ikes hosting these parties. I wonder how long it will take my wife to outgrow this phase. Am I being control ling? What should I do? — Getting Frustrated in Pontiac, Mich. Dear Getting F rustrated: Your wife appears to be try ing to hold onto her carefree single days, and it's a shame she can't do that without get ting herself soused and stay ing out all night. On the other hand, if she's in no condition to get behind the wheel, then it' s better that she not drive until she sobers up. I don't think saying what's on your mind is "controlling." I suspectyour wife becomes an gry because sheis defensive. Her behavior is immature, and how long it will take her to outgrow this "phase" is any body's guess. I re commend that you b oth w i den yo u r circle of friends so you spend more time with other married couples who are more mature
DEAR ABBY than your wi f e's sister and high school friends appear to
be. Dear Abby:I have reached a crossroad in my life. Just when I thought I had everything, from the house with the white picket fenceto the family dog and chil dren, I have learned something about my husband. He had never opened up about himself other than to say he was raised by his father and stepmom who abused him as a child. As I was cleaning out a closet and getting rid of some things, I came across his old briefcase, which I opened to see if anything of importance was inside before tossing it. To my shock, there were photos and a DVD of what seemed like pornography of himself and other women. I can respect past relation ships, but having done some thing like this and kept the evidence is very troubling to me. I find myself needing clo sure, but when I try to talk to him, he brushes me off. I feel betrayed, unsure who I mar ried and lost about what else to do. What do you advise? — Confused in California Dear Confused: How o l d does your husband appear to be bn those photos'? If they are recent, then it is important that you get to the bottom of this — and counseling may help you find the answers you' re
looking for. However, if they are NOT recent, let the past stay buried. Some women keep old love letters long after the romance is over. And some men keep old pictures like the ones you found. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.corn or P.O. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Tuesday,Oct. 16,2012 By Jacqueline Blgar This year you could beunusually self-indulgent, and you' ll loveevery moment. A sweet tooth, as well as partying, could be thesource of some weight gain. If you aresingle, you will delight in the "dating game." Youeven might give thought to playing the field. Know that it will take avery special person to get anycommitment from you. If you areattached, add more playful moments into your bond. Curb aneedtopossessand/orcontroleach other, as thesetraits could hurt any goodbond.SCORPIO draws youout. The Stars Show the Kind of DayYou'l Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3 Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * What could be complicated becomes significantly less so becauseofadiscussion.W henyou state your feelings, others also are more likely to open up.Youcould be doing a lot of questioning right now. Sorting through a lot of information takes time anddetermination. Tonight: Hook up with a keyperson. TAURUS(April 20-May 20) ** * * Defer to someone whomight be eminently morecapable andwho has theability to look atsituations quite differently fromyou. This person's mind is alwaysactive. Heor sheunderstands you andthesituation well andwill beable to come up with an effective solution. Tonight: Theonlyanswer is "yes." GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * * Y our patience and ability to gain clarity — even in the most difficult situations — opens many doors. Additionally, your optimism helps others sometimes get past their issues. Remember, at this point in time, you are like acatwith nine lives; go for what you want! Tonight: Do not push yourself. CANCER(June21-July 22) ** * * * Y our libido energies are high. Remember, it is your choice asto how you direct them.Youare far more upbeat than in thepast, and this affects a project, a difficult interaction or even a budding relationship. Just avoid not doing anything with this special energy. Tonight: Not to befound. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * You are most comfortable in a homey environment. If you are working, you could leaveearly and bring more work home or, if you can, take the day to work entirely from home. Some ofyou even might consider starting a home-based business. Express your feelings directly and compassionately. Tonight: Happy athome.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * * Y ou continue to express your feelings in away others can relate to. Your willingness to verbalize your emotions is substantially increased. Avoid embellishing or elaborating details when dealing with someonewho oftendoesn'thavethe ability to focus for any length of time. Tonight: Visit with a friend. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * Become more awareof yourself and whatyou offer to others. You do notwant to pull back, but giving too muchhasits liabilities. Try to detach from situations that might appear difficult or impossible to resolve. A little detachment goes along way. Tonight: Treatsomeoneto dinner. SCORPIO(Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * Beam in what you want, as others are flexible. Someone appreciates your verbal and direct communication. A partner lets you know how much your thoughtfulness and caring means to him or her.You will have a long-overdue heart-to heart talk with this person as aresult. Tonight: With a special person. SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** Assume a low profile, especially if you do not want to maintain the lead in a key situation. Genuinely try to understand your liabilities, yet know when to accept anoffer. Your words blend together with your feelings, both negative andpositive. Youwill havea lot to think about. Tonight: Dofor you. CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * Meetings are far more important than you might realize. You are in sync with others, and this causes opportunities to knock on your door. You might feel excessive in your emotions and/or your finances. Those around you will open up asa result of your being less-than-perfect. Tonight: Where the fun is. AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * Put your best foot forward. Others respond toyour efforts and admire your willingness totakethe lead and accept responsibility. Youmight be quite playful andfull of fun; however, you will want to suppressthat side when dealing with authority figures. Tonight: Split town assoonasyou can. PISCES (Fed. 19-March 20) ** * * * Y ou could be pushing the envelope. Youalso might want to do necessary research and create your own alternatives. Changethe time of a meeting or be willing to miss it. Once you start exploring ideas andmaking calls to experts, you will not want to be distracted. Tonight: Listen to a great piece of music. © 2012 by King Features Syndicate
O M M U N IT Y
A LE N D A R
Please email event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.corn or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.corn. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY "THE DAUGHTERSOFTHE AMERICANREVOLUTION": Bend Genealogical Society presents a program by Alice Miles; free; 10 a.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-317-9553 or www.orgenweb.org/ deschutes/bend-gs. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Stitches" by David Small; free; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3764 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar. "THE JUNGLEERSIN BATTLE": A screening of the documentary film about the World War II 41st Infantry Division; $10 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.
WEDNESDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central OregonPumpkin Company, 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.corn. IGNITE BEND: A series of five minute presentations on a range of topics, each chosen by the presenter; SOLDOUT;7 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St.; 541-480-6492 or www.ignite bend.corn. SARA JACKSON-HOLMAN: The Portland-based piano-pop artist performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www .mcmenamins.corn. ZION I:The BayArea-based hip-hop duo perform, with Graft, Minnesota, Diego's Umbrella and Vokab Kompany; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; 8:30 p.m., doors open 7:30 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541 788-2989 or www.random presents.corn.
1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco .corn. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Read and discuss "State of Wonder" by Ann Patchett; free; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 or www.deschutes library.org/calendar. SMART ARTFUNDRAISER: Featuring an art show, art sales and a social; proceeds benefit the nonprofit SMART; free; 5 p.m.; Aspen Hall, 18920 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-355-5600 or www.getsmartoregon.org. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Wiliam Sullivan talks about his book "The Case of D.B. Cooper's Parachute"; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. AUDUBON SOCIETYBIRDERS' NIGHT:Nature photographer Terry Steele presents "Birding up the Texas Gulf"; hosted by East Cascades Audubon Society; free; 6:30 p.m. social; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. WOODYPINES:The ragtime and blues band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382 5174 or www.mcmenamins.corn. "EVIL DEAD,THEMUSICAL": 2nd Street Theater presents the musical comedy about five college students who accidentally unleash an evil force; contains adult language; $21, $25 splatter zone, $18 students and seniors; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541 312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater .corn. FRUITIONAND DEAD WINTER CARPENTERS:A night of jammy string-band music; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 8:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www .p44p.biz. MARK SEXTON BAND:The Reno based funk-soul act performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.corn.
FRIDAY THURSDAY PUMPKIN PATCH: Free admission; noon-6 p.m.; Central OregonPumpkin Company,
PUMPKIN PATCH:Freeadmission; noon-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Company, 1250 N.E. Wilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504 1414 or www.pumpkinco.corn.
CORN MAIZE:$7.50, $5.50 ages 6-11, free ages 5 andyounger; 3-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Company, 1250 N.E.W ilcoxAve., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.corn. BETHLEHEM INNBENEFIT DINNER: The eighth annual dinner, titled "The Perfect Pair," features gourmet dining, handcrafted beers and fun; proceeds benefit Bethlehem Inn; $45; 5-8 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-322-8768 or www .bethleheminn.org. CANDLELIGHTDINNERDANCE: Dinner and dancing featuring the Notables Swing Band; $12; 6 p.m. dinner, 7 p.m. dancing; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-388-1133. "HOW DIDWE GET HERE?" LECTURESERIES:Featuring a presentation on "To Siberia and Beyond"; $10, $8 Sunriver Nature Center members, $3 students, $50 for series; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Road; 541-593-4394. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Wiliam Sullivan talks about his book "The Case of D.B. Cooper's Parachute"; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541 -549-0866. "FIDDLERON THE ROOF":The Summit High School drama department presents the musical aboutaJewish peasantwho must marry off his three daughters while facing anti-Semitism; $10, $8 students, seniors and children; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend;541-355 4000 or http: //bend.k12.or.us/summit. MACKLEMORE &RYAN LEWIS:The hip-hop group performs; $18 plus fees in advance, $20 day of show; 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788 2989 or www.midtownbend.corn. OH, HELLHALLOWEENPARTY: Featuring a performance of "Bobby Gould in Hell", a costume contest andli ve musicbyAvery James and The Hillandales; a portion of proceeds benefits Sara's Project; $6; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, 100-464, Bend; 541-215-0516 or www volcanic theatrepub.corn. "WINCHESTER'73": A screening of the 1950 unrated film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld.org.
"EVIL DEAD, THEMUSICAL":2nd Street Theater presents themusical comedy about five collegestudents who accidentally unleash anevil force; contains adult language;$21, $25 splatter zone,$18students and seniors; 8 p.m.; 2ndStreet Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave.,Bend;541-312 9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.corn. JAZZ AT THE OXFORD:Featuring a performance by the Portland Blues Review with LaRhonda Steele and Curtis Salgado; $35 plus fees in advance; 8 p.m .;The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www.jazzatthe oxford.corn. THE AUTONOMICS: The Portland rock band performs, with Black Pussy; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation .corn/venue/thehornedhand. ADVENTURE GALLEY:The indie rock band performs, with Necktie Killer; $5; 8:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541 389-6999 or www.liquidclub.net. JON WAYNE ANDTHEPAIN:The Minneapolis-based reggae-rock act performs; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24N.W. Greenwood Ave.,Bend;541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.corn. DJ WEATHER: The Portland-based DJ performs; free; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116.
SATURDAY FRIENDSOFTHEFOREST:Half-day volunteer conservation projects along Whychus Creek;projects include planting, scattering seeds,mulching and more; free; 9a.m.-2 p.m.; Creekside Park, U.S.Highway 20andJefferson Avenue, Sisters; 541-549-0253 or www.nationalforests.org/volunteer. PUMPKINPATCH:Freeadm ission; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne; 541 548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. SKI GEARSALE:Sale of winter clothing and gear; proceeds benefit the Mt. Bachelor National Ski Patrol; free admission; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70S.W. Century Drive, 100-464, Bend; info© mtbachelornsp.org. CORN MAIZE:$7.50, $5.50 ages 6 11, free ages 5 andyounger; 10 a.m. 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Pumpkin Company, 1250 N.E.W ilcox Ave., Terrebonne; 541-504-1414 or www.pumpkinco.corn.
PET CALENDAR Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www .friendsforlifedogtraining.corn. PET LOSSGROUP: Drop-in PRIVATE TRAINING: Foraggression support group for anyone experiencing or anticipating the and other serious behavior problems and one-on-one training; cost by death of a pet; free; 6-7:30 p.m. quotation; times by appointment; Tuesdays; Partners in Care, Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend; Sharon Myers at 541-382-5882. S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869 or www.friendsforlifedogtraining.corn. DOGS PRIVATEBEHAVIORAL COUNSELING: Cost by quotation; times by BEHAVIORALTRAINING: appointment; Dancin' Woofs, 63027 Cost by quotation; times by appointment; W ednesdays;Lin's Lower Meadow Drive, Suite D,Bend; Mare Shey at541-312-3766 or School for Dogs, 63378 Nels www.dancinwoofs.corn. Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 PRIVATE TRAINING: Cost by or www.linsschoolfordogs.corn. quotation; times by appointment; Chris Waggoner at 541-633-0446 or AKC RING-READYCOACHING: www.DeschutesRiverDogs.corn. Cost by quotation; times by appointment; W ednesdays;Lin's MUTTSABOUTYOU: Positive methods School for Dogs, 63378 Nels for basic training, all agegroups; $115 Anderson Road, Suite 7, Bend; for five weeks;class sizelimited; call for Lin Neumann at 541-536-1418 class hours; TheDogPatch Boutique, or www.linsschoolfordogs.corn. info@thedogpatchboutiqueinc.corn or PUPPY101:Puppies ages8 541-678-5640. to 13 weeks old mayjoin any SOLVECHALLENGING BEHAVIOR: week; $85; 7-8 p.m. Tuesdays; S.A.N.E. Solutions for challenging Dancin' Woofs, 63027 N.E.Lower dog behavior, private lessons; cost Meadow Drive, Suite D,Bend; by quotation; times by appointment; Mare Shey at 541-312-3766 or Kathy Cascade at 541-516-8978 or www.dancinwoofs.corn. kathy@sanedogtraining.corn. PUPPYKINDERGARTEN TELLINGTONTTOUCH: Learntools CLASSES: Ongoing training, to reduce stress and reactivity, help behavior and socialization classes your dog become more confident for puppies 10 to16 weeksold; and improve social skills; cost by $80 for four weeks; 6:15-7:30 p.m. quotation; times by appointment; Thursdays; Pawsitive Experience, Kathy Cascade at 541-516-8978 or 65111 High RidgeDrive, kathy@sanedogtraining.corn. Tumalo; Meredith Gageat 541 FIXLEASH AGGRESSION:Costby 318-8459, trainingdogs123© quotation; times by appointment; bendbroadband.corn or www Dogs Ltd 8 Training, 59860 Cheyenne . pawsitiveexperience.corn. Road, Bend; LindaWest at 541-318 OBEDIENCE CLASSES: Six 6396 or www.dogsltdtraining.corn. week, drop-in classes; $99.95; ABETTER-BEHAVEDDOG: 5 and 6 p.m. Mondays, 6 p.m. Individual marker training with Fridays, and 10a.m. and 5 p.m. positive reinforcement; cost by Saturdays; Petco, 3197 N.U.S. quotation; times by appointment; Highway 97, Bend; Loci Jensen Anne Geser at 541-923-5665. at 541-382-0510. BOARD ANDTRAIN: Minimum of one OBEDIENCE FORAGILITY: Six week boarding; cost by quotation; weeks; $120; 4 p.m. Saturdays; times by appointment; La Pine Desert Sage Agility, 24035 Training Center, Diann Hecht at 541 Dodds Road, Bend; Stephanie 536-2458 or diannshappytails@msn Morris at 541-633-6774 or www.desertsageagility.corn. .corn or www.diannshappytails.corn. PUPPY MANNERS CLASS: Social PRIVATETRAINING: For owners and skills for puppies up to 6 months; their dogs with special behavior or $110 for seven-week class,cost scheduling needs; cost by quotation, includes materials; 6-7p.m. times by appointment; La Pine Mondays; preregister; Friends Training Center, Diann Hecht at for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. 541-536-2458, diannshappytails
GENERAL
@msn.corn or www.diannshappy tails.corn. DAY SCHOOL FORDOGS:Training basics for companion dogs, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. four days a week for three weeks; cost by quotation; times by appointment; Dogs Ltd & Training; 59860 Cheyenne Road, Bend; Linda West at 541-318-6396 or www.dogsltdtraining.corn. K9 NOSE WORK: Drop-in class for advanced students; $15 per session; 6 p.m. Fridays; preregister; Friends for Life Dog Training, 2121 S.W. Deerhound Ave., Redmond; Dennis Fehling at 541-350-2869, Pam Bigoni at 541-306-9882 or www .friendsforlifedogtraining.corn. BOARD ANDTRAIN: Board your dog with a certified trainer; cost by quotation, times by appointment; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht, 541-536-2458 or diannshappytails@msn.corn or www.diannshappytails.corn. OFF-LEASH PLAYCLASS:Learn about off-leash recalls and manners, for nonaggressive dogs; $10 per session; 7-8 p.m. Thursdays; La Pine Training Center, Diann Hecht, 541-536-2458 or diannshappytails©msn.corn or www.diannshappytails.corn. CHIR04CRITTERS:Animal chiropractic seminar; free; 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday; Eastside Bend Pet Express, 420 N.E. Windy Knolls Drive, Bend; 541-385-5298. ALL FOR DOGSADOPTION: Meet dogs available for adoption; free; 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday; Eastside Bend Pet Express, 420 N.E. Windy Knolls Drive, Bend; 541-385-5298. OBEDIENCE FORAGILITY: $120 for six weeks; 7:15 p.m. Tuesdays; Desert Sage Agility, 24035 Dodds Road, Bend; 541-633-6774, www. desertsageagility.corn. TREIBALLCLASS:$120 for six weeks; 7 p.m. Tuesdays; Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, Bend; contact Jan at 541-420-3284 or www.desertsageagility.corn. PUPPY LIFESKILLS: $120 for six weeks; 5 p.m.; Tuesdays; Desert SageAgility,24035 Dodds Road, Bend; contact Jan at 541-420-3284 or www.desertsageagility.corn. FOR THEANIMALS' SAKEART AUCTION:Costume contests and more, benefitting the Redmond Humane Society, music by Steve
Thorpe and Company; free; 7:30 p.m. Oct. 31; Ambiance Art Gallery, 435 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; contact 541-548-8115 or http: //ambianceartonline.corn/ GalleryEvents.html.
HORSES ROLLINGRANCH IN SISTERS: Open for trail-course practice and shows; $10 per horse; 69516 Hinkle Butte Drive, Sisters; Shari at 541-549-6962. PRACTICEAND PLAY: Obstacle course trail; $15; 3-6 p.m. today; preregister; Sky HawkRanch, 6287 N.E. 33rd St., Redmond; Madison at 541-639-7030 or madison@ skyhawkranch.biz. BRASADARANCH COMPETITIVE TRAIL CHALLENGE: ACTHARide; Oct. 26; register by Oct. 24;Brasada Ranch, 17037 S.W.Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; Kate Beardsley at541-350-2406 or www.actha.us/ride/6261. HALLOWEEN SPOOKTACULAR SHOW:$9 per class or $60 unlimited classes; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Oct. 28; Silver Horse Ranch, 63950 Tyler Road, Bend; Sarah at 541-408-4080 or www.silverhorseranch.corn. WILD TRAILSCOMPETITIVETRAIL CHALLENGE:ACTHA Ride;Oct.28; register by Oct. 26; Brasada Ranch, 17037 S.W. Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; Kate Beardsley at 541-350 2406 or www.actha.us/ride/6262. WYLENE WILSONCLINICS: Horsemanship and bridleless clinics and lessons; $100 per clinic, $15 to audit; 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Oct. 29-Nov. 3; preregister; Silver Horse Ranch, 63950 Tyler Road, Bend; Sarah at 541-408-4080 or www.silverhorse ranch.corn ALL-DAYTRAIL COMPETITION: Open for all levels, judged by Wylene Wilson; Nov. 4; Silver Horse Ranch; 63950 Tyler Road, Bend; Sarah at 541-408-4080 or www.silverhorse ranch.corn. CHARLEYSNELLHORSEMANSHIP CLINIC:$50-$125 per day and $15 haul-in fee, $20 per person to audit; Nov. 16-18; Weston Equine Services, LLC, 68810 Holmes Road, Sisters; Alison Weston at 541-728-7004 or www.westonequineservices.corn or http: //charleysnellhorsemanshipv. vpweb.corn.
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44 Earthy tone 46 Soothes 47 Elmer Fudd, at times 52 Old Nair rival 53 Concert reed 54 Flight school finals 56 "King Kong" studio 57 Proficient in 60 Corn Belt resident 62 Google Earth offering 63 'What a dumb idea!" (or what you might say about the beginning of 17-,
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: P AC E I G L O EC O L 8 L I D S H I F T S U P E T E N H U G O AR E A J UM P E R C A B E L OP E AL L S E L L A S P E T E L E P A T H S S HE A T S E A B A S S I NL ET O G D R E S S R E H E L OU T A R MO E N T S W R Y L xwordeditor@aol.corn 6
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cause provokers
HERMAN
DOWN 1 Ga m bling letters 2 Unfriendly dog 3 Swaps for a better model 4 " Baby": "Hair"
19 Theology subj. player 20 Of the state, to 11 Sheep prized for Sarkozy its wool 21 Fur from a weasel 12 "Am tool" retort 23 Woolly mama 13 'What's My 25 Whistle-blower? Line ? " panelist 28 Soon, to Francis Shakespeare 18 Kismet 29 Dieter's progress 22 Macho guy 31 Written permission 23 End of a vague to skip school threat 34 Campbell's line 24 Goes a-courting 36 Old Russian 26 Pretense leaders 27 Tousle 37 Support, as a 30 Scared, as 40 Response
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
Brett Continued from B1
Brett tour Brett is currently touring the country in a gigantic bus (more rock star than children' s author). The tour started in the Northeast, not far from her home in Massachusetts, and is winding its way Northwest. Brett enjoys traveling via bus because it allows her to visit some smaller towns — such as Bend — that are some distance from the big hubs. It also al lows her to travel with lots of "stuff," including a large back drop, items to give away (like buttons) and a large easel. During th e e v ent, B r ett plans to talk f o r a b out 20 minutes. She doesn't r ead the book , s a y in g a n y one can read it, but instead talks about the creative process. She will also offer a drawing lesson on how to draw a tur tle and encourages children to bring paper and pen to fol low along. While her book is aimed at kids age 5 or 6, it also has ap peal for older and younger students.
Rarely doesthe character get rescued "I usually have the characters puzzle it out themselves." In "Mossy," children can learn a lot about appreciating the natural world, says Brett. Mossy ends up being taken to a natural history museum where Brett showcases collec tions of shells, butterflies, min erals and fossils. r~ Brett e n joys i l l u strating • e$ turtles and thinks they have E appeal, with their underbites and big eyes. She also likes that they are slow, yet live a Submitted photo long time. "They are every After coming up with the idea of "Mossy," Jan Brett created a where, but so cryptic." She pond for turtles in her backyard in Massachusetts. Here is one even decided to create a pond of the turtles who came to live in the pond. on her own property to attract turtles. McNeil says the animals Stories also reimagines popular sto Brett creates "are a perfect Brett says the process of ries, like "The Owl and the combination of realism and creating a b ook t a kes her Pussycat" an d " G o ldilocks caricature." She also appre about a year. First, she comes and the Three Bears." Right ciates how Brett gives clues up with the story and works now, Brett is working on re in th e i l l u strated b o rders on the manuscript. Often she telling "Cinderella," but this about what wil l h appen in is inspired by things she sees time most of the main char the story. in nature — like the turtle. acters, including Cinderella, Teaching kids But other times she gets inspi are chickens. ration from magical or whim If there is an overall theme Once the story is in place, sical ideas; her stories feature to her stories, Brett says, it Brett focuses her attention on trolls, a t a l k in g h e dgehog is probably fo r c h a racters the artwork. Brett agrees that and a gingerbread boy. She to learn to help themselves. the "pictures are the m ain
event." She feels art can help children understand a story, even when their vocabulary is somewhat limited. Children search the illustrations, de tecting nuances, emotions and clues to the plot. She loves watching children read her books; "they get out their pointer finger and trace the page." Brett likes to hear what they observe and pick out: "They will see things par ents won't see." One of Brett's goals is to in spire children to create their own stories and art. When she talks with children, she en courages them to think about an event they remember and try to turn it into a story. Brett feels attuned to her 6-year-old self and t r ies to w rite about " what I l o v ed when I was 6." She remembers jumping out of bedwith her sister and run ning into the woods to imagine and play. Or if it was a rainy day, she liked to stay inside and do an art project. "I loved the sense of dis covery, finding a new bird or mushroom."
"Kids are very good appre
ciators.Not enough are creat
ing (art) themselves." — Reporter: 541-617-7860, ajohnson@bendbulletin.corn
A Visit from theGoon Squad The Invisible Circus Look at Me The KeeP
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at home, he signed up for an apprenticeship with a profes sional K-9 trainer who was training dogs for the police force. (Yes, he still has his dog. And, no, it doesn't get jealous when it smells the odor of oth er dogs on his clothes.) The dogs Carbonneau trains at Can Do Canines spend the first few months of their lives with volunteer trainers who take them into their homes. (About 30 puppies are expect ed to arrive in November and December, and Peters is des perate for puppy raisers. Working w i t h in- h ouse professional trainer Laura Waudby, Carbonneau is in volved with the final stages of training. By the time he starts working with the dogs, they usually have been assigned to a client. The trainers teach them the exact skills they will need to serve that client. If the person is deaf, for instance, the dog is taught hand signals. If a wheelchair is involved, the
When it comes to creating artwork, Brett knows some kids feel intimidated by a big white page. That's why she of fersthe lesson in how to draw a turtle using simple shapes, as a way of building their con fidence. Her website (www .janbrett.corn) offers lessons in drawing many other animals, such as a horse, a chicken, a cat and a rabbit. She wants children to learn to be creative, as it can help t hem solve p r oblems a n d come up with creative solu tion. "It's a personal skill that will always be helpful." Brett hopes to inspire them to make their own art.
PULITZER PRIZE W INN ING AU T H O R
Continued from B1 "I still have all my limbs," he said. "There are people a lot worse off than I am." And he's intent on helping them. Earlier this year, he ap plied for a fellowship program offered by the Mission Contin ues ( w w w.missioncontinues
gian shepherd puppy to train
being a kid.
JLNNll'3RAGAN
Assistance
zation that matches post-9/11 veterans with public service projects. When they learned that he had spent part of his time in North Carolina train ing dogs, it was a natural fit with Can Do Canines, where he started in August. "He's doing a great job for us," said Alan Peters, the ex ecutive director. "He's very patient, and he's good at read ing the dog. A dog can't tell you, 'I'm confused.' You have to keep a very sharp eye on the dog" for signs that it un derstands what's being taught. "He's been a wonderful asset for us." C arbonneau knows h o w much a dog can help some one inneed. A dog helped him get back on his feet after his injury. His t h erapist s u ggested that focusing on training a pet would help with his recovery. But he took it a step further: In addition to getting a Bel
While Brett says she some times feels jaded, she has the ability to reach back. "I can still get that feeling of discov ery." She is also able to push the childhood feeling of anxi ety away in her work and fo cus on the rosieraspects of
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THURSDAY, JANUARY I 0, 20I 3 7 :00P.M. BEND Hi G H
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P. Jeff Wheeler / Minneapolis Star Thbune
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Dan Carbonneau gets help pushing an elevator call button from Erma, an assistance dog in train ing, at Can Do Canines in New Hope, Minn. bursts of time. "If you work with them too " Typically, when a d o g long, they get tired and you learns to heel, it's taught to sit start to lose them" in terms of down whenever you stop," Car their paying attention, he said. bon neau explained. "Some "You have to keep it exciting times we have to cure them of for them." the urge to sit. The wheelchairs To make sure the dogs have can turn suddenly, and the dog been taught everything they has to pivot to stay out of the need to know, the last bit of way." training usually takes place One of the programs in in the client's home, where the volves teaching the dogs to handler can make sure that react to the scent of someone the person and the dog are who is going into a diabetic working in sync. coma. The dogs can sense As for Carbonneau, work the change in body chemistry ing with a client is a reminder caused by high blood sugar that he's helping to improve before the diabetic feels any someone'slife. "I get something out of it, physical symptoms. By using odor patches, the trainers teach too," he conceded. "But it's not the dogs to alert the client that just me. A lot of post-9/11 vets c are" about i mproving t h e a problem is imminent. "You want to have a good community. connection w it h t h e d o g ," Carbonneau hopes to start Carbonneau said. "You want business school next y e ar. the dog to trust you. It takes In the meantime, he's taking a lot of patience and a lot of a full load of classes at Nor praise." mandale Community College. The patience really comes Sometimes his schedule gets a into play when teaching com little tight and he has to scram plicated tasks, such as open ble to squeeze in all his dog ing a kitchen drawer. training, but he isn't consider "With the difficult tasks, you ing scaling back. "It's a big commitment, but break them down into small steps," he said. "You teach one this is something I enjoy," he step at a time and then connect said. "It gives me something all the steps at the end." more to do when I wake up On any given day, he' ll work than just go to school. I' ve nev with five to 10 dogs, but in er seen it as a chore."
L iBRA RY
ON SALE NOW AT dplfoundation.org
teNIOW Th< B~<tiD bertdbroadband m $f:onncfetion
dog is trained to keep out of the device's way.
Join AAA Travel and Jeannie McGinnis for a presentation on three different cruising styles and three different cruise lines so you can decide which one is right for you — Azamara Club Cruises, Celebrity Cruises, and Royal Caribbean International. Thursday, October 25 at 6:00 PM
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fo Uncommon Care .t Unbelievable Fees visit us at: .DrRow.corn or call 541-526-0019
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News of Record, C2 Obituaries, C5 Editorials, C4 Weather, C6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
LOCAL BRIEFING Heroin arrest in Bend Bend policeThursday arrested Lewis Corti Soltez, 33, of Portland,
on suspicion of dealing heroin.
Police picked upSoltez at 6:13 p.m. on Northeast 3rd Street near Northeast
Lafayette Avenue,ac cording to police Mon day. Police allege Soltez
carried asmall amount of heroin with him. A search of his Dunes Motel room, 1515 N.E. 3rd St., yielded
four grams ofheroin, ac cording to police.
Soltez was held in lieu of $30,000 in the Des chutes County jail Monday
O www.bendbulletin.corn/local
Rattesna e iteswoman i in near roo e RiverRanc By Dylan J. Darling
four people on a hike along
The Bulletin
the Scout Camp Trail, he said. The group had hiked about a mile and a half to the river and was headed out of the canyon when the snake bit the woman around 11 a.m. The bite was on the wom an's right index finger, McLar en said. She then grabbed the snake and flung it. Before the strike, the woman didn't hear or see the snake, he said.
A woman was airlifted to St. Charles Bend on Monday after a rattlesnake bit her as she was hiking in the Crooked River Canyon near Crooked River Ranch. "She put her hand on a rock to climb on up, and it got her," said Tim McLaren, chief of Crooked River Ranch Fire and Rescue. The woman was one of
"He was probably just sun ning himself on the rocks," McLaren said. A team of seven from Crooked River Ranch Fire and Rescue hiked into the canyon to tend to the injured woman, McLaren said. They moved her about a quarter mile to a plateau where a Life Flight helicopter picked her up and carried her to St. Charles. Her name was not im mediately available. The
bite occurred on land man aged by the Bureau of Land Management. Even this time of year, rattle snakes will be warming them selves during the heat of the day, particularly in remote ar eas, said Lisa Clark, a spokes woman with the BLM. The Western rattlesnake, which is found in Central Oregon, is considered nonaggressive. That is, unless it is startled. SeeSnake /C2
on charges ofheroin pos session, heroinmanufac ture and heroin delivery. A
court datewasscheduled for Wednesday.
DMV offices closed Friday All DMV offices in
Oregon will be closed Friday for a statewide
mandatory furlough day. The DMV suggests
customers conduct busi ness by mail or online, if possible. Because waiting times can be long
on days beforeandafter closures, the DMV also
recommendscustomers who need to visit the of fice do so before Thurs
day or after Monday. Passenger-vehicle registration renewals, changes of address, and
JlIIH
notices of vehicle sale
,,// i /,'f
can all be done onthe DMV's website at www
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.OregonDMV.corn/online
aI
The statewide fur lough day is the sixth of 10 scheduled during the 2011-13 budget period.
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ID theft prevention workshop set A free workshop about identity-theft prevention will be held at 6 p.m. Oct.
23 in the conference room at Mid Oregon Credit Union's Madras office, 395 S.E. Fifth St.
Jefferson County
Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
A rainbow stretches across the skyover Bend Monday morning. Today is forecast to be partly cloudy with strong winds; more weather could arrive toward the end of the week. See complete forecast, Page C6.
ain asn' Lji e am ene
Sheriff Jim Adkins will
explain some ofthe most common financial
crimes, such asphishing and fake-checkseams. The presentation will also offer tips to avoid being a victim of identity theft. To register for the workshop, call 541-382 1795. Morebriefing and News of Record, C2
FIRE UPDATE
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Recent rains haven't been enough to squelch the Pole Creek Fire burning south west of Sisters. "It hasn't been put out by any means," Karen Curtiss, deputy fire staff officer for the Forest Service and Bu reau of Land Management in Central Oregon, said Monday. So far only a smattering of rain has fallen on the
26,795 acres burned in the last month by the wildfire. Surrounded by containment lines and natural barriers, the fire continues to smolder. It started on Sept. 9. While fire officials had targeted Monday as the day they'd have full contain ment of the fire, they' ve now moved the expected date to Saturday, said Alex Robertson, fire staff officer for the Forest Service and BLM in Central Oregon. As
of Monday it was 90 percent contained. There still has been no word on the cause of the fire, 36 days since it was first spotted near the Pole Creek Trailhead.The fire caused the evacuation of about 30 hikers and campers from the Three Sisters Wilderness Area and destroyed four cars at the trailhead. Fire officials have said they' re waiting for a rush of rain to end the Pole Creek
Fire and fire season in Cen tral Oregon. After a couple of dry months, rainy weather started on Friday, followed by another round just after midnight Sunday, said Di ana Hayden, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Pendleton. The weather systems dropped a tenth of an inch of rain on Sisters Friday and another tenth early Monday. SeeWeather /C2
Reported for Central
and Eastern Oregon. For the latest information, visit www.nwccweb .us/information/
•
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Following up on Central Oregon's most interestingstories, even if they' ve been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbufletirLcom. O» To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.corn/updates.
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THE SMITH CASE IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
No bodyyet; trial likely ayear or 2 away
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1. Pole Creek Fire • Acres: 26,795 • Containment: 90%
• Cause: Under investigation
Well shot! reader photos • We want to see your best photos capturing the colors of fall in
Central Oregon for publication in a special version of Well shot!
Send your best work to readerphotos@ bendbulletin.corn by Oct. 20 and we' ll pick
the best for publication.
canbe victim,
judge says By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin
Prosecutors can identify as a victim the Tumalo man allegedly murdered by his father, a Deschutes County Circuit Court
judge ruled Monday. James Hargrave, 62, is expected to stand trial next Tuesday on al legations that he shot and killed his son, 29-year-old Steven Hargrave, during a confrontation at their home in Tumalo in Decem ber 2011. Monday, defense at torney Karla Nash argued that because her client's case centers around the idea that he J ame s committed Hargr ave the act in self defense, the jury shouldn' t hear Steven Hargrave re ferred to as a victim. Steven Des chutes Har grave County Deputy District Attorney Casey Baxter said case law showed that a person who has been determined by a prosecutor to have been a victim of physical harm can be called a vic tim. Baxter also noted a grand jury had determined Steven Hargrave was the victim of the violent crime as well. Deschutes County Cir cuit Court Judge Wells Ashby denied the defense motion and ruled Steven Hargrave can be called a victim during the jury trial. But, he noted, "it's not a term this court is likely to use in front of the jury." The trial is expected to last four weeks. SeeTrial /C2
g@= ELECTION:
Nov. 6
For our completecoverage, visit www.bendbulletin.corn/elections.
Attorney vs. judge for high court By Sheila G. Miller
WHATEyER
firemap.aspx.
Hargrave
By Scott Hammers
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The Bulletin
company
The body of a former Bend man has yet to be lo cated, more than two years after his suspected murder and a year after his busi ness partner was arrested and charged in his death. Christopher Ryan Smith lived in Bend for about a year, according to his father, Steven Smith, who still lives in Bend with Christopher Smith's moth er, Debi Smith. In 2010, Christopher Smith was living in South ern California, where he co-owned the Internet
800xchange with Edward Younghoon Smith Sh in . Investiga tors believe Shin mur dered his 32 year-old busi ness partner Shin at their San Juan Capist rano office in June of that year in order to consolidate control of the business. He then allegedly imperson ated Christopher Smith for months, sending emails to
Christopher Smith's family and friends claiming he was on a trip to Africa and writ ing accounts of his travels. When the emails stopped in December 2010, the Smith family contacted law enforcement and later filed a missing person report with the Laguna Beach Police Department. The Orange County Sheriff's Office took over the inves tigation, and in late August 2011, Shin was arrested while attempting to board a plane from Los Angeles to Canada. A second man, Kenny Roy Krall, was ar rested on suspicion of alleg
edly helping Shin dispose of Christopher Smith's clothing and vehicle. Steven Smith said that since the arrests of the two men, searches for his son' s body have been conducted in the deserts southeast of Los Angeles — including one with 150 police offi cers — but have turned up nothing. Earlier this year, the Smith family filed a $10 million claim against the Laguna Beach Police De partment, alleging police had botched their investiga tion into his disappearance. SeeCase/C2
The Bulletin
The race for a seat on the Oregon Supreme Court pits a longtime Portland attorney against a longtime Portland judge. Multnomah County Cir cuit Court Judge Richard C. Baldwin and Sussman Shank LLP partner Nena Cook both saythey believe their varied experi ences and B aldw i n commitment to legal ser vices for all Oregonians make them prime can didates for a C ook spot on the Supreme Court. Baldwin has been a Multnomah County Circuit Court judge since 2001. Before that he served as the executive director of the Oregon Law Center, which provides legal help to low income Oregonians, and also worked for Multnomah County Legal Aid and as a trial attorney for 14 years. SeeCourt/C2
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
Case Continued from C1 Steven Smith said the suit has since been dropped but declined to elaborate, as the Orange County District Attor ney's Office has advised him not to talk to media. Shin, now 34, has plead ed not guilty to the charges
Court Continued from C1 W hoever wins t h i s r a ce "makes very important deci sions on a daily basis, affects the lives of Oregonians as far as liberty and property," Baldwin sard As a result, he said, the race is about experience and quali fications, particularly as the Supreme Court has faced what he callsan "experience drain" over thepast few years as jus tices with the most courtroom experience have left the bench. "It's really important to have someone at the table that's real ly been there and understands the dynamics of trial and can contribute that understanding to deliberations, to make deci sions collectively," Baldwin said. B aldwin grew up i n S a n Jose, Calif., and was the first in his family to graduate from col lege. His parents were active in the community and particular ly in the schools, and he said he was inspired by them to focus on increasing people's access to the justice system. His work as an attorney fo cused on helping those at risk. As a judge, Baldwin said he' s presided over more than 350 criminal and civil t r ials, as well as drug treatment court. He also helped establish the county's first mental health court. "I think I have an unusually deep background in terms of experience and qualifications," he said. "I was a lawyer for 25 years before I went on the bench. About half of that was with legal services programs representing low-income cli ents, and I saw up close just
against him and is being held without bail at t h e O range County Jail. Matt Murphy, a p r osecu tor in the homicide unit of the Orange County District Attorney's Office, said Shin could go to trial in a year or two. Shin hired one of the best defense attorneys in the area, Murphy said, who has filed
several motions challenging whether certain evidence, in cluding statements made by Shin after his arrest, should be admissible at trial. Murphy said the Smith fam ily has been disappointed a trial hasn't happened yet, but "the worst thing that could happen" would be to move the trial along too quickly, opening the door
judge.... When any group of
JudgeRichardC. Baldwin
NenaCook
Party:Nonpartisan Age:65 Hometown:San Jose, Calif.
Age:46 Hometown:Salt Lake City
Time in area:40 years Family:Wife (Teresa), two children
Employment:Multnomah County Circuit Court Judge Education:Bachelor' s
degree from SanJose State University; law degree from Lewis 8 Clark College Northwestern School of Law
Party:Nonpartisan
Time in area:Portland since 1991 Family:Two children
Employment:Partner attorney, SussmanShank LLP; judge pro tern, Muitnomah County Circuit Court
Education:Bachelor' s degree from Gonzaga University; law degree from Willamette University
2001; executive director
College of Law Experience:Private practice 21 years; Marion
from 1995 to 2000; trial attorney14 years; director of litigation for Multnomah
judge pro tern since 2007.
Experience:Multnomah County Circuit Court since of the Oregon LawCenter
County District Attorney's Office, 1990-91; Oregon State Bar president, 2005;
County Legal Aid from 1977 to 1981. Oregon
Court of Appeals clerk. how vulnerable low- and mid dle-income clients are when they don't have reasonable ac cess to justice." Baldwin said trial court judg es are"maybe the most prac tical animals on the planet,"
for Shin to claim he received inadequate legal counsel. "It's a complicated case; we' re sort of at the mercy of the defense," Murphy said. "We' re ready any time." The search for Christopher Smith's body has been sus pended indefinitely, Murphy said. The area where inves tigators believe it's likely his
review in cases where there' s issues of public importance." Cook is a partner with 21 years of experience at Sussman Shank LLP in Portland and has
served as a judge pro tern since
2007 for the Multnomah Coun ty Circuit Court. She saidit'sherdiverse expe rience that makes her the best making decisions all day long. person to join what she called As a member of the Supreme an already strong bench. "I bring a different perspec Court, he would take a more scholarly approach but would tive, and I think that's valu push to focus the opinions the able," she said. "We already courtissues. had four former Court of Ap "There's some thought that pealsjudges as members ofthe perhaps if they ... focus opin Supreme Court. When Judge ions a little more directly and Dave Brewer ascends he will practically on what the parties bring with him the experience and attorneys and the public of a former trial judge, so that needs to know about the law, is covered. I bring a different that might free up time to per perspective as a lawyer in pri haps take more petitions for vatepractice and as a pro tern
people is m aking decisions that impact every Oregonian, if each come from a different experience and background it will strengthen the decision and rule of law." Cook pointed to her commit ment to the legal profession, including efforts to provide ac cess to legal services for low income Oregonians. During a tenure as the president of the Oregon State Bar she initiated a statewide loan repayment assistance program for local law students. When they pur sued public service work, they received relieffrom some of their law school debt. She also worked on a d isability task force that sought to remove barriers to make it easier for those with physical disabilities to navigate courthouses. Although s h e's r u n n ing against a circuit court judge, Cook doesn't believe extensive time onanother bench isneces sary to sitting on the Supreme Court bench. "Certainly, judicial experi ence is helpful, and we have that covered," she said. "Now what I would bring is a perspec tive different from that." Cook said she's heard time and again that the Supreme Court doesn't take enough cases, and suggested that with her perspective as a trial at torney, she might be "the voice of someone who can say, 'This area of the law is something that comes up a great deal for trial attorneys, so this is a case we should take.'" Perhaps, she said, that would increase the number of cases the Supreme Court examines. — Reporter:541-617-7831, smiller@bendbutletin.corn
NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:35 a.m. Oct. 8, in the 900 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:20 p.m. Oct. 8, in the 500 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:30 p.m. Oct. 8, in the 1900block of Northeast Third Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 4:55 p.m. Oct. 8, in the 61200 block of Brittle Bush Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:36 p.m. Oct. 8, in the area of Northwest Oregon Avenue and Northwest Wall Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:11 a.m. Oct. 9,I nthe 1200 block of Northeast Purcell Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:09 p.m. Oct. 9, in the 600 block of Southeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:39 a.m. Oct. 10, in the 60900 block of Miles Court. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:39 p.m. Oct. 10, in the 1500 block of Northeast Forbes Road. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 4:02 a.m. Oct. 11, in the 1300block
of Northwest Cumberland Avenue. DUII —Charles James Durand, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:52 a.m. Oct. 12, in the area of Northwest Congress Street and Northwest Kansas Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 7:47 a.m. Oct. 12, in the 2200 block of Northeast Second Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:58 a.m. Oct. 3, in the 800 block of Northeast Fourth Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:41 a.m. Oct. 7, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:08 p.m. Oct. 7, in the 2500 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:05 p.m. Oct. 10, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:55 a.m. Oct. 11, in the 1200 block of Southwest Wheeler Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:25 a.m. Oct. 12, in the 100 block of Southwest McKinley Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:48 a.m. Oct. 12, in the 20400 block of Karch Drive. DUII —Jay Hariey Taber, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:11 a.m. Oct. 13, in the area of Northeast Third Street and Northeast Kearney Avenue. DUII —Marco Antonio Perez-Diaz, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving Under the influence of intoxicants at1:41 a.m. Oct. 13, in
body was dumped is massive, he said, and it's ineffective to search without more spe cific information on where he might be. "But, if we had a tip, or if Shin wants to talk, we' ll go," Murphy said. Steven Smith said his fam ily has struggled to move past the disappearance and likely
death of Christopher Smith. He said there's far more to the story than has been revealed publicly so far, but until Shin goes to trial, most of what in vestigators have learned will remain under wraps. "When it all comes out, it' ll be unbelievable," he said. — Reporter:541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulleti n.corn
Trial
James Hargrave was tested after the shooting and had a Continued from C1 blood alcohol level of 0.01. Hargrave is o n d i alysis At the time of his death, a three times each week, which toxicology report states Ste may impact how quickly the ven Hargrave also had traces trial progresses. of OxyContin, Vicodin and Police were called to the hydrocodone in his system. Hargraves' remote Tumalo In March, defense attorneys home Dec. 4 after Pamela argued for Hargrave's release, Hargrave called 911 to report saying he killed his son in her husband had shot her son. self-defense while under ex According to testimony dur treme emotional disturbance ing the release hearing, the and fear for his life. Ashby pair were on opposite sides of declined to set bail, saying the an open-air loft in their home, son had no weapon and never yelling at one another. When physically assaulted his father, Steven Hargrave threatened and that evidence showed to hurt his father, James Har Hargrave had unlawfully and grave allegedly told him to intentionally shot his son. "come on over here and try Family members have said it." When his son approached James Hargrave feared his son, him, Hargrave told his son he who had a history of substance was tired of his behavior, and abuse and violence. They say when the insults continued, he they believe he shot his son in shot him once in the chest. self-defense afteryearsofprob S teven Hargrave had a lems with the 29-year-old. blood alcohol level of 0.38 per — Reporter:541-61 7-7831, cent the night of the shooting. smiller@bendbulletin.corn
Weather
Central Oregon, running from 8 p.m. Monday until 8 p.m. to Continued from C1 day. West winds of 25-35 miles But Robertson said the rain per hour were expected, with mostly missed the Pole Creek gusts up to 45 mph. Fire. Today should be mostly More rain was falling late sunny with a h igh around Monday in Bend and was ex 57 degrees, according to the pected to continue into early Weather Service. The low to this morning, Hayden said. night should drop to 33. Up to 0.3inches of rain was The skies should be clear expected to fall in the latest until the next round of rain, weather system. As of 9 p.m. which isn't expected to arrive Monday, three and half hours until late Thursday, Hayden of rainfall had produced 0.16 sa>d. "It looks like it is going to of an inch of rain at the Bend Municipal Airport. be dry and mostly clear until The rain should be over to Thursday, Thursday evening," day, and winds are expected she said. to bestrong.The Weather Ser — Reporter: 541-617-7812, vice issued a wind advisory for ddarli ng@bendbulleti n.corn
Snake
the 100 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. DUII —Christopher Paul Neal, 41, was arrested on suspicion of driving Under the influence of intoxicants at 3:44 p.m. Oct. 13, in the area of Northwest Riverside Boulevard and Northwest Congress Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 4:40 p.m. Oct. 13, in the 63100 block of Watercress Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:51 p.m. Oct. 13,in the 500 block of Hill Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 9:26 a.m. Oct. 14, in the 19500 block of East Campbell Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:12 a.m. Oct. 14, in the 900 block of Northwest Milwaukee Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 4:12 p.m. Oct. 14, in the 19400block of Kemple Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:49 p.m. Oct. 4, in the 1400 block of Southwest Knoll Avenue. Jefferson County Sheriff's Office Unauthorized use —A vehicle was
reported stolen Oct. 8, in the area of Northeast Clark Drive and Northeast Elm Lane in Madras. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported Oct. 9, in the area of Culver Highway north of Metoiius. Theft —A theft was reported Oct. 11, inthe1700biockof Southeast McTaggart Road in Madras. Theft —A purse was reported stolen Oct. 11, in the area of the Haystack Reservoir boat ramp. Burglary —A burglary, theft and attempted burglary were reported Oct. 13, in the 16000block of Southwest Dove Road in Crooked River Ranch. Oregon State Police Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 1:49 p.m. Oct. 13, in the area of LI.S. Highway 20 near milepost 82. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 2:41 p.m. Oct.13, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 169.
and feet," Clark said. While rattlesnakes take Continued from C1 cover in d ens o nce tem Surprise encounters with peratures drop near freez r attlesnakes, like th e o n e ing overnight, she said, the Monday, may lead to bites, recent warm days and mild she said. The most common nights might keep them out. "In general, if we are hav bites are to the extremities. To avoid t h em, p eople ing average daily tempera s hould take care an d b e tures of 50 degrees or above, aware of snakes when cross the more active they will be," ing rugged terrain. Clark said. "It's really about watching — Reporter: 541-617-7812, where you place your hands ddarling@bendbulletin.corn
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BEND FIRE RUNS Thursday 9:10 a.m.— Smoke odor reported, inthe area of Dusty Loop. 29 —Medical aidcalls.
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Mayor of Bend, 1991, 2009, 2010
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Bend City Councilor, 22 years Rotary Club of Bend, President 09 — 10
LOCAL BRIEFING
Bend Sister City Foundation, Non-Profit, Founder
Continued from C1
Crash near Kent injures teenage driver A single-vehicle crash Monday on U.S. Highway 97 three miles south of Kent left a
teenage driver from California seriously injured, the Oregon State Police reported.
