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MONDAY December16,2013
Robot tourney SPORTS • B1
LOCAL• A5
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
•
CASCADES CAMPUS
•
Earth's temperatureResearchers havecome up with an idea that goesagainst conventional wisdom.A3
aims
Obituary —PeterO'Toole, the charismatic actor who earned overnight famefor his role in "Lawrence ofArabia." A2
• Joel Lissonbecamean instructor at a Bend-based tactical training company dueto his stories ofGreenBeretservice, the companyfounder says... stories henow doubts
OF eSS
Fa ic
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
By Tyler Leeds
A Bend-based tactical
TWO timeS an aCe —For Alex Valley, of Bend, a tale of hole-in-one rags to riches, all in the space of three weeks. B7
trainingcompany severed
The Bulletin
ties with a co-owner recent-
ly after the founder said he learned his business part-
Rebranding its pumice pit as a canyon allowed Oregon State University-Cascades Campus
ner lied about his military
to sidestep one of its greatest
service.
hurdles, but the university still has major decisions to make
Joel Lisson, 57, was co-owner and a wilderness survival instructor at Bend-
COmmentary —The NFL's heavy injury toll.B1
In national news — After Senate budgetvote,few hopes for a productive 2014.A2
concerning transportation,
decisions connected to nearly everyaspectofthecampus.
based REACT Training Systems. Shawn Jewell,
OSU-Cascades is expand-
the company's founder and other co-owner, said Lisson
ing into a four-year campus, with the aim of welcoming its
had earned his status as a
first freshman class in 2015.
trainer due to his tales of military experience in the
The universityhas identified 56 acresin southwest Bend to host a new campus, an area
elite Special Forces of the
And a Web exclusivePolitics stopping at the water's edge? It hasn't been consistent through U.S. history. bendbuuetin.cem/extras
U.S. Army — the Green
that indudes an old pumice mine and ponderosa pine for-
Berets. "This concept that he
ests. On Thursday the universi-
was a fake or afraud never entered my mind," said
ty revealed plans to place aca-
5
(+
demic buildings on the bottom of the former mine. With the
Jewell, 52.
Lisson and Jewell met in
EDITOR'5CHOICE
campus starting to take shape, the university is investigating
2006, and a mutual friend told Jewell of Lisson's
how best to minimize the num-
storied past, Jewell said.
ber of students who drive to school, focusing on how near-
Along with his stories about
White Househeld rules before election
his time and wounds as a Green Beret, Jewell said Lisson had a shadowbox
parking may affect traffic. Despite the long-term plan-
full of medals — including
ning, administrators caution
a Purple Heart, Bronze Star and Combat Infantry
that any construction in the newly dubbed canyon is a long way off, and the first stage of development will bring only
Badge. Therewas also a Special Forces certificate, a green beret and a trophy with an inscription saying he'dbeen"Soldier ofthe
sure the stories weren't
true, and he believes Lisson
series of rules on the en-
vironment, worker safety and health care to prevent them from becoming points of contention before the 2012 election, according to documents and interviews with current
and former administration officials. Some agency officials were instructed to hold off submitting proposals to the White House for up to a year to ensure that they would not be issued before
voters went to the polls, the current and former offi-
cials said. The delays meant that rules were postponed or never issued. The stalled regulations included cru-
wooded plot adjacent to the Southwest Century Drive and Colorado Avenue roundabout.
cial Forces Group. Now Jewell says he is
The Washington Post
White House systematically delayed enacting a
three buildings to a 10-acre
Year 1983" for the 5th Spe-
By Juliet Eilperin WASHINGTON — The
by amenities, dormitories and
hadn't earned the awards. "We should have, in
retrospect, lookedmore deeply, but we didn't," Jewell said. Lisson didn't come to the door of his Bend home when The Bulletin stopped
SeeCampus/A6
Submittedphoto
Medals, including a Purple Heart, Bronze Star and Combat Infantry Badge, are allegedly on dis-
play at Joel Lisson's house inOctober. Records found by Mary Schantag of Fakewarriors.com show Lisson was in active duty from 1980 to 1983 and then went into the reserves from 1983 until 1986, but there is no mention of a Purple Heart, Bronze Star or Combat Infantry Badge.
fraud, he wouldn't be the
by last week. Instead a woman with a dog answered. After checking
first in Central Oregon to
with Lisson about an inter-
Wes Cooley, R-Powell Butte,
conjure up phony military exploits. Former U.S. Rep.
view request, she passed a didn't run for re-election in card for Christopher Heaps, 1996afterquestionsarose a Bend attorney, and said to about his claim in the voter talk to him. guide that he served in the Asked about the quesSpecial Forces during the tions surrounding his Korean War. The next year client's military service rehe pleaded guilty to lying cord, Heaps said, "We don't about his military record haveany comment on it." in Marion County Circuit Heaps also said Lisson Court. He was fined and was not interested in speak- sentenced to 100 hours of ing with the newspaper. community service. If Lisson is indeed a SeeRecord/A4
By Michael S. Rosenwald The Washington Post
In retrospect, there was a lot about Jack Watson that didn't
make sense. A s a hired fundraiser fora
Courtesy REACTTraining Systems
Joel Lisson about two years ago at a REACT Training Systems
class. The companyhassince ended its connections with Lisson due to questions about his claimed military service.
cial elements of the Afford-
able Care Act, what bodies of water deserved federal protection, pollution controls for industrial boilers
and limits on dangerous silica exposure in the
workplace. The Obama administra-
tion has repeatedly said that any delays until after the election were coincidental and that such deci-
sions were made without regard to politics. But seven current and former administration officials told The Washington Post that the motives behind many
of the delays were clearly political, as Obama's top aides focused on avoiding controversy before his re-election. See Rules /A8
Haggling as aprice of doing business By Hilary Stout
over-the-knee leather boots,
New York Times News Service
building on the haggling skills they acquired in the past few years getting big-box store
Pay no attention to the
price on that tag. Or even the markdown. This year some shoppers are quietly taking the art of bargainingup the escalator to the floors selling cashmere or
deals on TVs and the like.
Armed with increasingly sophisticated price-tracking
have become bolder, and they know that they often have the
with customers. Last month, Best Buy es-
upper hand during a tough
sentially invited consumers to bargain when it announced
season forretailers.Recog-
Lions Club chapter in Oklahoma City, Watson collected money for troubled families, but he didn't have a family of his own, living alone and sleeping on an old sofa. He paid rent in cash. He didn't drive. He had no girlfriends, not many friends and celebrated holidays byhimself. "I felt sorry for him," said Patricia Wright, his landlady and fri end forthepastdecade. "He was a little odd, but a very sweet man."
Afewweeks ago, Watson sent Wright a cryptic emaiL He apologized for what she was about tohear abouthim. He hoped they could still be friends. Then TV news crews
nizing the new reality, some retail ers,desperateforsales
that it would match the prices
tracked her down, and she
of any competitor this holiday
learned that Jack Watson, the
and customer loyalty, have
season if customers showed
mysterious do-gooder, was not
proof of the lower price. SeeBargaining/A8
Jack Watson.
begun training their employand other devices, consumers ees in the art of bargaining
tools on their smartphones
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 46, Low27 Page BS
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with Ryan is no sign of things WASHINGTON — The ¹i to come. "I think the grand bargain, partisan budget compromise that passed the House by a you know, thatputs everything wide margin last week has in a whole lot of tough votes on inspired House Speaker John the table is impossible to find Boehner, R-Ohio, to blast out- at this point," Murray said on side conservative groups that NBC's "Meet the Press." he said were using RepubliDespite the broad bipartican members of Congress for san vote to pass the budget their own gain. It has inspired deal in the House, Democrats kind words between the two are still trying to come up legislators — Senate Budget with the 60 votes necessary to Committee Chairman Patty break a GOP-led filibuster in Murray, D-Wash., and House the Senate.On Friday,several Budget Committee Chairman key Republicans signaled that Paul Ryan, R-Wis. — who they would vote to end debate. hammered outthe deal.And That list included Sens. John it has inspired hope that, after
support to pass it," Sen. Dick Durbin, D-I11., said on CBS's "Face the Nation."
The Senate is expected to vote to end debate Tuesday morning, followed by a vote on final passage by Wednesday evening. The chamber is scheduled to end its legislative
business for the year on Friday, though aides in both parties suggested that it may adjourn Wednesday or Thursday.
"Senate Democrats have
the opportunity over the next
McCain, A r iz., Jeff F l a ke, year to work with us to make Ariz., Susan Collins, Maine, job creation easier rather than and Richard Burr, N.C. Sev- pushing job-killing tax hikes; eral others, including Sens. they have the opportunity to Johnny Isakson, Ga., Saxby work with us to protect con-
But that hope masks a deeply divided Senate, where ill will
Chambliss, Ga., Lisa Murkow- sumers from the consequences ski, Alaska, and Bob Corker, of Obamacare;and they have
DEPARTMENT HEADS
the opportunity to undo the
damage they'vedone to the legislative process. Sadly, all signs point to more of the same political legislation designed to fail," Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said people have given us divided government. The administration needs to accept it."
Ukrainian talkS —TheEuropeanUnion onSunday broke off talks with Ukraine onthe far-reaching trade deal that protesters in Kiev,the capital, havebeendemanding for weeks,andatop official issued astinging, angry statementall butaccusing Ukraine's president of dissembling. The bloc's enlargementchief, Stefan Fule,wrote onTwitter that the words and actions of thepresident, Viktor Yanukovych, weregrowing "further and further apart." OnSunday,about100,000 protesters clogged a main plaza in Kiev.Thestatement by Fule, coming amid this protest, sent a pointed messageto the crowd that theUkraine government might well have to changebefore the EUagreement can berevived.
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Saudi CritiCiSm —An influential Saudi prince blasted the Obama administration Sundayfor indecision and a loss of credibility with allies in the Middle East, saying that American efforts to secure apeace deal between Israelis and Palestinians would founder without a clear commitment from President BarackObama."We've seenseveral red lines put forward by the president, which went along andbecame pinkish as time grew,and eventually ended upcompletely white," said Prince Turki al-Faisal, the former intelligence chief of Saudi Arabia.
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ISrael VOte —A growing campaign amongAmerican professors to isolate Israel reaches amilestone today, when a large group of scholars is expected to reveal whether its members endorsed anacademic boycott of Israel to protest the Israeli treatment of Palestinians. The American Studies Association's national council voted unanimously Dec. 4 in favor of a boycott resolution and put the matter to a vote of its almost 5,000 members, who haduntil Sunday night to cast their ballots online. NOrth KOreall pOlitiCS —Kim KyongHui, an aunt of the North Korean leader, KimJong Un,appears to have survived the purge and executio nofherhusband,JangSongThaek,ashernamere-emerged on a leadership list in the North's state-run news mediaover the weekend. TheKorean Central News Agency on Saturday included Kim Kyong Hui's name inthe roster of top officials appointed to a national committee in charge of organizing a state funeral for Kim Kuk Tae, a former party secretary who died Friday at 89. In North Korea, whether an official's name is included onsuch alist is an important gauge of whether the official is favored by thegovernment.
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New YOrk tiaill CISSh —Since aMetro-North Railroad train derailed in theBronx onDec. 1,killing four people and injuring more than 70, theMetropolitan Transportation Authority has not hadto look far for safety remediesthat might have prevented the crash. Recently ordered improvements, delivered in response tothe derailment, have been borrowedfrom theLong Island Rail Roadandat times from the Metro-North system itself. Changessignificant enough to havethwarted the crash, according to rail experts, weresimple enoughto havebeen completed within days.Othersare sostraightforward that some of the authority's board membersassumedthey hadbeenin place for years.
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COIOradOSChOOIShOOting — Colorado's governor askedthe nation Sundayfor prayers for the 17-year-old girl whowas critically wounded byaclassmateathersuburbanDenverhighschool.Gov.John Hickenlooper alsocredited security procedures adoptedafter the1999 massacre atnearbyColumbineHigh School for helping put aquick end to the ArapahoeHigh School shooting by Karl Pierson, an18-year-old student whoshot ClaireDavis at point-blank rangebefore killing himself. "We all have tokeepClaire in ourthoughts and prayers," he told CBS' "Face theNation." Davis is hospitalized at Littleton Adventist Hospital. Davis is in critical condition andstable, but she is in acoma, herfamily said in a statement issued onthe hospital's FacebookpageSunday.
After the Senate reconvenes
in January, observers say, the coming year is unlikely to yield significant legislative action.
years of governing by crisis, Congress may begin returning to something resembling regular order.
over recent rule changes has Tenn., have indicated that they heightened a bitter partisan may vote for cloture. McCain divide. As the Senateprepares said Sunday he would support to take up the budget deal this the final measure. "The struggle is still on week, both sides say it is likely to be one of the final pieces of in the United States Senate; significant legislation to pass we will need about eight Rethe 113th Congress as midterm publicans to come our way. I elections loom. feel we'll have a good, strong Even the deal's chief Dem- showing from the Democratic ocratic negotiator conceded side. But we need bipartisan
ChineSe lunar rOver —China hailed its lunar probe mission a success after the country's first moon roverandthe landing vehicle that carried it there took photos ofeachother onthe surface, state media reported. Thesix-wheeled rover moved to aspot about10 yards north of the landing vehicle Sundaynight China time andthe pairtook photos for about a minute, theofficial Xinhua NewsAgency reported. Thecolor images transmitted back toEarth showedthe Chineseflag on the Yutu, or "Jade Rabbit" rover, namedafter a mythological creature. President Xi Jinping andPremier Li Keqiangwereat the Beijing Aerospace Control Center to hearlunar programchief commander MaXingrui declare the Chang'e 3mission asuccess, Xinhuareported.
Elmond Jiyane/The Associated Press
A military honor guard lines the route Sundayfor former South African President Nelson Mandela's funeral procession as it makes its way to his final resting place in his homevillage of Qunu, South Africa. His flag-draped casket resting on acarpet of animal skins, Mandelawas laid to rest Sunday in the green, rolling hills of the eastern hamlet where he began his extraordinary journey — one that led him from prison to the presidency, aglobal symbol of endurance and reconciliation in the fight against South Africa's racist rule. Artillery boomedand military aircraft roared
through a cloud-studded sky, asthe simple andthe celebrated gathered to paytheir final respects at a state funeral that blendedancient tribal rituals with a display of the might of the new, integrated South Africa. "Yours was truly a long walk to freedomand now you have achieved the ultimate freedom in the bosom ofyour maker," Brig. Gen.Monwabisi Jamangile, chaplain-general of the South African military, said as Mandela's casket was lowered into the ground at the family gravesite. "Rest in peace."
"AVatar" SeqlielS —James Cameron says he will be returning to New Zealand to film three sequels to "Avatar," his enormously popular movie about the bluealiens of Pandora. The director made the announcement Monday in thecapital Wellington with producer Jon Landauand Prime Minister John Key.Thefilms will be made by Lightstorm Entertainment andTwentieth Century Fox. "Avatar," releasedin2009andshotinNew Zealand,wonthreeAcademy Awards and is the highest-grossing film in history, with an international box office take of nearly $2.8 billion. — From wire reports
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet Classifleds
— The Associated Press
.h dl Um.
REDMOND
'Lawrence of Arabia' star Peter O'Tooledead at 81 By Gregory Katz
A reformed — but u nre-
The Associated Press
pentant — hell-raiser, O'Toole LONDON — Known on the long suffered from ill health. one hand for his starring role Always thin, he had grown in "Lawrence of Arabia," lead- wraithlike in later years, his ing tribesmen in daring at- famously handsome face tacks across the eroded by years of outrageous desert w a s tes, drinking. and on the other But nothing diminished for his headlong his flamboyant manner and c harges in t o candor. "If you can't do something d runken de O'Toole bau c hery, Peter willingly and joyfully, then O'Toole was one don't do it," he once said. "If of the most magnetic, charis- you give up drinking, don't go matic and fun figures in Brit- moaning about it; go back on ish acting. the bottle. Do. As. Thou. Wilt." O'Toole, who died Saturday O'Toole began his acting at age 81 at the private Welling- career as one of the most exton Hospital in London after a citing young talents on the long bout of illness, was nom- British stage. His 1955 "Haminated a record eight times for an Academy Award without
takinghome a single statue. He was fearsomely handsome, with burning blue eyes and a penchant for hard living which long outlived his decision to give up alcohol. Broadcaster Michael Parkinson told Sky News television it was hard
tobe too sad about his passing. "Peter didn't leave much of life unlived, did he?" he said.
let," at the Bristol Old Vic, was
critically acclaimed. International stardom came
in David Lean's epic "Lawrence of Arabia." With only a few minor movie roles behind him, O'Toole was unknown
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MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, Dec.16, the350th day of 2013. Thereare15 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS PrOfeSSOrS —A large group of U.S. scholars is expected to reveal whether its members endorsedanacademicboycott of Israel to protest the Israeli treatment of Palestinians.A2
RESEARCH
STUDY
Dad's dietmayaffect child's development
no o oxl ea ocoo ane: u some rees
By Meeri Kim
men trying to have children could try cleaning up their diWatching what you eat ets even temporarily. "If a man has been living a nd drink i s n't j ust f o r moms-to-be anymore. New a bad, unhealthy lifestyle, he scientific evidence suggests will not only improve his own Special to The Washington Post
HISTORY Highlight: In1773, the Boston Tea Party took place asAmerican colonists boarded aBritish shipand dumped morethan 300 chests of tea into Boston Harbor to protest tea taxes. In1653, Oliver Cromwell became lord protector of England, Scotland and Ireland. In1809,the French Senate granted a divorce decree to Emperor Napoleon I and Empress Josephine (the dissolution was made final the following month). In1811, the first of the powerful New Madrid earthquakes struck the central Mississippi Valley with an estimated magnitude of 7.7. In1863, philosopher and author GeorgeSantayanawas born in Madrid, Spain. In1907, 16 U.S.Navybattleships, which came to be known as the "GreatWhite Fleet," set sail on a14-month round-the-world voyageto demonstrate American sea power. In1944, the World War II Battle of the Bulgebeganas German forces launched a surprise attack against Allied forces in Belgium (the Allies were eventually able to beat the Germans back). In1951,a Miami Airlines CurtissC-46 Commando crashed just after takeoff from Newark Airport in NewJersey, killing all 56 people on board. In1960, 134 people were killed when a United Airlines DC-8 and a TWASuper Constellation collided over NewYork City. In1962, Nepal's Panchayat Constitution was proclaimed. In1976, the government halted its swine flu vaccination program following reports of paralysis apparently linked to the vaccine. In1982, Environmental Protection Agency headAnne Gorsuch became the first Cabinet-level officer to be cited for contempt of Congress for refusing to submit documents requested by acongressional committee. In1991, the U.N.General Assembly rescinded its1975 resolution equating Zionism with racism by avote of 111-25. Ten yearsage: President George W. Bushsignedanumber of measuresinto law, including legislation meant tostem the flood of junkemail known as "spam" and a bill to establish a national museumdevoted to black history. President Bush told ABCNewsthat Saddam Hussein deservedthe "ultimate penalty" for his crimes.Germanyand France,two of the most ardent opponents of theAmerican-led war,agreed to relieve Iraq's debt burden. Five years ago: President-elect Barack Obama announced his choice of Arne Duncan, the head of theChicago school system, to be his education secretary. The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously to authorize nations to conduct land and air attacks on pirate bases on thecoast of Somalia. The Cleveland Clinic announced its surgeons had performed the nation's first near-total face transplant on a severely disfigured woman. One year age: President Barack Obamavisited Newtown, Conn., the sceneof the Sandy HookElementary School massacre; after meeting privately with victims' families, the president told an evening vigil he would use "whatever power" he hadto prevent future shootings.
BIRTHDAYS Rock singer-musician Billy Gibbons is 64. Actor Benjamin Bratt is 50. Actor-comedian JB Smoove is 48. Actor Daniel Cosgroveis 43. — From wire reports
Researchers at Dartmouth suggest that — in some limited circumstances — the cooling value of a snowy field may be greater than the climate benefits of a stand of trees.
that the father's diet before
health but the health of his off-
conception might be just
spring," she said. Scientists at McGill fed
as important to a child's health.
A study in mice linked
male mice a diet containing
less than 15 percent of the recommended amount of folate,
By Lenny Bemstein
nutritional deficiencies in
The Washington Post
preserving trees is critical to cooling our warmingplanet. Millions of acres of forest are wiped out everyyear, cut down to make room for agriculture and,increasingly,urban growth, mostly in developing
paternal diet to a higher otherwise known as vitamin rate of birth defects com- B9. High doses of the nutrient pared with t hose whose can be found naturally in liver, fathers were fed a normal, spinach, brussels sprouts, aswell-rounded menu. The paragus and avocados. Kimfindings raise concerns mins chose folate because it about dads unknowingly can directly affect the body's passing on harmful traits ability to produce epigenetic through molecular mark- markers.
nations. Such deforestation is
ers on the DNA of t heir
a major contributor of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, re-
sperm. Administration started to reThese epigenetic mark- quire makers of grain proders don't change the genet- uctsto enrich breads,pastas, ic information, but rather rice and cereals with folic acid, switch parts of the genome the synthetic form of B9. Most on and off. They are sus- people in the United States ceptible t o e n v i ronment get enough of the vitamin, but and diet throughout fetal some groups such as younger d evelopment, but w e r e women tend to absorb less of thought to be wiped clean it. Also, being overweight or before birth. New studies, consuming alcohol can cause including the one published the body to metabolize less online Tuesday in Nature folate. Communications, have reBabies of women who don't vealed that some of them get enough folate are more may survive all the way likely to have defects in the from sperm to baby. neural tube, a structure in emWhen analyzing the bryos that later becomes the sperm epigenomes of the brain and spinal cord. While
It's an article of faith that
sponsible for 17 percent of the
heat-trapping greenhouse gasThinkstock es that are warming the planet, Dartmouth researchers say they can calculate where a snowy field according to the Environmen- might be of greater benefit to the planet's temperature than a stand tal Protection Agency. of trees. Governments and environ-
mental groups worldwide have worked hard to reduce that tical sense, is that when man- shouldn't pay people to grow total and provide incentives to agers are trying to determine forests in northern Maine,' plant more trees. when to harvest trees, they Lutz said. "You may be doing But now two Dartmouth Col- might want to account for the the opposite of what you want." lege researchers are suggesting benefits of the open field they But the pair stressed that their that in some limited circum- will leave behind. In places work should not be construed stances, the cooling value of where snow remains on the as support for heavy cutting of an open, snowy field may be ground for considerable lengths trees or deforestation. greater than the dimate bene- of time and trees grow slowly, The researchers also confits that a stand of trees canpro- limiting the amount of carbon sidered the value of the timber vide — and that it is possible to they can take in, it might make itself, noting that a forest mancalculate where that might be sense to take downtrees sooner agement decision could come the case. rather than later and leave fields down to whether the wood is In the short term, they said, unplanted longer. used, for example, for furni"In spruce-fir stands, very ture or pellets to run a power such knowledge would be useful in forestry management. In short rotation periods of just plant. Only a small portion the longer term, nations with 25 years become economically of theworld's trees are used vast expanses of snow fields optimal when albedo is consid- to produce durable goods, that reflect heat back into space ered," Lutz and Howarth wrote. Thompson said. "In areas where the albedo might seek to be credited for They noted that there is a body that contribution to reducing of research that shows that cut- effect can roughly cancel out global warming during inter- ting down boreal forests can the carbon effect, (then) what national climate negotiations. produce"net climaticbenefits." you should really concentrate "In some cases, the cooling "This is an important publi- on is the value of the wood influenceof albedo can equal cation," said Jonathan Thomp- products," Howarth said. and surpass the dimatic ben- son, a senior ecologist at the Climatechange may change efits of carbon sequestration Harvard Forest at H a rvard the equation. The warming from forestgrowth,"post-doc- University, who was not as- planet will have less snow and toral fellow David Lutz and sociated with the research."It shorter winters, reducing the professor of environmental starts to quantify the tradeoffs albedo that could help cool it, studies Richard Howarth wrote between those two (benefits)." the researchers noted, saying in their paper. Funded by the One place where that may be more research needs to be National Science Foundation, it the case is the White Mountain conducted in this area. "
was presented at the fall meet-
ing of the American Geophysical Union last week.
National Forest in New Hampshire, where Lutz and Howarth conducted their research, using
Albedo is the reflectivity of the earth's surface, the amount
models to assign values to albedo and carbon capture. High on
of solar energy it sends back those mountains, the snowfall into space. White surfaces, is heavy and remains on the such as snow, send back more ground well into the spring, of this shortwave radiation while tree coverage can be than dark surfaces, such as sparse and slow-growing. "This should guide policy green, leafyforests. What that means, in a prac- into saying, 'Well, maybe we
Ozone holestabilizing but not yetshrinking By Tony Barboza
soon to declare a recovery.
Los Angeles Times
For now, year-to-year variations in t e mperature and
The hole in the ozone layer is stabilizing but will take un-
winds, which each year carry til about 2070 to fully recover, ozone from the tropics to polar according to new research by regions, are the driving factors NASA scientists. in the size of the hole. The assessment comes In 2006, the ozone hole grew more than two decades after larger than ever. It reached the Montreal Protocol, the in- a similar size in 2011 before ternational treaty that banned chlorofluorocarbons and oth-
shrinking in 2012 to its sec-
ond-smallest size. Naturally er compounds that deplete the occurring meteorological conozone layer, which shields the ditions were mostly responsiplanet from harmful ultravio- ble for those fluctuations, two let rays. NASA studies found. Levels of chlorine in the Over the next two decades, atmosphere are falling as a scientists expect the ozone result of the treaty, but have hole to continue to vary widely. "It's n ot going to be a not yet dropped below the threshold necessary to have smooth ride," said Susan Straa shrinking effect on the han, a senior research scientist ozone hole that forms each at NASA. "There will be some y ear over A n t a rctica, a c- bumps in the road, but overall cording to scientists at NA- the trend is downward." SA's Goddard Space Flight Not until chlorine falls be-
Center. They presented their findings last week at the annual meeting of the A mer-
ican Geophysical Union in San Francisco.
m i ce , t h e
scientists predict for between 2015 and 2030, will the phase-
out of ozone-depleting substances begin to have a discernible effect.
ozone hole is getting worse.
Scientists project that at
But scientists who track its un-
that rate, there will be a full re-
even progress say it is still too
covery by about 2070.
it was known that low folate
r esearchers found a b - in males can affect their fertilnormalities in e pigene- ity, these findings show a surtic markers that affected prising association with birth genes linked to develop- defects. "No one ever thinks of birth ment, neurological and psychological d i sorders defects as coming from the and certain cancers. father if they aren't genetic," "We should be looking said Kimmins. Instead, the focarefully at the way a man cus tends to be entirely on the is living his life," said study mother and what she eats and author and
r e productive drinks because of the shared
biologist Sarah Kimmins of McGill University. "Environmental exposure is re-
nutrients during pregnancy. "This is becoming a really outdated way of thinking," she
membered in the develop- satd. ing sperm and transmitted
to offspring." Since it takes human males about three months
to produce fully grown sperm from stem cells,
Pa.re. &md.6 t"O.
aj B~ dU Bend Redmond
Kimmins speculates that
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
Record Continued from A1 In 1999 the Oregon National Guard d i dn't r e new the contract of Keith Bonner, who was the director of the
Oregon Youth ChalleNGe Program near Bend, after veterans groups questioned Bonner representing himself as a former Navy SEAL.
The groups said they found documentation that
B o nner
Jewell said L isson didn't part of when in the Army, and obtain some of the permits he he served around the same said he would for buildings on time Lisson would have in the the complex. It made him won- 1980s. But Hinton doesn't reder about Lisson and his word. member Lisson being one of For Jewell's daughter, Crys- his fellow soldiers. tal Jewell, 27, the permit issue Based in Fort Campbell added to the skepticism she in Kentucky, the 5th Special had about her dad's business Forces Group currently has partner, whom sh e s tarted a force of about 2,000 people, working with in August. She and it doesn't keep a pubjoined her father's company to lic running list of who has be a trainer about a year and served, said Maj. Brandon Bisa half ago and started working sell, of the group. He said he didn't have anything to verify at the training facility in August. Crystal Jewell served in whether Lisson was ever in
hadn't been a SEAL despite his wearing a uniform with a SEAL insignia at events for the Air Force in 2006 and 2007. the 5thSpecial Forces Group. "That is not something that the military-structured youth She said things she learned in program. the military about how to dis- we are going to be able to conplay awards made her suspect firm," he said. Questionablepast Lisson was a fake. And she Lisson did serve in the U.S. Questions a b out L i s son thought the combination of Army, Hinton said, just not started earlier this fall, as RE- trainingsand experience he with the Green Berets. HinACT began construction on a claimed didn't make sense. ton contacted Mary Schantag, "Just certain things he was chairwoman of the board for training center about 30 miles east of Bend off state Highway saying just wasn't adding up," FakeWarriors.com, to uncover 27.The acronym inthecompa- she said, so she looked online what they say is Lisson's real ny's name stands for "Reality and found websites where military background. SchanEnvironment Applied Com- people exposed military-valor tag, of Missouri, has been bat Tactics," and the company impostors. researching military service offers hand-to-hand, firearm The Jewells got in touch records for 24 years. It beand other training to local, with retired Master Sgt. Jeff gan as a project with her late stateand federal agencies,as "J.D." Hinton, who served in husband, Chuck Schantag, to well as citizens. the Special Forces. Hinton document the experiencesof "Everything we do is based runs a websitecalled profes- prisoners of war. As they did on our credentials," Jewell sionalsoldiers.com. so, they learned there were "They wanted to find out if people claiming to be POWs sard. Lisson was an instructor for basically what he was telling who weren't, so she now opREACT but rarely led classes was true," said Hinton, who erates two networks, one to beyond the basics, Jewell said. lives in Arizona. tell true POW stories and one He'd often sit out instruction, Hinton said he was in the to expose liars. Along the way, Jewell said, citing pain from 5th Special Forces Group, the Schantaghasbecome adept at his wounds suffered while same group Shawn Jewell said acquiring and reviewing miliwith the Special Forces. Lisson claims to have been tary service records.
Fugitive
Courtesy Anthony Rackley via The Washington Post
Anthony Reckley end his older sister, now known as Ocean Meir, in
Rackley — was a wanted man e childhood photo. and accusing him of doing improper things with the mon"I have people out there that ey. Rackley begs to differ but acknowledges that he kept 70 I helped," he said. He added: ve done percent of donations for him- "I'mnota good guy. I' self, with another 10 percent some bad things in my life. going to his partner — per- You can call it atoning. You centages that raise red flags can call it whatever you want. among experts But I went to bed with a clear on cha r i table conscience." fundraising. Rackley's case has puzzled "The bottom law e n f orcement o ff i cials, line then is that many of whom can't recall the Lions Club an escapeejustoffering himReckiey on l y gets 20 per- self up for apprehension after cent," said Doug so long away. But he's not the White, who teaches fundrais- longest on-the-run Maryland ing management and ethics at fugitive to be recaptured. That Columbia University. "That is apparently is Willie Parker, a very bad number." found in 2008, at age 81, livThe Oklahoma City district ing peacefully in North Carattorney's office declined to olina after escaping from an file extortion charges. A se- Eastern Shore prison 43 years nior official called the spat a e arlier. He e ventually w a s "he said, he said" and added, paroled. "You really can't make this Rackley hopes for a simistuff up." lar resolution. As he awaits
'Make the best of it'
Court records show there is not a federal case against
tive duty from Nov. 4, 1980, to Nov. 2, 1983, and then went
have are not new to Hinton,
Lisson.
Schantag or Doug Sterner, a into the reserves from Nov. 3, Vietnam veteran and author of 1983, until Nov. 3, 1986. He en- "Restoring Valor," a book set
Reputation rebuild
listed at Fort Leonard Wood in
to be released in February.
mer business partner, has dis-
Sterner and his wife, Pam Sterner, have crusaded for years against people claiming Sam Houston in Texas before tohave earned militaryhonors going to Hawaii, according that they haven't. Doug Stern-
Shawn Jewell, Lisson's for-
Missouri, started his training
tanced himself from Lisson
there and then spent nearly three months training at Fort
in what he said is an effort to save his reputation and the
business.
to the records. In Hawaii, he
On REACT's website, Jewer said Pam Sterner helped ell posted this message:
was stationed at Tripler Army
with the paperwork for the
Medical Center i n H o nolu- Stolen Valor Act of 2012 and lu, where he was trained and the follow-up Stolen Valor Act
then workedas a patient-care
of 2013, which became law in
specialist. His active service ended at Tripler, and then he
June. The Stolen Valor Act of 2012 was struck down by the
was listed as drill sergeant while in the reserves.
U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled the original law vio-
ponents Achievement Medal
or other tangible benefit.
"Joel E. Lisson is no longer connected in any way to REACT Training Systems as of Oct. 2013. All business agreements, teaching credentials, certifications or services
rendered by Mr. Lisson have been removed and are no Decorations and awards for lated the First Amendment's longer associated in any way Lissonin the records provid- protection of free speech. The to REACT. We apologize for ed by Schantag are an Army revised law focused on people any inconvenience, but due Service Ribbon, Sharpshooter using claims of military acco- to fraudulent credentials and Badge, Army Reserve Com- lades to gain money, property violations of REACT policies and Armed Forces Reserve Medal. There is no mention of a Purple Heart, Bronze Star or
by the actions of Mr. Lisson,
"It is a common and prev- REACT has severed its relaalent problem, and we felt it tionship with and disavows needed to be addressed," Doug all actions associated with Mr.
Combat Infantry Badge. The Sterner said. Lisson. Please do not hesitate records also don't reference Sterner was not f a miliar to contact us with any conthe Special Forces or a Soldier
with Lisson but said he and his
of the Year award. wife had investigated similar The Bulletin has also sub- situations of people potentially mitted a request to the Nation- using claims of military expeal Personnel Records Center in rience and honors to earn recMissouri for Lisson's records, ognition, money and jobs. but it will likely be weeks beWhile glad the Stolen Valforethere is a response from or Act of 2013 became law, the agency. Schantag said federal prose-
Stolen Valor
cutors aren't using it.
"Charges right now are Stories of people claiming very, very rare," she said.
cerns or questions."
Jewell said he's also called and met with clients to personally apologize. "My goal is to pick up the pieces," Jewell said. He said he hasn't talked to
Lisson, although he's tried. "We just want to move forward," Jewell said. "Move on." — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com.
him. A Maryland corrections In the county jail, Rackley spokesman said o ff i cials has been quizzed by inmates know nothing about Rackley's about how he managed to stay house was a miserableplace claims, but an FBI spokes- free. "I kept my head down, for Rackley and his older sis- man in Oklahoma City said minded my own business and ter, Wanda, who said they lived agents recently interviewed stayed out of trouble," he said. in fear. After dinner, served him, at his request, about the Oklahoma City police suppromptly at 6, if anyone had allegations. port that assertion. "He has ap"When you have a bad feel- parently lived a fine upstandmisbehaved that day, there ing, I've always thought, 'Don't ing life while he's been here," was a beating. They turned to books for just stand there. Do some- Master Sgt. Gary Knight said. solace. "We would read and thing,'" Rackley said. But last m onth, Rackley escape into a place where it called authorities after a disdidn't hurt, where people had Making a break p ute over money w ith J o e enough money, where families On a work assignment in Byrd, his fundraising partner got together to laugh," said his Baltimore, Rackley told the for the Lions Club. Rackley's sister, who eventually changed guard that he wanted to pick deal with the club, he said, her name to Ocean Meir to up some fried chicken. The was that he took 70 percent help put the past behind her. guard let him go. He hailed a of the $25,000 to $30,000 he Reached at her home in Bal- cab, ducked into a movie the- estimated he raised a year. timore, Rackley's 86-year-old ater and the next day he board- Ten percent went to Byrd, and mother, Ruby Zeller, said, "It's ed a train to New Orleans. 20 percent went to the Lions been a long time, and I really Within 16 hours, he was Club. don't feel like talking about it." tending bar. He stayed six Tom Cummings, a Lion disThen she hung up. months, he said, and then went trict leader in Oklahoma, said As a young teen, Rackley to Michigan, Washington state, using hired fundraisers was bought a bike for $8, and with Idaho and Minnesota, though "extremely rare" in the orgathat freedom he found trou- those travels and his activities nization, which has a special ble. He committed petty street along the way couldn't be ver- interest in vision issues. Bevcrimes and was sent to a home ified independently. In 1991, erly Willard, president of the for troubled boys. By the time he settled in Oklahoma, even- Belle Isle Lions Club, said the he was 14, he was living on tually working with promi- club raised money this way bethe streets and breaking into nent organizations such as cause its members weren't well homes at night to steal food. the Oklahoma Foundation for off and were generally older "I did what I had to do to sur- the Disabled, whose director, and because several had vision vive," he said. Georgia Devening, said Wat- problems of their own. In 1969, at 18, he went to son — Rackley — was "very White, the fundraising exprison for armed robbery, sincere" about his work. pert, said commission-based serving six years before he He marvels at the details a rrangements with h i r ed was paroled. He stayed out for of his double life. For one, he fundraisers violate ethical two years until violating his somehow made it through standards. He faulted the Liparole. He went back to the adulthood w i thout g o vern- ons chapter for making that ide n t ification. deaL Maryland House of Correction ment-issued in Jessup and, at age 29, was in Asked how he signed up for But such pacts are "fairly a pre-release program. utilities, he said, "I called." common" because they offer But just days after a parole He had a Twitter account, for organizations "found money," hearing that he thought went which he took on the persona saidKen Berger,president of positively, Rackley said he of a crude poet and used his Charity Navigator, a watchdog grew fearful that he would be own picture. And he recalls group. "They think, 'Hey, even killed by a senior prison offi- once sitting next to a senior if we only get 20 cents on the cial because he had incrim- law enforcement official at an dollar, it's 20 cents we didn't inating information about awards dinner. have,'" Berger said. where his stepfather, now dead, was a steelworker. The
month after reporting that his
didn't know that Watson-
more military experience or accolades than they actually
family moved to Baltimore,
Continued from A1 He was Anthony Rackley, an escaped felon from Maryland who had done time for armed robbery and who had been on the run for 33 years. He turned himself in last Lions Club fundraising partner,whom he had told about his past, was blackmailing him for a greater portion of the money they raised. The club member, through his daughter, denies the blackmailing allegation, saying he
Schantag found records that show Lisson was in ac-
for the poor, the blind, victims
of tornadoes and a camp for disabled children he ran once ayear. "He was so kind and generous," said Vickie Gray, an administrative assistant
at Haynes Equipment who helped organize donations Rackley picked up. She once visited his camp for the disabled. "I know it was legit," she said. "We are just in total
shock around here." She passed along a message for him: "Please tell him we
say hello."
