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SAFEWAY *MAXIMUM REWARD IS $1 PER GALLON AT SAFEWAY GAS STATIONS AND AT PARTICIPATING CHEVRON OR TEXACO STATIONS OF CHEVRON OR TEXACO BRANDED FUEL. CANNOT BE COMBINED WITH ANY
OTHER SAFEWAY GAS REWARDS OFFER.Points earned based on whole dollars spent at Safeway locations; cents are not counted (e.g., $5.25 spend = 5 points; 25II not counted). Points are redeemed in increments of 100. Different levels of gas Rewards are available based on points earned: 100 points = 10II per gallon Reward; 200 points = 20C per gallon Reward; 500 points = SOII per gallon Reward; 1000 points = $1 per gallon Reward. Rewards are available for use at participating Chevron and Texaco stations approximately 4 hours after earning them. See program brochure in store or on safeway.com for complete details. Points less than 100 expire at the end of the calendar month in which they were earned (For example, in January, points less than 100 expire at the end of January). Gas Rewards earned during each month can be used through the end of the following calendar month (For example, Rewards earned in January expire at the end of February). Savings are limited to no more than 25 gallons in a single fill-up, subject to rounding for in-store transactions or limits placed on your payment card by your financial institution which may be lower, and a limit of 1 vehicle per transaction. Rewards cannot be redeemed after pumping. Gas Rewards only apply to Chevron, Texaco and Safeway branded products. Eligible purchases exclude Beer, Wine & Spirits, Tobacco, US Postage Stamps, Gas Purchases and Services, Bus/Commuter Passes, Fishing/Gaming Licenses, Ski Tickets, Lottery Tickets, Gift Certificates, Money Orders, Event Tickets, Safeway Club Card Savings, Safeway Store Coupons, Sales Tax, Selected Gift Cards (American Express, PayPower, MasterCard, My Choice, Safeway, Visa, Only1 Visa, NetSpend and RE-loadit cards), Metro Passes or Tokens, Amusement Park Passes, All Fluid Items in the Refrigerated Dairy Section (including Fluid Dairy and Dairy Substitutes) and Redemption Value. Products may not be available in all stores. Different gift cards, prepaid cards and stored value cards ("Cards") have differentterms, restrictions, fees and rules ("Terms"), which are (except where prohibited by law) subject to change. See Cards and Card carriers for Terms. All trademarks are property of their respective owners and are used with permission. Program may be discontinued or changed at any time without notice. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ. Void or subject to restrictions based upon applicable law. Eligible Pharmacy purchases toward points include only out-of-pocket pharmacy prescription costs, including co-pays.
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Shop with your Safeway Club Card, earn Gas Reward Points*
For program details, go to Safeway.com. SPADEA ROP 1, P1
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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.50
SUNDAY November17, 201 3
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Prepsoccer:3 state champs
IN COUPONS INSIDE
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
Northwest Travel —wine
scheduled for completion in the next few years. Upgrades to Bend parks under a $29 million
St. Chares bracesfor Medicare cuts again
voter-approved bond will account for much of the construction. But hotels, apartments, schools, a
By Tara Bannow
and more in Woodinville.D1
MarS miSSian —An orbiter launching Monday will study the planet's atmosphere.A3
In addition to the proposed major upgrades to Bend's drinking water and sewer systems, bike lanes are being added and streetwork is being done, project by project, to comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act. But there's more. Bend has dozens ofhighly visible projects
The Bulletin
Plus: Black hole —Jets of
university, a college dorm and major road construction projects are also in the mix.
The second year of Medicare's system of rewarding or penalizing hospitals based on their quality of care has dealt yet another blow to St. Charles Health System. Both St. Charles Bend and St. Charles Redmond will for the second year in a row see decreased Medicare payments for inpatient stays through September 2014. Medicare's Value-based Purchasing Program, a component of the Affordable Care Act that seeks to shift health care spending away from quantity and toward quality, bases its findings on 24 measures ofeffectivecare and patient satisfaction and — starting this year — death rates. St. Charles Bend will see 0.4 percent less payment from Medicare on its annua1$72 million, or about $289,000. St. Charles Redmond will see $42,000 less on its $12 million annual payment, a decrease of 0.35 percent. The cuts took effect Oct. 1. "Those numbers come right off of our bottom line," said Karen Shepard, St. Charles' chief financial officer. "That's money that is gone from our community now." SeeSt. Charles/A4
matter may help solve a longtime mystery.A3
Lookingforward Backyard chickens — Many are abandoned after they quit producing eggs.A6
Projects scheduled to be completed in the next fewyears
Riley RanchNature Reserve $3.74M, spring 2016
River rail projects $2.7 M, summer 2016
• Education• Infrastructure• Recreation• Commercial
Pine Nursery Phase
Trail extension•
The next generation
$7.58M, summer 2015
— New consoles offer much more than just games.E1
rail extensi n, footbridg
OK to kill cyclists?Penalties are often light.F1
Race jn America —NYG
• Sage Springs Apartments
mayor-elect's marriage highlights changing attitudes.A6
Trail ension
And a Wed exclusive-
• COCC dorm
How does a Secret Service agentmanage to leave behind a bullet in a hotel room?
$22M, fall 2015
bendbugetin.com/extras Bend-La Pine middle school
EDITOR'SCHOICE
rail xte sion Trail etens
GalvestonAvenue Project $TBD, TBD
$TBD, fall 2015
Trail extension gk l < Q~ g oforadogam safe passage resurfacing $735M, fall 2515 Pavilion ll ioe dnk+b $3 5M 73rd
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Hampton • inn 8 Suites
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OSU Ca cades
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$TBD, fall 2015
By Maria Recio
A sp Hei s ap tme
McClatchy Washington Bureau
WASHINGTON — Who killed JFK? Fiftyyears after the slaying of the nation's 35th president, that's still a provocative question for many. Conspiracy theories began swirling almost immediately after
Footbri e
• • Bend- a Pine elemrIntary $2.6Q, fall 2015
Health care website goal: 80 percent successrate
Murphy oa / ThirdSt e roject $25M, f 15
@aPhfC president John Oll A5
F.K e n nedy's assassination in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, and have never really stopped. A spate of new books reexamining that moment in anticipation of the 50th anniversary has revived some theories, tried to squelch others and found intriguing new details ofbotched investigations or deliberate concealment by authorities. There's a ready audience: Sixty-one percent of the American people believe that Lee Harvey Oswald did not act alone in killing the president, according to the most recent Gallup poll, released Friday. While the percentage is the lowest since the late 1960s, it confirms the public's ongoing doubts about the "lone gunman" theory. The likely conspirators? The poll found that 13 percent believe the Mafia and 13 percent think the federal government was involved; 7 percent named the CIA; 5 percent each believe Cuban leader Fidel Castro, "special interests" and political groups were responsible; the Ku Klux Klan, then-Vice President Lyndon Johnson and the Soviet Union each drew 3 percent. S00 JFK/A5
By Amy Goldstein and Juliet Eilperin
Bend's iIuildingpermits areredounding,too
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — As many as one in five Americans who want health-care plans through the new federal insurance marketplace may be unable to sign up online even if the Obama administration meets a Nov. 30 deadline for fixing the website, according to government and industry officials familiar with the project. Under the administration's best-case scenario, many Americans will not succeed in purchasing insurance online, whether because their personal cases are too complicated or simply because the website remains defective, according to an internal target that administration officials have not made public. SeeWebsite /A4
These maps show commercial and residential building permits that have been filed with the city, by year, from 2000, through the recession, and to October of this year. A red dot indicates a single permit; other colors represent clusters.