Jeremy Walls,19, of Colusa, Calif., was driving a 2005 Jeep Cherokee northbound at1:49
p.m. when it crossed thehigh way and left the southbound shoulder, rolled and came to
rest on its wheels in awheat
field. The driver was not wear ing restraints, was thrown from
the Jeepand partially caught
Yoii have aright toknowwhat yourgovernment is doing.
underneath it when it came to
Current Oregon Iaw requirespublic notices to be printed in a newspaper whose readersare affected by the notice. But federal, state,and local government agencies erroneously believethey can savemoneyby posting public notices ontheir web sites insteadof in the local newspaper. If they did that,you'd have to know in advance where, when, and how to look, and what to look for, in order to be informedabout government actions that could affect you directly. Lessthan 10% of tile U.S. population currently visits a govern ment website daily,* but 80% of all Oregonadults read a news paperat least onceduring an average week, and 54% read public notices printed there.**
rest, according to police. Life Flight carried the driver to St. Charles Bend with serious but non-life threatening injuries.
He was listed in fair condition Monday night at the hospital, a
nursing supervisor said. State policewereassisted at the scene by the Sherman Coun ty Sheriff's Office, South Sher
man Fire 8 Rescue andOregon Department of Transportation.
Keeppudlic notices inthenewspaper! 'Us censu)8rrseorlMoy 2II9 "Amerrcan oenionRerearcs pnn<etonNj september2070
Bend-La Pine Public Schools, Human Resources Deschutes County Field Representative, US Senator Ron Wyden I
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Paid for by Kathie Eckman for City Council
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
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REGON NEWS
Tax foesformslate in Reedsport's fall elections State's voters The Associated Press REEDSPORT — A tax re volt along the Oregon coastal d unes has spilled f ro m a spring ballot measure into the municipal elections this fall. In May, voters in Reedsport approved a measure that rolls back water and sewer rates and requires a public vote on tax and fee increases. A slate of insurgents who supported the measure and call themselves The New Ma jority is now challenging the
mayor and three candidates for seats on the City Council, The Roseburg News-Review reports. W inning would g ive t h e challengers a majority on the seven-member council. Meanwhile, the tax m ea sure awaits a decision from a Douglas County judge on its constitutionality. A hearing on the challenge by the city is set for Nov. 2. Reedsport i s a Do u g l as County town of m ore than
4,000 people between Florence and Coos Bay. It could default on l oans owed to the Department of E nvironmental Q u ality f o r improvements to the sewage treatment plant if water rates are reduced, opponents of the measure said. Mayor K e it h T y m c huk, running for a sixth term, says the amendment to the charter will hinder the city, and voters didn't understand what their votes would mean.
increasinglyshun major parties
He's being challenged by Merv Cloe. In 2010, Cloe lost to Tymchuk with 29 percent of the vote. The charter a mendment, Cloe said, passed by a strong majority — 6 0 p ercent ap proval — and the City Council is now obstructing it with the court challenge. "The mayor is required to
By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
SALEM — Oregon vot ers have increasingly shed their political labels since the last time they helped select a president. Since 2008,Democratic and Republican registra tion has fallen, while the ranks of Independent and unaffiliated voters h ave swelled.
accept people changing the law," he said. "People have the right to control the spending of their resources."
Four years ago, 76 per cent of Oregon voters were members of the two major p o l itical p a r t ies, compared with 71 percent now, according to an As sociated Press analysis of September data from the Secretary of S t ate's Of fice. Both major parties have fewer members now than four years ago, even though total voter regis tration has grown. The Democratic Party had 8 54,000 r e gistered votersin September, 7 per cent fewer than four years ago. Republicans saw a 2 percent decline to 672,000 voters. A hard-fought Demo cratic primary and enthu siasm for Barack Obama among new voters drove Democratic r e g istration way up in 2008, said Trent Lutz, executive director of the Democratic Party of
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Photos by AlexPajuaas/TheDaily Astorian
Work on the Astoria-Megler Bridgewas brought to a halt over the weekend. Both lanes were open as of Monday afternoon before winds closed it again. The gusts had damaged the platforms workers were using for a paint and repair job on the bridge, so it was closed for safety reasons.
But this election cycle is different, he said. There' s less enthusiasm among Democrats, an d t h e re' s no U.S. Senate election or other high-profile race to draw the attention of voters or outside interest
soria ri ereo ens, u enwin scosei a ain The Associated Press ASTORIA — For the second time in 24 hours, high winds Monday evening prompted t ransportation o f f i cials t o close t h e A st o r ia-Megler Bridge near the mouth of the Columbia River. T he w i nd s o n c e a g a i n threatened to detach segments of contractor work decks at tached to the bridge, Oregon Transportation D e p artment spokesman Rick Little said. Gusts to 40 mph were re ported nearby, the National Weather Servicesaid. Weather conditions might improve after midnight, but motorists should a n ticipate that the bridge closure could last into Tuesday morning, Little said. The bridge links western corners of Washington state and Oregon. Drivers were de toured inland to the Highway 30 bridge between Longview, Wash., and Rainier, Ore. Workers have been repaint
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Crews evaluatethe damage caused by the weekend's rain and windstorm to galvanized sheet metal platforms on Monday.
ing and repairing the bridge. The span was closed in high winds Sunday night as a safety precaution, but both lanes reopened Monday after engineers inspected the bridge and repairs were started. The bridge itself wasn't damaged,
highway officials said. The weekend winds were strong but not exceptional by coastal standards — weather service equipment registered a top gust of 41 mph, and volun teer observers reported gusts of 50 mph, said meteorologist
Beth Burgess. "We' renot quite sure why t he cable ties broke in t h e wind," Little said of the earlier problems. The cables secured decking at the side of the bridge that gave workers access to repaint and re-rivet the structure. It was built in th e 1960s and once called "the most valuable public asset in Clatsop Coun ty" by Astoria Mayor Willis Van Dusen. Work began in July on a five-year, $50 million project to renovate the bridge, which was originally built for $24 million. It was repainted in the 1980s. T he d e partment's p r o j ect manager, Steve Templin, said the decking is thin sheet metal, and 500-700 feet of it was hanging by a cable from the side of the bridge Monday morning. Workers began removing that decking.
groups. "We haven't had t h at same energy l evel t h at was there in 2008," Lutz said. " We' re building i t back." Greg Leo, a spokesman
EUGENE — There was a shootout in Eugene between an intoxicated man firing a paint ball gun and police firing rubber bullets and beanbag rounds. Police won. Officers took the 49-year-old man into custody Sunday evening after about 30 minutes. The Register-Guard reports the man fired more than 50 paintball rounds from his porch and front door and hit two of ficers. They had responded af ter his yelling and threats had alarmed neighbors. Lt. Bill Solesbee says the man was taken to a hospital for an evaluation. He faces charges of assaulting an of
Portland shooting leaves 1 dead PORTLAND Police say one person is dead af ter a shooting in n o rtheast Portland. Sgt. Pete Simpson says of ficers found the body Monday night when they responded to a report of a shooting. Police are investigating. Additional details were not immediately available.
Jackson County fire risk lowered MEDFORD Jackson County's fire danger level has
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for the Oregon Republican Party, said the rise in unaf filiated voters is a reflection of a n i n d ependent streak among Oregon voters. "It's not a terrible concern," he said of the smaller number of r egistered Republicans. "We would like to see more people register as Republi cans and we think t hat as we win some of these races in 2012 that our registration numbers will go up." To register for this year' s election, forms must be post marked by t o day. A nyone with an Oregon driver's li cense or state-issued iden tification card can r egister online until 11:59 p.m. Here are some otherfacts about Oregon's electorate: • V oters l e a ving m a j o r parties a r e n' t e m b r acing smaller ones. Excluding the Independent Party, Oregon's minor parties have picked up just 340 voters. • Democrats lost voters in every county.Their steepest declines were in Gilliam and Lake counties, where they lost a fifth of Democrats, al though there are fewer than 1 ,000 Democrats i n e a c h county. • Republicans lost voters in about two-thirds of coun ties in the state, most signifi cantly in Multnomah, where a decline of 5,000 Republi cans amounted to a 7 percent drop. The GOP's sharpest in crease was in Crook County, which added 252 Republi cans, a 5 percent gain. • N early 9 0 pe r c ent o f voters live i n c o u nties on the west side of the Cascade Mountains.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
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end's Community Center, plagued by financial prob P
lems, came close to closing a few weeks ago. Now its leaders have a plan that they believe will put the center on sound financial footing for the future. That's good news. The center has played an im- s c rapped the thrift store and are portant role in the community c l o sing the w arehouse, saving since it was founded in 1999. o v erhead on two buildings, and Combined with the Family Kitch- d e cided to limit themselves to on en, it assures that the city's hun- s ite programs only. They' ve also gry have a place to eat every day c ome up with a plan to pay those of the week. It also has back taxes. been home to a senior as important t As can happen theJust " P ogr center's directors the local chapter of wi t h any h ave ~ o r ke d wi t h Becca's Closet, which tJ u SjneSS, ttle United Way to h ave provides formal wear the institution's books community to low income teens audited, a first. That for special events. The Center grew should give those in center also provides QeypnQ jts charge a far c learer clothing and firewood means jn picture of j ust w h at t th ' d went wrong and why. recent years. A t t h e s a m e t i m e, As can happen with they' ve hired an ex any business, the com pert to help them re munity center g r ew beyond its means in recent years. view their bylaws and manage It operated a thrift store and a mentpolicies. Combined,thetwo warehouse in separate locations, actions should make fundraising meaning additional rent, heat easier,for they should help as ing and other expenses. And its sure that the center is run re sponsibly in the future. fundraising lagged. Pulling back from the brink Ultimately, all that meant it of ruin, as the center is doing, is owed more than $4pp,ppp on a not easy. Hard decisions must be mortgage and $1lp,ppp in othe~ expenses, including $22ppp in made, programs dropped, feel ' ings hurt. In the end, however, back payroll taxes. without those decisions, the cen The center's directors have ter could not survive. Its directors made some important changes recognized that, are making the that they believe will help the tough decisions and are ready to institution s u r v ive. Th e y' ve move on.
M nickel's Worth Knight best choice for council
Lookout Mountain logging objections not constructive pponents of an experi mental l o gging p r o ject on L o o kout M o u n tain say they want to p r otect old growth ponderosa pine. What their comments reveal, however, is a closed-minded, unrealistic attitude. The Forest Service project southwest of Bend is in the Prin gle Falls Experimental Forest near Sunriver, an area set aside for study. Larger trees are be ing left behind, according to re search forester Andrew Young blood, while those 12 to 28 inches in diameter are being cut. Results of the experimental logging will help scientists un derstand how thinning affects the forest, including the risk of wildfire and damage by insects. Results will be used to improve decisions about how to manage pine stands along U.S. Highway 97. For Tim Lillebo with Oregon Wild, such research is not need ed: "I think we cut big trees for 100 years, and we saw the re sults," he said. Karen Coulter with the Blue Mountains Biodi versity Project put it this way: "This is an old-growth liquida tion sale, and that is the kind of
O
logging that should be relegated to our past." What should be relegated to our past is this kind of knee-jerk reaction. The clearcut logging of days past is totally different from the research going on at Lookout Mountain. Env i r onmentalists have done critical work to stop that earlier approach, and they deserve credit for changing the conversation. They look foolish, however, when they take such extreme positions. Even the use of the term "old growth" is problematic. The ex pression has many definitions, m any of w h ich d on't fi t t h i s case. But it's a loaded term that makes any logging sound ne farious, serving to obscure, not clarify, the issues. Fortunately, two courts have upheld the For est Service plan, rejecting Blue Mountains' objections. The destructive force of wild fires and the enormous cost of fighting them have focused at tention on forest health at the same time that we need to find a way to get jobs back into natural resources. A more reasoned ap proach from environmentalists would help assure we get the bal ance right.
the title might suggest. The Corpo ration Division and the Land Board are central to the economic health of I believe Doug Knight brings a the state. The State Audit and Elec level of civility to discussing issues tion Division functions are central that allows for robust exchanges to ensuring honesty in government that will lead to rational decisions and in elections. on the Bend City Council. I' ve been We are fortunate that Knute Bue impressed observing his decision hler is running for this position. making on the Planning Commis As a Rhodes Scholar, active civic sion. He is thorough and does his leader, businessman and physician, homework. Hi s i n sight, coupled Buehler has the background and with his professional and civic ex ability to do pretty much anything perience,provides a strong base for he wantsto do. His master's degree being an effective city councilor. in politics and economics seals the We have different opinions on deal when we evaluate his quali whether Bend should elect its may fications for the secretary of state or. We also have had lively discus job. sions about Bend'ssurface water Buehler wants to attract business
project. A couple of years ago, we to Oregon, ensure agency efficiency spoke in front of the school board on opposite sides of a transporta tion issue. So why would I want to serve alongside Knight on the City Council and encourage you to vote for him? At the end of the day, we will be able to respectfully disagree, know ing we are both doing what we believe is best for Bend, even if we arrive at different conclusions from time to time. What I like most about Knight is that he extends respect to those with a differing opinion. I' ve witnessed the professional and personal attributes that make Knight my choice for Bend City Council. I urge you to vote for Knight on Nov. 6. Jodie Barram Bend
health insurance? Because this is a pre-existing disease. Even if she has no insurance, she has the financial ability to be taken care of. Does she worry about her job, meeting her bills, helping her children with schooling? I don't think she has a clue. My husband has had MS for 43 years. During the first 25 years of that time there was not an insurance company thatwe could get coverage from. The doctors said he couldn' t work for five years. We practiced preventive medicine to get through those years. I worked 16 hours a day to keep our family afloat. Mitt Romney calls our Medicare an en titlement. I paid to Social Security as an employee and an employer. I was a small-business owner. During Romney's first debate, he made the statement he would rather buy pri vate insurance versus a government (Medicare) plan. Don't we all wish we had that luxury. I will be voting for Obama. Myrt Williams Bend
and accountability, reform PERS, provide open and honest elections, and work toward a balanced plan for sustainability of our state land. As secretary of state, he will have both the position and the consider able ability to do just that. We have all seen the news reports reviewing the actions — and non actions — of the 20-year career poli Vote Republican tician who currently holds the of fice. It makes no sense whatsoever V ote Republican t o s ave o u r to continue with the status quo. Constitution and America for now I will be voting for Buehler for sec and generations to come. Vote Re retary of state, and so should you. publican for your health care to be Steve Kessler between you and your doctor and Redmond not some government committee. Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan, I do Ann Romney has noclue not believe they will take public as sistance away from those who need I was listening to a speech by Ann it. Romney and Ryan, presidential Romney on CNN, and she made the leadership for the United States of statement that because she had MS America. it gives her a better understanding I will vote Republican. of what people are going through Agnes Sarutzki in these hard times. Does she have Crooked River Ranch
Vote for Buehler The Oregon secretaryof state po sition is more important to us than
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Oregon Cultural Trust worth celebrating, supporting By Kathy Deggendorfer ct. 8 marked the 10th anni versary ofOregon's cultural tax credit and th e Oregon Cultural Trust's 10th birthday. Since that time you — Oregonians — have donated more than $25 million to support culture in our state. This support comes back into our region through grants — supporting orga nizations such as the High Desert Museum and Nature of Words in our community. The trust would not be here today without the leadership of one Or egonian who made his home in ru ral Deschutes County: the late Ben Westlund, a former state treasurer, statesman and entrepreneur. West lund co-sponsored the legislation that created the trust, and he served on the board of the cultural trust in its early years. Westlund under
stood the importance of supporting culture. His work to create the trust has given Oregon a legacy that we should all be proud of. "Down the trail" was Westlund's signature signoff. In honor of the cultural trust's 10th anniversary, al low me to take the liberty of adding one word to that memorable phrase: "down the cultural trail." And what a trail it has been. The trust's permanent endowment has grown to $17 million. Last year alone $1.47 million was granted back to 57 cultural organizations across our state — organizations that connect Oregonians with our heritage, that introduce dance to new audiences and bolster educational radio and
TV programming. We have reason tocelebrate our accomplishments in t his f i rst de cade, and then look forward to what
IN MY VIEW the next decade will bring. Next year the Legislature will de cide on the renewal of the cultural trust tax credit — an incentive be hind the trust's fundraising efforts. The ultimate goal for the trust is to establish a fund to ensure arts and culture continues to thrive in a state that prides itself on creativity and cultural heritage. A renewal of the tax credit is critical to support the trust's continued growth. Much has been accomplished in the past 10 years. However, support ing culture in Oregon and in our re gion is as important today as ever, and we need champions like West lund both in the Legislature and in our communities who can advocate for culture.
That's why on Oct. 8 the Des chutes County Cultural Coalition and Sisters Artworks hosted the B en Westlund M emorial A w a r d Ceremony to honor Sisters arts ac tivist Brad Tisdel and celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Oregon Cul tural Trust. Tisdel is an educator, musician, arts advocate and the current artis tic director of the Sisters Folk Fes tival. This award is also personal for me. Twelve years ago I helped recruit Tisdel to start the Ameri cana Project, a musical education program within th e S isters Folk Festival. Under Tisdel's leadership, the Americana Project has grown, bringing music i nto ou r s c hools and releasing seven CDs to critical acclaim. This award is also the impact of the work of the cultural trust. Ten
years ago the cultural trust set up a web of 36 county and six tribal cul tural coalitions that are responsible for granting trust f unds in t h eir communities. The Ben W estlund Memorial Award is funded out of that grant-making and was concep tualized by the Deschutes County Cultural Coalition. Tisdel's work is moving us down the cultural trail. Next year the Or egon Legislature will have an op portunity to do the same — by re newing the cultural trust tax credit. The next decade will present new opportunities for leadership on cul tural policy. Here's to Westlund, Tisdel and all th e O r egonians wh o e n r i ch our state and make a di fference. Onward. — Kathy Deggendorfer is an artist and community activist in Sisters.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
CS
OREGON NEWS
BITUARIES
ru e ioneers o e un i usiness can riva wine
DEATH NOTICES Amelia (Molly) Cope, of Bend Dec. 17, 1920 - Oct. 12, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds. corn Services: The family will gather at Fort Rock Cemetery at a date to be decided. Contributions may be made
By Sherri Buri McDonald The (Eugenei Register-Guard
to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.
Myron J. Gaviglio, of Bend June 26, 1923 - Oct. 11, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.corn Services: No services will be held. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 541-382-5882 www. partnersbend.org
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or
Heng Sinith /The Associated Press
A Cambodian family rides on a motorbikeMonday past portraits of former King Norodom Sihanouk, left, and his wife Queen Monineath at the edge of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Sihanouk, the former king who was a towering figure in Cambodian poli tics through a half-century of war, genocide and upheaval, died Monday. He was 89.
in all correspondence.
Norodom Sihanouk, king of Cambodia, political survivor
For information on any of these services or about the
By Sopheng Cheang
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DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Eduard Volodarsky, 71: A Russian screenwriter
w hose f i l m s
(mostly
t hemed a r o un d b a t t l e and camaraderie among
men) are recognized clas sics today in Russia but whose effortsto present a picture of war on his own terms led the Soviet au thorities to shelve many of his w o rks fo r y e ars. Died Oct. 9 i n M o scow. N o cause of death w a s
given. George Whitmore Jr., 68: An eighth-grade dropout who confessed in 1964 to three New York murders that he did not c ommit, and whose case became instrumental in establish ing historic legal reforms — including the Supreme Court's 1966 " M i r anda" ruling, w h i c h p r o t ects criminal suspects. Died Oct. 8 in a Wildwood, N.J., nursing home of a heart attack. Geoff Agisim, 66: Iconic street performer of sea chanteys in the Los An geles area. He performed frequently at e v ents or ganized by the late John Olguin, director emeritus of the Cabrillo Aquarium, and at th e Lo s A n geles Maritime Museum. Next Sunday's Autumn Sea Fair at Cabrillo Beach will be dedicated to him. Agisim d ied Wednesday at h i s home in San Pedro after a battle with p ancreatic cancer. — From wire reports
The Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — He was many things to the Cambodia he helped navigate through half a century of war and genocide — r e
Martin Nesirky said. "The secretary-general also hopes that the legacy of the for mer king will allow Cambodia to advance the national healing process, including through con tinued commitment to
vered independence FEAT U RF P justice," Nesirky said. hero, ruthless monarch op i IVARY In 2004, Sihanouk and prime m i nister, abdicated the throne,
When winemakers from northern California f ir st set their sights on Oregon a nd tried to g row w i n e grapes here in the 1960s, many people thought they were crazy. The same could be said of the latest crop of Or egon agricultural dream ers, including Simon and Linnet Cartwright of Cot tage Grove. For the past five years, t he C a r t w r ights h a v e spent more than $40,000 and countless hours on the four acres behind their house growing trees inoc ulated with European va rietiesoftruffles — the ar omatic and flavorful fungi prized by chefs around the world. T he C a rtwrights a r e trying to grow truff les — a line of work successful in Europe and Australia, but s till unproven i n N o r t h America. The Oregon wine story is well known. The state now has more than 400 wineries cont r i b uting $2.7 billion a year to the economy, according to a recent study by Full Glass Research, a market and industry research firm in Berkeley, Calif. Truffle specialist Charles Lefevre, founder of New World Truffieres, the Eugene company that supplied the Cartwrights' trees, believes the Oregon truffle industry will be a similar success. "It's the p eople who get i n n o w who will be the big stars 30 years from now," he said. Oregon'semerging truf fle industry could one day rival the size of the wine industry here, according to Lefevre and several oth er authors of a 2009 fea sibility study on culinary truff les in Oregon. But for now, Oregon's truffle industry is still in its infancy. New World T r uffieres sells trees to hundreds of customers — truff les grow alongside tree roots — and five of the customers are producing t r uff les, said Lefevre, who holds a Ph.D.
communist c o l l abo citing his poor health. rator, eccentric playboy, avid The move paved the way for his filmmaker. son Norodom Sihamoni to take Most of all, perhaps, Cam his place. bodia's former King Norodom On Monday, Sihamoni flew Sihanouk was a cunning po to China with Prime Minister litical survivor who reinvented Hun Sen to retrieve Sihanouk's himself repeatedly throughout body. State flags flew at half his often flamboyant life. staff, and Cambodian govern Sihanouk died Monday at ment spokesman Khieu Kan age 89 of a heart attack in Bei harith said a week of official jing, where he had been receiv mourning would be held once ing medical treatment since the former king's body is repa January for multiple ailments. triated on Wednesday. A cre First crowned king by the mation ceremony will be held in mycology from Oregon French in 1941 at the age of 18, in three months, according to State University. "It's where ... the Or Sihanouk saw his Southeast Buddhist tradition. Asian nation transformed from While officials said they ex egon wine industry was in colony to kingdom, from U.S. pect as many as 100,000 to line maybe the early 1970s," he backed regime toU.S. bomb the route from the airport to said. "So it has a long way ing zone, from Khmer Rouge the Royal Palace for the return to grow." killing field to what it remains of Sihanouk's body, the im Other experts say North today — a fragile experiment in mediate reaction in the capital A merican t r u f fl e g r o w democracy. seemed muted,partly because ers face a steep learning He ruled as a feudal-style ab it was a holiday, which took curve. "We still have a lot to solute monarch, but called him many people out of town. self a democrat. He was a man One of those mourning was learn about our c l i mate who sang love songs at elabo 67-year-old Yos Sekchantha, and soils and where are rate state dinners, brought his who said she offered prayers the r i gh t c o m b inations French poodleto peace talks, that his soul would rest in peace. to make the truffle fungi "I don'tknow much about and charmed foreign dignitar happy and prolific," said ies such as Jacqueline Kennedy. politics, but the king father was truffle expert Jim Trappe. He also painted, fielded a really a good leader and cared The longtime professor palacesoccer team, composed about his county and people," at Oregon State Universi ty's Forest Science Depart music and led his own jazz she said as tears welled in her band. His appetite extended eyes. ment is now a researcher to fast cars, food and women. Born Oct. 31, 1922, Sihanouk and consultant. He married at least five times enjoyeda pampered childhood Trappe also i s c o -au — some say six — and fathered in French colonial Indochina. In t hor of " F ield Guide t o 14 children. 1941, the French crowned him North American Truff les: When the murderous Khmer king instead of other relatives Hunting, Identifying and R ouge seized power in t h e closer in line to the throne be Enjoying t he Worl d ' s 1970s, he was reviled as their cause they thought the pudgy, Most Prized Fungi," and a collaborator. Yet he h i mself giggling prince would be easy ended up as their prisoner and to control. lost five of his children to the re They were the first of many gime. Later, in the 1990s — af to underestimate him, and by ter a U.N.-brokered deal to end 1953 the French were out. Cambodia's long civil war — he In 1955, Sihanouk stepped recasthimself as a peacemaker down from the throne, orga and constitutional monarch. nized a mass political party In the twilight of his life, Si and went on to hold various po hanouk suffered colon cancer, sitions as head of government diabetes and high blood pres and state. sure. Prince Sisowath Thomi Through those years, he co, a royal family member who steered Cambodia toward un also was Sihanouk's assistant easy neutrality at the height of bendbulletin.corn and nephew, said the former the Cold War and was a founder king passed away before dawn of the Non-Aligned Movement. Monday. "His death was a great loss A REVERSE MORTGAGE... to Cambodia," Thomico said, adding that Sihanouk had dedi Now's the Time cated his life "for the sake of his • New saver programs entire nation, country and for • New lower fee programs the Cambodianpeople." • Interest rates are still low U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon s en t c o n dolences And pay NO monthly mortgage payments...ever! and acknowledged Sihanouk's Mike LeRoux "long dedication to his country and his legacy as a unifying na (541) 350-7839 SECUR ITY L E N D IN G tional leader who is revered by (888) 61 7-8558 SptadB1frtgfh stp'Ytsr srortgdgn Cambodians and respected in NMLS 5771 6 61 310 Col umbine Lane Bend, OR 97 702 ternationally," U.N. spokesman
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"We still have a lot to learn about our climate and soils and where are the right combinations to make the truffle fungi happy and prolific." — Jim Trappe, truffle expert
speaker at the upcoming Or egon Truffle Festival in Eu gene, which Lefevre founded in 2006 with his wife Leslie Scott, former general man ager of the Oregon Country Fair. T ruffle cultivation in t h e Willamette Valley "has been discouraging, so far, for rea sons speculated but not re ally known," Trappe said. "A successful truffle producer in Australia visited here. He thinks our soils are too fertile and our climate too wet." "The Italians have a saying thatthe poorer the soilis for the tree, the better it is for the truffle," referring to the Perig ord black truffle from south ern Europe, Trappe said. That's the type of t r uffle the Cartwrights are trying to grow in their orchard of Eng lish oak and hazelnut trees in Cottage Grove.
I t usually t a kes f iv e t o seven years fo r E u r opean black truff les to appear, but the demonstration farm may start producing earlier be cause the seedlings being planted are already 2 years old, Lefevre said.
Favorable climate
Pruch, a m u shroom col lector,said he heard Lefevre speak at a Cascade Mycologi cal Society meeting, which got him thinking that truff les might work at the demonstra tion farm. "He tells this really compel ling story about how a high percentage of t r u ffles con sumed in Europe are grown commercially and Oregon, and the Willamette Valley in particular, has a unique cli mate well-suited for t r u ffle production," h e s a i d. "We have native truff les that grow here, and there's this great Demonstration orchard opportunity fo r f a r mers in Although Oregon has its the Willamette Valley." own native truff les, cultiva P ruch s ai d h e ap p l i ed tion focuses on E u r opean for the grant because "the varieties, for which there is (grant' s) whole focus is help proven demand. ing farmers participate in Some restaurants pay $900 new emerging markets for a pound for European black certain high-value specialty truf f les. crops." A recent development that Cascade Pacific will begin aims to advance local grow planting trees t hi s w i n ter, ers' understanding of which Pruch said. truffle varieties grow best in which locations is a t h ree Title is 'ours to lose' acre demonstration t r u f f le Oregon isn't the only r e orchard at the 92-acre Berg gion of the United States vy g ren D emonstration F a rm ing to become the preeminent along the M cKenzie River, "truffle territory." near Walterville. But with its rich supply of The farm also is being used native truff les, a high concen for growing produce for the tration of the world's truffle f arm-to-school program i n e xperts, most w it h t i e s t o OSU's forestry program, and Eugene. "We want this to be a place the Oregon Truffle Festival, where area farmers can look a highly regarded celebra around and see what's work tion now in its eighth year, ing and what's not working," " Oregon already ha s t h a t Jared Pruch, demonstration title," Lefevre said. "It's ours farm coordinator. to lose." The Eugene Water & Elec Lefevre is promoting the t ric Board teamed up w i t h cultivation of European truf nonprofit M c K enzie R i v er fle varieties through his busi Trust an d t h e B o n neville ness at the same time as he Power Adminstration to buy advocates for native Oregon the land and create the farm truffle varieties at the truffle to promote sustainable farm festival, which runs Jan. 25 ing and create wildlife habi Jan. 27. tat along the river as a way Lefevre said he's working to protectthe area's source of to redeem Oregon truff les' "well-deserved bad r eputa drinking water. Cascade Pacific Resource tion because of how they' re Conservation & Dev e l op harvested and handled." ment, a nonprofit agency, will In years past, foragers in manage the truffle orchard. discriminately raked up foul That p r o g ra m r e c ently tasting i m m ature O r e gon received a $60,000 special truff les, along with sought ity-crop federal grant over after ripe ones. two years to set up the truffle Now truffle hunters here orchard. are following Europe's lead T he g r an t e n a bles t h e by using trained dogs to sniff group and its industry part o ut truff les at t h ei r p e ak n er, Lefevre's New W o r l d ripeness. Truffieres, "to take some risks Lefevre predicts that "it' s that people would not take if just a m atter of t i me" b e they were going to lose their fore more people give truffle shirts on this investment," he farming a try, he said. " It will s t art a t t h e m o said.Italso is a resource for growers, Pruch said. ment when several people Cascade Pacific will grow like Simon start to make real six varieties of truff les, in money from truff les," Lefe cluding European black truf vre said during a recent visit f les, on six half-acre plots, he to the C artwright's tr uffle sa>d. orchard.
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imgowdale l~ 62/33 War m Springs + •
ss 63/40• sss
NeWpOVa's >>Albany~ ~
• Meacham
Ruggs
Maupi
sss'Camp 44734j+
•
68/37
57/35
Ente rprise 52/31
50/27
57/38
La Grande•
c
52/32
52/37 Unip 51/31
48/30
• SpraY63/3t
• •
Baker City 58I26
i fy
a i i i i i c amp Shermane 6 2/4a sss s s 49/32 ~ 57/45 i s s s s x x x s Sisters
•
•
' 6 2 /39 s s s s s s
s» i
4 5 5/29 5
I
ss'et/39>~ Coos Bavss i i x x x t Crescent» 58/47 • <ss s s , %57/41 •
.60
pa uline 58/26
59Q9
8/ 3 1
• Brothers 8 59/29
La Pine 54/28 — epos
• crescent
Lake
+<'ftoseburft
' .
52/1 7
Chemult
59/1 9
Silv e r
60/25 •
Frenchglen
Lake
64/32
Rome
57/21
Medford
57/30
• Kla math
Ashland
61/45
Hermiston
61/30
Chiloquin
• 64/39
~%Et ltihtlk'
• 45'
Fields•
• Lakeview
FallS56/ze
59/38
McDermitt
67/35
59I30
Burns
70/29
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s L>0~~0~ V
508 60s 7 0 s U 80s Ugos/10O L»OP
H UOSU20s U05 U4OS
' Nxx x x x x x x t xt x x x x x x x x v N N N NNNNNNKI
R
4 5/3
Thunder Bay
«
53 x3
(m the 48 contiguous states):
»
' Halifax
xx 65/41 Sosv ortland Toronto 60/36 537 +4 x ton ( •~ ( 62/44 • Buffalo '
40 Br in
vvvvs x69/3Q vv Xzjz/43
m1/46
Thermal, Calif
St. Pau'. Green B 70/53 • Bt/Sov
CvRapid City
• 20'
I/
Fraser, Colo.
'
'
k
x
• 71/313 ~ —
San Francisco 705 5 it'L k
• 1.56 w Chattanooga, Tenn.
BOS ig Vegas 87/
68/46
Los Angees
a C3 Honolulu 86/72
Tijuana 88/67
Denver
79/45 g
,
0 I / QQS +59/51 •
I
2
•
5 3 /46 ~ e w York 61/47 j . iladelphia
78/ 5 5 C hicago C olumbus ~
I
~
«Omaha
Louisville
I'
66/48
v3 K a81/57 nsasIICity St Louisx Nashville &H
• v 68/47 ti Oklahoma CitY 1istic Rock 87/60 • ~ 8 2 /58P~i 7 0S • Phoenix ' Albuquerque Atlanta 95/68 77/49 Birmingham 72/53
A WA I I
v +
+J
Dallas ~
Ri
84/61
'
I
74/5 2
flew orleans
4++ v
6 - Chihuahua
/os
xx
sxx ~
H•
Q O
ffpus'tpn
8i
79/63 •
~ BO
•
•
lando
•
4/68
• Miami 87/74
+ xv++W+v+'+++ + + x ex + ~ +t + t+ + ++ +W WW W+ + 4+ National Hurricane centers + + + + + vMonterrey On errey +888V+ %2/70v Hurncane Paul
forecast position 01
Anchorage 37/25
La Paz Mazatlan 8807 81/74
d'
eau
OALASKA
FRONTS
CONDITIONS 4 4 4
/34
Cold
showers.
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
60 39
68 43
63 43
58 38
Sunset todaY...... 6:19 P.m. Sunrisetomorrow 7 23 a m
First
Fu g La s t New
Sunsettomorrow .. 6:17 p.m. g Moonrise today.... 8:57 a.m. Mppnset tpday 7.02 p m Oct. 21 Oct. 29 Nov. 6 Nov. 13
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....9:30 a.m...... 7:00 p.m. Venus......4:05 a.m...... 5:00 p.m. Mars......11:12 a.m...... 8:1 0p.m. Jupiter......842 pm.....ll:54am.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 64/52 24 hours ending 4 p m.*.. 0.00" Record high........ 85 m1991 Month to date.......... 0.00" Record low.........14in1970 Average month todate... 021" Average high.............. 63 Year to date............ 6.74" Average low............... 33 Average yearto date..... 7.39" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.90 Record 24 hours ...0.33 in 1947 *Melted liquid equivalent
Saturn......7:55 a.m...... 6:42p.m. Uranus..... 5:31 p.m...... 5:52 a.m.
FIRE INDEX
OREGON CITIES
WATER REPORT
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Bend,westofHwy.97....High Sisters..............................High The following was compiled by theCentral City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Bend,eastof Hwy.97..... High La Pine.............................. High Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Preppitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 pm. Redmond/Madras......Mpd. Prineviae.........................High
a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Astoria ........ 61/55/1.10.... 57/43/sh . ...60/44/pc Mod.= Moderate; Ext. = Extreme Reservoir Acre feet C a pacity Baker City...... 69/46/0.06.... 58/26/pc ....58/29/pc To report a wildfire, call 911 Crane Prairie..... . . . . . . . 33,902...... 55,000 Brookmgs......61/57/1.68.... 61/45/eh ....66/49/pc Wickiup..... . . . . . . . . . . 109,570..... 200,000 Burns..........71/45/0.05....60/25/sh . ....61/29/s Crescent Lake ...... . . . . . 71,1 58 ...... 91,700 Eugene........ 68/59/0.46.... 62/39/eh ....60/38/pc Ochoco Reservoir ..... . . . 1 6,849 ...... 47,000 Klamath Falls ...67/48/0.00.... 56/26/pc ....64/33/pc Prineville..... . . . . . . . . . . 83,195..... 153,777 Lakeview....... 66/50/0.00....59/30/sh . ....64/31/s The higher the UV Index number, the greater River flow St a t i on Cubic ft./sec La Pine ........61/49/0.00.... 54/28/sh . .... 58/23/s the need for eye and skin protection. Index is for ar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 313 Medford....... 69/57/0.05.... 64/39/p< ..... 73/43/f Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup ..... . . . . . . 417 Newport...... 61/54/0.76 ...58/45/sh . ...61/46/pc Crescent Creekgelow Crescent Lake ........ 26 MEDIUM HIGH North Bend.... 70/61/038 ...56/45/sh . ...60/46/pc Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 216 Ontario........ 73/50/0.07....67/40/sh . ....61/37/s 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RwerBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 466 Pendleton...... 71/55/0.14....68/37/pc . .... 59/34/s 0 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,090 Portland ....... 65/59/0.26....61/46/sh . ...59/44/pc Crooked RiverAbove Pnneville Res.. ... . . . . . 11 Prineville....... 67/49/0.08 .... 58/29/sh . .... 58/34/s Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 136 Redmond....... 69/53/0. 02.... 59/27/pc . ....60/33/s Updated daily. Source: pollen.corn Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. .... . . . . . 15.8 Roseburg....... 74/59/0.26.... 61/38/eh ..... 66/40/1 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 216 Salem......... 67/59/0.47.... 63/40/eh ....61/40/pc ~~ Sisters.........68/57/0.07....56/30/sh......60/28/s ~YLOIN Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM • The Dalles......66/54/0.15....67/41/pc.....63/39/pc or go to www.wrd.state. or.us LegendWweather,Pcpprecipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze,shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurnes, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 1
P%8g
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
Yesterday' s extremes
• 100o
cloudy with a slight chance of
IPOLLEN COUNT
• 75o
67/27
Paisley
xsxPas
• Beac
Partly
mostly cloudy with a chance of showers.
Showers likely today, mainly dur ing the morning hours.
Yesterday' s state extremes
Jordan Valley
Christmas Valley
•
ra s 6 y 66/3
Partly to
sunny.
Sunrise today...... 7:22 a.m. MOOn phaSeS
65/30
60/21
Rile,
•• Fort Rock swts
5 2/22
VM
Mostly
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
EAST 55/27 Ontano Showers early, 67/40 then gradual Valee 68/41 • clearing expected Nyssa today. 66/41 Juntura
• John Da
R
Sunriver Bend
•
> , Ed nSIIo<»' Oakridge
ii i i i i i i i i i i
p
RedmOnd •
seoo
Florenceu ms ' 5 7/47 s »
Mostly
WEST
CENTRAL A few showers possible early, then decreasing clouds today.
JosePh
•B4
Is
clear.
BEND ALMANAC
Astorla- ~xxNNkk~.
Tigamook~ii
Bs
xa>
'' * * * * * * +
W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms Ram Flurnes Snow
Ice
Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......81/51/0.00... 86/63/s.. 87/49/s GrandRapids.... 50/46/0.00 .. 65/53/sh. 73/51/sh RapidCity.......78/38/0 00.. 77/42/sh.. 53/37/c Savannah .......84/64/0.00...75/53/s. 77/58/pc Akron..........63/48/0.04 .. 57/44/pc. 72/51/pc GreenBay.......55/43/0.00.. 61/50/sh. 65/46/sh Renp...........79/49/0.00... 82/42/s.. 69/37/s Seattle..........61/52/0.5155/43/sh .. .. 56/45/c Albany..........66/57/0.07... 54/36/s66/43/pc . Greensboro .....73/58/0.57 . 66/44/s73/48/pc . Richmond.......69/63/0.15 .. 68/44/s. 72/49/pc SiouxFalls.......73/31/0.00. 79/51/pc. 61/39/sh Albuquerque.....76/47/0.00... 77/49/s .. 76/47/s Harrisburg.......67/58/042... 63/39/s. 67/46/pc Rochester, NY....69/48/0.00.. 52/42/pc.68/49/pc Spokane ........65/53/0.04 .. 61/33/sh. 56/31/pc Anchorage......37/33/0.04 .. 37/25/rs. 35/24/sn Hartford,CT.....73/60/0.20 ... 61/40/s. 66/48/pc Sacramento......85/53/0.00... 85/55/s .. 85/54/s Springfield, MO ..75/44/0.00... 79/56/s...71/44/t Atlanta.........77/63/0.11 ... 72/53/s. 75/54/pc Helena..........65/48/0.00..57/36/sh. 49/29/pc St. Louis......... 71/48/000.. 83/54/pc...74/48/t Tampa..........89/72/0.00 86/65/pc...82/65/t .. Atlantic Oty.....75/63/003... 65/48/s .66/567pc Honolulu........86/73/0.01... 86/72/s .. 85/71/s Salt Lake City.... 74/46/0 00.. 68/46/pc .. 55/42/s Tucson..........92/59/0.00... 91/60/s .. 89/65/s Austin..........80/57/0.00... 80/62/c. 86/59/pc Houston ........82/65/0.00... 83/68/t . 88/67/pc SanAntonio.....78/65/0.00... 82/64/t. 86/62/pc Tulsa...........86/52/000...83/59/s. 76/46/pc Baltimore .......71/59/0.52...65/46/s. 68/51/pc Huntsville .......76/58/0.00 ..73749/pc. 77/51/pc SanDiego....... 77/64/000... 81/65/s.. 88/67/s Washington, DC..72/62/0 06... 66/48!s .70/50/pc Billings.........67/57/001..69/39/sh. 54/29!pc Indianapolis .....61/46/0.00 ..69751/pc...74!51/t SanFrancisco....72/55!000...76/55/s.. 82/57/s Wichita.........88/47/000...84757!s.70/47/pc Birmingham.....77/59/0.00... 74/52/s. 79/58/pc Jackson,MS.....79/60/0.00 ..79/54/pc. 82/58/pc SanJose ........74/53/0.00...82/56/s..86/56/s Yakima.........72/45/0.05 66/35/pc. .. 57/35/pc Bismarck........80/38/0.00 ..72/43/sh.. 52/38/c Jacksonvile......84/66/0.00... 77/61/s. 77/59/pc Santa Fe ........73/35/0.00 ... 72/43/s.. 68/36/s Yuma...........98/68/0.00... 96/69/s .. 95/72/s Boise...........74/55/0.04 .. 63/35/sh.. 58/34/s Juneau..........47/44/0.20... 46/34li...40/30/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........74/60/001..62/44/pc. 63/53/pc Kansas City......75/47/0 00... 81/57/s. 64/45/pc Bridgeport, CT....73/63/0.32... 60/42/s. 65/47/pc Lansing ........ 50/45/0.01 ... 63/51/c. 75/52/sh Amsterdam......55/43!0 00.. 56/47/sh. 55/49/sh Mecca.........1 06/81/0 00.. 101/81/s. 101/81Is Buffalo.........66/47/0.01 ..53/46/pc. 68/50/pc Las V egas .......84/60/0.00 ... 87/65/s.. 83/63/s Athens..........80/66/000... 85/71/s.. 86/71/c Mexico City......77/45/0.00.. 74/51/pc.. 76/52/s Burlington, VT....71/57/0 00.. 52/35/pc. 61/47/pc Lexington.......62/47/0.00..68/50/pc. 74/56/sh Auckland........61/54/0.00... 62/50/c .. 60/49/c Montreal........64/48/0.00... 50/34/c. 58/45/pc Canbou,ME.....59/37/0.19.. 54/33/sh.. 53/35/s Lincoln..........77/36/0.00... 82/54/s. 65/42/pc Baghdad........99/68/0.00... 97/65/s .. 96/67/s Moscow........$2/36/0.00...4!/35/c .. 60/55/c Charleston, SC...83/62/0.00... 73/51/s. 76/56/pc Little Rock.......78/52/0.00... 82/58/s ...79/52/t Bangkok .......90/79/000 92/74/pc 87/77/t Nairobi.........75/61/000...77/54!s.. 77/59A Charlotte........77/62/0.14... 68/47/s. 72/49/pc LosAngeles......87/65/0.00... 81/65/s .. 86/66/s Beiiing..........64/45/0.00 .. 66/49/pc.. 57/52/s Nassau.........86/77/0.00... 84/76/t. 85/79/pc Chattanooga.....74/58/1.5672/47/pc. .. 77/53/pc Louisville........66/48/0 00..71/54/pc ...76/55/t Beirut..........82/73/0.00... 88/78/s. 88/76/pc New Delhi.......93/72/0.00... 95/73/s .. 94/72/5 Cheyenne.......72/43/0.0071/38/pc .. .. 51/31/s Madison, WI.....60/39/0.00 ...68/52!c .64/42/sh Berlin...........55/41/0.00... 56/43/s .. 61/47/c Osaka..........81/55/0.00 73/62/sh...68/59/r .. Chicago.........60/45/000... 69/58/c...72/51/t Memphis........77/54/0.00 ..80759/pc...82!55/t Bogota .........68/46/0.00 ..63/51/sh.62/50/sh Oslo............41/37/0.00... 39/31/c. 43/36/sh Cincinnati.......62/48/0.00 66/52/pc. .. 75/57/pc Miami..........88/76/0.00..87/74/pc...86/74/t Budapest........68/55/0.00... 65/44/r. 63/50/pc Ottawa.........63/50/0.00 50/33/pc. .. 58/44/pc Cleveland.......58/50/0.02 .. 57/51/pc. 73/54/pc Milwaukee......52/44/0.00...65/54lc. 65/49/sh BuenosAires.....75/61!0.00..63/57/sh. 74760/pc Pans............57/39/0.00 ..57/42/sh. 56/52/sh Colorado Springs .77/37/0.00... 79!43/s.. 62/33/s Minneapolis.....61/38/0.00.. 70/53/pc.. 59/44/c Ca hoSa n Lucas .. 77/70/2.25... 85/74/t. 86/70/pc Rio deJaneiro ....79/66/000.. 80/65/pc.. 86/71/c Columbia,M0...73/46/000... 81/55/s...70/45/1 Nashville....... 72/55/0.00. 73/50/pc 79/55/t Cairo...........88/6I0.00 ..94/72/pc. 95/73/pc Rome... ........73/59/0.00..69/SIpc . 68/57/pc ColumbiaSC....81/65/0.00... , 72/47/s. 75/51/pc NewOrleans.....84/71/000..79/63/pc . 81/66/pc Calgary.........64/50/0 00 .. 48/33/pc. 54/32/pc Santiago ........70/45/0.00..71/55/pc.. 66/54/s Columbus, GA....83/66/0.06... 76/53/s .. 80/58/s NewYork.......71/60/0.20... 61/47/s. 66/52/pc Can cun.........86/73/0 00.. 86/76/pc.86/77/pc Sao Paulo.......73/54/0.00 ...80/63/c...84/62/t Columbus, OH....61/52/0.02 .. 63/50/pc. 74/55/pc Newark,Nl......72/61/0.33... 64/43/s. 68/49/pc Dublin..........50/41/000..49/40/sh. 54/38/sh Sapporo ........59/54/0 00..59/41/pc...67!3ir Concord,NH.....72/47/0.34 ..55/32/pc. 64/36/pc Norfolk,VA......76/61/0.67... 66/50/s. 69/52/pc Edinburgh.......50/32/000 44/33/pc 44/39/sh Seoul .........68/43/0 00 69/56/sh 61/52/pc Corpus Chnsti....90/74/0 00... 83/72/c. 87/75/pc Oklahoma City...84/50/0.00... 87/60/s. 78/43/pc Geneva......... 52/34/0.00.. 60/42/sh.. 69/46/c Shanghai........79/64/0.00 .. 76/58/pc. 71/57/pc Dallas FtWorth...82/54/0.00... 84/61/s . 85/54/pc Omaha.........74/42/0.00... 80/54/s. 64/42/pc Harare..........79/61/000..80/60/sh. 82/61/sh Singapore .......90/77/0.00 ... 86/79/t ...87/77/t Dayton.........57/45/0.00.. 64/51/pc. 73/57!pc Orlando.........88/72/0.00... 84/68/s...83/65/t HongKong......86/77/0 00.. 84/71/sh. 81/75/sh Stockholm.......50/45/0.0046/42/sh .. .. 51/38/c Denver..........77/48/0.00 ..79/45/pc.. 60/35/s PalmSprings.....98/70/0.00..101/69/s. 100/69/s Istanbul.........sl/68/000... 78/69/s .. 81/69/s Sydney..........79/54/0.00 ... 88/59/c . 70/60/pc DesMoines......70/41/0 00.. 78/55/pc.. 64/43/c Peoria..........64/42/0.00 74/55/pc...71/45/t .. lerusalem.......90/52/0.00... 86/63/s. 84/64/pc Taipei...........81 /72/0.00 .. 80/65/pc. 74/67/sh Detroit..........55/48/000... 59/51/c. 71/55/pc P hi ladelphia.....70/63/0.06...64/46/s.67/52/pc lohannesburg....70/54/000..77/58/pc. 72/59/sh TelAviv .........88/66/0.00... 93/73/s. 92/71/pc Duluth ..........57/28/000..63/47/pc . 55/44/sh Phoenix.........96/66/0.00... 95/68/s.. 94/70/s Lima...........68/61/000..66/61/pc.67763/pc Tokyo...........73/63/0.00 .. 66/59/pc...69/55/r El Paso....... 80/57/0 00 ... 82/62/s . 86/60/s Pittsburgh .... 69/49/0 22 58/42/pc 72/47/pc Lisbon..........68/54/0 00... 66/64/c .71/57!sh Toronto .........66/45/0.0053/43/pc .. . 63/54lpc Fairbanks........26/24/005.. 26/17/sn. 26/17/sn Portland,ME.....67/46/0.00..60/36/sh.. 59/45/s London.........57/37/0 00.. 58/48/pc. 59/51/sh Vancouver.......55/48/0 00 .. 57/46/sh. 55/46/pc Fargo ...........67/35/0.00... 72/50/s. 56/42/sh Providence......73/62/018 ... 61/41/s. 64/50/pc Madrid .........64/43/0.00... 67/44/s .. 64/53/c Vienna..........66/46/0.00... 50/43/r. 63/50/pc Flagstaff ........70/30/0.00... 72/33/s.. 71/31le Raleigh .........73/61/0.11...68/43/s. 72/49/pc Manila..........86/79/0 00 .. 88/74/pc. 85/78/pc Warsaw.........66/46/0 00 .. 51!47!sh.. 60/48/c
NORTHWEST NEWS
ix ' ilf) IIII
as in ton's at measure createsstran e e e ows By Rob Carson
". coax'
The (Tacorncz) News Tribune
TACOMA, Wash. — It's not surprising that Jim Johnston is passionate about this year' s campaign for Initiative 502, the proposal to legalize marijuana in Washington state.