Troubled youth Rackley was born in McMinnville, Tenn., the biggest city in a small county 70 miles f rom Nashville. It w a s t h e
early 1950s, and his life was not straight out of "Leave It to
extradition, his criminal past
Beaver." He met his biological
has startled charitable orga-
father once. His mother wasn't
Whatever the case, turning nizations around Oklahoma around a lot. himself in has freed Rackley, City, who dealt with him as he When he was 2, his mother 62, to tell the story of his life raised and distributed money found a new husband, and the on the run. He slipped away in 1980 from a pre-rel ease program in Baltimore, leaving behind an abusive family, a history of street crime and
A Free Public Service
a cherished oldersister who,
thanks to his unmasking, has reappeared in his life. "Life deals you a hand," Rackley said in a series of interviews by phone from the Oklahoma County jail. "You playthathand,and you make the best of it. I've never been rich, but I 'v e a lways been
free. I decided to live whatever years I had free — whether it be one or now 33'/z — the way I wanted." He chose his name, Jack Watson, to honor President
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
John F. Kennedy and a friend whose last name was Watson.
He chose Oklahoma City because he saw a help-wanted ad fora fundraiser and liked the people. He chose his profession after an acquaintance suggested raising m oney would be a good fit for his "gift of gab." Though he got more money than the Lions Club, Rackley said he spent much of it on charity work and solicited do-
nations of items worth many thousands more: food, glasses, clothes, gift cards. In his
sparsely furnished house, his landlady said, she found receipts for charitable donations
and a thousand dollars worth of coats he was about to deliver to the poor.
I
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MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A5
LOCAL Ee TATE Well shot!
u ocuseson emaeima es • Local OSU professor tracks girls' reactions to media portrayals ofathletesand models
e've beengetting glimpses of Santa and suspect you have, too! Wewant to see your photos of him, hanging out with the elves, making toys, hearing what your kids and grandkids want for Christmas ... • We'll print them on Saturday, Dec. 21, in the Local section, and show you more onour website. • Submit them at bendbulletin.com/ santasightings • Also, we want to see photos of holiday lights for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best work atbendbulletin.com /holidaylightsand we'll pick the best for publication.
W
sive. In order to understand
Deschutes County
what this media landscape
COmmiSSiOn —The commission is expected to meet at10 a.m. for a business meeting at the Deschutes County Administration Building, 1300 N.W.
By Tyler Leeds
cades Campus, is concerned
The Bulletin
with measuring the effects of
Girls faced with images of sexualized women in the
the current media landscape and finding ways to counteract
media may benefit from ex-
them. As a former athlete who
think of themselves and their
posure to images of female athletes, according to the re-
played"just about everything" growing up, Daniels is espe-
future. It's really limiting and
search of a local academic.
cially concerned with the role
comes down to the question, rHow do I look?'"
Elizabeth Daniels, an assistant professor of psychology at
athletes and athletics can play in the lives of girls. "Growing up, there was
the portrayal of women as sexualized objects is exten-
The literature documenting
does to girls, Daniels studied
the impact of exposure to non-sexualized images of female athletes. To do this she
showed a group of teenage girls pictures of female athletes engaged in their sport, female athletes in sexualized poses, and regular models. After seeing the images, the teenagers were able to record their reactions in an open-ended response. SeeResearch/A6
Wall St.
At the meeting, commissioners are expected to consider a PacifiCorp appeal of the Deschutes Historic Landmarks designation of the Cline Falls Power Plant. TUESDAY
RedmondCity COunCII —The City Council is expected to meet at 5:30 p.m. at Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave., for a special meeting. The council plans to discuss its urban renewal district, as well as consider an extension of an enterprise zone abatement for BasX, a newcompany that recently purchased the former Wal-Mart at 3500 S.W. 21st Place that has committed to creating 60 new jobs in the city in the firstyear, and nearly150 people by the end of its second year of operation.
Plus: • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphotos© bendbulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the bestfor publication.
WEDNESDAY
Bend City Council
— The City Council will meet for a worksession at 6 p.m. and aregular meeting at 7 p.m. at Bend City Hall, 710 N.W.
Submission requirements: Include as much detail as
Wall St.
possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number.
I%57~-
Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
- k.
EVENT CALENDAR TODAY "SOUTHERNBAPTIST SISSIES":A screening of the 2013 film by director Del Shores, presented by LGBT Stars andRainbows; $5, reservations requested; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881, payingitforward@ gmail.com or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.
Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
James Whitehall, 11, left, and Jonah Chambers, 11, of team Brain Storm, watch as their robot goes off track during a table competition round of the Intel Oregon FIRST LEGO League qualifying tournament Sunday at Mountain View High School in Bend.
• Teams oflocal students fight natural disasters ata LEGOrobotics competition
Councilsuspended the extra-strength charge andaskedacommi ttee to examine the way the chargeis assessed. Contact: 541-383-0354,
news©bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write "Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.
The Bulletin
gaggle of miniature robots responded to a range of natural
screening of the classic holiday tale; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 Sr IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. CHRISTMASCONCERT: Featuring the Bend Cello Collective and the Gospel Choir of the Cascades; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-390-2441 or www.freewebs.com/ bendgospel.
At the meeting, city councilors are expected to discuss a feeschedule for the 2013-14 fiscal year. The council is also expected to take upa first reading of changes to the extra -strength sewer charge. The charge is for businesses that produce more potent effluent into the city sewer system compared to residential strength sewage, including businesses like breweries. In May 2012, the City
By Tyler Leeds
TUESDAY "THE ROYALBALLET: THE NUTCRACKER": A
WEDNESDAY "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: FALSTAFF" ENCORE: Starring Ambrogio Maestri as the blustery Sir John Falstaff in the Verdi opera; performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; RegalOldMill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901. NAOMIHOOLEYStROB STROUP'SWINTER WONDERLANDTOUR: The Alaska piano-pop singer-songwriter performs with Portland's Rob Stroup; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww. mcmenamins.com.
TODAY
Larry Bird and Robert Par-
ish, but I knew of no women as elite basketball players," said Daniels, who joined OSU-Cascades in 2011. "For girls, the images of women are almost always objectified or sexualized, and there are implications for how young girls
Oregon State University-Cas-
CIVIC CALENDAR
disasterson Bend's east side Sunday. Luckily no one was hurt and the chaos
was designed. The robots were built and p r ogrammed by 18 teams of 9- to 14-yearolds, who gathered at Mountain View High School to compete in the Intel Oregon FIRST LEGO League qualifying tournament. This year's compe-
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!
The Bulletin
tition was titled "Nature's Fury," and the LEGO robots had to crawl around
Call a reporter
a billiards-sized table righting dam- Sophie Delfonsi, left, and Ella Reed, both10, cheer on their robot es their Nature's Fury age seemingly caused by a h ybrid Fighters teammates hope for the best. The teams at the tournament were also scored on e earthquake-tsunami-firestorm. research project that addresses an engineering challenge posed bynatural disasters. "I think the hardest things for the robots is lifting this one sign back up," said Lance Kasari,the event's director and a and instead preload their machines with copter's flight. "Some missions end up getting in the former team coach. "If they push it too far, instructions. The course map and chalit falls over. It's really difficult to program lenges have been known since September, way of others, so you have to prioritize that one to get it just right." and teams have used the time in between what you want to do based on points," Success lies just as much in program- fine-tuning their robots to address the said David Nordlund, a 14-year-old stuming the robots as in building them, various challenges, which include moving dent at High Desert Middle School. since competitors do not actively steer emergency vehicles and triggering a heliSee LEGO/A6
Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum. Olg.
CHOIR CONCERT: The Summit High School music department group performs; raffle proceeds benefit the music department and students; free; 7 p.m., 6:30 p.m. concert; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-815-5333 or www. THURSDAY friendsofmusic-shs.org. "IT'S NOTABOUTTHE "THESANTALAND GUN:VIOLENCEANOTHE PACIFICATIONOFTHE DIARIES":The one-man one-act reading features AMERICANWEST":Learn the role of violence in the Derek Sitter in the David culture of the American Sedaris play followed by a screening of "BadSanta"; West; free for members, $3 for nonmembers, $10 plus fees inadvance, reservation requested; 6 $10 at the door, $15for p.m.; High Desert Museum, both events; 7:30 p.m.; 59800 S. U.S.Highway 97, Volcanic Theatre Pub,70
S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. bendticket.com.
Sedaris play followed by a screening of "BadSanta"; $10 plus fees inadvance, $10 at the door, $15for both events; 7:30 p.m.; FRIDAY Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SANTALANDATTHEOLD S.W. Century Drive, Bend; MILL DISTRICT:Takea photo with Santa, children's 541-323-1881 or www. bendticket.com. activities, Tree ofJoyand THE MOSTESTWINTER more; free, additional cost SOLSTICECELEBRATION: for take-homephotos, $5 Celebrate the shortest day donation for children's of the year with live music; activities;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; free; 8-11 p.m.; TheBelfry, SantaLand, 330S.W. 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. THIRD FRIDAY STROLL: Featuring music, art, food and drinks; free; 4-8 p.m.; SATURDAY downtown Redmond;www. BENDINDOOR SWAP visitredmondoregon.com. MEETANDSATURDAY "THESANTALANO MARKET: Featuring arts DIARIES":Theone-man and crafts, collectibles, one-act reading features antiques, children's Derek Sitter in the David activities, music andmore;
free admission;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; BendIndoorSwap Meet, 679 S.E.Third St.; 54 I-317-4847. CHRISTMASTREELANE: Visit Santa andshopfor a Christmas tree,with complimentary face painting, hay rides, pony rides, petting zooand more; freeadmission;11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DDRanch, 3836N.E.SmithRockW ay, Terrebonne;541-548-1432 or www.ddranch.net. SANTAATNOLANTOWN CENTER: Takeaphoto with Santa, enjoy acookie andmeetsomefurry friends; proceedsbenefit BrightSide AnimalCenter; free, donations accepted; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; NolanTown Center, 2116Highland Avenue, Redmond;
541-923-0882. SANTALANDATTHEOLD MILL DISTRICT: Takea photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joyand more; free, additional cost for take-homephotos, $5 donation for children's activities;11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-3 I2-0 I3 I. CARRIAGERIDES INTHE OLD MILLOISTRIGT:Ride in the CowboyCarriage, located betweenBen& Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weatherdependent; donations accepted;2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's,680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. BEERTRAVELER FUNDRAISER: Afundraiser
for equipment to shoota trailer connecting people who love craft beerand those whomakeit; live music, raffle andmore; free; 6-9:30 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop &Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W.PenceLane, Suite1, Bend;541-7280703 or www.btbsbend. com. OREGONSTATESILVER GLOVESBOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS: The DeschutesCounty ROCKS boxing teamhosts the event; winnersadvanceto the regionals andnationals; prize drawings, foodand drinkavailable; Sf0, freefor children 6andyounger; 6 p.m., doors openat 5 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541-678-2286 orwww.
Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367
Oeschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects......541-410-9207 Salem ....................541-554-1162 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business ..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
deschutescountyrocks. com. ATOWER CHRISTMAS: HOMEFORTHE HOLIDAYS: Anoriginal production featuring holiday stories, dancesand songs; $12for adults, $8 for children12 andyounger, plus fees; 7p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700or wwwtowertheatre org HOLIDAYBREWGRASS JAMBOREE: An evening with The BluegrassAllStars; proceedsbenefit the local Kiwanis FoodBank; donation of cannedor nonperishable food items accepted; 7-11:30p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E.MainAve., Sisters; 541-815-9122or www.belfryevents.com.
SeeCalendar/A6
A6
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
LEGO Continued fromA5 The competition isn't only about robots. The teams were
also scored on a research project meant to address an engi-
neering challenge posed by natural disasters. David's
tea m,
t he
Gameaholics, were concerned with saving the human race. When descri bing theirproposal, Jason Cuthbert, a homeschooled 14-year-old, began by asking ominously, "Have you heard of the Yellowstone Caldera?" "It's a huge, super-volcano under Yellowstone, and it is well overdue for an explosion by hundreds of years," Jason said. "It could basically end
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
The team Brain Storm robot attempts to complete tasks during a table competition round of the Intel Oregon FIRST LEGO League qualifying toumament Sunday at Mountain View High School in Bend.
egon — hot spots found linger- tential of the boot sprinkler, or
life as we know it." ing afterforest fires. Dressed Another t e a m me m b er, as firefighters, the team per-
the "tracker jacker" as it was
dubbed by the team, helped Cymbrie Lagao, showed on a formed a skit for judges illus- Girls on Fire secure a first diagram how the team plans trating the inefficient process place finish. to puncture minute holes into by which mop-up crews check In addition to the winners, the "bubble" of pressure build- for hot spots by bending down three Bend-based teams and ing beneath the surface in order to relieve the tension build-
to feel the soil.
o ne from Redmond will b e
"I think we could even har-
you could work faster without
making it to the national final:
ness the heat for geothermal energy," Jason said.
bending over," said Heather Davenport, a 13-year-old
ingup.
Another team, Girls on Fire,
addressed a problem more often encountered in Central Or-
"We proposed a boot-sprin- advancing to a s t ate-level kler with an infrared sensor so competition with the hopes of I-Team, Faster Than Legos,
the T.E.A.M. Team and the student at Sky View Middle Redmond 7tvisters. School. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, At the end of the day, the potleeds@bendbulletin.com
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Elizabeth Daniels is an assistant professor in psychology at OSU-Cascades and researches topics
of gender and body image.
Research Continued from A5 "After seeing images of fe-
"We don't see women in lead roles, and that says a lot about our societal gender roles. There arejust so few women as politicians,
male athletes, the girls were
scientists or athletes, which provides such a
more likely to generate positive self-assessments of their body and abilities," Daniels said. "When they looked at the sexualized images, it was
narrow view." — Elizabeth Daniels, assistant professor at OSU-Cascades
'I'm ugly and I'm fat.' But with the athletes, it was t hings BOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS:The Deschute sCountyROCKSboxingteam hoststhe event;winnersadvanceto the regionalsandnationals; prizedrawings, food anddrinkavailable; Sf0, freefor children 6andyounger; 6p.m.,doors open at5p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-6782286 orwww.deschutescountyrocks. com.
SUNDAY COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS:Breakfast and atraditionalChristmasdinner,gifts, Santa Claus visit; free; 8a.m.-4 p.m.,1 p.m. SantaClausvisit; Bend's Community Center,1036N.EFifth St.; 541-3122069 or www.bendscommunitycenter.org.
SANTALANOATTHEOLD MILL DISTRICT: Takeaphoto with Santa, children's activities, Treeof Joy and more; free,additional costfor take-home photos, $5donationfor children's activities;11 a.mn6p.m.;SantaLand, 330S.W.PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. SANTAATNOLANTOWNCENTER: Take a photo with Santa,enjoyacookie andmeetsomefurryfriends; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center;free, donati onsaccepted;noon-4p.m.;Nolan Town Center,2116Highland Avenue, Redmond;541-923-0882. CARRIAGERIDESINTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT: Rideinthe Cowboy Carriage, located betweenBen&Jerry's and Francesca'sproceeds ; benefit the KIDS Center; weatherdependent; donations accepted;2-5p.m.; Ben&Jerry's, 680S.W.PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. ATOWER CHRISTMAS: HOME FOR THE HOLIDA YS:Anoriginal production featuring holidaystories, dancesand songs; $12for adults, $8for children12 and younger,plusfees;3 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835N.W.Wall St., Bend;541317-0700orwww.towertheatre.org. OREGONSTATESILVER GLOVES
Campus
the Old Mill, and Century has offer students more flexibility a grocery, coffee shop, restau- in determining how they get
Calendar Continued fromA5 "THE SANTALANO DIARIES": The oneman one-act readingfeatures Derek Sitter in theDavidSedaris play followed by a screening of "BadSanta"; $10 plus fees in advance,$10at the door, $15for both events;7:30p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend;541323-1881 orwww.bendticket.com. BROOIESTEWART BAND:The California country bandperforms; $5 plus fees; 9p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565Brinson Blvd., Bend;541-325-1886 orwww. maverickscountrybar.com. DOWNNORTH: TheSeattle, Wash.based funkbandperforms; $5;10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge,939 N.W.Bond St., Bend;541-388-0116 orwww. astroloungebend.com.
DEC. 23 SANTALANO AT THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Takea photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree ofJoy and more; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand,330 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES INTHEOLD MILL DISTRICT: Ride inthe Cowboy Carriage, located betweenBen&Jerry's and Francesca's; proceedsbenefit the KIDS Center; weatherdependent; donations accepted;2-5p.m.; Ben 8Jerry's, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. Contact:54t -383-0351, communitylife© bendbulletin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbutletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.
"Things like 'The Hunger like, 'I play soccer, too.'" Games' are just a drop in the Daniels a c k nowledgesbucket," Daniels said. "We there's no way to simply don't see women in lead roles, shift the media landscape, and that says a lot about our no matter how much cre- societalgender roles. There dence is given to the argu- are just so few women as polment that such a change iticians, scientists or athletes, would be good for everyone. which provides such a narInstead, Daniels sees herself row view." "as a researcher whose job In addition to studying imit is to establish evidence to ages of girls, Daniels is also support the argument that interested in how the instituthese images are not support- tion of childhood sports may ing positive self-images and be altered to help facilitate developmental." positive youth development. " Kids spend more t i m e While images of female athletes might be a good playing sports than doing way to counteract these forc- any other activity," Daniels es, thereare other forms of said. "And yet, sports often don't have an explicit youth defense. In an artide Daniels co-authored titled "I Am development mission. We're Not a Skinny Toothpick and missing a huge opportunity Proud of It," Latina girls were to educate them to develop found to use a sense of ethnic positive habits and skills."
To those who may be wor-
ried that a "youth development mission" may stand in the way of a college scholarship or county titles, Daniels points out how small the percentage of students are
who evencompete at a high level in college, and the even smaller percent who go on to
turn athletics into a professional career. "Sports can provide such
a positive context for development, but you often see it taken to such a different, ex-
treme level," she said. "There should be more of an emphasis on teaching how to be a
good teammateor how to be competitive while still resisting the idea of needing to win at all costs." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletfn.com
identity as a means to feel
positive about their body and appearance. Daniels also said just teaching girls about the imbalanced portrayal of females in the media can help.
Get ATaste For Food, Home 5 Garden ' • TheBulletin -
•
•
Continued fromA1
rants, and it's all within walk- around. "The best way to think about Moreover, a d m inistrators ing distance." stress that t hi s f i rst s tage At a series of open houses, the challenge is with a systems will bring only 150 additional Worth made the case that a uni- approach," Shinderman said. students to Bend. While this versity will generate less traffic "You need to look at parking initial development takes an than if the 56-acrte property weve both on and off site, and the incremental approach, many developedaskis~ yzo n ed, other modes open to students. residentsare focused on the which calls for a mix of rtesiden- There are a lot of factors that university's plans to h ave tial, commerdal andindustry. needtobe considered." "There is potential for sig5,000 students by 2025, an inOne of these factors is where crease of about 4,000 students. nificantly less automobile trips commuter students live. But
"The obvious concerns with a project this big are traffic and livability," said Eileen Krause, theco-chairwoman ofaBroken Top Community Association
coming from a university than the current use," Worth said. "Depending on how the campus is developed, it could be significantly less."
ad hoc committee devoted to
One of the major variables is the percentage of students who
monitoring the campus. "Nobody knows how it will affect will live on campus. The uniBend because we don't know versity's Campus Expansion what the campus will look like. Advisory Committee (CEAC), They haven't even dosed on the a group that includes university site, so you can't say they've ad- employees and representatives dressedanyissuesbecausethey of majorstakeholders, has asusdon't really have any issues yet. tainability task force charged But we're eager and excited to with arriving at that number. "Theywill lookat what would stay involved in theprocess and monitor the development." generate desirable outcomes for Jill Wimberly, a southwest
both students and the commu-
Bend resident, echoed these nity," said Kelly Sparks, assoconcerns. ciate vice president for finance "Traffic is just such a big is- and strategic planning. 'We will sue for me," Wimberly said. have to look at what the campus "When I drive to the Mt. Wash- could support and the kinds of ington-Century cirde, it can get housing we can build." reallybad, andI canonlyimagIn addition to attracting stuine what a four-year university will do to the west side. With
only a limited number of bridges from the east and not many side streets on the west, the
traffic willbe hard to avoid, and livability will go down. I don't understand why they didn't build at Juniper Ridge and have people come out to them." In addition to the cost of
building infrastructure at Juniper Ridge, a largely undeveloped area in norlheast Bend, administrators have repeatedly stressed that the selected loca-
tion offers more amenities, including restaurants, health care and parks. Phil Worth, a trans-
portation planner and member of the university's conceptual
before that can be figured out, Sparks acknowledged there will need to be more off-campus housing available for future students.
"Thecurrenthousing stock is absolutely limited," she said. Michelle Bunting, the owner
of Bend Property Management, called the west-side rental mar-
ket "especially tough, even for Bend."
"Adding so many more students looking for housing will make it more difficult," she said. "But it's hard to say what will
happen next year and where the market will take us." Sparks said the university
expects that private developers will build more residences near the university, and that
OSU-Cascades plans to work with the city to investigate the feasibility of such projects. "We think private developers
dents to live on campus, Matt Shinderman, co- c hairman would see it as a smart investof CEAC and an instructor in ment," Sparks said. the university's sustainability In addition to working with
program, said the university the city to address off-campus is investigating best practices housing, OSU-Cascades is in to move commuter students to discussions with the county campus as efficiently as possi- concerning a landfill adjacent ble. Some of the strategies he to the property's north side. identified include park-and-ride Sparks said the county and stations in areas like Redmond university are working on a and Prineville or along major non-binding memorandum access roads to Bend. He also of understanding that will acsaid the university has to inknowledge the university's detentionally limit the amount of sireto use thatland. "It's hard to say, but it could parking available on the campus and institute fees. be parking for students and "But if we don't want our staff, or more buildings or students to drive, the question even provide space for athletic becomes, What do we want fields," Sparks said. "It could them to do'?'" Shinderman said. also be used as a park-and-
design team, said the presence "Pedestrian andbike access will ride for Mt. Bachelor. But, I of these amenities will allow be important, but as everyone think what's most exciting is the universityto make a smaller knows, the existing transpor- the opportunity for a learning impact on traffic. tation service is minimal. We opportunity, the ability for "The location is embedded in have great interest in working the university to help turn a an area that supports student life and will attract students to
leave their cars at home and
with Cascades East Transit to expand it."
Shinderman said CEAC is live on campus," Worth said. also looking at car- and bike"The campus is ahalf mile from share programs, which would
brownfield into an amenity. It
could bean exciting process and offer a great outcome." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleedslbendbulletin.com
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The Bulletin
MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A7
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
ActorMcGine is roun e inot erseries TV SPOTLIGHT
• When is "The Bachelor"
• comingback? By Jay Bobbin
— Terri Haines, Daytona Beach, Fla.
Zap2it
John C. McGinley Q ••Ionlike"Ground Floor." Has
6. As has happened A •• Jan. in the past, he'll be famil-
he ever done any series besides that one and"Scrubs"'?
iar to fans of "The Bachelor-
ette," since ABC has appointed Juan Pablo Galavis — of the
— Jim Craig, Pontiac, Ill.
• He had a multiple-epiA • sode run on "Burn Notice" during its sixth season,
past summer's edition steered
but beyond those shows, the
many dates in the quest for
actor's series work has been a matter of supplying his voice
one mate. The woman also will have to have the makings of a good stepmother, since Galavis has a daughter, and you can just about bank on host Chris Harrison dedaring one of more of the telecasts "The Most Dramatic'Bachelor' Episode Yet!"
by Desiree Hartsock — as the latest fellow getting to have
for animated characters.He's
done that for "Justice League" (as the Atom), "WordGirl" and "Dan Vs." Photos courtesy Newscom
was the series Q • Why "Sports Night" canceled? •
John C. McGinley, left, had a multiple-episode role on "Burn Notice" during its sixth season. After a stint on ABC's "Sports Night," Peter Krause went on to act in "Six Feet Under" and "Parenthood."
It's so witty; I've caught it on FXX.
have I seen the Q •• Where actress who plays Leigh
— Jeannine Vogel, hood"; Josh Charles continues Columbus, Ohio his run on CBS' "The Good • While its fans have loved Wife" (and recently directed • it ever since its original an episode); Felicity Huffman run, precisely for that wit, the spent eight seasons on "DesAaron Sorkin-created show perate Housewives", and Joshnever was a r atings hit for ua Malina has been having ABC, which gave it two sea- a wildly good run on ABC's sons. Reportedly, there were "Scandal." chances for it to continue on
cable, but Sorkin already was looking ahead to his next project ... NBC's "The West Wing,"
which he would follow with HBO's "The Newsroom." Several stars of "Sports
Night" didn't fare badly in scoringother series runs afterward. Peter Krause went on to "Six Feet Under," "Dirty Sexy Money" and NBC's current "Parent-
"will not be resurrected." If any-
on "The Michael J. Fox Show"
same actorsand characters to
one should know, she should; me. one of the big factors in ABC — Donna Parsons, keeping the medical mystery Reading, Pa. It's not a matter of the acgoing for the three seasons it existed was its big appeal on • tors but the premise. By the international market. taking Molly out of her teach"Unforgettable" has a hap- ing job and letting her sample pier fate, at least for now, and various professions in her purespecially since CBS original- suit of a writing career, CBS I am wondering about ly let it go after its first season. has tried to give Melissa Mc• two shows that I have not The PoppyMontgomery-Dylan Carthy even more of a showseen in a while. One is "Body Walsh police detective drama case ... quite understandable, of Proof," and the other is "Un- did well enough in its return given the movie stardom she's forgettable." Have they been last summer to get a renewal developed in recent years. canceled? for a Season 3 next summer. That still might beg another — Judy Vollrath, Racine, Wis. asking of why the network • Talk of a possible "Body Why was the return didn't use the show as a sea• of 'Mike & Molly" ad- son starter, given McCarthy's • of Proof' revival went on until very recently, when star vertised as the "new" "Mike popularity, but at least it's back Dana Delany Tweeted that it & Molly"? They look like the now.
before? — Dan Porter, Twin Falls, Idaho Katie Finneran is a two• time Tony Award winner ("Noises Off,'" "Promises,
A•
A•
Promises") who has worked in several television series including "Wonderfalls," "The Inside," "Drive" and"I Hate My Teenage Daughter." She also was the
Q•
Broadway staging of "Annie" until she left to do the "Michael J. Fox Show" pilot for NBC. — Send questions of general
Q•
Widower shouldreachout to others Dear Abby: Christmas is coming, and I dread it. I have only my
else. If you're able, volunteer at a
brother, his wife and their kids.
I'm on Social Security disability,
senior center. It will give you less look like a gorilla. I think it's a slap time to brood, and you will feel in the face. She says it has noth-
and I barely make it each month.
welcome and needed.
food bank, a homeless shelter, a
to shave her legs. She is starting to ing to do with me. I don't know if I
Ag gy
decades. Many women expect-
not respond when I mail them gifts
and prefer — to pay for their own
or cards?
meal and drinks on a first date. It has nothing to do with whether
— Grandma in Marshfield, Mo.
interest via email to tvpipeline@ tribune.com. Writers must include their names, cities and states. Personal replies cannot be sent.
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
marriage, my wife no longer wants
They buy me gifts, but I feel emDear Abby:I recently went on a shouldmove to another zoo orbuy barrassedto acceptthem because first (and last) date with a "gentle- her some bananas. I can't buy anything for them. It man." He orderedhimself a beer —Peeved in Poughkeepsie makes me feel small. and a prime rib dinDear Peeved:This may be your E ven though I ner. He never asked wife's way of rebelling, just as have nothingto offer me if I wanted any- some retired men forgo shaving DFP,R my nieces, my broththing to eat or drink. because they no longer "have" er and sister-in-law As f l a bbergast- to. Or, the winters in Poughkeeppersuade me to go ed as I was, I have a sie may be so cold she feels she anyway. They are theory: Men today needs the insulation. Stay in the financially much better off than I ARE different from those of the zoo you're used to — after all, it's am. past, and my guess it's because the home. I lost my wife a year ago. I see pierced and tattooed gals today (If it's causing problems in your everyone else having someone in speak and act like sailors, there- marital relations, close your eyes their lives, and I feel alone. There's fore ruining it for the rest of us. and pretend it's cashmere.) just me and my dog now. The holi- Am I right? DearAbby:Would it be a breach days hurt. What can I do? — Puzzled in Florida of etiquette to enclose a self-ad— Miserable in Massachusetts Dear Puzzled: No. You need to dressed, stamped (blank) thankDear Miserable:You have some- speak up! The RULES OF DAT- you note with gifts I plan to send thing to give to your relatives. ING have changed over the last to my grandchildren, since they do It's the gift of your PRESENCE. If you have a talent, share it with them. Because this is your first Christ-
first Miss Hannigan in the latest
I
r
I
Dear Grandma:I think it's agreat mas without your wife, it's no won- they are tattooed or use four-letter idea as a last resort — and no, it der you feel alone. At this time of words. They like their indepen- would not be a breach of etiquette year, many people do. A way to dence, andsometimes earn more to do so. lessen the sense of isolation would than their dates do. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com be to do something for someone Dear Abby: After 25 years of or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • Oue to Monday Night Football, no movies will be screened today. • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guadian.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY,
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THEARMSTRONG LIE(R)3:30 • MR. NOBODY(R)8:30
t
DEC. 16, 2013:Thisyear you experience a lot of interpersonal communication. Prioritizing becomes even more important than it has been in the past. You will need to screen your calls often if you are to complete a task or project. If you are single, you have many opportunities to go out. Suitors seem to be everywhere. You are unlikely Stars showthe kind to commit, but if uf dayysu'll have you do, it will be no than sum++** pos~g~ive sooner mer. If you are at*** Average tached, make sure ** So-so your multifaceted * Difficult social life does not interfere with your relationship with your significant other. Respectyour differences, and everything will be good in your romantic world. GEMINI likes to play devil's advocate.
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Your inquisitiveness will come out, no matter whatyou do. Someone might not give you all the facts, or perhaps you could misunderstand where this
person is comingfrom. Knowthat he or she might not understand that you expect suchcomplete responses.Tonight:Hang out.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * You could have an edge to your
voice or ahardness inyour expression that others pick up on, and you might not even be aware of it. Others will react, and you won't know why. How often do you swallow your anger? Make a point to open up more. Tonight: Off to the gym.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You'll barrel right through a difficult moment. Know that a misunderstanding is at the base of the problem.
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
Backtrack without reacting. Listen to your instincts, yet remain open to others' suggestions; you will cruise pasta hassle if you do. Tonight: All smiles.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** Go within yourself for answers, especially as they won't be easily available. You might wonder what the source of your irritation is, or you could question what you are feeling. Be aware of the impressions that others might be receiving. Tonight: Make it early.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * Confusion could to lead to taking a step off the right path, but it will be one that is correctable. In fact, this mini-blunder could give you a lot of information aboutsomeone. Focus onyourlong-term goals in order to achieve good results. Tonight: Keep your focus.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * Pressure builds, and you could go on autopilot without even realizing it.
Slow down, orchoose areliable stressbuster to relieve the tension. Once the situation has been somewhat defused, consider your alternatives. Get feedback if possible. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) ** * * Keep reaching out to someone you care about. This person might have been distancing him- or herself as of late. Your theory could be wrong, so lose your judgments. Confirm plans with care, as
misunderstandings could pop upout of
the blue. Tonight: Use your imagination.
** * Deal with a partner directly. Realize that you might need to have atalk about your finances and your chosen direction with a different key person in your life. You could disagree with this person, which invites both of you to find a creative solution. Tonight: Make nice over dinner.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You might feel as if you have to defer to someone else. Youactually might be misreading the situation. Stay on top of a personal matter, and know full well whatyou want. Tonight: Go along with
someoneelse'ssuggestion. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * Dive headfirst into whatever you must do, whether it involves working on a project or running errands. Maintain your emphasis ondetails.You could havea misunderstanding with an associate. Try to clear it up without pointing any fingers. Tonight: Play it light and easy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * Y our creativity will emerge as a result of a misunderstanding. You might need to keep the peace or at least distract others from what is happening. You have a quality of lightness that pervades through any difficult situation. Tonight: Pretend it is still the weekend.
© King Features Syndicate
respective conferencesclash tonight at Ford Field in Detroit, where Matthew Stafford and the Lions welcome in Joe Flacco and the Baltimore Ravens. In the midst of a career year, Stafford will face a Ravens pass defense that ranks among the NFL's best. The same can't be said for the Lions' pass "D," a No. 28-ranked unit that Flacco will certainly try to exploit. Sp.m. on29, "DisneyPrep 5 Landing" — Santa's elves suffer job burnout, too. In this charming animated special, Dave Foley givesvoiceto W ayne,am ember of the elite elf team that prepares
for and overseesSanta's arrival
at children's houses. He was hoping for a promotion; instead, he has to stay where he is and train an annoyingly overzealous
new assistant (voice ofDerek Richardson). Ofcourse, no Christmas special would be complete withouta crisis and a lesson to be learned. 8 p.m. on 5, "Huw I MetYour Mother" —Marshall (Jason Segel) finally hitchhikes his way to the Farhampton Inn, where he and the gang encounter a wedding guest who's determined to stir up trouble among them. Andrew Rannells ("The Book of Mormon," "The New Normal") guest stars in the new episode "Bass Player Wanted." Neil Patrick Harris, Josh Radnor, Cobie Smulders and AlysonHannigan also star. 8 p.m. ou BRAVO,"The Real Housewives ofBeverly Hills" — In this new episode, Brandi tries to get Kyle andYolanda to mendfences,butsheonlysucceeds in driving Kyle away from the table. Surprisingly, it's Yolanda who comforts her. Kim and Carlton bond over squirrels while riding the Palm Springs aerial tramway. Later, Brandi discovers
9 p.m. en10, "IceAge:AMammoth Christmas" —This holiday special, based on the "Ice Age" films, finds the arctic herd busily decorating for the holidays. In his rush to help, Sid destroys Manny's favorite decorations. Manny is so upset that he convinces Sid he is now onSanta's naughty list. Joined by Crash, Eddieand Peaches, Sid takes off for the North Pole to plead his caseto Santa. Meanwhile, Manny, Ellie and Diego race to find Peaches. Ray RomanoandJohn Leguizamo lead the voice cast. © Zap2it
'
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E„L,E VAT,„I O,N
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * You might be taken aback by your anxiety. You could feel very uptight about what is going on, more so than usual. Unknowingly, you might be responding to the planetary vibes. Go for a walk, or do whatever it takes to make you feel better. Tonight: Head home early.
5:25p.m. on ESPN, "NFL Football" — Two teams in the thick of playoff races in their
herdog,Chica,hasgonemissing.