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But notall ofBend'sduildingnewsis rosy A National Association of Realtors report forecasts flattening home sales next year, citing still tight lending standards, rising interest rates and low inventory. Opinion on the Central Oregon market varies, with most real estate officials saying a minor slowdown has already begun, and some are worried there could be a moderate to severe downturn.Story in Sunday Business, E1
TODAY'S WEATHER Cloudy High 45, Low 30
Page CB
INDEX
The Bulletin
Business/Stocks Et-6 Community Life Df -8 Milestones D2 Pu zzles D6 B1-6 Calendar C2 Crosswords D6, G2 Obituaries C6 Sp o rts Classified Gt - 6 L ocal/State C f -8 Opinion/Books Ft-6 TV/Movies D8
Vol. 110, No. 321, 48 pages,
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Weu serecycfed newsprint
AnIndependent Newspaper
7 sections
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A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
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OUR ADDRESS Street
TYPHOON HAIYAN
MadlCBI daVICSS —Federal health officials say that defects in
s re ie ours in, rura areassi su er
Geithner'S neW jud —Timothy Geithner will join the private
some Medtronic devices used in heart procedures are severe enough that they could cause serious injury or death. The warning covers about 15,000 recalled guidewires, which are inserted through an artery and used to guide other devices into place, such as stents to hold open blocked arteries. A recall of the guidewires began Oct. 21 after Medtronic received reports of four complaints, including one patient who went into cardiac arrest but was resuscitated, company spokesman Joseph McGrath said Saturday. equity firm Warburg Pincus as president, the firm announced Saturday, the former Treasury secretary's first new prominent position since leaving office this year. The unusually low-key announcement — made with little fanfare on a Saturday morning — is Geithner's first foray into the private sector in 25 years, after serving in the Treasury Department, the lnternational Monetary Fund and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He is expected to start March 1.
By Andrew Jacobs New Yorh Times News Service
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.powerball.com and www.oregonlottery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
Q to Q29Q 37Q 44 Q 59 I The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
10Q 24 Q 32Q 43 Q 48 Q5Q The estimated jackpot is now $5.5 million.
QUINAPONDAN, P h i l ippines — Day after day, the mayor of this storm-shattered town m akes t h e t w o -hour drive past flattened villages and splintered palm groves to the nearest functioning airport, where he begs for provisions from those who run the relief supply staging area for eastern Samar Island. "My people are starving," he tells the government workers, whose requisition notebooks do not favor this rural flyspeck, population 16,525. "Yesterday someone died of hunger." After days of logistical logjams and transportation paralysis, relief supplies have begun pouring into the ravaged midsection of this island nation, with U.S. Osprey aircraft and C-130 cargo planes delivering pallets of rice and water to the airports in Tacloban, on Leyte Island to the west, and Guiuan, also here on Samar Island. International relief organizations have been fanning out in earnest across the disaster zone. According to UNICEF, 13 million people have been affected by the typhoon. The U.S. Navy says that aircraftfrom the carrier George W ashington have flown 7 7 sorties and delivered 11 tons of water and medical supplies since it arrived off the eastern coast of Samar on Thursday. Once on the ground, most of the aid is distributed by Phil-
RuSSIBll GPS —In recent months, the CIA and the Pentagon have been waging a bureaucratic turf war to stop the State Department from allowing Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, to build about half a dozen seemingly innocuous structures, called monitor stations, on U.S. soil, several U.S. officials said. They fear that these structures could help Russia spy on the United States and improve the precision of Russian weaponry, the officials said. These stations, the Russians contend, would significantly improve the accuracy and reliability of Moscow's version of the Global Positioning System. Sergey Ponomarev/ New York Times News Service
Climate farum —Following a devastating typhoon that killed
A man carries water Saturday in Tanauan, near Tacloban, Philippines, Nov. 16, 2013. The overwhelming destruction here has raised questions about where the survivors will be housed. ippine officials to cities across Leyte and S a mar I s lands, mostly by helicopter. But while hard-hit urban areas are finally getting adequate supplies to stave off hunger and thirst, the region's rural hinterland has been largely left to fend for itself in the week since Typhoon Haiyan barreled through with winds up to 190 mph. Perhaps most desperate are the far-flung islets whose residents, isolated from the country's main islands, already live from hand-to-mouth. On Saturday, members of a U.S. medical team touched down in Homonhon, a fishing island of 1,500 that was the first to bear the full brunt of Haiyan as it swept west.
thousands in the Philippines, a routine international climate change conference in Warsaw, Poland, turned into an emotional forum, with developing countries demanding compensation from the worst polluting countries for damage they say they are already suffering. Some have argued that wealthy countries need to create a huge pool of money to help poorer countries recover from the seemingly inevitable losses of the tangible and intangible, like destroyed traditions. Others have suggested a sort of insurance program. The United States and other rich countries have made their opposition to large-scale compensation clear. Meanwhile, global emissions continue to rise.
Margaret Aguirre, communications director for the team, from the International Medical Corps, said it was the first help the residents had received since the storm struck. "They were i n d e sperate shape," she said, describing a range of untreated injuries and diseases, mostly advanced infections and ailments from a week of living unsheltered in the elements. In Q uinapondan, m o s t people have been surviving on coconuts and camote, a Philippine sweet potato that residents have been diggingup from their waterlogged fields. "Camote is very nutritious but it's not enough," the vice mayor, Rosula Sablo Mambulao, 58, said with a weak smile.
Syrian Civil war —Syrian government forces have recently ousted rebels from a string of suburbs outside Damascus, Syria, threatening their yearlong control of territory south of the capital city, cutting supply lines and surrounding strongholds that one fighter called their "last castle" in the area. These recent battlefield successes — allowing the government to threaten rebel strongholds in and around Syria's two main cities — prompted Syria's prime minister, Wael al-Halqi, to declare Thursday that the government was heading for an "astounding victory." Yet early declarations of victory may be premature, as has been the case manytimes with both sides in this 2i/s-year-old civil war.
BerluSCOni SChiSm —Silvio Berlusconi's center-right political movement, a powerful force in Italy, split Saturday, dealing another blow to the former prime minister as Italian lawmakers prepare for a final vote this month on whether to expel him from the Senate. The breakaway group was led by Berlusconi's longtime protege, Angelino Alfano, who announced that he and other former lieutenants would refuse to join the rebranded political party, Forza Italia (or Go Italy), that Berlusconi unveiled Saturday.
Deadly bombstrikes KabLIInear where elderswill debate security pact By Azam Ahmed and Jawad Sukhanyar New Yorh Times News Service
KABUL, Afghanistan — A powerful car bomb that exploded near the site where Afghan elders are set to vote on a longterm security agreement with the United States killed at least 10 people Saturday, rattling central Kabul and underscoring the insurgency's desire to prevent a U.S. presence in Afghanistan beyond 2014. The bomb exploded shortly after 3 p.m. near the gates of Kabul Educational University, as students and pedestrians were filtering through the area, police officials said. An Afghan army Humvee patrolling the area was also struck, killing at least one soldier and wounding three others, according to witnesses and the spokesman for the Afghan Ministry of Defense. As th e a r e a i s c l eared, more bodies are likely to be uncovered. The scene around the gates of the school was one of devastation. More than a dozen cars were destroyed in the blast, which leveled structures and pulverized bystanders, leaving shattered glass, blood and pieces of flesh covering the ground. The attack occurred at a police checkpoint on the way to the university, which is near a major transportation hub. A large bus filled with people was shredded in the blast. "Students and s choolgirls were passing," said Dr. Ghulam Sarwar Zohair, an employee of a nongovernmental organization with offices nearby. "Lots of people got injured and probably killed." The gate of the university is just a few hundred yards from the site where elders and other important Afghans have assembled to vote on the security agreement between Afghanistan and the United States on Thursday. The approval of the pact by the assembly, known as a loya jirga, is a vital step toward allowing U.S. forces to remain in the country and continue training the Afghan army. "We believe it was meant to bring disorder before we convene the jirga," said a spokesman for the loya jirga, Abdul
Khaliq Hussain Pashayee."We are hopeful and expect Afghan security forces to provide a better security environment for the representatives of the people who will be meeting next week." Violence has been somewhat muted in Kabul in recent months. A spate of major attacks on the capital early in the summer, including one that killed at least nine people, gave way to an uneasy silence. The Afghan Security Forces have been on high alert in the days before the vote. Soldiers and police officers have been
RuSSianmanhunt —Ending a nearly monthlong manhunt, securityforces killed the husband of a suicide bomber who blew up a public bus last month in the city of Volgograd, Russian officials said Saturday. Officials said the husband, Dmitry Sokolov, 21, was killed, along with four others identified as rebels, by security forces in Dagestan, aviolence-plagued republic in the North Caucasus. The bus bomber, Naida Asiyalova, blew herself up on a crowded bus in the center of Volgograd, killing six other passengers. Russian officials said that anti-terrorism forces found Sokolov and the four others just outside Makhachkala, where they engaged in a standoff. All five men were shot and killed, officials said.