Johnston hasusedandappre
ASHztvol
ciatecl marijuana since he was a teenager back in the 1960s, and for the past several years he' s been smoking it daily to control pain from head injuries. He's long believed that crimi nalizing cannabis is misguided and counterproductive social
IV
policy. nl definitely want legaliza tion,n Johnston said recently from his home in Puyallup. "As a society, we' re dumb for not dOing it.n What is surprising is that Johnston i s cam p a igning against the initiative. nWe need a new law,n he said, "but this isn't it. It's definitely a conservative, one-sided thing." According to recent polls, Washington's marijuana mea sure, which would allow adults to possess as much as an ounce of pot, has a good chance of
Dean J. Koepf ter /Tacoma News Tribune
Jim Johnston uses medical marijuana to treat painbut is against a proposed Washington state lavv that would allow adults to possess upto one ounce of marijuana. Johnston says some provisions of the lavv would not be beneficial, and while a new law is needed, the proposed one is not it. people who think the proposal goes too far, as one might ex pect, but from people such as Johnston, who think it doesn' t
cessfor children and the pub
lic danger of drugged driving,
for example — needed to be addressed and dealt with, she go far enough. said, and 1-502 does that. Busi Opponents argue that, in the nesses with drug-free policies process of making the bill po would still be able to enforce passing. litically acceptable, its authors them under the initiative. "We' re feeling a l i ttle bit A statewide Elway poll in made compromises and set earlySeptember found 50 per precedents that will prove dif validated by the fact that there cent in favor of I-502, 38 percent ficult or impossible to get rid is very little organized opposi opposed and 12 percent un of and, in the long rurt, will set tion,n Holcomb said. "The fact decided. In a SurveyUSA poll back the national campaign for that people within the law are conducted about the same time, more complete legalization. sponsoring this, I think, is reas 57 percent of likely voters said Alison Holcomb, the Ameri sttring for many people." they would vote yes. can Civil L i b erties U n ion Steve Sarich, the director That puts marijuana advo a ttorney directing th e p r o of the No On 1-502 campaign, cates on the verge of landmark campaign — New Approach calls the initiative na Trojan legislation, something they' ve Washington — characterizes horse." "This is just absolutely the been unable t o a ccomplish the rift as " idealism versus despite 40 years of effort that incrementalism.n wrong idea," he said. "It's add began with the first California She readily admits I-502 is ing new penalties on top of cur Proposition 19 campaign in a cautious step. But she says rent penalties for use.n that's the way it needs to be, 1972. He rejects charges that the But the I-502 campaign is not only because it's a historic real reason medical marijuana threatened by ideological dis change in social policy, with providers are against the ini sension in the pro-marijuana m any unknowns, but a l so tiative is that it would break ranks, where the debate is for purely practical political up their lucrative monopoly on not about whether marijuana reasons. marijuana sales. "I don't think anybody's get should be legalized, but how it Concerns raised by oppo should be legalized. nents in past campaigns — the ting rich on medical marijua The only organized opposi possibilities of increased use na,n he said. "Nobody I know tion to I-502 is coming not from and dependence, easier ac 1S.
The care youtrust. Without the wait. Get fast, affordable walk-in care for all your minor medical needs. TO SeeOurSerViCeSand PriCeS,ViSit StCharleSlmmediateCare.org
St. Charles
Immediate Care 541-706-3700 Located at the corner of Neff and Medical Center Drive, on the St. Charles CampusSQ
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
NBA
MLB PLAYOFFS
pe~C) COMMUNITY iS]
SPO R TS
ian s
even series wit Portland Trail Biazers
forward J.J. Hickson grabs a rebound during Monday night' s By Josh Dubow
preseason game against Sacramento.
The Associated Press
Kings handBlazers preseason loss SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Marcus Thornton made four three-point ers and scored 11 of his 23 points in the fourth quarter to lead the
Sacramento Kings past
Photos byRyan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Kincade Mickel delivers a pitchto a teammate Wednesday evening during a Bend Elks fall baseball practice for middle school players at Vince Genna Stadium. The program also fields a group of high school players.
the Portland Trail Blaz ers117-100 on Monday night.
DeMarcus Cousins had 20 points and seven
"It shows
rebounds for the Kings.
you how
Jason Brooks added16 points, James Johnson had 12, and Jimmer Fredette and Tyreke Ev
ans 11 each. Cousins came off the bench midway through the fourth to help boost the Kings. He
scored six consecutive points, the final one a fastbreak layup that
put Sacramento (2-0) ahead 107-93 with 5:06 left. Rookie point guard Damien Lillard scored 20 points for Portland
(1-2). LaMarcus Al dridge had 16 points
and seven rebounds, Nicolas Batum scored 14, and Wesley Mat thews and J.J. Hickson had 11 each.
Evans helped keep the Kings lead in double digits in the third quarter
by scoring on avariety of drives to the basket. He had nine points and the Kings went into the
fourth quarter ahead 91-78.
Lillard connected on three three-pointers early in the third to rally
Portland and scored 11 points in the quarter. After a productive 10-point first half,
• Bend Elks program allows Central Oregonyouth baseball playersto continue working ontheir skills, evenafter the summerturns to autumn aseball players are known as the boys of summer, but it might be more accurate to say these players are the boys of fall. The Bend Elks fall baseball pro gram has almost doubled in size — from 29 playersto 53 — com
panse at Vince Genna Stadium. "And the great weather we have, we' ve just had a great response this year with the kids that wanted
AMANDA MILES
to play."
"This is only the field (in Bend) that still is playable for baseball," Jim Richards, owner and general youths ages 12 to 18 the opportunity to keep working on their diamond manager of the Bend Elks summer skills in generally gorgeous early collegiate baseball club, pointed autumn conditions. out last week about the grassy ex
pared with a year ago, offering local
The program, initially an offer ing for high school players starting in 2004, began in the second week of September this year and will continue through the second week of December. SeeFall/DG
Nick Campbell attempts to tag Steven Lippi as he slides into second base dur ing a Bend Elks fall baseball practice at Vince Genna Stadium last week.
More information For more information about baseball
programs and camps offered through the Bend Elks
and the Bend Fieldhouse, call 541-31 2-9259,
go to bendelks. corn or email jr@ bendelks.corn. 'SP'"!<4 . ..i<,0,"(Nrrtrs,
Cousins picked up four personal fouls and a technical and went to the bench midway through the third quar ter. — The Associated Press
NFL
p edup fO I' SunDevisam game againstNo. 2Ducks The Associated Press
TEMPE, Ariz. — Arizona State has exceeded most ex pectations in Todd Graham's first season as the football
program's head coach, leading N e Xt llP the Pac-12 South after win Oregon at
Manninglooks to
pass against the San Diego Chargers during Mondaynight'sgamein San Diego.
Broncos rally big to beat Chargers After being down 24-0 at halftime, Denver pulls away for a 35-24
victory,D3
Giants man Bochy said. "It's a shame
NlCS Game 3, San Francisco Giants at St. Lo Cardinals,
Wednesday, somebody got 1 p.m., Fox hurt. It was more of a roll
block. we' re comes out of this OK. He got hit pret y
good.
In$ilfe Detroit and
New York resume the ALCS o toda, ay,D4
Scutaro left after the fifth because of his damaged left hip. X-rays were negative, and he' ll likely get an MRI today. There was no word on his future status. "You' re trying to get to the second baseman and obvi ously try to knock him down so he can't turn a double
play," Holliday said. "As long
as you' re in the baseline, it' s within the rules." The series now shifts to St. Louis for three games, start ing with Game 3 on Wednes day when San Francisco ace Matt Cain takes on Kyle Lohse of the Cardinals. Things got off to a testy start when Holliday bar reled into Scutaro at second base to break up a potential double play in the first inning.
The play riled up a crowd that had seen three straight losses by the Giants so far this postseason. SeeGiants /D4
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
By John Marshall
Denver Broncos puarterdack Peyton
SAN FRANCISCO — Mar co Scutaro answered Matt Holliday's hard takeout with a big hit of his own to help the San Francisco Giants end their home slide. Scutaro hit a two-run single in San Francisco's four-run fourth inning before leaving with a hip injury and the Gi ants got their first home win this postseason, 7-1 over the St. Louis Cardinals on Mon day night that tied the NL championship series at one
Oregon State quarterback Cody Vaz talks to coach Mike Riley during Saturday' s game against BYU in Provo, Utah.
try and they have some dy namic players. We are excited for the opportunity."
The Oregon game has loomed large o n A r i z o na State's schedule for w eeks.
Rick Bewmer /The Associated Press
Some of the Sun Devils' play
ers admitted they had looked ning five of its first six games. past Colorado last week in an Arizona State The real test of how good the ticipation of facing the Ducks. • When: Sun Devils are will come over Arizona State (5-1, 3-0 Pac Thursday, the second half of a season 12) regained its focus after that is backloaded with tough 6 p.m. leading by just three points at games, starting T h u r sday • TV:ESPN halftime in Boulder on Thurs • Radio:KBND day and ran past the Buffaloes night against No. 2 Oregon in AM 1110 the desert. for a 51-17 win. Everything Arizona State Now the Sun D evils get theirchance against Oregon, a chance has done to this point is great, but the so-far-unstoppable Ducks repre they hope is not one of those careful sent a huge step up in competition, a what-you-wish-for moments. true measuring stick that could either Oregon (6-0, 3-0) has been the domi knock the Sun Devils down a f ew nant team in the Pac-12 under coach notches or be a huge thrust forward Chip Kelly, becoming just the second for the program. program to win three straight titles "This week is a little different deal," since theconference expanded to 10 Graham said Monday. "This is as good teams in 1978. a football team as there is in the coun See Ducks/D4
No. 8 Beaversdon't stumble with B Vaz By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
Moments after Cody Vaz's first ever drive asstarting quarterback for Oregon State, the Internet was humming. "VAZzle-Dazzle," "VAZ-tacular" and "VAZ-matazz" were among the
nicknames that were bandied about. "Cody Vaz" was trending on Twitter. Vaz, making his first start since
high school, passed for 332 yards and three touchdowns in Oregon State' s 42-24 victory at BYU on Saturday. He completed20 of32 passes.
SeeVaz/D4
D2
THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 20'I2
ON THE AIR TELEVISION Today
Wednesday
SOCCER 11:55a.m.: FIFA W orldCup
BASEBALL 1 p.m.:MLB Playoffs, NL
qualifier, Spain vs. France,
Championship Series, San
ESPN2. 3:30 p.m.:FIFA World Cup qualifier, United States vs. Guatemala, ESPN2. BASEBALL 5 p.m.:MLB Playoffs, AL
Francisco Giants at St. Louis Cardinals, Fox. 5 p.m.:MLB Playoffs, AL
Championship Series, NewYork
5 p.m.:WNBAFinals, Indiana
Yankees at Detroit Tigers, TBS. FOOTBALL
7 p.m.:NBAPreseason, Denver
6 p.m.:College, Louisiana Lafayette at North Texas, ESPN2.
Championship Series, NewYork Yankees at Detroit Tigers, TBS. BASKETBALL FeveratMinnesotaLynx,ESPN. Nuggets at Portland Trail Blazers, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. SOCCER 7 p.m.: MLS, RealSaltLake at Seattle Sounders FC, Root
Sports.
RADIO Today
Wednesday
BASEBALL 5 p.m.:MLB Playoffs, AL
BASEBALL 1 p.m.:MLB Playoffs, NL
Championship Series, NewYork Yankees atDetroit Tigers, KICE
Championship Series, San Francisco Giants at St. Louis
AM 940.
Cardinals, KICE-AM 940. 5 p.m.:MLB Playoffs, AL Championship Series, New York Yankees at Detroit Tigers, KICE AM 940.
Listings are themost accurrte available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Football • Ravens LB Lewis, CB Webb
lost for year:Ravenslinebacker Ray Lewis will miss the re mainder of the seasonwith an arm injury, an enormous blow to an already depleted defense that has uncharacteristically struggled this year. Lewis tore his right triceps during Sunday's 31-29 victory over Dallas. Cor
nerback Lardarius Webbalso is out for the year after ripping the ACL in his left knee in the win
against the Cowboys. Ravens coach John Harbaughconfirmed Monday both are done for the
year. • Bills re-sign DE Merri man to bolster banged-MpD: Shawne Merriman is back in
Buffalo after the Bills re-signed the free-agent pass-rushing star to bolster their banged-up de fense. The Bills (3-3) announced the signing Monday,after re turning home from anextended
agreement calls for alternative sites to be reviewed as well. The
county council unanimously ap proved the deal.
Hockey • NHL labor talks to resume
today ln Toronto:The NHL and its locked-out players will
resume negotiations today in Toronto after a four-day break
following two days of meetings last week.Theannouncement Mondaycomes onthesame day players missed their first scheduled paycheck of the
regular season. The NHLhas called off 82 games through Dct. 24 — the first two weeks
of the season. More cancella tions likely will be made soon if
a deal isn't reached. An agenda is not yet set for the talks that shift to the union's office from league headquarters. Butthe sides will be looking to make
headway on the core eco
West Coast trip, and a day after a19-16 overtime win at Arizona. Merriman returns to the Bills two months after the team cut the three-time Pro Bowl selec tion in part because it wanted to
nomic issue — the division of hockey-related revenue. That issue took a back seat in New York last week when the league
Buffalo's priorities have since changed after the team's depth has been depleted at defensive
Baseball
and union worked on second ary matters that also must be
develop several younger players. resolved.
end.
Basketball • Knight selling rings, medal at auction:Hall of Famer Bob Knight is selling his champi onship basketball rings and Olympic gold medal. A collection
of the former coach's memora bilia will be auctioned by Steiner Sports Memorabilia. It's part of a sale that features the jersey Yankees pitcher Don Larsen wore while pitching a perfect
game in theWorld Series. The auction, which hasalready started for some items, runs through Dec. 5and will feature Knight's rings from his three NCAA championship teamsat
• Reds extend manager Dusty Baker's deal for 2years: Dusty Baker missed the Cincin nati Reds' division title celebra tion, still recovering from a heart issue and a mini-stroke
in a Chicago hospital. Onewin away from the NLchampionship series and another celebration, he came upshort. The Reds are giving him another chance to take his team deep into the
postseason. The63-year-old manager agreed to atwo-year contract extension Monday, the same length as his last deal. The Reds have won the NL Central title in two of the past three years under Baker, losing in the first round of the playoffs. The
Reds havewon169 games inthe past three seasons, their best Indiana — the undefeated 1976 such showing in 30 years. Their season and theonesfrom 1981 two division titles in three years and f987. Steiner Sports CED mark their best stretch since Brandon Steiner says Knight Sparky Anderson led the BigRed wanted to be able to give some Machine to back-to-back World of the proceeds to his grandchil Series titles in 1 975-76. dren and charities.
•CountycouncilOKsSe attle arena deal:The King County Council has given its final approval to an agreement to build a new professional
basketball and hockey arena in Seattle, and the City Council
is expected to follow suit. The votesMonday came despite a lawsuit threat from the
Longshore union, which says the agreement violates state environmental law. Hedge fund manager Chris Hansen is lead ing a group that wants to build the $490 million arena with $200 million in public financing. The public investment would be paid back with rent money and admissions taxes from the arena, and if that money falls short, Hansen would be responsible for making up the rest. Hansen wants the stadium built near the Mariners and Seahawks stadiums, but the
COREBOARD
Motor sports • NASCAR and Fox sign 6 year extension through 2022:
NASCARand Foxannounced an eight-year, $2.4 billion exten sion Monday that runs through 2022 and keeps the prestigious Daytona 500 and first third of the Sprint Cup Series on the network. The deal begins in 201 5. The $300 million average annual fee is up from the $225 million Fox has been currently paying. It includes "TV Every where" rights that allow Fox to live stream its races beginning with the 2013 season-open ing Daytona 500. Fox gets the first13 Sprint Cup Series races under the deal, and the entire
Camping World Truck Series. ESPN andTurner hold the rights on the remainder of the sched ule through 20f4. — From wire reports
ON DECK Today Boys soccer: MountainViewat Ridgeview,4.30 p.ms Culverat Burns,4 p.msSisters at Junction City, 430 p.mcRedmondat CrookCounty, 430 p.m.; Bend atSummit, 7:30 p.m.;Gladstoneat Madras,4:30p.m. Girls soccer: MountainViewat Ridgeview, 3 p.m., Junction City atSisters, 4:30p.m.; Redm ond at CrookCounty, 3 p.m; Bendat Summit, 6 p.m.; Elmira at LaPine, 3 p.m.; Madrasat Gladstone, 6:30 p.m. Volleyball: Redmond at Mountain View,6.30 p.m., Bend at CrookCounty, 6:30p.m.; Ridgeviewat Summit, 7p.m.; SistersatElmira, 7p.ms LaPineat Cottage Grove,6:45 p.ms Madrasat North Marion, 6 p.m.;Culverat Central Linn, 4p.m.; Culvervs. Waldport inHalsey,5:30p.m. Boys water polo:Bendat Summit, TBA
0 . 6 67 110 93 Kansasat Oklahoma,4p.m. 0 .5 0 0 110 111 Baylor atTexas, 5p.m. McNeese St.at SamHouston St., 5p.m. Monday's Game TulaneatUTEP,5 p.m. Denver35,SanDiego24 FAR WEST Thursday'sGame StanfordatCalifornia, noon Seattle atSanFrancisco, 5:20 p.m. WeberSt. atS.Utah, noon Sunday's Games NewMexicoSt.at UtahSt., noon Arizonaat Minnesota,10a.m. UNLVatBoiseSt., 12:30p.m. GreenBayatSt. Louis,10 am. Idaho St atN.Colorado,12:35 p.m.
Seattle St. Louis
4 2 3 3
7, SanFrancisco9. 2B—Beltran2 (2), C.carpenter (1), Belt (1), Vogelsong(1). HR Pagan(1), off C.carpenter. St. Louis
BaltimoreatHouston, 10a.m. Washington atNYGiants,10a m Dallas atCarolina,10a.m. NewOrleansatTampaBay, 10a.m. Clevelandat Indianapolis, 10a.m. Tennessee at Buffalo, 10a.m. JacksonvileatOakland, 1:25p.m. N.Y.Jetsat NewEngland, I:25 p.m. Pittsburghat Cincinnati, 5:20p.m. Open.Atlanta, Denver,Kansas City, Miami,Philadel phia, SanDiego Monday,Oct. 22 Wednesday Cross-country: Bend, Mountain View, Summit, Detroit atChicago,5:30 p.m. Redmond,Ridgeview, Madras, La Pine, Crook Monday'sSummary Countyatthe Central OregonCross-country Relays in Bend'sPineNursery Park, 3p.m.; Sisters atthe CountryFairClassicinVeneta, 4:30p.m. Broncos 35, Chargers 24
ColoradoatSouthern Cal, 3p.m. NewMexicoat Air Force,4p.m. Sacramento St. atE.Washington, 4:05p.m. UC Davisat N.Arizona,4:05 p.m. PortlandSt.at CalPoly,6:05 p.m. WashingtonatArizona, 7p.m. Wyoming at FresnoSt., 7.30p.m. Utah atOregonSt., 7:30 p.m. San Diego St. atNevada,7:35 p.m.
Thursday Boys soccer:Ridgeviewat CrookCounty, 4:30 p.m., La PineatCulver, 4p.m.; CotageGroveat Sisters, 430 p.m.;Summitat MountainView,430 p.m.; Redmond atBend,4:30 p.m. Girls soccer: Ridgeviewat CrookCounty, 3 p.m.; Sisters atCottageGrove, 7p.m.; Summit atMoun tain View, 3p.m.; Redmond at Bend, 3 p.m.; La Pine atJunction City, 4:30p.m. Volleyball: Summiat t Bend,6:30p.m.; CrookCoun ty at Redmond, 6:30 p.m.; Ridgeviewat Mountain View, 6:30p.m.; Sistersat LaPine, 6:45 p.mcLa Salle atMadras,6 p.m.; Central Christianat Sher manCounty,530p.m. Boys water polo: MountainViewat Bend,TBA
BILLS VIKINGS COLTS TEXANS Packers Cowboys GIANTS Saints PATRIOTS RAIDERS Steelers
Friday Football: Bend,bye;Redmondat MountainView,7 p.ms Summiat t CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; Ridgeview at C eveland,7p.m; MadrasatGladstone, 7p.m.; Sisters atCottageGrove, 7p.ms ElmiraatLaPine, 7p.m.;CulveratKennedy,7 p.m.; Gilchrist at Butte Falls, 3p.m. Cross-country: Madrasat theKyleBurnside Wild horseMeetinPendleton, 3p.m. Volleyball: Gilchrrst at ButteFalls, 5 p.mcTrinity Lutheran atPaisley, 2 p.m.; Central Christianat HorizonChristian, 5.30p.m. Boys water polo: Madrasat Summit, TBA;Bendat Redmond, TBA
Saturday Volleyball: Summit, CrookCounty at WestLinn tourney, 8a.msLaPine at Philomathtourney,10 a.m.;Culverat Corbett to urne y,830 a.m.;Paisley at Gilchrist, 230 p.m; NorthLakeat Trinity l.u theran, 4p.m. Boys soccer: Umatiffa atCentral Christian,1p.m.
BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AH TimesPDT FINALS
(Best-of-5)
Indiana 1, Minnesota 0 Sunday,Dct 14.Indiana76,Minnesota 70 Wednesday, Dct. 17 Indianaat Minnesota,5 p.m. Friday,Dct.19:MinnesotaatIndiana, 5p.m. x-Sunday, Dct.21: Minnesotaat Indiana,5 p.m. x-Wedne sday,Dct.24:IndianaatMinnesota,5p.m.
NBA NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION
Preseason Aff Times PDT
Monday's Games
Philadelphia107,Boston75 Cleveland114,Orlando111, DT
Brooklyn98 Washington88 Dallas123,Houston104 Denver104,GoldenState 98 Sacramento117,Portland100 Today's Games Atlanta atIndiana,4p.m. Brooklynat Boston,4:30p.m. OrlandoatDetroit, 4'30p.m. Mrlwaukeeatchicago5pm Charlotte atOklahomaCity, 5p.m. Utahvs.L.A. LakersatAnaheim,Calif., 7 p.m.
Monday's boxscore
Kings 117, Blazers 100 PORTLAND (100)
Batum5-162-214, Aldridge5-156-616, Freeland 0-1 2-2 2, Lillard7-142-220, Matthews3-8 5-711, Hickson4-83-311,Smith 2-4 2-26, Pavlovic 2-40-0 5, Babbitt3-50-08, Barton2-30-04, Leonard1-I I 23, Morrison0-20-00, Claver0-00-00, Lauderdale 0-1 0-0 0,Karl0-2 0-0 0,Harper0-1 0-00, Holiday 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-85 23-26100. SACRAMENTO (117) Outla w 2-5 0-0 4,Thompson 1-3 5-7 7,Cousins 9-13 2-2 20,Brooks6-8 2-3 16, Evans4-93-3 11, Johnson6-90-0 12, Robinson0-4 0-0 0, Thornton
8-11 3-4 23,Thom as 1-5 0-03, Hayes2-3 0-04,Gar cia 2-4 0-0 6,Fredette3-6 3-411, Ndiaye0-0 0-00, Mitchell 0-00-00 Totals 44-80 18-23117. Portland 22 20 36 22 — 100 Sacramento 31 31 29 26 — 117 3-PointGoals—Portland 9-29 (Liffard 4-8, Babbitt 2-4, Batum 2-9, Pavlovic1-3, Karl0-1, Matthews0-2, Smith0-2), Sacram ento11-22 (Thornton4-5, Brooks 2-3, Fredette 2-3, Garcia 2-4, Thomas1-2, Outlaw0-1, Johnson0-1, Cousins0-1, Evans0-2). FouledDut None.Rebounds—Portland50(Hickson, Aldridge7), Sacramento 45(Cousins, Hayes7). Assists—Portland 19 (Batum 5), Sacramento22(Thomas,Hayes4). Total Fouls—Portland 19, Sacram ento 23. Technicals Pavlovic, Portlanddefensivethreesecond, Cousins, Sacramento CoachSmart, Sacramentodefensivethree second.A—9,328 (17,317).
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Aff Times PDT AMERICANCONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y.Jets 3 3 0 .500 133 141 NewEngland 3 3 0 500 188 137 Miami 3 3 0 .500 120 117 Buffalo 3 3 0 .500 137 192 South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 5 1 0 833 173 115 Indianapo is 2 3 0 400 100 145 Tennessee 2 4 0 .333 114 204 Jacksonville 1 4 0 .200 65 138 North W L T Pct PF PA Ba timore 5 1 0 833 161 118 Cincinnati 3 3 0 .500 149 163 Pittsburgh 2 3 0 .400 116 115 Cleveland 1 5 0 .167 134 163
West
W L T Pct PF PA Denver 3 3 0 .500 170 138 San Diego 3 3 0 .500 148 137 Oakland 1 4 0 .200 87 148 Kansas City 1 5 0 .167 104 183 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA N.Y.Giants 4 2 0 .667 178 114 Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 103 125 Washington 3 3 0 500 178 173 Dallas 2 3 0 .400 94 119 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 6 0 0 1.000 171 113 TampaBay 2 3 0 .400 120 101 Carolina 1 4 0 .200 92 125 NewOrleans 1 4 0 .200 141 154 North W L T Pct PF PA 4 1 0 .800 149 71 Chicago Minnesota 4 2 0 667 146 117 GreenBay 3 3 0 .500 154 135 Detroit 2 3 0 .400 126 137 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 4 2 0 667 110 97 SanFrancisco 4 2 0 .667 152 94
Betting line NFL
Favorite 49ERS
(Hometeamsin Caps) Opening Current Underdog Thursday 7.5
7 Sunday
Seah awks
IP HRER BB SO NPERA C.carpenter L, 0-14 6 52 2 1 76 4.50 J.Kelly 1 2 00 0 0 17 0.00 Sa as 1 1 00 0 1 10 0.00 S.Mrffer 11- 33 2 2 I 2 37 13.50 Rzepczynski 2-3 0 00 0 I 5 0 0 0 San Francisco IP HRER BB SO NPERA Vogelsong W,1-0 7 4 1 1 2 4 106 1.29 Affeldt 1 0 00 0 0 8 0 0 0 Rorno 1 I 0 0 0 1 11 0.00 T—3:10. A—42,679 (41,915).
TENNIS Professional Kremlin Cup Monday At Olympic Stadium Moscow Purse: Men,$742,160(WT260);Women, $740,000 (Premier) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Men First Round LukasRosol, CzechRepublic, def.DanielGimeno
Titans Cardi nals Browns Ravens Traver, Spain,7-6(9), 7-6(2). RAMS Denis Istomin (6), Uzbekistan,def. Bjorn Phau, SD — Gates 15 passfromRivers (Novakkick), PANT HERS Germany, 5-7, 7-5,6-1. 8:16. Red s kins TatsumaIto, Japan, def. RobertoBautista-Agut, SecondQuarter BUC CANEERSSpain,6-3, 1-6,6-2. SD — Jammer 80interception return (Novakkick), Jets Malek Jaziri, Tunisia, def. RajeevRam,United 6:00. Jaguars States,6-3, 6-1. SD — Gates11 passfromRivers(Novakkick),:24. B eng als Women Third Quarter Den—D.Thomas 29 pass from Manning (Prater Monday First Round BEARS 6 5.5 Lions Sofia Arvidsson,Sweden,def. BojanaJovanovski, kick), 10:56. Serbia,6-2, 6-4 Den Tcarter 65 fumble return (Prater kick), College LucieSafarova(8), CzechRepublic, def. Margarita 4:41. Today Gasparyan,Russia, 6-3,4-6, 6-2. Fourth Quarter 4 N TEXAS Klara Zakopalova,CzechRepublic, def. Alexandra Den—Decker 7 passfrom Manning (Prater kick), UL-Lafayette 3.5 Thursday Cadantu, Romania, 6-3, 6-3. 13:33. Oregon 10 9 5 ARIZONA S T Urszul a Radwanska,Poland,def.FrancescaSchia Den—Stokley 21passfromManning(Prater kick), SMU vone,Italy,6-3, 6-1. 9:03. Houston 5 6 Friday Den—Harris 46 interception return (Praterkick), SYRACUS E 4 4.5 Connecticut Stockhol m Open 2:05. Saturday Monday A—68,604. 5 4.5 NDRTHWE STERN At Kungliga TennishaHen Nebraska NL NL Stockholm, Sweden Den SD WISCONS IN Minnesota Surface: Hard-Indoor First downs 18 23 Army 3 2.5 E. MICHIGAN Purse: $712,300(WT250) TotalNetYards 3 66 30 8 Ball St 3.5 3 C. MICHIGAN Singles Rushes-yards 22 57 2 7-90 BowlingGreen 1 7.5 1 7 .5 UMASS First Round Passing 3 09 21 8 N Rlinois 14 145 AKRON Mikhail Youzhny(6), Russia, def. Brian Baker, PuntReturns 2 -12 4 - 1 4 Georgia 2 7.5 28 KENTUC KY UnitedStates,6-3, 6-1. KickoffReturns 4-68 5 - 126 VIRGINIA 4.5 4 WakeForest JarkkoNieminen(8), Finland,def. TobiasKamke, Interceptions Ret. 4 -61 1 - 8 0 N. Carolina 10.5 1 0 .5 DUKE 6-3, 6-4. Comp-Att-Int 24-30 1 25 41 4 Nc State 4 3.5 MARYLAND Germany, 0 -0 4 - 2 4 Crncinnatr Sacked-YardsLost 7 7 TOLEDO Erste BankOpen Punts 5-44.6 4-45.0 GEORGIA TECH 1 4.5 14 BostonCollege 2-2 4-2 Monday Fumbles-Lost Rutgers 4.5 5.5 TEMPLE At Wiener StadthaHe Penalties-Yards 10-81 9 - 64 AIR FOR CE 11 11 NewMexico NIO Vienna, Austria Time ofPossession 26;25 3 3:35 San Jose St 14 13 .5EX-S. T ANTO Purse: $902,850(WT250) UTAHST 30 30 NewMexicoSt Surface: Hard-Indoor INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS CLEMSDN 9 8.5 VirginiaTech Singles RUSHING —Denver: McGahee17-56, Hilman BOISEST 27.5 28 Univ Frrst Round 2-3, Manning3-(minus2).San Diego: Mathews22 NOTREDAME 14 14 Byu Gilles Mul l e r, Luxem bourg, def. SteveDarcis, Bel 74, Brown 3-13, Battle 2-3. Alabama 1 9.5 2 1 TENNES SEE PASSING — Denver: Manning 24-30-1-309. Stanford 25 3 CALIFORN IA gium, 6-7(3), 6-4,6-3. MarinkoMatosevic,Australia, def. RobinHaase San Diego:Rwers25-41-4-242. ARIZONA 6.5 7.5 Washington RECEIVING —Denver: Decker 6-98, Dreessen OHIO ST 17 18 Purdue (6), Netherlands,1-6,6-3,6-2. 6-57, Stokley4 48,McGahee4 42,D.Thomas 2-37, MICHIGAN 1 0.5 10 Mrchrgan St LuxembourgOpen Tamme2-27.San Diego:Gates 6-81,Floyd 5-60, NAVY 3 .5 3 Indiana Monday Mathews 4-19,Meachem 3-30,Brown3-23,Royal2 TexasTech 1 (TC) 2.5 TCU At CK Sportcenter Kockelsheuer 22,McMichael2-7. USC 4 1.5 41 Colorado Luxembourg MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. FloridaSt 17 18 MIAMI(FLA) Purse: $220,000 (Intl.) OREGON ST 10.5 1 0 .5 Utah Surface: Hard-Indoor WVIRGINIA 3 3 Kansas St College Singles Lsu 3 3 TEXAS ASM First Round FLORIDA 3 3 S. Carolina Schedule M agdal e na R yb ari k ova, Slovakia,def. CartaSuarez V ANDER B I L T 7 7 Auburn Aff TimesPDT (8), Spain,7-6(2), 6-4. KENTST 3 3.5 WMrchrgan Navarro (Subject to change) MonicaNiculescu,Romania, def. RominaDprandi, S. MISSISSIPPI 2.5 2.5 Marshall Today's Game 7-6 (4),6-1. C. Flonda 23.5 2 3 .5 MEMPHIS Switzerland, SOUTHWES T Lucie Hradecka, CzechRepublic, def. Tamira LOUISVILLE 7.5 7 S. Florida Louisiana-LafayetteatNorth Texas,6 p.m. (7), Austria, 6-3, 7-6(8). LA TECH 31 305 Idaho Paszek MonaBarthel (9), Germany, def. MandyMinella, OKLAHOMA ST 14 14 iowa St Thursday's Games Luxembourg, 7-5,6-0. OKLAHOM A 35 35 Kansas SOUTH TEXAS 10 10 Baylor HamptonatNCCentral 4.30p.m. Pittsburgh 11 105 BUFFALO SOUTHWES T SOCCER E. Carolina 3.5 3.5 UAB Houstonat SMU,5pm. IOWA 2.5 3 PennSt FAR WEST TULSA 21 19 . 5 Rice World Cup OregonatArizonaSt., 6 p.m. UTER NL NL Tulane FRESNO ST 17 15 Wyoming North andCentral Qualifying Friday's Games AmericaandThe Caribbean NEVADA 6.5 7 San Diego St EAST Third Round W . KENTU CK Y 3 3 UL-Monroe Uconnat Syracuse,5p.m. Times PDT MISSISSIPPIST 20 20 Mid TennSt Top two in eachgroupadvance TROY 6.5 6.5 Florida Int'I Saturday's Games GROUP A 6 ALABAMA 3 3 Florida Atl. EAST GP W D L GF GAPIs (Tc) means TCUopenedasthe favorite SacredHeart at Duuuesne,9 am. Guatemala 5 3 1 1 8 5 10 NewHampshire atMaine, 9a.m. UnitedStates 5 3 1 1 8 5 10 CCSU at Robert Morris, 9 a.m. Jamaica 5 2 1 2 5 5 7 BASEBALL Wagner at St. Francis(Pa.), 9a.m. Antigua 5 0 1 4 3 9 1 RutgersatTemple, 9a.m. Today'sGames MLB BowlingGreenat UMass, 9a.m. At Kingston, Jamaica Penn atYale,9 a.m. Jamaicavs.Antigua, 4:15p.m. MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL Corneff atBrown,9.30 a.m. At KansasCity, Kan. PostseasonGlance Buckneff atLehigh,9:30a.m. UnitedStatesvs Guatemala 415 pm AH Times PDT Georgetownat Colgate, 10a.m. Holy Crossat Lafayete, 10a.m. LEAGUECHAMPIONSHIP SERIES MLS Bryantat Monmouth(NJ), 10a.m. (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Harvardat Princeton,10a.m. American League MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER DartmouthatColumbia,1030am. AH gamestelevised by TBS AH Times PDT PittsburghatBuffalo,12 30 p.m. Detroit 2, NewYork 0 RhodeIslandatDeaware, 12:30p.m. Saturday,Dct.13: Detroit 6,NewYork4, 12innings Wednesday'sGame Indianaat Navy, 12:30p.m. Sunday,Dct. 14:Detroit 3, NewYork 0 RealSaltLakeatSeattle FC,8p.m. Gardner-Webb atStonyBrook, 1p.m. Today,Oct. 16:NewYork (Hughes16-13) at Detroit Saturday's Games Old DominionatTowson, 4p.m. (Verlander17-8), 5:07p.m. Montrealat TorontoFC,10.30a.m. KansasSt atWestVirginia 4 p m Wednesday,Dct. 17: NewYork (Sabathia15-6) at SportingKansasCity atNewYork, 4p.m. SOUTH Detroit (Scherzer16-7), 5:07p.m. Philadelphia atHouston, 4:30p.m VirginiaTechatClemson, 9a.m. x-Thursday,Dct.18: NewYork atDetroit,1:07 p.m. Columbus at D.C.United, 4:30p.m. Tennessee St.atJacksonville St., 9a.m. x-Saturday, Oct. 20:Detroit at NewYork, 5:07p.m. Chicag oatNew England,4:30p.m. Auburn atVanderbilt,9 21 am. x-Sunday,Oct.21 Detroit atNewYork, 5:15p.m. Colorado atChrvasUSA, 7:30 p.m. WakeForestatVirgrnia, 9:30a.m. National League Sunday's Games MorganSt.at Howard, 10a.m. AH gamestelevised by Fox Portlandat Vancouver, 4p.m. San DiegoatJacksonvile, 10a.m. St. Louis1, San Francisco1 Los AngelesatSanJose, 4pm. FIUat Troy,10a.m. Sunday,Dct. 14:St.Louis 6, SanFrancisco 4 FC DallasatSeatle FC,6p.m. Presbyterianat CharlestonSouthern, 10:30a.m. Monday, Dct. 15:SanFrancisco 7, St.Louis1 NC A&TatDelawareSt.,1030 a m. Wednesday, Dct.17: SanFrancisco (Cain 16-5) atSt. GeorgiaSouthernatFurman,10:30a.m. DEALS Louis (Lohse16-3),1:07p.m. CoastalCarolinaatVMI,10:30a.m. Thursday,Oct. 18: SanFrancisco atSt. Louis (Wain EdwardWaters atSavannahSt., 11a.m. wright14-13),5:07p.m. Transactions W. Carolinaat Elon, noon Friday,Dct. 19:SanFrancisco atSt. Louis, 5:07p.m. BASEBALL Boston CoegeatGeorgiaTech,noon x-Sunday,Dct. 21:St. Louis at SanFrancisco, 1:45 American League Va. LynchburgatGrambling St., noon p.m. MINNES O T A T W INS—Announced the retirement SouthCarolinaat Florida, 12:30p.m. x-Monday ,Dct.22 St.LouisatSan Francisco,5:07 of directorof minorleagueoperations JimRantz. FAUatSouthAlabama, 12:30p.m. p.m. National League Wofford atAppalachian St.,1230 p.m. WORLDSERIES CINCINN ATI REDS—Agreedtotermswith manager Viffanova at Georgia St., 12:30p.m. (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Dusty Baker on a two-yearcontract extension. ConcordatLiberty, 12:30p.m. AH gamestelevisedbyFox PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES—Named Wally Joyner SouthFloridaatLouisville,12:30 p.m. W ednesday, Dct. 24: at N a t i o nal Lea gue (n) assistanthittingcoach. NC Stateat Maryland, 12:30p.m. Thursday,Oct.25: atNational League(n) FOOTBALL JamesMadisonatRichmond,12:30p.m. S aturday, Dct. 27: at Am eri c an L e ague (n) National Football League NorfolkSt.at Bethune-cookman, 1p.m. S unday, Dct. 28: at Am eri c an Le a gu e (n) B UFFALO B ILLS — Signed DEShawne Mernman. MVSUatJacksonSt., I p.m. x-Monday,Dct.29: atAmerican League(n) Re-signed SDelanoHowell. ReleasedDTJay Ross Louisiana-Monroe atWKentucky 1pm x-Wednesday, Dct. 31.at National League(n) and CDavid Snow. DavidsonatCampbell, 3 p.m. x-Thursday,Nov.1:at National League(n) CHICAGO BEARS—SignedTEBrodyEldridge toa Samfordat Chattanooga, 3p.m. one-yearcontract. ReleasedRBKahlil Bell. SC StateatFlorida A8M,3p.m. Monday' s Boxscore GREEN BAY PACKERS— Claimed RB Johnny Alabama atTennessee,4p.m. White off waiversfrom Buffalo. PlacedRBBrandon NorthCarolinaat Duke, 4p.m. Saine on injured reserve. GeorgiaatKentucky,4 p.m. Giants 7, Cardinals1 JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS— SignedS ChrisHar Idahoat LouisianaTech, 4 p.m. CBKevin Rutland. MiddleTennesseeatMississippi St., 4 p.m. St. Louis AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. ris. Released SOCCER Marshall atSouthernMiss., 4 p.m. Jay cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .1 1 1 Major League Soccer Ark.-PineBluffat SouthernU., 4p.m. Beltranrf 3 0 2 0 1 0 .4 2 9 M LS — F ined San Jose DJason Hernandez, New EastCarolinaat UAB,4 p.m. HoffidayIf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .2 5 0 UCFatMemphis, 5p.m. Craig 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .0 0 0 England MBenny Feilhaber andthe Montreal Impact amountsfor their actionsduring Dct. 6 FloridaSt. atMiami, 5 p.m. YMolinac 4 0 I 0 0 0 .2 5 0 undisclosed E. KentuckyatTennesseeTech,5 p.m. Freese3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .1 2 5 games. COLLEGE MIDWEST Descalso 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .2 5 0 LIU BRO OKLYN—Announced theNCAAwil allow PurdueatOhioSt., 9a.m Kozma ss 3 1 0 0 1 2 143 men' s basketbal l transfer FKhalil Murphyto compete N. Illinois atAkron,9a.m. C.carpenter p 1 0 I 1 0 0 1 .000 MinnesotaatWisconsin, 9a.m. a-Schumaker ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .0 0 0 for theBlackbirdswhenthe2012-13season openson Nov. 9. ValparaisoatDayton, 10a.m. J.Kelly p 0 0 0 0 0 0 PFEIFFERNamedKatie Affensonassistant soft Armyat E.Michigan,10a.m. Salas p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Marist atDrake,11a.m b-Chambersph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .0 0 0 ball coach. RHODE ISLAND COLLEGE — Named Cynthia MissouriSt. at lffinoisSt., 11a.m. S.Mifferp 0 0 0 0 0 0 Gaudetwomen'sassistant basketball coach. UT-Martin atSEMissouri,11 a.m. Rzepczynski p 0 0 0 0 0 0 WESTER NNEWMEXICO—Announced the retire MichiganSt.at Michigan,12:30p.m. Totals 32 1 6 1 2 6 ment ofmen'sbasketball coachMarkColemanat the Nebra skaatNorthwestern,12:30p.m end ofthe 2012-13 season. Ball St. atCent.Michigan, 12:30p.m. SanFrancisco AB R H Bl BB SO Avg. W. MichiganatKentSt., 12:30p.m. Pagancf 4 2 2 1 1 0 .3 3 3 Montanaat North Dakota, 12:30p.m. S cutaro 2b 3 0 2 2 0 0 .50 0 FISH COUNT BYUatNotreDame,12:30 p.m. Therrot 2b 2 0 I 2 0 0 .50 0 S. Illinois atYoungstownSt, 1 p.m. S andoval 3b 5 0 1 0 0 1 .12 5 Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack S. DakotaSt.at N.Iowa,2 p.m. Posey c 5 0 1 0 0 2 .12 5 chinook, steelheadand wild steelheadat selected MoreheadSt.at Butler,3 p.m. Pencerf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .1 4 3 ColumbiaRiverdams last updatedonSunday. N. DakotaSt. atSouthDakota,4 p.m. Bet 1b 4 1 2 0 0 I .37 5 Chnk Jchnk Snhd Wstlhd Cincinnati atToledo,4 p.m. G.BlancoIf 3 2 1 0 I 0 .28 6 Bonnevil e 485 3 0 6 265 99 IndianaSt.at W.I linois, 4 p.m. B .crawford ss 4 1 0 1 0 0 .1 2 5 The Daffes 396 3 6 6 502 168 PennSt.at iowa,5p.m. V ogelsong p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .50 0 J ohn Day 624 42 2 1, 01 7 43 6 SOUTHWES T Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 0 0 M cNary 9 8 1 522 1, 2 7 8 40 5 iowa St.at OklahomaSt., 9 a.m. c-A.Huff ph I 1 1 0 0 0 1. 0 00 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, 0 0 0 0 0 0 LSU atTexasABM,9a.m. jack chinook, steelheadandwild steeheadat seected Rorno p Totals 3 6 7 12 6 3 6 San JoseSt.at UTSA,11a.m ColumbiaRiverdamelast updatedonSunday. AlcomSt. atPrairie Vrew,noon St. Louis 010 000 000 — 1 5 2 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd NichoffsSt. atStephenF.Austin, noon San Francisco 100 400 02x — 7 12 0 Bonneville 585,358 140,892230,468 83,759 a-struckoutfor C.carpenterin the5th. b-grounded The Daffes 407,924 122,686192,633 67,564 TexasTechat TCU, 12:30 p.m. John Day 332,649 106,239149,432 55,744 Rice atTulsa,12:30p.m. out forSalasinthe7th c-singledforAffeldt in the8th. E—C.carpenter (I), Hoffiday(1). LOB—St. Lours McNary 335,447 60,451 137,077 45,7 Lamarat Cent. Arkansas,4p.m.
Denver San Diego
0 0 14 21 — 35 1 0 14 0 0 — 2 4 First Quarter SD FG Novak32,8:59.
3.5 3.5 5.5 6 3 3 6 6 5.5 5.5 2 2 6.5 6.5 3 3 10.5 1 0 5 4 4 2 2.5
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
NFL
D3
NBA
Nets get
Boc t at unt? S ecia teams
WIA IA
are istenin
Brooklyn debut
By Judy Battista
By Brian Mahoney
New York Times News Service
The Associated Press
salaries of veteran players (this year's veteran minimum for a There are many confound player with four to six accrued i ng details about this N F L seasons is $700,000), teams season, ones that make you cannot affordto keep many wonder why a nyone would high-priced,experienced vet be willing to put money on an erans who are not starters. outcome. The team that looked And high-priced, experienced like the best in the league Sun veterans do not usually play day — the New York Giants on special teams. That leaves is 0-2 in its division. The entire special teams coaches with AFC East is the very definition a stew of relatively inexperi of mediocrity: 3-3, although enced (read: cheaper) players. on the bright side, it's the first The skill level is presumably time since the divisions were reduced, and the turnover is r ealigned in 2 002 t hat a l l greater. A special teams coach teams in a division are tied might see one good veteran for first place this late in the special teams player, but a gen season. The NFC West, which eralmanager might see money just two years ago sported a that could be spent on filling sub-.500 division champion, two roster spots. is filled with teams at or above Add to that a few other fac .500, even though only one of tors. New limits on offseason them won on Sunday. practice time mean special Nothing, though, is as head teams coaches like Westhoff scratching as one of the quiet no longer can use those quiet est trends of the season, which weeks to develop inexperi might be best summed up this enced players. Because few way: What in the name of Ray s tarters play much i n p r e Guy is going on here? season games, the backups There have been 10 blocked are pressed into full-time duty, punts through six weeks, one meaning fewer practiceand more than was blocked in all of game repetitions on special last season. There were three teams. Even more experienced this week before the Monday players, like those on Pitts night game: garden variety burgh's punting team, seem to blocks by Tennessee against struggle. Pittsburgh on Thursday night Tennessee linebacker Tim and Houston against Green Shaw, who blocked the Steel Bay on Sunday night and the ers' punt, said the Titans had more exotic adventure of Tam detected a weakness in the pa Bay's Michael Koenen. protection on tape. It is diffi Koenen is a p r etty good cult to tell what happened on punter, although he has had the block, but Steelers long his own issues with blocks. s napper Greg W arren a n d Of his 27 punts this season, 12 upback Ryan Mundy blocked have been downed inside the the same man, allowing Shaw 20-yard line. But Koenen has to run free. Mundy has been had seven punts blocked in his with the Steelers' organization eight-year career. On Sunday, since 2008. Warren has been Koenen went one step worse there since 2005. But Pitts after a punt was blocked by burgh changed specialteams the Kansas City Chiefs. He coaches two games into the c hanneled hi s i n ne r G a r o preseason this year. Yepremian and picked up the Westhoff said he believed ball from the end zone and at the instability on special teams tempted a pass. It landed in the would make blocked punts a hands of Chiefs linebacker Ed trend, but recent history in gar Jones, who returned it 11 dicates it is hard to predict. In 2010 there were 12 blocks, yards for a touchdown. It was ruled a fumble re but the San Diego Chargers covery because the NFL rule allowed four of them. In 2009 book states that you cannot there were only six blocks. throw a pass after a blocked In 2008, when there were 13 punt. Whatever. The chaos blocks, the Carolina Panthers that ensued after Kansas allowed three of them. So far City's block was just a micro this season, just one team, the cosm of unpredictable punt Washington Redskins, has al ing this season. Not every lowed more thanone blocked team can employ Tim Tebow, punt, but they came in the first the world's most famous per two games ofthe regular sea sonal punt protector, but even son and there have been none the New York Jets have had a since. punt blocked this season (by A ccording t o t h e El i a s San Francisco). The Jets also S ports B u reau, t h e m o s t have a special teams coach, blocked punts came in 1977, Mike Westhoff, who has been when there were 31. Punt pro around for so long that he says tection has clearly improved he knows why punt teams are since then. struggling to take flight. S till, the c urrent rate of "They have limited experi blocked punts (0.11 per game) ence because of so many rook is more than double the rate of ies making the team," Westhoff blocks in the most recent pro said of the punt teams. "It's dif ductive season, 2008 (0.05 per ficult to keep veteran backups. game). The NFL is on a pace You can keep one; you used to for a w alloping 28 blocked keep five or six. When I start punts — a figure that would ed, I might make one or two surely get plenty of special adjustments on my punt team. teams coaches fired. Westhoff Now I make five year to year." will not have to worry about Because of salarycap restric how to fix it, though. He is re tions and the rising minimum tiring after this season.