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BLUEIS THEWARMESTCOLOR (NC-17)6,9:50 • BLUE JASMINE (PG-13) 1, 3:25 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 1:20,4:30, 7:35 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 11:20 a.m., 2:10, 7:20,10:05 • FROZEN(PG)11:10 a.m., 12:55, 3:35, 6:25, 9:05 • FROZEN3-D (PG) 11:05 a.m., 1:45, 4:25 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATIONOFSMAUG(PG-13) l1 a.m., 12:45, 2:30, 4:20, 6, 7:55, 9:30 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATIONOFSMAljG 3-D (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 9:45 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG HIGH FILM RATE 3-D(PG-13) 12:15, 3:45, 7:15 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAljG IMAX 3-D (PG-13) 11:45a.m., 3:15, 6:45,10:15 • HOMEFRONT (R) 10 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) 11:25 a.m., 2:40, 4:40, 6:05, 7:05, 9:20, 10:20 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:20,4:55, 7:25 • NEBRASKA (R) 11:15a.m., 2, 7:55 • OUT OFTHEFURNACE(R) 1:30, 4:15, 7,9:55 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)1:55,4:45,7:30, 10:10 • TYLER PERRY'SAMADEACHRISTMAS (PG-13) 1:10, 3:55, 6:35, 9:10 • High Frame Rate movies record and play visuals at twice the rate or higher than normal. • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
TV TOOAY
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine
•
• Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at bendbulletin.cem/metlies
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AS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
Bargaining Continued fromA1 But other retailers are doing the same with less fanfare,
or even making steeper concessions. DealScience, a new website that collects, compares
and ranks online deals from thousands of retail brands, discovered that at least 20 per-
cent of big box retailers had price-matchingpolicies, though many do not advertise them. The site's co-founders, Bran-
~ y 'a &d , R , • y 4 S t t rtrt
don Hunt and Cory O'Daniel, said that they had been surprised to find that at least
a half-dozen merchants — including some of the original haggling stages like Best Buy, Home Depot and Lowe'snow permit managers to go a step better and offer 10 percent below a competitor's price. The bargaining practices are more commonplace for home and sporting goods or electronics, but even higher-end
Gretchen Ertl / New York Times News Service
Alexa Portney, right, tries on boots that her mother, Marilyn Santiesteban, left, bargained for in Newton, Mass. Armed with increasingly sophisticated price-tracking tools on their smartphones and
other devices, consumers knowthat they often have the upper hand during a toughseason. customers, according to Alison years ago when they realized Kenny Paul, vice chairwoman that some consumers were usand leader of U.S. retail and distribution at Deloitte.
"Some talked about their retailers like Nordstrom have price-matching guidelinesepiphanies and said the world though they usually do not has changed, we really have to broadcast the terms. do this," she said. Joe Marrapodi, one of the As a result, Paul said, some founders and the chief exec- retailers are training employutive of Greentoe.com, a new ees on the rules of bargaining. name-your-own price website, Instead of price discounts, walked into Nordstrom and those deals may be add-ons, Bloomingdale's the other day like an extended warranty, free in Santa Monica, Calif., and without identifying himself or
delivery or free installation.
his occupation, casually asked employees if they were open to bargairmg. Both the sales representatives and the managers said yes without hesitation, he said, and cited specific price-matchingpolicies. "I think they kind of keep it low key," he said. "They don't want it to be a thing."
ment or floor managers who are given the authority to make
A spokeswoman for Nordstrom said in a statement, "For
regular give-and-take with
Rules Continued fromA1 The number and scope of
delays under Obama went well beyond those of his predecessors, who helped shape rules but did not have the same formalized controls,
ing brick-and-mortar stores to
view products, only to walk out and order them ata lowerprice online. Now, Paul said, they
are trying to "turn lemons into lemonade" by using that model as an opportunity to work with
customers and even cement their loyalty. M arilyn
S a ntiesteban o f
Newton, Mass., rarely makes a purchase without first asking a manager for a better deal, and
While it is mainly departdeals, otheremployees arenow being coached to "recognize when a consumer needs to negotiate," and to "spot the consumer" getting ready to walk out the door, she said. When a sales clerk at Kohl's
as a result, she has won significant discounts on things as diverse as a dishwasher at Sears
and boots for her daughter at Macy's. The other day, she
said, she went shopping at a Barnes & Noble outside Boston for a book-with-toy set for her
7-year-old nephew. Her smartphone told her she could get the
in Kennewick, Wash., recently
item for about $6 less at Amaasked Siobhan Shaw, who was zon. She pointed this out polite-
buying an armload of items as long as we've been in busi- from the sale rack, if she would ness we've been committed to like to open a store credit card, offering our customers the best Shaw recalled that she replied possible prices, including meet- firmly: "No." "But," she said she quickly ing competitor pricing on similar items." asked, "can I get the same disThere was nearly universal count she got?" She was referrecognition among guests at a ring to the woman ahead of her private round-table dinner with in line, who had asked for a disretail executives in Dallas that their stores had better accept
I•
count and received 15 percent
off. The answer was yes. R etailers panicked a
P revious
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ly to the store manager, and he instantly matched the price. eYou think I'm not going to
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Bargaining "is not adversarial," she said, explaining that
V EAR E hl D S A L E I I
she considers it a service to tell
a store she can get abetterprice elsewhere. "We would both like it if I
would walk out of this store f e w having purchased an item."
White House to review proposed rules was "particularly egregious over the past two years."
Hearing loss shouldn't keep you from sharing her big moments, or a minute of joy this holiday season.
only two managers had the authority to request a major
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Perciasepe. Perciasepe and OIRA's director at the time,
Cass Sunstein, would have review. But Jeffrey Holm- "weekly a nd som e t i mes said current and former offi- stead, who headed the EPA's semi-weekly discussions" to cials who spoke on the condi- Office of Air and Radiation discuss rules that affected tion of anonymity because of in the George W. Bush ad- the economy, one said, bethe sensitivity of the topic. ministration, said the effort cause they had political conwas not as extensive as the sequences, the person said. Independentreport Obama a d m i nistration's "As we entered the run-up Those findings are bol- approach. to the election, the word went "There was no formalized stered by a new report from out the White House was not the Administrative Confer- process by which you had to anxious to review new rules," ence of the United States, or get permission to send them the former official said. ACUS, an independent agen- over," Holmstead said, referS unstein, who ha s r e cy that advises the federal ring to rules being submitted turned to his post as a Hargovernment on r egulatory to the White House. vard Law School professor, issues. The report is based on T he r ecent d e cision t o declined to comment. anonymous interviews with bring on Democratic strat-
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d o zen senior egist John Podesta as a se- EPA rules agency officials who worked nior W h it e H o use adviser S everal significant E P A with the Office of Information is likely to accelerate the proposals were withheld as and Regulatory Affairs, or number of new rules and ex- a result of those meetings, ofOIRA, which oversees the im- ecutive orders, given Podes- ficials said, including a pro-
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more than a
plementation of federal rules. The report said internal re-
ta's long-standing support
posalrequiring cleaner gaso-
for using executive action line and lower-pollution vehito achieve th e p r esident's cles that had won the support
views of proposed regulatory changes "took longer in 2011 goals despite congressional of automakers but angered and 2012 because of c o nopposition. the oil industry. cerns about the agencies isSen. Richard Blumenthal, That regulation, which suing costly or controversial D-Conn., who chairs the Ju- would reduce the amount rules prior to the November d iciary S u b committee o n of sulfur in U.S. gasoline by 2012 election." Oversight, Federal Rights two-thirds and impose fleetEmily Cain, spokeswom- and Agency Action, said wide pollution limits on new an for the Office of Manage- he's concerned about the re- vehicles by 2017, was ready in ment and Budget, said in a al-world impact of the post- December 2011, said three ofstatement that the adminis- ponements in the first term. ficials familiar with the pro"Legal protection delayed posal. But agency officials tration's "approach to regulatory review is consistent is protection denied," Blu- were told to wait a year to with long-standing precedent menthal said. "I've spoken submit it for review because acrossprevious administra- to officials at the top rungs critics could use it to suggest tions and fully adheres" to of the White House power that the administration was federal rules. structure and at OIRA and raising gas prices, they said. Administration off i c i als we're going to hold their feet The EPA issued the proposed noted that they issued a num- to the fire, and we're going rule in March. ber of c o n troversial r u l es to make sure they're held Other E P A r e g u l ations during Obama's first term, accountable in a s e r ies of thatwere delayed beyond the including limits on mercury hearings." 2012 election included rules emissions for power plants
and Medicaid eligibility criteria under the Affordable Care Act.
"OMB works as expeditiously as possible to review rules, but when it comes to
complex rules with significant potential impact, we
'Mother may I' The officials interviewed
for the ACUS report, whose
pollution rules for streams and wetlands, air emissions
names were withheld from
publication by the study au-
oxide limits for existing pow-
thors, said that starting in 2012 they had to meet with
er plants.
a former official said t h at
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on coal ash disposal, water from industrial boilers and cement kilns, and carbon di-
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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Scoreboard, B2 Community Sports, B6 Tee to Green, B7 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
College basketball: BCIrvine at Oregon, 7:30 p.m. (Pac-12Networks): The nationally ranked Ducksare coming off a win over lllinois on Saturday at the Moda Center in Portland andare 9-0 to start the season for the first time since
NBA basketball, Portland at Minnesota, 5 p.m. PST(ComcastSportsNet): The Trail Blazers continue to bethe surprise team of the league sofar this season. Theywrap up afour-game road trip against Kevin Loveand the Timberwolves.
Prep wrestling, Bendat Ridgeview, Mountain View atRedmond, 7p.m.: Dual meets highlight the high school sports schedule asthe LavaBears and Cougars travel to Redmond to square off against the Ravensandthe Panthers, respectively.
Prep basketball, Ridgeview atRedmond, girls at 5:30 p.m., boys at7 p.m.:The Redmond rivalry games will be staged in adoubleheader format at Redmond HighSchool. Getthere early, because thegym no doubt will be packed.
College football, GildanNewMexico Bowl, 11 a.m. PST (ESPN):Thefirst of 35 bowl games kicks off in Albuquerque, N.M., where Washington State faces Colorado State. Thebowls keepcoming until the BCSNational Championship on Jan. 6.
2006-07.
TEE TO GREEN: INSIDE ON87
NBA
Acesaplenty:After yearsof going WithOut ahOle-in-One,a BendgOlfer hitS
two in threeweeks, B7
Widgi Creek Golf Course, B7 • ltuchar, English takevictoryat Templeton Shootout, B7 • Golf scoreboard, calendar, B7
COMMUNITY SPORTS /'
.t. ,r
i
I'r
Portland's Wesley Matthews runs the floor against Detroit in
//
Sunday's game.
Blazers beat Pistons in OT
a,
Damian Lillard hits a last-second shot to lift Portland over Detroit 111-109,B3
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Beavers roll to victory over MES Roberto Nelson and Devon Collier combine for 44 points to leadOregon State over Maryland Eastern Shore,B3
NFL I
h
v
acons Redskins
26
Be r Browns
31 3
Colts
2
Texans
3
I
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Harry Kearney hits a jumpwhile racing the Dirksen Derby in the Derby Elites division on Sunday at Mt. Bachelor Ski Area. Kearney finished with a combined time of 62.9 seconds, the fastest time in the class.
Dolphins Patriots
2 20
ikings Eagles
4
Seahawk Giants
2 0
30
9ers Buccaneers Bil
• The annual Dirksen Derbydraws top riders in a benefit for paralyzedBendsnowboarder Tyler Eklund By Mark Morical
lyzed from the neck down in a snow-
boardingaccident near Lake Tahoe in California in 2007. Eklund finished fourth in the sit-ski
two 700-foot-long courses adjacent to the Sunshine Accelerator chairlift near the West Village Lodge. The courses consisted of tight berms and banked
race started small, but now in its sev- division during Sunday's finals. corners and jumps amid some trees. "Oh, it was super fun, way fun," said Riders raced two runs for a combined enth running, it has become an annu-
The Bulletin
MOUN T B A C H E LO R — Tyl er al draw fortop local snowboarders as Eklund sat in the lower level of the West well as big names in the sport from
Eklund, who remains in a wheelchair
time.
"It's fun getting back together will but canspeak on his own. "It's crazy, it's getting bigger and bigger each year. all my friends I used to snowboard From when it first started seven years with, just seeing how the snowboard ago to now, it's huge." community is so strong, and every-
Village Lodge on Sunday afternoon, a around the region. big smile on his face as snowboarder All funds from the derby — a after snowboarder piled into the room time-trial banked slalom format and for the Dirksen Derby awards. the brainchild of Bend snowboardAbout 500 riders competed in the one sticks around," Eklund said. "It's a It was, after all, all for him. er Josh Dirksen — go to Eklund, a race, which featured several different good bond to be a part of." The Dirksen Derby snowboard rally 21-year-old from Bend who was para- divisions.Boarders raced on one of SeeDirksen/B6
COLLEGEFOOTBALL
Corvallis Gazette-Times
randin Cooks was
sitting alongside teammate Malcolm Agnew a few days prior to Oregon State's season opener against Sacramento State in 2011.
With James Rodgers unable to play due to injury, Cooks, then a freshman receiver, was beingasked aboutmaking a start in his first football game with the Beavers. It may not be correct to
2 20
Chiefs Raiders
31 5
Panthers Jets
3 20
Packers Cowboys
3
Cardin Titans
3 34
ams Saints
2 16
Steeler Bengals
3 20
36
FOOTBALLCOMMENTARY
Injury toll a heavy
Could bowl gamebe Cooks' last as aBeaver? By Steve Gress
Jaguars
one in the NFL
describe Cooks as having a deer-in-the-headlights look, but he definitely didn't appear to be overly comfortable facing the media that August
By Tim Dahlberg The Associated Press
he stars are easy
T
enoughtokeeptrack of, especially when they go down on national television with everyone watching.
afternoon.
So much has changed. Cooks, now a junior, has gone on to be a vocal and con-
That is what happened
fidentleaderforthe Beavers. And he has produced like few others who have come through the Oregon State program. SeeCooks/B6
with tough guy Rob Gronkowski, last seen lying
Phelan M.Ehenhack ITheAssociated Press
Oregon State receiver Brandin
almost immobile on the
Cooks looks to lead the Beavers against Boise State in the Hawaii Bowl on Christmas Eve.
ground and screaming in pain after taking a big hit that ended his already ab-
breviated season. The bruising — and often bruised — New England tight end is only 24 years old, but the surgery for his torn ACL is his sixth in little more than a
year and every one of them exacts some sort of toll. And then there was Wes
Welker, streaking across the middle only to be leveled with a shot to the shoulders
and head for his second concussion in four games. SeeInjury/B4
ge
Zoe..l v,". fW~ /
Green Bay cornerback Tramon Williams (38) runs back an interception against Dallas.
Packers rally to beat Cowboys Green Bayties a team record for the largest comeback,B4
B2
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY BASKETBALL
Men's college, Gardner-Webb atDuke Women's college, NewMexico at Stanford
Time 4 p.m. 7 p.m.
TV/Radio ESPNU
Pac-12
FOOTBALL
NFL, Baltimore at Detroit
5:25 p.m.
ESPN
TUESDAY SOCCER FIFA ClubWorld Cup, Semifinal, TBA vs FCBayern Mynchen
Time
TV/Radio
11:30a.m. Fox Sports1
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Jimmy V Classic, Cincinnati vs. Pittsburgh Women's college, Jimmy V Classic, Connecticut at Duke NBA, Portland at Cleveland Men's college, Florida Gulf Coast at South Florida Men's college, Charlotte at Florida State Men's college, Yale atProvidence Men's College, Arkansas-Pine Bluff at Creighton Men's College, Jimmy V Classic, Florida vs. Memphis Men's College, Missouri State at Louisville Men's College, Wichita State at Alabama Men's College, Ball State at Marquette Men's College, UCIrvine at Oregon
4 p.m.
ESPN
4 p.m. 4 p.m.
ESPN2 CSNNW
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m.
ESPNU
Root Fox Sports1
5 p.m. Fox Sports 2 6 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. ESPN2 6 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. Fox Sports1 Pac-12, 7:30 p.m. 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
HOCKEY
NHL, Washington at Philadelphia
4:30 p.m.
N B CSN
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Manning honoredasSl's Sportsmanof the Year —Peyton Manning is Sports lllustrated's Sportsman of theYear. Manning has led Denver to an11-3 record this year, his secondwith the Broncos after missing the 2011season with Indianapolis because of neck troubles that affected his right triceps. Hehasthrown 47 touchdown passes, threeshyofTom Brady'sNFLseasonrecord.Manningis the fourth NFLquarterback to take the honor in the past nine years, following Brady in 2005, Brett Favre in 2007and Drew Brees in 2010. LeBron Jameswas the winner last year.
Brown says hewasn't meeting his ownstandardTexascoach Mack Brown said Sundayhe'sresigning becausehis teams haven't been living up to the winning standard he helped create. Brown said school President Bill Powers and athletic director Steve Patterson told him he could stay when the three met Friday. But after thinking it over further, Brown decided it was time to move on after 16 seasons to let Texas find a newcoach who can bring in new energy and heal a fractured fan base. Brown's teams won10 games every year from 2001-09 and won the national championship after the 2005 season. Brown also won two Big 12 titles.
Army fires Ellersonafter 5 years, nowinsvs. MavyArmy has fired coach RichEllerson after five seasons atWestPoint and no victories against Navy. Army athletic director Boo Corrigan says Ellerson wasnotified that hewould not be retained Sunday night, about 24 hours after the Black Knights (3-9) finished the season with a 34-7 loss to Navy.Ellerson went 20-41 at the U.S.Military Academy andcouldn't snap the Black Knights' losing streak against their most important rival. The Midshipmenhavewon 12straight in the series, the longest streak byeither side.
SOCCER Notre Damewins NCAAmen's soccer title — Andrew
O'Malley and LeonBrown led Notre Dameto its first NCAA men's soccer title, scoring in the Fighting Irish's 2-1 victory over Maryland on Sunday at PPLPark in Chester, Pa. Notre Damefinished the season17-1-6 to give 68-year-old coach BobbyClark his first title in 27 years of coaching at Dartmouth, Stanford and Notre Dame.Patrick Mullins, the nation's leading scorer, scored for Maryland (17-4-5j. The Terrapins were trying to win their fourth national championship and third under coach SashoCirovski. Harrison Shipp, a finalist for the MACHermann Trophy asthe nation's best player, set up O'Malley's winning goal with a perfectly placed free kick in the 60th minute. Brown tied it at1 in the 40th minute. Mullins, Maryland's own Hermann Trophy finalist, opened the scoring for the Terrapins in the 35th minute. Hefinished his college career with 47 goals, second in program history.
WINTER SPORTS U.S. men'S Curling team SWeePS toSOChi —The United States qualified for the men's curling tournament at the Sochi Olympics with an 8-5 playoff victory over the CzechRepublic on Sunday inFuessen,Germany.TheAmericans,skipped byJohnShuster, seized the advantage in the eighth end by scoring five points for a 7-3 lead. TheCzechs pulled two back in the ninth, but Shuster's team of third Jeff Isaacson, second Jared Zezeland leadJohn Landsteiner ended with another point to secure the last Olympic berth on offer. — From wire reports
Drexel53,PrairieView45 Fordham 57, fflinois St.32 JamesMadison64, St.John's51 Tuesday Northeastern 81, Maine55 Boys basketball: Bend at Madras,7p.m4Sistersat In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Unlversal Ucnck PennSt.66,TexasABM58 www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers Summit, 7 p.m4Redmondat Franklin,6 p.m.;RidPittsburgh63, OldDominion 49 geview atBurns, 7p.mJKlamath UnionatLaPine, Princeton84, Delaware80, OT 7 p.m.;Culverat Regis, 8 p.m4Central Christian Quinnipiac74, Albany(NY) 53 at Gilchrist,5;30p.m. Rutgers71, SacredHeart 51 Girls basketball:SummitatSisters, 7p.m4Burns Toledo64,St.Bonaventure 62 atRidgeview,7p.m.;MadrasatBend,7p.m4La Vanderbilt65,Harfford56 Pine atKlamathUnion, 7 p.m.; Culverat Regis, Viff anova83,LaSalle47 6:30 p.m4 Central Christianat Gilchrist, 4 p.m. South Bethune-Cookma n57, Jacksonville 49 Furman 79, Coastal Carolina 72 Wednesday Georgia91,KennesawSt. 32 Wrestling: CrookCountyat Summit, 7 p.m. Kentucky73, ETSU56 Miami 63CoppinSt. 58 Savannah St.79,Longwood55 Thursday Tennessee St. 92,Martin Methodist61 Boysbasketball:WoodhurnatBend,7p.mcSouth VCU 76, Cl evelandSt. 75 SalematSummit, 6 p.m.;Sisters, Madras,LaPine VirginiaTech65, SC-Upstate61 at SeasidInvi e te, 3:30p.m. W. Kentucky 83, JacksonSt.48 Girls basketball:Pendletonat Bend,5:15 p.m.; Midwest West Salem at MountainView, 7 p.m.;Sisters, Butler 53, N. Kentucky 47 Madras,LaPineat SeasideInvite, 3:30p.m. Cincinnati64,OhioSt.49 Wrestling: Bendat Ridgeview,7 p.mcMountain Dayton87,Washington St.76 View atRedmond,7 p.m. E. Michigan104,Detroit 96 Swimming: Bend,Redmond, Ridgeview,Sisters at Indiana51,IUPUI45 Cascad eSwim Center,4p.m. KansasSt. 73,UCSantaBarbara64 Marquette71,Milwaukee52 MichiganSt.80, Oakland62 Friday MissouriSt.87,Lamar 60 Boys basketball: Sisters,Madras,LaPineat SeaPurdue71, Kansas68 side Invite,TBD;Ridgeviewat Redmond, 7 p.m.; S. DakotaSt.87, Cent.Michigan82 MountainViewat Churchill, 7 p.m.; Culverat WichitaSt.63, GreenBay58 CulverTournament, 2 p.m.; Mitchell at Gilchrist, WrightSt. 79,Xavier 54 6:30 p.m. Southwest Girls basketball: WestSalemat Summit, 7 p.m.; Baylor100,Houston Baptist 57 Sisters,Madras,LaPineat Seaside Invite, TBD; LSU58, UALR51 Ridgeview at Redmond,5:30 p.m4Culver at CulOklahoma105,Md.-EasternShore 46 ver Tournam ent, 2p.m.; Trinity Lutheranat Crane "It's just a bad sprain, so he can StephenF.Austin 92,Grambling St.55 Christmas Tournament, TBA;Mitchell at Gilchrist, TCU73,Texas-PanAmerican47 5 p.m. play if he wears the nose brace." Texas109,SamHoustonSt. 48 Wrestling:Bend,Redmo nd, Summt,i Ridgeview, TexasSt.70, Houston 63 Sisters,Madras,LaPineat AlInvite atRidgeview, UTEP87,SELouisiana65 4p.m.;CrookCountyat Weishrodt Duals in LehFar West anon,11:30a.m. Armed ForcesBowl Stanford 1.5 4.5 Mic higan StArizona65,TexasTech56 At Forl Worlh, Texas Fiesta Bowl California70,CSBakersfield 51 Middle Tenne ssee(8-4) vs. Navy(8-4), 8:45 a.m. Baylor 17.5 1 6 . 5 C. Florida Hawai81, i Pacific 70 Saturday (ESPN) N. Colorado 75, North Texas69 Boys basketball: Sisters,Madras,LaPineat SeaMusic City Bowl Thursday, Jan. 2 Saint Mary's(Cal)88, UCDavis 71 side Invite,TBD;Culver at CulverTournament, 11 At Nashville, Tenn. Sugar Bowl UCLA56, San DiegoSt. 55 a.mcEchoatCentral Christian, 3:30p.m. ppi(7-5)vs.GeorgiaTech (7-5), 12:15p.m. Alabama 14. 5 15 Okla homa Washington 83,MontanaSt.60 Girls basketball: Sisters,Madras,LaPineat Sea- Mississi (ESPN) side Invite,TBD;Culver at CulverTournament, 11 Alamo Bowl Friday, Jan. 3 a.mcTrinity Lutheranat CraneChristmasTournaHOCKEY At SanAntonio Cotton Bowl ment,TBD;Echo at Central Christian,2p.m. O regon (10-2) vs. T e xa s (8-4), 3:45 p.m. (E SP N ) Missouri 1 1 Oklahoma St Wrestling:Bend,Redm ond, Summ it, Ridgeview, Holiday Bowl OrangeBowl NHL Sisters,Madras,LaPineat Al Invite atRidgeview, At San Diego OhioSt 5 3 Clemson 10 a.m.;Culverat Central LinnTournament, TBD; ArizonaState(10-3) NATIDNALHOCKEY LEAGUE vs. Te xa s T ech ( 7-5), 7:15 p. m . Crook Countyat Weishrodt Duals in Lebanon, All TimesPST (ESPN) Saturday, Jan. 4 11:30a.m. EaslernConference Tuesday, Dec.31 CompassBowl Atlantic Division AdvocareV1BBBowl V anderbilt 3 3 Housto n GP W L DT Pls GF GA At Shreveporl, La. SNOW B O A R D ING Boston 3 3 22 9 2 4 6 92 70 Arizona(7-5) vs. BostonCollege(7-5), 9:30 a.m. Sunday,Jan. 6 Montreal 3 5 20 12 3 43 88 75 Dirksen Derby (ESPN) Go Daddy Bowl Tampa Bay 3 3 19 11 3 4 1 90 80 Snowboardrally race Sun Bowl Ball St 8.5 8.5 A rk ansas St Detroit 3 5 15 11 9 39 89 94 At Mt. Bachelor, Dec. 14-16 At EI Paso,Texas Toronto 3 4 17 14 3 3 7 97 99 (Top three) VirginiaTech(8-4)vs. UCLA(9-3), 11a.m.(CBS) Monday, Jan. 6 Ottawa 3 4 13 15 6 32 96 111 DerbyElites —1, Harry Kearney, 1:02.9. 2,Lucas Liberly Bowl BCS Champi o nshi p Florida 3 4 12 17 5 29 78 109 DeBari,1:04.23.3,CurtisCiszek,1:04.36. At Memphis, Tenn. F lorida St. 8. 5 8.5 Aub u r n Buffalo 3 3 7 2 3 3 1 7 55 96 Men'sSplitboard(noltimed) —1,GabeCliafre. 2, Rice(9-3) vs.Mississippi State(6-6),1 p.m.(ESPN) Metropolitan Division AdamHaynes. 3, ForestBurki. Chick-fil-A Bowl GP W L DT Pls GF GA Women'sSplilboard(nottimed)—1,AmyWadley. BASKETBALL At Atlanta P ittsburgh 3 4 2 3 10 1 4 7 105 74 2, Angela Wilson. 3, Marie-FranceRoy. TexasA&M(8-4) vs.Duke(10-3), 5 p.m.(ESPN) W ashington 33 18 12 3 3 9 105 97 Groms (ages13andunder) —1, Sean Fitzsimons, Men's College C arolina 3 4 1 4 1 3 7 3 5 79 94 1;16.7. 2,WyattFoley,1;18.54. 3, NoahBrown, N .Y.Rangers 34 16 17 1 33 76 91 Betting line Sunday' s Games 1:19.79. East C olumbus 33 14 15 4 3 2 85 92 Older and wiser (60+) — 1, RubenValdivia, NFL P hiladelphia 33 14 15 4 3 2 76 91 1:29.44. 2,JohnDevenere, 1:30.48. 3, Gerry LoBostonCollege67, Philadelphia 50 (Home teamsin CAPS) 64,Northeastern 60 N ewJersey 34 13 15 6 3 2 78 85 pez, 1:31.63. Favorite Opening Current Underdog Fairfield Harfford 84, Sa cred H e ar t 72 N .Y. Islanders 34 9 19 6 2 4 83 118 Gengem n'es(ages86<9) — 1, SylvainDuclos, Today H ofstra 72, CCS U 67 WesternConference 1:06.88. 2,JasonMcAlister,1:07.88. 3, AmiVou- L IONS 6 5.5 Raven s Howard64,DelawareSt. 62, OT Central Division tilainen,1;08.34. NorfolkSt.86,BostonU.82, OT GP W L DT Pls GF GA Women — 1,MarieFrance-Roy,1:08.95. 2, Colleen College Q uinni p iac 80, V e rm on t 67 Chicago 3 6 24 7 5 5 3 135 101 Quigley,1:12.96. 3, DesireeMelancon,1:13.09. Saturday, Dec.21 Men —1, Nils Mindnich, 1:04.37.2, Kyle Miler, S tony Brook 67, Ne w H am p shi r e 48 St. Loui s 3 1 22 6 3 4 7 110 73 New Mexico Bowl 68,St.John's63 Colorado 3 1 21 9 1 4 3 88 73 1:06.45. 3,LoganBeaulieu,1:06.75. Washington St 3.5 4 Colo rado StSyracuse Viff anova73,LaSalle52 Minnesota 3 5 19 11 5 4 3 81 81 Sil-ski —1, GabeRousseau,1:35.55. 2, RaviDruLas VegasBowl South Dallas 3 1 15 11 5 35 90 93 gan, 1:37.64.3, HiromiTatsumi, 1:54.19. Usc 6 6 Fresn o St BowlingGreen67,MoreheadSt. 61 Nashyile 3 3 16 14 3 35 77 92 FamousIdahoPotato Bowl Winnipeg 3 4 14 15 5 3 3 90 100 72,Davidson58 Buffalo 2.5 1.5 Sa n Diego StDrexel FOOTBALL Pacific Division Manhattan 77,UNCWilmington 72 New OrleansBowl GP W L DT Pls GF GA 69,Coll. ofCharleston 62 Tulane PK PK UL-L afayette Marist Anaheim 3 5 2 3 7 5 51 111 89 College N. Kentucky87,Chattanooga71 L os Angeles 34 22 8 4 4 8 94 68 Tennessee St.108, Fisk85 Bowl Glance Monday,Dec.23 SanJose 3 3 2 0 7 6 4 6 108 82 UAB84,GeorgiaSouthern62 All Times PST Beef O'Brady's Bowl V ancouver 35 20 10 5 4 5 98 83 Ashevile 73, SC-Upstate63 Saturday, Dec.21 E . Carolina 12.5 13 . 5 Ohio UNC Phoenix 32 1 8 9 5 41 104 100 Winthrop 80, Ap pal a chi a n St . 72 New Mexico Bowl C algary 33 1 3 1 5 5 3 1 86 106 Midwest At Albuguerque Tuesday, Dec.24 E dmonton 35 1 1 21 3 2 5 93 120 DePaul 77,ChicagoSt.70,OT Washington State(6-6) vs. ColoradoState(7-6), 11 Hawaii Bowl St.72, Troy43 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime Oregon St 2. 5 3 Boise St Kansas a.m.(ES PN) loss. Miami(Ohio)59,WrightSt.56 Las yegasBowl Missouri 66, W. M ichi g an 6 0 Sunday'sGames Thursday, Dec.26 FresnoState(11-1) vs. SouthernCal (9-4), 12:30 NorthDakota78, Presentation 32 Washington5,Philadelphia 4, SO Little CaesarsPizzaBowl p.m.(ABC ) N.Y.Rangers4, Calgary3, SO Bowling Green 5.5 55. Pit t sburghStephenF.Austin 87,Southwest FamousIdaho Potato Bowl North Texas53 Tampa Bay3, Detroit 0 Poinsettia Bowl At Boise, Idaho T CU 57, T ex as -Pa n A m er ican 48 Florida2, Montreal1 1. 5 1.5 Utah St Buffalo(8-4)vs. SanDiegoState (7-5), 2:30p.m. N. Illinois Tennessee Tech79, Lamar 74 Chicago3, LosAngeles1 (ESPN) Anaheim 3, Edmonton2 TexasTech79, Cent. Arkansas57 Friday, Dec. 27 New OrleansBowl Today'sGames Far West Military Bowl Tulane(7-5) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4), 6 p.m. Toronto at Pittsburgh,4 p.m. Cal St.-Fufferton 87, T ex a s S ou th ern 80 Marshall 25. 2.5 Maryland (ESPN) Winnipeg at Columbus,4 p.m. Denver64,Wyoming61 TexasBowl Monday, Dec.23 St. Louisat Otawa,4.30p.m. 73,St. Martin's57 Beef 'O' Brady'sBowl Minnesota 4. 5 4.5 Syracuse Montana D allas at Col orado,6p.m. Montan aSt.72,Port land69 Fight HungerBowl At St. Petersburg, Fla. Tuesday'sGames Washington 3 3 Byu OregonSt.98, Md.-EasternShore66 Ohio (7-5)vs.East Carolina(9-3),11 a.m.(ESPN) Calgaryat Boston, 4p.m. Seattle66,Pacific Lutheran38 Tuesday,Dec. 24 Winnipegat Buffalo,4p.m. Southern Cal63, CSBakersfield 59 Saturday, Dec.28 Hawaii Bowl Florida atToronto 4pm UC Irvine70,E.Washington61 PinstripeBowl At Honolulu TampaBayatN.Y.Islanders,4p.m. U C Santa B a rb ara 72, Sa n D ieg o 6 1 OreqonState(6-6) vs. BoiseState (8-4), 5 p.m. Notre Dame 16 16 Rutg e rs Washington Phoenixat Montreal, 4:30p.m. St.78, Pepperdine61 (ESPN) Belk Bowl AnaheimatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Thursday, Dec.26 N. Carolina 2. 5 3 Cinci nnati Washingtonat Philadelphia, 4:30p.m. Sunday'sSummary Little CaesarsPizza Bowl Russell Athletic Bowl SanJoseatSt.Louis,5p.m. At Detroit Louisville 3 3.5 Miam i-Fla ChicagoatNashvile, 5 p.m. BowlingGreen(10-3) vs. Pittsburgh(6-6), 3 p.m. Buffalo WildWingsBowl Oregon St. 98, Vancouver at Minnesota 5pm (ESPN) Kansas St 3 3 Michigan ColoradoatDalas, 5:30p.m. Md.-Eastern Shore66 Poinsettia Bowl E dmonto n atLosAngeles,7:30p.m. At San Diego Monday,Dec.80 MD.-EASTER NSHORE(2-5) Northernlffinois (12-1)vs.UtahState(8-5),6:30 p.m. Armed ForcesBowl (ESPN) Navy 6 6 MidTenn St Snyder2-40-24,Ezeiru2-60-04,Baxter3-116 8 DEALS 12, Pitt 0-12-22, Smithffl 5-110-013, Johnson0-2 Friday, Dec.27 Music City Bowl Military Bowl Mississippi 2.5 3 Geo r gia Tech0-00, Bell0-40-00,Trim1-20-02, Walker1-31-24, Transactions Randaff 5 20 04, Choice0 0 000, Jones616 4 4 At Annapolis, Md. Alamo Bowl Marshal(9-4) l vs.Maryland(7-5), 11:30a.m. (ESPN) Oregon 13 14 Texas 21.Totals22-6613-18 66. BASKETB ALL OREGON ST. (6-2) TexasBowl HolidayBowl National Basketball Association At Houston Arizona St 13.5 14 Tex as Tech Rohbins1-60-02,Coffier10-164-624,Brandt6-9 NBA —SuspendedPortland CMeyers Leonard 5-617, Barton1-32-24, Nelson6-166-720, Moyer and Philadelphia Minnesota(8-4) vs.Syracuse(6-6), 3p.m.(ESPN) CDaniel Ortononegameafter Leon0-0 0-00, Cooke1-40-2 3,N'diaye0-00-0 0,Jones ard initiated Fight HungerBowl Tuesday, Dec.31 analtercation hybody-slammingOrtonto 0-0 0-0 0, Duvi v i e r 3-4 0-1 7, Morri s -Wal k er 2-21-1 A dvocare V100 Bo w l the floor and O rton retaliated byelbowing Leonard in At SanFrancisco Arizona 7 7 Bos t on College6, Gomis1-3 0-2 2, Mitchell 0-0 0-0 0, Schaftenaar the mouth duringSaturday's game. BYU(8-4)vs.Washington(8-4), 6:30p.m.(ESPN) 341-210,Reid1-11-13.Totals 35 BB20 30 98. Sun Bowl HOCKEY —Oregon St. 34-33. 3-Point GoalsUcla 7 7 Virg i nia Tech Halftime National HockeyLeague Saturday, Dec.28 Md.-Eastern Shore 9-22 (Jones 5-8, Smi t h RI 3-4, Liberly Bowl NHL — Sus p e n d e dWinnipegFAnthonyPeluso Pinstripe Bowl for hoarding Dallas DAlex Goligoski At New york MississippiSt 7 7 Rice Walker1-3,Randall 0-1, Baxter 0-2,Bell 0-4),Oregon three games St. 8-15(Schaftenaar3-3, Nelson2-5, Morris-Walker duringSaturday'sgame. NotreDam e(8-4) vs.Rutgers(6-6), 9a.m.(ESPN) Chick-fil-A Bowl DETROIR TEDWINGS— RecalledRW TomasJurBelk Bowl Texas A&M 1 2.5 1 2 . 5 Duke 1-1, Cooke1-1,Duvivier1-2, Barton0-1, Robbins 0-2). FouledOut—Ezeiru. Rehounds—Md.-Eastern co from At Charlotte, N.C. GrandRapids (AHL). Shore 38(Pitt 9), OregonSt. 45(Coffier 12). AsCincinnati(9-3)vs.NorthCarolina (6-6), 12:20p.m. Wednesday,Jan. 1 WASHINGTONCAPITALS— ReassignedD Nate sists — Md.-Eastern Shore14 (Bell 3), OregonSt. 24 Schmidt toHershey(AHL). Recaled CMichael Latta (ESPN) Gator Bowl Russell Athletic Bowl Georgia 9 9 Nebraska Schaftenaar5). TotalFouls—Md.-Eastern Shore 26, fromHershey. regon St.16. A—2,404. At Orlando, Fla. Hearl of Dallas Bowl COLLEGE ARMY— Firedfootball coachRichEllerson. AnMiami(9-3) vs.Louisville (11-1), 3:45p.m.(ESPN) N. Texas 6.5 6.5 Unlv Buffalo Wild WingsBowl Capital OneBowl nounced deputy athl e tic directorCol.JoeDeAntona Women's College At Tempe,Ariz. Wisconsin 2.5 1 S. Carolina will assume the day-to-day operations ofthefootball KansasState (7-5) vs. Michigan(7-5), 7:15 p.m. Outback Bowl Sunday'sGames program onaninterim basis. (ESPN) Lsu 7.5 7.5 lowa East NORTHDAKOTA STATE — Named ChrisKlieman Monday, Dec.30 Rose Bowl BostonCollege65,NewHampshire 40 footballcoach,effectiveattheendof theseason.