searching the area surrounding the site in recent weeks, demanding documentation and ownership papers from people in households in the vicinity. The bombing Saturday was a major blow to efforts to protect a significant symbol of the country's fledgling democracy. About 2,500 people are expected to convene next week for the jirga, supported by President Hamid Karzai. The Taliban, which did not immediately take responsibility for the attack, have been vehement in their opposition to the security pact.
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Santa ClauS prateSt —Demonstrators are gathering in Amsterdam to protest the arrival of the Dutch equivalent of Santa Claus, not because of any dislike of the children's festival but because of his clownish servant "Black Pete." Opponents say the figure, who wears blackface makeup, red lipstick and a frizzy "Afro" wig, is a racist caricature and either he should be abolished or altered. But the large majority of Dutch people feel that there is no racial insult intended by Black Pete, and he is a positive figure of fun. In the Dutch celebration, St. Nicholas lives in Spain, and arrives amid fanfare this weekend by steamboat, accompanied by hordes of "Petes" The festivities culminate in a night of gift-giving and poems on Dec. 5. — From wire reports
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REALTOR
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
M ART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, Nov. 17, the 321st day of 2013. There are 44 days left in the year.
SCIENCE
DISCOVERY
Scientists find black hole spewing iron, nickel in jets
HAPPENINGS EISCtlOll — Chile goes to the polls to choose a president.
HISTORY
By Deborah Netburn
from the black hole and into the universe. Others thought LOS ANGELES — Has a the jets were made of much black hole mystery just been heavier normal matter. "Until now, it wasn't clear solved? Writing i n t h e j o u r n al whether the positive charge Nature, a team of scientists came from positrons, the antisaid it found traces of nickel matter 'opposite' of electrons, and iron in the powerful jets or positively charged atoms," shooting out of black hole study coauthor James Millercandidate 4U 1630-47, a small Jones of th e I n ternational black hole just a few times the Center for Radio Astronomy mass of our sun. It may help Research said in a statement. solve a scientific puzzle that "Since ou r r e sults f o und has lingered for decades. nickel and iron in these jets, Astronomers have known we now know that ordinary for years that hyper-dense matter must be providing the black holes shoot matter into positive charge." the universe in high-speed Because it takes a lot more streams known as relativistic energy to move normal matjets. However, nobody knew ter than it would to move the exactly what type of material l ightweight e lectrons a n d the jets were spewing. positrons, the authors sug"It was one of the unsolved gests that the high-speed jets questions about relativistic are carrying more energy jets produced in the vicinity away from the black hole ofblack holes," said Avi Loeb, than was previously known. chair of the department of The study also sheds light astronomy at Harvard Union another scientific debate versity, who was not involved exactly where the j ets with the study. "What is their emerge from. It h a s been composition?" unclear whether the jets are Everyone was i n a g ree- caused by the spin of the roment that the jets would con- tating black hole, or if they tain electrons, which have originate from the disk of a negative charge. But the matter that surrounds the jets did not have a negative black hole. "Our results suggest it's charge overall. That s u ggested there was something more likely the disk is reelse in there with a positive sponsible for channeling the charge that canceled it out. matter into the jets, and we In addition, some models are planning further obserof the jets suggested they vations to try and confirm were shooting l i ghtweight this," Miller-Jones said in the electrons and positrons away statement. Los Angeles Times
Highlight:In1800, Congress held its first session in Washington in the partially completed Capitol building. In1558, Elizabeth I acceded to the English throne upon the death of Queen Mary. In1869,the Suez Canal opened
in Egypt. In1911, the African-American fraternity Omega Psi Phi was founded at Howard University in Washington, D.C. In1934, Lyndon Baines Johnson married Claudia Alta Taylor, better known as Lady Bird, in San Antonio, Texas. In1962, Washington's Dulles International Airport was dedicated by President John F. Ken-
The spacecraft known as Maven will study Mars'atmosphere and how ithas changed.
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nedy. In1969,the first round of Strategic Arms Limitation Talks between the United States and the Soviet Union opened in Helsinki, Finland. In1970,the Soviet Union landedan unmanned, remotecontrolled vehicle on the moon, the Lunokhod 1. In1973, President Richard Nixon told Associated Press managing editors in Orlando, Fla.: "People have got to know whether or not their president is a crook. Well, I'm not a crook." In1979, Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini ordered the release of 13 black and/or female American hostages being held at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. In1987,a federal jury in Denver convicted two neo-Nazisand acquitted two others of civil rights violations in the1984 slaying of radio talk show host Alan Berg. In2000, the Florida Supreme Court froze the state's presidential tally, forbidding Secretary of State Katherine Harris from certifying results of the marathon vote count just as Republican George W. Bush was advancing his minuscule lead over Democrat Al Gore. Also, afederal appeals court refused to block recounts under way in two heavily Democratic counties.
Ten yearsago:John Allen Muhammad was convicted of two counts of capital murder in the Washington-area sniper shootings. Arnold Schwarzenegger was sworn in as the 38th governor of California. Rush Limbaugh returned to radio after five weeks of rehabilitation for a painkiller addiction.
Five yearsago:Intheir first meeting since the election, Barack Obama and former rival John McCain met at the president-elect's transition headquarters in Chicago, where they pledged to worktogether on ways to change Washington's "bad habits."
One yearago:Workers using jackhammersbegan opening the concrete-encased grave of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in the West Bank so that investigators could checkfor a radioactive substance, polonium-210, as part of a probe into whether he had been poisoned before his death in 2004. A speeding train crashed into a bus carrying Egyptian children to their kindergarten, killing 48 children and three adults. On the fourth day of an Israeli offensive targeting militants in Gaza, the White House defended Israel's right to defend itself against rocket fire. Israel broadened its offensive, destroying the headquarters of Hamas' prime minister.