I "' " ' ~
RISI,",, yr,-:
Daniel Wallace/The Tampa Bay Times
Kansas City Chiefs running back Shaun Draughn (20) tackles Tampa Bay Buccaneers punter Michael Koenen, who fumbles the ball after a blocked punt in the fourth quarter of Sunday's game in Tampa Bay.
Lenny Ignelzi /The Associated Press
Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manningthrows a pass against the San Diego Chargers during the second half of Monday night's game in San Diego. Manning threw three touch down passes inthe second half.
annin 's ss u roncos' come ac By Bernie Wilson
nightmarish first half i n w h ich M anning served up an80-yard interception return for SAN DIEGO — It took a quarterback the a touchdown by Quentin Jammer and two caliber of Peyton Manning to pull off this kind special teams fumbles led to 10 points for the of comeback. Chargers. Manning threw three touchdown passes Manning beganthe comeback when he hit in the second half and Tony Carter and Chris Demaryius Thomas on a 29-yard touchdown Harris scored off turnovers by Philip Rivers pass on the opening drive of the second half. as theDenver Broncos overcame a 24-0 half On the ensuing San Diego possession, Elvis time deficit to stun the San Diego Chargers Dumervil stripped the ball from Rivers and 35-24 on Monday night. Carter ran 65 yards for a touchdown, holding Manning was 13 of 14 for 167 yards in the up the ball in celebration as he approached second half for the Broncos (3-3) who tied the the end zone. Chargers (3-3) atop the AFC West. Denver thensacked Rivers to force a punt It tied for the fourth-greatest regular-sea and Manning capped the next drive with a 7 son comeback in NFL history. yard touchdown pass to Eric Decker to pull to "It sure was special considering what was 24-21. on the line," said Manning, a four-time NFL Manning's 21-yard touchdown pass to Bran MVP and one-time Super Bowl winner who' s don Stokley gave Denver its first lead of the in his first season with the Broncos. game, 28-24 with 9:03 left. Stokley outleaped Manning had been 1-5 in his last six games defensive back Marcus Gilchrist to catch the against San Diego, all with Indianapolis. ball, and then got both feet down before tum Rivers was intercepted four times — three bling out of the end zone. in the fourth quarter — and lost two fumbles. That score w a s s e t u p by Ca r t er 's "When you lose it's rough, especially in a interception. Harris sealed the victory with a 46-yard game where youhad a big lead and so much at stake," Rivers said. interception return for a touchdown with 2:05 The Broncos seemed finished after a left. It was his second pick of the game. The Associated Press
Seahawks have notime to enjoy win with 49erslooming By Tim Booth
in how Seattle practices. The 2-minute offense The Associated Press has become an emphasis. SEATTLE — A normal Monday might al The results are noticeable. In wins over low for the slightest bit of appreciation for the Green Bay and New England, the Seahawks rally the Seattle Seahawks pulled off in the fi scored in the final 90 seconds to win, albeit nal moments, another fourth-quarter victory controversially in the win over the Packers. "It's a much-improved aspect of our football this season after striking out too many times a year ago in similar situations. team and it's with a first-time quarterback so With a game just a couple of days away at we' re excited that we' ll continue to get better, division rival San Francisco, there was no continue to focus on it and make it a great pri time for the Seahawks to relish their stunning ority in the program," Carroll said. There was some unwanted attention that comeback win over New England. "We have a big competition this week in came Seattle's way after cornerback Rich who is going to prepare the best," Seattle ard Sherman popped off in the moments af coach Pete Carroll said. ter the game about the Patriots and feeling To that end, the Seahawks were quickly the Seahawks were disrespected nationally. putting aside their 24-23 win over the Patri Sherman later posted a picture on his Twitter ots on Sunday and quickly looking ahead to account showing him getting in Tom Brady's Thursday night's showdown at San Francis face after the end of the game. Sherman and co. Both Seattle and San Francisco have 4-2 Brady had been talking at times through the records and are part of a three-way tie with game. "It's not a shock for us. We believe we have Arizona on top of the NFC West. The game plan for the 49ers was being a great ballclub and we believe we can play drilled less than 24 hours after the Seahawks with anybody," Sherman told reporters in the scored 14 points in the final 7:31, capped by locker room after the victory. "NFL Network Russell Wilson's 46-yard touchdown pass to and all of these pundits think they know ev Sidney Rice with I:18 left that gave the Se erything and we keep shutting them up week, ahawks the lead. by week, by week, by week. They thought "When it counted most we played our (New England) was the greatest ball club to best," Carroll said. "We put up a bunch of step on theearth. They're 3-3, .500. I don't yards in the fourth quarter ... we didn't allow know what great ball club is 3-3." a third down conversion by their offense in Many fans felt Sherman's rant was disre the last five. We kicked the ball well. We re spectful toward the three-time Super Bowl turned the ball well. We protected well, threw champion. Carroll believed it was his confi and caught it and all that well. We used the dent cornerback being a little too exuberant in clock very well defensively when we had our the moments after the victory. "I think (Sherman) was really excited about chance. I'm really fired up that we finished so well against a really, really good football what had just happened and I was too. And in team." the heat of the moment, everybody was kind of having a blast and in that, that directed some Seattle has made a sudden change in its ability to close games from the struggles of a attention to Tom Brady, who we all know is a year ago. Six times in the 2011 season, the Se great player and we all respect the heck out ahawks found themselves within one score in of him and probably why there is follow up to the closing minutes, yet went winless in all six that. But that's stuff that is going to happen situations. Five of those six losses were by six sometimes," Carroll said. "I think as we grow points or less. as a young team we' ll figure out where things Faltering late a season ago brought changes fit and don't fit best."
NEW YORK — The Nets brought professional sports b ack t o B r o oklyn w i t h a victory Monday night, beating th e W a shington Wizards 98-88 in the first basketball game at the Bar clays Center. B rook L opez h a d 1 8 points and 1 1 r ebounds for the Nets, who left New Jerseyafterlast season for a new $1 billion home in Brooklyn. They were greet ed by 14,219 fans on the night they became Brook lyn's first major pro sports team since the Dodgers left for Los Angeles in 1957. Clearly trying for a tri umphant opener even in a meaningless preseason game, the Nets brought All-Star point guard Deron Williams back on the floor to help protect a six-point lead with about 3'/2 minutes left. He fed Gerald Wallace for a basket about 30 sec onds later, and exchanged words and technical fouls with Wizardsreserve A.J. Price after Price fouled him w it h 5 6 . 5 s econds remaining. Andray Blatche scored 16 points, Joe Johnson had 14 and Williams finished with 11 points and nine as sists for the Nets, 2-0 in the preseason. Martell Webster scored 18 points and rookie Brad ley Beal added 13 for the Wizards. The Nets wore their road b lack uniforms with t h e word " Brooklyn" a cross the chest, designed and unveiled by rap mogul and team part-owner Jay-Z in one of his concerts here last month. His influence, the new home and a flurry of off season moves have brought the Nets nearly unprece dented attention for a team that was often ignored in its multiple New J ersey homes, no matter how good or bad the Knicks were dur ing that time. Shortly after the public address announcer greeted fans with a "Hello Brook lyn!" before introducing the Nets' lineup, Emeka Okafor made the first basket at the Barclays Center. The Wiz ards led by one after one, and the Nets took a 50-48 lead into halftime. The Nets assembled a t eam they think w il l b e a solid c ompetitor d u r ing their first season here,
re-signing Williams, Lo
p ez, Wallace an d K r i s Humphries while acquir
ing players such as John son, C.J. Watson, Blatche, Reggie Evans, a quick re build for a team that lost 70 games justthree seasons
ago. The move to Brooklyn took much longer. Owner and developer Bruce Rat ner had to fight off doz ens of lawsuits before the project could go forward, e ventually selling a m a jority stake in the team to Russian billionaire Mikhail P rokhorov f o r en o u g h funding to move ahead. Minor work is still be ing completed, but the Nets will deal with any incon veniences after two years at the Prudential Center in Newark while waiting for the Barclays Center to be
ready. "It feels great on all lev els to finally be here," Nets coach Avery Johnson said before th e g a m e. "You know, I left the building for two hours today, two or three hours, and just was kind of anxious to get back." Seating 17,732 for bas k etball, t h e a r en a s i t s above the exit to an ex panded subway s t ation that is directly accessible by nine l ines. Team of ficials believe the ease of traveling to the arena will help provide them with a home-court advantage that they never found in New Jersey.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
Ducks
MLB PLAYOFFS: ALCS
Ver an er t e next o stac e or Yanees By Noah Trister
The Associated Press
DETROIT — There were times this year when Justin Verlander took the mound while his team was reeling a bit — and the right-hander's presence was Detroit's best shot at snapping out of a momentary funk. Now, the hard-throwing ace is in a differ ent situation. Led by Verlander, the Tigers' rotation has been absolutely terrific this postseason, and his job is simply to keep this remarkable run going against the slumping New York Yankees. "I think pitching, much like hitting, is con tagious," Verlander said. "Guys go out there night in and night out and
the Yankees won twice. Phil Hughes, who will start Game 3 for New York, pitched a complete game against Verlander in a win over the Tigers on June 3. "Obviously Verlander is a great pitcher, but he is human and we know we can score off him," Hughes said. "I just have to do a better job than he does. It's going to be a challenge, but, like I said, I'm looking for ward to it." In his most recent start against the Yan kees, on Aug. 6, Verlander struck out 14 in
eight innings.
"You want to face familiar pitchers, even if he happens to be the best pitcher on the planet," Teixeira said. With the starters pitching brilliantly, De NeXt uP seeguyshaveagoodgame, and the next day he wants troit's big concern right now is the bullpen. ALCS, New to have a good game, so on Valverde allowed the Yankees to tie Game 1 York Yankees with four runs in the ninth, and although the and so forth. And I think at Detroit that's what we are feeding Tigers won 6-4 in the 12th, Detroit manager Tigers on right now." Jim Leyland needed to change plans a bit. The Tigers won the first Paul Sancya/The Associated Press He used Phil Coke to close out a 3-0 win in two games of the AL cham Detroit Tigers pitcher justin Veriander Game 2, and the left-hander pitched the final p ionship series i n N e w throws at Comerica Park in Detroit, Mon two innings. • Radio:K ICE- Yo r k, h o l d ing t h e Y a n day to prepare for his start against the New Coke may be a viable option against a AM 940 York Yankees in Game 3 of the ALCS. kees scoreless except for New York lineup with plenty of left-handed one brief uprising against power, but it's clear the situation is still in flux. closer-in-limbo Jose Val "I am just going to play it out and see what verde. With the exception of Valverde, no in hand with New York's horrendous slump. Detroit pitcher has allowed an earned run Derek Jeter is out for the year after breaking happens, see what kind of matchup there is," since Game 3 of the division series against an ankle in Game I of this series, and the Leyland said. "Find out who they have com Oakland. Yankees desperatelyneed their other stars ing up, who the matchup will be, probably Verlander takes the mound tonight in to start hitting. Robinson Cano, Alex Rodri go from there. I am hoping that Valverde in Game 3 of the ALCS. The reigning AL MVP guez, Curtis Granderson and Nick Swisher the very near future is ready to take back won both his starts against the A' s, throwing are a combined 12 for 107 — for a .112 bat over. As I said, that is pretty important that a shutout in the decisive fifth game. ting average — in the playoffs. we have him." "As a rotation, right now things are going Add catcher Russell Martin, and five reg Of course, if Detroit's rotation keeps up well," Verlander said during Monday's off ulars are below .200, hitting a combined 17 itsrecord pace,the pressure on the bullpen day. "It is nice to see us get rolling as a group, for 133 with 42 strikeouts — 25 more strike could be minimal. Can the Yankees possibly and hopefully we can continue it through outs than hits. They have a combined seven hit this poorly for another few days'? Leyland the World Series." RBIs, four of those by Cano. is skeptical. "We' re just hoping we can keep the Yan "We can'tscore seven runs, eight runs Detroit's starters have posted an 0.94 ERA in the playoffs this year. The postseason re in one at-bat," first baseman Mark Teixeira kees from swinging the bats too good," cord for a starting staff pitching at least sev said. "It's momentum. When things are go Leyland said. "You are certainly concerned en games is 1.05, set by the 1920 Cleveland ing bad, they can be really bad, but when about it because they are just too good. They Indians, according to STATS LLC. things are going good, we' re capable of put are too good of hitters and you know they Verlander, Max Scherzer, Doug Fister and ting up a whole bunch of runs." will break out at some point. You just try Anibal Sanchez are off to that type of start The Yankees haveactually had a decent to shut them down to the best of your abil this year. amount of success against Verlander. He ity and scratch out a few runs. The runs are Detroit's pitching display has gone hand faced New York three times this season, and pretty much at a premium so far."
NLCS rivals
go way back
Continued from D1 The Ducks played for a national championship against Auburn after the 2010 season and won the Rose Bowl last season for the first time in 95 years. Good as its run has been, Oregon may have its best team in Kelly's four seasons, even after losing its starting quarterback and its Heisman Trophy-fi nalist running back to the NFL draft. The Ducks have been unapproachable so far this season, their closest margin of victory a 17-point win over Fresno State. Oregon is second nationally in scoring with 52.33 points per game and has done it quickly, with 24 of its 39 scoring drives lasting less than two minutes, including 14 that have taken 60 seconds or less. The Ducks are third in the season's initial BCS standings. They rank eighth in total offense (541.67 yards) and have won nine straight games, the sec ond-longest streak in the FBS behind defending na tional champion and top-ranked Alabama. Oregon also has dominated Arizona State recent ly, winning seven straight games over the Sun Dev ils, including four in Tempe while averaging more than 43 points per game. "It's a big-time matchup," Arizona State linebacker Brandon Magee said after the victory over Colorado. "I hope it's going to be sold out. I'm excited to play them; who wouldn'tbe? We' re ready." The game is expected to be a sellout — a rarity at Arizona State — and the school is calling for a black out, with everyone in the stands wearing black. Graham is hoping the atmosphere will at least slow down the Ducks in their first true road test of the season. Oregon has been good on the road, winning 11 straight since losing at Stanford in 2009, the longest such streak in the nation. The Ducks have not had much time away from home this season, though, playing five of their first six games in Eugene while the other game, against Washington State, was at a somewhat neutral site in Seattle, where thousands of Duck fans attended. Facing a strong defensive team — Arizona State is fifth nationally in total defense and ninth in scor ing — in what should be a raucous atmosphere will certainly be new to Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota. He was a redshirtlast season, so obviously he did not play, and he has not had to face a whole lot of adversity this year as the first freshman to start at quarterback for the Ducks since Danny O' Neil in 1991. Mariota has been good so far, ranking second in the Pac-12 in passer efficiency (156.43) while com pleting68 percent of his passes for 1,301 yards and 15 touchdowns with five interceptions. He has been surrounded by some of the most dynamic players in college football — handing the ball off to Kenjon Barner and De'Anthony Thomas never gets old but Graham is hoping a bit of road rage from the Sun Devils' fans may rattle Mariota. "The crowd is a factor," Graham said. "I encourage our crowd, when they are on offense to try to break the windows out of the new building over there. Let' s get it loud." Pull this one off, and the Sun Devils will make some noise of their own.
By Bill Shaikin Los Angeles Times
SAN FRANCISCO — Connec tions are everywhere in this Nation al League Championship Series. Mike Matheny, the manager of the Cardinals, finished his playing career with the Giants. Outfielder Carlos Beltran played for the Giants last year, the Cardinals this year. In fielder Ryan Theriot played for the Cardinals last year, the Giants this year. The catchers run in the family: Bengie Molina, the oldest brother of Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina, used to catch for the Giants. Then there is the history between Brandon Crawford, t h e G i a nts' shortstop, and Daniel Descalso, the Cardinals' second baseman. "We were on the same 5-year old soccer team," Crawford said Monday. Crawford an d D e scalso each grew up the suburbs south of San Francisco. Crawford was raised a diehard Giants fan, so much so that the San Francisco Chronicle printed a picture of him attending Candle stick Park in 1992, visibly downcast at what was supposed to be the last game there before the team moved to St. Petersburg, Fla. He was 5. Baseball blocked the move, the team was sold, and the Giants built themselves a b e autiful b a yfront ballpark. His family purchased one of the commemorative bricks in front of the entrance. "Mike Lynn Brandon Amy Kait lin and Jenna Crawford," the brick reads, according to the San Fran cisco Chronicle. Crawford's favorite player grow ing up was — of course — the Gi ants' shortstop, Royce Clayton, who was traded to the Cardinals. By the time the new ballpark opened, in 2000, Rich Aurilia was the Giants' shortstop, and Crawford was play ing against Descalso in Babe Ruth baseball. C rawford went o n t o s t a r a t UCLA. The Giants selected him in the fourth round of the 2008 draft, three rounds after franchise anchor Buster Posey. C rawford, th e h o metown k i d , became the fifth player in six sea sons to start at shortstop for the Giants on opening day, following
Omar Vizquel (2007), Brian Bocock (2008), Edgar Renteria (2009-10) and Miguel Tejada (2011). He has come a long way from youth soccer and f r o m t e aming with Descalso. Crawford would be happy to tell you what position he played in soccer, if he could remem ber one. "I think, at 5, you kind of rotate positions," Crawford said, laugh ing. "I think everybody plays every thing, kind of like T-ball."
Vaz
Mark Humphrey I TheAssociated Press
San Francisco Giants' Ryan Theriot hits a two-run double during the eighth inning of Game 2 of baseball's National League championship series against the St. Louis Cardinals Monday in San Francisco. The Giants won 7-1.
Giants
safe calleven though replays showed Craig made the tag. Continued from D1 The Giants capitalized when There was plenty to cheer Ryan Theriot hit a two-run all night for the Giants. Ryan single to make it 7-1. Vogelsong p i t ched s e v en Back at B usch Stadium, strong innings, Angel Pagan Holliday will be cheered after hit a leadoff homer to give San being the target of boos all Francisco its first home lead night following his aggressive this postseason, and Scutaro play on the basepaths. broke the game open with his With runners on first and single off Chris Carpenter. second and one out, Craig hit Making Scutaro's hit even a bouncer to Crawford, and sweeter for the Giants was the the shortstop quickly flipped fact that Holliday misplayed to Scutaro for the forceout. the ball in left field, allowing a H olliday, a f o r mer h i g h third run to score on the error. school football star in Okla The Giants also benefited homa, came tumbling in and f rom a m i ssed call by a n slid late into Scutaro, crush umpire in the eighth inning ing his left leg to prevent the after St. Louis center fielder double play. Scutaro lay on Jon Jay made a spectacular, the ground twisting in pain diving catch to rob Brandon while trainer Dave Groesch ner and Bochy ran out of the Crawford of a hit. Jay threw toward first and dugout to attend to the second the Cardinals should have baseman. "As I watched it live it looked gotten a double play, but first base umpire Bill Miller did like it was a hard slide," Ma not see Allen Craig tag Gregor theny said. "It didn't go out of Blanco's jersey as he raced the baseline to get him. Once back to first on the play. again, I haven't looked at it St. Louis manager Mike again, but we teach our guys M atheny argued t h e c a l l to go hard. Play the game and the umpires huddled to clean, play it hard, not try and discuss it, but they kept the hurt anybody.
"I hated to see that it ended up that way. That's not how we playthe game. But we do go hard, but within the rules," he said. V ogelsong got out of t h e jam by retiring Yadier Molina on a groundout and Scutaro stayed in the game with a limp until being replaced in the sixth by Theriot. By then, he had done his damage with the bat in the big fourth inning. The rally started innocently enough with a bloop, opposite field double by Brandon Belt and a chopper over third base man David Freese by Blanco. Crawford then hit a bouncer between the mound and first base that Carpenter fielded and threw away toward first base. It appeared Crawford may have impeded Carpenter by running inside the base line but the Cardinals did not argue the play. With the bases loaded and two outs, Scutaro lined his single to left-center that Hol liday misplayed to the delight of Giants fans, putting Car penter and the Cardinals into a 5-1 hole.
Continued from D1 On Sunday, the Beavers climbed to No. 8 in the AP poll and started at No. 8 in the first BCS stand ings of the season. On Monday, Vaz, the 6-foot-I junior who tookover for injured quarterback Sean Mannion, wasnamed Pac-12 player of the week on offense. "I don't think anybody in our locker room was particularly surprised Cody played well," OSU coach Mike Riley said. "I think they' ve had faith in him as a teammate for a long time." In addition to a cool 59-yard completion to Bran din Cooks, and another steady 29-yarder to tight end Connor Hamlett, Vaz made a block on a BYU defen sive lineman that paved the way for Markus Wheaton to score on a 12-yard fourth-quarter reversethat bumped Oregon State's lead to 11 points. Vaz was solid t h roughout the game, and he even gave the rest of the team a pep talk to start the fourth quarter. "I just said 'The fourth quarter's NeXt up our quarter,' ... I just wanted to get Ut h t everybody pumped up a little bit," Vaz said. Now there's talk of "Beavers Be Saturday, lieVAZ" T-shirts. Before Saturday's start, Vaz had appeared in only five games for the Beavers, completing six of 17 passes • Radio: for 48 yards. He had not played in a K ICE-AM 940, KRCO-AM 690 live game since 2010. The victory over BYU moved the Beavers to 5-0 to open the season, their best start since 1939. Vaz's performance was just the latest surprisein an unexpected season for Oregon State, which went just 3-9 last year. Mannion's injury was also a surprise, even to Ri ley. The 6-foot-5 sophomore was hurt on a handoff in the Beavers' 19-6 victory over Washington State the week before, but he never left the game and finished with 270 yards passing and a touchdown. Two days later, the Beavers got word that Man nion would need surgery to repair the meniscus in his left knee. He had surgery last week and is out in definitely, although he could return before the end of the regular season.
Mannion was averaging 339.5 yards passing per game, then second in the Pac-12 and sixth in the na tion. He has passed for 1,358 yards with seven touch downs and four interceptions this season. He is sixth on Oregon State's career list with 4,686 yards. Last season as a redshirt freshman, Mannion un seated junior starter Ryan Katz, who had started the 2010 season forthe Beavers. Katz has since trans ferred to San Diego State — making Vaz the backup this season. Vaz grew up in Lodi, Calif., and played at St. Mary's High School, where he was 24-5 in two sea sons as the starter. He was the Stockton Record newspaper'splayer of the year in his senior season. But he had played only a supporting role until last Saturday. The Beavers, who are 3-0 in Pac-12 play, host Utah this Saturday night at Reser Stadium. "It's just a great sign of a guy staying ready over a long period of time and it's part of the identity of our football team," Riley said. "Guys are getting ready to play and when called upon they go in and do the
job."
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
DS
CO M M U N ITY SPORTS CALENDAR at Mazama Gym; benefit for COCC Foundation; free for COCCand OSU Cascades students, $10 otherwise; Bill Douglass, bdouglass@cocc.edu. I LIKE PIE:Thursday, Nov. 22; 9 a.m.; start is directly behind PADDLING 6 p.m.;Redmond High School, FootZone in downtown Bend, on BASEBALL Redmond; boys who make the Brooks Alley; untimed 2K, 5K and KAYAKING:For all ages; weekly teams will compete in Central 10-mile runs; recommended $5 classesand open pool;equipment PRIVATEPITCHINGINSTRUCTION: Oregon Basketball Organization cash or check and five cans of provided to those who preregister, With former Bend Elks and minor food for Neighbor Impact; pie for first come, first served otherwise; league player Dave McKae; pitching and regional tournaments; $150 (for season); Shonette Benso, 541 participants; footzonebend.corn; Sundays,4 p.m.-6 p.m., Cascade and hitting instruction; video 788-2846,mykatisdun©gmail.corn 541-317-3568. Swim Center, Redmond; $3; 541 analysis optional; $40 for 40 iteams.co/rsba. 548-7275; raprd.org. SCREW YOUR SHOESWORKSHOP: minute lesson or $55 for 1-hour PANTHERGIRLS YOUTH HOOPS: Thursday, Dec. 13; 6 p.m.-7 video analysis; 541-480-8786; For girls in grades five through eight p.m.;FootZone,Bend;with pitchingperfection©gmail.corn. living in the Redmond High School local ultrarunner Jeff Browning; PICKLE BALL PRIVATELESSONS:With Ryan attendance boundaries; tryouts for "winterize" a pair of running shoes Jordan, a graduate of Bend High teams that will compete in Central with some studs, which won't hurt BEND PICKLEBALL CLUB: School and a former Bend Elk who Oregon Basketball Organization and the shoes and are removeable; Mondays, Wednesdays and played at Lane Community College MISCELLANEOUS Fridays,8:30 a.m.-noon other select tournaments;Tuesday, learn to do it yourself or enjoy and the University of La Verne; Nov. 0,andWednesday, Nov. 7; full stud service; 541-317-3568; (approximately), Larkspur Park, RESTORE PROPERMOVEMENT specifically for catching and hitting, Redmond High School, Redmond; footzonebend.corn. Bend, weather permitting, rsss@ YOGA:Restorative yoga for busy but also for all positions; available grades five and six, 6 p.m.-7 p.m.; bendbroadband.corn; Tuesdays, athletes such as cyclists, runners REDMOND OREGON RUNNING after 3 p.m. on weekdays, open grades seven and eight, 7 p.m.-8 Thursdays andSaturdays, 9 a.m.-1 and triathletes already training; no KLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; schedulin g on weekends;atthe p.m.; players expected to attend both strength poses, just restorative yoga p.m. (beginner session 11 a.m.-1 Saturdaysat 8 a.m.; all levels Bend Fieldhouse or an agreed upon dates; $150 (for season), includes p.m. on Saturdays) Boys 8 Girls for active recovery;Mondays; 5 welcome; free; for more information location; $30 per half hour or $55 new uniform; Angela Capps, 541 Club of Bend, $5 for first two hours and to be added to a weekly per hour; discounts for multiple 923-4800, ext. 2175, angela.capps© p.m.; Powered by Bowen, 143 S.W. for non-BPC members and $2 for email list, email Dan Edwards at players in a single session, referrals redmond.k12.or.us; Shonette Benso, Century Drive, Bend; 30 minutes; second session, $3 and $1 for BPC rundanorun19©yahoo.corn; follow 5 points on Power Pass or $5 per or booking multiple sessions; cash 541-788-2846, mykatisdun@gmail. members, respectively (beginner class; 541-585-1500. Redmond Oregon Running Klub on only; 541-788-2722; rjordan© corn; iteams.co/rgyb. session is free), 16 players per Facebook. uoregon.edu. ADAPTIVEARCHERY:Age 8and session, sign up at signupgenius. RIDGEVIEWHIGH SCHOOL GIRLS older;Wednesdays, Oct. 10-Dec. REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: COBOTRYOUTS:For girls in grades corn/go/508094EA8AB2AA75 12 (except Oct. 31 and Nov. 21); 5 Weekly runs onTuesdays at6:30 five through eight who are scheduled pbplay; Wednesdays, 8 a.m.-10 BASKETBALL p.m.-6 p.m.; Top Pin Archery, 1611 to attend Ridgeview High School; a.m.,andSaturdays, 8 a.m.-11 a.m.; p.m.; meet at 314 S.W.Seventh S.W. First St., Unit D, Redmond; all St. in Redmond for runs of 3 to ADULT OPEN GYM: Age 18and Athletic Club of Bend (indoors), Wednesday andThursday, Nov. 7 equipment provided; $8 per class; 5 miles; all abilities welcome; older;Mondays and Wednesdays $15 drop-in fee (includes full club 8;6 p.m.-7:30 p.m.; Ridgeview High 541-548-7275; raprd.org. free; pia©runaroundsports.corn; through Dec. 19; 7 p.m.-9:30p.m.; School, Redmond; season schedule usage), 541-385-3062;Tuesdays, 54 I-639-5953. subject to school closures and is12 games plus league tournament; ACROVISIONTAEKWONDO: Thursdays and Fridays, 9 a.m.-11 Age 6 and older;Tuesdays and MONS RUNNINGGROUP: activities; no drinks besides water in $110, Randi Davis, ravenhoops© a.m., Valley View tennis courts, Thursdays, Oct. 16-Nov. 8; 7-8 Tuesdays;9:15 a.m.; contact water bottles or food allowed; $3 per redmond.k12.or.us. 3660 S.W. Reservoir Drive, lisa.nasr@me.corn for more p.m.; RAPRDActivity Center, visit; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. Redmond, weather permitting, MOUNTAINVIEW GIRLS Redmond; students will train in information. jsmck@hotmail . co r n; Mo ndays, BEND HIGHSCHOOL BOYS CENTRALOREGONBASKETBALL a complete martial arts system; 4 p.m.-6 p.m., indoor courts at MOVE IT MONDAYS: Mondays at CENTRALOREGONBASKETBALL ORGANIZATION TRYOUTS: For girls Sage Springs Club 8 Spa, Sunriver, 5:30 p.m.; open to both genders and ORGANIZATION TRYOUTS: For boys in grades five through eight who live uniforms are required and will be available for purchase; $69; 541 $7.50 drop-in fee (includes full all paces; carpool from FootZone in grades five through eight; for in the Mountain View High School 548-7275 or raprd.org. club usage), call 541-593-7890 in to trailheads when scheduled; grades five and six,Saturday, Oct. attendance boundaries;Tuesday, advance to sign up, palcic57©live. COCC RUGBY: Upcoming home melanie@footzonebend. corn; 27,11 a.m.-1 p.m., andMonday, Nov.13, andThursday, Nov.15;6 corn; we ekly play schedulesalso matches for the COCCRugby 541-317-3568. Oct. 29,6 p.m.-7:30 p.m.; for grades p.m.-8 p.m.; Mountain View High available at The Racquet Shoppe in seven and eight,Saturday, Oct. 27, School west gym, Bend; $150-$180 Football Club; Salem Rugby Club, GOOD FORM RUNNINGLEVEL1 Bend; oregonhighdesertpickleball. Saturday;Oregon Tech, Saturday, 1 p.m.-3 p.m.,and Monday, Oct. 29, for COBOseason, includes uniform; AND 2 CLINICS:Level 1 is a free blogspot.corn; bendpickleballclub© Oct. 27;Gonzaga University, 7:30p.m.-9 p.m.;Bend HighSchool, Steve Riper, 541-355-4527, 90-minute clinic that uses drills and hotmail.corn. Saturday, Nov. 3;1 p.m. start times; Bend; Don Hayes, 541-322-5034, mvgirlsjuniorcougars©gmail.corn. video to work on proper mechanics; Mazama Field, COCC campus. don.hayes©bend.k12.or.us. see schedule online for Level 1 HIGHSCHOOL BASKETBALL DESCHUTESMATCLUB dates;Level 2 is offered the first MOUNTAINVIEW HIGH SCHOOL LEAGUE:For players not RUNNING WRESTLING:All youths in grades Tuesday of every month with BOYS COBOTRYOUTS:Forboysin participating in their high school on through eight welcome; Dave Cieslowski of Focus Physical grades five through eight; for grades basketball programs; one league CORK CROSS-COUNTRYSERIES: Monday,Oct.22-Saturday, Therapy to help runners find their five and six,Saturday, Oct. 27, 3 for freshmen and sophomores, Tuesdays, Oct. 16-30;Old Mill Feb. 2;age divisions for kids in best form; clinic sizes limited; 541 p.m.-5 p.m.,and Monday, Oct. 29, and one league for juniors and District, Bend; courses will be 5 to grades one through three and 317-3568; sign up at footzonebend. 6 p.m.-7:30 p.m.; for grades seven seniors;Sunday mornings, Dec. 6 kilometers in length; registration four through eight; in-person corn/events/clinics; teague© and eight,Saturday, Oct. 27, 5 p.m. 2 through mid-March;Pilot Butte starts at 5 p.m.; $5 per race; registration available 5 p.m.-7 p.m. footzonebend.corn. 7 p.m., and Mo nday,Oct.29,7:30 Middle School, Bend; recreational footzonebend.corn/events. todayatBend High Schooland p.m.- 9 p.m.; Mountain View High league with T-shirts, officials FALLGIRLS NIGHT OUT: Thursday; PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: Thursday at Mountain View High School, Bend; Craig Reid, 541-318 and scorekeepers provided; 5:30p.m. onTuesdays;with Max 6:30 p.m.-9 p.m.; FootZone, School; $115-$165 for season; registration deadline is Tuesday, 8014, creid©bendcable.corn. King; locations will vary; max@ downtown Bend; $5; footzonebend. Nov. 27; $54 park district residents, registration is ongoing throughout footzonebend.corn; 541-317-3568. SUMMIT HIGHSCHOOL GIRLS corn; 541-317-3568. the season; online registration $73 otherwise; 541-389-7275; COBO TRYOUTS: For girls in grades ASK THE EXPERTS: First four FALL RUN: Saturday; 8 a.m.; and more information available at bendparksandrec.org. five through eight; grades five and Tuesdaysofeach month; 6 p.m.;at Kahneeta High Desert Resort, bendwrestling.corn. MIDDLESCHOOL BASKETBALL:For six, Monday and Tuesday,Oct. FootZone; informal, drop-in Q-and village front gate; $8-$15; 29-30,5:30 p.m.-7 p.m. both days; boys and girls in grades six through MARTIALARTS SEMINAR: A session with a physical therapist; registration available on weekdays With Brazilian jiujitsu instructor eight in Bend-La Pine Schools; grades seven and eight,Monday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Community individual attention dependent on Marcelo Alonso;Friday, Oct. 26, and Tuesday, Oct. 29-30,and boys league isNov. 1-Dec. 21, and the number of attendees; teague© Wellness Center, Warm Springs. 7 p.m.-9 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. Thursday, Nov. 1, 7 p.m.-8:30 p.m. girls league isJan. 14-March 12; footzonebend.corn; 541-317-3568. SD'S DOWN 8[ DI R TY HALF AND 27,10 a.m.-noon; High Desert emphasis on skill development, all days; Cascade Middle School, NOON TACORUN: Wednesdays at DIRTY10K: Sunday; 9 a.m.; Martial Arts, 2535 N.E. Studio Bend; players are expected to attend participation, sportsmanship and noon; meet at FootZone; order a Seventh Mountain Resort, Bend; Road, Bend; all styles and levels fun; practices and games will take all sessions for their grade level; Taco Stand burrito before leaving half marathon and 10K trail welcome; $35 for one day, $60 Ryan Cruz, 503-348-8449, ryan. place on weekdays; uniform tops and it will be ready upon return; runs; field size limited to 500; for both days; 541-647-1220; provided; boys registration deadline cruz. bend.k12.or.us. teague@footzonebend. corn; $20-$40; superfitproductions. bendhighdesertmartialarts.corn. is Monday, Oct. 15; girls registration RAVENYOUTHBASKETBALL: 541-317-3568. =69. corn/?page id deadline is Thursday, Dec. 27; YOUTHWRESTLING:For kids For boys in grades five through LEARN TORUN ALUMNI RUNNING walk-in registration only; $54, LEARN TO RUN: Next three-week in grades three through eight; eight living in the Ridgeview High GROUP: Wednesdays, 5:30 p.m.; scholarships available; 541-389 session begins Saturday, Oct. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, School attendance boundaries; meet at FootZone; easy, supportive 7275; bendparksandrec.org. Nov. 1-Jan. 29;5:30-7:30 p.m.; Bend 27;9 a.m.; FootZone, downtown tryouts on Tuesday,Oct.30,and Bend; includes instruction in proper and informal midweek running High School; $99 for park district Thursday, Nov. 1; 6 p.m.-8 p.m.; group; caters to slower paces and residents, $134 otherwise; Bend Park running gear and running/walking RidgeviewHighSchool,Redmond; 8 Recreation District, 541-389-7275, form, reference manual and training walkers/runners; free; marybel© HIKING boys who make the teams will materials, and mentor support; $50 footzonebend.corn; 541-317-3568. bendparksandrec.org. compete in Central Oregon CAMP FIREFALL FAMILY HIKE: $55; register online or in the store; WEEKLYRUNS:Wednesdays at Basketball Organization and regional ARCHERY: Ages 8-13; topics include Sunday;2 p.m.-4 p.m.; starts at connie©coachconnieaus tin.corn; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports Bend, tournaments; $100 (for season); safety and bow handling, archery Meadow Camp trailhead just off footzonebend.corn/events. 1320 N.W. Galveston Ave.; 3 to 5 Nathan Covill; 541-504-3600, ext. etiquette and games;Thursdays, miles; two groups, different paces; 6248; nathan.covill@redmond.k12. Century Drive, Bend; hike will last WILLOW CREEK FALL CANYON Nov. 1-29;5:30-7 p.m.; at Cent for about an hour; free; 541-382 or'.Us. CRAWL: Saturday, Oct. 27; 10 a.m.; 54 I-389-1 601. Wise Sporting Goods, 533 S.W. 4682;campfire©bendcable.corn; 7-mile hike and canyon survey from YOGA FORRUNNERS: Wednesdays Fifth St., Redmond; $25; raprd.org; LITTLE HOOPSTERS: Ages 6-8; campfireco.org. 541-548-7275. public works in Madras to Pelton at 7 p.m.; at Fleet Feet Sports Bend, Tuesdays, Oct. 30-Nov. 13;3:45 SILVERSTRIDERS GUIDE SERVICE: Park on Willow Creek Trail; $15, 1320 N.W. Galveston Ave.; $5 per p.m.-4:30 p.m.; RAPRDActivity REDMOND COMMUNITY YOGA: 7 Two-week hiking trip to Banff and includes lunch and bus ride back session or $50 for 12 sessions; Center, Redmond; learn to pass, p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays; Jasper National Parks in Canada; focuses on strengthening and dribble and shoot in this skills-based $49 per six weeks, drop-in available, to Madras; runners and walkers welcome; register by Oct. 24; Beth lengthening muscles and preventing class; $20; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. July 25-Aug. 7;explore these parks beginner to intermediate levels; and hike Alberta's best trails; trip Ann Beamer, 541-460-4023; mvhd. running injuries; 541-389-1601. Rebound Physical Therapy, 974 PEEWEE HOOPSLEVLES IAND II: geared toward those age 55 and org. FUNCTIONALFITNESS WORKOUT Ages 3-5;Thursdays, Nov. 1-15; older; strideon©silverstriders.corn; Veterans Way, Suite 4, Redmond; 541-504-2350. MONSTER DASH5K:Sunday,Oct. FOR RUNNERS:Thursdays starting Level I 11 a.m.-11:30 a.m. and 12:30 541-383-8077; silverstriders.corn. 28; 10 a.m.; Highland Elementary at 6p.m. atFootZone ofBend,845 p.m.-1 p.m.; Level II 3:45 p.m. WINTER FENCING: Hi g h Desert LEARNTHEART OFTRACKING School, Bend; 5K run and kids N.W. Wall St.; personal trainer 4:15 p.m.; RAPRDActivity Center, Fencingin Bend welcomes youths ANIMALS:Guided walks and 1-mile run; benefit for Angel Kyle Will will help participants Redmond; Level I is for beginners, age 10 and older and adults for workshops with a professional Flight West; costume-friendly; strengthen muscle groups to teaches basic skills; Level II is for competitive training and fitness; tracker;ongoing;8 a.m.-noon; $12-$30; fleetfeetbend.corn/races/ help avoid common injuries; $5; kids who have taken a Level I class Mondays, 4 p.m.-7 p.m., and learn to identify and interpret monsterdash; registration available 54 I-330-0985. previously; $17; 541-548-7275; Tuesdays through Thursdays, 5:30 tracks, signs and scat of animals at time2race.corn. raprd.org. p.m.-7 p.m.; introductory coached in the region; two or more walks LORD'S ACRE: Saturday, Nov. f encing l e sson on Mondays at 4: 30 RIDGEVIEWGIRLS YOUTH CAMP: per month; $35; 541-633-7045; SNOW SPORTS 3; Powell Butte Christian Church, p.m. for new members; Randall, For girls in grades three through dave@wildernesstracking.corn; 541-389-4547;Jeff, 541-419-7087. Powell Butte; 9 a.m.10 run and eight;Saturday, Nov. 3; 9 a.m.-3 SKI CONDITIONINGCLASS: wildernesstracking.corn. 5K run/walk; $15-$20 (technical p.m.; Ridgeview High School, Tuesdays andThursdays, 6 a.m.; PROJECTHEALING WATERS: T-shirts available for $ l5); Dave Fly-fishing and fly-tying program Redmond; $30; Randi Davis, WillPower Training Studio, Bend; Pickhardt; pickhardt5@yahoo.corn; work on core strength, anaerobic ravenhoops@redmond.k12.or.us. for disabled active military service HORSES 541-977-3493. personnel and veterans; meetings conditioning, leg strength and SUMMIT BOYSCOBO TRYOUTS: For HAPPY DIRTYGIRLS: Saturday, heldthesecondW ednesdayofeach more; 12 hour-long classes, $80; BRASADA RANCHCOMPETITIVE boys in grades five through eight; month;6 p.m.; Orvis Company Store; Nov. 3;8 a.m.; Sisters; half 541-350-3938. TRAIL CHALLENGE (ACTHA Saturday, Nov. 3,9 a.m. for grades marathon and 5K trail runs; field 320 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; RIDE): Friday, Oct. 26,all day; five and six, 11 a.m. for grades MT. BACHELORSPORTS outings begin in the spring; Brad at limited to 250 participants; $35 Brasada Ranch, 17037 S.W. Alfalfa seven and eight;Sunday, Nov. 4, 5 EDUCATIONFOUNDATION ALPINE, 541-536-5799; bdemery1©aol.corn. $75; happygirlsrun.corn/dirtygirls. Road, Powell Butte; trail varies p.m. for grades five and six, 7 p.m. NORDIC, FREERIDEFALL DRYLAND for grades seven and eight;Monday, from wood-chipped bridle paths ADULTOPENPLAY ROLLER VETERANS DAY/MARINECORPS TRAINING:Started in early to jeep trails to cross-country BIRTHDAYRUN: Saturday, Nov. Nov. 5,if necessary; Summit HOCKEY:Sundays, 6:30 p.m.-8 September; 541-388-0002;mbsef@ routes through historical canyons; High School, Bend; registration 10;9a.m.; City Hall, 710 N.W. Wall mbsef.org; mbsef.org. p.m.; $5; Cascade Indoor Sports, centraloregontrailhorse.corn. information must be submitted Bend; www.cascadeindoorsports. St., Bend; 5K run and 1-mile walk; BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY by Nov. 1, available at summit fundraiser for Disabled American DIANE'SHORSEBACK RIDING: corn; 541-330-1183. NORDIC FALLCONDITIONING basketball.corn; lan Swihart, 541 Veterans; $15-$21; chandler© For beginning riders ages 7-14; OPENROLLERSKATING: Forall PROGRAM:Ages 11-14; 633-8169, ianswi©gmail.corn. bendbroadband.corn; 541-350 Saturdays, throughOct. 27; 1 ages and ability levels; $5 per skater Wednesdays throughNov. 8512; entry form available at p.m.-2 p.m.; Diane's Riding Place, BITTY BALL:For boys and girls in 11;1 p.m.-4:15 p.m.; five-week (includes skate rental), children vetsdayrun.homestead.corn. Bend; learn proper horse care, how under 5 are free;Tuesdays, 12:30 kindergarten through grade two; program aims to improve strength, to cinch a saddle and ride; horses Saturdays, Nov. 3-Dec. 15;Sky p.m.-3:30p.m.;Wednesdays, 1 p.m. FOAM ROLLERCLINICS:Saturday, coordination and flexibility for and tack provided; wear weather View Middle School, Bend; players 4 p.m.; Fridays,2 p.m .-5 p.m.and Nov.17, 8:30 a.m.; Sunday, Dec. the upcoming nordic ski season; appropriate clothing; $100; rarprd. shoot at 8-foot baskets and play 6 p.m.-9 p.m.; Saturdays, 1p.m.-4 16;9:45 a.m.; FootZone, downtown transportation provided from org; 541-548-7275. five-on-five on shorter courts; p.m.and 6 p.m.-9 p.m.;Sundays, 1 Bend; taught by Ashleigh Mitchell, area middle schools; ben© registration deadline is Saturday, p.m.-4 p.m. 541-330-1183; callie@ WILD TRAILSCOMPETITIVE CPT; learn basic myofacial release bendenduranceacademy.org; Oct. 14; $43 park district residents, TRAIL CHALLENGE (ACTHARIDE): cascadeindoorsoccer.corn; www. with a foam roller; bring yoga mat 541-678-3864; enroll online at and foam roller if you own them; $58 otherwise; 541-389-7275; Sunday,Oct.28,allday;Brasada cascadeindoorsports.corn. bendenduranceacademy.org. bendparksandrec.org. Ranch, 17037 S.W. Alfalfa Road, foam rollers available for purchase; BENDTABLETENNIS CLUB:Evening BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY Powell Butte; much of route is soft limited to15 participants; $5; register MINI NORDIES:Ages 3-6; sessions REDMOND BOYSYOUTH playMondays;6 p.m.-9 p.m.(setup dirt with some rocky areas; fine for BASKETBALL:For boys in grades 30 minutes prior); beginner classes atFootZone;footzonebend.corn. duringwinter breakand in well-conditioned barefoot horses, five through eight living in the available, cost is $60; at Boys 8 COCCTURKEYTROT: Saturday, February;introductory ski skills and others should be booted or shod; Redmond HighSchoolattendance Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall Nov.17;13th annual event; 10 a.m.; fun games with small class sizes; centraloregontrailhorse.corn. boundaries; tryouts onMonday, St.; drop-in fee, $5 for adults, $3 for 3-mile run/walk starts at COCC four one-hour practices per session; Nov. 5,andThursday, Nov. 8; HALLOWEEN SPOOKTACULAR youths and seniors; Jeff at 541-480 track; registration begins at 9 a.m. bendenduranceacademy.org. Pleaseemail Community Sports event information to sports® bendbulletirLcom or click on "Submit an Event" on our website at bendbulletirLcom. Items are published on a space availability basis, and should be submitted at least 10 days before the event.
SHOW: Sunday, Oct.28;9 a.m.-5 p.m.; open all-breed show, features costume contest for horse and rider; English, western, jumping, trail and gaming classes; Silver Horse Ranch, 63950 Tyler Road, Bend; 541-408 4080; silverhorseranch.corn. WYLENE WILSONHORSEMANSHIP, TRAILAND BRIDLELESS CLINICS AND LESSONS: Sessions available M onday, Oct.29-Saturday,Nov. 3, Silver Horse Ranch, 63950 Tyler Road, Bend; instruction in fundamentals, advanced loading/ trailering, problem horses, adjusting the horse, and rider confidence; space limited; 541-408-4080; silverhorseranch.corn.
2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-614-6477; bendtabletennis© yahoo.corn; www.bendtabletennis. corn.
NORDICYOUTHCLUB:Ages 7 11;Saturdays and/or Sundays, Dec. 8- Feb. 24;includes a camp during winter break; introduces basic skate and classic techniques through games and adventures; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. MIDDLESCHOOL NORDIC DEVELOPMENTTEAM:Formiddle schoolers ages11-14;Wednesdays, Saturdays andSundays, Nov. 14 March10;participants to ski in small groups based on ability and improve classic and skate techniques in a fun, friendly atmosphere; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter breaks; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. HIGHSCHOOL NORDIC DEVELOPMENTTEAM: Forhigh schoolers ages 14-18; weekday or weekend enrollment options, Nov. 14- March 10;improve skiing efficiency by working with coaches and teammates in small group; participants are encouraged to fully participate in their high school nordic teams; includes camps during Thanksgiving and winter break; transportation provided; bendenduranceacademy.org. NORDICMASTERS:For adults; Tuesday, Thursday or Sunday morning enrollment options; skate technique;Dec. 11-Feb. 17;join a lively, social group to improve skiing efficiency through successful technique progressions; bendenduranceacademy.org. NORDICCOMPETITION PROGRAM: Ages 14-23;Tuesdays through Sundays throughMay1; times vary; instruction in varying activities to improve strength, technique, coordination, agility, and aerobic and anaerobic capacities with the goal to apply these skills to ski-racing environments; transportation provided; ben@ bendenduranceacademy.org or 541-678-3864; enroll online at bendenduranceacademy.org.
SOCCER SOCCEROPENPLAY(ADULT): Age 14 and older; no cleats, but shinguards required; $7;Friday nights; coed 7 p.m .-8:30 p.m ., men 8:30 p.m.-1 0p.m.; Cascade Indoor Soccer, Bend; 541-330-1183; callie@cascadeindoorsoccer.corn; cascadeindoorsports.corn.
SOFTBALL HIGHDESERT YELLOWJACKETS: For girls ages 8-12 interested in playing softball during the 2013 season; 12U division is for players born on or after Jan. 1, 2000; 10U division is for players born on or after Jan. 1, 2002; Jeremy (12U), 541-325 3689; Missy (10U), 541-647-0636; highdesertyellowjackets.corn. PRIVATELESSONS:Private fastpitch softball pitching and hitting lessons offered by former college/prep/club coach and current player evaluator for college programs; $25 per session; Tom Maudlin, 541-948-9501. SKILL INSTRUCTION: Age 10and older; with Mike Durre, varsity softball coach at Mountain View High School; lessons in fielding, pitching and hitting; $30 per hour or $50 per hour for two players; mdurre©netscape.net; 541-480-9593.
SWIMMING CSC CLUB POLO:With the Cascade Swim Club;Thursdays;7:15 p.m. 8:25 p.m.; beginners through experienced players; drop-in fees apply; 541-548-7275. REDMONDAREAPARKAND RECREATIONDISTRICT FAMILY SWIM NIGHT:7:25 p.m.-8:25 p.m., Tuesdays,Cascade Swim Center, Redmond;adultm ustaccompany anyone under age18; $10 per family; 541-548-7275, raprd.org.