ON DECK
IN THE BLEACHERS
Blackhawksstart fast en route to 3-1 victory over Kings The Associated Press CHICAGO — The Chicago Blackhawks were coming off an ugly loss, and they had the surging Los Angeles Kings coming to town for a rematch of last season's Western Con-
ferencefinals. Enter Jonathan Toews.
was a much better effort to-
had a
s h o rt-handed score ty when Andrew Shaw was
The Chicago captain set up
that snapped Los Angeles' N HL-record streak o f 1 8 first-period goals, leading the games without allowing a defending Stanley Cup cham- first-period goal. "I just tried to keep on doing pions to a 3-1 victory over Los Angeles on Sunday night. the right things and tried to
two of the Blackhawks' three
eWe got a great start and
didn't really let up for the next 40 minutes," Toews said. "It
NHL ROUNDUP
night. It doesn't take us long to get back to our good habits." Maple Leafs. zone much, so w e w e ren't R ookie A nt t i Raan t a Raanta was working on very effective." made 21 saves to help Chi- his first career shutout before Kris Versteeg and Patrick cago bounce back from a Alec Martinez scored at 16:06 Sharp also scored as Chicago 7-3 loss at Toronto on Satof the third. The Kings then improved to 7-0-2 in the securday night. Marian Hossa had a power-play opportuni- ond half of games on back-to-
find the puck all the time," said
Raanta, who was pulled after two periods in the loss to the
whistled for unsportsmanlike conduct. But the Blackhawks managed to kill it off. "We didn'thave the puck very much," Los A ngeles
back nights. It was win No.
684 for Joel Quenneville, tying Pat Quinn for fourth on the
matchup of the NHL's best of- last two periods. fensive team and the league's
Also ort Sunday:
stingiest defense went to the Capitals 5, Flyers 4: WASHhigh-scoring B l a ckhawks,INGTON — Alex Ovechkin who have won four of five and scored with 48 seconds left lead the NHL with 53 points. and goalie Phillip Grubau"It wasn't the start that we wanted and it's hard to play catch-up,e Kings center Anze
er off for an extra attacker to
cap a late three-goal rally and Washington went on to beat Kopitar said. "It's quite a bit to Philadelphia. overcome when it's that kind Ducks 3, Oilers 2: ANA-
ieague's coaching list. of team. It's no secret we lost The Kings (22-8-4) had won the game in the first period." six in a row and were hoping Ben Scrivens had 37 saves coach Darryl Sutter said. "So to complete a perfect four- for Los Angeles in his first a lot of the shots were stand- game trip in the same building start since Dec. 2, keeping ing at the blue line or sneak- where their Stanley Cup title the Kings in the game with ing irt. We weren't in their defense ended in June. But the a handful of nice stops in the
HEIM, Calif. — Dustin Penner
scored the tiebreaking goal with 3:17 to play, Ryan Getziaf extended his points streak to 14 games, and Anaheim beat Edmonton for its fifth straight vlctory.
MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
r e on The Associated Press
e r ies Baxter had 12 points and five re-
berto Nelson and Devon Collier en- bounds, but coach Frankie Allen said tered the game as the top scoring duo the freshman guard needed X-rays in the nation, and the two combined after being fouled and falling on his for 44 points as Oregon State domi- wrist. nated MarylandEastern Shore 98-66 For the second straight game, the Sunday. Beavers started quickly.Oregon Angus Brandt gave the Beavers State led 9-2, and Brandt scored six some extra firepower, scoring 17 points on layups during the run. points. Nelson finished with 20 With a lead hovering near 10 points while Collier added 24 and 12 points early in the first half, Oregon rebounds.
State had five substitutes on the floor,
Collier credited unselfish play for the Beavers' success, and Nelson said Brandt would be crucial for Oregon State in Pac-12 play. "Guys are going to key a little bit
including three who didn't play last
more on trying to stop Devon and I,"
points came nearly five minutes later. Maryland Eastern Shore took ad-
Nelson said. The Hawks (2-5) were led by KyRee Jones, who sank five 3-point-
season. The Beavers went cold with about
eight minutes left, missing seven shots in a row. Oregon State's next v antage, and Isaac Smith hit t w o
3-pointers in a row to give the Hawks
France'sWorley claims WorldCup giant slalomvictory The Associated Press
SKIINGROUNDUP
ST. MORITZ, S w i tzerland — W o rl d c h ampion finishes in 10 races but no Tessa Worley of France won wins after taking 11 victories
a World Cup giant slalom on Sunday, racing to the fastest time in both runs. Worley sped down in a combined time of 2 minutes, 7.62 seconds to deny Jessica Lindell-Vikarby of Sweden a second straight GS victory by 0.37 seconds. Tina Maze of Slovenia, the
defending overall World Cup champion, matched her best result of the season in third,
trailing Worley by 0.79. "It's really a relief," said Worley, who had a best finish of ninth in the first two GS races this season. "This race wasvery important be-
last season. "I thought I had to do this
day for myself," Maze said through a translator after explaining that Massi was ill Sunday. "I have to manage the race." M aze earned 6 0
r ace
points and is fifth overall, trailing Gut by 192. M aria
H o efl-Riesch o f
Germany placed 11th Sunday and moved ahead of Tina Weirather of Liechten-
stein into second overall. Weirather, who won Sat-
urday's super-G, also skied out in the morning. J ulia Mancuso was t h e
cause I started the season b est-placed A m erican i n not at all like I hoped." 12th, trailing Worley by 2.59. Worley, who won here Megan McJames was 23rd, three years ago, got her 3.07 back. eighth career World Cup Lindsey Vonn skipped the win — all in giant slalom. St. Moritz meeting as she She also won the gold medal manages a right knee injury in February at the worlds in ahead of the Sochi OlymSchladming, Austria. pics. She plans to return in Overall standings leader a downhill next weekend at Lara Gut of Switzerland and Val d'Isere, France. Mikaela Shiffrin of the Unit-
ed States were among expected contenders who did not complete the first run.
The women's circuit stops en route in the French Alps
on Tuesday for a slalom at C ourchevel, where
w orld
Both slid out on the aggres- champion Shiffrin should sive snow surface.
semn a 0 w in MEN'SCOLLEGEBASKETBALLROUNDUP
ers on his way to 21 points. Hakeem
CORVALLIS — Oregon State's Ro-
start as the favorite.
started playing more aggressive on souri beat Western Michigan. defense, and that was a big turnWashington State 78, Pepperdine points. around for us in the second half," Col- 61: PULLMAN, Wash. — Royce The Beavers rebounded and took a lier said. Woolridge had a season-high 20 34-33 lead into the break. Also on Sunday: points and freshman Que Johnson Maryland Eastern Shore hung No. 2 Syracuse 68, St. John's 63: added 14 to help Washington State around, but midway through the sec- NEW YORK — C.J. Fair and Tyler beat Pepperdine. Washington State ond half, the Beavers went on a 15-0 Ennis each scored 21 points, and (5-4) opened with a 10-0 run and led run to break open the game. Syracuse pulled out a victory over St. by as many as 16 in the first half, "Their size wore us down. They John's at Madison Square Garden. taking a 41-26 lead at intermission. were just a little bit too physical for No. 10 Villanova 73, La Salle 52: T he Cougars never trailed in t h e us," Allen said. "That second half, VILLANOVA, Pa. — Darrun Hilgame. we didn't get anything but a big liard scored 21 points and Josh Hart Southern California 63, CS Bakersspanking." added 13, lifting undefeated Villano- field 59: LOS ANGELES — Byron Beavers coach Craig Robinson va past La Salle. The Wildcats are Wesley scored 20 points, making a said his players were forcing passes, 10-0 for the first time since the 2005- pair of go-ahead free throws with turning the ball over and missing 06 season and are three wins shy 1:02 remaining, and Southern Calopen shots in the first half, and the of matching the program-best 13-0 ifornia rallied to beat Cal State Basecond half was like a separate game. start in 1937-38. kersfield after trailing most of the "We limited our turnovers and No. 24 Missouri 66, Western Mich- second half.
NBA ROUNDUP
azers over is ons
i ar The Associated Press A UBURN H I L LS ,
third, and Detroit led 84-73
— Damian Lillard came spin-
"For the most part, we did a
ning down the lane at the end
very good job guarding pickand-rolls," Pistons coach Mau-
of overtime and was blanketed by Rodney Stuckey, leaving Portland's guard with no choice but to fade to his right
talked about before the game.
Aldridge, we knewhe couldbe
Blazersa victory over the De-
Also on Sunday: Kings106, Rockets 91:SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Rudy Gay scored 26 points in his first home game since coming
final minutes.
al leader with five racers still to come down. The 30-year-old Slovenian, whose coach and partner Andrea Massi was absent Sunday, did not smile
and pounded her chest repeatedly with her right fist. She now has two podium
Mattias Hargin by .53 seconds and I t alian v eteran
Patrick Thaler — second after the first run — by .78.
over in a trade from Toronto, leading Sacramento past
ing to have to make a double
move to get anything off," Lillard said. "He blocked my first
Houston. Gay added five rebounds and four assists. Timberwolves 101, Grizzlies
move, andIknew he wouldn't
let me get to the basket, so I just spun off my other shoulder and put up a fadeaway. It felt good when I let it go, but
93: MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Kevin
Love had 30 points and nine rebounds, and Minnesota hit
a season-high 12 3-pointers in beating Memphis. The victory snapped Minnesota's 11-game losing streak to the Grizzlies and also gave the Timber-
a lot of shots felt good tonight
and didn't go in." That one did — with onetenth of a second left — to lift the Trail Blazers to a 111-109 victory over the Pistons. Lil-
wolves their third win in the
past four games. Suns 106, Warriors 102:
lard scored eight of his 23 points in overtime.
h i
Detroit led by 13 early in the fourth quarter, but the Pistons
looked out of sorts offensively down the stretch. Josh Smith scored 31 points, his most
since signing with Detroit as a free agent in the offseason, but the chance for a big home victory against one of the league's most impressive teams slipped away.
down the stretch we couldn't
Maze showed flashes of fied for the second run. The her record-setting2013 form 3 4-year-old Matt, a t w o and some emotion when she time former slalom world crossed the line as provision- champion, beat Sweden's
, r~l~ cl],
"Stuckey did a great job, but they told me that I was go-
protected his first-run lead
ley moved up to third.
a handful down low."
troit Pistons on Sunday night that seemed unlikely until the
we were young and we were in a lot of ballgames, but late
es. Zettel is second and Wor-
much took them out of 3-point shooting, which is what we
The ball d ropped right through the basket, giving the
ERE, France — Veteran Mario Matt of A u stria safely
States. Neither Ted Ligety, who finished the first run in 39th, nor B ode M i ller, who went off course, quali-
rice Cheeks said. "We pretty
for a last-ditch shot.
it until I fell," said Shiffrin,
race. It was another disappointing day for the United
heading into the final period.
M i ch.
"If this doesn't stink, I don't know what does," Smith said. "When I was in Atlanta and
to win a World Cup slalom
igan 60: COLUMBIA, Mo. — Jabari Brown scored 15 points to help Mis-
their first lead of the game, 31-30, at the 1:33 mark. Smith finished with 13
"Itwas perfect snow reAlso on Sunday: ally. Running (bib) No. 1, I Veteran Matt wins World was loving every second of Cup slalom race: VAL D'ISwho was runner-up behind Lindell-Vikarby in the previous GS race at Beaver Creek, Colo., this month. Lindell-Vikarby leads the discipline standings after three of eight scheduled rac-
B3
Duane Burleson I The Associated Press
Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard (0) goes to the basket past Detroit Pistons guard Brandon Jennings (7) during overtime of Sunday's game in Auburn Hills, Mich. The Trail Blazers defeated the Pistons111-109 in overtime.
PHOENIX —
E r i c B l edsoe
scored seven ofhis 24points in the fourth quarter and Phoenix won its fifth straight game, holding off Stephen Curry and Golden State. Bledsoe added eight rebounds and eight assists, Goran Dragic scored 21 points, and Channing Frye added 20 for the Suns.
Thunder 101, Magic 98: said. "But we got some big
the floor with shooters, gave
shots from Wesley Matthews
Damian a ball screen and let
and the defense really stepped him make a play." Up. The Blazers led by 11 early Matthews scored 14 points
OKLAH OM A CITY — Kevin Durant had 28 points, nine
rebounds and five assists, and Oklahoma City held off Orlando to win its 12th straight
in the second quarter, but De-
home game toopen the seaand tied the game with 30.8 troit rallied behind Smith and son. Russell Westbrook addfigure it out — and then later seconds remaining in regula- fellow big men Greg Monroe ed 20 points, 12 rebounds and we turned the corner." tion when he made two free and Andre Drummond to take six assists for Oklahoma City, LaMarcus Aldridge scored throws. Detroit had the ball a 51-50 lead into halftime. which has won six straight 27 points for Portland. Mo- with 1.1 seconds left, but Kyle Smith is shooting 26 per- overall and 14 of its past 15. ments before Lillard's winner, Singler's inbounds pass was cent from 3-point range this Nuggets 102, Pelicans 93: Stuckey tied the game for De- stolen, sending the game to season, and the presence of DENVER — J.J. Hickson had troit with a shot from near the free-throw line. Portland, which made 21
overtime.
Monroe and Drummond has
It looked like it might go to seemed only to encourage him a second overtime, but Lillard to shoot more from the perimshots from 3-point range in was able to create a shot for eter. But he attempted only Saturday's rout of P hiladel- himself even when his path to two 3s on Sunday, and the phia, went 7 of 26 on Sunday. the basket was blocked. Blazers couldn't handle him in "That wasn't looking good "It was the same play we the post for most of the night. for most of the second half," had run three or four times in Smith's old-fashioned threeBlazers coach Terry Stotts a row," Stotts said. "We spread point play made it 75-66 in the
19 points and 11 rebounds and Denver overcame aslow start
to beat New Orleans. Wilson Chandler added 19 points to
help the Nuggets bounce back from a rare home loss on Friday. They're 7-3 at Pepsi Center this season after going a franchise-best 38-3 in 2012-13.
Matt, who was second last
month in the slalom at Levi, Finland, has 15 World Cup wins — 14 in slalom and one
NBA SCOREBOARD
in supercombined. Standings All TimesPST
EasternConference W L Pct GB d-Indiana 20 3 .870 d-Miami 17 6 .739 3 Atlanta 12 12 .500 8~/2 d-Boston u 14 .440 10 Detroit u 14 .440 10 Charlotte 10 14 ,417 10'/2 Toronto 9 13 .409 10'/2 Chicago 9 13 .409 10'/2 Washington 9 13 .409 10'/2 Cleveland 9 14 .391 u Brooklyn 8 15 .348 12 NewYork 7 16 .304 13 Orlando 7 1 7 .292 13'/2 Philadelphia 7 1 8 .280 14 Milwaukee 5 19 .208 15'/2 WesternConterence W L Pct GB d-Portland 21 4 .840 d-SanAntonio 19 4 .826 1 Oklahoma City 19 4 .826 d-LA. Clippers 16 9 .640 5 Houston 16 9 .640 5 Phoenix 14 9 .609 6 Denver 14 9 .609 6 Dallas 14 10 ,583 6'/2 Golden State 13 12 .520 8 12 12 .500 8~/2 Minnesota NewOrleans u 11 .500 8'/2 LA. Lakers 11 12 .478 9 Memphis 10 13 .435 10 Sacramen to 7 15 .318 12'/2 Utah 6 20 .231 15'/2 d-divisionleader Marco Trovati/The Associated Press
France's TessaWorley celebrates in the finish area after winning an alpine ski women's World Cup giant slalom in St. Moritz, Switzerland, on Sunday.
Sunday'sGames
Sacrament0106, Houston91 Minnesota101,Memphis 93 portland01, Detroit109,QT Oklahoma City101, Orlando98 Phoenix106,GoldenState102
Denver102,NewOrleans93 Today'sGames Detroit atIndiana,4 p.m. PhiladelphiaatBrooklyn,4:30p.m. Minnesota at Boston, 4:30p.m. Utah atMiami, 4:30p.m. L.A. Lakers atAtlanta,4:30 p.m. Washin gtonatNewYork,4:30p.m. OrlandoatChicago,5p.m. SanAntonioat LA,Clippers,7;30p.m. Nesday's Games PortlandatCleveland,4p.m. Sacramento at Charlotte,4 p.m. LA. Lakers atMemphis, 5p.m. Oklahoma Cityat Denver 6pm NewOrleansatGoldenState, 7:30 p.m.
Summaries Sunday'sGames
Blazer3111, PiStOnS109 (OT) PORTLAND (111)
Batum7-131-218, Aldridge11-255-627, Lopez 5-8 2-212,Lillard6-210-1223, Matthews5-13 3-4 14, Williams3-100-0 8, Freeland2-30-0 4, Wright
1-2 0-0 3,Robinson1-40-0 z Totals 41-99 2226111. DETROIT (109) Smith13-175-631,Monroe7-143-417, Drummond 6-15 1-5 13, Jennings6-16 2-3 15, Caldwell-Pope1-52-35,Stuckey7-183-417, Singler2-3 0-05, Billups2-62-26,Harrellson0-00-00. Totals 44-9418-27109. Porlland 29 21 23 26 12 — 111 Detroit 22 29 33 15 10 — 109 3-Point Goal— s Portland 7-26 (Batum3-7, Williams 2-5,Wright 1-2,Matthews1-5, Lillard 0-7), Detroit 3-15(Singler 1-2,Caldwell-Pope1-2, Jennings1-4, Stuckey0-1, Drummond0-1, Smith0-2, Billups 0-3).FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Portland 61(Lopez13j, Detroit 60(Drummond14j. Assists — Portland 24 Nllard 7j, Detroit19 (Jennings 10j. Total Foul— s portland 21, Detroit 2z Techni-
cals — Portland defensive threesecond. A—13,003 (22,076).
SIIns106, Warriors102 GOLDEN STATE(102) Barnes2-7 2-4 8, Lee7-18 4-5 18, 6ogut4-6 1-6 9, Curry 8-1710-0 30, Thompson7-17 3-3 19,D.Green2-40-05,Speights2-60-05,Douglas 2-3 2-2 7,Bazemore 0-21-2 1. Totals 34-80 2333102. PHOENIX (106) Tucker2-72-2 7, Frye7-121-2 20,Plumlee2-6 2-2 6, Bledsoe 7-16 8-12 24, Dragic 6-11 5-8 21, MarkMorris3-91-27, G.Green3-73-410, Goodwin 0-1 0-0 0,Marc.uorris 5-101-2 u. Totals 35-79 23-34 106. Goldenstate 27 2 6 2722 — 102 Phoenix 33 26 22 25 — 106
37-8217-26 98. OKLAHOM ACITY (101) Durant11-184-528, Ibaka2-60-04, Perkins1-4 2-34,Westbrook7-226-620,Sefolosha3-80-06, Collison1-3 0-0 2,J.Lamb7-10 0-016, Adam s 2-3 2-26, Jackson 4-1t 2-210, Fisher1-32-25. Totals 39-8718-20101. Orlando 22 27 22 27 — 98 Oklahoma City 28 28 27 18 — 101
Kings106, Rockets 91
HOUSTON (91) Parsons7-15 5-6 19,Jones1-3 0-2 2, How ard 4-7 5-1313,Beverley2-t 2-2 6,Harden8-18 6-725, Smith3-50-06,Casspi1-51-24,Brooks4-83-413, Garcia1-6 0-03, Motiejunas0-1 0-20, Brewer 0-0 0-00. Totals 31-7522-3891. SACRAM EITO (106) Gay10-205-626,Thompson4-71-2 9, Cousins 7-14 r-r 21, Thoma s 7-124-519, McLemore1-42-2 NIIggetS102, PeliCanS93 4, Williams3-10 4-611, Outlaw3-7 2-28, Acy2-2 0-0 4, Fredette1-20-0 2, Thornton 1-30-0 2, McNEWORLEANS(93) m 0-00-00,Ndiaye0-00-00.Totals39-81 Aminu4-51-4 9,Anderson10-214-4 26,Smith Callu 4-100-08,Holiday6-130-012, Gordon4-1I 1-1 10, 25-30 106. 28 21 22 20 — 91 D.Miller 0-00-0 0,Amundson1-3 0-2 2, Rivers5-9 Houston 28 29 24 25 — 106 5-717,Morrow0-41-1 1, Roberts 3-90-08, Withey Sacramento 0-00-00.Totals37-8512-19 93. DENVER (102) Timberwolves101, Grizzlies 93 Chandler7-143-419, Faried5-92-212, Hickson 8-12 3-6 19, Lawson 4-9 3-4 12,Foye2-9 2-2 7, MINNESOT A (101) Hamilton1-80-02,Arthur1-30-02, Mozgov0-26 8 Brewer4-80-29,Love0-2 I 4-430, pekovic6-12 6, Robinson 5-102-214, A.Miler 4-90-0 9. Totals 7-819, Rubio3-94-512, Martin 0-30-00, Cunning37-85 21-28102. ham2-7 0-24, Shved2-41-1 6, Barea5-10 2-215, New0rleans 27 2 5 16 25 — 93 Mbah Mou a te1-21-1 3, Hummel1-3 0-03. Totals Denver 24 28 23 27 — 102 35-79 19-25101.
ThuIIder101, Magic 98
MEMPHIS(93)
Prince1-5 0-02, Randolph 7-196-8 20,Koufos 1-40-02, Conley12-200-1 28, Allen3-41-27, Miler 2-51-1 5,Leuer7-130-015, Bayless4-96-814, 0RLANDQ I98) Afflalo 9-205-5 25, Davis4-11 3-5 11,Vucevic Davis 0-20-00,Calathes0-20-00.Totals37-83 6-91-213,Nelson4-111-213, Oladipo5-125-815, 14-20 93. Harkless3-50-07, Nicholson1-30-02, Moore1-2 Minnesota 28 28 21 24 — 101 0-0 2, Harris3-8 2-48, O'Quinn1-1 0-0 z Totals Memphis 17 29 27 20 — 93
B4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
NFL ROUNDUP
a cers ea owo s
an o u era
The Associated Press
Chiefs 56,
ARLINGTON, Texas — If this was Matt Flynn's last start
Ra iders 31:
OAKLAND, Calif. — Jamaal
Charles tied a franchise record with five touchdowns in a game and gained 215 yards from scrimmage as Kansas City beat Oakland and
in place of Aaron Rodgers, it was quite a memorable one.
Flynn threw four touchdown passes in the second half, Eddie Lacy had the winning score on a 1-yard plunge after an interception by Tony
clinched at least a wild-card spot. Alex Smith threw five
Romo gave them one more
TD passes, going 17 for 20 for
4
:k
287 yards to make the Chiefs the fourth team ever to make
chance, and the Green Bay Packers matched the biggest
the playoffs a year after losing
comeback in franchise history
at least 14 games. Kansas City
in a 37-36 win over the Dallas Cowboys on Sunday.
(11-3) is tied for first place in the AFC West with Denver but needs help to win the division
Romo tossed two interceptions in the final 3 minutes, the
because the Broncos swept the season series.
first one giving Green Bay a chance for the go-ahead score with the Cowboys in position to run out the clock with a 3631lead.
P anthers 30 , J e t s 20 : CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Cam Newton threw for 273 yards and a t o uchdown, Captain
~4PE
//l.
Lacy scored with 1:31 to go for Green Bay's first lead
Munnerlyn had two sacks and returned an interception for a
since the first quarter and af-
score and Carolina bounced
ter the Packers trailed 26-3 at halftime. "It took me everything not to
back from its most lopsided loss of the season. With
i e-
E
New Orleans losing 27-16 to
cry," said Packers coach Mike McCarthy, whose team won its second straight w i thout
Tim SharpI The Associated Press
Green Bay Packers quarterback Matt Flynn, right, celebrates the game-winning touchdownagainst the Dallas Cowboys during the secRodgers after going winless ond half of Sunday's game in Arlington, Texas. Green Bay won 37-36.
with the rematch set for next
Sunday in Charlotte. If Carolina wins its final two games, it
in the first five, including the
Chicago game when the star QB got hurt. "I'm just drained. fate. They finish with WashJust the sheer emotion. It was ington and the Eagles. "We still control what we incredible." Playing on the same field feel like we can get done," where Rodgers was the MVP Romo said. "It just doesn't feel when they won the 2011 Super like it right now because we let Bowl, the Packers matched it slip away." the 1982 team in a September With Dallas leading 36-31, game against the Los Angeles Bryant made a lunging first Rams for the largest rally. down after a catch just before The Packers (7-6-1) kept the 2-minute warning t h at their playoff hopes alive with looked as if it would help DalRodgers possibly returning las hold off a huge Green Bay next week. He was close to rally. But Romo threw behind medical clearance, but missed Miles Austin after escaping a his sixth straight game with sack and Sam Shields intera broken collarbone. He was cepted at midfield. wearing a headset on Green The Packers steadily moved Bay's sideline. downfield before the plunge "Most guys would pack it by Lacy, who had 141 yards in — 'Guys, it's not our season. rushing. Let's go home and get ready Also on Sunday: for next year,' " said Green Bay Dolphins 24, Patriots 20: cornerback Tramon Williams, MIAMI GA RDENS, Fla. who had an interception over- Tom Brady's latest comeback turned on review before a bid came up short, and Migame-clinching pick that was ami helped its playoff chances ruledincomplete and reversed with a breakthrough victory on replay. "It's not that vibe over AFC East-leading New here." England. A fourth-down pass The vibe in D allas could from Brady was interceptbe negative for a while, with ed by reserve safety Michael Dez Bryant walking off the T homas, in h i s f i r s t N F L field before the game ended game, in the end zone with 2 and refusing to talk to report- seconds left, and Miami held ers in the locker room, simply on to win. shaking his head at them after Vikings 48, Eagles 30: MINfinishing with 153 yards and a NEAPOLIS — M at t C assel -
touchdown. "This is one of the hardest
losses that I've experienced," Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said. "That's a shame that we've lost that ballgame." The Cowboys (7-7) blew a great chance to pull even with
passed for 382 yards and two
touchdowns and ran for another score to lead injury-depleted Minnesota over Phila-
will clinch the division and the
Greg Jennings caught a career-high 11 passes for 163 yards for the Vikings (4-9-1). Asiata ran for 51 yards on 30 carries. Falcons 27, Redskins 26: ATLANTA — Desmond Tru-
fant deflected Kirk Cousins' pass on a potential winning 2-point conversion with 18 seconds remaining, and Atlanta edged Washington. The Falcons (4-10) scored 20 points off seven Washington turnovers. The Redskins (3-11) tied a team record with five lost fumbles. 49ers 33, Buccaneers 14:
Philadelphia in the NFC East ata rushed for the first three but still control their playoff touchdowns of his career and
for 50 yards and throwing for 206 and a touchdown before sitting out the last few min-
Colts 25, Texans 3: INDIANAPOLIS — A n drew Luck threw two touchdown pass-
first-round bye. The Panthers haven't been to the postseason since 2008.
utes. Wilson has 23 wins, the most for a quarterback in his
es, and Robert Mathis broke Cardinals 37, Titans 34: Indianapolis' s i ngle-season NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Jay first two seasons in the Super and career sacks records by Feely kicked a 41-yard field Bowl era. forcing a second-half safety goal in overtime, and Arizona Bears 38, Browns 31: to lead the Colts past Houston. edged Tennessee in overtime CLEVELAND — Jay Cutler Luck finished 19 of 32 for 180 after blowing a 17-point lead shook off some early rusti- yards with one interception late in the fourth quarter. Still, ness and threw three touch- and needed only two quarters the Cardinals (9-5) won their down passes in his first start
to put up 20 points, four short
sixth in seven games. With
since Nov. 10, leading Chicago of Indy's combined first-half San Francisco and Carolina past Cleveland. Cutler, who point total from the previous winning, they remained a missed Chicago's previous six games. game back of both for a NFC four games with a sprained Bills 27, Jaguars 20:JACK- wild-card berth. left ankle, threw a 4-yard TD SONVILLE, Fla. — EJ Manuel Steelers 30, Bengals 20: pass to Earl Bennett with 5:41
left as the Bears (8-6) rallied in vis caught a touchdown pass the second half and stayed in for the fifth straight game and contention for an NFC playoff Michael Crabtree scored his spot. Cutler finished 22 of 31 first TD since returning from for 265 yards and validated injury to help San Francisco coach Marc Trestman's debeat Tampa Bay. The victo- cision to stick with him over ry was the fourth straight for backup Josh McCown, who C olin Kaepernick an d t h e had played well while filling in 49ers (10-4), who pulled away forChicago'sstarter. for good with a 10-minute, TAMPA, Fla. — Vernon Da-
threw two touchdown pass-
es and ran for another score, leading Buffalo to a victory against banged-up Jacksonville. Manuel bounced back from the worst game of his rookie season — a four-inter-
P ITTSBURGH — Ant o n io Brown caught a touchdown
pass and returned a punt for a score in a 64-second span in the first quarter and Pitts-
burgh beat Cincinnati. Shaun Suisham added three f ield
ception performance at Tam- goals for the Steelers (6-8), pa Bay last week — and left who built a 24-point lead and his college state with his first hardly looked like a team win in five road starts. playing out the string.
fourth-quarter drive that pro-
duced a field goal. Kendall Hunter put it well out of reach, scooping up a fumble on the ensuing kickoff and diving 2 yards into the end zone for a touchdown.
Seahawks 23, Giants 0:
PL
•P
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Richard Sherman had two i nterceptions, Mar s h a w n
Lynch scored on a twisting, triple-effort 2-yard run, and
delphia, snapping the Eagles' Steven Hauschka k i cked five-game winning streak. three field goals as Seattle With A d rian Peterson and Toby Gerhart out, Matt Asi-
St. Louis, the Panthers (10-4) pulled even with the Saints
manhandled the New York Giants for its sixth road win.
I FiveBIBMIilays aiil lots of prizes to WIN! I
Russell Wilson toyed with New York's defense, running
WINYOU R CHOICE OFA PULYS TATION3
I I I I
ORAN
XBOX 360
Injury
country. But of all the stats in Week
concussions between them.
Continued from B1
15 of a typically violent NFL
ed Press, meanwhile, showed that during the first 11 weeks
season, there are a few that
should give anyone who pays the game some pause. Injuagain is a mystery when we ries are once again piling up are learning more about the at a disturbing rate, even in a cumulative effects of blows to league whereinjury reports the head, but you can bet he are often long. wilL A tally of the NFL injury The season also is over in list before Sunday's games Washington for Robert Grif- showed a startling 254 players fin III, though he is still mo- — an average of about eight bile even after being sacked per team — out for the season 24 times in his past five with injuries ranging from games. The Redskins are so busted ribs to foggy heads. worried their franchise quar- Another 131 players were eiterback will be hurt again ther out for this week's games that he wa s b enched with or listed as doubtful or questhree games remaining in the tionable to play. season rather than risk furThat is 385 players with sigther injury. nificant injuries out of about "If he did play, and some- 2,000 who will play in the NFL thing happened to him, I think this season. And that is just a it would set ou r f r a nchise weekly snapshot in a league back," embattled Redskins where making it through the coach Mike Shanahan said. season without injury is alUnfortunately, not as much m ost as rare asbeing fitted for precautionary care is tak- a Super Bowl ring. en with players who are not Worse yet, c oncussions stars. Far too often they play continue to take a heavy toll through injuries because if among players, highlighting a they do not play they might problem the NFL cannot seem soon find themselves out of to get under control even as it a job. It is a fact of life in a prepares to pay out hundreds league whose contracts are of millions of dollars to fornot guaranteed and there are mer players devastated from no guarantees that the next the effects of head hits during play could be your last. their playing years. It is no secret that football According to tracking by is a brutal game. Tough men the PBS program "Frontline," play it, and sometimes they there were 125 diagnosed conpay the price. The big hits cussion injuries in the NFL their bodies endure are part this season going into Sunof the very fabric of the game, day's games. Eleven players and a big reason why the were sidelined in last week's NFL is far and away the most games alone, including four popular sports league in the who had a previous total of 19 Why the Denver receiver would ever set foot on the field
wlNQNEQFTwo@50 GIFTGARDs
A review by The AssociatP.'lj
of the season players were
penalized on the average of once a game for either hits to the head, horse collars or
head-wrenching face masks.
That the NFL, after years
of denials, finally admitted that concussions are a serious issue and set up protocols to
I
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deal with them is commend-
able, though terribly late. The culture of covering up the effects of blows to the head is
changing, though it will never change enough for those who feel forced to play — no matter
how much their head hurtsjust to keep their jobs. The NFL
h a s i n s tituted
rules to protect quarterbacks and others most at risk for hits to the head, but it can go
only so far when the big hits and spectacular collisions are
what have made the league so popular. Short of the invention of some miracle helmet to protect the head at all
costs, it is pretty much a given that every week players will suffer concussions that
could cause long-term brain damage. But football remains a great game, and the NFL is nothing
I I I I
even if we are somewhat cognizant of the toll it takes on
those who play it. Still, as the injury numbers continue to add up, we cannot help but be reminded about what a terrible toll it is.
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I
MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B5
Rams eay Saints' postseason panswit win The Associated Press ST. LOUIS — Just like two years
c rtL
NFL
Everything went sour fast for the 10-win Saints. Brees was intercept-
"I saw enough. Period. I mean, ago, a St. Louis Rams team go- ed on the first snap, and again in the ing nowherejumped on the play- second series, and the Saints played enough," Payton said. off-bound New Orleans Saints early catch-up all day. The Saints (10-4) missed their "You want to talk about wak- first chance to clinch aplayoffberth, and never let them up. Drew Brees threw intercep- ing the whole place up," Brees said. trailing 24-3 at the half, but made tions that led to touchdowns on the "That did it." it look respectable with two touchSaints' first two possessions and the Quinn had two sacks, giving him downs in the fourth quarter. They're Rams got big days from Zac Stacy, an NFC-leading 15, for a pass rush unbeaten at home, but just 3-4 on Robert Quinn and on special teams that took the heat off a young sec- the road and play at Carolina with in a 27-16 victory Sunday. ondary. His quarterback hit on the the NFC South lead on the line next "When you looked at their side- Saints' first snap of the game altered week. line, they realized, 'Oh gosh, like, the flight of the ball on T.J. McDonThe Saints are averaging 32.9 here wego again,'"Rams defensive ald's interception, and he had a sack, points at home, with five of the wins end Chris Long said. "We hit 'em strip and fumble recovery to keep by double-digits induding playearly, and they were reeling." the Saints down in the third quarter. off hopefuls Dallas and Arizona. The Rams were 0-6 and douCoach SeanPayton benched left They're averaging just 18.4 points ble-digit underdogs before upsetting tadde Charlie Brown after that play on the road with the three wins by the Saints in 2011. St. Louis was 2-14 and shifted left tackle Zack Strief to eight, four and two points. that year and New Orleans went the right side in an attempt to neuK ellen Clemens threw for tw o 13-3. tralize Quinn. TDs in the f irst quarter, match-
rr
/
~h
Tom Gannam/The Associated Press
St. Louis wide receiver Chris Givens, left,
slips past NewOrleans safety Isa Abdul-Quddus after catching a passfor a 31-yard gain during Sunday's game inSt. Louis.
ing his best performance in seven games as the fill-in starter for Sam Bradford. The Rams (6-8) recovered an onside kick to set up a field goal in the first quarter, and Michael Brockers blocked a field-goal attempt at the end of the half.