BIRTHDAYS Sen. James lnhofe, R-Okla., is 79. Movie director Martin Scorsese is 71. Actor-director Danny DeVito is 69. "Saturday Night Live" producer Lorne Michaels is 69. Former Democratic National Chairman Howard Dean is 65. House Speaker John Boehner is 64. Actor Stephen Root is 62. Entertainer RuPaul is 53. U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice is 49. — From wire reports
John Raouxl The AssociatedPress
Technicians work on NASA's next Mars-bound spacecraft, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution — known as Maven — at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. The robotic explorer is scheduled to blast off Monday. By Marcia Dunn
craft — as long as a school bus and as hefty as a 5,400CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. pound SUV — will dip as low — NASA hopes its newest as 78 miles above the surface Mars spacecraft lives up to its for atmospheric sampling, and know-it-all name. its orbit will stretch as high as The robotic explorer called 3,864 miles. Maven is due to blast off MonUnderstanding the makeup day on a 10-month journey to and dynamics of Mars' presthe red planet. There, it will ent atmosphere will help guide orbit Mars and study the at- h umans more safely to t h e mosphere to try to understand planet's surface, especially if how the planet morphed from the ship takes advantage of warm and wet to cold and dry. the atmosphere for braking, "A maven is a trusted exJakosky said. NASA targets pert," noted NASA's space sci- the 2030s for the first manned ence chief, John Grunsfeld. Ma- expedition. ven will help scientists "build a The spacecraft also holds story of the Mars atmosphere an antenna and radio to serve and help future human explor- as a communications relay for NASA's two active Martian ers who journey to Mars." The $671 million mission is rovers, Curiosity and OpportuNASA's 21st crack at Earth's nity, as well as the next pair of most enticing neighbor, com- landers to be launched in 2016 ing on the heels of the Curiosity and 2020. rover, still rolling strong a year Maven is considered so imafter its grand Martian arrival. portant that launch preparaWhen Maven reaches Mars tions were allowed to resume next September, it w ill j o in a coupleof days after the start three functioning spacecraft, of the 16-day government shuttwo U.S. and one European. down. Maven has one month An Indian orbiter also will be to launch; Earth and Mars line arriving about the same time. up only every 26 months. So Maven will be the 10th orbiter if Maven isn't flying by mid to to be launched to Mars by late December, the spacecraft NASA; three have failed, tes- will be grounded until the betimony to the difficulty of the ginning of 2016. task. The red planet is a notori"No other planet, other than ously tricky target. The world's perhaps Earth, has held the overall success rate since the attention of people around the 1960s for a Mars mission is less world than Mars," Grunsfeld than 50-50. said. NASA has attempted the Early Mars had an atmo- most, 20 launches so far, and sphere thick enough to hold wa- has the best success rate: 70 ter and moist clouds, said chief percent. Russia, i n s e cond investigator Bruce Jakosky of place with 18 Mars launches, the University of Colorado's has a dismal 14percent success Laboratory for A t mospheric rate. China collaborated on one and Space Physics in Boulder. of the Russian flops. Europe Indeed, water flowed once and Japan haveattempted one upon a time on Mars, and mi- Martian mission apiece; the crobial life might have existed. European Mars Express has "But somehow that atmohad mixed results, while the sphere changed over time to Japaneseeffortfizzled. "We're never a success until the cold, dry environment that we see today," Jakosky said. we're at Mars and we're taking "What we don't know is what data and getting the science the driver of that change has that these folks envisioned been." back in 2003," when the idea Maven — short for M a rs arose, observed NASA project Atmosphere and Volatile Evo- manager David Mitchell. lution — is the first spacecraft There's also a lighter side to devoted entirely t o s t u d y- Maven. Attached to one of its ing Mars' upper atmosphere. solar wings is a DVD containIndia's orbiter will also study ing more than 100,000 names the atmosphere but go a step submitted by the public earlier further, seekingout methane, a this year, as well as more than possible indicator of life. 1,000 Japanese-style haiku Scientists theorize that some verses, also penned by the pubof the early atmospheric water lic, and 377 student art contest and carbon dioxide went down entries. into the crust of the Martian The Maven team liked this surface — thereis evidence of haiku from a n a n onymous carbonate minerals on Mars. contributor: "Amidst sand and stars/We Gases also may have gone up and become lost to space, scan a lifeless planet/To escape stripped away by the sun, mol- its fate." ecule by molecule, Jakosky But this haiku was the No. said. I public vote-getter, submitted Maven holds eight scientific by British blogger Benedict instruments to measure the up- Smith: "It's funny, theynamed/Mars per atmosphere for an entire Earth year — half a Martian after the God of War/Have a year. The boxy, solar-winged look at Earth." The Associated Press
To come to these conclusions, the researchers looked at radio waves and X-rays that were emitted by black hole 4U 1630-47. The first time they looked, the radio wave spectrum suggested the jets were not on, and the X-ray spectrum did not reveal anythingunusual. "The jets are not always on," Miller-Jones told the Los Angeles Times. "It depends a little bit on how fast the black hole is feeding." But the second time the team looked, the radio waves seemed to indicate the jets were on. At the same time, the X-ray spectrum picked up the characteristic signature of iron and nickel that was off just a bit. The scientists believe the signatures w e r e sl i g htly skewed because of a Dopplerlike effect in space. "Just like a sound wave gets higher as it moves tow ard you and lower as i t moves away from you, we saw the same effect," MillerJones said. "The energy was shifted a little bit to higher energies when it was moving toward us, and lower when it was moving away from us." One especially cool result of this effect is that it allowed the researchersto determine how fast the material in the jets were moving. Their finding? A w h opping 123,000 miles per second, or about 66 percent of the speed of light.
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Website
The meaning o f s u ccess was defined for the first time Continued from A1 during the panicky days of The measure, which is the October, when White House first concrete performance officials belatedly recognized standard since the governthat the federal exchange had ment began to design the sysserious software and hardtem, was defined by a group ware defects. of federal health officials and A t a meeting late in t h e technical experts in late Ocmonth at CGI Federal's offices tober and is now guiding the in Herndon, Va., White House work of hundreds of governpresidential i n novation f e lment employees and contraclows assigned to help repair tors racing to try to repair the the exchange presented estibalky website. Paul Sancya/The AssociatedPress mates of how quickly people The goal is that 80 percent Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius' shadow would need to get from one of people going to HealthCare. is visible as she speaks about HealthCare.gov at the Community Web page to the next in order gov should manage to enroll Health and Social Services Center in Detroit on Friday. to reach the 80 percent goal, electronically, but that means according to a government ofmany others will be unable to ficial familiar with the discusget in. w as granted anonymity t o when more than 20,000 to sion. They calculated that the Whether the g overnment speak about matters that are 30,000 people — about half the system would need an error meets the benchmark — and not public. intended capacity — try to use rate of less than I percent and whether the public regards it it at the same time. a typical wait time of no more as adequate — will be a cen- 'Vast majority' According to a government than 500 milliseconds — half a tral factor in President Barack To assess progress toward official familiar with the new second — no matter what part Obama's efforts to i ncrease the goal, administration offitarget, the 20 percent who are of the website they were on. support for the controversial cials have developed two new unlikely to be able to enroll The metrics were written health-care law and lure cus- measurements, appearing in online are expected to fall into on a wall, according to an intomers to the federal insur- reports generated each morn- three groups: people whose dustry official familiar with ance marketplace. It puts more ing, that show how long con- family circumstances are so the meeting. Officials from the pressure on the administra- sumers must wait for pages to complicated that the website Medicare and Medicaid cention to fix technical problems load on HealthCare.gov and cannot determine their eligi- ter "later came into the room, that have made it difficult for how often they get error mes- bility for subsidies to help pay heads nodded, and the CMS people to sign up for coverage sages, government and indus- for health plans; people un- team rallied around the meaby other routes, including fed- try officials said. comfortable buying insurance sures," said the official, who The "vast majority" phrase on a computer; and people spoke on condition of anoerally sponsored call centers and insurers themselves. has been invoked repeatedly who encounter technical prob- nymity to describe a private Administration officials ac- by Obama, Zients and other lems on the website. meeting. knowledge that until recently, administration officials, with The n e w per f o rmance Benchmarks they had no concrete defini- little explanation of what it measures address how easily tion for how well HealthCare. means. In a news conference Until last month, no con- consumers should be able to gov should work, but t h ey Thursday, while apologizing c rete p e r f ormance m e a - progress through the website. say one would not have made for the health-care law's rollsures had been developed for But there are still no concrete sense before the site went live out problems, Obama omitted HealthCare.gov, the first-ever goals forthe site's accuracy, on Oct. I. the word "vast," saying that government computer system including whether users are "We are very focused on "the majority of people who for consumers to buy private