V O LL E Y BALL OREGON VOLLEYBALLACADEMY INFORMATIONALMEETING: Sunday,Oct.28;5 p.m.-6 p.m.; Pappy's Pizzeria, Bend; for the 2012-13 season; meeting for local and travel teams that will cover tryouts, schedule and costs, and will include a question-and-answer period; 541-419-1187; turner@ oregonvolleyballacademy.corn; oregonvolleyballacademy.corn. OREGON VOLLEYBALLACADEMY TRYOUTS:Saturday, Nov. 3, 9 a.m.-noon;Sunday, Nov. 4,3:30 p.m.-5:30p.m.; Monday, Nov. 5, 6 p.m.-8p.m.;Cascade IndoorSports, Bend; tryouts for 14U and 12Utravel and local club teams; attendance at all three session is required; $15; 541-419-1187; turner@ oregonvolleyballacademy.corn; oregonvolleyballacademy.corn.
WALKING WALK "LIVE" CLASSES: Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays;4:15 p.m.-4:45 p.m. on Mondays; 10:15 a.m.-10:45 a.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays; Redmond Grange; indoor 2-mile walks; $5 per class; 541-993-0464; walklivecentraloregon.corn.
D6 THE BULLETIN •TUESDAY, OCTOBER 'I6, 2012
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF
Rugby
participants earned points by mak ing baskets from designated spots
• Roughriders pick up first win: The Bend Rugby Club won for the first time in the 2012-13 season
on the court, and the participant with the highest point total achieved in one minute was the victor. In the
on Saturday, defeating the Rogue
free-throw and three-point shooting
Valley Rugby Club 36-17 in Bend. Joel Abbott and Mike Gamm led the Roughriders with two tries apiece, while Mike Hunter added a try, three
conversions and apenalty kick. Peter Liddell also had aconversion.
event, the participant with the high est point total after shooting 25 free
throws (baskets worth one point each) and six three-point shots
(baskets worth three points each) won the event. The World Senior Games is an
Bend Rugby Club, now1-5 overall, 1-2 in the Pacific Northwest Rugby Football Union Division III stand
annual Olympic-style sporting event open to menandwomenage50 ings, is off until the season resumes and older from across the world. in February.
For more information, go to senior
games.net.
Senior sports I
Wrestling
• Central Oregooians part of championship team: FiveBend residents were members of aslow
(f
• Youth wrestling program on tap: The Oregon Basics Wrestling
Academy andthe Bend Park 8
pitch softball squad that earned a k ~
gold medal at the HuntsmanWorld
Recreation District are teaming up
Senior Games, which started Oct. 8
and are scheduled to conclude this
to offer a youth wrestling program for boys and girls in grades three
Saturday in St. George, Utah.
through eight this fall and winter.
Redmond resident BobbyBell, Tumalo's BobGordon,and Bend's Tom Cook, PaulGreathouseand
The program begins Nov. 1and con cludes Jan. 29. Practices are sched uled from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays andFridays
John Seekins all played on the Or
egon RoadRunners squadthat won the men's 65-plus A division. Gordon
Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
reported that heandhis teammates
Hunter Mein connects with a pitch during a Bend Elks fall baseball practice at Vince Genna Stadium on Wednesday.
Fall Continued from 01 Participants typically practice two days per week, Richards noted, and play games once ortwice per week against other fall baseball programs, primarily from the Willamette Valley and another Central Oregon fall squad based out of Redmond and Prineville. Those games and practices are why the lights are on at the stadium during some evenings this fall. Right now, the Elks are still conduct ing some of their practice outside, but they will move completely into the Bend Fieldhouse, adjacent to Genna Stadium, in a couple of weeks for instructional camps.
The program is open to players who are not currently involved in playing a fallsport.The program fee is 3389, and
includes camps and uniforms. (Coaches and umpires also are paid. Many play ers inthe current crop, Richards said, will move on to a winter sport, while some now involved in fall sports will come out for baseball this winter. "It's too difficult for an athlete to play two sports at the same time," he observed.
The additional time spent working on baseball skills is beneficial in a variety of ways. "Especially for these guys that aren' t playing a sport otherwise, it keeps them active," said Joe Buckley, one of the pro gram coaches. "It gives them an activity to do. It keeps them busy after school.... It's really nice to get the extra at-bats, the extra ground balls out on the field since they' re going to be inside for about three months. For their development as players, I think it's really good for them to get this extra two, three months after the summer's over just to really work on their skills." And that is what the Bend Elks fall baseball program is about: develop ment. Richards described it as low-key, pointing out that scores and statistics are not kept and the pitching done by players is limited in the interest of pro tecting arms from overuse. "It's really an opportunity to get bet ter, spend extra time on stuff you don' t get to spend on during the regular sea son," said Cal Waterman, a 14-year old freshman at Bend's Summit High School, who is in his second year of fall ball with the Elks. The extra time out on the diamond can
went undefeated in the double-elimi nation tournament, and that their division included teams from Califor
be especially beneficial to the younger players, who are just moving up to a full size field. Another program coach, Kevin Rochin, said that after just a few weeks
at Bend High School. Area school and club coaches will provide the instruction.
Program fee is $99 for park district residents, $134 otherwise,
and the registration deadline is
Oct. 25. Registration is available in Another Bend resident, Jim Crow person at the park district office, ell, won two medals in the men' s 799 S.W. Columbia St., and online 75-79 age division in basketball: a at bendparksandrec.org. For more
nia, NewMexicoand Florida.
a lot of his young charges can now eas ily throw across the infield to first base rather than one-hop the baseball. "Repetition is key to baseball," Ro chin said. "There's only so much you can do: hit the ball, throw the ball, pitch the ball.... Doing the same things over and over again day in and day out. It' s the only way to get better." Wolfie Meckem, 12, is out for fall baseball for this first time this year. Baseball is the Cascade Middle School seventh-grader'sfavorite sport, and he has improved his hitting skills, he said, during his time in the program. During a brief pause from practice, he said his favorite quote was, "The more you sweat in practice, the less you bleed in battle." Playing baseball isn't nearly the same as going to battle, but the general prin ciple still applies. Additional time spent on the field in the fall can pay dividends down the road. Maybe evennext summer.
gold in "hot-shot" shooting and a
information, call the park district at
bronze in three-point and free-throw shooting. In the hot-shot event,
541-389-7275. — Bulletin staff reports
COMMUNITY SPORTS SCOREBOARD Bowling League standingsandhigh scores Lava Lanes,Bend
Ocl. 1-7 Casino Fun All In The Family; FrankMcDonald, 242/615;KarenMolderthauer,214/513. His Attd Hers —WoodsideRanch Shilos; Jayme Dahll te,284/739;DianeHayes,2231567.
Guys AndGals—DowntownOrnamental Iron;Jo
WaldaBerry,212/586. Have-A-Bau — Team 5; RyanPierce, 208/491; BrittneyOsbom,167/430. Draft — ComingForYou;SteveWilson, 216/641; KarenDougart,1571410. Rimrock Lanes, Prineville (Teamscratch game; teamscratch series; men's scratch game;men's scratch series; women's scratch game;women's scratch series) Week1 Friday Night Specials — SassyDogs,712; The Gray Mayers,2,415; RyanWaddel, 288; RickyMayers, 702; LeslieGerke, 1t1; ChrisGray,650. Week 3 Rimrock — ColdStone Creamery, 895; Prinevile Reser voirResort,2,788;Gene McKenzie,236;Doug Gray,640;virginya Cook, 182;Julie Mayers, 548. Week 6
siah Ohlke, 241/606; JanetGetling,179/525. Rejects —Split AndMiss; DougGray,267P15; Sue Snedden,t 81/509. Lava Lanes Classic —Wasabi ArtdGinger; Terry Lussier,268BOt; DebbieSmith, 190/507. Wednesday Ittc —Auntie Em'sDeli; PaulHiliard, 25B/730;SkipNadig, 300/632, Tea Timers —Ball Breakers;SueParker, 229/594 Latecomers —NoThreat, PamSloan,192/501. TNT Roller Coasters;DaveGrimes, 256/706; Me 50 + or — Its A UTurn, 64B;Fire Bailer's, 2,051; gan Waltosz,169/481. Progressive — Hills Horseshoeittg; Matt Ayres, Mike Ola, 204;Matt Hawes,733; LauraHawes, 156; 243/680. Stella Oia447.
Free Breathers —PinHeads;JohnScott, 248/686; J.B Bayeur;180/484 T.G.I.F.—BowlingStones;AndySolberg, 242/648;
— Reporter:541-383-0393,amiles@ bendbulletin.corn.
Grizzly MountainMen's —NoBoundaries,1,012; KBWEngineering, 3,041;JeradMcCletnan, 258;Jordan Higgins,751.
Griner focused onsenior season with champBaylor By Stephen Hawkios The Associated Press
WACO, Texas — Brittney Griner watched the Olympics and wished she was there. Thanks to the WNBA draft lottery, she might know where
WOMEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
to select the dominating post player next s p r in g b e fore Chicago chooses second and she's going. Tulsa third. Before Rio in 2016, or even Griner watched the draft getting started in the pros next lottery with some friends, and summer, there is still the senior she described them more ex season with the Lady Bears for cited than she was about her the fun-loving All-American potential future destination. "I' ve still got a year here and who can dunk and broke her right wrist in a longboarding I'm looking forward to my year accident this summer. Baylor here,"said Griner, who told her is coming off the NCAA's first friends one other thing that 40-win season and returns ev night: "They didn't say they ery starter from its undefeated were picking me. They just got national championship team. the No. 1 pick." T he Lady Bears are t h e The accident on the elon gated skateboard came after overwhelming favorite to win Griner had already removed their third consecutive Big 12 herself from consideration for title. They open the season the 12th and final spot on the Nov. 9 at home against Lamar. U.S. women's basketball team T hrough he r f i r s t t h r ee that won gold at the London seasons at Baylor, Griner has Olympics. She almost cer averaged 21.6 points and 8.6 tainly would have been part of rebounds a game with a Big the team, but didn't participate 12-record 594 blocked shots. because of summer school She is the first NCAA player classes she had to take and the with 2,000 career points and ill health of her mother. 500 blocked shots. "She's OK. Ups and downs, In the NCAA tournament but she's all right," Griner said, last season, Griner dunked but not wanting to elaborate twice. That matched Candace on her mother's health during Parker for most dunks by a an interview with The Associ woman in NCAA tournament ated Press. play and during a college ca Griner said she made the reer (seven). right choice to bypass the Olym After having to wear a cast pics, even though she wished this summer because of the while watching the games that broken radius bone, Griner's she was playing. The 6-foot-8 wrist was fully healed before Griner was with USA Basket the Lady Bears started practic ball in Europe last fall, when ing this month. Griner worked she averaged 12.8 points and to get stronger and faster this 7.3 rebounds a game. summer, and also to take on "It was exciting just watch coach Kim Mulkey's challenge ing them," Griner said. "It's a for her to be a better offensive great team, basically all my rebounder. role models are on that team. G riner didn't fall of f t h e It was just amazing knowing longboard, but rather jumped that I was with them for a little off it w hen she was going bit overseas.... Just to see them down a ramp and realized she out there playing hard, play wouldn't be able to make a ing strong, and bringing the turn. She got hurt after jump gold home, it was good." ing off, then reaching out to When the WNBA draft lot catch herself against the wall. "I was trying to save my tery was held last month, the Phoenix Mercury won the No. self from falling off, but I still I overall pick and the chance broke my arm," Griner said.
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© www.bendbulletin.corn/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
NASD <QCHANGE+20.07+.66% IN BRIEF Bend median home price drops The median single
family home price in Bend dipped to $220,000 in September,
according to figures released Mondayby
the Bratton Appraisal
Group. The median price is down from $250,000 the month before, which
was a nearly four-year high in Bend. Septem ber's figures wiped out
two months of solid gains in July and Au gust. With the exception of those two months, median prices in the city have hovered between
DOIIVjOE NS CHANGE+95.38+.72%
Sttl'MII CHANGE'+11.54+.81%
+ BONDS Tres '"> CHANGE+.60%
V GOLD CHANGE -$ 22.00
Americans are inally getting ack Retail sales better than intot e lack, Fe i uresshow expected in • As household debtdecreases,spending on big-ticket items isstarting to increase By Elizabeth Dexheimer Bloomberg News
ATLANTA — Anita Bull ock-Morley was $57,000 in debt on 27 credit cards and close to filing for bankruptcy in 2007. With help from an Atlanta counseling service, the 37-year- old says, she paid about $1,400 a month and cleared her balances. Now
she's used cash to buy an $800 iPad and upgrade her iPhone. Three-plus years into the economic recovery, Ameri cans finally are getting their finances back into shape, Fed eral Reserve figures show. Household debt as a share of disposable income sank to 113 percent in the second quarter from a record high of
134 percent in 2007 before the recession hit. Debt payments on that basis are the smallest in almost 18 years, while the delinquency rate for credit cards is the lowest since the end of 2008. "The household deleverag ing process is largely over," said Mark Zandi, chief econo mist at Moody's Analytics in West Chester, Penn. "Credit use should soon go from being a significant headwind to the economy to a tailwind."
September
The progress that consum ers have been making will allow gross domestic product to absorb stepped-up deficit reduction by the federal gov ernment next year and keep on expanding, Zandi said. He sees GDP growing 2.1 percent in 2013, a bit slower than this year's projected 2.2 percent, as Congress allows some, but not all, of the scheduled year end tax increases and spend ing cuts to go ahead. See Debt/E3
By Shobhana Chandra Bloomberg News
$166,000 and $234,000 since late 2008.
In Redmond, me dian prices dropped to
EXECUTIVE FILE
$145,000 in September, down from $155,000
in August. TheAugust figure was athree-year high for Redmond,
according to Bratton figures.
Microsoft unveils Xbox Musicservice Buyers of tablets that
run Microsoft's new est operating system, Windows 8, are in for
a pleasant musical surprise: They' ll be
't Ig
able to handpick from a selection of millions of
songsandstream them for free as long asthey put up with an audio ad every 15 minutes.
The new service, called Xbox Music, is not on offer anywhere else at the moment.
Sweden's Spotify allows track selection
and playback onper sonal computers for free — with the occasional audio ad — but doesn' t allow you to pick exactly
the song you want on tablets unless you pay $10a month for its premium subscription.
Pandora's popular free online radio service also doesn't let you pick spe
Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Annie Block, owner of The Absolute Horse in Bend,added Western riding equipment to her inventory to attract new customers.
cific tracks.
Softbank buys big stake in Sprint Sprint dug a hole for itself when it bought Nextel in 2005 in one of the worst deals in telecom history. Now,
a deep-pocketed friend from overseascould help the companyclimb out of its hole and reinvigorate its fight against AT&T and Verizon Wireless. Japan's Softbank
Corp. hasagreedto buy a controlling stake in Sprint Nextel Corp. for $20.1 billion, money that will be dividedbythecompany and its shareholders.
AnnouncedMondayin Tokyo, the deal positions
Sprint as astronger com petitor to its two biggest rivals, ATBT and Verizon. — Staffand wire reports
Risingsenior incomes Between 2001 and
V SILVER ,' HAN',E",0926
• The Absolute Horse caters to a variety of ridingstyles
The basics
By Rachael Rees
What:The Absolute Horse Where:2221 N.E. Third St., Suite B
The Bulletin
Employees:Five
To expand her customer base and mar ket, Abbie Block expanded her tack store, The Absolute Horse, about 14 months ago and added Western-style riding equip ment and accessories to her existing Eng lish-style inventory. Now, The Absolute Horse draws cus tomers from as fa r a s M e dford and Burns. From horse blankets and show cloth ing to Western bridles and grooming sup plies, Block said, her 4,000-square-foot tack store aims to fill the needs of horse people across the riding disciplines, such
Phone:541-388-3855
Website:www.facebook.corn/pages/ The-Absolute-Horse/120521261315822
as English, hunter-jumper and Western. "Most people in this community aren' t completely focused on one discipline," she said. "A lot of people have a pri mary discipline and then a secondarily discipline." Block, a 29-year-old Bend resident, entered the tack-store industry when
Gallops Saddlery, a Portland-based tack store, opened a Bend location in 2006. Af ter managing the English-style tack store forthree years, she bought the business in October 2009. In addition to changing the name of the Northeast Third Street store to The Ab solute Horse, she said she also shifted the focus to better fit the needs of the Central Oregon horse community. In August 2011, Block expanded the store by 1,500 feet, which allowed her to add a section for Western riding.
Equipment like bits, blankets and grooming suppliesare necessary regard less of riding style, she said. By expand ing, she was able to draw in new custom ers and increase sales of cross-discipline merchandise. See Tack/E3
WASHINGTON — Americans snapped up goods from cars to iPhones in September at a fasterpace than forecast by economists, showing consumer demand was heading into the year-end holidays on a high note. The 1.1 percent advance followed a revised 1.2 per cent increase in August, the best back-to-back showing since late 2010, Commerce Department figures showed Monday. The median forecast of 77 economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for a 0.8 percent rise. "This keeps the eco nomic expansion moving forward," said Dean Maki, New York-based chief U.S. economist at Bar clays. "Consumer spend ing is continuing to grow solidly." Gains were broad based, with 12 of 13 retail categories showing an improvement, as shoppers were heartened by higher stock prices and home val ues. Faster payroll growth would further boost the consumer spending that' s needed to offset a slow down in business invest ment, Maki said. Maki raised his track ing estimate of third-quar ter consumer spending to 2.1 percent from 1.8 percent, and for gross domestic product to 2 per cent from 1.8 percent after the report. Shares climbed asthe retail sales report and earnings from Citigroup Inc. overshadowed a slump in commodity pric es. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose 0.8 percent to 1,440.13 at the close in New York. Other reports Monday showed that inventories in the United States rose at a slower pace in August, in dicating that unexpected strength in sales may be starting to drain stock piles, and manufacturing in the New York region contracted in October for a third straight month. Globally, inflation in China cooled in Sep tember, approaching the slowest pace in two years, giving the government room to ease policy should growth keep deteriorat ing. In London, asking pricesforhomes surged to a record this month. Economists' estimates for retail sales in the Bloomberg survey ranged from gains of0.3 per cent to 1.3 percent. The reading for August was revised from an initially reported increase of 0.9 percent. SeeRetail /E4
2011, median house hold income grew for
those headed bypeople age 65 and older, but fell for all other age
gl'oups.
2-step password verification is inconvenient but more secure By Randali Stress
Age group cha ngein of head of inflation-adjusted household income
15-24 25-34 35-44 45-54 55-64
-0.3
65+
-15-10-5 0 5 1015 Source: Census Bureau AP
New Vorlz Times News Service
Bank ATMs embody decades-old technology. A four-digit PIN? What a seemingly crude security system. Where are the uppercase and lowercase letters and the random punctuation that we are continually told are cru cial to hacker-resistant passwords? In fact, though, the four-digit numbers required to use cash ma chinesare one element of an extremelystrong se
curity model that most of today's websites fall well short of matching. Think about it: An ATM requires the presen tation of both
TECH
card and a correct PIN. Websites can and should follow this general principle of requiring two dissimilar thingsbefore access is granted. After supplying the password, that second thing could be a code that
arrives as a text message on one's phone. A thief would find that stealing your password for a web site was useless without also having your phone in hand. The technical term for requiring something you know and something you have when trying to log into an online account is "two-factor authentica tion." It's also known as two-step verification. If this system, using passwords and smart phones, were used on all
limited-access websites, the passwords wouldn' t have to be long and complex. But many Web users have easy-to-guess passwords in just one step verification, which is highly imprudent. Nick Berry, president of DataGenetics, a con sulting firm in Seattle, has analyzed the large password databases that hackers who have broken into various websites have publicly released. SeePasswords/E3
0
7
4
7
ys)ygry r New York Times News Service
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
THE BULLETIN
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S ERVI C E HO Ur R S 30p m M — F 7:4 5 a
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Schedule Online at www.stanleysteemer.corn
EX PI RES 1/1 1 5/ 12 Not vahd with other LIMITED TIME OFFER NO COUPON NECESSARY• NOT VALID WITH OTHER OFFERS I offers BBCW1012
Stanley Steemer Upholstery Special!
CARPET TI I LE & G ROUT IHARDWOOD I FURNITURE
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5 4 1.9 2 3 . 3 2 3 4 1715SW Highl and Ave.,Redmond ~ www.unkpointnw.corn ~
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INCLUDES:
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Clean Glass Treat Dash-Vinyl 8 Leather
Don't forget your area rugs & upholstery too!
Chem Dry -of Central Oregon
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Right on the Corner of Third Street and Franklin in Bend. Right on the Price.
54 I -388-7374 • Residential & Commercial
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Welcome to The Outpost! The Outpost is a Oregon retailer. We specialize in providing a fun shopping experience for our customers, with a lot of
Behind Bank ofAmerica on 3rd Street
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Vacuum Interior Wipe Dash, Doors 8 Center Console
interesting and unique items. Wehave toys, p f'
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clothing, crafts, swords, tools, leather goods, household supplies,and an assortment of tobacco products, all at great prices!
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LUNCH 11:30 — 2:30, MON-FRI DINNER 4-9, MON-SAT
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Expires 11/30/12
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Providing you with a fun shopping experience is our priority,so please come in and see us at any of our locations!
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Valid any day of the week. Bring in this voucher to redeem. Must buy two regularly priced entrees and two beverages to receive$7 discount. Limit one coupon pet table. Cannot be combined with any other offers, discounts, or specials. Does not apply to the MezzoMenu or Pastini Sunday Supper. Valid in Bend only. Please honor your server with a gratuity based on the amount before discount. Offer expires 10 /31/12.
CARPET Cl-EAIrlllrlG "
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If FREE Estimate Over the Phone If I I CRC Certified Technician
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Old Mill- Next to REI 375 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, OR, 9770Z
Oxi Fresh uses a combination of its one of a kind Oxi SpongeEncapsulotor, and Oxi Powder. This three part cleaning solution creates apowerful oxygenated cleaning system that breaks down the stains while encapsulating them, so that they can be efficiently removed from the carpet pile.
(541) 749-1060
www.Pastini.corn
Itissafe forchildren and pets,leaves no sticky residue,reduces returning stainsand hasan one hour average dry ti m e.
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
Tack
riders. In July, Block opened a tem Continued from E1 porary store at the High Desert While e questrians could Classics, an annual two-week order clothing and equipment hunter-jumper co m p etition online or through catalogues, held at the J Bar J Boys Ranch Block said demand for a local on Hamby Road that brings in tack store still exists. equestrians from throughout Customers like t o t o uch, the Northwest. "We set up a whole other feeland see what products are made of when making pur store during the (Classics) to chases, she said. meet the needs of the exhibi "Brand to brand, sizes fit dif tors of the horse show that ferently," she said. "You can' t might not have time to get off order a small in every brand of the show grounds during the breeches and expect them to store's business hours," she fit the same.... that's the same said. for horse. If you buy one horse Beyond that event, Block blanket, the same size in an tries to support Equine Out other brand might not fit." reach, a local horse rescue or In addition, she said hav ganization, and Healing Reins, ing a local store allows her to a therapeutic riding center, by connect with and better serve donating products and time. "The goal is for the store the needs of Central Oregon
to have a strong presence in Central Oregon and the horse community," she said.
Debt
they canpay offtheirbalances
Continued from E1 T he GD P n u m ber w i l l mask stronger growth for the private side of the economy, to 3.6 percentfrom 3.1 percent, he said. The rebuilding of h ouse hold balance sheets has been helped by a rise in asset pric es, particularly equities. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index has climbed 111 percent since hitting a nadir in March 2009. Home prices also are begin ning to rise, jumping in the second quarter by the most in more than six years, accord ing to the S&P/Case-Shiller index. The result: Household net worth as a percentage of in come roseto527 percent in the second quarter from 477 per cent in the first three months of 2009, at the height of the fi nancial crisis, according to fig ures from the Fed. While that' s lower than the 652 percent peak hit in 2006, it's higher than the 515 percent average that's prevailed since 1980. The Fed's easy-money pol icy — keeping its benchmark federalfunds rate near zero since December 2008 — also is helping Americans put their finances on f i r mer f ooting. Taking advantage of record low mortgage rates, many borrowers ar e r e f i nancing into shorter-maturity loans so
"People are opting for fast er amortization," said Mike Fratantoni, vice president of researchand economics atthe Mortgage Bankers Associa tion in Washington. W ith refinancing near a three-year high, he reckons that two in five home owners who went through the process in August cut the term of their debt. T he r ecent s t rength i n housing and sales of cars and light-duty t r u ck s s u ggests that Americans are becoming more comfortable with their finances, according to Wells Fargo's Paulsen. "We are seeing some big t icket spending," h e s a i d . "They are things you don't see unless you are pretty confi dent of your balance sheet." The U.S. economy expand ed "modestly" last month, sup ported by i m provements in these two markets,according to the Fed's Beige Book busi ness survey released Tuesday. Housing s howed "wide spread improvement since the last report," according to the Fed, with all 12 of its districts reporting that "existing home sales strengthened, in some cases substantially." Foreclosure filings fell 16 percent in September from a year earlier to their lowest lev el since July 2007, according to
RealtyTrac, the Irvine, Calif. based onlinemarketplace for foreclosureproperties. "Stronger housing increas es the odds the economy im proves" inthe fourth quarter, Ed Hyman, chairman of New York-based Inte r n ational Strategy 8 Investment Group, and his team said in a Wednes day report to clients. N ew-home starts will i n crease to 900,000 next year from 750,000thisyear as po tential buyers become more relaxed about taking on new debt, said David Crowe, chief economist at the National As sociation of Home Builders in Washington. U.S. vehicle sales rose last month to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 14.9 million, the highestsince March 2008, from 14.5 million in August, according to researcher Auto data in Woodcliff Lake, N.J. Toyota led with the biggest gain in September, with sales surging 42 percent and top ping the 36 percent average estimate of eight analysts sur
more quickly.
INCOME STRATEGIESCONFERENCE
your background Q•• What's with horses?
A
• I g r ew u p d o i ng t h e • hunter-jumper circuit in Washington. Since I moved here, I' ve gotten into a bunch of disciplines like reining and pleasure riding t o e x p lore Central Oregon on horseback. Now, my latest thing is playing
polo. • What is y o ur f a vorite • p art a bout o w n ing a tack store'? Being able to be part of • the horse community. I get to do something I do well, r etail, and still b e p ar t o f something I have a lot of pas
A•
store in the future'? • I s ee this store fulfill • ing t h i s c o m m unity's needs. In staying here locally and constantly modifying our inventory, we can keep our local community up with the latest and greatest products that are out on the market. By focusing on the one store, we can also help support and be involved with other horse-re lated events and organizations without stretching ourselves too thm.
A
— Reporter: 541-617-7818 rrees@bendbulletin.corn
official Nathan Sheets, say the deleveraging process still has years to run. While debt as a share of income has fallen from its peak, the second quar ter's 113 percent was above the 94 percent average since 1980. Sheets, global head of in ternational economics at Citi group in New York, said the ratio probably will fall over time to about 100 percent, not ing this can occur without dis rupting the economy. Angela Sasseville, 37, a psy chotherapist in Denver, said she and her husband are three years into a "financial turn around plan" to pay off a five figure credit-card debt. "We' re not to the end of it yet," said the mother of two. "Folks have to recognize that this is, for a lot of families, not a sprint, it's a marathon." Still, they' ve made enough
progress to be looking for a
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AlaskAisr Avista BkofAm BarrettB Boeing CascdeBcp CascdeC p
Colsprtw Costco
CrattBrew FLIRSys HewlettP HmFedlD Intel
Keycorp Kroger Lattice LaPac MDURes MentorGr Microsoft
13 37.10 +.28 -1.2 NikeB 1 .16 17 25.90 +J6 t . 6 Nordstrm .04 10 9 .44 +.32 +69.8 NwstNG .44 39 27.73 +.03 +38.9 OfficeMax 1.76 13 7z25 +.40 -1.5 Paccar 5.55 +J1 +26.7 PlanarSy 1.40 0 5 4 .67 +.51 +15.9 Plum Crk .88 18 53.50 +1.54 +14.9 PrecCastpt 1.10 25 96.51 -1.04 +15.8 Safeway 53 7.92 +.08 +31.6 Schnitzer
.28 13 19.50 -.08 -2z2 Sherwin .53 5 1 4.47 +.06 -43.8StancrpFn .24f ... 11.03 -Jo +6.1 Starbucks .90 9 2 1.73 +.25 -10.4 TriQuint .20 8 8. 3 5 +.02 +8.6 Umpqua .60f 22 2343 +J2 -3.3 US Bancrp 9 3 .60 +.04 -39.4 WashFed 14.35 +.35 +77.8 WellsFargo .67 19 21.55 +.07 +.4 WstCstBcp 14 15.77 +.02 +16.3 Weyerhsr .92f 15 29.51 +.31 +13.7
2121 NE Division
Bend
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WILSONS of Redmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable
L~ MXtTREss
G allery- B e n d
641 N W Fir
R ed m o n d
541-330-5084
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Market recap
YTD Div PE Last Chg%Chg 1.44 21 1.08 18 1.827 21 .08 16 .80 12
95.61 +1.19 -.8
55.70 +.77 +1zo 49.29 +.20 +z8 7.28 -.13 +60.4 40.28 + J 3 +7.5 1.35 +.03 -29.3 43.54 +.60 +19J 166.49 +4.08 +1.0 15.67 + J 0 -25.5 27.74 +.62 -34.4 151.54 +Z32 +69.8
1.68 40 .12 19 .70 7 .75 12 1.56 30 .89I 11 3z42 +.14 -11.8 .68 26 47.67 +.49 +3.6 4.96 +.10 +1.8 .36 15 1z21 -.01 -1.5 .78 12 33.63 -.09 +24.3 .32 13 16.63 +.01 +18.9 .88 11 33.90 -.35 +23.0 .20 14 2z64 +JQ +45J .687 42 27.30 +1.04 +46.2
Precious metals P r ime rate Metal
Price(troyoz.)
PvsDay
Timeperiod
Percent
NY HSBC BankUS NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver
$1 737.00 $1 736.00
$1 754.50 $1 758.00 $33.633
Last Previousday Aweekago
3.25 3.25 3.25
$3z707
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541-382-4171 541-548-7707
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Northwest stocks YTD Div PE Last Chg%Chg Name
$
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Name
Iivnfehl 7:30 AM — 5:30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.
ECONOMY. VISIT SMITHWEEKLY COM FOR DETAILS.
choosing "password" as one' s password. "Using an ATM PIN in the Continued from E1 Among 30.3 million pass context of the online world is words, he has found 3.4 mil unwise," says Marty Jost, a lion consisting of nothing but product marketing manager four digits. (It's astounding at Symantec, the computer that there are still websites security company. "Using an that permit these. I always easy-to-remember PIN is even encounter password require m ore unwise because it'seasy ments that force me to choose to guess." ever longer, more complex Jost says websites should strings of characters, num use multiple layers of secu bers and punctuation marks.) rity so that "the password is Some f o ur-digit p a s s not the only authentication words are far more popular mechanism." than others: "1234" alone ac Users of Gmail and other counts for almost ll percent Googleservices,for example, of these passwords; "1111," an can elect to have a two-step additional 6 percent. Repeti verification system to protect tive patterns occupy many their accounts. When the sys of the other spots among the tem is activated, the user fills 20 most frequent numbers. in the boxes for user name Lower on the list are numbers and password, as usual, but that are likely to be a year of then is sent to another page birth or the four-digit render where a v e rification code ing of the month and day of a must be typed in. Users may birthday. choosetohave thisarrive as a We can speculate that some text message, or they can ob of the four-digit passwords tain it by using an app on their found in websites' databases smartphone. There's a back were first conceived as PINs up method, too, in case their for ATMs. They may also be smartphone is lost or stolen. serving as the users' PINs for PayPal and Dropbox also unlocking smartphones. Ber offer their users the option of ry says he also saw a number requiring two-step verific of instances of what he calls "finger walking" on a keypad, in which the sequence comes from a geometric pattern, like "2580" — moving from top to bottom in the keypad's center. The bank customer who chooses the year of her birth as her cash-machine PIN isn' t putting her savings in great jeopardy. The thief who picks up a lost wallet with an ATM card in it would have to guess the PIN correctly in just the first few tries, or the system would shut down the account. Even if successful, the thief would be limited by the ceiling on daily ATM withdrawals. And, in cases of theft, the cus tomer would be made whole by the bank for the loss. W hen that short PIN i s used as a password on the Web, however, without a second form of verifi cation, it is just about the worst pos sible choice, almost as bad as
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new, larger home. "That is s omething that w e ar e a c tively planning for and excited about," Sasseville said. That's good news for the veyed by Bloomberg. Chrys economy next year — and for ler Group, majority o wned whoever gets elected president by Fiat, and Honda also beat on Nov. 6. "Private-sector d eleverag estimates. Deliveries will increase to ing is well advanced," said 15 million next year from 14.4 Peter Hooper, chief economist million in 2012, predicted Bar at Deutsche Bank Securities clays' Johnson. in New York and a former Fed Some economists, includ officiaL The United States is ing Harvard professor Ken "laying the foundation for a neth Rogoff and former Fed reasonably good expansion."
E3
Amex
NYSE
Indexes Nasdag
Most Acttve Is<or more) Most Acttve ISs or more) Most Acttve (St or more) Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Vol (00) Last Chg SprintNex 2468745 5.69 -.04 BkofAm 1483140 944 + 32 S&P500ETF 99163414408 +1.19 C>t>group 655446 36.66 +1.91 SPDR Fncl 547545 15.99 +.18
Getners (S2 ormore) Name
Vringo 57 077 4.66 -.12Clearwire 15u640 2.69 +.37 GoldStr g 35053 2 03 -.01 SiriusXM 569281 2 80 +.02 NovaGld g 20300 4.98 -.03 Intel 485774 2t73 +.2 5 CheniereEn 17771 15.75 +.02 ACapAgy 417258 3z00 -.59 NwGOld g 16695 u.81 +.01 Microsoft 415399 29.51 +.31
Gainers (S2 ormore)
L a s t Chg %ChgName
Gainers IS2 or more)
L a s tChg %ChgName
L a s tChg %Chg
EquusTR z33 +.28 +13.7 GenMoly 3.61 +.34 +10.4 IntrntGold 3.84 +.82 +27.3 AlonHldgs z57 +.22 +9.4 MGTCap rs 3.56 +.29 +8.9 BComm 6.07 +t27 +26.5 ChinaGreen 3.46 +.29 +9.1 eMagin 4. 5 6 + .30 +7.0 JamesRiv 4.78 +.90 +23.2 NaviosAcq 2.83 +.21 +8.0 HallwdGp 6.85 +.44 +6.9 Cyclacelrs 6.70 +1.23 +22.5 AlphaNRs 8.48 +.60 +7.6 MeetMe 3.36 +.u +3.4 Dyaxcp z 8 2 + .44 +18.5 LOSerS (S2 or more) Losers (S2 or more) Losers (S2 ormore) Name L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %ChgName L a s t Chg %Chg AmrRlty 3.00 -.41 -1zo SonicAut 17.91 -1.55 -8.0 BareshtC I4.80 -1.20 -7.5 CS VS3xSlv 3452 -z79 -75 CSVLgNG s 38.35 -z91 -7.1
Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Totalissues NewHighs NewLows
3.62 -.48 -u .6 7.60 -.90 -10.6 4.91 -.56 -10.2 4 94 -.55 -10 0 4.83 -.53 -9.9
3.39 -.49 -1z6 BostPrv wt SwGAFn 8.29 -.63 -7.1 ChiMobG n NDynMn g 3.69 -.27 -6.8 Amlndep ComstkMn z54 -.18 -6 6 PrimaBion Medgenwt 3.70 -.21 -5.4 PLX Tch
IncopR
Diary 2,031 Advanced 1,001 Declined 102 Unchanged 3134 Total issues 87 New Highs 18 New Lows
Diary 224 Advanced 201 Declined 35 Unchanged 460 Total issues 4 New Highs 10 New Lows
1,559 879 143 2,581 62 45
52.Week High Lo w
Net Last Chg
N ame
13,661.72 11,104.56 Dow Jones Industrials
5,390.u 4,365.98 DowJonesTransportation 499.82 42z90 DowJonesUtilities 8,515.60 6,844.16 NYSE Composite 2,509.57 2,094.30 AmexIndex 3196.93 2,44t48 Nasdaq Composite
1,474.51 1,158.15 S&P 500 15,43z54 12,085.12 Wilshire5000 868.50 664.58 Russell2000
13,424.23 +95.38 5,065.47 +20.84 478.36 +z88 8,293.50 +66.42 2,439.78 +1 3.81 3,064.18 +20.07 1,440.13 +0.54 15,033.34 +115.40 828.28 +5.19
World markets
YTD 52-wk % Chg %Chg % Chg +.72 +9.88 +.41 + . 91
+.61 +z94 +.81 +1 0.92 +.57 +7.09 +.66 +1 7.62 +.81 +14.51
+.77 +1 3.98 +.63 +1 t79
+1 7.79 +0.07 +9J8 +1 5.37
+1 z98 +1 7.1 8 +1 9.92 +1 9.48 +20.28
Currencies
Here is how key internationalstock markets Key currencyexchangerates Monday compared with late Friday inNewYork. performed Monday. Market Close %Change Dollarvs: E x change Rate Pvs oar Amsterdam Brussels Paris London Frankfurt HongKong Mexico Milan NewZealand Tokyo Seoul Singapore Sydney Zurich
329.45 2,376.48 3,420.28 5,805.61 7,261.25 21,148.25 42,006.13 15,590.72 3,916.37 8,577.93 1,925.59 3,043.05 4,505.50 6,178.03
+.46 s +.41 s +.92 s +.21 s +.40 s +.06 s +.82 s +.51 s +.51 s +.51 s -.40 +.04 s -.10 +.63 s
AustraliaDollar BritainPound CanadaDollar ChilePeso ChinaYuan EuroEuro HongKongDollar
Japan Yen MexicoPeso RussiaRuble So. KoreaWon SwedenKrona SwitzerlndFranc TaiwanDollar
1.0246 1.6071 1.0219 .0020 6 .1595 1.2941 .1290 .012707 .078007 .0322 .000900 J 500 1.0707 .0342
1.0230 1.6073 1.0208 .00204 .1596 1.2958 .1290 .012758 .077702 .0322 .000900 J 495 1.0719 .0342
Selected mutual funds YTD Name NAY Chg%Ret Amer CentumInv: Eqlnc 7 .97 +0.05 +11.7
GblMacAbR 9.99 +0.01 NA FMI Funds: LgCap p 17A5 +0.10 +144 FPA Funds: N ewlnco 10 63 + 21 Gro|Nthl 28.33+024 i153 ColumbiaClassZ: FPACres 28 84 +0.14 +8.6 Acorn Z 30.89 +0.20 +i 3 .5 Ultra 26.45 >0.14 +15.4 AcomlntZ 40.05+0.18+i7.4 Fairholme 31 92+0.56 +37.9 American FundsA: Federated Insll: AmcpAp 21.32 >0.13 i13.7 Credit SuisseComm: AMutlAp 28.48+0.22 +12.0 ComRett 8.37 -0.09 +2.3 TotRetBd u64 -001 +6.1 StrValDvlS 515+004 +9.2 BalAp 20.31 +0.12 +13.2 DFA Funds: BondAp 1298 +56 IntlCorEq 1007+008 +11.3 Fidelity Advisor A: 12.28+009 +15.4 Nwlnsgh p2304+014 +16.8 CaplBAp 5314+024 +110 USCorEq1 CapWGA p3634 +0.25 +15.5 USCorEq212.11 +009 +156 StrlnA 1279+002 +9.1 Fidelity Advisor I: CapWAp 21.61 +0.01 +7.4 DavisFundsA: EupacA p 39.84+0.25 i1 3.3 NYVen A 36.22 +0.06 +11.4 Nwlnsgtl 2336+0.14+170 Fidelity Freedom: Y: FdlnvA p 40.22 +0.33 i14.8 Davis Funds G ovtA p 14.60 + 2 . 2NYVenY 36 66 +006 +11.7 FF2010 14.34 +0.04 +9.8 A: FF2010K 13.14+0.04 +99 GwthA p 33.84 +0.25 +17.8 Delaware Invest + 6 . 4FF2015 11.99 +0.03+100 Hl TrA p 11 27 +0.01 +11.9 D iverlnc p 9.47 Dimensional Fds: FF2015K 13.21 +0.04 +10.1 IncoAp 1808+0.10 +109 IntBdAp 1380 +27 EmMCrEq19.16 +0.12 +12.6 FF2020 14.53 +0.05 +11.1 ICAA p 30.76 +0.22 +15.0 EmMktV 28.68 +0.23 +11.8 FF2020K 13.64+0.04 +11.1 NEcoAp 28.42 +0.13 +19.5 IntsmVa 1502+009 +125 FF2025 12.11 +0.05 +12.3 NPerAp 30.52+0.26 +16.7 LargeC0 1137+009 +164 FF2025K 13.80 +0.05+12.3 NwWrldA 52.61+0.18 +14.1 USLgVa 2257+020 +194 FF2030 14.42 +0.06 +12.6 SmCpAp 39.35+0.17 +18.6 US Small 23 25 +016 +14.1 FF2030IC 13.95+0.05 +i 2.7 TxExA p 13.16 +0.01 +8.1 US SmVa26.84 +018 +i6.4 FF2035 11.95 +0.06 +13.5 WshA p 31 43 +0.21 +1 2.5 IntlsmCO15.19 +0.08 +11.7 FF2035K 14.04+0.06 +13.6 F ixd 1 0.35 +0. 9 FF2040 8.34 +0.04 +13.5 Arlisan Funds: Intl 2 3 75 +0.20 9.8+1IntVa 15.70 i0.14 +9.3 FF2040K 14.08 +0.06+13.6 + 4 . 5Fidelity Invest: IntlValr 2899+0.20 +155 G lb5Fxlnc 11.28 +0. 9 AIISectEq 13.05+0.11 +16.2 MidCap 3805+0.27 +155 2 YGIFxd 10.13 AMgr50 16.38 +0.06+10.4 MidCapVal2119+010 +7.6 Dodge&Cox: Baron Funds: Balanced 7703+047 +15.7 AMgr20r 13.39+0.02 +6.4 Growth 5736 +0.37 +12.4 Income 1391 +002 +75 Balanc 20.21 +0.12+12.5 Bernstein Fds: intlStk 3298+031 +128 BalancedK20.21+0.12 +12.7 IntDur 14.27 +0.01 +5.2 Stock 119.75 +0.96 +i9.4 BlueChGr49.96+0.42 +17.8 CapAp 29.85 +0.31+21.2 a vMu 14.92 +3. 0 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.41 NA Cplnc r 9.42 +0.02 +13.6 BlackROck A: NA Contra 79.07 +0.48 +17.2 Eqtyav 20.14 +0.12 +12.0 TRBdNp 11.40 GIAIA r 19.58 +0.08 +8.5 Dreyfus: ContraK 79.08 +0.48 +17.3 BlackRockB&C: Aprec 45 28 +0 36 +13.1 DisEq 24.66 +0.20 +14.6 GIAICt 18.20+0.07 +7.9 EatonVanceI: Divlntl 2907 +0.16 +139 BlackRockInsll: FltgRt 9.1 0 +7. 0 DivrslntK r 2906+016 +141 Equityov 20.19 i0.12 i12.2 GlbAllocr 19.68 i0.08 +8.8 Cohen &Steers: RltyShrs 67 87 +0 48+13.3
DivGth 30.12 +0.22 +17.2 500ldxAdv51.06 +0.41+16.5 Intlr 5 9 .41 +0.56 +13.3 Lord Abbelt A: GlobA p 61.36 +0.46+13.5 Pioneer FundsA Eq Inc 47.35 +0.35 +17.0 TotMktAdr41.80 i032 +16.1 HarlfordFdsA: Aff>IA p 11.99 >0.10 +15.1 GblstrlncA 4.32 + 1 1.1 PionFdA p 42.07 +0.34 +9.8 EQII 1 9.79 +0.17 +15.7 U SBond I 11.96 +4. 2 CpAppAp 3309 +035 +148 BdoebAp 809+001 +11.2 IntBdA p 6.57 +0.01 +9.1 Price Funds: Fidel 3624 +0.32 +17.0 First Eagle: Harfford HLSIA: ShourlncA p465 + 5 .8 MnStFdA 37.82 +0.35 +17.6 BIChip 45.82+0.39 +1 8.6 FltRateHir 995 +59 GlblA 49.43 +0 22 +9 6 CapApp 42.50 +0.38+14.3 Lord Abbelt C: asingavA1743+0.13+122 CapApp 23.33t0.10 +13.1 GNMA 1183 -001 +30 OverseasA 22.27 +0.07 i9.4 IVA Funds: S hourlncCt4.68 + 5 . 2S&MdCpVI31 25 +0.24 +5.5 Em MktS 32.44 i0.13 +13.8 Wldwider1618 I +004 +53 LordAbbelte Go|Nnc 1064 +2. 7 Forum Funds: OppenheimerB: Eqlnc 26.29i0.16 +15.8 GroC0 97.45 +075 +20.5 Absstrlr 11.24 -0.01 +1.7 InvescoFundsA: ShtDurlnco 464 +5.6 RisingoivB15.V +0.1 2 +11.5 Eqlndex 38.83+0.31 +16.2 Frank/Temp Frnk k Chart p 17.94 +0.09 +11.8 MFS Funds A: Grolnc 21.32 +0.18 +18.5 S&MdCpVI26.41+0.20 +4.8 Gmwlh 37.95+0.32 +1 9.2 GrowCoF 97.48 +0.75+20.6 FedTFAp 12.76+0.01 +82 CmstkA 17.67 +0.17 +17.5 TotRA 15.26 +0.06 +10.8 OppenheimerC&M: HlthSci 43 81+0 24 +34.4 Grow(hCO K97.46 +0.75+20.6 GrwlhAp 50.02 +0.31+12.1 EqlncA 9.29 +0.05 +13.2 ValueA 25.65 +0.17 +16.0 RisingDvCp15.70+0.1 2 +11.6 HiYield 6 92 +0.01 +12.7 Highlnc r 9.31 +0.01+12.7 HYTFA p 10.94 +1 0.1 GrlntAp 21 26+0.18 +156 MFS FundsI: Oppenheimer Boch: InstlCpG 1886+0.1 7 +1 70 I ntBd i ' l.16 +4 6 IncomAp 2.24 +0.01 +12.5 HYMuA 1010 +0.01 +124 jtaluel 25 77 +0 18 +16.3 R I:NtMuA 756 +16 3 IntlBond 10.20-001 +66 I ntmMU 1068 +4. 6 asovAp 37.74 +0.26 +8.4 Ivy Funds: MainStayFundsA: OppenheimerY: Intl G&l 1263+009 +96 IntlDiSC 31 85 +016 +154 Stratlnc p 10.71 +002 +10.3 AssetSCt 24.33+0.09 +12.5 H iYldBA 6.10 +1 0 9 DevMktY 3396 +0.13 +172 IntlStk 13 96+011 +136 InvGrBd 1170 +54 USGovAp 685 -001 +1 6 AssetstA p25.18 +0.09 +13.1 ManagessFunds: IntlBIY 657+0.01 +9.5 MidCap 5858+032 +111 InvGB 8.01 +5. 9 Frank/TmpFrnkAdv: AssetStrl r 25.43 +0.08 +13.3 Yacktmanp19 22 +0.11 +11.2 IntGrowY 29.56+0.23 +15.8 MCapVal 2525+015 +180 LgCapVal 11.51 +0.10+14.3 GlbBdAdvx13.41+0.01 +12.7 JPMorgan AClass: YacktFOC2064+013 +10.5 PIMCOAdmin PIMS: N Asia 1630 +006 +172 LowP r 39.06 +0.22 +14.4 IncmeAd 2.22 i0.01 +12.8 CoreBdA 1215+0.01 +4.7 ManningSNapierFds: T otRtAd 11.59 +9. 1 NewEra 4411 +023 +49 PIMCO Instl PIMS: LowPnK r39.04 +0.22 +14.5 Frank/Temp Frnk C: JP MorganInstl: WldoppA 7.51 +0.07 +i3.3 N Honz 3579+023 +15.3 r11 23 + 14.6 Magelln 74.64 +0.64+18.8 IncomCt 2.26 +001 +119 MdCpVal 28.00 +0.20 +17.9 M ergerFd 15.96 + 2 . 4AIASetAut N Inc 9 9 7 -001 +56 JPMorgan RCl: Metro Wesl Fds: AIIAsset 1271 +001 +12.6 QverS MidCap 29.83 +0.11 +14.2 Frank/Temp Mll A&B: SF 8.25 +0.06 +12.7 1215 + 5 0 TotRetBd 1106 + 1 0.0ComodRR 700 -008 +9.6 R2010 16.71+0.07 +11.3 M unilnc 13.57 +7 . 1 SharesA 22.49 +0.15+14.3 C oreBond NwMktr 1783+006+172 Frank/Temp Tempk JPMorganSelCls: TotRtBdl 11.06 +0.01 +10.2 Divlnc 1225 +0.01 +12.7 R2015 13.01+0.06 +12.3 EmgMkCur1053+0.01 +74 R2020 18.03+0.10 +13.3 OTC 6064+036+109 GIBdApx 13.45 +001 +125 CoreBd 12.14 +0.01 +4.9 MorganStanley Inst 100lndex 1040+008+179 GrwthAp 18.85 +0.14 +157 aghYld 8.14 +001 +12.1 MCapGrl 34.97+0.21 +6.2 EmMkBd 12.41+0.02+14.3 R2025 13.21+0.07 +14.1 Puntn 1962 +0.11 +137 WorldAp 1571 +013 +143 S htourBd 1102 + 16 Mutual Series: HiYld 9 .57 +0.02 +11.9 R2030 18.99+0.13 +14.8 PuntanK 19.62 +0.11 +13.9 Frank/TempTmpB&C: USLCCrPls2316 +0.18 +173 GblDiscA 3000+0.18 +12.2 InvGrCp 11.34 + 13.3 R2035 13.43+0.09 +15.2 SAIISecEqF1 3.07 +0.11 +16.4 GIBdC px 13.48>0.01+12.1 Janus r shrs: GlbDiscZ 30.44+0.19 +12.5 L owou 10.65 +5 . 6 R2040 19.11+0.13 +15.3 SCmdtystN9.21 -0.10 +2.8 GE Elfun S&S: PrkMCVal T22.03+0.12 +9.1 SharesZ 22.70 +0.14 i14.5 R ealRtnl 12.62 +8 . 7 ShtBd 4.86 +2.7 SCmdtyStrF9.24 -0.10 +3.0 US rqtr 45.31 +039 +169 John HancockCI1: Neuberger&BermFds: ShortT 9.89 +3.0 SmCpStk 35.82+0.26 +14.6 SrslntGrw n.64 +007 +15.1 GMO TruslIII: LSBalanc 1354+006 +122 Geneslnst 4979+021 +7.2 TotRt 11.59 +9. 3 SmCapVal 38.80 +0.29 +12.5 SrslntVal 913 +006 +130 Quahty 23.90 +0.19 +14.6 LSGrwth 1349+008 +'l33 NorthernFunds: PIMCOFundsA: Specln 13.03+0.01 +9 2 SrlnvGrdF 11.70 -001 +54 GMO TruslIV: Lazard Instl: HiYFxlnc 7.47 NA RealRtAp 1262 +84 Value 26 53 +025 +17.7 Oakmark Fundsl: STBF 8 6 0 +2 2 IntllntrVI 2020 +0.15 +8.1 EmgMktl 1938 +005 +154 T otRtA u 59 +9. 0 Principal Inv: Vl: Longleaf Partner: EqtylnCr 2923+011 +S.1 PIMCOFundsC: StratlnC 11.45 +001 +93 GMO Trusl LgCGIIn 10.33 +0.08 +16.3 T otaled 11 04 +6. 1 EmgMktsr11.32+0.05 +98 Partners 3084+0.16 +157 Intl I r 1910 +012 +15.4 T otRtC t 11.59 +8 . 4 Putnam FundsA Oakmark 4950+042+18.7 PIMCOFunds0: USBI 11.96 +4.1 Quahty 23.91 +0.19 +14.6 Loomis Sayles: GrlnA p 14.65i0.14 NA LSBondl 15.09 +0.03 +12.5 Old Weslbury Fds: T Rtn p 1 1.59 +9. 1 Royce Funds: Value 74.34 +0.63 +17.1 GoldmanSachsInsl: Fidelily Sparlan: aYield 7.36 +0.01 +12.9 Strlnc C 15.47 +0.06 +10.3 Globopp 7.52 +0.02 +11.9 PIMCOFundsP: PennMul 11.69 r i0.09 +8.6 500ldxlnv 51.06 +0.41 +16.5 Harbor Funds: LSBOndR 1503+004 +122 GlbSMdCap1 4.63+0 05 +10.6 AstAIIAuthP11 22 +14.5 Premierl r 19.56i0.15 +5.6 500ldx I 51.06 +0.41 +16.5 Bond 13.02 NA StrlncA 1539+006 +109 LQCapStrat 977+006 +11.4 T ot RtnP 11 59 +9 . 3 Schwab Funds: Fidelily Sparl Adv: CaPAplnst42.98 +0.41 +16.5 Loomis Sayles Inv: OppenheimerA: Perm PortFunds: 1000lnv r 40.97+0.32 +15.8 ExMktAd 40.07 r +0.27 +14.3 Intllnvt 58.72 i0.55 +12.9 InvGrBdY12.81+0.02 +11.0 DvMktAp 34.28 +0.14w169 Permannt 49.15 -0.11 +6.6 S&P Sel 22.79i0.18 +16.5
Scout Funds: Intl 31 .75 +0.254.4 +1 Sequoia 16399 i099 +127 TCW Funds: TotRetBdl 10.27 -0.01 +11.7 Templelon Inslit: ForEqs 18.91 i0.10 +11.2 Thornburg Fds:
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E4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
MARKETPLACE
If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323,email business@bendbulletin.corn or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.corn. Pleaseallow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication.