Brees was 39 for 56 for 393 yards, but with just one touchdown, and threw two interceptions in the first
quarter for the first time in a decade. The Rams played one of their strongest games of the year a week after getting eliminated, and the franchise is assured of a 10th con-
secutive season without a winning record. St. Louis' offense had a nice day
against Saints defensive coordinator Rob Ryan, who had an extended interview with the Rams in Janu-
ary before joining New Orleans.
NFL SCOREBOARD Summaries
6;18. Phi — FGHenery35, 2:35.
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Sunday'sGames
Rams 27, Saints16 N ewsrleans St. Louis
0 3 0 13 — 16
1 4 10 3 0 — 2 7
First Guarter StL — Harkey 31 pass from Clemens(Zoerlein kick, 11:20.
tL — Kendrfcks 4 passfrom Clemens (Zuerlein
kick), 2:45.
SecondGuarler
StL — FGZuerlein 31,14:57. NO — FGHartley45,10:17. StL — Stacy40 run(Zuerlein kick), 4:10. Third Guarler StL — FGZoerlein 35,2:42. Fourlh Guarler NO — Brees1run (runfailed),11:25. NO — Colston 5 passfrom Brees(Hartley kick), 3:07. A—58,442.
SecondQuarter
East W NewEngland 1 0 Miami 8 N.Y.Jets 6 Buffalo 5
L 4 6 8 9
PF PA 369 311 310 296 246 367 300 354
T 0 0 0 0
Pc t .7 14 .5 7 1 .4 2 9 .3 5 7
T 0 0 0 0
P c t PF PA .6 4 3 338 319 .35 7 326 355 . 2 86 221 399 .1 4 3 253 375
H ome Away A FC NFC 7 -0-0 3 -4-0 7-3-0 3-1-0 4 - 3-0 4 -3-0 7-3-0 1-3-0 5 - 2-0 1 -6-0 3-7-0 3-1-0 3 - 4-0 2 -5-0 4-6-0 1-3-0
South W L - Indianapolis 9 5 e nnessee 5 9 J acksonville 4 1 0 H ouston 2 12
Div 3-2-0 2-2-0 2-3-0 2-2-0
Min — FGWalsh21,13;19. Phi —FGHenery51, 8:55. Min — Asiata1 run(Walsh kick),1:06. Phi — FGHenery33,:00. Third Quarter Min — Cassel6 run(Walsh kick), 12:03. Min — FGWalsh38,4:43. Phi — Jackson 30 pass fromFoles (Henery kick),
3:14. Div Phi—Erlz3 passfromFoles (passfailed),:15. 2-2-0 5-0-0 Fourlh Guarler 1-3-0 0-4-0 Min — Asiata1 ron(Walsh kick),13:01. 0-4-0 3-1-0 Min — Patterson 5passfromCassel (Walsh kick), 0-4-0 1-4-0 6;54.
H ome Away A FC NFC 5 - 2-0 2 - 5-0 1 -6-0 1 -6-0
4 - 3-0 3 -4-0 3 -4-0 1 -6-0
7-3-0 4-6-0 4-6-0 2-8-0
Phi — Avant16 passfromFoles (Cooperpassfrom Foles),4:26. Min — Asiata5run(Walsh kick),1;09. W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v A—64,087. Cincinnati 9 5 0 .6 4 3 354 274 6 - 0-0 3 -5-0 7-4-0 2-1-0 2-3-0 Baltimore 7 6 0 .5 3 8 278 261 6 - 1-0 1 -5-0 6-4-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 Phi Min Pittsburgh 6 8 0 .4 2 9 321 332 4 - 3-0 2 - 5-0 5-6-0 1-2-0 3-2-0 25 29 Cleveland 4 10 0 . 2 86 288 362 3 - 5-0 1 -5-0 3-7-0 1-3-0 2-3-0 First downs TotalNetYards 4 75 45 5 13-79 35-85 Rushes-yards West NO St L Passing 3 96 37 0 First downs 30 17 W L T Pc t PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC Div 1 -1 1 - 13 PuntReturns TotalNetYards 4 32 30 2 x -Oenver 1 1 3 0 .7 8 6 535 372 7 - 1-0 4 -2-0 7 -3-0 4-0-0 4-1-0 KickoffRe turns 2 -83 5 - 45 20-61 34-144 Rushes-yards x-Kansas City 11 3 0 . 7 86 399 255 5 - 2-0 6 -1-0 7 -3-0 4-0-0 2-3-0 InterceptionsRet. 1 -2 1 - 30 Passing 3 71 1 5 8 S an Diego 7 7 0 .5 0 0 343 311 3 - 3-0 4 -4-0 4 -6-0 3-1-0 2-2-0 Comp-Att-Int 30-48-1 26-35-1 0-0 1-7 PontReturns O akland 4 10 0 .28 6 295 393 3 - 4-0 1 -6-0 4 -6-0 0-4-0 1-3-0 Sacked-YardsLost 4 -32 3 - 12 0 -0 2 - 53 KickoffReturns Punts 4-41.3 2-48.5 0-0 2-5 InterceptionsRet. 0-0 0-0 Fumbl e s-Lost Comp-Att-Int 39-56-2 14-20-0 NATIONAL CONFERENCE Penalties-Yards 9 -94 3 - 25 4-22 0-0 Sacked-Yards Lost Time ofPossession 23:34 36:26 Punts 2-53.5 4-41.8 East 1-1 0-0 Fumbles-Lost INDIVIDUAL ST A T I S TICS Penalties-Yards 8 -77 4 - 30 W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC Div RUSHING —Philadelphia: Foles 5-41, McCoy Timeof Possession 32:12 27:48 Philadelphia 8 6 0 .5 7 1 364 349 3 - 4-0 5 -2-0 7-3-0 1-3-0 3-2-0 8-38. Minnesota: Asiata30-51, Cassel3-19, PatDallas 7 7 0 .5 0 0 393 385 5 - 2-0 2 -5-0 6-4-0 1-3-0 4-0-0 terson2-15. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS N.Y.Giants 5 9 0 .3 5 7 251 357 3 - 4-0 2 -5-0 4-6-0 1-3-0 2-3-0 PASSING Philadelphia: Foles 30-48-1-428. RUSHING —New Orleans: Sproles 7-24, Washington 3 11 0 . 2 14 305 434 2 - 5-0 1 -6-0 1-9-0 2-2-0 0-4-0 Minnesota:— Cassel26-35-1-382. Thomas 8-21, Brees 2-8, Ingram1-5, Stills 1-3, RECEIVING—Philadelphia: Jackson10-195, K.Rohinson1-0. St. Louis:Stacy28-133, Bailey1-6, South Ertz 6-57, McCoy5-68, Cooper4-29, Avant3-40, Clemens 3-5,Cunningham 2-0. W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC D i v PASSING — New Orleans:Brees39-56-2-393. NewOrleans 1 0 4 0 . 7 14 359 270 7 - 0-0 3 -4-0 8-2-0 2-2-0 4-0-0 Celek1-25,Smith1-14. Minnesota: Jennings11163, Patterson5-35,Wright 4-95, Asiata3-15, Ford St. Louis: Clemens14-20-0-158. 1 0 4 0 .7 14 328 208 6 - 1-0 4 - 3-0 7-3-0 3-1-0 3-1-0 2-55, Simpson1-19. RECEIVING —New Orleans: Colston 8-92, Carolina 2-8-0 2-2-0 1-4-0 ampaBay 4 10 0 . 2 86 258 324 3 - 5-0 1 -5-0 MISSED FIELDGOALS—Minnesota: Walsh Sproles8-38,Thomas7-62, Moore6-78, Stills 4-47, T 4 10 0 . 2 86 309 388 3 - 4-0 1 -6-0 3-7-0 1-3-0 1-4-0 55 (WL). Ingram 2-39,Graham2-25,Watson2-12. St. Louis: Atlanta Pettis 4-41, Harkey3-29, Bailey 2-26, Kendricks2-13, North Givens1-31, Stacy1-10, Cook1-8. Seahawks23, Giants 0 H ome Away N FC AFC W L T Pc t PF PA Div MISSED FIELDGOALS—New Orleans: HartChicago 8 6 0 .5 7 1 406 391 5 - 2-0 3 -4-0 4-6-0 4-0-0 2-3-0 Seatlle ley 36 (BK),26(WL). 3 10 3 7 — 23 Detroit 7 6 0 .5 3 8 346 321 4 - 2-0 3 -4-0 6-4-0 1-2-0 4-1-0 N.y. Giants 0 0 0 0 — 0 GreenBay 7 6 1 .5 3 6 353 362 4 - 2-1 3 -4-0 5-5-1 2-1-0 2-2-1 Firsl Quarler Chiefs 56, Raiders 31 Minnesota 4 9 1 .3 2 1 363 425 4 - 3-0 0 - 6-1 3-7-1 1-2-0 1-3-1 Sea—FG Hauschka49,8:33. SecondGuarler KansasCity 21 14 14 7 — 66 West Sea—Lynch 2run(Hauschkakick),5:30. Oakland 3 1414 0 — 3 1 Sea—FG H a us chka44,:03. W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC Div First Guarter x -Seattle 1 2 2 0 .85 7 380 205 6 - 0-0 6 -2-0 9 -1-0 3-1-0 3-1-0 Third Guarter KC — Charles 49passfromA.Smith (Soccopkick), Sea—FGHauschka24,8:47. San Francisco 10 4 0 . 7 14 349 228 5 - 2-0 5 -2-0 7 -3-0 3-1-0 4-1-0 14:38. 4-0-0 1-3-0 Fourlh Quarler Arizona 9 5 0 .64 3 342 291 6 - 1-0 3 -4-0 5 -5-0 Oak —FGJanikowski 34,11:05. Sea—Baldwin12 passfromWilson (Hauschka S t. Louis 6 8 0 .42 9 316 324 4 - 3-0 2 -5-0 3 -7-0 3-1-0 1-4-0 KC — Charles 39passfromA.Smith (Soccopkick), x-clinched playofspot kick), 12:13. 7:27. division A—79,691. KC — Berry 47interception return (Succopkick), y-clinched Thursday'sGame Sunday,Dec. 22 5:07. Sea N YG SanDiego27,Denver 20 Tampa Bayat St.Louis,10a.m. SecondGuarler First downs 21 12 Sunday'sGames Indianap olis atKansasCity, 10azu Oak —Jennings1run (Janikowski kick),1440. TotalNetYards 3 27 18 1 Minnesota48,Philadelphia30 DenveratHouston,10a.m. KC — Charles1 run(Succopkick), 8:59. Rushes-yards 34-134 14-25 MiamiatBuffalo, 10a.m. KC — Charles16passfromA.Smith (Succopkick), Atlanta27,Washington26 Passing 1 93 156 SanFrancisco33,TampaBay14 NewOrleansatCarolina,10a.m. 5:42. PuntReturns 7-73 1-4 Seattl e 23, N . Y . G ian t s 0 DallasatWashington,10azu Oak —Jennings1 run(Janikowski kick), 3:00. KickoffReturns 0 -0 3 - 74 Chicago 38,Cleveland31 Cleveland at N.Y.Jets, 10azu Third Guarler Intercepti o ns R e t. 5-5 1-0 olis25,Houston3 Minnesota at Cincinnati, 10a.m. Oak—Holmes 6 passfrom McGloin (Janikowski Indianap Comp-Att-Int 20-29-1 22-35-5 Buffalo27,Jacksonvile 20 Tennes seeatJacksonvile, 10a.m. kick, 12:01. 4 -29 4 - 30 Sacked-YardsLost ,NewEngl and20 Arizona atSeattle,I;05p.m. ak — Rivera 14 passfrom McGloin (Janikowski Miami24 7-41.3 8-47.5 Punts Kansas City56,Oakland31 N.Y.Giantsat Oetroit, 1:05p.m. kick), 4:57. 2-0 2-0 Fumbles-Lost Carolina30,N.Y.Jets20 OaklandatSanDiego,I:25 p.m. KC — Charles 71passfromA.Smith (Succopkick), 8 -50 5 - 38 Penalties-Yards Arizona 37,Tennessee34,OT Pittsburgh atGreenBay,1:25p.m. 3:38. Time ofPossession 33;58 26:02 St. Louis27,NewOrleans16 NewEnglandat Baltimore,1:25p.m. KC — McGrath 6passfromA.Smith (Succopkick), GreenBay37,Dallas36 Chicago at Philadelphia,5:30p,m. 1:20. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Pittsburgh 30,Cincinnati20 Monday,Dec.23 Fourlh Guarler Today'sGame RUSHING —Seattle: Wilson8-50, Lynch16-47, AtlantaatSanFrancisco,5:40p.m. KC — Davis17 run(Soccopkick), 8:19. Turhin 9-34, Baldwin1-3. N.y. Giants: A.Brown11B altimore a t D e tro i t , 5:40 pz u A—49,571. 17, Hillis 3-8. PASSING —Seatlle: Wilson18-27-1-206, JackKC Dak son2-2-0-16. N.y. Giants:Manning18-31-5-156, AH TimesPST First downs 19 26 Painter 4-4-0-30. TotalNetYards 3 84 46 1 RECEIVING —Seattle: Lynch 6-73, Baldwin Rushes-yards 24-78 33-130 6-71, Tate2-25, Wiffson2-23, Kearse2-21, MiffPassing 3 06 33 1 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. er 1-8, Turhin 1-1.N.y. Giants:Jernigan7-67, PuntReturns 1-9 1-6 RUSHING —N.y. Jets: Ivory11-66,Smith6-44, A.Brown4-9, Myers3-37, Cruz2-25, Hillis 2-24, KickoffReturns 4-107 5-130 Poweff 8-37,Hakim 1-8,Richardson2-2.Carolina: Bears 38, Browns 31 Pascoe 2-12, MurphyJr.1-7, Nicks1-5. InterceptionsRet. 5 -119 0 - 0 D.Wiffiams15-81, Tolhert12-18, GinnJr. 1-14,NewMISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. Comp-Att-Int 20-25-0 20-41-5 ton 7-12,LaFeff1-6. Chicago 010 7 21 — 38 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-12 0-0 PASSING —N.y. Jets: Sm ith15-28-1-167. Car- Cleveland 3 7 14 7 — 31 4-49.5 1-48.0 olina:Newton16-24-0-273. Punts Dolphins 24, Patriots 20 First Guarler 1-1 2-2 RECEIVING —N.y. Jets: Poweff4-19, CumberFumbles-Lost Cle — FGCundiff 35,7:26. 8-91 1 0-90 l a nd 3-50, Nel s on 3-44, Hol m es 2-14, Kerl e y 1-25, Penalties-Yards N ewEngland 3 7 0 10 — 2 0 SecondQuarter Time ofPossession 25:53 34 :07 Winslow1-12,Bohanon1-3. Carolina: Olsen5-88, Miami 0 7 3 1 4 — 24 Chi — FGGould23, 12:55. D.Wiffiams3-87, LaFeff3-61, Smith3-20, GinnJr. First Quarler Cle — G ipson 44 i n t e rcepti o n return (Cu ndi f f ki c k), 1-10,Tolhert1-7. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS NE —FGGostkowski22,3: 53. 8:01. RUSHING —Kansas City: Davis9-34, Charles MISSEDFIELDGOALS— None. SecondQuarler Chi — Marshall 5 passfromCutler (Gouldkick), 8-20r A.Smith4-17, Jenkins1-5, Gray1-3, Daniel NE—Hoom a n aw anoi 13 pass from Brady(Gost:24. 1-(minus1).Oakland:Jennings23-91, Pryor3-19, Falcons 27, Redskins 26 kowskikick),1:38. Third Quarler Reece 5-18,Olawale1-2, McGloin1-0. Mia — Wallace 39 passfrom Tannehiff (Sturgis Chi — Bowman43interception return(Gouldkick), kick),:32. PASSING —KansasCity: A.Smith17-20-0-287, 7 13 0 6 — 2 6 13:48. Daniel 3-5-0-31.Oakland: McGloin18-36-4-297, Washington Third Guarter Atlanta 14 3 7 3 — 27 Cle — Baker 2run(Cundiff kick),8:20. Reece 1-1-0-22, Pryor1-4-1-12. Mia — FGSturgis 32,7:31. First Quarter Cle — W a rd 5 1 fu m bl e re t u rn (C u n di f f ki c k), 3:40. RECEIVING —Kansas City: Charles 8-195, Fourlh Quarler Atl — Jackson3ron (Bryant kick), 8:14. Fourth Quarter Bowe3-24,Avery2-33,McGrath2-14,Davis2-8, Mia—Oan.Tom has2 passfromTannehiff (Sturgis Atl — Gonzalez 13 passfrom Ryan (Bryant kick), Chi — Jeffery 45passfromCutler (Gouldkick), kick), 14;54. Gray 1-18, Sherman 1-15, Hall 1-11. Oakland: 3:52. 10:59. Streater4-59, Holmes4-58, Rivera 3-30, Jennings NE —FGGostkowski23,7: 45. Was —Davis 23passfromCousins (Forhathkick), Chi — E.Bennet 4 passfrom Cutler (Gouldkick), 3-12, Reece2-52, D.Moore2-46, Jones1-52, Che- :48. NE — Edelman 24 passfromBrady (Gostkowski 5:41. kwa1-22. kick), 4;07. SecondGuarler Chi — Bush40ron (Gouldkick), 2:17. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. Mia — Thigpen 14 passfromTannehiff (Sturgis Atl —FGBryant 20,10:39. Cle — Gordon 43 passfrom Campbell (Cundiff kick), 1:15. Was —Garcon 53 pass from Cousins(Forhath kick),:59. A—71,863. Panthers 30, Jets 20 kick), 6:35. A—71,513. Was —FGForhath 33,:49. NE Mia N.y. Jets 3 3 7 7 — 20 Was —FGForhath 37,:00. Chi Cle First downs 29 20 Third Quarler Carolina 3 13 0 14 — 30 First downs 23 20 T otal Net Ya rd s 4 53 37 8 Atl — Jackson2run(Bryantkick), 8:13. First Guarter TotalNetYards 4 40 36 6 Rushes-yards 22-96 23-89 Car — FGGano35, 4:39. Fourth Guarter Rushes-yards 31-179 17-93 Passing 3 57 28 9 NYJ —FGFolk54,:00. Atl —FGBryant 51,3:25. Passing 2 61 27 3 PuntReturns 0-0 2-9 Was —Moss 3 pass from Cousins (pass failed), PuntReturns SecondGuarler 1-21 0-0 Kickoff Re t u rns 1 -19 2 - 25 Car — FGGano22, 6:46. :18. KickoffReturns 4 -97 4 - 44 InterceptionsRet. 0-0 1-0 NYJ —FGFolk33,3:49. A—70,069. Interceptions Ret. 2 -43 2 - 7 9 Comp-Att-Int 34-55-1 25-37-0 Car—O.Wiffiams 72 passfrom New ton (Gano Comp-Att-Int 22-31-2 23-39-2 Sacked-YardsLost 1 -7 4 - 23 kick), 3:29. Was Atl 2-4 0-0 S acked-Yards Los t Punts 3-48.7 4-47.3 Car—FGGano40,:08. First downs 22 19 3-36.7 5-42.2 Punts 0-0 2-1 Fumbles-Lost Third Guarler TotalNetYards 4 76 24 3 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Penalties-Yards 1 -2 4 - 21 NYJ—Richardson1run (Folkkick), 3:04. Rushes-yards 21-103 21-54 Penalties-Yards 7 -40 9 - 90 Time ofPossession 31:21 28:39 Fourlh Guarler Passing 3 73 1 8 9 Time ofPossession 34:48 25:12 Car—Tolhert1run(Ganokick),11:05. PuntReturns 4 -15 3 - 25 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 0 -0 4 - 7 8 Car—Munnerlyn 41 interception return (Gano KickoffReturns I N DIVIDUAL ST AT I S TICS RUSHING —New England: Blount11-47, Rid1 -2 2 - 14 kick), 8:17. Interceptions Ret. RUSHING —Chicago: Forte 24-127, Bush3-44, ley 8-34, Vereen 2-13, Devel in1-2. Miami: Miller NYJ —Cumberland8passfromSmith (Folk kick), Comp-Att-Int 29-45-2 29-38-1 Cutler 3-11,Jeffery1-(minos3). Cleveland: Baker 15-61, Oan.Tho mas 5-16, Walace 1-13, Fields 1-0, 1 -8 3 - 2 1 8-38,Gray 2-30,Campbel 3:50. Sacked-YardsLost l1-17,Oghonnaya5-7, Tannehiff 1-(minus1). A—73,251. Punts 3-52.7 6-49.3 Whittaker1-1. PASSING —New England: Brady34-55-1-364. Fumbles-Lost 5-5 2-1 PASSING — C h ic ago: Cutler 22-31-2-265. Miami: Tannehiff 25-37-0-312. N YJ C a r Penalties-Yards 9 -66 7 - 7 3 Clevel a nd : C a mp b e l l 2 3 3 9 2 2 7 3 . RECEIVING —NewEngland: Edelman13-139, First downs 19 21 Timeof Possession 26;08 33:52 RECEIVING —Chicago: Marshall 6-95,M.Ben- Amendola10-131,Boyce4-42, Vereen3-8, Collie TotalNetYards 2 97 392 nett 6-71, Jeffery 5-72, E.Bennett4-23, Forte 1-4. 2-25, Hooman awanui 1-13, Blount 1-6. Miami: 28-157 36-131 INDIVIDIJALSTATISTICS Rushes-yards Cleveland: Og honnaya5-39, Little 4-68,Baker4-46, Wallace6-105, Hartline5-70, Matthews5-64, Egnew RUSHING —Washington: Morris 18-98, Helu Gordon3-67,Ca Passing 1 40 261 m eron 3-23, W hi t taker 2-4, Barni d ge 2-25, Thi g pen 2-23, MarMoore1-11, Clay1-6, Sims 1-0 1-0 Jr. 3-5.Atlanta: Jackson15-38,Rodgers4-17, SnelPontReturns 1-17, Bess 1-9. 1-6, Dan.Thomas 1-2, Miler 1-0. 1 -22 3 - 4 9 ling 1-0,Ryan1-(minus1). KickoffReturns MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—NewEngland:Gost0 -0 1 - 41 InterceptionsRet. PASSING — Washington: Cousins 29-45-2kowski48(WL). Comp-Att-Int 15-28-1 16-24-0 381. Atlanta: Ryan 29-38-1-210. 4 -27 2 - 12 Sacked-Yards Lost RECEIVING — Washington:Moss8-64,Garcon Vikings 48, Eagles 30 4-33.0 2-46.0 7-129,A.Rohinson4-99, Morgan3-29,Paulsen3-21, Punts Colts 25, Texans3 0-0 0-0 Fumbles-Lost Davis1-23,Morris1-8, HeloJr.1-4, N.Wiffiams1-4. P hiladelphia 3 0 13 8 — 3 0 Penalties-Yards 3 -20 6 - 59 Atlanta:Gonzalez6-62, White5-53, Douglas5-37, Minnesota 7 10 10 21 — 48 Houston 3 0 0 0 — 3 Timeof Possession 26:59 33:01 Rodgers4-24,Jackson4-5, O.Johnson3-19, DiMarco First Guarter Indianapolis 7 13 0 0 — 2 0 1-7, Sneffing 1-3. Min — Jennings 57passfromCassel (Walsh kick), Firsl Quarler
North
Ind — Whalen14 passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick),
9:31. Hou —FGBuffock49,1:46.
SecondGuarler
Ind — FGVinatieri 37,12:00.
Ind — Richardson9passfromLuck(Vinatieri kick), 7:03. Ind — FGVinatieri 43,1:44. Third Quarler Ind — FGVinatieri 40,12:27. Ind — Reddingsafety,1:53.
SecondGuarler
Ari —FGFeely 25, 7:21. Third Quarler Ari —FGFeely 47,13:32. Ten—Walker1passfromFitzpatrick(Bironaskick), 6:16.
Ari — Baffard6passfromPalmer (Feelykick),2:14. Fourth Guarter Ari — Mendenhaff1run(Feely kick), 6:50. Ari — Cason 20 interception return(Feely kick), 6:13. A—65,470. Ten—Preston 10passfromFitzpatrick (Bironas kick), 3:12. H ou In d Ten—FGBironas24,:47. First downs 12 19 Ten—Preston 8 pass from Filzpatrick (Bironas TotalNetYards 2 39 33 1 kick),:10. 25-107 36-152 Rushes-yards Overlime Passing 1 32 179 Ari —FGFeely 41,10:18. 2 -11 3 - 67 PuntReturns A—69,143. 4-108 2 - 50 KickoffReturns 1 -32 2 - 38 InterceptionsRet. A ri Te n Comp-Att-Int 18-34-2 19-32-1 First downs 24 32 4-36 1-1 Sacked-Yards Lost TotalNetYards 3 60 460 8-49.5 6-43.0 Rushes-yards Punts 36-145 19-66 3-0 1-0 Fumbles-Lost Passing 2 15 394 1 4-114 4 - 36 Penalties-Yards 0 -0 2 - 18 PuntReturns Timeof Possession 26:49 33:11 KickoffReturns 3-72 7- 1 40 Interceptions Ret. 2-36 0-0 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Comp-Att-Int 20-30-0 36-58-2 RUSHING —Houston: Tate16-72, Karim4-21, S acked-Yards Lo s t 2-16 3-8 D.Johnson 4-12, Keenom1-2. Indianapolis: Rich4-53.0 3-48.3 ardson19-64,DBrown5-38, Luck5-29, Choice5-18, Punts 1-0 3-1 Fumbles-Lost Lynch1-3,Rogers1-0. ties-Yards 9 -69 3 - 16 PASSING — Houston: Keenum 18-34-2-168. Penal Time of Pos se s si o n 30:58 33:44 Indianapolis: Luck19-32-1-180. RECEIVING —Houston: Griffin 6-62, A.JohnINDIVIDUALSTATISTICS son 4-18, Hopkins3-52, Tate3-20, Martin 1-13, RUSHING —Arizona: Egington 10-71, MenD.Johnson1-3.Indianapolis: Hilton8-78,Whalen 4-45, Richardson4-38, Rogers2-23, Doyle1-(mi- denhaff21-69, S.Taylor 3-6, Palmer2-(minus 1). Tennessee: C.Johnson13-40, Fitzpatrick 3-22, nus 4). Greene 3-4. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. PASSING —Arizona:Palmer 20-30-0-231.Tennessee: Fitzpatrick36-58-2-402. Bills 27, Jaguars 20 RECEIVING —Arizona: Fitzgerald6-49, Effington 4-87, Baffard3-13, Floyd2-33, Roberts 2-15, Buffalo 3 1 7 0 7 — 2 7 Golden1 -16,Oray1-9,Mendenhaff1-9.Tennessee: Jacksonville 3 7 3 7 — 2 0 Wright12-150,Walker8-53, N.Washington 7-92, C. First Quarter Johnson3-51,Britt 3-29, Preston3-27. Buf — FGCarpenter 42,13;10. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Tennessee:Bironas Jax — FGScohee32, 8:07. 50 (SH). SecondGuarler Jax — Sanders12 passfromHenne (Scoheekick), Packers 37, Cowboys36 14:54. Buf — Woods7passfromManoel (Carpenter kick), Green Bay 3 0 14 20 — 37 7:07. Buf — Manuel8 run(Carpenter kick), 2:14. Dallas 1 3 13 3 7 — 3 6 Buf — FGCarpenter 40,:00. First Quarter Dal — FGBailey47, 10:56. Third Quarter GB — F G C r osb y 57,7:40. Jax — FGScohee55, 4:43. Dal — FGBailey23,4:52. Fourlh Quarler Dal — Witten25passfromRomo (Baileykick),;28. Jax — Lewis 13 passfrom Henne (Scohee kick), 13:50. SecondGuarler Buf — Summers 1 pass from Manoel (Carpenter Dal — FGBailey43 554 kick), 9:35. Dal — FGBailey50,3:45. A—60,085. Dal — Morray1 ron(Bailey kick),:24. Third Guarler B uf Ja x GB — Nelson 13 pass from Flynn (Croshykick), First downs 25 22 13:08. TotalNetYards 3 66 354 Dal — FGBailey50,6:33. Rushes-yards 44-198 31-159 GB — Quarless3 passfrom Flynn (Croshykick), Passing 1 68 1 9 5 1:09. 2 -4 3 - 10 PuntReturns Fourth Guarter KickoffReturns 2 -38 1 - 17 GB — Starks 11passfromFlynn (Croshykick), InterceptionsRet. 2 -34 1 - 2 8 12:47. Comp-Att-Int 17-24-1 21-36-2 Dal — Bryant5passfromRomo(Bailey kick), 7:55. Sacked-Yards Lost 4 -25 5 - 42 GB — J.Jones 3 passfromFlynn (Croshykick), Ponts 4-45.0 3-45.3 4:17. Fumbles-Lost 2-1 3-2 GB — Lacy1run (passfailed),1:31. 7 -67 6 - 80 Penalties-Yards A—91,054. Time ofPossession 32:35 27:25 GB Dal INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS First downs 26 27 RUSHING —Buffalo: Jackson17-80, Spiler13- TotalNetYards 4 33 46 6 67, Manuel10-37, Sum mers 4-14. Jacksonville: Rushes-yards 27-150 18-134 Todman 25-109, Robinson 2-28, Henne4-22. Passing 2 83 332 PASSING —Buffalo: Manuel 17-24-1-193. PuntReturns 1-26 1-7 Jacksonville: Henne 21-36-2-237. 0 -0 2 - 46 Returns RECEIVING —Buffalo: Woods5-82, Chandler Kickoff Intercepti o ns R e t . 2+5) 1 - 21 5-54, Summ ers 3-16, Gragg1-28, Jackson1-8, Comp-Att-Int 26-39-1 29-48-2 Johnson 1-4, Spiler 1-1.Jacksonville: Lewis4-54, Sacked-YardsLost 2 -16 3 - 26 Todman 4-44, Taylor 4-42, Harbor3-52, Brown3-20, Punts 4-49.3 2-51.5 Sanders 2-17,Ehert1-8. Fumbl e s-Lost 0-0 0-0 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Buffalo: Carpenter Penalties-Yards 7 -59 7 - 79 54 (WR). Time ofPossession 28:20 31:40
49ers 33, Buccaneers14 SanFrancisco 7 10 3 1 3 — 33 TampaBay 0 7 0 7 — 14 First Guarter SF — Crahtree4 passfromKaepernick (Dawson kick), 7:05. SecondGuarler SF — FGDawson47, 6:12. SF — V.Davis 52 passfrom Kaepernick (Dawson kick), 1:47. TB — Jackson11passfromGlennon(Lindeffkick), :29.
Third Quarter SF — FGDawson43, 7:51. Fourlh Quarler TB — Wright 24passfromGlennon (Lindeffkick), 14;54. SF — FGDawson21, 4:27. SF — Hunter fumblerecoveryin endzone(Dawson kick), 4:21. SF — FGDawson35, 2:49.
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS
RUSHING —Green Bay: Lacy 21-141, Starks 3-12, Flynn 3-(minus3).Dallas: Murray18-134. PASSING — Green Bay: Flynn 26-39-1-299. Dallas: Romo 29-48-2-358. RECEIVING —Green Bay: Boykin 6-83, Quarless 6-66, Nelson5-61r Lacy4-30, J.Jones3-49, Starks 1-11,Kuhn1-(minos1). Dallas:Bryant11153, Witten4-71, Wiliams4-46,Murray4-19,Beasley3-19 Austin2-35 Escohar1-15 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.
Steeiers 30, Bengals 20 Cincinnati Pittsburgh
0 7 0 1 3 — 20 21 6 3 0 — 30 First Quarter Pit —Beff1run (Suishamkick), 9:58. Pit — A.Brown12 passfromRoethlisherger(Suisham kick),2:16. Pit — A.Brown67punt return(Suishamkick),1:12. SecondQuarter A—64,142. Pit—FG Suisham25,9:36. Cin—Bernard 1run(Nugentkick), 5:14. SF TB Pit—FGSuisham45,1:14. First downs 22 13 TotalNetYards 3 76 183 Third Quarler Rushes-yards 40-187 12-39 Pit —FGSoisham26,6:18. Passing 1 89 144 Fourth Guarter PontReturns 5-51 1-9 Cin — Eifert 1 pass from Dalton(Nugent kick), KickoffReturns 2 -29 5 - 83 14:09. 1-0 0-0 InterceptionsRet. Cin — M.Jones13 passfrom Dalton (passfailed), Comp-Att-Int 19-29-0 18-34-1 5:46. Sacked-Yards Lost 2 -14 4 - 35 A—45,873. Punts 4-43.3 7-47.7 2-0 1-1 Fumbles-Lost Cin Pit Penalties-Yards 8 -62 4 - 3 2 First downs 19 19 Timeof Possession 39;50 20:10 TotalNetYards 2 79 290 22-57 36-106 Rushes-yards INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Passing 2 22 18 4 RUSHING —San Francisco: Gore22-86r Hunt- PuntReturns 0 -0 2 - 78 er 8-40,Kaep ernick 7-39, James 2-22, Boldin 1-0. KickoffReturns 5 -150 1 - 2 0 TampaBay:Rainey11-27, Leonard1-12. Interceptions Ret. 1-0 0-0 PASSING —San Francisco: Kaepernick19-29- Comp-Att-Int 25-44-0 20-25-1 0-203.TampaBay: Glennon18-34-1-179. 1 -8 1-7 acked-YardsLost RECEIVING — San Francisco:V.Oavis 5-79, S 4-41.5 3-38.3 Punts Crahtree 5-45, Miler 4-26, Boldin3-43, Celek1-8, Fumbles-Lost 2-1 0-0 Manningham1-2.TampaBay: Wright7-82,Jack- Penalties-Yards 6 -50 4 - 25 son 5-58, Owosu3-21, Underwood2-15, Rainey Timeof Possession 28:24 31:36 1-3. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. INDIVIDIJALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cincinnati: Bernard13-33, Dalton 4-20, Green -Ellis 4-4, Huber1-0. Pittsburgh:Bell Cardinals 37, Titaas 34(OT) 24-57,Dwyer6-26, FJones5-22, A.Brown1-1. PASSING —Cincinnati: Dalton 25-44-0-230. Arizona 7 3 10 14 3 — 37 Tennessee 10 0 7 17 0 —34 Pittsburgh:Roethlisherger20-25-1-191. RECEIVING —Cincinnati: Green9-93, M.Jones First Quarter Ten —FGBironas45, 9:34. 5-48, Eifert3-33,Gresham3-23, Sano3-20, Bernard 2-13. Pitlshurgh: A.Brown5-66,Bell 5-50, Sanders Ari — Mendenhaff1run (Feelykick), 4:30. Ten —C.Johnson25passfromFitzpatrick (Bironas 5-38, Miller4-35,Cotchery1-2. kick),:00. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
O M M U N IT Y
MIDDLE SCHOOLPROGRAM: MBSEF middle school program; ages11-14; through March;www.mbsef.org. FAMILY NIGHT:Six archery classes for HIGH SCHOOLPROGRAM: MBSEFhigh families;Jan.13-March; secondand school program; ages 14 and older; fourth Mondaysof the month; Bend through March;www.mbsef.org. Bowmen Archery Range; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m. or 6:45-7:45 p.m., depending on MASTERS PROGRAM:MBSEFmasters program; ages 21 and older;through the night; families must pre-register; 541-480-6743. March;www.mbsef.org. HOME-SCHOOL NORDIC: Ages11-18;Jan. 14-Feb. 18,Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.; $100; www.bendenduranceacademy.org BASEBALL SHE'S ONSKIS:MountBachelor's women's only nordic program; JR. COUGARINFONIGHT: Informational meeting for Jr. Cougar13-14 baseball team; Wednesdaysor Saturdays; six-week and 12-week programs available; at the Mt. Mountain View-bound 13- and 14-year-old Bachelor Nordic Center; www.mtbachelor. boys;Dec. 19,8 p.m.; Round Table Pizza com. in Bend; new MV coach Joe Dominiak will be there to answer questions; contact Jr. DAWNPATROLS: Nordic dawn patrols Cougar coach Greg Gemignani at 541-410- with Dave Cieslowski;Wednesdays,102399 or gemignani@q.com. 11:30a.m.;through March 5;limited to15
advanced skiers; sfoster©mtbachelor.com. BABES IN SNOWLAND: Mt.Bachelor program for kids ages 4-5;Sundays,9-10 a.m.; four different four-week sessions, the first startedDec. 4.; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; $105 clinic only, $125 clinic and rentals; sfosterjimtbachelor.com. K'S FOR KIDS:Ages 6-8; Sundays,10:3011:30 a.m.; three four-week sessions, first session startedDec. 4; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; $105 clinic only, $125 clinic and rentals; sfoster©mtbachelor.com. INTRO TOSKATESKIING: Skate skiing clinics;Wednesdays, Fridaysor Saturdays;four-week sessions starting in December;$120 for clinic and trail pass; $160 for clinic, trail pass and rentals; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; sfoster© mtbachelor.com. INTRO TOCLASSIC SKIING: Classic skiing clinics;Fridaysor Sundays;four-week
CLIMBING DEVELOPMENTTEAM: ThroughJan. 30; Mondaysand Thursdays, 4 to 6 p.m.; ages10-18; at Bend Rock Gym; $480 plus gym membership; www. bendenduranceacademy.org.