correctly informed if they are measuring p erformance of use it will be able to see it op- insurance, several o f f icials eligible for federal help in paythe site now and moving for- erate the way it was supposed confirmed. ing for health plans or whether "Many asked about bench- insurance companies are givward and making sure we to have ways t o d e monstrate Zients, however, revived the marks," said a senior admin- en correct information about progress," said Julie Bataille, "vast majority" phrase in com- istration official who spoke their new customers. communications director for ments to reporters the next on the condition of anonymity Bataille, the Medicare and the Center for Medicare and day, adding that "most users because of the topic's sensitiv- Medicaid center communicaMedicaid Services, a branch will be able to navigate the ity. But there was "no schedule tions director, said that focusof the Department of Health marketplace from account cre- of them." ing on improving the system's and Human Services with re- ation, through the application, When HHS in 2011 invit- performance " will m ak e a sponsibility for the insurance all the way to enrollment." ed contractors to bid on the difference for consumer exexchange. "That is a focus of But Zients also said that chance to build HealthCare. p erience and a c curacy o f "new bugs and other glitches gov, the department's "state- transactions." the team that is in place now." The internal 80 percent tar- will su rface" i n D e cember ment of work" did not include Administration offi c i als get is the basis of a promise a nd beyond that an d w i l l requirements typical of many have talked publicly in recent that has become an admin- need to be fixed. Even if the IT contracts in which inter- days about one of the meaistration mantra i n r e c ent site works well, he said, "that ested companies must spell sures: a reduction in errors weeks: HealthCare.gov will doesn't mean that the site will out how the system would per- that freeze Web pages or oth"work smoothly for the vast be sufficient for 100 percent of form, according to an indus- erwise hinder the ability to majority of users" by the end users or consumers to use for try representative close to the sign up for insurance. They of November. enrollment." project, who spoke on the con- have said the error rate has The catchphrase was coined The Washington Post redition of anonymity in order to dropped from up to 6 percent a by former presidential man- ported last week that the fed- speak frankly. The agreement week ago to less than one peragement official Jeffrey Zients eral exchange is unlikely to be that CGI Federal, the company cent now. "That is something we need shortly after the White House working fullyby the end of the chosen as the main contractor, assigned him to oversee the month. The uncertainty over signed on Sept. 30, 2011, also to continue to drive lower," Bawebsite's repairs, according the site's future performance did not contain specific perfor- taille said. "We need to have to a government official with stems from the fact that it is mance criteria, success mea- lower errorrates.We need to knowledge of the project who currently malf u n ctioning sures or response times. have a fast site." '
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St. Charles Continued from A1 For the Bend campus, the cut was 0.15 percent worse than last year's penalty, which came to nearly $183,000. For Redmond, which was dealt a roughly $65,000 cut last year, it was slightly less painful. The Central Oregon hospitals were among 1,451 hospitals in the country that will be paid less for the Medicare patients they see due to penalties under the Value-based Purchasing Program, a number that's up slightly from last year, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis. Another 1,231 hospitals will see bonuses under the program, down from more than 1,500 last year. The data the Centers for Medicare 8Medicaid Services released last week included the amount of penalties or bonuses to hospitals, but the actual breakdowns of how they scored on various quality measures won't be available until December, Donald McLeod, CMS spokesperson, wrote in an email to The Bulletin. A notice on Hospital Compare, the website where CMS publicly reports its qualitymeasures, said it won't be updated until Dec. 12 due to the federal government shutdown. If not for the shutdown, the notice said it would have been updat-
ed in October. St. Charles leaders said they've made progress since last year in the areas in which CMS measures quality, such as improving quick responses to heart attack patients, for example. As of July 2013, 80 percent of heart attack patients admitted to St. Charles Bend were given coronary interventions within 90 minutes of arrival, up from 78 percent in the 20112012 Health Compare data. According to the 2011-2012 data, the national average at that time was 94 percent. The percentage of heart surgerypatients given a beta blocker just before and after surgery increased to 95 percent on the Bend campus and 100 percent in Redmond as of July 2013, up from 80 percent in Bend and 71 percent in Redmond, according to the 2011-2012 data. The national average was 97 percent in 2012. Pam Steinke, St. Charles' vice president of quality and chief nurse executive, said the hospitals underwent a process improvement to identify those patients, including implementing a checklist post-discharge to validate whether they did or did not need the beta blockers. Sometimes, CMS counts as non-compliant people who didn't receive beta blockers even if they weren't supposed to get them, so doctors now al-
ways indicate whether the patient should have them. The percentage of heart failure patients given discharge instructions on howto take care of themselves fell to 67 percent on the Bend campus andjumped to 100 percent on the Redmond campus as of July 2013 compared with 86 percent in Bend and 84percent in Redmond the previous year. The national average in that category was 93 percent in 2012. With respect to patient satisfaction, the p roportion of patients who said their doctors and nurses communicated well with them stayed relatively the same. The percentage of patients who said their medications were explained well to them dropped in Bend from 62 to 58 as of September 2013. The problem with the Valuebased Purchasing Program is that it doesn't account for the cost of services, and thus penalizes Oregon hospitals that have done a lot of work around providing more efficient care, Shepard said. "There's a h uge i nequity across the country where, say, Florida and a lot of the East Coast gets paid higher than we get paid on the West Coast because we cut costs out a long time agoand we've been penalized for that," she said."So they get a lot more money for being inefficient."
In fracas onhealth coverage, Dems feelexposed law's m i nimum c o verage requirements. Republicans CONCORD, N.H. — The found their voice. Democrats awards ceremony F r iday lost theirs. The polling gap e vening for N e w H a m p - closed, and Republican walshire's police forces was full lets opened. The National of pomp, circumstance, ofRepublican Senatorial Comficers in dress uniforms and mittee raised $3.8 million a show of support from the in October, its best monthly state's ful l c o n g ressional showing of the year. delegation. N ew H a mpshire's t w o But almost as soon as all House members, Kuster and the awards had been given Carol Shea-Porter, are facing and the photos taken, New combative Republican chalHampshire's four members lengers and a wave of caustic of Congress, three of them attacks over the health law. Democrats, were set upon by Both broke rank with their local reporters with one sim- leaders and the White House mering question: What are on Friday, voting for a Repubyou going to do about the fal- lican bill to reinstate insurtering Affordable Care Act? ance policies that had been Rep. Ann McLane Kuster, canceled for failing to meet the state's freshman Demo- minimum standards set by crat, displayed her own ex- the Affordable Care Act, and asperation over the f ailed to let insurance companies rollout. " Patience is a v i r enroll more people in such tue, and Americans have it plans. in short supply," she said. Friday's 261-157 House "Frankly we ar e not w ell vote o n t h e R e p ublican served by the politics of all bill included a roster of 39 this." Democrats. For Democrats across the For D emocrats, v o ting country, the reversal of po- for Republican health care litical fortunes over the past bills may not b e a p o l itimonth has been head-spin- cal panacea. After Friday's ning. In mid-October, as Re- vote, the National Repubpublicans were contending lican Congressional Comwith voter fury over a 16- mittee mocked vulnerable day government shutdown, Democrats who voted yes Democrats had the momen- as political turncoats. Sheatum. Polls showed a growPorter, the New Hampshire ing number of voters who c ongresswoman, said s h e said they wanted the party to understood that — and had control Congress after next no intention of playing down year's election. her support for the health Then the problems with law. "I'm very proud that I votthe Internet-based health exchanges came into focus, fol- ed for it, and I think all the lowed by millions of letters kinks will be worked out," from insurance companies she said. "In the i nterim, canceling individual policies this is what I believe in. I just that did not meet the health have to keep working." By JonathanWeisman
New Yorh Times News Service
Overall, 66 percent of Oregon hospitals that are part of the quality program are seeing penalties under the new numbers and 34 percent are getting bonuses, according to Kaiser. The Oregon Association of Hospitals and Health Systems estimates that Oregon hospitals lost $1.1 million through the program in the 2013 federal fiscal year, and they'll lose more than $2 million in 2014. The Healthcare Quality Coalition is lobbying the federal government to make cost 50 percent of hospitals' scores. By 2015, cost will comprise about one-fifth of hospitals' scores. At the end of the day, the U.S. health care system still pays hospitals to do more regardless of quality or whether it's necessary, and the Value-based Payment Program is designed to reverse that, said Stuart Guterman, vice president of Medicare and cost control at The Commonwealth Fund. "The bottom line is to really say 'We're paying attention to this and our intention is to pay for what we want to see the health care system produce and not just for whatever they happen to produce,'" he said. The St. Charles hospitals in Madras and Prineville are not subject to the Value-based Purchasing Program.