Pizza Hut withdraws prize for stunt at
BUSINESS CALENDAR work with tracking and reporting features to accurately prepare professional estimates and monitor BUSINESSNETWORK your projects; bring a flash drive; INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT cost includes workbook and CEUs; CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: class continues Oct. 19 and Oct. 26; Visitors are welcome and first two $ l99; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Community College, 2600 N.W. Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. 541-420-7377. OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER VISITBEND BOARD MEETING: PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the Open to the public but please email minimum requirements by the Valerie@visitbend.corn to reserve Oregon Liquor Control Commission a seat; 8 a.m.; Bend Visitor Center, to obtain an alcohol server permit; 750 N.W. Lava Road; 541-382 registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; 8048. Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third BUSINESSAFTERHOURS: 4:30 St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or 5:30 p.m.; Comfort Suites, 2243 www.happyhourtraining.corn. S.W. Yew Ave., Redmond. FINANCIALPLANNING AND CROOKEDRIVERRANCH MONEY MANAGEMENT:Call541 TERREBONNE CHAMBEROF 318-7506, ext. 309 to reserve a seat; COMMERCE NETWORKING 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, SOCIAL:Free; 5:30 p.m.; Desert 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541 Meadows Clubhouse, 520 N.E. 548-2380. Shoshone Ave., Redmond; 541-923 LAUNCHYOURBUSINESS: 2679 or www.crrchamber.corn . Designed to help business owners SMALL-BUSINESSCOUNSELING: get off to a good beginning SCORE business counselors will be and develop a working plan; available every Tuesday for free one preregistration is required; the on-one small-business counseling; course combines four one-hour no appointment necessary; free; daytime coaching sessions that 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend start Oct. 8, with three Wednesday Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; evening classes on Oct. 17, Oct. 31 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentral and Nov. 14; $79; 6-9 p.m.; Central oregon.org. Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay, Bend;541-383 7290.
TODAY
WEDNESDAY
PROJECT MANAGEMENT FUNDAMENTALS:Online instruction begins Oct. 17; complete two online lessons each week for six weeks and meet in the classroom Nov. 7and Dec.5; $159;; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383 7270. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541 749-0789. RISK MANAGEMENT — VISION, STRATEGY 8( EXECUTION: A panel of regional bank CEOsshare their perspectives and outlooks; $30 for individuals and $350 for a corporate table of eight; 7:30 a.m.; Seventh Mountain Resort, 18575 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-382 3221 or http: I/bendchamber.erg/ chamber-events/risk-management association/. MS PROJECTBASICS:Manage tasks, timelines and resources and
THURSDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541 610-9125. EXPLORETHEBENEFITS OF WORKING WITHSCHWAB: Free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab 8 Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1 794. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765. WHO WILL MAKEDECISIONS FOR YOU?:Whether due to a brief hospitalization or long-term incapacity, many of us will have a time in our lives when we won't be able to make our own financial or medical decisions; estate planning
and elder law attorneys Ryan Correa and Linda Ratcliffe will discuss the many planning options available and the potential consequences of failing to plan ahead; registration required; free; 6 p.m.; Hurley Re, 747 S.W. Mill View Way, Bend; 541 317-5505.
FRIDAY BALLOT MEASURES 2012: Town hall forum; $30 for members, $40 fornonmembers;7:30 a.m.;Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437 or www.bendchamber.org. COFFEE CLATTER: 8:30-9:30 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. BOOKKEEPINGFOR BUSINESS: Eight-week class meets on Friday mornings and will help you understand and apply entry-level accounting conceptsto keepbooks electronically using QuickBooks Pro; for those with little or no bookkeeping experience who are looking to add employable skills or small-business owners; class continues through Dec. 14; $229 plus textbook; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383 7270. CENTRALOREGONREAL ESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.corn. KNOW COMPUTERS FOR BEGINNERS:Free;1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-31 2-1 050. FREE TAXFRIDAY: Freetax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax .corn; free; 2-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite100, Bend; 541-385-9666. KNOW EMAILFOR BEGINNERS: Free; 3 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1 050.
SATURDAY FORKLIFTOPERATION AND SAFETY:Upon satisfactory completion, forklift operator certification cards will be mailed; must bring valid ID to class and be 18 years old; $69; Ba.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-383
7270. SMARTPHONEANDTABLET WORKSHOP:Free; 6:30-8 p.m.; U.S. Cellular, 1380 S.W. Canal Blvd. Ste. 101, Redmond.
presidential debate By Tiffany Hsn
Though the publicity ploy got Pizza Hut plenty of at L OS ANGELES — A p tention, most of it was nega propriate topics to broach tive. On his show, Stephen during a live, televised presi Colbert s n eered: "What dential debate: The economy. c ould b e mo r e A me r i The jobs situation. Pizza top can than using our e lec pings? Not so much. toral process for p r oduct Pizza Hut has canned its placement?" roundly panned stunt to get On Twitter, users slammed the question "sausage or the company for "hijacking a pepperoni?" asked during presidential debate for mar today's town hall-style event. keting," calling th e e f fort "silly" and "guerrilla mar Instead, the company now plans to run the promotion keting gone awful." Some online. said it was a sure sign that Last week, the pizza pie the U.S. was becoming an purveyor told customers "idiocracy." that it would give away free In a backtracking state pizzas for life — one large ment, the company wrote pie weekly for 30 years — or that its "Pizza Party" effort $15,600 to anyone brave (or was "originally intended for dumb) enough to ask Presi the candidates" but "will now dent Obama or Mitt Romney instead be open to the public their choice of meat. and asked online."
MONDAY
Los Angeles Times
CORC LUNCHEON:CAI-CORC presents discussions about social media and how it affects homeowner associations; registration required before noon on Oct. 18; $20 for CAI-CORCmembers and $25 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382 8436 or www.caioregon.org.
TUESDAY Oct. 23 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. KEEPINGYOUR EMPLOYEES ENGAGED:Registration required; includes lunch; $25 for Chamber members and $45 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437 or www.bendchamber.org. WORKFORCE INCLUSION RECOGNITIONAWARDS:Award presentation to local businesses that support inclusive hiring and presentation about the supports available for businesses to make diversified partnerships successful; with appetizers, beverages and door prizes; free; 5-6:30 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436. SAVING ANDINVESTING: Call 541 318-7506, ext. 309 to reserve a seat; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Neighborlmpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541 548-2380. SMALL-BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free one-on-one small-business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentraloregon.org.
Retail
2 conference call. "The stiffest headwinds are uncertainty, Continued from E1 some of which is related to the Sales climbed 1.3 percent sovereign debt crisis in Eu at automobile dealers, after rope and concerns about the a 1.8 percent increase the pace of growth here at home." prior month, Monday's re Celenia Cruz, a n u r se, port showed. The results are i s among those who a r e in sync with industry figures spending more. She s aid issued earlier this month. she recently got a new job Cars and light trucks sold at Stanford University that at a 14.9 million annual pace came with a big raise. Cruz, in September, the most since who's from San Jose, Calif., March 2008, according to is finishing up a vacation in Ward's Automotive Group. Washington. "I' ve been spending more Chrysler and General Mo tors reported gains. money on clothes and a va "We continue to be encour cation like t his one" she aged by positive signs from satd. "Today ts our last day the housing sector, lower in D.C.; we' ve been here for jobless claims, higher con four days." sumer sentiment and higher Retail sales excluding au consumer spending," Kurt tos increased 1.1percent, the McNeil, GM's vice president most since January, today' s of U.S. sales, said on an Oct. report showed.
NEWS OF RECORD
DEEDS Deschutes County
LawrenceL.and BetsyG.Walker to Kenneth L. andJanie S. Rizzott, Elkhorn Estates, Phase 5, Lot 65, $165,144 Ronald D. and Mary J. Doanta Michael R. and Rhonde S.Reeves, Cottages of Westside Terrace A Condominium Stage 2, Unit 17, $182,500 Wells Fargo BankN.A. to SeanA. Murphy andLarissa C. Primus, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top, Phase 10, Lot 213, $369,500 Bend Equity GroupLLCto Carolyn E. Richardson,Brookland Park, Lot 8, $167,000 Thys Heyneker and Monica T. Heyneker, who acquired title as Monica Tomei, to Rodert L. Farrell and Richard E. Jackson, trustees for Edith M. Farrell-Wasmann Trust,Awbrey Village, Phase 1, Lot 36, $340,000 Edward D. andPatty A. Culver to Gayle A. Knldell,Panoramic View Estates, Lot3,Block4,$349,000 Dnnlap FineHomesInc. to Tina L. andLance P.Lyons,Williamson Park, Lots 2 and 3, Block 2, $183,500 Hayden HomesLLCto Aaron M. Stewart and Jackie L. Holmberg, Aspen Rim No. 2, Lot 191, $204,598 Dayle M. Bailey, trustee for Dayle M. Bailey Living Trust, to RodinL. Long, MountainView Park,Phase 2, Lot 56, $164,000 Janet Gniley to Ayres Properties LLC,Replat of Shevlin Riverfront, Lot 17, $712,000 Craig G. Rnssillo to SFICascade Highlands LLC,Tetherow, Phase1, Lots 70-101, 103-105, 110, 129, 149 153, Phase 3, Lots 115-117, 119-128, 130-139, 142, 144-145, 147, 154 164, 166-1 68, 170-1 81, 183-186, 188-1 89, 191, 194-1 96, 198-201, Phase 4, 203-216, 218-221, Phase 5, Lot 222-260, $20,000,000 Craig G. Rnssilla ta SFI Cascade Highlands LLC,Tetherow, Phase 1, Lot 95, $300,000 Steven C. Sahm, trustee for Steven Cary SahmRevocadle Living Trust, to Benjamin L. andRoberta J. Steward and Donald R. andPenny J. Fraker,Township 16, Range 12, Section 29, $252,900 Frank C. and Lisa M. Teklits to Lane J. Pearson,Boulder Ridge,
Phase 1, Lot 3, $181,400 David L Davisson, trustee for Louis and Harriet DavissonTrust, to Daly Estates Investments LLC,Daly Estates, Lot11, Block1, $190,000 LucindaE.andM ichaelD. Sands, trustees for SandsFamily RevocableTrust,to Joseph W. and Maria R. Kaempf,Mountain Village West 2, Lot11, Block16, $631,000 Timothy P. andPamela D. Martin, William A. and Linda M. Jobe, Alan V. Jones, Tantara J. Phillips, Stephen J. andWinnie R. Miller to Tim L and Barbara J. Velikonia, Eagle Crest, Lot 24, Block 9, $310,000 Richard S. and Mary Y. Dill to Kennethand PaulaSalminen,Lazy River South, Second Addition, Lot 6, Block 22, $180,000 Steven C. andJennifer S. Panlsan to Glenn B. andMary E. Bison, Partition Plat1991-41, Parcel 3, $156,000 Allen G. andCassandra J. Jackson to Kristi L. Thompson,Canal View, Phase 5, Lot 3, $284,000 Jedediah, Danieland Jocelyn Tureck to Jennifer S. Panlson, Canyon Point Estates, Phase 5, Lot 95, $179,900 Dan and Heather Holland to Richard L. andDavid A.Stevens, Fairway Point Village 1, Lot 26, Block1, $460,000 Richard A. andKelly A. Bailey to David S. and Thanittha Green, Tamarack Park East, Phase 7, Lot 1, Block 8, $197,000 Bernard V. Poitras to Ladelle L., Matthew R., Jason J. and Heather R. White, Fairway Point Village 4, Lot 3, Block18, $345,000 Lee S. and Karen S.Wagner to David A. andCynthia J. Morman, Traditions East, Lot 27, $246,000 Christopher M. and GlendaP. Wiser to ColdyHartsell and Emily Gibbons,Wiestoria, Lots 12 and 13, Block 14, $178,000 Jay T. and Karen E.Waldron to Janet S. and Premjeet S. Chopra, North Rim on Awbrey Butte, Phase 1, Lot 7, $183,000 Colin J. and Tamara C. Russell, trustees for Russell Family Living Trust, to Dennis W. Peterson and Yolanda A. Sanchez-Peterson trustees, for Peterson Family Living Trust,Park Addition to Bend, Lot4, Block11, $825,000 StevenA.and Mary B.Jenkins to
Michael and Monica Giamellaro, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 6, Lot 272, $463,000 Larry and CindyWilcox to Andrzaj J. and Marianna Piernicki,Yardley Estates, Phase 5, Lot106, $268,000 Sherry Lavoe to Citimortgage Inc., Boulder Brook, Phase 4, Lot 50, $160,000 Crystal Park Construction LLC to Jnanita Endsley,Alder Glen, Lot 10, $156,238 Al and Marcia Steward to Richard D. and Monique D. Moore, Sundance East, Phase 3, Lot 3, Block 11, $525,000 Pacific Rim FundingInc. to Al and Marcia Steward,Township 16, Range 12, Section 19, $490,000 Peter and Sherryl Adams, trustees for Peter AdamsFamily Trust, to Daniel L and Joanne W.Leffel, Mountain View Park, Phase 2, Lot 107, $168,500 Wayne C. andRobbye E. Pnrves to Kevin M. West,Orion Estates, Lot 25, Block 9, $166,000 Conrtney Spitzer to Johnand Mary L. Chadwick,Boulevard Addition to Bend, Lot14, Block14, $160,000 Wells Fargo BankN.A. to Kevin R. and Krista D. Laninger,Woodside Ranch, Phase 1, Lots 12 and 13, Block 4 $515,000 Paul D. and Mara A. Still to Manasseh V. Phillips,Stonehaven, Phase 1, Lot 6, $185,000 LSI Title of OregonLLCto U.S. Bank N.A.,Vandevert Acres South, Lot1, Block15, $249,183.22 Shirley J. Sands toLeanneT. Raderts,Williamsburg Park, Lot 2, $245,100 Michael F. Schndert and William B. Gnral ta Shawn M. Alfara,Aubrey Heights, Lots27 and 28,Block2, $265,900 Rodin Laughlin andJeffrey Fnchs to Deborah Gregoire,Valhalla Heights, Phase 2, Lot13, Block 4, $249,000 Perry D. andRosario logan to Kimberly A. P. andRobert A. Hagner,Awbrey Park, Phase 1, Lot 32, $605,000 Shirley A. Chiantelli, trustee for Shirley AnnChiantelli Living Trust, to Karen A. Gook,Phoenix Park, Phase 3, Lot 39, $246,500 Robert L. and Patricia A. Beck to Cecil E. and Lais A. Rath,Ridge at Eagle Crest 41, Lot 26, $610,000
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Show your appreciation to your customers by than'.ng them in a group space ad that vvill run
Nov. 22nd, Thanksgiving Day, the most-rend paper of the yenv! This special one page group ad will showcase your business along with a message of thanks to your customers.
Ad sizes are 3.33" x 2.751" and are only 8 9
in cl u d ing full colo<".
ONLY 18 SPOTS WILL BE AVAILABLE! Deadline for ad. spaceand. copy: Thursday, November 15, 2012 Publishes on Thursday, November 22nd
I
1
Contact your Bulletin Advertising Representative for more information Tonya McKiernan: 541-617-7865 email: tmckiernan@wescompapers.corn
Nena Close: 541-383-0302 email: nclose@wescompapers.corn
www.bendbulletin.corn
Food, F2-3 Home, F4
Ask Martha, F6
Recipe Finder, F6
Garden, F5
© www.bendbulletin.corn/athome
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
Do you makegreat cookies?
• Traditional (this category will
Bulletin, At Home, RO. Box 6020,
The Bulletin wants to know. The At Home section is hosting
include snickerdoodle, peanut but Bend,OR 97708.Individuals may
a cookie contest. Grand prize is a two night stay on theOregon
ies that people arefamiliar with) • Nontraditional/wacky (this cat egory is for cookies with unusual ingredients or preparations) There will also be asepa
of cookies. Those entering thecompeti
Coast, location to be determined. The winners will be determined
by a panel of judges onNov.16. Those entering mustregister
by Nov. 9. Cookies will be divided into sev eral categories: • Chocolate chip • Bar • Decorated
ter, oatmeal raisin and other cook
submit up to three different kinds tion must bring six cookies to
The Bulletin for judging.Cookie submissions will beacceptedthe
rate category for youth 16 and
evening of Nov. 15 (up until 7:30
younger. To register, email the following
p.m.) or the morning of Nov.16 (between 8and10 a.m.).
info to athome@bendbulletin.
All of the winning recipes will be published, alongside photos of the
corn:name, typeofcookieand contact information. Registra tion can also be mailed to: The
winning cookies, in the AtHome section.
• Questions?Contact Alandra Johnsonat 541-617-7860 or ajohnsonObendbulletin.corn.
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Thinketock
HOME GARDEN
DIY
Adventures: dnvewap blacktop Editor's note:This is an installment of the bimonthly featureDIYAdventures, in which reporter Penny Nakamura tackles a home project and reports about the process.
I .Qn.'
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By Penny Nakamura For The Bulletin
I want to make a full con fession from the start: This particular do-it-yourself proj ect was so challenging, I only finished one-third of it. I was attempting to blacktop my 2,300-square-foot driveway that also included an uphill area. As you may know by now, these DIY articles are quite an adventure, and the expert consultants become my best friends for a week, as I dial up their cellphone numbers and frantically ask their advice. This usually happens after a mistake. Central Oregon Asphalt Sealing owner Zach Russell was no different, even taking my panicked calls while he was on vacation with his wife. I should've known this was a big job to tackle, as Russell initially warned me that most DIY homeown ers who attempt to blacktop usually only have 500 to 600 square feet of driveway — mine was almost four times that size. See Driveway/F4
Marietta Gallagher/The Bulletin
Maureen Klecker created hanging basketsfor Deschutes Brewery's downtown Bend pub after looking at pictures of European window baskets.
• I
6 ICJES BREWER',.
FOOD
Roast and freeze:
peppersnow, pepperslater By janRoberts-Dominguez For The Bulletin
Over here in the Willa mette Valley, those of us who have been growing sweet bell peppers have been dealing with abundance. Even now, the third week of October, those prolific plants are taunting us: I'm still produc ing ... what are you gonna do about that? Of course, even you Central Oregon folk are benefiting from the bounty, either di rectly through your weekly farmers markets or indirectly in theproduce section ofyour favoritegrocery store.So many peppers, yet so little time to deal with them. Well, I say roast 'em! Then freeze 'em. That's the solution to taming an abundant pep
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
"I really want to see color in Bend. That's what it's all about,"said Maureen Klecker, who began managing the Deschutes Brewery gardens 12 to 15 years ago.
• GARDEN OFTHE MONTH: MaureenI(lecker cultivates a palette for the DeschutesBrewery andother local businesses Editor's note:The At Home section features a garden profile each month during the gardening season. To suggest a garden forthe profile,email athomeibendbulletin.corn. By Marielle Gallagher The Bulletin
Maureen Klecker was 27 years old and working winters at Mt. Bachelor ski area when she decided that she needed to secure summer work. She placed an ad in The Bulletin that read: "Lawns Mowed. Call Maureen. Responsible Adult" and in two weeks had more clients than she could handle.
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website:
O bendbulletin.corn/athometour "I charged five dollars for the first lawn I mowed." A fter couple a ofyears of contentedly staying busy mowing lawns, two elderly women she worked for told her it was time to start weeding their garden beds. "So they started pointing out the dif ference between a weed and perennial, and they'd give me a whack if I got it wrong." From learning to weed, the lessonsgrew to include propa
gating seeds, dividing iris and pruning roses. Eventually Klecker started taking land scaping classes and "today I'm a professional landscaper after 30 years." Klecker designs and main tains gardens for multiple lo cal residents and businesses, including Pine Tavern, where she's cared for the garden for 25 years, and Deschutes Brew ery, where Bend residents have likely noticed the brightly colored garden nestled around the stone Deschutes Brewery sign at the Colorado and Simp son roundabout.
See Hues/F5
Marielle Gallagher/The Bulletin
Klecker says yellow flowers make a big difference in creat ing a striking color palette.
per population. SeePeppers/F2
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Linguine with Roasted Peppers and Hazelnuts,F2
• Romesco Sauce,F2
• Simple Roasted RedPepperSauce with Black Olives and Garlic,F2
• Roasted Sweet Pepper Crostini with Muffuletta Garlic-Olive Relish,F2
• Mushroom Benedict, F3 • Chorizo Benedict F3 • Reuben Benedict,F3
• Irish Cheddar and Ale Pub Cheese,F6 • Pork Chops with Apples and Cider,F6
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F2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
Fooo
Nextweek:Spooky Halloween eats
Roasting and freezing sweet bell peppers: One method would be to pierce eachpepper in several places with a sharp knife to avoid bursting, then place them on the bak
ing sheet. Place thepepper under abroiler and broil, turning sev eral times, until it has blackened over most of its surface.
Alternatively, you could blacken peppers over agas flame on your stove top by spearing eachpepper with a fork (pierce each pepper in several places with a sharp knife to avoid bursting); rotate the pepper as it blackens. This method is somewhat time
consuming, so I don't recommend it if you are roasting very many peppers. Another method is to simply place the pierced peppers onyour grill over hot coals and roast, turning as they blacken, until they are thoroughly blackened.
Once the peppers havebeenroasted, let cool and then peel away the blackenedskin. Slice the peppers open, removethe stem and seeds. Don't worry if some of the skin is too stubborn to
slip away from the fleshy portion. As long asyou get the majority of the skin, it's fine.
To freeze, arrange thepeeled peppers on aparchment-lined baking sheet and place them in the freezer until they are firm.
Place the individually frozen peppers in resealable freezer bags and keep frozen for up to 9 months or longer (but quality may suf fer a bit if your freezer doesn't get below 0degrees F). To use your frozen cache ofpeppers, simply removethe desired number of them for a given recipe and thaw at room tem perature until soft. They will release a bit of juice during the thaw
Linguine with Roasted Peppers and Hazelnuts Makes 4 servings. 3 oz chunk of Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, cut into pieces 4 red bell peppers (or a combination of red and yellow), roasted and peeled (as described) About '/e C fresh basil leaves ~/4 C extra-virgin olive oil 2 cloves fresh garlic, peeled
'/4 tsp salt ~/4 tsp coarsely ground black pepper '/4 tsp red pepper flakes 12 oz linguine (either dried or fresh) '/4 C coarsely chopped roasted hazelnuts (or pine nuts) Additional shredded Parmesan (to pass at the table)
Place the cheese chunks in a food processor and grind using the pulse button so that you don't over-process the cheese. Add the roast ed peppers, basil, olive oil, garlic, salt, pepper, and red pepper flakes. Continue processing until the mixture is ground to a coarse sauce con sistency (chunks will remain). Adjust the seasoning, adding additional salt and pepper if necessary, then scrape the sauce into a bowl and set aside. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the pasta and cook just until tender. Drain the pasta from the water (reserving about '/8 cup of the hot pasta water, which you will add to the sauce when tossing with the
pasta). Place thecooked anddrained pasta in a large bowl. Add the sauce
Andy Tnllie The Bulletin
and toss well to coat the linguine. If the mixture seems a bit dry, add a couple of tablespoons of the hot pasta water. Add the hazelnuts and toss
again before serving.
ing process, so thaw them on adish or plate so you don't lose that delicious juice!
Additional cheese may be passed at the table.
Romesco Sauce Simple Roasted Red Pepper Sauce with Black Olives and Garlic Makes about 2 cups. This is a delicious spread to use ontoasted rounds of a crusty baguette.
Makes about 3 cups. I' ve shared this recipe before and amdoing so again since it's been such a fantastic year for peppers. Romesco isoneof mymost favorite sauces. And it freezes beautifully. Not familiar with it? Well, it's a sauce that has the con
sistency of pesto andthe reddish hue of aTuscan sunset. It's a melange of 4 Ig (or 6 med) roasted and peeled red bell peppers 2 TBS extra-virgin olive oil 1 med yellow onion, finely chopped 3 fresh cloves of garlic, peeled and finely chopped
'/e C coarsely chopped black olives 1 TBS chopped fresh basil (or a dollop of pesto)
roasted tomatoes and peppers, olive oil, roasted hazelnuts and fried bread, and enhances the delicate flavors of grilled prawns and vegetables, looks
t/4 tsp salt
Gouda. When stirred into a seafood stew or spooned over freshly-grilled halibut or scallops, it elevates the flavor profile in an elegant, understated
'/4 tsp red pepper flakes
and tastes fabulous whentossed with creamy-white pasta, and adds arich dimension to a simple appetizer of fresh ciabatta bread and extra-aged way. It keeps for several weeks in the refrigerator.
Dice the red peppers, reserving any juice that accumulates.
About 2 TBS olive oil, divided Heat the oil over medium heat in a medium-large skillet. Add the onion 1 Ib Roma tomatoes (4 med) and garlic and saute, stirring often, until the onion is tender and trans 1 red sweet bell pepper, lucent, about 8 minutes. Add the peppers, olives, basil, salt and pepper roasted as previously flakes, along with any reserved juice (if there is no pepper juice, then add described about 3 tablespoons of dry white wine or chicken broth). Cover and sim 2 (1-inch thick) slices of mer the mixture over medium-low heat for about 10 minutes, just so the an Italian-style bread flavors marry and the peppers arevery tender. (measuring approximately The sauce may be used immediately or refrigerated for about a week 6 inches by 3 inches in (or frozen for several months). diameter), such as ciabatta or pugliese 1 C roasted and skinned hazelnuts
Andy Tullie The Bulletin
Peppers
on a grill. Whatever method, the result should always be the Continued from F1 same: a lovely layer of bubbled Besides, I love the smell of and charred skin. roasting peppers — whether Once they' ve achieved that they' re resting on a b a king blackened state, just l eave sheet in my oven, pierced with them be u ntil t h ey' re cool a fork and suspended over a gas enough to handle and then burner on my stove, or dangling simply scrape away the paper above glowing mesquite coals thin charred exterior, giving not a second thought to the few stubborn bits of blackened skin still clinging to the flesh — which actually provide the subtle note of authenticity to the process. This is the point when I cut into them and remove the seeds and stem. If you have a lot of sweet bell peppers to roast, then when you' ve done so, simply lay them flat on a parchment-lined baking sheet and place them in the freezer until they' re frozen. Once firm, they canbe placed in a re-seal able freezer bag and put back in the freezer for months and months and months. With roasted peppers in the freezer you can make so many wonderful sauces, spreads and soups through the entire au tumn, winter and spring. Until you run out, of course. — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallis food writer, cookbook author and artist. Contact: janrd@proaxis.corn
HWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. (1 block West of Costco)
541-323-3011 • starks.corn
3 garlic cloves, crushed and peeled 1 to 2 tsp red pepper flakes 1 tsp Spanish paprika ~/2 tsp ground chipotle chile pepper (McCormtck sells one in the spice aisle) '/2 tsp salt d/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper d/4 C red wine or sherry vinegar '/2 C extra-virgin olive oil Hot water, if needed
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Pool one tablespoon of olive oil on a baking sheet and place it in the oven while it is preheating. Halve the tomatoes lengthwise, cut out the
core from each half. Whenthe oven is hot, remove the baking sheet from the oven and place the tomato halves in the oil, cut-side up. Coat the sur face of each tomato half with a bit more oil, which will help with browning.
Cook for about 15 minutes, then turn the tomatoes over, cut-side down and continue roasting until the tomato skins begin to darken, crack and pull away from the flesh. Remove from oven and set aside until they' re
cool enough to handle. Meanwhile, heat the remaining 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a heavy-bot tomed skillet (you can use a non-stick skillet, but it won't impart quite as
much toasted flavor to the bread). Fry the bread until golden brown and crisp on both sides. Remove from skillet and let cool.
Pluck the peeland core from the cooled tomatoes, reserving the juices. Place the fleshand juice in the food processor. Peel, coreand seedthe pep per, reserving the juice. Place the flesh and juice in the food processor. Add
the bread, toasted hazelnuts, garlic, red pepper flakes, paprika, ground chipotle chile pepper, salt and black pepper. Process until smooth (it will have a somewhat grainy appearance because of the nuts). With the ma chine running, add the vinegar. Let the motor run for a moment then stop 1i ty-,c p r ,
it and scrape downthe sides of the bowl. Turn the motor back on andadd
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the t/2cup of extra-virgin olive oil in a slow, steady, very thin stream. The sauce will thicken slightly and hold together in a rich, rusty-colored orange/
uh
red. If the sauceseemstoo thick (it should have asoft pesto consistency), then with the machine running, drizzle in some hot water. Taste and make
sure the saucehas plenty of piquancy and enough salt. If desired, with the machine running, add additional vinegar and salt. Romesco saucecan be
r
prepared and refrigerated for at least a week (I' ve even used batches of it at
~,4Lz;,-'' Photo courtesy Karl Maaedam
Romesco saucecombines roasted tomatoes and peppers, olive oil, roasted hazelnuts and bread, and it freezes well.
the end of 2weeks). Bring to roomtemperature before using. Note on roasted red peppers:If you want to trim a bit of labor from the project, you could use astore-bought roasted and peeled red pepper. More uses foryourromescosauce: Serve over grilled lamb, fish and vegetables, or in a bowl alongside breadand roasted spring onions. Also delicious as a sandwich spread or a dipping sauce for asparagus. Stir it into seafood stews andvegetable soups. — Recipe from "OregonHazelnut Country — the Food, the Drink, the Spirit," by Jan Roberts-Dominguez
Sewing Machine Repair 8 Service
Roasted Sweet Pepper Crostini with Muffuletta GarlieOlive Relish Makes 20 hors d'oeuvres. 2 roasted red sweet bell peppers (or 1 red and 1 yellow)
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1 French or Italian baguette, sliced into 20 '/4-inch thick slices 1 C Muffuletta Garlic-Olive Relish (see recipe)
2 balls (each about 6- to 8-ounces) fresh mozzarella cheese, sliced into 20 ~/4-inch thick pieces
If frozen, thaw the roasted peppers, then slice into thin strips and set aside.
Arrange the bread slices on abaking sheet and place them under the broiler to toast for about 40 seconds on each side, just enough time so they begin to blush golden brown; remove the bread from the oven. When ready to serve, spread a small amount of the Muffuletta Garlic-Olive Relish on each piece of the bread
(crostini). Cover with a slice of the cheese,and then top with two strips of the pepper to form anX. Return the crostini to the broiler and broil for about 30 seconds, just to soften the cheese. Serve immediately.
Muffuletta GarlieOlive Relish (for the Roasted Sweet Pepper Crostini) Makes1 cup. i
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Stoves ' Fireplaces ' Spas Grills • Patio Furniture 424 NE Third St., Bend •
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This is such a marvelous concoction, with roots in New Orleans, where the muffuletta sandwich — a hearty combination of Italian-style meats and cheeses, slathered with a rich olive and garlic relish — was created de
cades ago. However, this is also awonderful mixture in its own right. Simply place the relish in a bowl alongside slices of a crusty baguette for a simple appetizer. '/2 C coarsely chopped pimiento-stuffed olives ~/2 C coarsely chopped pitted black olives '/4 C coarsely chopped red onion
'/4 C minced fresh flat-leaf parsley 2 TBS balsamic vinegar 1 TBS minced garlic
1 heaping tsp drained and rinsed capers d/4 tsp dried oregano '/4 tsp ground black pepper '/t C extra-virgin olive oil
Place the olives, onion, parsley, vinegar, garlic, capers, oregano and black pepper in the workbowl of a food processor. Pulse the mixture until the ingredients are finely chopped. Add the olive oil and continue processing until the mixture is thoroughly chopped but not pureed. This mixture will keep for weeks in the refrigerator.
FOO D
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
F3
CRACKING THEBENEDICT CODE
By Regina Schrambling Special to The Washington Post
Usually when I see eggs Benedict on a menu my eye skips to the next anything. Brunch is where cliches go to molder, and this is one of the weariest: a dish allegedly invented to alleviate a hang over, inevitably h ash-slung by cooks battling their own hangovers. At its most tradi tional it's uninspiring; taken to poorlyexecuted extremes it can induce what the French describe as crise de foie, that singular liver stress brought on by the likes of a stick of butter converted into hollan
daise atop poached eggs on bacon on a buttered English muffin. To put it more con cisely: boring, with fries. So when I saw the phrase "Irish Benedict" on a menu the other week, followed by "corned beef/Swiss/poached egg/Thousand Island hollan daise,n I had to order it. An obvious knockoff of a Reu ben sandwich would surely involve not just creativity but acidity to counter the rich ness. And it c onvinced me that eggs Benedict is one clas sic made to be reinterpreted at home. Swap in chorizo and lime hollandaise, or cremini mushrooms and red pepper hollandaise, and it's a whole new brunch. Eggs Benedict ar e d e f i nitely more fit for company than some overnight egg-and bread casserole upgraded to "strata" and decidedly more impressive than store-bought croissants. Even if you only make enough for two, the trip from stove to table is so much faster than floundering in Yelp to decide where poached eggs and hollandaise are fit to eat. Eggs Benedict i s a l most kitchen Legos; there are so many ways to put it together yourself. The hollandaise is
crucial, but the only t r icky p art is m a king i t a n d n o t breaking it. I'm the timid type, so I do it i n a n i m provised double-boiler, with a s t ain less-steel bowl set over barely bubbling water in a saucepan. It's just a m atter of b lend ing a room-temperature egg yolk with lemon or lime juice until the egg starts to cook, then whisking in melted but ter off the heat until the sauce emulsifies. Most recipes yield oceans of hollandaise, but it's pos sible to whip up enough for a mere two orfour servings. And because hollandaise is one of those mother sauces that spawn a dozen others, it can be flavored many ways very simply. (Choron is toma to added to bearnaise, which itself is t a rragon added to hollandaise.) As the base for any Bene dict, an English muffin does an ideal job of capturing oozy eggs and buttery sauce. But you can make nice, absorbent corn muffins or biscuits fast from scratch; if you were feel ing particularly extravagant, you could use puff pastry in stead. For the Reuben, though, rye bread is key against the corned beef and Swiss. A nd then t h ere ar e t h e all-important poached eggs. Chef Michel Richard, whose t echnique i s i l l u strated i n an accompanying video at washingtonpost.corn/food, prefers to start with eggs at room temperature, but I'm in the straight-from-refrigerator
Reuben Benedict Makes 2 servings. Heat up the corned beef by placing the slices in a small nonstick skil let, perhaps with a little chicken broth; cover and gently steam. FOR THE EGGS: 4 Ig eggs, as fresh as possible, straight from the refrigerator % tsp cider vinegar or distilled white vinegar 4 slices rye bread, toasted 6 oz sliced, lean corned beef, heated 4 slices Swiss cheese (4 oz total) Cornichons, for garnish FOR THE SAUCE: 5 TBS unsalted butter 1 TBS ketchup 'ya tsp Sriracha sauce '/4 tsp Worcestershire sauce 1 TBS pickle relish Freshly squeezed juice from 'A lemon (1% TBS) 'tr tsp Dijon-style mustard 1 Ig egg yolk, at room temperature Salt For the eggs: Line a wide bowl with a few layers of paper towels. Fill a
saucepanorskilletwithabout3inches 'z,
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me d ium or medium-low, theso water is barely bubbling at the edges. Workingin batches as needed,
gently break theeggs into individual teacups, custardcupsor ramekins. Use aspatula or spoonto swirl the
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water a few times. Hold the side of the
egg container asclose aspossible to
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the surface of the water andslide each
egg in. Use the spatula or spoon to
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camp. In either case, they should be super-fresh. (I had wildly different results using eggs bought at Whole Foods with an expiration date a month off and with the eggs I had bought at a farmers market a week earlier; the former spun off into white threads.)
of water. Bring to a boil over high heat. Add the vinegar and reducethe heatto
"shape" the white around the yolk as needed. Cook for 2 to 4 minutes, de
pending on how runnyyou like your eggs. Use aslotted spoon totransfer to the lined bowl.
Trim off any"threads" if necessary before serving. For the sauce: Fill a medium Photos byDebLindsey i For The Washington Post Sauoepan With a few Inohes Of Waiel,
Simply using lime juice instead of lemon juicein the hollandaise sauce brings the flavors of this a Mexican-inspired chorizo Benedict together.
nd h eat over medium heat or until the water is barely bubbling at the
edges.Adjust theheatto medium-low if needed. Place a metal bowl on the
saucepan(tocreateadouble boiler). Meanwhile, melt the butter in a
Makes 4 servings.
small skillet or saucepan over low
You' ll need four 6- or 8-ounce custard cups or ramekins for baking the muffins, and a small cup for transferring heat. Whisk together the ketchup,
the eggs to the poaching water. Thediced chorizo can bewarmed in a skillet over medium-low heat. FOR THE MUFFIN BASE: 7 TBS melted unsalted butter 'A C stone-ground yellow cornmeal '/4 C flour 'A tsp baking powder 'A tsp baking soda 'h tsp kosher salt % C cooked corn kernels (optional)
Savory and rich-tasting, mushroom Benedictmakes a good breakfast-for-dinner candidate.
6 TBS regular or low-fat sour cream 1 Ig egg FOR THE EGGS: 'yatsp cider vinegar or distilled white vinegar 8 Ig eggs, as fresh as possible, straight from the refrigerator 8 to 12 oz (2 links) cured, cooked chorizo, cut into medium dice, warmed
Sriracha, Worcestershire and pickle relish in a small bowl. Comb i ne the lemon juice, mustard
Chopped cilantro, for garnish FOR THE SAUCE: 8 TBS (1 stick) unsalted butter Freshlysqueezedjuiceof h W large lime (2 tsp) 2 Ig egg yolks, at room temperature Kosher salt
and eggyolk inthe metal bowl,whisk ing constantly until the mixture starts to thicken. Remove from the heat. hisk i n t he melted butter, a tablespoon or so at a time, to form an emulsified sauce. Whisk in the ketchup mixture. Season with salt if neededand holdinawarm spot. Divide the toasted bread between
two warmed serving plates. Top with the warmed corned beef, then
For the muffin hase:Preheatthe oven to 400 degrees. Place 4 custard cups or ramekins (6 to 8 ounces each) the cheese. Arrangethe eggs ontop. on a baking sheet. Ladle overthe sauce;garnish with the
Mushroom Benedict Makes 2 servings. FOR THE EGGS: 4 Ig eggs, as fresh as possible, straight from the refrigerator 'yatsp cider vinegar or distilled white vinegar 2 English muffins, split, toasted and buttered Chopped chives, for garnish (optional) FOR THE MUSHROOMS AND SAUCE: 7 TBS unsalted butter 1med or Igshallot, minced(3 to 4 TBS)
Use a little of the melted butter to grease the inside of the cups or ramekins. cornichons. Serve right away. Use a fork to combine the cornmeal, flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt and corn kernels, if desired, in
a mixing bowl. Stir together the remaining melted butter with the sour 8 oz shiitake mushrooms, stemmed and sliced '/4 to % tsp tamari (may substitute low-sodium soy sauce) Freshly squeezed juice of 'A sm lemon (about 1 TBS) 1 Ig egg yolk, at room temperature Salt (optional) Freshly ground black pepper 1 sm red bell pepper, roasted, peeled, seeded and diced (homemade or store-bought)
cream and egg in a measuring cup. Gradually stir the wet ingredients into the cornmeal mixture to form a thick batter. Divide evenly among
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the custard cups or ramekins. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, until firm and browned. For the eggs:Line a wide bowl with a few layers of paper towels. Fill a saucepan or skillet with about 3 inches of water. Bring to a boil over high
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Working in batches as needed, gently break the eggs into individual teacups, custard cups or ramekins.
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transfer to the lined bowl. Repeat
For the eggs:Line a wide bowl with a few layers of paper towels. Fill a
to poach the remaining eggs.
•
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saucepan or skillet with about 3 inches of water. Bring to a boil over high Trim off any "threads" if neces heat. Add the vinegar and reduce the heat to medium or medium-low, so the sary before serving.
water is barely bubbling attheedges.
For the sauce:Fill a medium
Working in batches as needed, gently break the eggs into individual tea saucepan with a few inches of wa cups, custard cups orramekins. ter, and heat over medium heat or Use a spatula or spoon to swirl the water a few times. Hold the side of until the water is barely bubbling at the egg container as close as possible to the surface of the water and slide the edges. Adjust the heat to me each egg in. Usethe spatula or spoon to "shape" the white around theyolk dium-low if needed. Place a metal
as needed.Cookfor 2 to 4 minutes, depending on howrunny you like your eggs. Use a slotted spoon to transfer to the lined bowl.
Trim off any "threads" if necessary beforeserving. For the mushroomsandsauce: Fill a mediumsaucepan with afew inches
bowl on the saucepan (to create a double boiler). Meanwhile, melt the butter in a
small skillet or saucepan over low
Not if you choose any of our three facilities located on Bends west side.
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of water, and heat over medium heat or until the water is barely bubbling at heat. the edges. Adjust the heat to medium-low if needed. Place a metal bowl on Combinethelime juice and egg
O u r managerS Will adViSe you On unit SiZe, reCOmmend mOVerS, prOVide you With paCking Melt 2 tablespoons of the butter in a medium skillet over medium heat. constantly until the mixture starts SuPPlieS, anything to eaSe the mOVing StreSS! Add the shallot and cook, stirring frequently, until the shallot is just translu tothicken. Removefromthe heat cent, then increasethe heat to medium-high andaddthe mushrooms, stir Whisl in the melted butt«, a Mujtipje SiZeS aVailable at Summer RateS! the saucepan(to create adouble boiler).
yolks in t"e metal bowl, w"isking
ring to coat. Cook for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally, so the mush tablespoon or so at a time, to form rooms release their moisture and brown. Stir in the tamari (to taste), then an emulsified sauce. Season with
season with blackpepper totaste. Melt the remaining 5 tablespoons of butter in a small skillet over low heat. Combine the lemon juice and egg yolk in the metal bowl and whisk to
salt to taste and hold in a warm spot. The yield is aboutt/~ cup. When ready to serve, cut the
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Inquire at any of our 3 sites, all conveniently located on the west side.
blend. Set over the simmering water and continue whisking until the eggs corn muffins in half horizontally, start to set. Remove from the heat and whisk in the melted butter, a table placing two halves cut sides up spoon or so at a time, until the sauce emulsifies. Stir in the roasted pepper on each plate. Divide the warmed bits. Seasonwith salt if neededand hold in awarm spot. The yield is about chorizo evenly over the muffin '/3 cup. halves, then place a poached egg To assemble, lay the toasted, buttered English muffin halves on warmed on the chorizo. Spoon the sauce
plates and top with the shiitake mixture. Place apoached egg oneach muf over each portion, then sprinkle fin half, then spoon the pepper hollandaise over each portion. Garnish with chives, if desired. Serve right away.
with the cilantro, if desired. Serve right away.
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541.382.808: 8
8 4 1.317.5700: 5 41.330.0023
visit us at www.centraloregonstorage.corn
F4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012
HOME
Next week: Going plastic-free
Zach Russell, the owner of Central Oregon Asphalt Sealing, and Penny Nakamura measure and take notes for Nakamu ra's black-topping project. Russell says the rule of thumb is one gallon of blacktop material per 25 square feet of driveway, although if you do it less frequently, the sur face will probably require more. ego
Driveway Continued from F1 The truth is, I never saw the value of sealing my drive way, which is why for the past seven years it was never done. All the while, the asphalt was chipping away season after season. "You' ll know you need to blacktop when the surface is coming apart, like this," ex plained Russell, as he gently kicked up some asphalt peb bles that were lose. "With our extreme weather here, we get sun oxidation, and then with the snow and rain, the water freezesand expands. All this causes the asphalt surface to break apart. When you black top, you' re really protecting your investment, because it' s much less costly to seal your driveway than to have it as phalted again." R ussell and hi s t eam a t Central Oregon Asphalt Seal ing have sealed hundreds of thousands of miles of roadway and parking lots in our area, including Redmond Airport's runway and taxiway. I figured if they could do a r u nway, Photos by Reb Kerr /The Bulletin surely I could tackle this drive Penny Nakamura applies blacktopping materialto her driveway. Before you get to this step, leaves and needles must be removed way, especially with Russell's and any cracks sealed. Any oil stains need to go, as well. advice.