MORDIC SKI COMPETITIVENORDIC PROGRAM: Through May1;for athletes 14 and over; five or six days a week; $2,200; or $1,500 from Nov. 19-May1; www. bendenduranceacademy.org. NEW YEAR'S DAY RELAYRACE: MBSEF hosts relay race; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center;Jan. 1;www.mbsef.org. HIGH SCHOOL NORDICTEAM: through March19;additional training for nordic athletes who are still involved with high school skiing; one to three days a week, Wednesdaythrough Sunday;starts at $375; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. YOUTH PROGRAM:MBSEF Stevenson Youth Program;ages 7-11;Dec. 26-March; www.mbsef.org.
Cooks
sessions starting inDecember;$120for
clinic and trail pass; $160 for clinic, trail pass and rentals; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic
Center; sfoster©mtbachelor.com.
RUNNING ADVENTURERUNNING: Runs from 3.5 to 5 miles long over trails, roads, parks
ton, Rodgers, fellow Biletnikoff winner M ik e H ass, James Newson and Sammie
Continued from B1
His name is plastered all Stroughter, among others. over the B eavers' record While Cooks is not conbooks for his accomplish- cerned with numbers, he unments both this season and derstands what they mean. "It's fun to be able to acduring his three-year career.
On Thursday, he was named the Biletnikoff Award winner as the nation's best
complish something like that at this school and program," Cooks saidearlier
receiver. this season. Cooks caught 31 passSo could the Hawaii Bowl es for 391 yards and three be his final appearance in a touchdowns his freshman Beaver uniform? season, then was an importMany would bet there is a ant complement to Markus good chance it will. "I'm going to sit down with Wheaton last season when he caught 67 passes for 1,151 my family at the end of the yards and five scores. season and my coach and One big question coming see what the best decision into this season was how will be for myself," he said the Beavers would replace after winning the Biletnikoff Wheaton, who wa s d r afted in the third round by the
E ND
PORTS
ARCHERY
Award.
There is not much individNFL's Pittsburgh Steelers ually for Cooks to come back last April. to accomplish. Cooks has more than However, he prides himmade up fo r W h eaton's self on not being selfish and departure. on being a team player. He now h olds th e s i nThere is no doubt that if gle-season school record for Cooks does return, he will receptions with 120, break- have the chance to be tops ing the mark of 91 set by at Oregon State in career Wheaton and Rodgers, and receiving yards and recepthe singl e-season record for tions. He needs 10 catches receiving touchdowns (15). in the bowl game to break His 120 receptions this Wheaton's mark of 227. season are also a P ac-12 Oh, and the Beavers will record. be in good shape next season He leads the country with if No. 7 lines up again. 1,670 receiving yards, also a But if Cooks leaves, there single-season school mark, is little doubt he will make entering the Hawaii Bowl on an impact in the NFL. He has Christmas Eve. the skill set, drive and confiHis career numbers are dence tomake ithappen. "There'sa lot ofgreatreequally impressive, as he holds therecord for receiv- ceivers out there," he said. ing touchdowns with 23 and "But I feel like I can play on is third in receiving yards that level like those guys." Most who have followed (3,212). Those lists, by the way, Cooks at OSU would bet on include the likes of Whea- that as welL
at 10- to 12-minute-mile pace; first and thirdWednesdaysof each month, 6 p.m.; next runDec.18, leaves from FootZone;
dress warmandbring a headlamp; laura© footzonebend.com. COOKIERUN: Leavefrom FootZone;Dec. 18,5:30 p.m.; 3-5 miles; cookies from No-BakeCookieand beerfrom Deschutes after the run; runners are welcome to bring their own cookies to share; free; RSVP to angelaIefootzonebend.com. SUPER BOWL SUNDAYDAMN RUN: 20mile,10-mile or 5K runs from Prineville to Bowman Dam; $30 with T-shirt or $20 without;Feb. 2, 10 a.m.; chili and hot chocolate to follow run; www. NormsXtremeFitness.com. SNOWSHOE RUNNINGGROUP: Saturday morning snowshoe running group;through March15; meet 8:30 a.m. and carpool to trailheads; 3-6 miles;
SnowshoeWithLaura©gmail.com.
REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a weekly email list, email Dan Edwards at rundanorun19©yahoo.com; follow Redmond Oregon Running Klub on
Facebook. REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP:Weekly runson Tuesdays at6:30 p.m .;meetat314 S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; piaII runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. MOVE ITMONDAYS: M ondaysat5:30 p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled(first and third Mondaysof each month); all other runs start and finish at FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 miles; paces 7-12 minutes per mile; melanie© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30 p.m. onTuesdays; with Max King; locations vary; interval-based; all ability levels; max© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. ASK THEEXPERTS:Tuesdays; 6 p.m.; at FootZone, downtown Bend; informal, drop-in Q-and-A session with a physical therapist; teagueIefootzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. NOON TACORUN: Wednesdays atnoon;
Bowling
BendParkasdRec A Division Weeke
Leagueleadersandhighscores Lava Lanes,Bend oec. 2-8 CasinoFun — TheGang;Frank McDonald 218/5 83;TeresaMcDonald190/470. HisandHers— "GeturDone"; Kerst Bosma 238/6 80;BrandiMcclennen224/602. Guysand Gals— TheWeakestLink;Toby Cundel l258/742;AmyAnderson180/520. Have-ABall— Team6,TuckerHess246/613; AlexisHil-Gruenberg196/551. Lava LanesClassic — Mo andPops; Terry Lussi er279/690;BevSunderlin256/585. Rejects — GutterDusterse;Eric Holcomb 245/627;Suesnedden179/50a WednesdayInc. — Civil WacDieryel Wa de 279P90; RickWidlund278/73t. Tea limess — InspirationStrikes; Debbie
CountryCatering Furnish/Zenith Auto Redmond Athletic Club Lebron'Si s sters
Cheerlead ers/Hairport GoodyearAutoCare
W 4 3 3 3 2 0
L 1 2 2 2 3 5
B Division Weeka BendBroadband Business
rrhoseone Guys
WidgiCreek PrestigeWorldWide 541 Threa ds TheBendTrolley
corn cob crazies
Eye oftheNeedle BlueRetinaRavens NTheZone TheVroom Old CreekCompany
W 5 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 1
L 0 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 4
Smith210/557. TNT —DaveGrimes279//47; shannonGrimes 247/651. Latemmen — We'reRolling Now;Beckie Zimmerma n201/485. FreeBreaners—sweetsixteen; Jimwhitson 279/734 ;EllenEdwards232/549. T.G.I.F.— StrikersProShop;Rick Widlund 246/693 ;DebbiePowell204/545.. Drafl — IPLP; EdChilcutt 214/553;Merri Chil-
meet at FootZone, downtown Bend; order a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and it will be ready upon return; teaguece footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568 LEARN TORUNGROUPRUN: Wednesdays, 5:30 p.m.;meetatFootZone, downtownBend;conversational-paced runs of 2-3 miles; beginners and all paces welcome; 541-317-3568. W EEKLY RUNS: Wednesdays at6 p.m .; Fleet Feet Sports Bend; 3-5 miles; two groups, different paces; 541-389-1601 YOGA FORRUNNERS: Wednesdays at 7 p.m.; at Fleet Feet Sports Bend; $5 per
snowboarders;through March;www. mbsef.org. COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: MBSEF competition programs for freeskiers and snowboarders;Dec. 30-March;www. mbsef.org. FREESKIERAND SNOWBOARD PROGRAMS:MBSEFfull-time program for freeskiers and snowboarders;through April;www.mbsef.org. FULL-TIMEALPINE PROGRAM: MBSEF winter and full-time program for alpine ski race program;through March;www. mbsef.org. session or $50for12 sessions; focuses on YOUTH WINTERCAMP:MBSEFfour-day strengthening and lengthening muscles and winter camp for youth freeride skiers and preventing running injuries; 541-389-1601. snowboarders;Dec. 27-30; at Mt. Bachelor CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: ski area; www.mbsef.org. Thursdays;5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: MBSEF Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more freeride and snowboard competition information. programs;through March;www.mbsef.org FUNCTIONALSTRENGTH FOR RUNNERS: MASTERS PROGRAM:M BSEF alp ine Thursdays;6:15 p.m.; WillPower Training masters ski racing program; through Studio,155 S.W. Century Drive, Suite March;www.mbsef.org. 110, Bend; weekly workouts for runners, ALPINE CAMP:MBSEFfour-day alpine triathletes and cyclists; $5; 541-350-3938. winter youth camp,Dec. 27-30; www. FUNCTIONALSTRENGTH FOR mbsef.org ENDURANCERUNNERS: Produced by FootZone and Athlete Wise Performance Coaching;Wednesdays, 7:15-8:15 p.m. and Thursdays,7:15-8:15 a.m; at FootZone; $5; SWIMMING
kraigefootzonebend.com
PLANTAR FASCIITIS CLINC:Physical therapist Steve Leary leads clinic on common runners'ailment; at FootZone;
Jan. 8,7 p.m.; RSVPat angela© footzonebend.com.
ALPIME SKIIMG/ SMOWBOARDIMG
REDMOND AREAPARK AND RECREATION DISTRICT FAMILYSWIM NIGHT:7:25-8:25 p.m., Tuesdays,Cascade Swim Center, Redmond;adultm ustaccompany anyone under age 18; $10 per family; 541-5487275, raprd.org.
TABLE TEMNIS
RECREATIONALDOWNHILL RACING: Hoodoo hosts City League racing; tentative mid-January start;open to men and women, boys and girls of all ages; for more information, go to www.BendSkiClub.net. MBSEF RACEPROGRAMS: Runs through March;www.mbsef.org. DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM:MBSEF development for freeskiers and
BEND TABLE TENNIS CLUB:Evening play
Mondays; 6-9p.m.(setup30minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys 8 Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; club membership available to those who donate $100or more; Jeffat 541-480-2834; Don at541-318-0890;Sean at 267-614-6477; bendtabletennis©yahoo. com; www.bendtabletennis.com.
Dirksen Continued from B1 Dirksen said
t h e e v e nt
raised $30,000 for Eklund last year, and he added that it might come close to that
amount again this year. Qualifying was staged on Saturday and the finals were
held on Sunday. Harry Kearney, of Telluride, Colo., won the Derby Elites division with a two-run time of 1 minute,
2.9 seconds. Lucas DeBari, of Glacier, Wash., finished second (1:04.23), and Curtis Ciszek, of Bend, was third (1:04.36). (For top-three results from all divisions, see Scoreboard, 62.) Proof of how the Dirksen
Derby is gaining prestige was the presencethis weekend of snowboarding legend Shaun P almer, a
s i x - time w o r l d
champion and seven-time X Joe Kline 1The Bulletin Games gold medalist. Palmer, Curtis Ciszek hits a turn while racing the Dirksen Derby in the Derby Elite division on Sunday at Mt. of South Lake Tahoe, Calif., Bachelor ski area. Ciszek finished with a combined time of 64.36 seconds, finishing in third place in came to B end w it h s n ow- his class. boarding friend Chris Roach. " I've heard about it f o r Bachelor style. Dirksen Derby going strong years," Palmer said of the Dirk- started." "We definitely designed this each year. sen Derby. "I watched a bunch Palmer finished ninth in the "Josh is amazing," Eklund of videos online of the race, Derby Elites division Sunday. courseto kind ofrepresentthe and I said, 'That looks like a Dirksen said he had to cap style of riding we do here at said. "The things he's done, bunch of fun.' I just jumped in participation in this year's der- Bachelor," Dirksen said. "Rel- and how big it's become, and the truck with Roach and came by at 500 snowboarders, and atively fiat, but a lot of turns how organized it is.... More on up. It's fun. It feels like the he had to turn away about 200 and bobbing and weaving and morepeople are starting through the trees. So a lot of to know about it. I can't wait to (19)80s, like a cool snowboard Aders. event with a cool atmosphere." A professional rider who local guys definitely do well." see what it's going to be like in Palmer, 45, is one of the pi- frequently appears in snowEklund said he is thankful the years after this." oneers of snowboarding. He boarding films, Dirksen said for all the work of Dirksen and — Reporter: 541-383-0318, said he is amazed at how far he tries to keep the derby laid- other volunteers to keep the mmorical@bendbulletin.com. the sport has come since the
back — less about the com-
early days in the 1980s.
petition and more about the camaraderieand creating ex-
"It's crazy," Palmer said.
"You watch (two-time Olym- citement for Tyler Eklund. "We kind of try to keep it pic gold medalist) Shaun White and those guys in the like a big party with a race inhalfpipe nowadays and it's just volved," Dirksen said. ridiculous. We had to shovel The banked slalom courses our pipes by hand when we are designed in classic Mount
IN BRIEF
COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD Basketball
Email events at least 10 days before publication to sportsibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.
cutt155/410.
progr essive — G' s up; RobertGibson 267/66a RimrockLanes, Prineville Week15 GrizzlyMountainMen'sLeague Team highs —Scratchseries: Prinevile ReservoiResort, r 2,890;Scratchgame: KBW Engineering,1,003; Handicapseries: Carson Oil, 3,228;Handicap game: prineville Heating and Cooling,1,126. Men's highs —Scratchseries:Ricky Mayers, 743;Scratchgame:LeviBishop,266;Handicap series:paul sloan,720;Handicapgame: Dave Gagermeier,270 Week15 50+
Team highs—Scratchseries: Fireballers, 2,093scratchgame: It's Au Turn, 599; Handicap series:Easy4, 2,361; Handicapgame:A& AEnterprises,798. Men's highs—Scratchseries:Al Anderson, 593; scratchgame: paul sloan, 194; Handicap series:ChrisWorthington, 605;Handicapgame: PaulAsman,214. Women's highs —Scratchseries: Laura Lawes,402; Scratchgame:Ari Mayers,184; Handicapseries: cheri Good man, 613; Handicapgame : Stella Oia,211.
CLIMBING
OVERWEIGHT?i."I lost over 30 pounds,
YOU cantoo!"
The support from the team of specialists made it easier and I surpassed my goal quickly. I feel AMAZING and have so much energy, more than I ever imagined. My entire team is grateful. Thanks MRC!
Local climbersqualify for USA Cll8mPIODSlllPS —Eleven BendEndurance Academy rock climbers havequalified for next month's USAClimbing Division I Championships in Seattle. Abby Black (female, 17-18years old) and Olivia Brumwell (female, 13-14) won their divisions at the regional championships in Medford last weekend. EmmaVeeMcMillian (second, female17-18); Riley Joyce (third, female 17-18); Tristan Helmich (third, male15-16); Walker Davis (fifth, male15-16); Iris Flattery (fourth, female13-14); Lukas Strauss-Wise (fourth, male13-14); Gavin Bianucucci (sixth, male11-12); LeahPfeiffer (third, female1112); and Brady Pfeiffer (second, male 10and under) all advancedpast regionals with their top-seven finishes. — Bulletin staff report
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MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T EE TO
REEN
Offseasonupdate: Widgi CreekGolf Course By Zack Hall This is the latest install-
ment of a weekly Tee To check in via email with Central Oregon golf facilities for an offseason update. This
week we contacted Brad Hudspeth, general manager at Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend.
Hudspeth has been involved in th e day-to-day operations at Widgi Creek since 2005. This is what he had to say about the current
business of golf and his public course in southwest Bend: • How was business in • 2013? Business in 2013 was
A •• good at Widgi Creek. W e saw a n
and a 9-iron ones in less than a month. He used the same Titleist golf ball, pictured, for both
4N
l
English set record
aces.
Q
Roh Kerr/ The Bulletin
The Associated Press NAPLES, Fla. — Matt
Kuchar and Harris English ran away with the Franklin Templeton Shootout,
shooting a 14-under 58 on Sunday in the final-round scramble to break the tour-
nament course record. Kuchar and English finished at 34-under 182, playing their last 28 holes at Tiburon in 25 under. They opened with a 64 on Friday in modified alternate-shot play and had a 60 on Saturday in better ball. The duo beat Retief
• Bend's AleVal x ley recordstwo hole-in-onesin three weeks
www.wldgl.com
i n c r ease i n
ICuchar,
inmaking two hole-in-
Number ofboles:18 Status: Openseasonally Location:18707 Century Drive, Bend Tee times: 541-382-4449 Course stats:Par 72, 6,763 yards Hend golf professional: Matt Phillips Course designer:Robert Muir Graves (1991, original nine; 1992, second nine) Extras:Driving range, short-game practice facility, putting green, restaurant, pro shop Website:
Green feature in which we
GOLF ROUNDUP
Alex Valley used a 5-iron
1i
WidgiCreek, at a glance
The Bulletin
rounds played of over 3 per-
Goosen and Fredrik J a-
cent from 2012. And most
importantly, thanks to su-
Sundays.)
perintendent Paul Rozek and
his experienced staff, the golf course was in outstanding
Q •• began in 2007, how
shape throughout the entire
have your golf operations changed in recent years?
After a recession that
season.
• Since 2007, we have • downsized our staff in
Were any changes of
Q •• note made to the facility during the past year?
both the food and beverage operation and the pro shop
A • changes included the rebuilding of three tee boxes • In 2 0 13, o ur m a j o r
operation (maintenance staff
has remained intact). We havealsobeen more competitive in pricing with our daily fees and memberships.
on the course, the addition
of a brand new fleet of golf carts, and we also brought in some new maintenance
equipment as well.
Are the local golf faciliQ •• ties doing enough to at-
tract and foster local play? If Are any changes and/ not, what more can be done? • or improvements to the • I believe that golf in facility scheduled for 2014? • Central Oregon will • I n 2 014, we w i ll b e continue on the upswing. • bringing in new mow- And with the continued efing equipment for the main- forts from all of us, in con-
Q•
A
A
tenance department, rebuild-
junction with
ing some more teeboxes and changing our five-day
Oregon Golf Trail, we will remain a prominent location for players in and around the stateofOregon.
membership to include all-
day Sunday through all-day Thursday. (In the past, fiveday passes began at noon on
t h e C entral
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.
GOLF SCOREBOARD Jan. 31:CentralOregonWinter Series event at MeadowLakes Golf Coursein Prinevile. Aggregate shambletournament beginswith an 11a.m. shotgun.Two-personteamswith nomole thanone professionalallowedper team.Cost is $30forprofessiottals,$50for amateurs. Costincludesgross and netskinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra. All playersmustsign ttp bynoonon the Wednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor moreinformation, call PatHuffer,headpro at CrookedRiver
The Bulletin welcomes contributions to in weekly local golf results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to thesporls department, 541-385-0831, ema Iled to sporlsebendbulletitt.com, or mailed to P.O. Box6020; Bend, OR 97708.
Calendar
RanCh,at 541-923-6343Ol email himat CrrPat@
The Bulletin welcomescontributions to in weekly local golf eventscalendar.Items should be mailedto P.O.Box 6020,Bend, OR 97708;faxedtothe sporls deparlment at 541-385-0831; or emailed to sporls@bettdbulletin.com. TOURNAME NTS Dec. 20:CentralOregonWinter Series eventat EagleCrestResort in Redmond. Shamble tottrnamentbeginswith an11a.m.shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanone professional allowed per team.Costis $30for professionals, $50for amateurs.Costincludesgrossaitd netskinscompetitions.Cartcostsextra.All players mustsign up by noonontheWednesdaybeforetheevent. To registerorfor moreinformation, call PatHuffer, head pro at CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-9236343 oremail himat crrpat@crookedriverranch. com. Dec. 21: ChristmasGooseGolf Tournament at MeadowLakesGolf Course in Prineville. Chapmanis for two-persott teamsattd tees off with an11 a.m,shotgun,Cost is $30plus $25 per-person greenfee. Toregister ol for moreinformation,call theMeadowLakes golf shopat
crookedriverranch.com .
Professional
PGATour Franklin TempletonShootout Sunday At Tibttron GolClub f (Gold Course) Naples, Fla. Purse: $3million Yardage:7,271; Par: 72 Final Moneywinningsper player HarrisEnglish/MattKttchar,$385,000 64-60-58—182 RetiefGoosen/Fretjdie Jacobsen,t242,500 67-61-61 —189 lan Poulter/Lee Westwood, $145,000 70-61-59—190 Chris DiMarco/ElillyHorschel,$05,000 68-64-60—192 SeanO'Hair/KennyPerry,$100,000 64-69-60—193 Rorysabbatini/scott verplank,$90,000 541-447-703. 69-64-61—194 Jan.17:Central OregonWinter Seriesevent CharlesHowell III/Jt stin Leonard,$85,000 at Kah-Nee-TaHigh DesertResort nearWarm 64-6t-64—195 Springs.Triple-six tournam ent beginswith an11 JonasBlixt/GregNorman,$80,000 a.m.Shatgun.TWO-PerSOnteamSWithnOmelethan 72-63-62—197 one professionalallowedperteam.Cost is $30for Jerry Kelly/Steve Stricker, t80,000 professionals, $50 for amateurs.Cost includes 71-65-61—197 Graham DeLaet/MikeWeir, $80,000 grossandnetskinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra. All playersmustsign Upbynoonott theWednes73-64-60—197 day before theevent. Toregister orfor moreittfor- JasonDuftter/Dttstin Johnson,t75,000 68-69-61—198 mation,call PatHU ler, headproat CrookedRiver Ranch, at541-923-6343ol email himat crrpat@ Markcalcavecchia/chadcampbell, $72,500 crookedriverranch.com . 72-66-63 —201
. -~ wr4~
"'" yfi Fgf+ . -
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7"!i,tJr)
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F
or 25 years, Alex Valley had rarely come close to making a hole-in-one.
ZACIC HALL
chances go way up when you play as much as I play."
cobsen by seven strokes,
That would in part explain
record for margin of victory set by Curtis Strange
an amateur golfer, getting
why Valley suddenly seemed to have the good fortune of a
skunked when it c omes to
lottery winner.
A t 12,500-to-l o d d s
for
matching the tournament and Mark O'Meara in 1989
in the inaugural event. "It was a fun week,"
aces is not much of a surprise. "Do I have a theory? Yeah," Such is the case for most of us golfers. says Swenson. "Once the Then last month Valley, a dam opens, the flood hap67-year-old Bend resident, pens. That's my theory. And I
Twenty-five years ago Valley picked up golf, but it was really just "a game here or a game there," he says. That changed when he became one of the lucky don't think it could be proven retired four years ago from ones, striking a solid 9-iron or disproven." L es Schwab, where h e and watching in amazement Tim Finkle's story is just as had worked as a construcas his scuffed Titleist rolled unlikely. This past summer, t ion supervisor for the t i r e down the sloped green for an on July 5, the Bend resident company. ace on the 132-yard 16th hole scored his first hole-in-one at A bargain hunter who at The Greens at Redmond. age 52. On July 9, he carded spreads his local r ounds "It just disappeared," Val- his second. around to Meadow Lakes, ley recalls coolly. "I said, Both came at Awbrey Glen C rooked River Ranch an d 'Holy smokes, I just hit a hole- Golf Club, where Finkle is a The Greens a t R e d mond, on-one.' " member. among other places, ValAfter the round, the ball He played some 100 times ley plays some three times a unceremoniously went right in 2013. Most of those rounds week now. "The better you get, the back in his golf bag to be used were played at Awbrey Glen, again. so familiarity did play a role, better you want to get," says Exactly three weeks to the he says. Valley, who has worked his "Going after th e s ame way into a bogey golfer. "It day later, on Nov. 30, Valley was back at it . U sing that greens, same pins with the just turned into something I same Titleist, he connected same clubs, even a blind wanted to do." with a 5-iron on The Greens squirrel gets a nut, right?" Valley figures the increase of R e dmond's 1 68-yard Finkle says. "The interesting in time spent on the course at fourth hole. The ball bounced piece is just the back to back. least contributed to his aces. in front of the green, then One after forever I can write But the plain-spoken man sped toward the hole.
off to the newfound frequen-
At first, Valley assumed the ball had rolled over and
cy (of playing).... But the that he continued to play with back to back, and the almost the same ball he hit for his triple (just two days before first hole-in-one sees no need
off the putting surface. He
discovered that he was indeed wrong when he saw a golf ball — his lucky Titleist — resting at the bottom of a cup. "(My playing partner) goes over and looks down in the hole and goes, 'Hey, right there,' " Valley recounts. "I
just said, 'You're kidding.' " As hard is it might be to fathom, Valley is hardly the only one from around these parts to go so profoundly from hole-in-one rags to riches in such a short amount of time. Bend's Stein Swenson, a
his first hole-in-one he had
missed an ace by 2 inches) is just the weird one. I don't
know if there is an explanation other than a combination
is bound to pay dividends, he says. "With golf, maybe it's 30 years before you're entitled, by virtue of the golf gods, to a matter of
ly one plays. Obviously the
an ace.
His first finally came in March 2011 when he flushed
ier than others. — Reporter:541-617-7868, zhallCbendbulletin.com.
a 9-iron on the third hole at
Juniper Golf Club in Redmond. His good fortune did not end there, though. By ear-
ly June of that same year, he had aced two more. How can anyone explain such good fortune falling to one golfer when so many of us spend years trying with virtually no success'?
" WI N T ER MERT ' P RCK M i E S
h o w f r e quent-
Mountain Medical Immediate Care
ize during the year, that's difficult, but to mix up the formats and have a partner here is just a lot of fun. It's
nice to perform well." Kuchar and E nglish, w ho replaced the i n jured Brandt Snedeker in the field, each earned
$385,000. Also on Sunday: Garcia wins Thailand Championship: C H ONBURI, Thailand — Sergio Garcia shot a final-round 68 to beat Henrik Stenson
by four strokes and win the Thailand Golf Champ ionship a t
th e A m ata
Spring Country Club. The 33-year-old Spaniard, who held the lead since the sec-
ond round, turned in a solid final round that featured six birdies and included just two bogeys to finish at 22-under 266.
"Luck is as good a theory as any," says Valley, a married father of two adult children and two grandchil-
have your first hole-in-one,"
gon Golf Tour, spent his first 35 years in the game without
more team events. I real-
to overthink it.
65-year-old avid golfer and a Swenson says. "And then it's co-owner of the Central Ore-
of my favorite events of the year. I wish we could play
who cares so little for pomp
of frequency and luck." dren. "I hate to try to put a Other than unbelievably reason on something that good fortune, how often a ridiculous." golfer actually plays may be Indeed. the key ingredient. Maybe the best explanaSwenson gets out at least tion is that some are just luckfour times a week. And that
Kuchar said. "This is one
~eree ~
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-
BS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWeather Central, LP ©2013.
I
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Today: 1 Partly cloudy
5
Tonight ydly I dy
46 FORECAST:5TATE 5N3
53/36
49/37 =
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Mc innvige '
LincolnCity -
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•
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and
38/26
• Meacham
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•
on n
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Granite
Josep 36/22
Un ion
cloudy skies.
Baker C 39/1 9
• John
Unity 35/20
Florence•
IIedmnnd •
32/
Pa lina 4077
35/1 8
45/1 8
yssa
31/20
• Burns 45/30
Roseburg
PorgDrford -Grants-
Gold
• Beach
e
52/42 -
•
Medf ti rd
Brookings ' 54/46 ~
34/22
Rome
Hermiston
46/25
Chiloquin
Klamath
'AsMand
~
• 61 0
45/22
Paisley 47/23
• 40/27
'
45/23
Frenchglen
45/21
-
Yesterday's stateextremes
Jordan Vialey
Christmas '• 42/1 6 Silver Lake
C emult
44/21
-
Riley
Crescent • Fort Rock 48/1 8
Lake L •
51/36
tario
Valee
Sunriver
52/36 •
EAST Partly to mostly
3525
38/22
Camp Sherimyn
Eugene •
CENTRAL Partly cloudy skies.
• 37/21
•
•
Wig owdale
Enterpris
41/29
Ruggs
fog early.
Wallow
. Warmdprings•
-
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Albany
Hermiston39/28
, "A lington
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51/34 • %
47/33
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52/41
45/27 D ages D0
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39/3IL
iggs
4I3/L i I ~
• Lakeview
Falls 42/21
•1
Fields •
McDermitt
33/24
42/22
0
Lakeview
32/7
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
42 22
32 19
35 23
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Calga 34/23
46/39
5askatoon 23/9
alt Lak City Vegas 36/25 65/43
Dcala, Fla.
J
Ibuquerque
Los Angele 79/55
~ CO
52/27
Phoenix
0
Honolulu ~ 80/69
Om~ha 40 23 ' Kansas City 47/29 R
oma Clty Llttle Rock/' - Nashv&l y'6 /38 • em 56/34 ' SOS47/3 •
)
63/38
73/59
H AWA I I
Houston 0
Chihuahua
65/42
60/38
-1os
-3 S
Anchorag
iladelphia
i
30/21
ington, ttc.
H
33/25
B ir ingha 6/35
Ch a ilo
Atlanta
5 2 / 36
•
(
•
lando
H
7/45
• Miami 75/62
Monterrey 62/46e
La Paz 73/62
Mazatlan 87/73
A
Aj/1
•
• Dallas
Tijuana
29/21
'• 4 -zI'
St. Louisi 36/26 .i
•
75/4
' ew York
15
Bd/36 • m o l umbus,
h j ca ~ 22/17 '
3 5/23 •
•
•
•
oS
-Moine
Denver
113/3
1 /34e
etroit
Cheyenne 52/30 • SQS San Fr cis«o 65/4
if x 16 rtland 18/1
onto reen 8
46/24
38/25
• 3.57"
9/-
Thunder Bay 14/9
pid tgty ag 23/18vi
Boise
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. • -32 0 Bemidji, Minn.
Queb
21/14
Bismarck 35/17
Billings 42/29
or a 49/37
• 86'
vwwv
o~ o ~o
Winnipe
•Seattle 48/39
(in the 48 contiguous states):
Juneau
31/17
CONDITIONS
FRONTS
ALASKA
Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Mercury....710am......357pm. High/low.............. 55/34 24hoursending4pm*.. 000" Venus......947 a m...... 658 p m. Remrdhigh........ 60 in1953 Month te date.......... 180" Ma r s......1239am.....1243 pm. Remrdlow......... -3in1967 Averagemonth10date... 108" Jupiter......s58 pm......914a m. Average high..............39 Year tndate............ 638" Satum.... ..4:27a.m......2:29p.m. Aver agelow ...............22 Aver ageyeartedate....10.24" Uranus....1238 pm......107 a m. Barometricpressureat4 pm3033 Remrd 24hours ...1A3 in1977
First
Sunsettomorrow... 4:28 p.m. Moonri isetoday....4:24p.m. Moonsettnday.... 6:45 a.m.
*Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX ~ SKI REPORT
OREGON CITIES
Yesterday Monday Tuesday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 pm for solar at noon. Astoria ........ 49/43/0.28.....50/37/c.....50/42/sh Baker City 38/1 3/0.00....39/1 9/pc.....37/18/pc Brookings 54f34/0.00.....54/41/s......55/44/s Burns.......... 40/11/0.00.....39/17/s......39/16/s Eugene 52/33/trace.....40/29/f.....40/33/sh Klamath Falls ...36/11/0.00.....42/21/s......44/21/s Lakeview....... .41/1/0.00.....42/22/s......44/24/s La Pine........ 54/22/0.00....44/1 5/pc.....43/21/pc Medford 32/28/trace..... 40/27/f.....47/32/pc Newport 50/41/trace.....53/40/c.....51/42/pc North Bend.....54/37/0.00 ....52/36/pc.....52/42/pc Ontario 30/15/0.00 ....32/19/pc.....32/18/pc Pendleton 58/35/0.00....41f29/pc.....43/31/pc Portland 45/39/0.02 .....49/37/c.....45/37/sh Prineville 54f36/0.00 ....42/23/pc.... A5/26/pc Redmond 57/33/0.00 ...A6f20/pc.....50/23/pc Roseburg 45f35/0.00.....42/33/f...... 44/39/f Salem 49/38/0.09.....47/33/f.....45/36/sh Sisters......... 52/28/0.00....42/21/pc.....46/23/pc The Dages 56/31/0.00....39/31/pc.....44/34/pc
1 L
MED IUM HIGH 4
6
8
1li
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 28 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report
Snow levelandroadconditions representing condi tions at 5 P.m.yesterday. Key:T.T. = Traction Tires.
ljmbe~rirne 00 26 2 8 warner canyon........ . . . . . .0.0... no report Pass Conditions Wi gamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0 .0... no report 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1.84 at CabbageHig.......... Carry chains or T.Tires AsPen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.... ..25-29 Hwy 20at Santiam pass ...... carechains or T'Tires Mammath Mtn., CalifOrnia.....0.0.. . . . .25-30 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwg 26 at Dchoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires Squaw ValleY,California.......0.0... . . .21-23 Hwg58atWigameuepass.... Carrychainsortlires SunValleY ldaho....... . . . . . . 0 0 . . . . . .1522 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.lires Hwy.242 atMcKenzi e Pass........Ciosed forseason For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.trip«he«k.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatherPcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-pariial clouds,c-clouds, hhaze, shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sfsnowflurries,snsnew, i ice,rs rainsnowmix,w wind,f fog, drdrizzle,tr trace
JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
wv w o a a w
Yesterday's extremes
chance of snow
47 29
Yesterday Monday Tuesday
YestenhyMomlay Tuesday
-o a
Mostly cloudy with a slight chance of light snow
HIGH LOW
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE WEST Sunrise today...... 7:34 a.m. MOOnphaSeS Partly to mostly mday...... 4:28 P.m. cloudy with patchy Sunset Fug Sunrisetomorrow .. 7:35a.m.
Umatiga
Hood River The
CannonIJeach
97/43-
Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain and snow
BEND ALMANAC
• Astoria Seasidee
Partly cloudy
5
y+++h.