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Few duy single JFKassassin theory
tress its some veterans ate in i e
Most Americans think more than one person was responsible for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy Nov. 22, 1963. A lookat the 50-year trend: 80-
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runs the center's treatment programs for post-traumatic CHICAGO Nearly stress. four decades have passed The passing of a spouse can since the end of the Vietstoke feelings of survivor guilt. nam War. Bill Simon, a 65A seriousillness can force a year-old combat veteran, veteran to confront death in thought he had had long the same way he once did in ago escaped th e n i g htVietnam. mares and flashbacks that Experts emphasize it's never haunted him after his reScott Strazzante/ too late to get help. "We have Chicago Tnhune turn home. good treatments for PTSD. If "For many years, I never you come into the hospital and had any issues," he said. loved ones — can stir memo- scared as I was," he said. "Af- see us, we can help you," said He had all the trappings of ries from a long-ago war. ter all these years, that's when Dr. Matthew Friedman, direca successful life: a loving An estimated 2.7 million (the thought) creeps in. Who tor of the Department of Veterwife, three children and a men and women served in was this guy? He had a mother ans Affairs National Center for house in Arlington Heights, Vietnam. Their average age is and a father. Maybe he was a PTSD. Studies show that treatIll. But about 10 years ago, 64, according to Vietnam Vet- dad. Over the years, that has ment is effective regardless of the nightmares returned. erans of America. "Most are come back to me." whether a person seeks help Night after night, they be- approaching retirement," said It wasn't until after his reimmediately after the traumatcame more vivid and more Tom Berger, director of the tirement t h a t Mar k owski ic event or decades later. bizarre. health council at Vietnam Vet- went to Edward Hines Jr. VA For Bob Ranieri, 66, of Chi"Regardless of whatever erans of America. "Once they Hospital and was diagnosed cago, the death of his wife and I start dreaming about, the retire, their spouse has passed with PTSD. "We got on with his brother in the span of five dream always mutates into and the kids have left home, our lives — I did — but it never months brought a long period some Vietnam i ncident," without that structure, theybe- goes away," he said. of darkness. Depression trigsaid Simon, a research spe- gin to think about things." Memories form a complex g ered nightmares from t h e cialist at a petrochemical A nniversary d a te s a n d web of images and emotions. war. At the urging of a few company. "They've gotten holidays such as Veterans Day It's hard to know how one friends who served in Vietprogressively worse. Right may begin to bother people. event might trigger recollec- nam, he went to see a psycholnow, I barely sleep." But even when a veteran seeks tionsfrom decades before, ex- ogist and she diagnosed him S imon d o esn't k n o w treatment late in life, experts perts say. with PTSD. what triggered the return say, in many cases the postAt Captain James A. Lovell Now his most powerful therof his nightmares. But ex- traumatic stress disorder had Federal Health Care Center in apy, he said, is spending time perts say his experience is been there all along. North Chicago, more Vietnam with his five grandchildren, not uncommon. As VietFor Tim Markowski, 65, a veterans are reporting symp- whom he calls "my joy." nam veterans age, many wounded combat veteran, re- toms of late-onset PTSD. "I His voice sometimes tremdiscover they have more tirement meant more time to think that's due to the fact that bles when he talks about the time to contemplate their think about the young North Vietnam veterans are at an war. But he will try t o t alk lives. The time for reflec- Vietnamese soldier he killed age when they're experienc- anyway because, he said, "it's tion — as well as retire- while on patrol in 1967. ing more loss and all the life very important that they know "He was probably about ment, reunions with war changes that can be triggers," about Vietnam and the sacribuddies and the deaths of my age. He was probably as said Anthony Peterson, who fices that were made."
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For Vietnam veteran Bob Ranieri, 66, depression after the death of his wife and brother triggered nightmares of the war.
Chicago Tribune
ltwasa plot
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NOTE: Pollsconducted at irregular intervals
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NOV. DEC. DEC. OCT. FEB. NOV. MARCH NOV. NOV. 1963 1966 1 976 1 9 83 1992 1993 2 00 t 2 0 0 3 2 0 13
QSept. 1964 Warren Commission report says Lee Harvey Oswald was lone shooter
ODec. 1991 Oliver
Stone's "JFK" film released based on New 61979 House Select Committee on Orleans District Assassination says Kennedy "was probably Attorney Jim Garrison's assassinated as a result of a conspiracy" conspiracy investigation Source: Gallup poll, Nov. 7-f0, 20t3, of t,039 adults; margin of error: +/-4.0 percentage points
Graphic: Judy Treihle ©20t3 MCT
JFK
Kennedy Assassination," former New York Times reporter Continued from A1 Philip Shenon opens his book The random-sample poll of with a revelation that the Navy 1,039 people 18 and older was pathologist wh o e x a m ined conducted Nov. 7-10. It has a Kennedy's body burned the margin of error of plus or mioriginal autopsy report benus 4 percentage points. The cause it contained drops of the belief in a conspiracy hasn't president's blood. The book diminished in nearly 50 years also has new details about of polling. Doubts also persist Oswald's time in Mexico City, about the findings of the War- including meetings with the ren Commission, which was Russian KGB, which the CIA created by Johnson, after he allegedly hid from the Warren became president, to investi- Commission investigation. "In Mexico City there were a gate the assassination and was led by Supreme Court Chief lot of people who wanted to see Justice Earl Warren. Kennedy dead who met with It is a deep-seated beliefOswald," Shenon said. that no single man could comStill, Shenon isn't pushing a mit what some consider the conspiracy theory. "All the most credible evicrime of the century — that's been part of t h e A m erican dence points to Oswald as the psyche since the 1960s and shooter of the president and that got a H ollywood boost the killer of Tippit," he said of from director Oliver Stone's Dallas Police Officer J.D. Tipconspiracy-fueled 1991 re-cre- pit, who was killed trying to ation, "JFK." detain Oswald. "My suspicions But it's also one that no one are who else knew and if he speaks about too loudly, as was encouraged to do it." Secretary of State John Kerry University of Virginia prodiscovered earlier this month fessor Larry Sabato concludes when he said publicly that he in "The Kennedy Half-Cendidn't think Oswald had acted tury" after extensive research alone, only to clam up within that the "evidence" of a fourth shot — and therefore a second days. "To this day, I have serious gunman — instead of the three doubts that Lee Harvey Os- shots witnesses heard was wald acted alone," Kerry told wrong. Studies of recordings NBC News' Tom Brokaw for from an open microphone on a 50th anniversary package. "I a Dallas police officer's motorcertainly have doubts that he cycle don't include the sound was motivated by himself." of any shots, said Sabato, beKerry touched on several of cause it was too far away. "The debate over Nov. 22 will the theories that have swirled around the assassination: Was likely never end," he said at the book's release at Washington's more than one gunman involved? Beside Oswald's perch Newseum last month, adding on the sixth floor of the Texas that the Warren Commission School Book Depository, did has led to "50 years of unendm ore shots come from t h e ing suspicions and cynicism." grassy knoll at Dealey Plaza? While he's confident that Did Cuba an d t h e f o rmer no evidence of a fourth shot Union of Soviet Socialist Re- shows up on recordings of the publics — communist nations incident made at the time, Safurious at being pressured to bato doesn't close the door to remove Soviet missiles from all conspiracies. Cuba — figure in Oswald's Republican political consulaction? tant Roger Stone's "The Man Oswald, a former Marine, Who K i lled K ennedy: The defected to the USSR for sever- Case Against LBJ" is a conal years and married a Russian spiracy-laden work that brings woman before returning to the CIA, the FBI, the Mafia Texas. He was also considered and Texas oilmen together