Getting started
blow off your driveway. I bor- l e aves and pine needles. This doesn't actually blow it where r o w ed a f riend's leaf blower a c t ually takes longer than you you want it to go. In truth, it' s a n d started blowing away the a n t icipate, because the blower rather frustrating. So a fter 90 minutes of leaf blowing, and feeling I wasn't making much progress, I brought out my trusty Kenmore vacuum cleaner. I figured if you can' t blow the debris away, maybe you could suck it into a bag. I'm afraid to say the crazy neighbor lady — that would be me — was at it again. Yes, I did vacuum my driveway, with the help of a 100-foot extension F RIGIDA I R E G as C o o k t o p I cord. After two changes of the *True convection I ndu Ct iOn R a n g e ~ * vacuum cleaner bag, and a Professional Series I~ drawer new HEPA filter, my driveway SAVE $4 S O a FPIF3093LF was clean and ready for my next step. (Honestly, without Also find these amazing FRIGIDAIRE deals: the headon the vacuum clean Top-mount Refrigerator 18 0 ~SAVE er, you can really get into the <pGHT2t4eKp >Stainless steel *5Gasburners *Stainlesssteel JGP630SEKSS Slide-in Range asphalt cracks, to get it ready ~S A VE 8 04 True convection, warmin drawer, as FPDB3085KF Also find these terrific GE deals: for crack sealing.) Microwave Hood $343 Note to self: It might look K l e c h o n A b t S l id e - i n R a n g e tPvMtsrooMee} black on black lessstrange ifone uses a Shop Microwave Hood $369 *True convection Vac. Must buy one. I did see (pt/M2070SMSS) stainless steel *Warming one neighbor slow down in her Microwave Hood I59 L drawer (JVM1840DRBB) blaCk car andgive me a strange look LOW Microwave/convection Oven $419 as I vacuumed. I gave a friend tpEBtseooMww) Counter-top model I N-S T O R E ly wave, and she sped away. Built-in Dishwasher ~ 675 I felt like the children's book P RIC E ! KESS907SS (powrtteoHss>Profile stainless steel character "Amelia Bedelia." Built-in Dishwasher 529 Al f i d t h b li ble ~ I t (GLD8760NSS) Stainless steel The second day of this DIY Built-in Dishwasher project was a bit ominous. I $315 warming dra e $ 2e s s AYE 70 4 ~ (GLD6966) woke up and realized I had (KEWD105HWH) white B uilt-in M ic r o w a v e ~ 799 ~S AVE 60 0 Wall Oven, 30" forgotten to turn off the auto (KBHC109JSS) (JTpsospss) Stainless steel, touch controls matic sprinklers, so the sides Built-in D i s h w a s h e r Lo w I N - s T o RE pRIGE Built-in Refrigerator, 42" e3699 of my driveway were wet. (KuDLt sPxss) Stainless Steel (Pse42ysxss) Profile stainless steel, I'd have to wait a few hours to start. Then, on closer in B uilde rs , r e m o d e l e r s , h o m e o w n e r s , spection, I noticed our dog de cided to perform her morning constitution on the driveway, was not attended to by R efrig e r a t o r SO N Y . Te l evision which some child in this household. *Built-in Wl-F I To make matters worse, a *Crisp detail SAVE$361 certain teenage driver in this •r KDL46EX720 *Pur® Water Filtration with $SSS house ran over this pile with a Indicator car, in a rush to get to school. *Adjustable SpillGuard™ Refrigerator for More fun for mom, so with the Shelves P RI C E , . ED5HExwQ jet spray nozzle on the hose, *Side-by-side I cleaned up said mess and Another great bargain from Whirlpool: *Ice & water in door waited for the water to dry. Whirlpool Refrigerator C ALL f or P R l C E MSD2454GRW As it turned out, waiting was (GI51VAXVL) Stainless steel needed, because the weather needs tobe atleast 50 degrees SAVE $200 W ine S t o r a g e to blacktop, and this particular CLOSE-OUT PRICE *132 bottles morning had a decidedly win *Pull-out shelves ter chill. 427GLH In the meantime, I drove out to Phoenix Asphalt, which L OW, LO W P R I C E sells its sealer mainly to com Floor model sale! m ercial companies but w i l l Also: SUBZERO Refrigerator CALL ror PRICE sell to a person doing a DIY COMF iN FOR UNBELiEVABLE PRiCES (700BR) Under counter drawer refrigerator project. It's definitely worth the drive to north Bend. "You don't want to use the sealer they sell at the national hardware chain stores," cau tioned Russell. "That stuff they sell may be OK for places like California and Arizona, but it won't hold up for Central Oregon weather." aa Zi+ tNwjohnsonbrothersfv.corn j As it t u rns out, Phoenix
The first thing you' ll need to do is use a leaf blower and
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Having suffered t h rough weeks of smoke from the Pole Creek Fire near Sisters, men tal red alerts were firing off in my head, as I imagined myself with a weed torch. I remem ber my battle with the water pressure hose — I still have the scars in my deck to prove it. While the weed torch might have been easier, I didn't want to take any chances, given the fact that my fall cleanup hasn' t started, and there are plenty of pine trees and pine needles in our immediate vicinity. T he second m e thod o f sealing cracks is called cold crack sealing. This sounded much safer to me, but Russell did caution that this method o f sealing does no t b o n d
as strongly and probably wouldn't last as long. But I couldn't be swayed because I have a real fear of fire. C old crack s ealing w a s
fairly easy. I bought a $12
gallon bottle of the Phoenix Asphalt Crack sealant, which comes out as a v ery t h ick paste. The mixture is so thick, I had to stand on the bottle to squeeze it out into the cracks. Once you get a thick rope of it into the cracks, you' ll need a trowel or spatula to smooth it into the cracks. My smoothing technique wasn't that great, Asphalt has about 80 percent it looks as if I h a v e small of the market share for its lava tubes in some areas, but blacktop sealer in this region. at least they' re not as big as The special formula, which is speed bumps. made in its Portland produc I guess this is where I should tion plant, is made to with come clean, so to speak. I had stand the vagaries of Oregon to get this DIY job done pron weather. to, as my husband was out of "We make our product from the country on business, and 60 percent of asphalt materials, he was less than confident in which is four to seven times my abilities to do this project. more than the brands you' ll I think his words a week ear find at the big box stores," said lier were something like this, Phoenix A s phalt p r esident "I absolutely, in no uncertain Jim Hendricks. "Those big terms, don't think you should box stores sell a product that be doing this job." usually has 10 to 20 percent of Of course tome, that was asphalt material, and the rest just one opinion. I needed to is water, so it's fairly thin, and get this done before he re it won't last a year. Our prod turned. It would be a surprise. uct should last a homeowner Fearstrikesthe heart about five years." I was sold, because I wanted I had serious trepidation to buy local, and perhaps more d umping out m y f i r s t g a l importantly to many consum lon of blacktop sealant onto ers, Phoenix Asphalt sells its the driveway. I had my trusty 5 gallon seal coating for con squeegee in hand — yes you siderably less than other loca spread this stuff with a giant tions, at $30 per 5 gallon buck squeegee with a long handle. et. A quick glance at a couple This blacktop sealer is a thick of th e n a t ional h a r dware slurry, and yes it stains ev chain stores found blacktop erything. Wear clothes and sealing products selling any shoes you plan to get rid of af where from $40 to $45 per 5 ter you' re done. It will be very gallon tub. hard to erase any mistakes, To calculate how much you' ll which is why I duct-taped the need, Russell says the rule of pavers thatborder the drive thumb is one gallon of black way, as I preferred not to have top material per 25 square feet them turn black. of driveway. After calculating Then, of course, there was my 2,300-square-foot area, he the fear of having my drive estimated I'd need 92 gallons. way look like the lunar sur "It may vary, because if you face, oran uneven lava flow. haven't ever blacktopped, or To make sure that wouldn' t you don't do it regularly, the happen, I decided I would be surface will be very thirsty, better off pouring the black and it will absorb more of the sealant out a little bit at a time, material," said Russell. so I got an old Trader Joe's half gallon milk carton from the Sealing the cracks recycle bin, and used that as B ecause we h a d n e v er my pouring container. I would blacktopped our driveway, I dunk the milk carton into the was informed by Russell that 5 gallon bucket and then pour I had 45 feet of lineal crack it into the area I was working ing. Even before you can start on. Oddly, I didn't think I'd blacktopping, one must seal need gloves to do this work, so the cracks. my hands turned blacker and There are two ways to ap blacker with each gob of black proach sealing cracks. The sealant I poured out with my first one sounded easy enough, milk container. until I heard Russell say the As yo u m i g h t i m a gine, words, "weed torch." my clumsy attempts at being "It's really easy; all you have careful as I spread each milk to do is get this product (called) container full o f t h i s b lack Crack Stix, which is like a long slurry onto the driveway took black rope, you lay it in the a laboriously long time. To crack, and then you melt it into make matters worse, it wasn' t the cracks with a weed torch," spreading that well. As Russell said Russell. "That's how the had cautioned, this driveway road crews do it, too." was very thirsty, the sealant For those of you who don' t was absorbing very quickly know what a weed torch is, it' s and settling. After using 10 like a blow torch with a long gallons, I realized there was handle that's used to not only no way I was getting 25 feet melt Crack Stix but to also per gallon. burn out weeds. Continued next page
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 • THE BULLETIN
ARDEN
Next week: Purple tomatoes
Hues
works it gently into the soil. "Over time, the soil becomes easy to work, and it looks and feels much healthier than our sandy soil." For top-dressing a perennial garden, Klecker uses compost rather than bark, which, she says, is only good for tree and shrub beds. The second key to a healthy garden i s w e eding, w h ich Klecker says must be done weekly. She points out that even one weed going to seed can "potentially be years of an infestation." And the third step is dead heading weekly. In addition to making for a c lean and vibrant looking garden it of fers aclose-up picture of the garden's health. Dead-head ing "allows us to spot weeds, disease and pay attention to the evolution of the plants."
Continued from F1
Intuitive gardening I nitially K lecker went t o college to be a teacher. Upon
completing her junior year, she changed course after tak ing up downhill skiing at Mt. Bachelor. "I enjoyed the sport so much, that I decided to take a break from school and move to Bend." In doing so, she be gan a path toward what she says she always intuitively knew to be her calling. Klecker, who comes from a family of gardeners and flo rists, studied the genealogy of her family and had a "duh" moment when she found a picture of her grandfather' s garden."Ilooked atmy grand father'sgarden and Irealized that's how I knew how to do it. I learned it through osmosis." Klecker saw that the bor ders of h i s g a r dens w ere reminiscent of her own often curving style. In her own gar den projects she would dig up the straight borders and sculpt a curving border. "It was rewarding to realize that I had been doing this for years and never realized that it was an intuitive action ... I came about it doing it naturally." The picture captured other elements from her own style: prominent "bones," ortrees and shrubs in the garden and big splashesof color."I real ized I was creating what I grew up with."
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The joy of it It takes three years to really understand a plant, explains Klecker, as she talks about the hop vines she is just planting to grow horizontally along a fence at the brewery. "This is
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my first year to plant (hops),
Marielle GallagherI The Bulletin
Maureen Klecker said her gardening styleis similar to her grandfather' s. "It was rewarding to realize that I had been doing this for years and never realized that it was an intuitive action ... I came about it doing it naturally."
having good manners with the clients. "Eventually I told him 'If you can pick all the weeds out of that little row of flowers I' ll give you another dollar." From there shetaught her kids to plant bulbs "pointy side up" and all along the way Family business her sons learned a good work D uring al l t h e y e ars o f ethic and managerial skills. growing a landscaping busi Today her husband has joined ness, Klecker married her hus the business and helps tend band of 31 years, whom she the gardens. met at Mt. Bachelor, and had two sons. Instead of enrolling Deschutes Brewery gardens her children in a f ter-school Klecker says sh e b egan care, Klecker began bring managing t h e Des c hutes ing her oldest son with her B rewery gardens 12 t o 1 5 on jobs, paying him a dollar years ago. As th e brewery an hour "just to be good," said has grown and there has been Klecker. Being good meant construction and the addition not interrupting her work and of roads, Klecker has evolved
with it — adding and moving beds, renovating and restyling
lemon gem marigold and add ed it to the bouquet. "Yellow is as she goes. so sunny. It really brings out Klecker's style is to bring the others," she said adding a color to the otherwise muted white snapdragon to the mix. landscape of Central Oregon. In addition to the brewery's "I really want t o see color gardens, Klecker created hang in Bend. That's what it's all ing baskets fo r D e schutes about," said Klecker. In the Brewery 8 P ublic House in brewery's garden, bright yel downtown Bend at the request low, hot pink and orange are of Gary Fish, Deschutes' found the show-stoppers between er and president. Fish showed taller blues and purples. Kleck Klecker pictures of w i ndow er says yellow flowers make boxes from a trip to Europe and all the difference when putting asked if she could add some together a color palette for a thing similar, so she created dy flower bed. She plucked a pink namic baskets with tall spikes petunia and a blue salvia from of dracena and dramatic trail the garden and put them next ers of creeping Jenny. to each other in her hand. "OK, see, that's pretty nice." Then Three integral tips she plucked a bright yellow Klecker outlined what she
has identified as the t h ree most important things to do in order to maintain a healthy and beautiful looking garden. The first is adding amend ments to the soil. "You' ll see a remarkable difference in something planted in good soil and something that's not," said Klecker. To start a garden bed Kleck er clears all the plants, weeds and grass. "Then I rototill or break up the soil a good 12
inches deep and add a good six inches of organic amend ments, rototilling or working them into the soil ... then plant it out." In addition to the six inches of amendment, Klecker adds two more inches in the fall and
and in three years I will under stand that hop in this environ ment ... for now there's a lot of head scratching." Every year Klecker's gar dens look different because of her constant thirst to learn more about her craft. "I found monk's hood, and it's a lovely blue. I have so much to learn ... I'm an advocate to going to as many open gardens as pos sible ... I learn brilliant ideas from other gardeners ... "I think I have the best job
in the world. (Gardening) is meditative, it can be spiritual. I just like the movement of the garden and the changes in the season." — Reporter: 541-383-0361, mgallagIMr@bendbulletin.corn
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Author, photographerhelpyoudiscover 'EverydayTrees' By Kathy Van Mullekom
drive by them. Hence, they collaborated NEWPORT NEWS, Va. to do a different kind of book, Gardener and author Nancy "Seeing Trees: Discover the Ross Hugo and photographer E xtraordinary S e c rets o f Bob Llewellyn traveled more E veryday Trees," which i s than 20,000 miles over four an up-close observation of years, looking at V i r ginia's backyard and neighborhood finest trees for their 2008 trees. book "Remarkable Trees of "I want trees to move from Virginia." the background to the fore During those treks, they no ground of people's conscious ticed little things about trees ness because they are just so — characteristics commonly interesting and i m p ortant," considered unremarkable to says Hugo, who lives in How the everyday eye. ardsville, Va., where she and Details like bracts and buds her husband operate an out and catkins, small intimate door education center called parts of trees that are often Flower Camp. "It's crazy to overlook them, overlooked when you walk or Daily Press (Newport News, Vad
or to think the only time to pay close attention to them is for two weeks in the fall." The book is written for ev eryone, not just people who are already tree lovers, Hugo
says, so she avoids jargon and explains details in under standable terms. "For example, I suggest p eople look d own a s w e l l as up, because there is lots o f 'tree information' in t h e cones, leaves, catkins, fruits and other things you find on the ground beneath them,"
she says. "And, using binoculars can h elp you see things in t h e crown of a tall tree that would
otherwise be invisible to you." Her personalfavorite trees include white oak for its lon gevity — as long as 600 years; black gum for its flowers that bees loveand incredible bark on old specimens; and Ameri can beech for its horizontal branching pattern and its fo liage that hangs on through winter and looks like parch ment before it falls. Tiny tulip poplar leaves im press her because the '/4-inch newbies are the same as their grownup counterparts. And, she likes the way they' re fold ed — like valentines, down the midrib — as they emerge from the buds.
"The longer you look, the more you see, it's that simple,"
says Hugo. "You don't have to know the names of the botanical features you' re seeing to ap preciate their beauty and the genius of their engineering."
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Bend Senior Center From previous page After about 30 gallons, and three and half hours later, I had completed about 600 feet, and I was tired. My hands were com pletely black, and underneath all the black staining were big blisters on my right hand. And just when I thought it couldn' t get any worse, my husband came home a day earlyfrom his business trip, and caught me in th e a ct. Fortunately, he saw the small patch I had completed, and he a ctually admitted it looked better than the original asphalt, so he was encouraged. I was not. I was in all honesty, discour aged, but didn't admit it. I real ized as I oozed the black seal ant around with the squeegee, that at the pace I was going, I'd be at this past midnight. As I was berating myself, and hitting my low point, the Central Oregon Asphalt Seal ing team dropped by the house to check on my progress. To see three professionals jump out of their truck was like seeing the cavalry come in after a long fight. I raised the white flag, and at this point would've paid them almost any amount to finish the job. There are several reasons to do a DIY, and for most, sav ing money is a big part of it. Russell originally told me that if he were bidding on my driveway, he estimated to do the entire 2,300-square-foot driveway, including the hot
RehKerr/The Bulletin
Because of the way the blacktop material stains, be sure whatever you' re wearing is something you won't care about disposing of after the job is done. Gloves might not be a bad idea, either. crack sealing, it would cost and equipment," explained $450. Russell. "But for a large drive The small 600-square-foot way, that will need a lot of portion I completed, which is sealer, it starts to be less cost the averagesize of a subdivi effective to do it yourself. We sion driveway had a l ready buy the sealer at a bulk price." cost me justunder $200. For me to finish the job would've Prolific professionals exceeded the professional bid So after crying "uncle," I price. Another reason people watched the professional team do DIYs is because they enjoy of three from Central Oregon it; I was most definitely not en Asphalt Sealing work t heir joying this. black magic. "Yes, if you have a smaller Honestly, I wanted to cry, d riveway, like 50 0 o r 6 0 0 out of relief and joy because square feet, it m i ght m ake they were so e fficient and sense todo ityourself because fast. The best analogy I can as a contractor I do have a give you is comparing myself minimum bid price I have to to the replacement NFL refer charge, because of my crew ees who officiated the football
games during the official lock out. Then when the real NFL referees returned — guys who know the game — a sense of relief fills the air. The pros finished the rest of the driveway in less than an hour. I didn't really need to duct tapethe paver borders of this driveway because they' re that precise. They didn't miss a beat. As for myself, I'm still in awe days later, as I try to get the black sealer off my hands and nails. Thank you to Rus sell and the team at Central Oregon Asphalt Sealing for saving the day, and thank you for not laughing at my feeble attempt at this job.
Follow-up Well there's a big difference in the 600-square-foot area I attempted, and the area done by the professionals. I noticed as my section dried, it started to look like a drought-stricken region,as the black sealer was cracking up in one patch. The entire area that the profession als completed is perfect. It would appear I skipped a step. A big step. If you have an oil stain in your driveway, you need to use an oil primer to try to get it off before you blacktop. Tomorrow, I will buy another bucket of sealer, and attempt a do-over on this sec tion. Live and learn. — Reporter: pnalzamura~ bendbulletin.corn
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1 DiscoverYourRoots Online Thursday,October 25 3:00 - 5:00 pm $15 in-district / $20 ou-Of-district Research your family history
k Stand Tall - Don't Fall FitnessClass Wednesdays,October 31 - December 19 Taught by certified Arthritis instructors $30 in-district / $41 out-of-district
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F6
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 20'!2
et our is cra senses tin in Irish pubcheese: easy and flavorful wit s ee su er ero costumes Requests
By Jufie Rothman The Baltimore Sun
Where tobuy
MARTHA STEWART
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• Kids' long-sleeve T-shirts and leggings: americanapparel.corn • Assorted 3M Scotchlite reflective
ook, out in the yard! It' s
a boy! It's a girl! No, it' s Superkid — faster than a speeding soccerball,more powerful than a yellow school b us, able to pack her ow n lunch box in a single bound! You don't need X-ray vision to see thatwhen your kids create these Halloween costumes, they can mix and match their own a m a zingly a w e some attributes. Mercifully, t h ese o u t f its do not require any heroics on your part. Even if some thing as small as a needle and thread cripples you like Kryp tonite, you can still fashion un beatable ensembles with a few store-bought supplies, such as felt, tape and glue. And these don't require a hulking hunk of time — you and your kids can whip them up before you can say, "Kapow! Bam! Zap!" (Time conversion for the Caped Crusader-impaired: a
fadrics andtape: ref lectivefabric.corn
• Chromspungrosgrain rihdon:mjtrim.corn • Casa Collection polyester satin: joann.corn • Adhesive holographic metallic-effect film:
texascraft.corn • Blue Harlequin
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Masquerademaskand Black Sophisticate Dominomask: partycity.corn • Wool felt:
: If'"ll+
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magiccabin.corn • Also exploreyour local hardware store: Most carry duct tape, painters' tape and foil tape in a range of
colors.
few hours.) Each of these outfits starts
with leggings and a long sleeve T-shirt (which don' t even have to match). Then come the accessories: head bands, ey e m a s ks, c h est letters and l i ghtning bolts, capes, cuffs and belts. Best of all, as a w o man w hose children are wearing home made costumes, you get to be Supermom.
Gerri Papp, of South Bend, Dianne Bernsten, of Balti- I nd., is looking for a French m ore, was looking for a recipe s t y le doughnut or Beignet rec f or making pub cheese similar i pe. She said she had one she t o one she remembers from l i ked that came from a wom t he Hilltop Inn and Lounge e n's magazine in the 1970s. It in Bowie, Md., m any was a basic yeast dough years ago. She said she that was cut into 2-inch has tried several store squares before the fi bought versions over the nal rising and cooked years and has not liked in hot oil until puffed any. The Web is full of and then sprinkled with pub cheese recipes, the RE CIPE powdered sugar before majority of which start FI N DER serving. with processed cheese Elaine Marie Smith, like Velveeta as a base, of Reisterstown, Md., is but a recipefor a homemade lo oking for a recipe for mak Irish cheddar and al e pu b i ng creamed cucumbers like s pread that I came across on o nes her mother used to serve. t he food blog sweetnicks.corn U n fortunately, she does not sounded really tasty. have her m o t her's r ecipe, B logger C at e O ' Malley, b ut she remembers thatshe o f Rockaway, N.J., said she would peel the cucumbers a dapted this recipe from one a nd slice them very thinly, t hat was made during an Irish- a llowing them to soak in salt themed cooking class she took w ater for 24 hours. Then they a few years ago. The original w ere drained and mixed with r ecipe called for shaping the a creamed dressing that she i ngredients into a ball and roll- t hinks was made with mayon ing it in chopped fresh parsley na ise and perhaps vinegar but a nd chives before serving. She n o t sour cream. said she skips that step and just Looking for a hard- to- find recipe mixes everything together and or can answer a request? Write serves in a bowl along with to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, crackers. So whether you deThe Baltimore Sun,501N. Calvert cide you want to get fancy and St., Baltimore,MD 21278,orem ail shape this into a ball or sim balt sunrecipefinderCgmail.corn. ply serve it as is, this spread is Names mustaccompany recipes chock full of flavor. for them to be published.
Tamara Schiesinger /New York Times News Service
No phone booth or revolving dooris required to transform tape and ribbon into some seriously cool superhero costumes. channel. Attach safety pin to one end of ribbon, and thread through. (No-sew option: Snip holes along one edge and run
1 . Make b e lt : C o v e r long paper or muslin with desired color of painters' tape. (If u sing reflective tape, skip this step.) Create belt buckle by t r i mming pieces of painters' tape and sticking them to the center of strip. 2 . Make c u f fs : p r i n t template at marthastewart .corn/quick-costumes. Cut out. Trace onto the shorter pieces of paper or muslin, and cut out. Cover cutout with desired color of paint ers' tape. Wrap a r ound wrist so the ends overlap
and cut out. (Snip from top and bottom, but leave sides intact.) Remove the mask's elastic, and glue ribbon at ribbon through.) sides. 3 . Attach letter o r s y m 2. Print templates of head bol: Lay cape or T-shirt flat. band, crest at marthastewart Cape and T-shirt how-to Squeeze gluealloverthe back .corn/quick-costumes. Cut out, A cape is truly what sepa of the letter or symbol, and and trace the headband onto rates the supermen from position on cape or shirt. Let reflective tape and the crest the boy wonders. This one d~. onto glitter paper. Glue star to requires just one easy seam crest, then glue crest to head at slight angle, forming Mask and headband how-to band. Let dry. Center crest a peak. Tape or glue in we didn't even hem the edges. Even the small bits of tape on forehead, and wrap band place. we used are highly r eflec around head; trim ends to al — Questionsofgeneral Tools and materials tive,so it's great for trick-or low a I - i nch overlap. Glue interest can be emailed to Felt or sparkly paper t reating after dark. Trim a ends. mslletters@martha Small sharp scissors plain mask into a shape with stewart. corn. For more Belt and cuffs how-to 36-by-36-inch piece of poly personality. information on this column, ester satin (or T-shirt) Thick painters' tape is ideal visit www. marthastewart. corn. 24 inches of '/2-inch ribbon Tools and materials for belts and cuffs, and it sticks Fabric glue, such as Magna Cardboard eye mask right to paper or muslin. Tac Small sharp scissors Safety pin Fabric glue, such as Magna Tools and materials 2-inch-wide strip of k r a ft Tac 1. Make letter or symbol: 2 10-inch pieces of '/2-inch paper, muslin o r r e f lective Print a template of your choice ribbon tape, cut to fit around child' s at m a rthastewart.corn/quick I length reflective tape, 30 waist with I-inch overlap -costumes. Cut out. Trace onto inches Painters' tape in a variety of felt or paper, and cut out. Glitter paper colors Two 2-by-8-inch strips of 2. Make cape: Fold over one Cutout or punched stars side of the fabric by I inch, and kraft paper or muslin press with a cool iron. Sew 1. For mask, use a pen to Fabric g l u e , s u c h as down flap, creating a '/4-inch draw your desired outline, Magna-Tac Winter is on
Irish Cheddar and Ale Pub Cheese Makes 1 medium-size cheeseball or about 2 cups spread. 2'h C shredded extra-sharp Irish cheddar cheese 1 (8-oz) pkg cream cheese, softened 2 tsp Dijon mustard 2 TBS heavy cream 'k tsp cayenne pepper
In a food processor, combine cheddar, cream cheese,mustard, cream, cayenneandsalt. Process 30seconds. Addale; process until smooth. Pulse in 2 tablespoons of the parsley and 2 tablespoons of the chives until just com
bined. Transfer to a bowl; coverandrefrigerate at least 4 hours or overnight. To serve: If desired, shape the chilled spread into a ball, wrap in plastic wrap, and chill at least 1 hour or until ready to serve. Just before serving,
roll the ball in remaining choppedparsley andchives. Servewith crackers. — Recipe adapted from Shop-Rite cooking class
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A taste of fall in a bottle (and ameal) By David Tanis New York Times News Service
A few years ago, I spent a month in a tiny village in Nor mandy. Up the road, past an ancient apple orchard, was a dairy farm run by Monsieur Bernard, a wiry, weathered, hardworking fe l lo w who looked to be in his mid- to late 60s. It was a really small dairy farm, just 14 cows. "I used to have a big herd," he told me, "but there's not much business anymore. Ev eryone around here has moved to town." Still, he did have a hand ful of loyal customers, and if you wandered by in the after noon just after milking time and brought your own jug, he would sell you a liter of still warm milk for a few centimes. I'm not much of a milk drinker, except for a little in my morn ing coffee, but I still walked over every day to buy some, and to have a chat. Each day Monsieur Bernard got a bit friendlier, and by the end of the second week, I found my status had changed from nosy tourist to trusted regular. I received a gift with purchase: a bottle of his homemade hard cider or, as he called it, cidre bouche. The cider was deli cious, if a bit rough around the
FOR THE SPICED SALT: '/4 tsp black peppercorns 3 cloves 4 allspice berries 2 TBS roughly chopped fresh sage 1'A TBS kosher salt FOR THE PORK AND SAUCE: 6 boneless pork chops, 4 oz each, about %-inch thick 2 Ig apples 2 TBS butter
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it's way and now is the time to
promote your business in our special Service Guide page in Classifieds. This special one page guide will feature an option of three different ad sizes. The guide will run 8 consecutive Fridays beginning November 2nd in our Classifieds Section. '
a I I All-purpose flour, for dusting 'h C hard cider, plus 2 TBS 2 tsp Dijon mustard 1'A C chicken broth 2 tsp potato starch dissolved in 2 TBS cold water 3 TBS creme fraiche 1 TBS Calvados, apple brandy or Cognac, optional 2 TBS finely cut chives 2 TBS chopped parsley
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For the spiced salt, put peppercorns, cloves, allspice and sage in a spice mill or mortar and grind to a rough powder. Remove to a bowl and stir in salt. Season pork chops on both sides with salt mixture. (There
will be some salt mixture remaining; use it to season the sauce.) Cover and leave chops at room temperature to absorb seasonings for at least 30 minutes.
• Weatherization • Ho me improvement • Ca rpet cleaning • Automotive • And much more!
Peel, quarter and coreapples, then cut eachapple into 12 wedges. Melt 1 tablespoon butter in a wide skillet and raise heat to medium-high. Add
apple wedges inonelayer and brown gently on oneside, about 2 minutes. Brown on the other side andcook for 2 minutes more, or until apples are cooked through but still firm. Remove apples from pan and keep warm. Add 1 tablespoon butter to pan and swirl to melt. Dust pork chops with
flour, and place in pan and brown gently for about 4 minutes per side. Adjust heat if necessary to keep pork from cooking too quickly. Remove chops and keep warm on a platter in a low oven. Discard butter in pan.
Add /2 cup cider to pan, raise heat to high and cook down to a syrup. Add mustard and chicken broth, and bring to a boil, then reduce heat to a simmer. Add potato starch and stir with a wire whisk as the sauce thick
ens. Stir in cremefraiche. Season to taste with remaining spiced salt. Add 2 tablespoons cider and the Calvados, if using. Cook for 1 minute more.
Spoon sauceover the chops, then spoon the apples around the platter. Sprinkle with chives andparsley.
Deadline for ad space and copy: Fri., Oct. 26,20i2 Publishes on Friday, Nov. 2, 9, l6
& 23 Additional publish dates: Nov. 30, Dec. 7, l4, 2I
Ad Size
Rate
1.120" x 2.6511"
$100.00(4 runs)
2.4715 x 2.6511"
$160.00 (4 runs)
2.4715 x 5"
$240.00 (4 runs)
PLUS 4 FREE/
edges. I soon found that nearly ev erybody else in the area made cider, too. There is plenty of homemade cider that never leaves the re gion, but also a large number of estates that specialize in pro ducing fine artisanal cider for export, as well as Calvados, the potent apple brandy distilled
eStrowies; ri
Pork Chops with Apples and Cider Makes 4 to 6 servings.
'/4 tsp sea salt '/4 C ale (or any beer you have on hand) 4 TBS chopped fresh parsley, divided 4 TBS chopped fresh chives, divided
from cider. Cider became my favorite beveragefora while ,somehow cleaner-tasting than beer, and certainly lighter than w i ne. Then, as it sometimes happens, my cider phase receded into memory. But now, with piles of new crop apples at the market and
a stand selling local handmade cider, too, dinner seems practi cally predestined. I' ll pan-fry boneless pork chops and serve them w i t h b u t t er-browned apples and a Normandy-style sauce made with cider and cream. And to drink, a chilled bottle of sparkling New York hard cider.
Contact your Bulletin Advertising RePresentative for more information Nena Close: 54I -383-0302 • email: nclose@wescompapers.corn Tonya McKiernan: 54I -6I7-7865 • email: trnkiirnnanwwssommaaers.coo
wwrr.benribulletin.rom ThC B U l l C f l n
541 -382-1811
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Furniture & Appliances
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Computers
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Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment •
T HE B U LLETIN r e Wood outside benches, quires computer ad 2 for $50. Sportbrella, For newspaper m ags, 300 r nds o f vertisers with multiple $49. Piranha paintball delivery, call the ITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment ammo. Excellent cond. ad schedules or those repeater gun, $99. Misc fireplace items, $89. selling multiple sys Circulation Dept. at 201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials $650. 541-350-9052 541-385-5800 tems/ software, to dis Misc. office items, $59. 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves CASH!! Angled computer desk close the name of the To place an ad, call 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood For Guns, Ammo & Bdrm set - Headboard 541-385-5809 306 business or the term w/chair, $99. Compost 204- Santa's Gift Basket Reloading Supplies. 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers w/mirror, dresser w/ "dealer" in their ads. bin w/free weedeater & or email Farm Equipment 205- Free items 541-408-6900. spools, $49. classifiediN bendbulletin.corn 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment mirror, night s tand, Private party advertis 541-948-4413 & Machinery 208- Pets and Supplies Brass foot & h e ad 270 - Lost and Found ers are d efined as D ON'T MI SS T HI S 210- Furniture & Appliances board, $500 all, great those who sell one GARAGESALES Find exactly what 211 - Children's Items cond., 541-516-8642. computer. Ford New Holland 275 - Auction Sales you are looking for in the 212 - Antiques & Collectibles SUPER TOP SOIL Tractor, Di e sel, GENERATE SOME ex DO YOU HAVE 280 Estate Sales 257 www.hershe sotlandbark.corn 215- Coins & Stamps CLASSIFIEDS 2300, hours, 32HP, citement i n your SOMETHING TO 281 Fundraiser Sales Screened, soil 8 com Musical Instruments 240- Crafts and Hobbies Incl. push hog, post neighborhood! Plan a SELL post m i x ed , no 282- Sales Northwest Bend hole auger, blade, 241 - Bicycles and Accessories garage sale and don' t FOR $500 OR rocks/clods. High hu 284Sales Southwest Bend $12,000, 242 - Exercise Equipment forget to advertise in LESS? • Building Materials mus level, exc. f or 541-410-0929 286- Sales Northeast Bend 243 - Ski Equipment classified! Non-commercial flower beds, lawns, 541-385-5809. 244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend advertisers may Bend Habitat straight gardens, W anted Use d F a r m 290- Sales RedmondArea place an ad 245 - Golf Equipment RESTORE s creened to p s o i l . Equipment & Machin Leather Ethan Allen re with our 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas Building Supply Resale Bark. Clean fill. De cliner chair, $ 2 45. ery. Looking to buy, or "QUICK CASH 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. Quality at LOW liver/you haul. consign of good used Piano, Steinway Model Culver, 541-546-9008 FARM MARKET SPECIAL" PRICES 541-548-3949. 0 Baby Grand 1911, 248- Health and Beauty Items 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery quality equipment. 1 week 3 lines 12 Refrigerator / freezer, 740 NE 1st gorgeous, artist qual 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs Deschutes Valley OI' 316 - Irrigation Equipment stainless steel SxS, wa 541-312-6709 ity instrument w/great 251 - Hot TubsandSpas Equipment k 20i ~s 325- Hay, Grain and Feed ter/icemaker, 25cf, ex Lost & Found • Open to the public. action 8 S t einway's 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 541-548-8385 Ad must cellent cond, $495. 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies warm, rich sound. Will Sisters Habitat ReStore 255 - Computers include price of Culver, 541-546-9008 341 - Horses and Equipment adorn any living room, Building Supply Resale Found: Hiking s hoes 256- Photography ii i $5 0 0 i n p arking l o t o f f church or music stu 345Li ve s t o ck and E qui pment Quality items. 257- Musical Instruments or less, or multiple Cascade Lakes Hwy. Hay, Grain & Feed dio perfectly. New re The Bulletin 347 Llamas/Exotic Animals LOW PRICES! items whose total 258 - Travel/Tickets C all to ident i fy 3A Livestock Supplies tail $ 6 9 ,000. Sacri recommends e xtra 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 150 N. Fir. does not exceed 406-570-5051. 259- Memberships fice at $34,000 OBO, n • p. . i •Panels Gates Feeders 541-549-1 621 $500. 358Farmer's Column 260- Misc. Items call 541-383-3150. chasing products or x Check out the Now galvanized! Open to the public. 375- Meat and Animal Processing 261 - MedicalEquipment services from out of I •6-Rail 12' panels, $101 classifieds online Call Classifieds at 260 383 - Produce andFood the area. Sending II 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. • 6-Rail 16' panels, $117 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.corn Misc. Items cash, c hecks, o r • www.bendbulletin.corn Custom sizes available 263- Tools • Heating & Stoves Updated daily l credit i n f o rmation 541-475-1255 208 Buying Diamonds may be subjected to Just bought a new boat? NOTICE TO LOST: Cat, white, long Wanted: Irrigated farm /Gold for Cash l FRAUD. For more Pets 8 Supplies haired, name is Leo, ground, under pivot ir ADVERTISER Sell your old one in the Saxon's Fine Jewelers information about an s classifieds! large male, left ear Ask about our Since September 29, 0 riqation, i n C e n tral 541-389-6655 advertiser, you may l gray, gray patch on OR. 541-419-2713 Super Seller rates! 1991, advertising for The Bulletin recom I call t h e Ore g onI fuzzy tail, has collar & 541-385-5809 used woodstoves has BUYING mends extra caution ' State Att or n ey ' J e w ellWheat Straw: Certified 8 been limited to mod tags, n ea r Lionel/American Flyer w hen purc h a s l General's O f f i c e School. Please call Beddinq Straw & Garden els which have been trains, accessories. ing products or ser Consumer Protec- • Straw; Compost.546-6171 c ertified by th e O r 541-420-8883. 541-408-21 91. Largest 3 Day vices from out of the t ion ho t l in e at I egon Department of Lost Jezebel, a small GUN & KNIFE area. Sending cash, BUYING & SE L LING Environmental Qual German Shorthairs l 1-877-877-9392. Looking for your female C hi checks, or credit in SHOW All gold jewelry, silver ity (DEQ) and the fed scruffy AKC -females $500, next employee? huahua, brown, long f ormation may b e tn Bn!!cttng and gold coins, bars, October 19-20-21 males $400. Home eral E n v ironmental ish-hair, w e s t of I Want to Buy or Rent Place a Bulletin subjected to fraud. rounds, wedding sets, raised, mom on-site, Portland Expo Protection A g e ncy Brookswood on trails help wanted ad For more i nforma class rings, sterling sil 1st shots dewormed. Center (EPA) as having met north of main COI ca Wanted: $Cash paid for tion about an adver today and ver, coin collect, vin smoke 541-408-211 4. 1-5 exit ¹306B stan nal. $1000 r eward. vintage costume jew tiser, you may call reach over tage watches, dental dards. emission Admission $9 Antiques & A cer t ified 541 -41 0-2887. elry. Top dollar paid for the O r egon State G erman Wireh a i r gold. Bill Fl e ming, wood stove 60,000 readers Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, Gold/Silver.l buy by the Attorney General' s may be REMEMBER: If you Collectibles Pointer pups, ready 541-382-9419. each week. Sun.10-4 identified by tts certtft Estate, Honest Artist Office Co n s umer 10/27, AKC/NAVHDA, have lost an animal, Your classified ad I 18 00-659-3440 I Elizabeth,541-633-7006 cation label, which is COWGIRL CASH jcallis@eoni.corn, Protection hotline at don't forget to check will also i CollectorsWest.co~m We buy Jewelry, Boots, permanently attached The 541-805-9478. 1-877-877-9392. Humane Society WANTED: RAZORS, appear on to the stove. The Bul Vintage Dresses & Double or single Kittens/cats avail. thru bendbulletin.corn letin will no t k n ow in Bend 541-382-3537 nesttz" More. 924 Brooks St. Redmond, edged, straight rescue group. Tame, which currently Sen ng cen al 0 enonrwrr rsas ingly accept advertis 541-678-5162 Visit our HUGE 541-923-0882 razors, shaving shots, altered, ID chip, ing for the sale of receives over www.getcowgirlcash.corn home decor brushes, mugs & Sat/Sun 1-5, call Prineville, 1.5 million page uncertified Adult companion cats more. consignment store. scuttles, strops, re: other days. 65480 541-447-71 78; Folding treadmill with woodstoves. to seniors, dis views every New items shaving accessories FREE St., Bend , OR Craft Cats, mat, $19. 2 air condi abled 8 veterans! Tame, 78th month at no arrive daily! 8 memorabilia. 5 41-389-8420; 598 541-389-8420. Owens Aluminum Dog tioners, great deal! $99 altered, shots, ID chip, 5488; photos, etc. at extra cost. 930 SE Textron, Fair prices paid. Boxes. Great for sport both. Hoover Floormate more. Will always take www.craftcats.org Fuel 8 Wood Bend 541-318-1501 286 Bulletin Call 541-390-7029 ing dogs. Various sizes & Bissel Spotbot, $175 if c ircumstances www.redeuxbend.corn between 10 am-3 pm. back Classifieds and style. Call for infor for both. Adjustable un Sales Northeast Bend change. 389-8420. Visit Kittens - Looking for a Get Results! mation 503-538-5047 derside ball hitch, $30. Sat/ Sun 1-5. Photos, companion not just a WHEN BUYING Rotating Safe h eat Call 541-385-5809 Animal Rescue info: www.craftcats.org. cat? Then Lester and The Bulletin reserves Rem. Woodmaster mdl heater FIREWOOD... w/controls, $49. Holiday Bazaar FUNDRAISER or place your ad Guy are looking for you. the right to publish all AUSSIES, M I N I/TOY Two five month old kit ads from The Bulletin 742 . 3 0 8 cal i ber, Call 541-948-4413 To avoid fraud, on-line at Fri., 10/19 8to 2 p.m. & Craft Shows semi-auto, custom AKC, all colors, $325 tens need homes they newspaper onto The The Bulletin Indoor Tables are bendbulletin.corn black stock, 2 clips, Moving Sale Snow tires 8 up, parents on site. can share. Fo r more recommends pay Bulletin Internet web Bushnell 3x9 Sports w/rims, 5-hole pattern, loaded with good stuff Community Clothing, 541-598-5314 or information call Linda at site. ment for Firewood Marsh Orchid Drive Food and Dry Goods man scope, 3 boxes Aurora 215x70x15, used 345 541-788-7799 541-647-4280 upon delivery follow signs - Butler Drive @ High Desert shells, hard gun case, 1 season. Poker table, only Livestock & Equipment and inspection. Market or Purcell ood cond. Coffee table Assisted Living, 2660 Barn/shop cats FREE, Lab Puppies, yellows 8 $400. 541-548-0426. terr ng Ce rral 0 ego r nre lsta cord is 128 cu. ft. NE Mary Rose Place, some tame, some not. b lacks, males 8 f e 2 end tables. Recum • A 4' x 4' x 8' Goats - Quality young Ruger M77 7mm mag bant We d e liver! F i xed, males, $200 ea., no bike. Newer roll-top 242 Bend, Oct. 15-31. ** FREE ** num, Leupold scope, bred does, 5 I $100/ • Receipts should shots. 541-389-8420 papers, 541-771-5511 Exercise Equipment custom all-weather fin desk. 541-815-6826 Drop off your dona head. 541-548-0501 include name, Garage Sale Kit tions between 8 a.m. Labradoodles - Mini & ishes on scope, barrel 8 VENDORS WANTED! phone, price and Place an ad in The Chihuahua Puppies and 7 p.m. daily. med size, several colors BowFlex Xtreme IISE stock. Ammo included. New i n door m a rket kind of wood pur Bulletin for your ga cute! $250-300 541-504-2662 like new upgraded to $750. 541-317-0116 Farmers Column (Clothing may be new Very opening in NE Bend. chased. rage sale and re 541-977-4817 or www.alpen-ridge.corn 410 lb . a l l a t t ach or gently used and will Great opportunity for • Firewood ads ceive a Garage Sale Iesse1215Ogmail.corn Ruger Red Label 20g be dispersed to Beth ents, $ 59 9 o b o . o/u English stock 26" collectors, artisans and MUST include spe Long term lease on 40+ Kit FREE! Labradors, quality! AKC, m lehem Inn residents) craftsman who want to cies and cost per irrigated acres in Alfalfa. 2 black, 2 choc; 1 white Eves, 541-279-1263. choke tubes $1,000. 541-312-2003 KIT INCLUDES: Available now for fall have a winter outlet for cord to better serve fern., $500. Suitable for N autilus d u m b be l l Browning Citori 12g o/u their • 4 Garage Sale Signs or spring planting. quality merchan our customers. svc dogs. 541-536-5385 bench, like new, $100 28" choke tubes New Vendors Market • $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-548-0040 dise. Saturdays Oct. http.//www.welcomelabs.corn $1,000. obo. 54 1 - 279-1263 Craftsmen 8 Artisans Use Toward Your through March. $25 Maltese pups, 7 weeks, 2 Both in beautiful condi Two rolls of field fenc eves Next Ad Every Sat. Oct. thru for 8'x10'. Call Don at ter ng Central Oregon r nre inn males, $350, 2 females, tion 541-977-7006 ing: 1 n ew, 1 used • 10 Tips For "Garage March, 9 a.m. 5 p.m. 541-977-1737 or Pups, as $450 ea., adorable lov $100 541-389-9844 at Masonic Hall, 1036 Chihuahua S&W 9mm model 659, nwpickers©hotmail.corn 30+ cord s e asoned, Sale Success!" ing, frisky & fl u ffy! NE 8th St., Bend be sorted colors, teacup, 541-678-0120 Guns, Hunting silver, great c o nd., Wanted: Irrigated farm 1st shots, w ormed, split, p iled. S e ll-all hind the 7-11 Store at & Fishing w/case & 3 cartridges, Wanted- paying cash only $ 3250. P o ss. ground, under pivot ir $250, 541-977-0035 PICK UP YOUR Pit Bull puppies, born for Hi-fi audio & stu Greenwood 8 8th. $450. 541-420-9599 rigation, i n C e n tral dio equip. Mclntosh, trade for motorcycle GARAGE SALE KIT at Drawings every Sat. for Dachshund AKC mini A ug. 28th. $20 0 . 300 H&H/98 M a user, OR. 541-419-2713 p/up, car, quad, La 1777 SW Chandler $25 gift certificate at a www.bendweenies.corn C ontact T iffany a t w/3x9 Tasco scope, Taurus, 22 mag, 4" bar J BL, Marantz, D y 8-shot, NIB, $350. naco, Heathkit, San Pine, 928-581-9190 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 541-728-1416 Call or local business!' $375. 541-508-4558 range finder, spotting rel, 541-548-3439 text and I can email or s cope, 2 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Dry Juniper Firewood boxe s Meat & Animal Processingl nminia English Bulldog Call 541-261-1808 text you with Pictures. a mmo, $1200 , Wanted: Collector $200 per cord, split. ture" puppies. $800 541-490-5440 seeks high quality Items for Free 1/2 cords available. Grass fed, all natural obo. 2 Male, 2 Fe POODLEpups, AKC toy 541-475-3697. WHEN YOU SEE THIS fishing items. Immediate delivery! BEEF. No hormones, male 2 brindle, 2 tan. POM-A-POO pups, toy. BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Call 541-678-5753, or 541-408-6193 FREE Llama Manure antibiotics, etc. So cute! 541-475-3889 Belgium Browning BAR 541-233-8096 ~CO! Search the area's most 503-351-2746 Shovel ready, you haul! $2.50/lb. + cut 8 Poodles, standard AKC, 300 Win. Mag, $650; FIREWOOD seasoned comprehensive listing of English Bulldog Call 541-389-7329 wrap. 541-389-5392. black 8 apricot, $800 Browning A-Bolt Medal Wanted: WWII M1 Car Lodgepole, p r o fes classified advertising... Puppies On a classified ad bine, Colt Commando, sional quick delivery. real estate to automotive, AKC registered, 1st $1000, happy, healthy & lion with Boss 3 00 Where can you find a go to Colt 1911, S&W Vic Win. Mag with 3x9 Rounds $180 cord; merchandise tc sporting shots 8 microchipped groomed. 541-367-8822 www.bendbulletin.corn Need to get an ad helping hand? tory, 541-389-9836. Leupold, $800; Contact A n d y at goods. Bulletin Classifieds Ready to go! to view additional Poodle Toy Puppies appear every day in the in ASAP? From contractors to Ruger M77 .243 with 541-508-61 86. $2000. 541 416-0375 2 males, 5 females. photos of the item. Leupold 3x9, $400. print or on line. 8 wks. 541-520-7259 yard care, it's all here Computers Log truck loads of green German Shorthair AKC 541-280-1 898 People Look for Information lodgepole del. to Bend Call 541-385-5809 in The Bulletin's Pups, FC Tonelli's Ris Queensland Heelers www.bendbulletin.corn Fax it to 541-322-7253 About Products and ing Sun bred, 4 females standard 8, mini,$150 & Bendlocal pays CASH!! HP PhotoSmart model $1000. Mixed loads "Call A Service The Bulletin Classifieds 3 males, $600 ea. for Guns, Knives & 7 550 p r inter $ 2 0 . Services Every Daythrough l odgepole, $1 1 0 0. up. 541-280-1537 http;// Professional" Directory The Bulletin Classifieds 541-81 5-41 77 541-598-6988 Sewing Centra Oregon nnre fna nghtwayranch.wordpress.corn A m m o . 541-526-0617 541-279-9013 A1 Washers & Dryers
Bulgarian AK-74,
$150 ea. Full war ranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
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THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD No. 0911
Edited by Will Shortz Across 1 Admin. aide 5 Spook 10 Wise guys? 14 Off one's rocker 15 Does some computer programming
30 Ike's command in W.W. II 31 Fawning females 34 Book after Daniel 38 Sudanese junkyard? 42 Perfume compound 43 Officer on the 16 Midmonth day bridge with 17 Red-skinned Spock and food Uhura 18 Island dances 44 Penpoint 19 Reference 45 Family member, 20 Articles in informally Dracula's 47 Magazine staff, wardrobe for short 22 Actress 49 Mississippi-to Hayworth Michigan dir. 23 Raise, as young 50 Big shoe 24 Lebanese water specification in Libya? passage? 27 Veer back in the 56 U2 frontman other direction 57 Buck tail? 28 Start of a long 58 Alternative to distance call Travelers 29 Nord's opposite 60 Kitchen fixture
61 Poetry 63 Trader 64 Unlikely prom
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38 39 40 41 Down 1 Writer Waugh 42 43 2 Soothing soaks 45 46 47 48 49 3 One getting the blame 50 51 52 53 54 55 4 "My Cousin 56 57 58 59 Vinny" co-star 5 Where to study 60 61 62 63 chem. or hist. 64 65 66 6 Mannerly 7 Extemporize 67 68 69 8 Rope, for Ricardo Puzzle by Kenneth Leaser 9 Op-ed pieces 32 Ostrich's cousin 39 Answers 51 Gallivants 10 Pinhead-size spy 33 Medical 40 Charlie's Angels, 52 Unable to move photo hardening 53 Memorable2011 e.g. ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 11 Word on taking 35 Write hurricane 41 Quattro one' s leave F AR O E A P E S SAM Shakespearean 54 Springsteen's manufacturer AL T E R N A T I V E A N D 12 Imply "Born poetry 46 From Serbia or 55 Tier U E E N O F M E A N F I R 13 Val d' 36 Popes and the Croatia (Alpine skiing S I S T R E S O BA MA like 59 Questions destination) ACT E R UR A L 48 Elite retreat 37 Head of a French 62 French 101 word HE A R N O E V I L M I LE 21 Fleabag hotel, monastery 50 Hearty steak with two accents AL I T O A N EW for short S 0 M E T H I N GW I C K E D 25 Helpful computer For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. ER I E NA O M I command Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday AL E C S I D V I C I O U S 26 European coal crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. F 0 R UM EDE N AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit center nytimes.corn/mobilexword for more information. GN O M E E A R L BS 27 Farmworker Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past H E T DO N T B E C RU E L who became the puzzles, nytimes.corn/crosswords ($39.95 a year). AL I I N D I S R E PA I R Cowardly Lion in Share tips: nytimes.corn/wordplay. NY C CO S T O M IT S Dorothy's dream Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.corn/learning/xwords.