Cold W arm Stationary
44 ** ** * 444 4 4 4 4 '** * * * e *
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries S now I c e
Yesterday Monday Tuesday
Yesterday Monday Tuesday
City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Le/Pcp Hi/Le/W HiRo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hrie//LW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Le/W AbileneIX......61/29N 00...63/36/s .. 61/37/s GrandRapids....24/18N03 ..22/21/pc. 31/22/sn RapidCity.......5434/0 00..46/24/pc. 44/28/pc Savannah.......67/49N.04... 59/39/s .. 64/42/s Akron ..........34/17N.02.. 20/17/sn. 33/18/sn GreenBay........18/JN00 ..19/14/pc. 30/1Npc Reno...........41/13N.00... 42/1 5/s.. 43/20/5 Seatde..........53/47N.05...4039/c. 4541/sb Albany..........30/12N.70...15/Ipc. 26/18/sn Greensboro......49/36N00..4I32/pc .. 56/32/s Richmond.......5437N.00 ..41/28/pc. 51/3ipc Sioux Fais,,, ..,,,11/6/001..34/tipc.. 30/15/s Albuquerque.....49/22N.00... 52/27/s .. 55/30/s Hamsburg.......39/28N 01.. 26/17/pc. 36/24/sn RoibesleNY....26/19NAO r, ..17/13/sn. 30/24/sn Spokan e........43/30/0.00...37/26/c..3$3Nc Anchorage......20/12N.04..... 6/1/s .. 12/1 2/s Hartbrd,CT.....37/20/0.19.... 24/9/s. 28/2$sn Secremen te......61/29N.00... 65/37/s .. 66/39/s SpringfieldMO , ..42/17N.00... 48/29/s.. 50/31/s Atlanta .........54/36/0.01... 52/36/s .. 5535/s Helena..........54/32/000..41/25/pc.43/24/pc St. Louis.........37/22N.00..36/26/pc. 43/26/pc Tampa..........73/63N25...67/48/s..72/49/s AtlanticCity.....55/35/0.33..3424/pc. 44/33/sb Honolulu........73/65/2.06... BI69/s .. 83/70/s Selt Lake Oty.....34/9N.00 ..36/25/pc. 37/25/pc Tucson..........68/37/0.00... 76/45/s .. BI48/s Austin..........61/29N.iN... 65/36/s.. 67/44/s Houston........5532/0.00... 65/42/s.. 68/48/s SanAntenio.....64/32/0.00... 67/37/s.. 7I45/s Tuls a...........59/JM .IN...60/33/s..6I36/s Baltimore...... A6/32/0.00 ..31/24/pc.. 44/28/c Huntsville .......39/35N.00... 51/31/s.56/31/pc SanDiyqo.......75/47/0.00... 76/55/s.. 72/56/s Wasbington,DC..51/36N.00 ..33/25/pc .. 45/28/c Billings .........5I34/0.00..42/29/pc. 45/27/pc Indianapolis.....27/1 7N00.. 25/24/pc. 35/19/pc SanRancism....60/40/0.00... 65/45/s.. 62/47/s Wichita.........63/19N.00...5$29/s ..54/31/s Birmingham.....42/35/0.00... 56/35/s .. 59/36/s Jackson, MS.....43/33N.00... 6I35/s .. 66/JIs SanJose........62/31/000... 71Y42/s.. 67/42/s Yakima........ AB/19N.00 ..3427/pc .. 3$31/c Bismarck..........9/2N 06 ..35/17/pc. 26/12/pc Jacksonvile......67/50N19... 61/39/s .. 66/41/s Santare........45/22/0.00...47/21/s.. 5I24/s Yuma...........71M0.00...75/51/s ..7851/s Boise...........34/21N00..38/25/pc .. 39/27/s Junmu..........34/31N.17 ..31/17/sn. 22/llpc INTERNATIONAL Boslon..........38/23N66... 23/10/s. 29/21/sn Kansas City......43/1 6N.00... 47/29/s .. 47/31/s Bridgeport,CT....38/29N.63..28/19/pc. 35/27/sn lansing.........22/15N04..19/16/pc. 3119/sn Amslerdem..... AB/43/0.07...44/41/c. 44/37/sb Mecca..........86/63/0.00... 79/59/s .. 7N59/s Buffalo .........25/16/0.18 ..19/15/sn. 32/23/sn las VyNas .......62/3$0.00...65/43/s. 65/45/pc Atbens..........69/51N.00...56/44/c.Slyeupc Mexim Cny......6I50/0.00... 72/44/s.. 73/44/s Burlington, VT....22/12/0 33.... 9/Npc. 23/16/sn Lexington .......35/29N.00..36/32/pc. 42/27/pc Auckbnd. .......77/61N00..Tt/56/sb.67/Sgpc Montreal.........12/3N.96... 3/-4/pc... 9/5/sn Caribou,ME.....13/-1/0.77. 17/-10/sn.. 1M/sn Linmln..........34/14000 ..45/24/pc.42/24/pc Baghdad........51/39N 00... 55/41/s.. 57/42/s Moscow.........21/3N JN ..22/22/sn ..32/29/rs Charleston, SC...66/50N.01... 58/38/s .. 64/42/s Little Rock.......51/31N00... 56/34/s .. 6$35/s Bangkok........91/79N.00... 856lr. 7$62/sb Nairobi .........79/61N10.. 74/56/sb. 71/53/sb Cbarlotle........55/39N.01... 52/33/s .. 553Qs LosAngeles......80/47N.00... 79/55/s.72/51/pc Beiling..........41/19N00... 4NI9/s.. 36/17/s Nassau.........84/61N.JN... 78/72/r...76/71/t Chattanooga.... At/34N.00 .. 51/32/pc.. 54/31/s Louisvile........34/28/000 37/ .. 32/pc. 42/27/pc Beirut ..........59/46N.t j...52/49/s.56/4fypc NewDdbi.......75/52NJN...77/61/s.. 77/56/s Cheyenn e.......49/32N.00...52/30/s..57/36/s MadisonWl......20/7N 00.. 24/15/pc. 31/13/pc Berlin...........43/36N.00 ..42/36/pc.. 39/33/c Osaka..........50/39/0.00...41/40/c .. 47/42/c Chicago.........23/1ON 00.. 22/17/pc. 33/20/pc Memphis........4533/0.00... 56/38/s .. 57/4l/s Bogota.........66/39N.00 .. 70/54/sb.60/52/sb Oslo............37/3M.19..4l/30/sb.32/26/pc Cincinnaii.......33/28N.00..31/36/pc.38/23/pc Miami..........86/740.00 ..75/62/sb. 77/65/pc Budapest........37/32N.00... 31/31/c .. 32/26/s Ottawa..........14/1N.33... 1/-2/pc...12/7/sf Cleveland.......34/16N01 ..23/20/sn. 33/23/pc Milwaukee......22/1ON00 .. 21/16/pc. 33/17/pc BuenosAires.....93/68/0 00... 99/72/s.. 97/68/c Paris............50/39N00... 51/41/s.. 5I44/c Celorado Springs.55/19N 00... 57/27/s.. 58/31/s Minneapolis......4/-1N.00..23/18/pc.. 28/7/pc CaboSanLucas ..81/59/0.00 ..81/64/pc.. 84/62/s Rio de Janeiro....84/73N JN..77/68/sb. 75/65/sh ColumbiaMO , ...39/13N 00... 41/27/s.. 43/27/s Nashvile........36/31000..47/35/pc.50/32/pc Ceiro...........59/45N.07..62/48/pc. 63/49/pc Rome...........57/43N.00... 56/40ls .. 56/47/s ColumbiaSC....58/4EN.04... , 57/34/s.. 62/35/s NewOrleans.....51/44001...60/42/s .. 66/44/s Celgary........ A6/36/0.0D ..34/23/pc. 43/2$pc Sanliego........82/55N.00...89/64/s .. 89/65/s Columbvs GA...56/39N.03... 58/34/s.. 63/38/s NewYork.......40/30/0.75..29/21/pc..39/25/rs rancun.........84/70N.80... 77/72/i. 77/71/sb Sae Pdul o.......84N4N.00..72/62/sb..68/56/c Columbus, OH....32/24/0.00 .. 24/24/pc.. 34/21/c Newark,NJ......39/30/OA4..31/20/pc. 39/25/sn Dublin..........54/43N.03..42/34/sb.. 45/44/c Sapporo ........3427N.07.. 34/29/rs. 33/29/pc Cenmrd, NH.....28/12N69...17/1/s. 23/12/sn Norfolk,VA......57/44/002..41/26/pc. 54/34/pc Edinburgb.......50/39N iN ..41/35/pc. 39/39/pc Seoul...........30/10/0.00...33/26/c.38/21/pc Corpus Cbristi....63/37N.00... 66/42/s.. 7I51/s Oklahoma City...62/260.00... 62/38/s .. 62/38/s Geneva.........34/28N.00 ..40/26/pc.. 41/32/s Shanghai........54/4EN.00 ..47/44/sb.. 48/43/c DallasFtWorth...61/26/0.00... 63/38/s.. 65/41/s Omabe.........27/16N00..40/23/pc. 40/23/pc Herare..........81/63N IN ..76/61/sb. 76/64/sb Singapore 88/72/1 29 87/77/sb 89/76/sb Daytim .........27/22N00.. 26/26/pc.. 34/19/c Orlando.........73/640.1 8... 67/45/s .. 71/47/s Hong lreng......64/61/2.46... 53/4Ir. 51/45/sb Stockholm.......41/36/0.00 ..42/37/sb.. 38/31/c Denver..........58/25$00... 56/29/5 .. 61/33/s PalmSprings.....76/47/0.00... 78/54/s.. 7$54/s Istanbul.........5I37N 00 ..44/41/pc. 48/45/sb Sydney..........75/66/0.00 ..74/67/pc. 77/65/pc DesMoines......20/12/000 .. 35/23/pc. 37/19/pc Peoria..........20/12/000 ..26/19/pc. 34/17/pc Jerusalem.......45/33N 02... 40/37/s. 41/37/pc Taipei 68/ 66/0 00 6ISS/sb 5$54/r Detroit..........25/19N00..2I16/pc. 31/22/pc Philadelphia.....43/32/009..30/21/pc..4l/28/rs Jobannes burg....84/62/0.15... 84/56/s. 76/57/sb TelAviv.........61/36N.iN... 50/45/s. 52/42/pc ..19/14/pc.. 25/3/pc Pboenix.........71/45N00... 75/49/5.. 78/52/s Ume ...........75/64/0.00...78/65/c.77/65/pc Tokyo...........5537/0.00...48/38/c. 50/43/pc Duluth......... -3/16N 01 El Peso..........57/26N.00... 59/33/s .. 63/36/s Pitlsburgb.......352EN02...20/19/c. 34/22/sn Usbon..........59/46N.00 ..59/50/pc. 5547/sb Toronto..........23/9/OAO ..1$18/pc ..28/25/sf ..-37/AS/5-31/-33/pc Portland,ME.....2012/0.97... iilfpc. 24/17/sn London.........54/4EN13.. 53/39/sb. 42/37/pc Vanceuver.......5I43/0 00 Fairbanks........ -2/4JN.00 .. 46/39/dr. 43/37/sh Fargo........... -3/9N 00 ..30/15/pc.. 245/pc Previdence......37/28N.79... 26/1 3/s. 32/23/sn Madrid .........59/30N 00..51/38/pc. 51/4Ipc Vienna......... AB/30N.00... 39/26/5 .. 35/27/s Flagstaff........47/19N.00... 51/1 7/s.. 54/24/s Raleigb.........54/38I0.03... 49/32/s .. 56/33/s M8008..........91/77N.27 ..86/74/pc. 8573/sh Warsaw.........39/32N.00 ..37/3isb. 37/30/pc
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2013 • •
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contact us:
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Pets & Supplies
Pets 8 Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
Bicycles 8 Accessories
Aussie/Heeler mix, shots & dewormed, $150. 541-977-4686
German Wirehaired Pointer pups, AKC, 7 F, A1 Washers&Dryers Antiques wanted: tools, $150 ea. Full war1 M, $800. 541-454-2132 furniture, marbles,early ranty. Free Del. Also B/W photography, old KITTENS at PetSmart wanted, used W/D's sports gear, cowboy 11-4 Sat. 12/1 4, & 541-280-7355 items. 541-389-1578 Sun. if any left, thru local rescue. Appx. 15 FREEZER: GE upright Reber's Farm Toy Sale! 202 avail. Adopt now & 22 cu.ft., $425. Each Sat. & Sun., 10-5 Want to Buy or Rent AUSSIES! Registered we'll hold up to 2 wks. 541-948-9191 until Christmas, 4500 SE 389-8420, 598-5488. G ENERATE S O M E Tillamook Lp., Prineville. ASCR miniature Aus- www.craftcats.org CASH for dressers, 541-447-7585 Shepherds, 2 red EXCITEMENT in your dead washers/dryers tralian Lab puppies black and neighborhood! Plan a Just bought a new boat? tri females, 2 black tri 541-420-5640 pur e bred, garage sale and don't Sell your old one in the females, 1 blue merle yellow male, 1 blue merle fe- males and f emales forget to advertise in classifieds! Ask about our 203 male, 2 black tri males, ready to go now. $250 classified! Super Seller rates! Holiday Bazaar 541-385-5809. 1 blue tri dilute, $500 & Call 541-771-5511. 541-385-5809 8 Craft Shows up. 541-761-6267 or Lab Pups AKC,black & Q ueen b e d fr a m e 541-546-5449. The reserves yellow, Master Hunter lodgepole with slats, theBulletin 3rd Holiday Fair right to publish all sired, performance pedi- $165. 541-389-5017. Aussie-Tzu male pups. Coming to Sisters at from The Bulletin Will be ready with 1st ree, OFA cert hips & el- Refrig/freezer, older 19 ads Outlaw Station Shopnewspaper onto The shot & worming on ows, 541-771-2330 cu.ft. Whirlpool $40. ping Center close to Bulletin Internet webJan. 3. $ 350 each. www.kinnamanretrieverercom 541-948-9191 Ray's Food Place, site. Kelly 541-604-0716 or Labrador puppies, AKC, Hwy 20. Open11/29 R olltop desk with 7 541-489-3237 chocolate, $350. thru 12/22, Illlon. Bulletin drawers, medium oak, The 541-977-6844 Sersina Central Creyon sinceeie Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. $250. 541-548-4051 Sun., 10-6. Labradors AKCVendors wanted! Chocolates & yellows, 541-595-6967 shots, wormed, health/ hip guar. 541-536-5385 205 www.welcomelabs.com Chihuahua puppies, tiny, Items for Free 1st shots/dewormed, M INI-AUSSIE p u ps, Vintage head & foot$250. 541-977-0035 blue merle & black tri. HANCOCK8t Wanted Free refrigeraboard, no side rails. $350. 509-460-8280 MOORE SOFA $45. 541-419-6408 tor, I'll pick up. Call Salmon/Coral chePomeranian puppy, 541-815-9938 nille fabric with dia215 male, wolf sable, 10 mond pattern. Tradiwks old. Real sweet 208 Coins & Stamps tional styling with heart.$275 Pets & Supplies loose pillow back, 541-480-3160 down-wrapped seat Private collector buying Dachshund minis, male & avail 12/14 $350- POODLE pups AKC toy, cushions, roll arms, postagestamp albums 8 The Bulletin recom- female world-wide tiny teacup, cuddly people skirt, two matching collections, mends extra caution $450. 541-508-0386. p illows an d ar m and U.S. 573-286-4343 dogs. 541-475-3889 when purc h as- Donate deposit bottles/ covers. L ike new (local, cell phone). ing products or sercans to local all vol., Queensland Heelers condition. $1 500. vices from out of the non-profit rescue, for Standard 8 Mini, $150 240 541-526-1332 feral cat spay/ neuter. area. Sending cash, & up. 541-280-1537 Crafts & Hobbies checks, or credit inCans for Cats trailer www.rightwayranch.wor formation may be at Bend Petco; or dodpress.com The Bulletin nate M-F a t S mith subjected to fraud. 3rd Holiday Fair recommends extra ' For more informaSign, 1515 NE 2nd; or Rodent issues? Free l caution when purcoming to Sisters, at tion about an adverat CRAFT, Tumalo. adult barn/ shop cats, chasing products or • Outlaw Station Call for Ig. quantity fixed, shots, s o me tiser, you may call IHShoppingenter services from out of I the O r egon State pickup, 541-389-8420. friendly, some not. t the area. Sending t close to Ray's Food www.craftcats.org Will deliver. 389-8420 ' cash, checks, o r ' Place, Hwy 20. Attorney General'9 Office C o n sumer English Bulldog female Opening 11/29 thru l credit i n f ormation Siberian-Husky pup, 12/22, Mon.-Thur. Protection hotline at may be subjected to AND Wolf-Husky pups, puppy, 3t/a mos old, 10-4, Fri. Sat. Sun. 1-877-877-9392. $2200. 541-382-9334 $400 ea. 541-977-7019 l FRAVD. For more 10-6.Vendors information about an s wanted! enchantabull.com Please call The Bulletin Yorkie 2-yr old male, 9 advertiser, you may I Serving Central Oregon sincetate 541-595-6967 Ibs, for Stud Service. l call t h e Ore g onl Call 541-416-1615 ' State Atto r ney ' Adopt a rescued kitten l General's O f f i ce Yorkie 6 mo old male, AGATE HUNTERS or cat! Fixed, shots, reat personality, $500. Consumer Protec- • Penshers • Saws ID chip, tested, more! t ion ho t l in e at I 9 L an deliv. . 541-792-0375 • e Rescue at 65480 78th German Shepherd i 1-877-877-9392. St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ Repair Jn Supplies pups, parents on site. Yorkie 9-wk male, tail Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. I Takingdeposits. docked, dewclaws, $450. I TheBulletin www.craftcats.org 541-280-2118 Can deliv. 541-792-0375 Serving Cenrrai Oregon sincetana
2005 Maverick ML7n M ountain Bike, 1 5
frame (small). Full suspension, Maverick s hock, SRAM X O drivetrain 8 shifters, 9 speed rear cassette, 34-11, Avid Juicy disc brakes. Well t a ken c are o f. $950 . 541-788-6227. 242
Exercise Equipment
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Life Fit R91 Recumbent BikeAbsolutely like new with new batteryoperates perfectly! Clean, always housed inside home. $2100 new; selling for $975. Great Christmas gift! 541-647-2227
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs. Call on one of the professionals today! Nordic Trac A2350. Presents beautifully. Hardly used. A perfect holiday gift. $350.00 Cash and carry. 541-390-1713. Proform Crosswalk 380 treadmill, like new, only 1 hour of usage! $275 obo. 541-408-0846
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202 - Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar 8 Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture 8 Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212-Antiques& Collectibles 215- Coins 8 Stamps 240 - Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263 - Tools
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants 8 Flowers 269 - Gardening Supplies 8 Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGE SALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308 - Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, RabbitsandSupplies 341 -Horses and Equipment 345-LivestockandEquipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358 - Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383- Produce andFood
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Golf Equipment
Golf Equipment
Guns Hunting & Fishing
CHECKYOUR AD
SHOW l December20-21-22l on the first day it runs Portland Expo to make sure it is corCenter nSpellcheck" and rect. Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, human errors do ocSun.10-4
cur. If this happens to 1-5 exit ¹306B your ad, please conAdmission $10 tact us ASAP so that I 1-nnn-ana-344n corrections and any www.Collectoradjustments can be sWest.com made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 246 The Bulletin Classified Guns, Hunting People Lookfor Informat!on & Fishing About Products and Services Every Daythrough Ammo/Accessories: 200 The BulletinClassiNetfs rds .223/.556, $70. 100 rds 9mm, $35. NEW AR New Odyssey putter, N2 30-rd maq pull, $10; $35. New 3 pr golf shoes, N3, $15; 10rd, $15. 541-306-0166 $15 ea. 541-306-0166
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Full Color Photos For an adctifional ("Special private parlY rates apply to merchandise and automotive categories,)
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES!
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.
Modern amenities andall the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.
can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tOugh V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
BSSl 1C S T o pl a ce y o ur a d, v i si t
CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
GarageSales
GarageSales
GarageSales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!
541-385-5809
u .
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.
'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *
97 $ 0 2
n d • O r e g o n
ww w.b end b ul l et i n . com or cal l 54 1 - 3 85 - 58 09
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
C2 MONDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2013•THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
269
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
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Can be found on these pages: For newspaper
delivery, call the
Dept. at Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Circulation 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. 541-385-5809 or email Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. The Bulletin Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. 270
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476
Employment Opportunities
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
Servlng Central Oregon sincefgte
476 476 CAUTION: Employment Employment RBEIIDBI Ads published in "Employment O p Lost & Found Opportunities Opportunities portunities" include FOUND woman's pre- employee and inde- HOTEL/RESORT SALES PERSON scription glasses, pendent positions. The Riverhouse Hotel Local floor covering store north end of Canyon Ads fo r p o sitions and Convention Cen- has immediate need Driver, Redmond. that require a fee or ter is se e king a for F-T salesperson. 541-504-4310 upfront investment Housekeeping Super- • Must possess combe stated. With visor. Prior supervi- puter knowledge; have Lost 1 ct. round diamond must any independentjob sory experience in a sales & design experi628 stud earring 12/7 at hotel operation is pref- ence please Bend Macy's. REWARD! opportunity, Loans & Mortgages fered. Please go to i nvestigate tho r • Knowledge of carpet, 503-913-0780 Riverhouse.comto fill vinyl, tile, hardwood 8 Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad oughly. Use extra PRIVATE PARTY RATES WARNING Lost men's wallet while c aution when a p out a n ap p lication natural stone. foronly$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines on-line, or come to • Responsible for show- The Bulletin recomhelping disabled vehicle plying for jobs onmends you use cau3075 N Hwy 97, Bend, room coverage, man*UNDER '500in total merchandise on NE 27th in Bend. Call line and never proOVER '500 in total merchandise tion when you pro541-526-1022; or ask for vide personal inforto apply in person. agement of individual 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Emma at 541-241-7693. vide personal Submit a resume with accounts for c lients mation to any source 14 days................................................ $16.00 your application. 7 days.................................................. $24.00 working on remodel information to compayou may not have Competitive wage, vaca- and/or new construc- nies offering loans or *llllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 researched and credit, especially tion, bonus, and use of tion. Material selecdeemed to be repu28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special those asking for adREMEIIIIBER:If you resort facilities. tions, estimates, sales table. Use extreme vance loan fees or 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 icall for commercial line ad rates) lo mentdru have lost an animal, agreements, ordering when r e - Pre-em screen is re uired. don't forget to check cs aution product, i n stallation companies from out of ponding to A N Y state. If you have work orders and inThe Humane Society online employment voicing. Actively purconcerns or quesBend PRODUCTION/ A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: ad from out-of-state. sue new accounts and tions, we suggest you 541-382-3537 MANUFACTURING: We suggest you call Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. rospects. consult your attorney Redmond the State of Oregon Growing manufacturing ages * on experior call CONSUMER 541-923-0882 BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) company seeks per- ence.based Consumer Hotline Email resume HOTLINE, Prinsvttts s on i n terested i n at 1-503-378-4320 REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well cover letter to: 1-877-877-9392. 54t-447-7tfe; q uality work i n r e - and For Equal Opporiuo Craft Cats as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin laxed a t m osphere. wall 970Ohotmail.com nity Laws c ontact 54t-355-5420. Experience in manubendbulletin.com Oregon Bureau of reserves the right to reject any ad at Tick, Tock Labor 8 I n d ustry, facturing preferred. If 286 any time. is located at: i nterested, ple a se Civil Rights Division, Tick, Tock... Sales Northeast Bend 971-673- 0764. come t o 5 3 7 SE caution when pur1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Glenwood Dr, Bend, chasing products or I ...don't let time get Bend, Oregon 97702 The Bulletin OR 97702 to fill out an services from out of • away. Hire a Serving Central Oregonsince faa ** FREE ** application. I the area. Sending 541-385-5809 c ash, checks, o r professional out Garage Sale Ktt PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction I credit i n f ormation an ad in The of The Bulletin's Good classified adstell is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Place • may be subjected to Bulletin for your gaCheck out the the essential facts in an to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based oft the policies of these "Call A Service I FRAUD. sale and reclassifieds online interesting Manner. Write newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party rage For more informa- I Professional" ceive a Garage Sale from the readers view not Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. www.bendbuffetin.com tion about an adver- • Kit FREE! Directory today! the seller's. Convert the Updated daily I tiser, you may call facts into benefits. Show the Oregon State 246 246 263 263 KIT INCLUDES: TURNED YOU • 4 Garage Sale Signs Add your web address the reader howthe item will I Attorney General's BANK Guns, Hunting Guns, Hunting Tools • TV, Stereo & Video • $2.00 Off Coupon To help them insomeway. s Office C o n s umer s DOWN? Private party to your ad and read& Fishing & Fishing n Use Toward Your I Protection hotline atl will loan on real esThis ers onThe Bulletin's TV/DVD, Sylvania 19 tate equity. Credit, no Next Ad Newin box, advertising tip I 1-877-877-9392. web site, www.benddigital LCD w/remote Russian semi-auto380 • 10 Tips For "Garage problem, good equity or nearly new brought to youby bulletin.com, will be $75. 541-548-6642 Sale Success!" LThe Bulletin g is all you need. Call Craftsman Tools: able to click through n Oregon Land MortThe Bulletin • 10 Stationary automatically to your 255 Serving Central Oregonsince fsta gage 541-388-4200. radial arm saw, website. DO YOU HAVE PICK UP YOUR Winchester .06 Model • Computers Model ¹315.220100, Looking for your next SOMETHING TO GARAGE SALE KIT at LOCALMONEytWe buy 70, BSA 3-9, $450. employee? $375. SELL 1777 SW Chandler Marlin 12 ga., Model 28 T HE B U LLETIN r e - • 10 n Stationary Quality Improvement Coordinator secured trustdeeds & table Place a Bulletin help FOR $500 OR Ave., Bend, OR 97702 note, some hard money $275. 541-617-5997; quires computer adsaw w/guide rails, wanted ad today and LESS? loans. Call Pat Kelley vertisers with multiple model ¹315.228590, reach over 60,000 Non-commercial The Bulletin 541-382-3099 ext.13. ad schedules or those 249 Ssrvlng Central Oregonslnce 1905 readers each week. $325. advertisers may selling multiple sysArt, Jewelry • 6-1/8 n Jointer Your classified ad asaeose Hosoator Ceattcn place an ad tems/ software, to dis- planer Have an item to will also appear on 292 with our & Furs Job Summary: This position oversees the declose the name of the model "Professional" ¹351.227240, bendbulletin.com "QUICK CASH sell quick? Sales Other Areas sign of and fosters an approach to, continubusiness or the term which currently $250 obo. SPECIAL" ously improving quality, establishes quality im"dealer" in their ads. If it's under receives over 1.5 Call 541-504-6413 1 week3lines 12 Estate sale! All must go! provement responsibilities in the organization; Private party advertismillion page views '500 you can place it in ot' daytime hours. Fri. to Wed. 9-6 sets strategic priorities for quality assessment ers are defined as every month at ~2 e e k s 2 N 298 NW Harwood St., and improvement. Reviews and analyzes all those who sell one The Bulletin no extra cost. Ad must Prineville elements of Ql/RM programs. Coordinates computer. 265 Bulletin Classifieds Classifieds for: include price of with Board of Directors and insurance carrier Building Materials Moving Sale, Fri.-Mon., functions of Risk Management. Co-chairs Get Results! ~e t a tts of 5553 267 9-6, 512 S. Ash, Sis- Quality Improvement/Risk Management Com14-kt white gold Call 385-5809 '10 -3 lines, 7 days or less, or multiple Musical Instruments ladies wedding band ters. Huge vintage col- mittee. R e ports to the Medical Advisory or place MADRAS Habitat items whosetotal '163 lines, 14 days lection! 5 4 x3 2 big with a bright polish RESTORE your ad on-line at does not exceed Committee activities of the Ql/RM Programs. finish, 1.66 carat (Private Party ads only) Building Supply Resale screen TV, 5 rooms of bendbulletin.com $500. furn & wares, wom's HD Qualifications: Must have a current Oregon RN diamond Hearts and Quality at arrows, round cut, leathers & access. LOW PRICES Call Classifieds at license. Must be able to demonstrate strong Pressroom Sl -1 Clarity, F color. 84 SW K St. 541-385-5809 communication and organizational skills. Must Appraised at www.bendbulletin.com 541-475-9722 Night Supervisor have working knowledge of QA, CQI, Pl pro$15,000. Very Open to the public. The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orgram, state and federal regulations regarding unique piece. Illlason & Hamlin egon, is seeking a night time press superviASC's and accreditation standards. Prineville Habitat Asking $9500. Baby Grand Piano. sor. We are part of Western Communications, 541-281-7815 ReStore Beautiful black lacInc. which is a small, family owned group conPosition details: Full Time position; Monday I Ruger Red Label Building Supply Resale quer finish. Still unsisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon through Friday. Complete compensation and 20 ga. 0/U English 1427 NW Murphy Ct. der warranty. and two in California. Our ideal candidate will benefit package including profit sharing and I stock, choke tubes 541-447-6934 A great Christmas manage a small crew of three and must be bonus plan. beautiful $1000; Open to the public. Gift! $25,000 able to l e arn ou r e quipment/processes ~ Browning BPS12 ga (orig. $47,000) quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for lnterested persons should submit ) pump 26" w/choke 325 266 swingroll61 ©gmail. our 3 7/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ tubes, beautiful a cover letter and resume to com Hay, Grain & Feed leadership experience preferred. In addition to Heating & Stoves jobs@bendsurgery.com I $425; Springfield 541-312-2425 our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nu1911 A1 45 acp 6 Oii paintingby First quality Orchard/Timmerous commercial print clients as well. We NOTICE TO I mags, work done to I othy/Blue Grass mixed noted NY artistn Julie ADVERTISER offer a competitive wage and opportunity for 260 Pressman Heffernan, 22 x18 n hay, no rain, barn stored, advancement. Since September 29, $250/ton. Patterson Ranch framed, $500. 1991, advertising for If you provide dependability combined with a Misc.ltems Experienced press operator 541-548-0675 used woodstoves has Sisters, 541-549-3831 positive attitude, are able to manage people Our Smith River, CA. production plant is seekand schedulesand are a team player, we 12V car charger for elec- been limited to modwould like to hear from you. If you seek a tronic items, 125w, new in els which have been ing an experienced Goss community press Call a Pro certified by the Oroperator. We have 8 units that have been well stable work environment that provides a great pkg, $20. 541-548-6642 Whether you need a egon Department of maintained and added to during the past sevplace to live and raise a family, let us hear 2 Humidors / Cigars & Environmental Qualfence fixed, hedges eral years including rebuilt quarter folder. We from you. accys $35 8 $25 ea. or Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at ity (DEQ) and the fed- trimmed or a house have CTP operation with Kodak equipment as • • 2/$50. 541-306-0166 i eral E n v ironmental built, you'll find well. anelson@wescom a ers.com wit h your Protection A g e ncy complete resume, references and salary hisBuying Diamonds Weare Western Communications, lnc. afamtory/requirements. No phone calls please. (EPA) as having met professional help in Call 54 I -385-5809 /Gofd for Cash smoke emission stan- The Bulletin's "Call a ily owned company that has 7 newspapers in Drug test is required prior to employment. to r o m ot e o u r service Saxon's Fine Jewelers dards. A cer t ified Service Professional" California and Oregon. Our company provides EOE. 541-389-6655 w oodstove may b e a great culture and work environment. This Directory Handyman identified by its certifiAdult Care plant prints 2 of our publications plus a limited BUYING cation label, which is 541-385-5809 amount of commercial printing, which we hope Lionel/American Flyer CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE to grow. This is a 4-day, 32-hour shift that reLife Tree Personal I DO THAT! permanently attached trains, accessories. Immediate opening in the Circulation departService LLCHome/Rental repairs to the stove. The Bulquires hands on community press experience 541-408-2191. ment for an entry level Customer Service RepSenior Concierge Service Small jobs to remodels letin will not knowLooking for your and ideal candidate will be willing to assist in resentative. Looking for someone to assist our • Errands• Home Mgmt. Honest, guaranteed ingly accept advertisnext employee? other areas outside the pressroom such as • Organizing 541-389-2591 subscribers and delivery carriers with subBULLETINCLASSIFIEDS ing for the sale of work. CCB¹151573 Place a Bulletin prepress and mailroom as needed. scription transactions, account questions and Dennis 541-317-9768 Search the area's most uncertified help wanted ad delivery concerns. comprehensive listing of woodstoves. Smith River is centrally located between CresBuilding/Contracting today and classified advertising... cent City, CA, one of our papers that prints evERIC REEVE HANDY reach over Essential: P o s i tive a tti t ude, s tro n g 267 ery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday a.m. with NOTICE: Oregon state SERVICES. Home 8 real estate to automotive, 60,000 readers service/team orientation, and problem solving law requires anyone Commercial Repairs, merchandise to sporting approximately 5,000 circulation, and BrookFuel & Wood each week. skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a who con t racts for Carpentry-Painting, goods. Bulletin Classifieds ings, OR. Our Brookings publication is also Your classified ad fast-paced, performance-based customer call construction work to appear every day in the approximately 5,000 circulation that prints on Pressure-washing, will also center environment and have accurate typing, be licensed with the Wednesday and Saturday a.m. Both Crescent print or on line. WHEN BUYING Honey Do's. On -time appear on phone skills and computer entry experience. Construction ContracCity and Brookings provide excellent quality of promise. Senior Call 541-385-5809 FIREWOOD... bendbuHetin.com Most work is done via telephone so strong tors Board (CCB). An life to raise a family. Discount. Work guar- www.bendbulletin.com To avoid fraud, which currently communication skills and the ability to multi active license anteed. 541-389-3361 task is a must. means the contractor The Bulletin receives over If this sounds like you, we would like to hear or 541-771-4463 The Bulletin is bonded 8 insured. Serving CentralOregonsince faa recommends pay1.5 million page from you. Please send resume with referBonded 8 Insured Work shift hours are Monday through Friday Verify the contractor's ment for Firewood views every ences and salary requirements to: David DeCCB¹181595 BUYING & SE LLING only upon delivery CCB l i c ense at month at no longe, Qu a lit y Con t ro l Sup e rvisor 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. www.hirealicensedAll gold jewelry, silver and inspection. extra cost. ( ddelonge©triplicate.com), PO B o x 2 7 7, Home Repairs, Remod and gold coins, bars, • A cord is 128 cu. ft. contractor.com Must be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, Crescent City, CA 95531. Bulletin 4' x 4' x 8' or call 503-378-4621. els, Tile, Carpentry rountfs, wedding sets, weekends or early morning hours might occaCiassifieds The Bulletin recom- Finish work, Mainte class rings, sterling sil- • Receipts should sionally be required. Pre-employment drug Get Results! nance. CCB¹168910 ver, coin collect, vinmends checking with testing required. include name, Call 541-385-5809 Phil, 541-279-0846. tage watches, dental the CCB prior to conAccounting price and gotd. Bill Fl e ming, phone, or place your ad tracting with anyone. Please send resume to: kind of wood 541-382-9419. on-line at Some other t rades purchased. ahusted©bendbulletin.com also re q uire addi-Landscaping/Yard Care bendbuHetin.com • Firewood ads tional licenses and Hovv to avoid scam The Bulletin MUST include serving cenfral oregon since 7553 NOTICE: Oregon Land- and fraud attempts certifications. species & cost per 341 scape Contractors Law cord to better serve EOE/Drug free workplace (ORS 671) requires all YBe aware of internaHorses & Equipment Credit Assistant Debris Removal tional fraud. Deal loour customers. businesses that advertise t o pe r form cally whenever posWill provide support and assistance to Tire JUNK BE GONE Landscape Construc- sible. The Bulletin Centers and customers in all areas of credit Servlng Cennaf Oregon slnceSta tion which includes: s/ Watch for buyers I Haul Away FREE reporting and general maintenance of Serving Central Oregon since 1903 l anting, deck s , who offer more than For Salvage. Also 2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H accounts r eceivable. D uties i n clude ences, arbors, your asking price and 1 cord dry, split Juniper, slant Shilo, great Cleanups & Cleanouts Advertising Account Executive water-features, and in- who ask to have $ 5 9 0 0 reviewing credit r eporting information, Mel, 541-389-8107 $200/cord. Multi-cord c ondition. Rewardingnew business development reporting corrections to credit bureaus, stallation, repair of irmoney wired or obo. 541-317-0988. discounts, & tla cords reviewing a n d ana l yzing f i n ancial rigation systems to be handed back to them. available. Immediate Domestic Services The Bulletin is looking for a professional and l icensed w it h th e Fake cashier checks delivery! 541-408-6193 statements and completing UCC-1 forms. driven Sales and Marketing person to help our Landscape Contrac- and money orders Requires a h i g h s chool diploma or Get your A ssisting Seniors a t customers grow their businesses with an tors Board. This 4-digit are common. equivalent. Prior banking or accounting Home. Light house number is to be in- V'Never business expanding list of broad-reach and targeted Find exactly what give out perexperience preferred. Must have good keeping & other ser cluded in all adverproducts. This full-time position requires a sonal financial infor- you are looking for in the keyboarding and 10-key skills; good verbal vices. Licensed & background in consultative sales, territory tisements which indimation. CLASSIFIEDS and written communication skills; ability to Bonded. BBB Certi cate the business has sg'Trustyour instincts e ROW I N G management and aggressive prospecting skills. make decisions, work independently and fied. 503-756-3544 Two years of media sales experience is a bond, insurance and and be wary of establish an d m a i ntain c o operative preferable, but we will train the right candidate. workers compensa- someone using an Aff year Dependable with an ad in working relationships. tion for their employ- escrow service or Drywall Firewood: Seasoned; The Bulletin's ees. For your protec- agent to pick up your The position includes a competitive Cedar, Spl i t, D el. "Call A Service Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent compensation package, and rewards an tion call 503-378-5909 Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 WALLS R US merchandise. or use our website: customer service and over 400 stores in aggressive, customer-focused salesperson with Hang tape, texture, for $365. Lodgepole Professional" unlimited earning potential. the Northwest. We offer competitive pay, 1 for $205 or 2 for scraping old ceilings, www.lcb.state.or.us to The Bulletin Directory servtng central oregon since faos check license status excellent benefits, retirement, and cash & paint. 25 yrs. exp. $385. 541-420-3484. before contracting with Email your resume, cover letter bonus. Resumes will be accepted through Call Bob, 760-333-4011 the business. Persons Nook®. new i n box, A BIT LESS TACK and salary history to: 269 December 18, 2013. 20% OFF sale on sedoing lan d scapenever used! Orig. $119; Jay Brandt, Advertising Director Gardening Supplies lected items. 2500 Electrical Services maintenance do not sell $80. 541-548-6642 'brandt©bendbulletin.com Please send resume and sq. ft. of gently used r equire an LC B l i & Equipment or' salary requirements to: Wanted- paying cash English & Western Mike Dillon Electric cense. drop off your resume in person at ZYLSHuman.ResourcesOlesschwab.com for Hi-fi audio & stusaddles, show clothElectrical troubleshoot1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Emails must state BarkTurtSoil.com ing. 24 yrs experience. Just bought a new boat? dio equip. Mclntosh, ing, bridles, saddle Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. "Credit Assistant" JBL, Marantz, D ypads, Home Deco. Lic/ Bonded ¹192171 Sell your old one in the No phone inquiries please. Gift Certificates. 165 in the subject line. Holiday Special classifieds! Ask about our naco, Heathkit, San- PROMPT DELIVERY $45/hour Super Seller rates! sui, Carver, NAD, etc. NE Greenwood Ave No phonecall s please.EOE 542-389-9663 EOE / Drug Free Workplace 541-408-4758 Call 541-261-1808 Bend 541-323-3262 541-385-5809
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 16, 2013
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wii'sb'o„f
C L U B M onday,m Dec bere16,2013
Louie in a hurry
ACROSS 1"The Lord of the
your opening call? ANSWER: It's a matter of style and judgment, but in my view, a pass is the soundest call since no opening bid is suitable. I would reject a threeheart preempt because the suit is broken and th e h and has good support for the other major. Partner would pass three hearts with Q J 10 8 7, 4, A K 6 5 , K J 2 w hen game at spades might come home. North dealer Neither side vulnerable
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
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DAILY QUESTION
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Y ouhold: 4 K 4 2 ( 4) AJ 9 8 6 3 2 Opening lead — 0 J 0 None 4 10 7 3. You are the dealer with neither side vulnerable. What is (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency,LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
D I A M LB L E AC 5 I L FE R E E O N N A C T S
A L P A A S R T S M I ET N C T O M S M A S A K MA
ED G E IN S A L I S 0 U RN E I LO ON S I ES RT
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45 Lock unlocker king, in (Enya 46The France tvpe) 1$Licoricelike flavor 47Volleyball star Gabnelle 19Colored part of 49 Cuckoo the eye 53 French words 20 Friendly 16 Loll 17New
describing how comment roast beef is after proyiding often served information 56Authorof the 23 Sports stadium verse that 24 Lesser-plaved starts with the part of a 45 beginnings of 20-, 34- and 25 Cellist Casals 42-Across 28 Puccini opera or 59Cocaits heroine 61 Bramble 32 Put h a p p y face 62 abo u t ~approximately) 34Goes "pop!" as B jack-in-the-hox 63 Prefix with lock
ace and continue with the queen. (To continue trumps also works.) East wins and shifts to a spade, but Louie has time on his side. He takes the king and leads another club. If West ruffs and leads a second spade, Louie wins in dummy and unloads his losing spade on a high club.