una Cuban government sympa- der a manipulative then-Vice thizer who, seven weeks be- President Johnson who wants fore the Dallas shooting, was to be president. Johnson died in Mexico City trying to get a in 1973. "This guy is an amoral psyvisa to Cuba. K erry t ol d B r okaw t h a t c hopath," Stone said i n a n he didn't agree with another interview. popular theory that the CIA A Texan, Johnson insisted was behind the assassination. on the trip to the Lone Star Some skeptics of the Warren State despite Kennedy's reCommission report maintain luctance to go to a hard-core that the Central Intelligence conservative area, Stone said. Agency was humiliated by Johnson also allegedlythought Kennedy's refusal to provide he'd be dumped from the ticket air cover for the Bay of Pigs when Kennedy faced re-elecplan, a failed effort that the tion in 1964. "I believe Johnson was the agency backed to invade Cuba and overthrow Castro. But yoke of the conspiracy," Stone when Kerry then appeared on said, in which he included disNBC's "Meet the Press," pre- gruntled mob bosses who had sumably to talk about foreign given money to Kennedy's fapolicy issues, the former Mas- ther to help with the 1960 elecsachusettssenator refused to tion, only to be subsequently respond to questions about the investigated by an aggressive assassination. Attorney General Robert KenBut others have weighed in. nedy, the president's brother. In "A Cruel and Shocking Stone also maintains there Act: The Secret History of the were multiple shooters.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
IN FOCUS:RACE IN AMERICA
Urban hensoften abandoned once
ite ma or, ac wie: ew or egg-laying ends votereveasc an in attitu es By Jesse Washington The Associated Press
Another milestone is passing in America's racial journey: The next mayor of New York City is a white man with a black wife. Even in a nation with a biracial president, where interracial marriage is more accepted and common than ever, Bill de Blasio's marriage to Chirlane McCray is remarkable: He is apparently the first white politician in U.S. history elected to a major office with a black spouse by his side. This simple fact is striking a deep chord in many people as de Blasioprepares to take office on Jan. I, with McCray p laying a major role in h i s administration. "It reflects the A m erican values of embracing different races, ethnicities, religions. I think it's just a great symbol," said William Cohen, the former Maine senator and Secretary of Defense, who is married to a black woman. Cohen was already a senator when he started dating Janet Langhart, a black television journalist. He proposed several times, but she feared that her race would hurt Cohen's political future. They married in 1996, a few weeks after Cohen announced he would not seek a fourth term. "There has been that fear (of interracial marriage) on the part of politicians. I didn't have it," Cohen said. He noted that a few white politicians have married Latino or Asian women, like former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, whose wife is from Mexico, or Kentucky Sen. Mitch McConnell, who is married to the Taiwan-born former Labor Secretary Elaine Chao. There have been black men in politics who have been married to white women, such as Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas or former Massachusetts Sen. Edward Brooke. And high-profile women such as South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, whose parents are from India, and Mia Love, the black mayor of Saratoga Springs, Utah, are married to w hite men. Yet unions of white men and black women have retained a forbidden aura, Cohen said. "It's black and w hite, it's slavery and Jim Crow and the fact you can't talk about it," he said. "Black and white has been more of a taboo in the eyes of enough people to be a deterrent."
Changing opinions The taboo is declining, polls show. In July, a Gallup poll found that 87 percent of Americans
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Kathy Willens/The Assoaated Press file
New York Democratic mayor-elect Bill de Blasio, then a candidate, embraces his son Dante, left, daughter Chiara, second left, and wife Chiriane McCray after polls closed in the city's primary election in New York in September. approved of interracial marriage — the highest rate ever — compared with 4 percent in 1958. In 2010, more than 15 percent of all new marriages were interracial, according to the Pew Research Center. Yet statistics also indicate why de Blasio and McCray are such a rarity. The Gallup poll showed that 14 percent of white people did not approve of intermarriage, compared with 2 percent of black people. And white men are the least likely to marry outside of their race — more than 97 percent of white men are married to white women (82 percent of black men, 65 p ercent o f H i s panics a n d 48 percent of Asians marry within their own group). The figures are based on 2005 census data analyzed by Michael Rosenfeld, a Stanford University sociologist who studies interracial marriage. M uch has been made of the difficulties black women have in selecting husbands from a pool of eligible black men shrunk by unemployment and incarceration. Among black women age 35 and over, more than 25 percent have never been married, compared with about 7 percent of white women, census figures show. Black men also are twice as likely as black women to marry outside of their race, according to Rosenfeld. American history and culture, meanwhile, are littered with troubled tales of interracial couples. There have been centuries of debate over President Thomas Jefferson fathering children with hi s slave Sally Hemings; Sen. Strom Thurmond fought for segregation after having a child with a black housekeeper.In his 1991 film, Spike Lee dubbed interracial sex "Jungle Fever." All of which helps explain why many saw the matrimonial script being flipped by McCray and de Blasio.
"We're seeing black women loved in a way we have not seen before," said Aja Monet, a poet and New Yorker. She sees this trend in real life and fiction, from McCray to first lady Michelle Obama to the Olivia Pope character in "Scandal," the hit TV show about a powerful black political operative in a relationship with a white president. Monet has black, Cuban, Jamaican and Puerto Rican heritage. Her boyfriend is Korean-American. She noted that McCray and her brown children not only helped de Blasio connect with black voters "their love functioned like a political technology" — but McCray also was a key player in de Blasio's campaign and will be an important part of his Democratic administration. "It's fair to say the most important voice in my life is Chirlane McCray," de Blasio said after his victory. -
Powerful optics As de Blasio and McCray celebrated on election night with their two children, Tiya Miles saw them on television and stopped in her tracks. "I was very moved," she said. Miles, a black University of Michigan professor, recently wrote a column about being stung by the sight of so many successful black men choosing white wives. It feels like "a personal rejection of the group in which I am a part, of African American women as a whole, who have always been devalued in this society," Miles wrote. "I think black women sit there with these feelings and they fester, and they take little bits ofus over time," Miles said in an interview. "We can deal, we can manage, we keep on moving because that's our job in life, but it still affects us." So for her, de Blasio and McCray's victory feels like confirmation — especially since
McCray does not r esemble the type of black woman that m ainstream A m erica u s u ally deems beautiful, like Halle Berry or Beyonce. "A woman who has darker skin and natural hair, and a white man," Miles said. "To see a black woman who is in a long-term relationship with children and her partner, who does not fit that stiff, narrow, i dealized image of w hat a black woman should look like, I think is powerful." It's more a simple sign of progress for Love, the mayor from Utah and a rising Republican star. "I tend not to look at race in any issue," she said. However, "the fact that people are able to marry someone outside of their race without feeling as if they are going to have any issues or repercussions is a great thing." Interracial marriage is not entirely accepted. A r e cent Cheerios ad featuring an interracial family inspired so many racist remarks that YouTube stopped allowing comments on it. And there remains some black resistance to m a r rying white people — it's widely accepted that i f Pr e sident Barack Obama had married a white woman, or even a lightskinned black woman, black voters would have caused him problems.