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools altd Trailtiltg 454- Looking for Employmenl 470- Domestic & In-Home Posit ions 476 -Employment OpporIunilies 486 - Independent Positious
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Employment Opportunities
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Chief Nursing Officer Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in Enterprise, OR
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Seeking individual with mechanical ap titude & clean driving 454 record. Drug-free Looking for Employment workplace; must pass drug screen and Seeking position as Pri criminal background vate Caregiver, over 10 check. Clean, profes yrs. exp. in medical/ sur sional appearance. gical floors. Very com No experience nec passionate, professional essary. Pay $11 per caregiver. 541-294-5440 hour. Apply in person: 20584 Painters Ct., 476 Bend, between Employment 10am-2pm, Monday-Friday. Opportunities 1-888-387-9252
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Ads published in "Em ployment Opportuni t ies" i n c lude e m ployee and i ndependent po s i tions. Ads for posi tions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, p l ease investigate thor oughly. Use extra caution when
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PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 642
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Commercial for RentlLease
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Independent Contractor Sales We are seeking dynamic individuals. DOES THis SOUND LIKE YOU? • OUTGOING 8 COMPETITIVE
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Our winning team of sales 8 promotion professionals are making an average of $400 - $600 per week doing special events, trade shows, retail 8 grocery store promotions while representing THE BULLETIN newspaper as an independent contractor
fenced yard, storage shed, $599+dep., 2812 SW 24th. 541-815-1146.
Classic Irg. 2 bdrm on Spectrum professional culdesac. storage econ building, 2 5 0 ' -500', heat. R60 ins. $750+ $1.00 per ft. total. No last+ dep. No pets 1977 N NN. C a l l An d y , NW 2nd. Local refs. 541-385-6732.
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Want To Rent
Houses for Rent General
Houses for Rent La Pine
WARNING The Bulletin recom mends you use cau tion when you pro vide personal information to compa nies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for ad vance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have
concerns or ques tions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,
I I I
I I Attorney General'sI Office Co n s umerg
Duplex 2 bdrm/1 bath, appl., W/D hookup,
Loans & Mortgages
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Installer / Glass Glazier
OVER '500in total merchandise 4 days .................................................. $18.50 7 days .................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
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541-923-3564.
'UNDER '500in total merchandise 7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days ................................................ $16.00 *Must state prices in ad
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Housekeeping World Mark E agle Crest is taking appli cation for a part time housekeeping posi tion, some hotel re sort cleaning exp. preferred. Must be able to work week ends. Please c a ll Tammy or Lisa at
www.llTR.net
Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free
Starting at 3 lines
Look at: Bendhomes.corn 25 Bed critical ac for Complete Listings of 1-877-877-9392. cess hospital. Or Area Real Estate for Sale BANK TURNED YOU egon RN licensure, CPR, ACLS, DOWN? Private party T.E.A.M. will loan on real es (TNCC) C ertifications. BS N tate equity. Credit, no problem good equity Required/Masters chasing products or I is all you need. Call Preferred. Minimum services from out of now. Oregon Land 5 years acute care 8 2 y e ar s n u r sing I the area. Sending Mortgage 388-4200. m anagement. E x c ash, checks, o r LOCAL MONEYrWe buy c ellent Bene f i t I credit i n f o rmation secured trust deeds 8 I may be subjected to note, Package. EOE some hard money FRAUD. Visit our website at loans. Call Pat Kelley For more informa wchcd.org or contact 541-382-3099 ext.13. tion about an adver Linda Childers, I tiser, you may call Reverse Mortgages f541)426-5313 the Oregon State by local expert Mike
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Employment Opportunities Remember.... A dd your we b a d dress to your ad and readers on The Bulletin' s web site will be able to click through automatically to your site. Sales Telephone prospecting position for important professional services. Income pote n tial $50,000. (average in come 30k-35k) op portunity f o r ad vancement. Base 8 Commission, Health and Dental Benefits. Will train the right per son. Fax resume to: 541-848-6408.
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 52 8 - Loans aud Morlgages 543- Stocksand Bonds 55 8 - Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities
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Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Fr i d ay. . . .. . • • • • • • . • • • • • • . • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3: 0 0 pm FrI • Sunday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5$00 Pm FrI •
i 50~0rj 50~0rj
Can be found on these pages :
or go to www.bendbuiletin.corn
LeROUx NMLS57716
Call to learn more.
541-350-7839 Securitv1 Lending NMLS98161
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RETIRED PROFES SIONAL COUPLE PUBLISHER' S La Pine - Nice 3 Bd, 2.5 is all about meeting seeks furnished rental NOTICE in Crescent Creek in Bend area for Nov. All real estate adver Ba, subdivision. Gas appli your needs. thru Apr. Non-smok tising in this newspa ances 8 fireplace, dbl ers, no pets, excel per is subject to the fitness center, Call on one of the lent references. Con F air H o using A c t garage, park. $800 mo; $900 tact 806-374-5675 or professionals today! which makes it illegal deposit. 541-815-5494 nemarshOhotmail.corn to a d v ertise "any preference, limitation 630 or disc r imination Rooms for Rent based on race, color, Property Management, Inc. religion, sex, handi 541-382-0053 NE Bend, private bath & cap, familial status, entrance, fenced pa marital status or na tio,new carpet & paint, tional origin, or an in AVAILABLE BEND AREA RENTALS $495. 541-31 7-1 879 tention to make any such pre f e rence, Room for rent, Just bring • 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath SE Duplex -Single garage. your toothbrush, one 1 limitation or discrimi Small fenced, natural back yard. FP. W/D bdrm, full bath, office, nation." Familial sta Hookups.New carpet& paint.N o Pets.$650 k itchen u s e , fu l l y tus includes children yyST stocked with utensils. under the age of 18 • Furnished 1 Bdrm/2 Bath Condo - next to Beautiful home at The living with parents or Pioneer Park. Laundry facilities. Indoor Pool. cus t o dians, Murphy bed.Gated community. No pets.$6 75 Greens Golf Course in legal Redmond. $500/mo. + pregnant women, and (AII Utilities included except cable) small utility bill. Own people securing cus • FULLY furnished 1 Bdrm/1 Bath Condo ers are absent often. tody of children under Mt. Bachelor Village. Has Murphy bed, too! 541-279-9538. 18. This newspaper place to transition or vacation. Access to will not knowingly ac Great & Jacuzzi. Free Wi-Fi. No pets. $675 yyST Studios & Kitchenettes cept any advertising •pool Lovely Condo on the River -2 Bdrm/2 Bath. Furnished room, TV w/ for real estate which is cable, micro & fridge. in violation of the law. Gated community. Single garage. Extra stor room. Gas FP. Vaulted ceilings. W/D Utils 8 l i nens. New ur r e a ders ar e age owners. $145-$165/wk O hookups. Great floor plan.$1100 yyS hereby informed that 541-382-1885 3 Bdrm/2 Bath NW Home - Shevlin Park all dwellings adver •Fenced back yard. Dbl. garage. Tile counters. tised in this newspa 634 Hardwood floors. Pine trim & decor. W/D in per are available on AptJMultiplex NE Bend an equal opportunity cluded.Dogs only considered. GFA. 1638 sq. $1250.00 basis. To complain of •ft. Open * spacious 3Bdrm/2 Bath SW Home $299 1st mo. rent!! discrimination cal l near schools - office at entrance. Hardwood GET THEM BEFORE HUD t o l l -free at floor. Lots of built-ins and pull outs. Large gas THEY ARE GONE! 1-800-877-0246. The 2 bdrm, 1 bath toll f re e t e l ephone fireplace. Vaulted ceilings. Crafts room up $530 & $540 for the hear stairs with sink. Fruit trees. Pets? $1495.00 Carports 8 A/C included! number ing im p aired is • Beautiful 4 Bdrm/3.5 Bath NW Awbrey Fox Hollow Apts. Butte home. 2story with Bonus Room and 1-800-927-9275. (541) 383-3152 Built-in office area. Master and Guest suites on Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co the Main. Tranquility in the trees. partially wrap *Upstairs only with lease around porches front and back. Formal dining. Need to get an Huge river rock FP. Triple garage. Must see. Call for Speciais! ad in ASAP? 3525 s . ft. $2295.00 Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. You can place it AVAILABLE REDMOND AREA RENTALS W/D hookups, patios 3 Bdrm/2 BathSW Home - Fenced back yard online at: or decks. with large patio. Dbl. garage. New paint, car MOUNTAiN GLEN, www.bendbulletin.corn pet, appl., 1120 sq. ft. $850.00 541-383-9313 *** FOR ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES*** Professionally CALL 541-382-0053 &/or Stop By the Office managed by Norris & 541.385.5809 at 587 NE Greenwood, Bend Stevens, Inc.
KOZA K
WE OFFER:
*Solid Income Opportunity* *Complete Training Program* *No Selling Door Io Door * *No Telemarketing Involved* *Great Advancement Opportunity* * Full and Part Time Hours *
applying for jobs on line and never pro vide personal infor mation to any source you may not have re Independent Contractor searched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when r esponding to A N Y online e m p loyment
FOR THE CHANCE OF A LIFETIME, Call Adam Johnson 541-410-5521, TODAY!
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*Supplement Your Income*
ad from out-of-state.
We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320
For Equal Opportunity L aws: Oregon B u reau of Labor 8 In dustry, C i vil Rights Division, 971-673-0764
If you have any ques tions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 -Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor RentNWBend 654- Housesfor RentSEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 -Houses for RentFurnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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Looking for your next
amp/oyee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000
readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.corn which currently re ceives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds
745
Homes for Sale BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/Pics!
www. BendRepos.corn bend and beyond real estate 20967 yeoman, bend or
Get Results! NOTICE Call 385-5809 or All real estate adver tised here in is sub place your ad on-line at ject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , bendbulletin.corn which makes it illegal to advertise any pref The Bulletin erence, limitation or discrimination based To Subscribe call on race, color, reli 541-385-5800 or go to gion, sex, handicap, www.bendbulletin.corn familial status or na tional origin, or inten 762 tion to make any such preferences, l i mita Homes with Acreage tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly 5 Acres, 2 irrigated, E. accept any advertis side of Bend, 4 bdrm, ing for r eal e state 2.5 bath, small shed, which is in violation of must be pre-qualified, this law. All persons $350,000, 541-389-7481 are hereby informed that all dwellings ad vertised are available on an equal opportu nity basis. The Bulle tin Classified
Where buyers meet sellers.
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.corn
Easily. The Classified Section is easy to use. Every item is categorized
750
Redmond Homes
and every category is indexed on the section's front page.
Redmond Worry Free Certified Home $149,000
Huge Landscaped Lot Move in Ready! 800-451-5808 ext 819 •
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Classifieds Thousands ofadsdaily in print andonline.
To the bicyclist who I invertantly cut off at the Mill Mall round about last Saturday, my apologies.
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tractors Board (CCB). More Than Service A n active lice n se Peace Of Mind means the contractor i s bonded an d i n Fall Clean Up s ured. Ver if y t h e Don't track it in an Winter contractor's CCB • Leaves c ense through t h e • Cones CCB Cons u m er • Needles Website • Pruning
Travel Trailers
• Debris Hauling
Fifth Wheels
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
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Sprinkler B/owouts Discounts available Call Cutting Edge Lawnworks: 541-815-4097 • LCB ¹8451
Call The Yard Doctor for yard maintenance thatching, sod, sprin kler blowouts, water features, more! Allen 541-536-1294
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20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast
w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $19,500. 541-389-1413
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20.5' Seaswirl Spy der 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530
Jayco Seneca 2007, 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy 5500 d i e sel , t oy hauler $130 , 000. 541-389-2636.
• ij Immaculate!
Beaver Coach Marquis 40' 1987. New cover, new paint (2004), new inverter (2007). Onan 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, parked covered $35,000 obo. 541-419-9859 or 541-280-2014
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fish LCB 5012 ing, drift, canoe, or call 503-378-4621. house and sail boats. The Bulletin recom Gutter For all other types of j~ mends checking with Aeration/Fall Clean-up Cleaning watercraft, please sce the CCB prior to con BOOK NOW! Southwind 35.5' Triton, Class 875. tracting with anyone. Weekly/one-time service 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du 541-385-5809 Compost avail. Bonded, insured, Some other t r ades pont UV coat, 7500 mi. free estimates! also req u ire addi Applications Bought new at COLLINS Lawn Maint. tional licenses and Use Less Water $132,913; Ca/i 541-480-9714 certifications. asking $93,500. $$$ SAVE $$$ GENERATE SOME ex Call 541-419-4212 Improve Soil citement in your neig Debris Removal Bend Landscaping borhood. Plan a ga 881 Sprinkler Blowouts, 2012 Maintenance rage sale and don' t JUNK BE GONE and Winterization Travel Trailers Package Available forget to advertise in I Haul Away FREE 541-382-1655 weekly, monthly classified! 385-5809. LOB¹ 7990 For Salvage. Also Casita 16-ft 2005 Spirit and Cleanups & Cleanouts Deluxe, awning, AC, one time service heater. Excellent cond. Mel, 541-389-8107 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 N OTICE: ORE G O N $11,000. 541-383-3886 Landscape Contrac EXPERIENCED Handyman tors Law (ORS 671) Used out-drive Commercial r equires a l l bu s i parts - Mercury ERIC REEVE HANDY & Residential nesses that advertise OMC rebuilt ma SERVICES. Home 8 t o p e r form L a n d rine motors: 151 Commercial Repairs, Free Estimates scape C o n struction $1595; 3.0 $1895; Carpentry-Painting, Senior Discounts which incl u des: 4.3 (1993), $1995. Pressure-washing, 541-390-1466 p lanting, deck s , Pioneer Spirit 18CK, 541-389-0435 Honey Do' s. On-time Same Day Response fences, arbors, 2007, used only 4x, AC, promise. Senior w ater-features, a n d electric tongue j ack, Discount. Work guar installation, repair of $8995. 541-389-7669 anteed. 541-389-3361 irrigation systems to Watercraft or 541-771-4463 Nelson Landscape be licensed with the Bonded & Insured Maintenance Landscape Contrac CCB¹181595 2007 Sea Doo t ors B o a rd . Th i s Serving 2004 Waverunner, 4-digit number is to be I DO THAT! Central Oregon excellent condition, included in all adver Home/Rental repairs Residential tisements which indi LOW hours. Double S pringdale 2005 27', 4' Small jobs to remodels & Commercial cate the business has trailer, lots of extras. slide in dining/living area, Honest, guaranteed $10,000 a bond, insurance and work. CCB¹151573 sleeps 6, low mi, $15,000 workers c ompensa 541-719-8444 Dennis 541-317-9768 obo. 541-408-3811 tion for their employ ees. For your protec Ads published in "Wa ,~ i ~ ] Home Improvement tion call 503-378-5909 tercraft" include: Kay • SnowRemoval or use our website: Kelly Kerfoot Const. • Sprinkler Repair aks, rafts and motor 28 yrs exp in Central OR! • Back Flow Testing www.lcb.state. or.us to ized personal check license status Quality & honesty, from watercrafts. For • Fall Clean Up carpentry 8 handyman before co n t racting " boats" please see •Weekly Mowing with t h e bu s iness. Class 870. jobs, to expert wall cov Senior Discounts ering install / removal. Persons doing land slide, Bunkhouse style, Bonded & Insured scape m aintenance 541-385-5809 sleeps 7-8, excellent Sr. discounts CCB¹47120 541-81 5-4458 Licensed/bonded/insured do not require a LCB condition, $ 1 6 900 LCB¹8759 541-389-1413 / 410-2422 license. Serving Central Oregon s nce 1903 541-390-2504 www.hirealicensedcontracior. corn
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Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care
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Watercraft
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Hysfer H25E, runs Sea Kayaks - His & Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 MONTANA 3585 2008, well, 2982 Hours, Hers, Eddyline Wind 29', weatherized, like exc. cond., 3 slides, $3500, call Dancers,17', fiberglass king bed, Irg LR, Arc n ew, f u rnished 8 Motorcycles & Accessories boats, all equip incl., 541-749-0724 tic insulation, all op ready to go, incl Wine personal flo tions $37,500. ard S a t ellite dish, Harley Davidson Soft paddies, tation devices,dry bags, 541-420-3250 26,995. 541-420-9964 Tail Deluxe 20 0 7 , spray skirts, roof rack w/ I a) white/cobalt, w / pas towers 8 cradles — Just NuWa 297LK H i tch G A L L W senger kit, Vance & Hiker 2007 3 slides add water, $1250/boat TODAY 8 Hines muffler system Firm. 541-504-8557. 32' touring coach, left Viking Tent t railer & kit, 1045 mi., exc. kitchen, rear lounge, Peterbilt 359 p o table 880 2 008, c lean, s e l f c ond, $19,9 9 9 , many extras, beautiful contained, sleeps 5, 541-389-91 88. c ond. inside 8 o u t , 1/3 interest in Colum water t ruck, 1 9 90, Motorhomes 3200 gal. tank, 5hp easy to tow, great $34,499 OBO, Prinev bia 400, located at Harley Heritage pump, 4-3" h oses, cond. $5200, obo. ille. 541-447-5502 days Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Softail, 2003 camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-383-71 50. & 541-447-1641 eves. Call 541-647-3718 $5 000+ in extras 541-820-3724 $2000 paint job, 1 /3 interest i n w e l l 30K mi. 1 owner, equipped IFR Beech Find It in For more information w — N B onanza A 36 , lo The Bulletin Classifieds! please call cated KBDN. $55,000. 541-385-8090 Country Coach Intrigue ) 54 1 -385-5809 541-419-9510 or 209-605-5537 2002, 40' Tag axle. 400hp Cummins Die Weekend Warrior Toy Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th sel. tw o s l ide-outs. Hauler 28' 2007,Gen, wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Executive Hangar HD FAT BOY at Bend Airport 4 1,000 m iles, n e w fuel station, exc cond. TV,full awning, excel Utility Trailers 1996 sleeps 8, black/gray (KBDN) tires & batteries. Most lent shape, $23,900. 60' Completely rebuilt/ i nterior, u se d 3X , wide x 50' deep, options. $95,000 OBO 541-350-8629 customized, low w/55' wide x 17' high $24,999. 541-678-5712 miles. Accepting of 541-389-9188 FIND IT) bi-fold door. Natural ferss. 541-548-4807 gas heat, office, bath Big Tex Landscap BUY IT! Get your room. Parking for 6 ing/ ATV Trailer, Looking for your SELL IT! business ars. A d jacent t o next employee? dual axle flatbed, Just too many The Bulletin Classifieds cFrontage Rd; g reat 7'x16', 7000 lb. Place a Bulletin help collectibles? visibility for a viation wanted ad today and GVW, all steel, G ROW I N G bus. 1jetjock@q.corn reach over 60,000 $1400. Sell them in 541-948-2126 541-382-4115, or readers each week. 773 ,oo oJ Your classified ad 541-280-7024. The Bulletin Classifieds with an ad in Acreages Good classified ads tell will also appear on The Bulletin's ~o .x~~ the essential facts in an bendbulletin.corn 541-385-5809 "Call A Service Pilgrim In t e rnational interesting Manner. Write which currently re CHECK YOUR AD 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, from the readers view - not Automotive Parts, Professional" ceives over 1.5 mil Please check your ad HD Screaming Eagle Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 lion page views ev the seller' s. Convert the Service 8 Accessories Directory Electra Glide 2005, on the first day it runs Fall price $ 2 1,865. ery month at no facts into benefits. Show to make sure it is cor 103" motor, two tone 541-312-4466 extra cost. Bulletin the reader how the item will Honda Accord 2004 4 candy teal, new tires, rect. Sometimes in Classifieds Get Re 16" RIMS for sale, 2 help them in someway. s tructions over t h e 23K miles, CD player, sults! Call 385-5809 s now tires Goo d This hydraulic clutch, ex phone are misunder or place your ad cond. $250 OB. 541 advertising tip stood and an e rror cellent condition. on-line at 350-1684 brought to youby Highest offer takes it. can occur in your ad. bendbulletin.corn 541-480-8080. If this happens to your The Bulletin Econoline R V 1 9 89, ad, please contact us Honda Elite 80 2001, fully loaded, exc. cond, SewingCental Omgo 5 nce tot8 Regal Prowler AX6 Ex the first day your ad Take care of 1400 mi., absolutely 35K orig. mi., $18,750. treme Edition 38' '05, appears and we will like new., comes w/ Call 541-546-6133. 4 slides,2 fireplaces, all your investments be happy to fix it as carrying rack for 2" maple cabs, king bed/ s oon as w e c a n . receiver, ideal for use CAN'T BEAT THIS! with the help from bdrm separated w/slide le Deadlines are: Week w/motorhome, $995, glass dr,loaded, always The Bulletin's Look before you days 11:00 noon for 541-546-6920 garaged, lived in only 3 x buy, below market next day, Sat. 11:00 "Call A Service mo,brand new $54,000, value! Size & mile ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP ou a.m. for Sunday and still like new $28500 aqe DOES matter! Professional" Directory Softajl Deluxe Monday. SHARE LEFT! will deliver,see rvt.corn, Cjass A 32 ' H urri Chev Corvair con 2010, 805 miles, 541-385-5809 ad¹4957646 for pics. Economical flying in vertible,1964,Monza cane by Four Winds, 882 new top & Thank you! Black Chameleon. your ow n C e s sna Gory, 541-580-7334 2007. 12,500 mi, all 172/180 HP for only tranny, runs great, exlnt The Bulletin Classified Fifth Wheels $17,000 amenities, Ford V10, $ 10,000! Based a t cruising car! $5500 obo. Call Don © Ithr, cherry, slides, SPRINTER36' 2005, BDN. Call Gabe at 541-420-5205 like new! New low 541-41 0-3823 $10,500 obo.Two Professional Air! price, $54,900. slides, sleeps 5, 775 ~ 5 4 1 -388-0019 • 541-548-5216 queen air mattress, Manufactured/ 870 small sgl. bed, couch Mobile Homes Boats & Accessories Gulfstream folds out. 1.5 baths, S cen i c 541-382-0865, Cruiser 36 ff. 1999, Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 FACTORY SPECIAL 13' leave message! I Smokercraft Cummins 330 hp die by Carriage, 4 slide New Home, 3 bdrm, Chevy C-20 Pickup 1985, good cond., sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 outs, inverter, satel $47,500 finished 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; in. kitchen slide out, lite sys, fireplace, 2 on your site,541.548.5511 15HP gas Evinrude auto 4-spd, 396, model tires, under cover, flat screen TVs. www.JandMHomes.corn + Minakota 44 elec. new CST /all options, orig. miles only,4 door $60,000. motor, fish finder, 2 hwy. owner, $24,000, fridge/freezer ice 541-480-3923 541-923-6049 extra seats, trailer, maker, W/D combo, M i R d ~ Taurus 27.5' 1988 extra equip. $3200. Interbath t ub $19,900 2 bdrm, 2 bath & Everything works, Diamond Reo Dump $23,900 2 bdrm, 1 bath 541-388-9270 shower, 50 amp pro $1750/partial trade for Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 $38,900 3 bdrm, 2 bath pane gen & m o re! car. 541-460-9127 yard box, runs good, $39,999 3 bdrm, 2 bath 17' 1984 Chris Craft $55,000. 541-548-5511 $6900, 541-548-6812 - Scorpion, 140 HP 541-948-2310 www.JandMHomes.corn inboard/outboard, 2 885 Advertise your car! Flcetwood Wilderness depth finders, troll 1980 Chevy C30, 16K Add A Picture! 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, Canopies & Campers Movers! $7,999 2 bdrm, ing motor, full cover, Reach thousands of readers! original miles, 400 cu in, rear bdrm, fireplace, EZ - L oad t railer, Hunter's Delight! Pack auto, 4WD, winch. $7000 1 bath, $19,999 Office/ Call 541-385-5809 AC, W/D hkup beau Cam p er The Bulletin Ctassfffeds obo. 541-389-2600 OBO. Studio, $32,900 3 bdrm, $3500 age deal! 1988 Win tiful u n it! $30,500. C aribou 541-382-3728. 1995, model 11M, 2 bath, 541-548-5511 nebago Super Chief, 541-815-2380 A/C, electric jacks, www.JandMHomes.corn 3 8K m i l es , gr e a t micro, 2.5K propane shape; 1988 Bronco II 17' Seaswirl 1988 gen, awning. Ford 4 x4 t o t o w , 1 3 0 K F -350 X L T 1 9 9 9 , open bow, rebuilt Call a Pro mostly towed miles, os n • . 7 .3L d i esel, 4 x 4 Chevy V6 engine, nice rig! $15,000 both. Whether you need a new uph o lstery, 541-382-3964, I eave crewcab, 162K mi., trai l e r Chevy Wagon 1957, K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 $13 000 pkg. W i ll E conoline fence fixed, hedges $4500 or best offer. msg. 16-Ton 29 ' B ed, 4-dr., complete, 707-688-4523 slide, AC, TV, awning sell camper sepa trimmed or a house NEW: tires, converter, rately fo r $ 4 5 00. w/fold up ramps, elec. $15,000 OBO, trades Itasca Spirit Class C brakes, P i n t lehitch, please call built, you' ll find batteries. Hardly used 541-548-361 0 541-420-5453. 2007, 20K miles, front $15,500. 541-923-2595 $4700, 541-548-6812 professional help in entertainment center, The Bulletin's "Call a I all bells 8 whistles, extremely good con Service Professional" dition, 2 s l ides, 2 Directory $45,000 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 HDTV's, 541-385-5809 OBO. 541-447-5484 Volvo Penta, 270HP, low hrs., must see, $15,000, 541-330-3939
Call54I-3855809topromoteraur serviceAdvertise ' far 28daysstarting at I4I Iliro ope ooioouogeiono<oruooleonourweooieI
NOTICE: Oregon state law req u ires any one who c o n tracts for construction work to be licensed with the C onstruction Con
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real EstateWanted 719- Real EstateTrades 726 -Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos&Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- NorthwestBendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
Redmond Homes
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THE BULLETIN•TUESDAY OCTOBER 16 2012 875
Winter is on it's way and now is the time to promote your business in our special Service Guide page in Classifieds! This special one page guide will feature an option of three different ad sizes. The guide will run 8 consecutive Fridays beginning November 2nd in our Classifieds Section. e I I
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o
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The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Sprinkler Blow-outs
The Bulletin
• WeatheriZation • HOme imPrOVement • CarPet Cleaning
• Automotive • And much more!
Deadline for ad space allcl cOP)f:
Fri., Oct. 26,20I2 PubliSheS on
Friday, Nov. 2, 9, l6 & 23 Additional publish dates: N0V. 30, DeC. 7, l4, 2I
Ad Size
Rate
1.120" x 2.6511"
$100.00(4 runs)
2.4715x 2.6511"
$160.00(4 runs)
2.4715x 5"
$240.00(4 runs)
PLUS 4 FREE/ Contact your Bulletin Advertising RePresentative for more information Nena Close: 54I-383-0302 • email: nclose@wescompapers.corn Tonya McKiernan: 54I -6I7-7865 • email: tmcklernan@vvescompapers.corn
www.ben dbulletin.corn The
B u l l et i n
541 -382-1811
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G4 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012•THE BULLETIN 975
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Pickups
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Sp o rt Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
GMC Denali 2003
Audi S4 Cabriolet 2005 49K mi, red w/charcoal interior, 2 sets tires,
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Au t o mobiles
Automobiles •
Automo b iles
T oyota C a mry X L E 1994 V6, 4 dr, leather interior, AM/FM radio CD/Tape player, sun
Looking for your next employee?
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BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RV's for Rent
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 932
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
GMC '/4-ton 4WD, 1997, Diesel engine, extra
cab, good shape, electric windows, door locks & seats, $5500. 541-382-5309
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1
ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-41 9-5480.
loaded with options. Exc. cond., snow tires and rims in cluded. 130k hwy miles. $9,500 obo.
exc. cond., $19,950
Place a Bulletin help roof, auto., p s/pb, wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 c ruise, A / C , ver y Buicks! 1996 Regal, Mercedes E420 1994, clean, great condition, readers each week. 541-41 9-4890. 87k; 1997 LeSabre, great cond., all ser $3150. 541-593-2134 Your classified ad 112k; and others! vice records, 152K will also appear on You' ll not find nicer Check out the $5,250 541-610-9986 bendbulletin.corn Buicks $3500 8 up. classifieds online which currently re One look's worth a Mitsubishi 3 00 0 ceives over 1.5 mil G T www.bendbulletin.corn thousand words. Call lion page views 1 999, a u to., p e a r l Updated daily Bob, 541-318-9999. every month at w hite, very low m i . for an appt. and take a $9500. 541-788-8218. Toyotas: 1999 Avalon no extra cost. Bulle drive in a 30 mpg. car tin Classifieds 254k; 1996 Camry, GMC Yukon XL S LT Get Results! Call 2004, loaded w/fac Cadillac CTS S e dan 98k, 4 cyl. Lots of 385-5809 or place miles left in these tory dvd, 3rd s eat, 2007, 29K, auto, exc. your ad on-line at cars. Price? You tell $8900. 541-280-6947 cond, loaded, $17,900 me! I'd guess bendbulletin.corn OBO, 541-549-8828
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
541-350-5373.
$2000-$4000. Your servant, Bob at Cadillac E i D o r ado What are you 541-318-9999, no 1994, T otal c r e a m Porsche 911 1974, low charge for looking. puff, body, paint, trunk mi., complete motor/ looking for? as showroom, blue trans. rebuild, tuned Volkswagen Jetta SE, You' ll find it in leather, $1700 wheels suspension, int. & ext. 2008. 40,500 mi, Great w/snow tires although refurb., oi l c o o ling, condition, FWD, ABS, The Bulletin Classifieds car has not been wet shows new in & out, automatic, AC, moon in 8 years. On trip to perf. m ech. c o n d. roof, CD/MP3 & much Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., Much more! more! $12,950 541-385-5809 $5400, 541-593-4016. $28,000 541-420-2715 541-771-2312
Chrysler 300 C o upe ...don't let time get 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Ford T-Bird 1966 390 engine, power away. Hire a I nternational Fla t auto. trans, ps, air, everything, new Bed Pickup 1963, 1 frame on rebuild, re professional out paint, 54K original t on dually, 4 s p d. painted original blue, of The Bulletin's miles, runs great, 1999 Ford F250 XLT trans., great MPG, original blue interior, Super Duty S u per could be exc. wood "Call A Service original hub caps, exc. excellent cond. in & out. Asking $8,500. Cab. V10, 6.8L, auto, hauler, runs great, chrome, asking $9000 Professional" 541-480-31 79 4x4, 90k miles, AC, new brakes, $1950. or make offer. Find exactly what winch, grille, many ex 541-41 9-5480. Directory today! 541-385-9350 tras, 2 extra tailgates you are looking for in the Just bought a new boat? and 5th wheel set-up. CLASSIFIEDS Sell your old one in the $9900 541-31 7-0554. classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! Cadillac Seville STS 541-385-5809 Chev short box 2003 - just finished step-side pickup, GMC b ton 1971, Only $4900 engine work 1976, excellent Jeep Willys 1947,custom, $19,700! Original low shape inside & out, RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L by Certified GM me small block Chevy, PS, mile, exceptional, 3rd hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, OD, mags+trailer. Swap chanic Has every Chrysler SD 4-Door owner. 951-699-7171 all electric, all am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. for backhoe.No am calls thing but navigation. 1930, CD S R oyal works, $5500. 541-420-3634 /390-1 285 please. 541-389-6990 Too many bells and Standard, 8-cylinder, 541-382-5309 w histles t o l i s t . body is good, needs 935 bought a new one. some r e s toration, Mercury M o n terreyChevy Silverado 1500 Sport Utility Vehicles $6900 firm. runs, taking bids, 541-420-1283 1965, Exc. All original, LTZ crew, 2011, sexy 541-383-3888, 4-dr. sedan, in stor black, loaded! 12k mi, 541-81 5-331 8 age last 15 yrs., 390 $36K. 541-325-3735 High C o m pression Porsche Cayenne 2004, engine, new tires 8 li 86k, immac, dealer c ense, reduced t o maint'd, loaded, now $2850, 541-410-3425. Buick Enclave 2008 CXL $1 7000. 503-459-1 580 AWD, V-6, black, clean, ChryslerSebring 2006 940 mechanicall y sound, 82k FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Fully loaded, exc.cond, Ford 250 XLT 1990, Vans miles. $22,900. very low miles (38k), door panels w/flowers 6 yd. dump bed, Call 541-815-1216 & hummingbirds, always garaged, 139k, Auto, $5500. transferable warranty white soft top & hard 541-41 0-9997 n top. Just reduced to Plymouth incl. $8600 Say ngoodbuy B a r racuda 541-330-4087 $3,750. 541-317-9319 1966, original car! 300 Ford F250 2009 Super to that unused or 541-647-8483 hp, 360 V8, center duty crew cab diesel item by placing it in lines, (Original 273 4x4, ¹A79900 $38,995 Ford Crown Vic. eng 8 wheels incl.) The Bulletin Classifieds Chevrolet G20 Sports 1997 4 door, 127k, 541-593-2597 man, 1993, exlnt cond, d rives, runs a n d $4750. 541-362-5559 or looks great, extra Oregon PROJECT CARS:Chevy 541-663-6046 5 41-385 -5 8 0 9 set of winter tires on AntoSource 2-dr FB 1949 & Chevy rims, only $3000. Coupe 1950 - rolling 541-598-3750 Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 541-771-6500. Chevy Astro chassis's $1750 ea., aaaoregonautosource.corn CHEVY K-5 BLAZER 2 dr. hardtop, fastback, 1985 Hunters Special Cargo Van 2001, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & Chevy 4-dr 1949, com pw, pdl, great cond., radio (orig),541-41 9-4989 plete car, $1949; Ca People Look for Information 4x4 V-8 Tow Package dillac Series 61 1950, 2 $1900.00 541-977-8696 business car, well Have an item to About Products and Ford Mustang Coupe dr. hard top, complete Services Every Daythrough m aint, regular o i l sell quick? 1966, original owner, w/spare front c l ip., Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 c hanges, $4 5 0 0 , The Bulletin Classifieds 4x4. 120K mi, Power please V8, automatic, great $3950, 541-382-7391 call If it's under seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd 541-633-5149 shape, $9000 OBO. '500 you can place it in row seating, e xtra 530-51 5-81 99 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! tires, CD, pnvacy tint Chevy G-20 c u stom The Bulletin ing, upgraded rims. conversion travel van Door-to-door selling with Ford Ranchero Ford F250 XLT 4x4 Classifieds for: Fantastic cond. $7995 fast results! It's the easiest L ariat, 1990, r e d, 1979 Contact Timm at 1994 128k, 5.7L, rear with 351 Cleveland 80K original miles, way in the world to sell. 541-408-2393 for info elect. bed, 75% tires. a '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 4" lift with 39's, well real beauty in & out! modified engine. or to view vehicle. Travel in economy and '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Body is in maintained, $4000 The Bulletin Classified style and under $4000. (Private Party ads only) obo. 541-419-5495 excellent condition, 541-385-5809 Bob, 541-318-9999 $2500 obo. 541-420-4677 tI MISSTHIS DON Ford Excu r sion 2005, 4WD, diesel, VW Karman Ghia Sell an Item exc. cond., $18,900, "Arctic Fox Silver Edition 1140, 2005. 5 hrs on 1970, good cond., call 541-923-0231. new upholstery and gen; air, siideout, dry bath, like new, loaded! . convertible top. Ford Ranger 1999, 4x4, A/so 2004Dodge Ram 3500 quad cab dua//y $10,000. 4x4, 11,800 mi, SuperHitch..." 7 1K, X- c ab , X L T, Garage Sales 541-389-2636 Richard, Bend, OR a uto, 4 . 0L , $ 8 4 00 If it's under$500 OBO. 541-388-0232 Garage Sales Get Results from Qualified you can place it in Garage Sales Central Oregon Buyers! The Bulletin Call us at 541-385-5809 and ask Find them about our Wheel Deal S ecial! Classifieds for: in The Bulletin $10 • 3 lines, 7 days VW Thing 1974, good cond. Extremely Rare! Ford Super Duty F-250 Classifieds $16 • 3 lines, 14 days 2001, 4X4,$7900 OBO; Only built in 1973 8 trades considered. 1974. $8,000. 541-385-5809 (Private Party ads only) www .bendbulletiz 541-815-9939 541-389-2636
WHEN YOU SEE THIS I The Bulletin recomb mends extra caution I Roller (no engine), when p u rchasing ~ OO lowered, full roll cage, products or services 5-pt harnesses, rac M orePixatBendbjletin,corn I from out of the area ing seats, 911 dash 8 On a classified ad I S ending c ash , instruments, d e cent go to checks, or credit in shape, v e r y c o ol! www.bendbulletin.corn formation may be I $1699. 541-678-3249 to view additional I subiect toFRAUD. photos of the item. For more informa I tion about an adver Toyota Camry's tiser, you may call Want to impress the 1984, $1 2 0 0 Oregon StateI relatives? Remodel I the Attorney General's I obo; 1985 SOLD; your home with the I Office C o nsumer I 1986 parts c a r, help of a professional I Protection hotline at $500; call for de from The Bulletin's 1-877-877-9392. tails, "Call A Service 541-548-6592 Professional" Directory Servrng Central Oregon smte 1903
PORSCHE 914 1974,
I I
The Bulletin
p"""' ' n oars, Q d Qotd cot vintage 8, bo ' IJ!ake s St»ver» g nets and tst L rnattres Wedding 0 eve. Ca e, ' BO i on twic atches ! rnbre OAR> 3 15 H p' wu tdpes. seywer t , Vi p,KEB ooka, ;ter. wl"n atto ks, t' ec<o Bazo BtKE. 200' ba0ast tan gps. ower, OBO. t new, 1 O 1 HP $19 AK ente rtatnrnen 1200, LID OA ' 200 $750.Ca0 St 9 Patd $" . ne+ 's 33 GOER cen'ter' fits Ca0eve $500 CR, $15,' DE seat,2 ye' $
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LEGAL NOTICE DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON ROAD DEPARTMENT INVITATION TO BID FOR SUPPLYING AND DELIVERY OF AC-15P LIQUID ASPHALT 2013
Sealed bids will be re ceived at th e D e s chutes County Road D epartment, 6 1 1 5 0 SE 27th Street, Bend, Oregon 97702, until but not a f ter, 2 : 00 p.m. on October 30, 2012 at w hich time and place all bids for the abo v e -entitled public works project will be publ i cly o pened an d r e a d aloud. The contract calls for supplying and deliv ery of 1600 Tons of AC-15P liquid asphalt to specified locations in the Bend, Terreb onne and La Pine ar eas o f De s c hutes County. Specifications and other bid documents
may be inspected and obtained at the Des chutes County Road
D epartment, 6 1 1 5 0 S.E. 2 7 t h St r e et, Bend, Oregon 97702 or t h e De s chutes County webs i t e,
www.deschutes.org. Inquiries pertaining to these s p ecifications shall be d irected to Tom Sh a mberger, Operations Manager, telephone (541) 322-71 20.
Bids shall be made on the forms furnished by the County, incorpo rating a l l co n t ract documents, ad dressed and mailed or d elivered t o Ch r i s Doty, Department Di rector, 61150 SE 27th Street, Bend, Oregon 97702 in a sealed en
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contract. Freight rates gal paper called a Oregon regarding the LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE for product delivery to "motion" or "answer". manufacture, distribu NOTICE OF SEIZURE n additional a g e ncies The "motion" or an tion, or possession of PUBLIC HEARING - Board of County Commissioners, Deschutes County FOR CIVIL may b e n e gotiated swer" must be given FORFEITURE TO ALL controlled substances NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Deschutes County intends to convey OF AC-15P LIQUID to the court clerk or (ORS Chapter 475); all right, title and interest in the following described land to the La Pine ASPHALT 2013 n and separately from this POTENTIAL contract. administrator w i t hin and/or (2) Was used Parks and Recreation District (the "District" ). These parcels, comprising t he name an d a d CLAIMANTS AND TO 30 days of the date of or intended for use in approximately 30.49 acres, are currently designated "park" by Order of dress of the bidder. ALL UNKNOWN CHRIS DOTY first publication speci PERSONS READ THIS committing or f acili the Board of County Commissioners. The land will be conveyed without fied herein along with tating the violation of, consideration for park and recreation purposes as authorized by ORS Each bid must con Department Director CAREFULLY the required filing fee. solicitation to violate, 275.330. The land is adjacent to lands owned by the District, commonly tain a statement as to PUBLISHED: It must be in proper If you have any inter attempt to violate, or whether the bidder is known as Audia Park. BEND BULLETIN: form and have proof est i n t h e s e i z ed conspiracy to violate a resident bidder, as THE October 16 & 23, 2012 o f service o n t h e the criminal laws of defined in ORS Parcel 1 d e s cribed JOURNAL OF plaintiff's attorney or, property State of Oregon Situate in the County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, described as fol 279A.120 (1) (b). DAILY below, you must claim the COMMERCE: if the plaintiff does not regarding the manu Vendors shall use re that interest or you will lows: have a n at t o rney, automatically lose that facture, distribution or A portion of the South Half of the Northwest Quarter (S 1/2 NW 1/4) of cyclable products to October 16 & 23, 2012 proof of service upon possession of c o n the maximum extent interest. If you do not Section 17, Township 22 South, Range 10 East of the Willamette Me t he plaintiff. If y o u file a c laim for t he trolled su b stances ridian, beginning at the northwest quarter corner of the South Half of the economically feasible LEGAL NOTICE in the performance of IN T H E CI R C UIT have any q uestions property, the property (ORS Chapter 475). Northwest Quarter; thence South 02' 27' West 685.04 feet to the true should see an the contract work set C OURT FOR T H E you may be forfeited even IN THE MATTER OF: point of beginning; thence North 64' 55.5' East, 138.39 feet to a point; attorney immediately! forth in this document. STATE OF OREGON if you are not con (1)U.S. Currency in thence on a 50' radius curve 107.54 feet to a point; thence North 89' 47' If you need help in the amo u n t of FOR THE COUNTY finding an a t torney, victed of any crime. East, 100 feet; thence North 38 26.5' East, 160.08 feet; thence North Case No. 89' 47' East, 2,000 feet; thence South 39' 04' East, 231.14 feet; thence Deschutes Co u n ty OF DES C HUTES. To claim an interest, $4,751.00, 2012-001 68697 you may call the Or may reject any bid not L AW O FFICE O F egon State Bar Law you must file a written seized 8/1 7/1 2 from North 89 47' East, 160.0 feet; thence North 38 38' East, 231.14 feet; in compliance with all MIKEL R. MILLER, claim with the forfei thence North 0' 13' West, 40.0 feet; thence North 89' 47' East, 300.0 prescribed bi d d ing P .C., P l aintiff, v s . yer Referral Service at ture counsel named James Babcock. feet; thence South 0' 13' East, 40.0 feet; thence South 20' 07.5' East, (503) 684-3763 or toll (2)U.S. Currency in ANDREW T HOMAS below, Th e w r i tten 191.46 feet; thence North 89' 47' East, 160.0 feet; thence North 40' p rocedures and r e amo u n t of 50.5' East, 848.74 feet; thence North 89' 47' East, 546.93 feet; thence quirements, and may POWELL, Defendant. f ree i n O r egon a t claim must be signed the 452- 7 636. by you, sworn to un $5,067.00, Case No. reject for good cause Case No. CV 120060. (800) South 2 05.5' East, 441.43 feet; thence North 65 35.5' West, 340.0 D A T E OF der penalty of perjury 2012-001 68697 any or all bids upon a SUMMONS. To: AN FIRST feet; thence South 62' 45.5' West, 171.81 feet; thence South 2' 05.5' PUBLICATION: Octo seized 8/1 6/12 and finding of Deschutes D REW THOM A S before a notary public, East, 165.07 feet; thence South 87' 54.5' West, 120.0 feet; thence 2, 2012. /s/Mikel and state: (a) Your 8/17/12 from Jessica C ounty it i s i n t h e POWELL, Defendant. ber South 2' 05.5' East, 170.07 feet; thence South 87' 54.5' East, 120.0 R . Miller. Mikel R . Smith. YOU ARE hereby re true name; (b) The public interest to do feet; thence South 2' 05.5' East, 225.10 feet; thence South 89' 36.5' Miller, OSB¹ 914754, so. The protest pe quired to appear and address at which you West, 1,380.0 feet; thence South 59' 16' West, 495.0 feet; thence South LEGAL NOTICE riod for this procure answer the complaint Attorney for Plaintiff. will a c cept f u t u re The Board of Direc 0' 23' East, 150.05 feet; thence South 89' 36.5' East, 453.22 feet; ment is seven (7) cal filed against you in the m ailings f ro m t h e tors of the Central Or thence North 02 27' West, 623.45 feet to the point of beginning. endar days. above-entitled action court and f orfeiture egon Irrigation Dis SUBJECT TO conditions, restrictions, reservations and easements of FIND YOUR FUTURE within thirty (30) days HOME INTHE BULLETIN counsel; and (3) A trict will hold a Special record, including Easement - Little Deschutes River Public Access, re Upon mutual agree from the date of the s tatement that y o u Planning Session on corded July 11, 1980, as Document 907 in Book 324, Page 761, Official m ent, parties m a y first publication of this Your future is just a page have an interest in the Tuesday, October 30, Records of Deschutes County,Oregon. extend the term of this summons upon you, away. Whether you' relooking seized property. Your 2012 at 4:00 P.M. in Parcel 2 Contract, at unit with t h e req u ired for a hat or a place to hangit, deadline for filing the the District Office lo Lot 12,Block 3, DESCHUTES RIVER ACRES, Deschutes County, Or C ourt filing fee; i n claim document with prices prov i d ed The Bulletin Classified is c ated at 1 055 S W egon, SUBJECT TO conditions, restrictions, reservations and ease herein, provided that case of your failure to forfeiture cou n sel Lake Court in Red ments of record. your best source. t he C o ntract t e r m d o so , n amed below is 2 1 Parcel 3 f o r wa n t mond. Every day thousandsof does not extend be thereof, petitioner will days from the last day Lot 11, Block 3, DESCHUTES RIVER ACRES, Deschutes County, Or y ond O c tober 3 0 , apply to the Court for buyers and sellers of goods of publication of this egon, SUBJECT TO conditions, restrictions, reservations and ease Get your 2014 plus the appli the relief demanded in and services do business in notice. Where to file ments of record. these pages. They know cable warranty term. the complaint. The a claim and for more Parcel 4 you can't beat The Bul l etin business complaint all e g es i nformation: Da i n a Lot 7,Block 3, DESCHUTES RIVER ACRES, Deschutes County, Or Classified Section for Included in this b id breach of contract for Vitolins, Crook County egon, SUBJECT TO conditions, restrictions, reservations and ease a re p rovisions f o r damages i n the selection and convenience District Attorney Of ments of record. Parcel 5 permissive coopera amount of $3,331.86 - every item isjust a phone fice, 300 N E T h i rd call away. tive procurement as plus interest of 1.5% Street, Prineville, OR Lot 6,Block 3, DESCHUTES RIVER ACRES, Deschutes County, Or 97754. provided i n ORS each month since De The Classified Section is egon, SUBJECT TO conditions, restrictions, reservations and ease 279A.215. Po l i tical cember 31, 2011, and Notice of reasons for ments of record. easy to use. Every item subdivisions w i t h in attorney fees pursu is categorized andevery Forfeiture: The prop Parcel 6 With an ad in and adjacent to Des ant to ORS 20.082. cartegory is indexed onthe erty described below Lot 2,Block 3, DESCHUTES RIVER ACRES, Deschutes County, Or chutes County and in NOTICE T O THE was seized for forfei egon, SUBJECT TO conditions, restrictions, reservations and ease section's front page. The Bulletin's cluding Polk County DEFENDANT: READ ture because it: (1) ments of record. are authorized to use T HESE PAPE R S Whether youarelooking for Constitutes the pro the quoted price re C AREFULLY! Y o u a home orneed aservice, ceeds of the violation "Call A Service Deschutes County will hold a public hearing to accept comments on the c eived on t h i s r e must "appear" in this your future is in the pagesof of, solicitation to vio proposed conveyance. The meeting is scheduled for 10:00 am, The Bulletin Classified. Professional" quest t o p u r chase case or the other side late, attempt to vio Wednesday, October 31, 2012, at 1300 NW Wall Street, Barnes Hear materials at the same will win automatically. ing Room. Information is available at deschutes.org/Property-and-Fa late, or conspiracy to terms, conditions and To "appear" you must violates, the criminal cilities/Public-Hearing-October-31,-2012.aspxor by calling Teresa Rozic, The Bulletin Directory file with the court a le laws of the State of Property Specialist, at 541-385-1414. prices of the original
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