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency If UnluckyLouie had been around 100 years ago, he might have won a free cruise — on the Titanic. After all the misfortune Louie has seen, you'd think he would (1) underbid and (2) play more carefully. Instead, he hurries to meet his luck. A s today'sdeclarer,Louie ruffed the first diamond and took the ace of trumps: seven, four, queen. He knew he could afford two trump losers, so he abandoned trumps and took a club finesse. East won and led the ten of spades. Louie won with the king and led another club, but West ruffed, led the queen of spades to dummy's ace, ruffedthe next club and cashed a spade. Down one.
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PUZZLE BY ELIZABETH C. QORSKI
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For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
Annual subscripiions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX Io 388 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriplions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
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By Gareth Bain
(c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
12/16I13
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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I •
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
•
764
Burns, OR. 447 acres, Ranch FSBO $365,000 541-589-1630. Info at www.elkridgecabin.co m/447AcRanch.html 771
605
Lots
Roommate Wanted
SHEVLIN RIDGE Seeking roommate in 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apmy age range (over 40). proved plans. More Call f41-312-3085. details and photos on craigslist. $159,900. 632 541-369-8614 Apt./Nlultiplex General 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
CHECKyOUR AD
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
541-548-5511
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-546-5511
658
Houses for Rent Redmond Spacious 1800 sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 bath home w/ 2 car garage located in S W Re d mond. Large living room and utility room. Fridge incl. $1200 mo. + sec. dep. 615-400-6915
JandMHomes.com Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes 541-546-5511
: I.
®
693
Office/Retail Space for Rent
650
500 sq.ft. upstairs office on NE side of town, private bath, all util. paid. $500 month plus $500 d eposit. 541-480-4744
a
Snowmobiles 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, in good
condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
lillotorcycles & Accessories
op ©ggg [Pp
750
Redmond Homes Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbugetin.com
880
881
882
908
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Sunchaser Pontoon KOUNTRY AIRE boat - $19,895 1994 37.5' motor20' 2006 Smokercraft home, with awning, cruise, S-6521. 2006 and one slide-out, 75hp. Mercury. Full camping e n closure. Only 47k miles Pop u p cha n ging and good condition. $25,000. room/porta-potty, BBQ, 541-548-0318 swim ladder, all gear. Trailer, 2006 E asy- (photo above is of a loader gal v anized. similar model & not the actual vehicle) P urchased new, a l l records. 541-706-9977, cell 503-807-1973. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Tioga 24' ClassC Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
ts •I •I Iw
2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384
Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939
Call The Bulletin At
541-3a5-sa09 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
fj
Rear living, large refrigerator, walk-in shower, queen bed, lots of storage inside & out, new tires, electric jack, excellent condition, only used 3 times. Call toseel 541-318-6919
For Sale 1990 5th Wheel Transporter Low miles, EFI 460,
4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500.
1/3 interest i n
w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293 1/5th interest in 1973
•5
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and Door-to-door selling with Tango 29.6' 2007, engine, hangared in fast results! It's the easiest Rear living, walkBend.Excellent perNATIONAL DOLPHIN around queen bed, Keystone Challenger formance & affordway in the world to sell. 37' 1997, loaded! 1 Winnebago Aspect 2004 CH34TLB04 34' central air, awning, able flying! $6,000. slide, Corian surfaces, 2009- 32', 3 slidefully S/C, w/d hookups, The Bulletin Classified 1 large slide, 541-410-6007 wood floors (kitchen), outs, Leather intenew 16' Dometic aw$12,000. 541-385-5809 2-dr fridge, convection rior, Power s e at, ning, 4 new tires, new 541-280-2547 or microwave, Vizio TV & locks, d ows, Kubota 7000w marine 541-815-4121 roof satellite, walk-in Aluminum win wheels. diesel generator, 3 shower, new queen bed. 17" Flat Screen, slides, exc. cond. inWhite leather hide-a- Surround s o u nd, s ide & o ut. 27" T V bed & chair, all records, camera, Queen bed, dvd/cd/am/fm entertain no riets or smoking. Foam mattress, Awcenter. Call for more $28,450. 1974 Beffanca 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, details. Only used 4 ning, Generator, InCall 541-771-4800 1730A times total in last 5 i/~ inboard motor, great verter, Auto Jacks, years.. No pets, no cond, well maintained, Air leveling, Moon WEEKEND WARRIOR $8995obo. 541-350-7755 roof, no smoking or Toy hauler/travel trailer. smoking. High retail 2180 TT, 440 SMO, $27,700. Will sell for 180 mph, excellent p ets. L ik e n ew, 24' with 21' interior. 860 $24,000 including slidcondition, always $74,900 Sleeps 6. Self-coning hitch that fits in Motorcycles & Accessories 541-480-6900 hangared, 1 owner tained. Systems/ your truck. Call 6 a.m. for 35 years. $60K. appearance in good to 10 p.m. for appt to condition. Smoke-free. see. 541-330-5527. Head south In Madras, Tow with i/~-ton. Strong for the winter! 21' Sun Tracker Sig. sew[ suspension; can haul call 541-475-6302 1997 Tropical by ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker ddl ATVs snowmobiles, 50hp, live well, fish fndr, National RV. 35-ft, iI even a small car! Great Dramatic Price ReducChevy Vortec ennew int, extras, exc cond, price - $8900. tion Executive Hangar gine, new awnings, Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' $7900. '541-508-0679 Call 541-593-6266 at Bend Airport (KBDN) Harley Davidson everything works, 2004, 35K, loaded, too Ads pubhshed in the 60' wide x 50' deep, excellent condition, much to list, ext'd warr. 2011 Classic LimMonaco Lakota 2004 w/55' wide x 17' high bi"Boats" classification Looking for your 1 owner, non-smok- thru 2014, $49,900 Denited, LOADED, 9500 5th Wheel include: Speed, fishdr. Natural gas heat, next employee? miles, custom paint ers, $15,000 OBO. nis, 541-589-3243 34 ft.; 3 slides; im- fold ing, drift, canoe, offc, bathroom. Adjacent Place a Bulletin help "Broken Glass" by 541-408-7705 maculate c ondition; house and sail boats. Where can you find a to Frontage Rd; great wanted ad today and Nicholas Del Drago, large screen TV w/ visibility for aviation busiFor all other types of reach over 60,000 new condition, helping hand? entertainment center; ness. 541-948-2126 or watercraft, please go readers each week. heated handgrips, reclining chairs; cenFrom contractors to email 1jetjock@q.com to Class 875. Your classified ad auto cruise control. ter kitchen; air; queen 541-365-5609 yard care, it's all here will also appear on $32,000 in bike,only Piper Archer 1 9 80, bed; complete hitch bendbulletin.com in The Bulletin's $23,000obo. and new fabric cover. based in Madras, alwhich currently re541-318-6049 Servin cenval ore on since 1903 ways hangared since "Call A Service $18,000 OBO. ceives over 1.5 milN ayion R V 20 0 8 , new. New annual, auto (541) 548-5886 Sprinter chassis 25'. Professional" Directory lion page views evpilot, IFR, one piece ery month at no Mercedes Benz diesel, windshield. Fastest Ar861 24,000 miles, pristine extra cost. Bulletin cher around. 1750 tocond., quality throughClassifieds Get ReTravel Trailers tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. out, rear slide-out w/ sults! Call 385-5609 541-475-6947, ask for queen bed, d e luxe or place your ad Rob Berg. h o useboat,captain swivel f ront Fleetwood Wilderness on-line at Harley Davidson Sport- Beautiful $85000 541 3904693' seats, diesel generator, N.W. Edition 26' 2002, MONTANA 3565 2006, bendbulletin.com 1 slide, sleeps 6 , www.centraloregon awning, no pets/ smokexc. cond., 3 slides, 9,257 miles, $4995. Call queen bed, couch, houseboat.com. king bed, Irg LR, ing. $78,500 o b o . stove/oven, Michael, 541-310-9057 tub/ 862 Arctic insulation, all Ready to deal! Financ- shower, front elec. 875 options $35,000 obo. Fifth Wheels ing avail. jack, waste tank heatHD Fat Bo 1996 Watercraft 541-420-3250 541-382-2430 ers, s tabilizers, 2 A lpenlite 1993 29 f t . Save money. Learn prop. t a n ks , no 5th wheel/gooseneck. ds published in "Wato fly or build hours smoking/pets, winter- Slide, queen b e d, tercraft" include: Kaywith your own airi zed, g oo d c o n d. Onan aks, rafts and motorgen e rator. c raft. 1966 A e r o $8500 OBO Needs refrigerator reIzed personal Commander, 4 seat, 541-447-3425 watercrafts. For paired. $ 6 000/obo. 150 HP, low time, "boats" please see Completely Bend. Mes s age: OPEN ROAD 36' full panel. $23,000 Providence2005 Class 870. Rebuilt/Customized 541-306-1961 2005 $25,500 obo. Contact Paul at Fully loaded, 35,000 2012/2013 Award 541-385-5809 King bed, hide-a-bed 541-447-5184. miles, 350 Cat, Very Winner sofa, 3 slides, glass clean, non-smoker, Showroom Condition shower, 10 gal. waServing Central Oregon since 1903 3 slides, side-by-side Many Extras ter heater, 10 cu.ft. refrigerator with ice Low Miles. 880 fridge, central vac, maker, Washer/Dryer, KeystoneLaredo 31' $17,000 s atellite dish, 2 7 " Rtf 20 06 w ith 1 2' Motorhomes Flat screen TV's, In 541-548-4807 slide-out. Sleeps 6, Arctic Fox 2003 Cold TV/stereo syst., front motion satellite. queen walk-around Weather Model 34 5B, front power leveling $95,000 bed w/storage under- licensed thru 2/15, exlnt jacks and s cissor 541-460-2019 Superhawk-.8 neath. Tub & shower. cond. 3 elec slides, solar stabilizer jacks, 16' Only 1 Share 2 swivel rockers. TV. panel, 10 gal water htr, awning. Like new! .vL Available Air cond. Gas stove & 14' awning, (2) 10-gal 541-419-0566 Economical flying refrigerator/freezer. propane tanks, 2 batts, in your own Microwave. Awning. catalytic htr in addition to COACHMAN IFR equipped Outside sho w er. central heating/AC, genFreelander2008 ,II I Cessna 172/160 HP for Triumph Da ytona 32' Class C, M-3150 Slide through stor- tly used, MAN™ V features! 1: only $13,500! New 2004, 15K m i l es, a ge, E a s y Lif t . Must see to appreciate! Pristine - just 23,390 Rexair 28-tt Garmin Touchscreen perfect bike, needs $29,000 new; $19,000. By owner (no miles! Efficient coach motorhome, 1991avionics center stack! nothing. Vin dealer calls, please). Call Asking $18,600 has Ford V10 Ideal for camping or Exceptionally clean! 541-4947-4605 or text 541-325-1956. ¹201536. w/Banks pwr pkg, Recreation by Design hunting, it has 45K Hangared at BDN. 14' slide, ducted furn/ 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft $4995 CHECK YOUR AD miles, a 460 gas enCall 541-728-0773 AC, flat screen TV, Top living room, 2 bdrm, Dream Car gine, new tires, au16' awning. No pets/ has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, AutoSales 916 tomatic levelers, entertainment center, smkg. 1 owner1801Division, Bend Onan generator, Trucks 8 a must see! $52,500. fireplace, W/D, DreamCarsBend.com king-size bed, aw541-548-4969 garden tub/shower, in 541-678-0240 Heavy Equipment ning. Nice condition great condition.$36,000 Dlr 3665 Sell or trade? $6700. or best offer. Call Peter, on the first day it runs Layton 27-ft, 2001 541-815-9939 307-221-2422, to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and Front & rear entry AILL DELIV/R human errors do ocNeed to get an doors, bath, shower, cur. If this happens to queen bed, slide-out, ad in ASAP? your ad, please conoven, microwave, air Peterbilt 359 p otable You can place it tact us ASAP so that Fleetwood D i scovery conditioning, patio water truck, 1 990, corrections and any 40' 2003, diesel moawning, twin proonline at: 3200 gal. tank, 5hp adjustments can be pane tanks, very torhome w/all www.bendbulletin.com pump, 4-3" hoses, Victory TC 2002, made to your ad. options-3 slide outs, nice, great floor plan, camlocks, $ 25,000. runs great, many 541-385-5809 $8895. 541-620-3724 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, accessories, new 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 541-316-1388 etc. 32,000 m i les. tires, under 40K 931 Wintered in h eated miles, well kept. Automotive Parts, shop. $64,900 O.B.O. $5000. 541-447-8664 908 Service & Accessories 541-771-0665 Aircraft, Parts (4) 235/65-17 Wintercat & Service 865 studded tires, like new, $400. 4 c hrome rims TIFFIN PHAETON QSH ATVs Fleetwood Prowler from 2002 Jeep Grand 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 32' - 2001 Orbit 21' 2007, used Cherokee, $100. 350hp diesel engine, only 6 times, A/C, 2 slides, ducted 541-280-0514 $125,900. 30,900 miles, oven, tub shower, heat & air, great G ulfstream S u n new Michelin tires, great micro, load leveler condition, snowbird sport 30' Class A (4) 235/65-R17 studded ready, Many up1986 new f r idge, cond! Dishwasher, w/d, hitch, awning, dual tires, good tread, central vac, roof satellite, batteries, sleeps 4-5, grade options, fi1/3 interest in Columbia TV, solar panel, new low miles, $375. aluminum wheels, 2 full nancing available! 400, $1 50,000 (located refrigerator, wheelEXCELLENT CON541-385-5663 Honda TRX 350 FE slide-thru basement trays @ Bend.) Also: SunriDITION. All acces$14,500 obo. chair lift. 4 0 00W & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 tow2006, 4 wheel drive, g enerator, 4 P205/75R-14 studded ver hangar available for G ood sories are included. electric start, electric condition! $12,500 bar and Even-Brake insale at $155K, or lease, snow tires on 115mm Call Dick, $14,511 OBO. GM wheels, used 2 mos, s hift, n e w tir e s , obo 541-447-5504 cluded. @ $400/mo. 541-480-1687. 541-382-9441 541-948-2963 $375. Bob, 541-548-4671 $2500, 541-960-8006. Call 541-977-4150 „
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Item Priced at: • Under $500 • $500 to $999 • $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over
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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 Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 16 2013 870
Ottcm couch se an and Excellent condi iorh t staihs > np tsars, "y ccmfonable. W $1600 cfferingas for only new,
$700 541-000-000
• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000 potential customers. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 15,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous Listing online, with photo, on bendbulletin.com
Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
C6 MONDAY DECEMB ER 16 2013 •THE BULLETIN I
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975
975
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Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
Looking for your next employee?
I
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e BOATS 8 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- RVs 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
Buick LaCrosse CXS 2005, loaded, new battery/tires, perfect $8495. 541-475-6794
931
933
935
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
4 P205/75R-15 studded t ires, 8 5 -90%
tread, asking $275. Bob, 541-548-4871 Avalanche Extreme studded tires on rims, 215/60R16, used 1 seas, gd cond $200. 541-604-0963 Les SchwabMud & Snow blackwall Murano P245/50/R-20 102T Observe G02, used 1 winter. Pd $1200. Will take reasonable offer. 541-306-4915
Corvette 1979
L82- 4 speed. Nissan Pathfinder SE 85,000 miles 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, Garaged since new. roof rack, moon roof, I've owned it 25 t ow pk g . , all o y years. Never damwheels. Vin¹722634 aged or abused. $12,988 $12,900. Dave, 541-350-4077
FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190
© s un mu
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
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GMC Sierra 1977 short bed, exlnt o r iginal cond., runs 8 drives Chevy Tahoe 2001 great. V8, new paint 5.3L V8, leather, and tires. $4750 obo. air, heated seats, 541-504-1050 fully loaded, 120K mi. III,'I $7500 obo 541-460-0494
Jeep CJS 1979, Original owner, 87k miles, only 3k on new Ford Bronco 114x4, 1989, 258 long block. Clutch auto, high miles, runs package, Warn hubs. good. $1700. Excellent runner, very 541-633-6662 dependable. Northman 6t/I' plow, Warn 6000¹ winch. $7900 or best reasonable offer. 541-549-6970 or 541-815-8105.
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport -4 LT
loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.
Say Rgoodbuye
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
fphoto for illustration only)
Ford FusionSE 2012, 4 Cyl., 2.5 Liter, auto, FWD, power seats, alloy wheels, Vin¹418211 $15,888
©
S UBA R U .
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
ExR E A
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Ford Windstar van, 1996, 1 owner, only 68,100 miles, new tires, always serviced, no smoking/ pets. Like new, $3950. 541-330-4344 or 541-420-6045
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Clean attd SmOO th
Replace your old trail bikeyott ahdfind thatAWESoiy!Enewride!
s1000oeo
Item Priced at: You r Total Ad Cost onl . • Under $500 $29 • $500 to $99rtt $39 • $1000 to $2499 $49 • $2500 and over $59
Includes up to 40 words oftext, 2" in length, with Chevy 1986, long bed, border,full color photo, bold headline andpdice. four spd., 350 V8 reServing CentralOregon since1903 built, custom paint, • The Bulletin, • The Cent ralOregonNickelAds 541-385-580ttt great t i r e s and • Central Oregon Marketplace e bendbulletin.com Some restrictions apply wheels, new t a g s, $5000 obo. 'Pilvatepartymerchandiseonly -excludespets8livestock,autos, Rvs,motorcycles,boats,airplanes,andgaragesale cottgor!es. 541-389-3026
The Bulletin
f
I
1-877-877-9392.
f
Serving Central Oregon sincetgln
Find It in The Bulletin ClassiBedsl 541-385-5809
Need help fixing stuff?
Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
1000
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE Arnold Irrigation District Board Member PositionsZones 1 and 2
sonfile.comR by
clicking on Public Works Projects" and then on "City of A petition was received Bend" or in perfor the position of Di- son at 1902 NE rector of Zone 1 from Be n d , J oyce Taylor. N o 4 th S t , other petitions were Oregon. Entities received. Therefore, intending to the Board of Direc- s ubmit a pro tors declared Joyce p O6al ShO u ld T aylor, Director of Zone 1 for a t hree register with the year term, commenc- Central O regon ing at the first board Builders Exmeeting in J anuary change a s a 2014 until th e f i rst planholder in orboard meeting of the der t o r e c e ive year 2017. No petitions were re- a ddenda. T his ceived at the District can b e don e o ffice for Z one 2 . o n-line o r by Since no p e t itions contacting Cenw ere received f o r Orego n Zone 2, Ray Kuratek t ral agreed to sit on the Builders Exboard for a n a dditional year. Ray Kuratek was appointed director for Zone 2 for a one year term beginning at the board meeting in January 2014 until th e f i rst b oard meeting i n January 2015.
p ractices, a n d
05 MTN BIKE
541-000-000
[ subject toFRAUD. For more informaf tion about an advertiser, you may call I the Oregon Statel Attorney General's I Office C o nsumer I f Protection hotline at
1000
al6 from q u alified firms to furnish and implement an i ntegrated En terprise Resource Planning
•
DriVe train Etttttttteit! A ttttgt Ride!
©
extra caution I I mends when p u r chasing • f products or servicesf from out of the area. f S ending c ash ,f checks, or credit in- x I formation may be I
Legal Notices
sealed propos-
o li runningmountain bike! FullSuspension, 15Uframe,Disc brakes,
©
I The Bulletin recoml
1000
that will support Bend'8 staff in t he delivery o f City of Bend services and activit ies, t a k e ad vantage of best
'
2003 6 speed, X50 fphoto for illustration only) 2010, 4 Cyl., 1.5 Liter, added power pkg., Subaru impreza WRX auto, FWD, 530 HP! Under 10k Limited 2006, 4 Cyl., Vin¹066953 Turbo, 2.5 liter, 5 spd, miles, Arctic silver, $8,888 gray leather interior, AWD, moon roof, rear S US A R U . spoiler, pre m i um new quality t ires, and battery, Bose wheels, Vin¹508150 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. premium sound ste$15,888 877-266-3821 reo, moon/sunroof, Dlr ¹0354 S UBA R U car and seat covers. NIRRRUOPRRRD.ODII Many extras. Ga- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. raged, perfect conAdvertise your car! 877-266-3821 dition $5 9 ,700. Add A Picture! Dlr ¹0354 Reach thousands of readers! 541-322-9647 Call 541N385-5809 Look at: The Bulletin Classifieds Bendhomes.com Porsche Carrera 911 for Complete Listings of 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, Area Real Estate for Sale new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with Subaru STi 2010, 18 mo factory war16.5K, rack, mats, cust ranty remaininq. snowwhls stored one$37,500. owner, $29,000, 541-322-6928 541.410.6904 Volkswagen Touareg 2004 The Bulletin's What are you Meticulously maintained. Very clean "Call A Service looking for? inside and out. V6. Professional" Directory You'll find it in Recently servicedis all about meeting 60 point inspection The Bulletin Classifieds sheet. $7900 your needs. Call 541-480-0097 Call on one of the 541-385-5809 professionals today!
Legal Notices
The City of Bend i6 acce p t ing
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The Bulletin Classifieds
1000
(ERP) System
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(photo forillustration only)
Toyota yaris Sedan
Legal Notices
(photo for illustration only)
933
541-410-8749
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
The Bulletin's Honda F i t S por t "Call A Service Hatchback 2009, 4 Cyl., VTEC, 1.5 Liter, Professional" Directory a uto, F WD , re a r spoiler, alloy wheels, is all about meeting yourneeds. Vin¹040086 $13,988 Call on one of the S UBA R U professionals today! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF BEND, Dlr ¹0354 OREGON Classic 1995 Jaguar XJ6/ Vanden Plas, $1900 obo. Request for 541-526-5854 Proposals Enterprise Resource Planning TURN THE PAGE (ERP) System For More Ads Solution The Bulletin Project ¹ IT14AA
I
VW Bug Sedan, 1969, fully restored, 2 owners, with 73,000 total miles, $10,000. 541-382-5127
runs good. $2000.
in ASAP?
503-358-1164.
Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597
3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, P/S, straight body,
SUS A R LL
®
BMW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $19,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not many M-Roadsters available. (See Craigslist posting id ¹4155624940 for additional details.) Serious inquiries only. 541-480-5348
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(photo forillustration only)
Nissan Altims Hybrid 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 Liter, auto, FWD, leather, rear spoiler, a lloy wheels, Vin¹102916 $12,988
®
® s um au
1966 Ford F250
Lincoln Zephyr 2006, V6, 29,000 miles, silver, It stone leather seats, good cond, priced to s ell, $9700. 541-549-2500
(photo tor illustration only)
Subaru Outback 2011 grey, 53k mi., I nternational Fla t Buick Skylark 1972 ¹339328 • $16,788 Matchless! 17K original Bed Pickup 1963, 1 miles! Sunburst yellow/ ton dually, 4 spd. white vinyl/Sandalwood. trans., great MPG, 15 factory options includ- could be exc. wood 541-598-3750 ing A/C. 'Sloan docu- hauler, runs great, www.aaaoregonautomentation." Quality re- new brakes, $1950. source.com paint. COMPLETELY ori- 541-419-5480. inal interior & trunk area PRISTINE). Enqine compartment is VERY MUCH Take care of original. No r ust, n o your investments leaks, evervthino works! $19,900. 541-323-1898 with the help from Chevy 1955 PROJECT The Bulletin's fphoto forillustration only) car. 2 door wgn, 350 Toyota RAV4 Sport "Call A Service small block w/Weiand 2007, 4 Cyl., 2.4 Liter, dual quad tunnel ram Professional" Directory auto, 4WD, tow pkg., with 450 Holleys. T-10 alloy wheels, r o of 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, rack, Vin¹066992 Weld Prostar wheels, $15,988 extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 (photo forillustration only) Dlr ¹0354 Toyota Tacoma Xtracab Pickup 2000, 4 975 Cyl., 2.7 liter, auto, Price Reduced! 4WD, tow pkg., alloy Automobiles Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 wheels, be d l i n er. engine, power every- Vin¹648820 thing, new paint, 54K $10,988 orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out.$7500 SUS A R LL obo. 541-480-3179 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Corvette Coupe Dlr ¹0354 1996, 350 auto, Nrj ce 935 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, Sport Utility Vehicles garaged/covered. GMC Yi ton 1971, Only Bose Premium Gold $19,700! Original low system. Orig. owner mile, exceptional, 3rd manual. Stock! owner. 951-699-7171 $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! Just too many 541-923-1781 collectibles'? BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K miles, premium package, heated lumbar Acura TL SH 2013 Sell them in supported seats, pan- AWD 4dr, tech. pkg, The Bulletin Classifieds oramic moo n roof, 15k mi. ¹001713 Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe$35,995 non headlights, tan & 541-385-5809 black leather interior, n ew front & re a r !• SERI brakes O 76K miles, 541-598-3750 one owner, all records, www.aaaoregonautovery clean, $16,900. source.com 541-388-4360
CLASSIC
Need to get an ad
Fax it to 541-322-7253
®
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993
$4000. 541-419-5575
Ford Supercab 1992, fphoto forillustration only) brown/tan color with Nissan Pathfinder SE Cadillac El Dorado I m atching full s i z e 1997, V6, auto, 4WD, 1994Total Cream Puff! roof rack, moon roof, Body, paint, trunk as c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 Lincoln LS 2001 4door over drive, 135K mi., running boards, alloy showroom, blue sport sedan, plus set full bench rear seat, wheels. Vin¹136692 leather, $1700 wheels of snow tires. $6000. $4,988 slide rear w i ndow, w/snow tires although 541-317-0324. car has not been wet in bucket seats, power S US ARu seats w/lumbar, pw, NIERRUOPEERD.OOII 8 years. On trip to HD receiver & trailer 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., brakes, good tires. $4800. 541-593-4016. 877-266-3821 Good cond i tion. Dlr ¹0354 $4900. 541-389-5341
932
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored 8 Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
fphoto for iltustrtttion only)
Subaru impreza OutJaguar XJS 1990, V-12 co n v ertible, back Sport Wagon auto, I m peccable 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 liter, 1996, 73k miles, cond., 56,600 mi., a uto, A WD , re a r Tiptronic auto. spoiler, roof rack, alblack w/ tan leather transmission. Silver, interior, tan top, A/C, loy wheels, blue leather interior, Vin¹824283 cruise, PS, PB, air moon/sunroof, new bag, Pirelli t i res, $16,888 quality tires and s ame owner 1 3 battery, car and seat S UBA RU years. $14 , 500. covers, many extras. NIEPRUOIENID.OOII Call Jeff Recently fully ser2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-410-0671 877-266-3821 viced, garaged, looks and runs like Dlr ¹0354 new. Excellent conThe Bulletin FIND IT! dition $29,700 To Subscribe call BIIV ITI 541-322-9647 541-385-5800 or go to SELL IT! www.bendbulletin.com Porsche 911 Turbo The Bulletin Classifieds
©
Buick Regal S Custom 1994, 6 1,752 mi., exc. cond., V6, 3.1 L, fuel injected, 4 dr., FWD, exc. all season tires, new battery and alternator, very clean, exc. a/c and heater, pb, pw and s t eering.
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
s ignificantly i m prove t h e effic iency an d e f fectiveness of Bend'6 administrative proce66es. The refor quest proposal, specifications, add enda, plan holders list, and notification of res ults f o r thi s p roject may b e viewed, p r inted o r o r dered o n line from Central Oregon Builders Exchange at http://www.plan-
change at: (541) 389-0123, F BX (541) 389-1549, o r email at a d -
min Oplanson-
file.com.
Pro -
posers
are
r esponsible f o r making sure they have a l l ad-
denda
b e f ore
s ubmitting
pro-
posals. A man-
datory p r e-submittal me e t ing w ill be h el d a t City Hall Council C hambers, 7 1 0 NW Wall Street, B end, Or e g o n
on:
Tu e sday,
January 7, 2014 at 10:00am Propo6816 will only
be
acc e pted
from a t tendees of this meeting. Teleconferenci ng details a r e i ncluded in t h e RFP. The deadline for s u bmit-
ting proposals is:
Thursday, January, 30, 2014 at 3:00pm. Proposa ls m u s t be p hysically received b y th e City at the location listed below by the deadline. No f a x e d or
electronic (email) proposals shall be
acc e p ted.
P roposals
re-
ceived after the above date and t ime, or i n a n y l ocation oth e r t han t h e Pu r chasing Division, will not be con-
sidered. Sealed proposals s h a ll be delivered to: Gwen Chapman,
Purchasing
M anager, Ci t y Hall, Administrative Office, 2nd f loor, 710 W a l l S treet, Be n d , Oregon 9 7 701. T he outside o f the envelope or box c o n taining
the
p r o posals 3. Late fee of five per- tion, or possession of cent (5%) for each payment received af-
controlled substances (ORS C hapter475); ter the 10th of any and/or (2) Was used and be marked: month: $2,156.21; 4. or intended for use in " Enterprise R e Trustee's Sale Guar- committing or faciliantee: $1, 2 36.00. tating the violation of, source Planning S UM O W IN G O N solicitation to violate, (ERP) System O BLIGATION SE - attempt to violate, or Solution CURED BY TRUST conspiracy to violate IT14AA" The DEED: $358,581.33. the criminal laws of City of Bend reNotice is given that the State of Oregon any person named regarding the manuserves the right pursuant to Section facture, distribution or 1) to reject any 86.753, Oregon Re- possession of c o nor all proposal vised Statutes, has trolled s u b stances not i n co m p li- the right to have the (ORS Chapter 475). ance with public foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the IN THE MATTER OF: s olicitation p r o trust deed reinstated cedures and reby cur i n g the (1) US Currency in quirements, 2) to above-described de- the am o un t of reject any or all faults, by payment of 1 ,555.00, Case N o proposals in acthe entire amount due 13-11069 seized June (other than such por- 5, 2013 from Krista c ordance wi t h tions of principal as Vela. ORS 279B.100, would not then be due 3) to cancel the had no default ocsolicitation if the LEGAL NOTICE curred), and by payCity finds it is the ing all costs and ex- NOTICE TO INTERpenses actually ESTED PERSONS. public interest to incurred in enforcing GINGER L. DURDANdo so, 4) to seek the obligation and SHAW has been apc larifications o f trust deed, together pointed Personal Repany or all proresentative of the ESw ith t rustee's a n d OF LEI posals, and 5) to attorney's fees, at any TATE time prior to five days DURDAN, Deceased, s elect th e p r o before the date last by the Circuit Court, posal which aps et fo r t h e sa l e . State of Oregon, Desp ears to be i n MARK G. REINECKE, chutes County, under the best interest Case Number Successor Trustee. of the City. 1 3PB0143. All p e rLEGAL NOTICE sons having a claim NOTICE OF SEIZURE against th e e s tate Gwen Chapman FOR CIVIL m ust p resent t h e Purchasing FORFEITURE TO ALL c laim w i t hi n fo u r Manager POTENTIAL months of th e f i rst CLAIMANTS AND TO 541-385-6677 publication date of this ALL UNKNOWN notice t o H e n drix, LEGAL NOTICE PERSONS READ THIS Brinich & B e r talan, NOTICE OF SALE CAREFULLY LLP, at 716 NW HarMark G. R e inecke, riman Street, Bend, Successor T r ustee If you have any inter- Oregon 97701, ATTN: under the Trust Deed est i n t h e s e i zed Lisa N. Bertalan, or d escribed bel o w , property d e scribed they may be barred. hereby elects to sell, below, you must claim Additional information pursuant to Oregon that interest or you will may be obtained from Revised Sta t utes automatically lose that the court records, the interest. If you do not Personal RepresentaSections 86.705 to 86.795, the real prop- file a claim for the tive or the followingerty described below property, the property named attorney for at 10:00 a.m. on Feb- may be forfeited even The Personal Repreruary 7, 2014, in the if you are not con- sentative. Date of first lobby of the offices of victed of any crime. publication: DecemB ryant, Lovlien & To claim an interest, ber 9, 2013. HENJarvis, 591 SW Mill you must file a written D RIX B RINICH & View Way, Bend, Or- claim with the forfei- BERTALAN, LLP, 716 egon. All obligations ture counsel named NW HAR R IMAN, of performance which below, The w r itten BEND, OR 9 7 701, are secured by the claim must be signed 541-382-4980. Trust Deed hereinaf- by you, sworn to unter described are in der penalty of perjury default for reasons set before a notary public, PUBLIC NOTICE forth below and the and state: (a) Your The Bend Park & Recbeneficiary declares true name; (b) The reation District Board all sums due under address at which you of Directors will meet the note secured by will a c cept f u ture in a work session and the trust deed d em ailings from t h e regular meeting on scribed herein imme- court and forfeiture Tuesday, December diately due and pay- counsel; and (3) A 17, 2013, at the Disable. G R A NTORS: s tatement that y o u trict Office, 799 SW Kris M. B ales and have an interest in the Columbia, Bend, OrKimberly A. B a les. seized property. Your egon. The work sesBENEFICIARY: Frank deadline for filing the sion will begin at 5:30 H. Baker, Trustee, claim document with p.m. Agenda items inFBO Century Devel- forfeiture cou n sel clude a report on the opment LLC Retire- named below is 21 Simpson Pavilion dement Trust Dated De- days from the last day sign and presentation c ember 17 , 2 0 0 2. of publication of this of a sample agreeT RUST DEED R E - notice. Where to file ment with f u nding CORDED: August 10, a claim and for more partners. A r e gular 2009, in Book 2009, i nformation: D a i n a business meeting will at page 34187, Offi- Vitolins, Crook County be conducted begincial Records, Des- District Attorney Of- ning at 7 :0 0 p . m. chutes County, Or- fice, 300 N E T hird Agenda items include egon. P R O PERTY Street, Prineville, OR c onsideration of a COVERED BY 97754. g round lease w i t h TRUST DEED: PARNotice of reasons for Bend FC Timbers and CEL 1 O F P A RTI- Forfeiture: The prop- consideration of apTION PLAT 2005-69, erty descnbed below proval of c onsiderDESCHUTES was seized for forfei- ation of SDC ResoluCOUNTY, OREGON. ture because it: (1) t ion No. 3 60. T h e DEFAULT: Failure to Constitutes the pro- agenda and meeting pay: 1. Unpaid princi- ceeds of the violation report for the Decempal in the amount of of, solicitation to vio- ber 17, 2013, meet$312,065.00. 2. late, attempt to vioing is posted on the Monthly interest-only late, or conspiracy to district's web s ite: payments i n the violates, the criminal www.bendparksanamount of $1,658.62 laws of the State of drec.org. For more from July 2011 to the Oregon regarding the information call manufacture, distribu541-706-6100. present: $43,124.12;
shall include the
proposers name