'An affirmation' De Blasio was elected in New York, perhaps the most diverse city in America. But he is connecting with people across the country, especially the children o f i n t erracial marriages. " Thank y ou , N e w Y o r k City, for this gift," wrote Liz Dwyer, whose father is white and mother is black, on her los angelista.com blog. "It's just the resonance of it. How much it means for families to see a family like them in a visible place," said Ken Tanabe, a New Yorker with a Japanese father and Belgian mother. He is the founder of the Loving D a y o r g anization www.lovingday.org — which organizes annual events celebrating the 1967 Supreme Court decision that struck down laws against interracial marriage. "Within o u r c o m munity, when someone does well, it feels like an affirmation," he said. "Not on the scale of a Barack Obama, but sort of a local version of that." Said Cohen, the former defense secretary: "It says a lot about this c ountry. W here we've come from, how far." "The mayor," he said, "has shattered an image."
Compromise defers a solar power fight By Diane Cardweii New Yorh Times News Service
In voting to impose a modest charge on new residential solar customers, A r i zona's power regulators have ended, for the moment, a bitter fight between the rooftop solar industry and the state's main electric utility. The closely watched decision, which came last week after months of increasingly heated debate from both sides, preserves a credit system that has been a powerful incentive in attracting solar customers and adds less compensation than the utility, Arizona Public Service, had sought.
T he compromise on t h e amine their entire rate struccredit system, which is known ture, not just net metering, as net metering — it pays resi- said Bryan Miller, president of dential and commercial cus- the Alliance for Solar Choice, tomers for excess renewable a lobbying group, and vice energy they send back to the president for policy at Sunrun, grid — allows it to continue. a residential installer. "The commissions and the But it sets up a future battle over the value of decentralized regulators are telling them to solar power that will play out go fix them, but fix them for across the country. everyone, not just for solar More than 40 statesoffer customers," he said. Referring some form of the incentive, ac- to the utility, he added, "Those cording to the Energy Depart- fees are real and they'll have ment, and the credit programs a real impact on the industry, are under scrutiny in nearly but they do not accomplish APS' goal of destroying the all of them, advocates say. In the Arizona case, as in rooftop solar industry." others this year, regulators The Arizona utility claimed have told the utilities to re-ex- a victory as well in the regula-
tors' recognition that solar customers put a financial burden on nonsolar customers, which solar advocates dispute. "The d i stributed r o oftop solar industry has just been pushing for so long, 'There's no cost shift, there's no cost shift, there's no cost shift,' and I think increasingly you're seeing people both in California and Arizona and in other places say, 'No, this is a real issue and we've got to deal with it,'" said Jeff Guldner, senior vice president for customers and regulation of Arizona Public Service. "If we don't do something to address it you're going to have the system collapse."
By David Pitt The Associated Press
DES M O IN ES, Iowa — Five chickens live in artist Alicia Rheal's backyard in Madison, Wis., and when they age out of laying eggs, they may become chicken dinner. "We get egg-layers and after a couple of years we put the older girls in the freezer and we get a newer batch," Rheal said. Rheal is a pr a gmatic backyard chicken enthusiast who likes to know what's in her food. But others find the fun ofbringing a slice of farm life into the city stops when the hens become infertile. Hesitant to kill, pluck and eat a chicken, some people abandon the animal in a park or rural area. As a result, more old hens are showing up at animal shelters, where w o rkers increasingly respond to reports of abandoned poultry. "The numbers are exploding. We had hoped that the fad had peaked and maybe we were going to get a little bit of a break here, but we haven't," said Mary Britton Clouse, who operates Chicken Run Rescue in Minneapolis. In 2001, she had six calls from people seeking homes for abandoned chickens. That rose to nearly 500 last year, said Clouse, who takes animals from the city's animal control department and works with local humane groups to place unwanted birds. As w i nter a p proaches the number of abandoned chickens rises, Clouse said: "The summer fun is over." Chickens begin l aying eggs where they're 4 to 6 months old and are most productive for about two years, University of Wisconsin poultry specialist Ron Kean said. Egg production drops off significantly after that, but the hens can live another decade or more. Urban chicken populations have been on the rise
since the mid-2000s, championed by people who wanted to know where their eggs came from and whether the animals were free-range and hormonefree. It's unclear how many people have backyard chickens and there's no official count of the number of cities that have approved chi c k en-friendly ordinances. Clouse said th e p r oblem worsened around 2007, and her organization and others began pleading with cities to either deny requests to allow backyard chickens or to budget for regulation, inspection of coops, and enforcement of a n imal cruelty laws. It didn't slow the trend. "What you've got are all these people who don't know what the hell they're doing. They're sticking these birds in boxes the size ofbattery cages in their backyard," said Clouse. Many b ackyard c h i cken keepers build or buy elaborate fence-enclosed houses with elevated nesting areas to make the chickens feel safe. Some communities offer tours to show off chic coops. Aside from the eventual drying up of egg production, there are a number of headaches that backyard chicken farmers may face. Feed, shelter, litter, and veterinarybills add up, and chickens are vulnerable to predators and must be in a secure shelter. Their feed can attract rodents, and chickens can contract parasites requiring veterinary care. For all the naysayers, chicken keepers stand behind their ventures. Rheal said she intends to have the hens hang around far into the future, both for the eggs and the meat. But even Rheal has a soft spot for some of her flock, especially Minnie and Scoozie, 7-year-old Bantams. Rheal says those two will be in her yard until they die.
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
IN FOCUS:COLOMBIA
Toronto mayor still has somesupport
o oa r in o e orsecars o e s reeswi cas su si ies
By Charmaine Noronha and David Crary
to fulfill his campaign mantra: "Stop the gravy train." The Associated Press "Everyone, including all TORONTO — W hen Rob of his voters, knew he was Ford was elected mayor of To- rough-around-the-edges ronto in 2010, his bluster and and had incidents involving checkered past were widely pot and alcohol in his past," known. A plurality of voters says a summary on the site. backed him anyway, eager "MAYOR FORD IS GOING to shake things up at a City NOW H E RE, NOR SHOULD Hall they viewed as elitist and HEI" wasteful. Ford has been embattled Those voters — many from since May, when there were Toronto's conservative-lean- news reports that he had been ing, working-class outer sub- caught on v i deo smoking urbs — got their wish, and crack cocaine. perhaps more turmoil than Newly released court docuany could have expected. ments show that Ford beN ow the loyalty o f t h e came the subject of a police mayor's constituency, known investigation at that point. as Ford Nation, is being tested Staffers accused the mayor as he faces intense pressure to of frequently drinking on the resign following sensational job, driving while intoxicated revelations about his drink- and making sexual advances ing problems and illegal drug toward a female staffer. The use, as well as repeated out- mayor added to the f uror bursts of erratic behavior and Thursday by using profanity crude language. while denouncing the latest The City Council voted Fri- allegations. day, on a 39-3 vote, to suspend Most city councilors want Ford's authority to appoint Ford to step aside but lack the or dismiss the deputy mayor authority to force him out unand his executive committee, less he is convicted of a crime. which oversees the budget. Given that the core of ToFurther efforts are expected ronto — its downtown and Monday to strip Ford of most close-in neighborhoods of his r emaining powers, — has a liberal tilt, a politithough he vows to resist with cian like Ford probably never court action. would have b een e lected Many of Ford's political al- mayor had it not been for an lies — including most council amalgamation forced on the members — are deserting metropolitan area in 1998 by him, and polls show his ap- the Conservative provincial proval rate is down sharply government. Toronto, with a from two years ago. Yet some population of about 700,000, of his loyalists want him to was merged against its will hang on. with five of its neighboring "Yes, he is an embarrass- m unicipalities, creating a ment, but not a thief," said Joe mega-city that now has 2.7 Amorim, 49, a supply chain million residents. "There will b e a g r o up manager from the city's Little Italy area. "People are tired that sticks with him, but it of smooth-talking politicians gets smaller and smaller," that waste public money and said Grace Skogstad, a proserve corporations and the fessor of political science at wealthy." the University of Toronto's That outlook is reflected on campus in Scarborough, one a Facebook site called "I Hate of the amalgamated suburbs The War On Mayor Rob Ford" where Ford has been most which praises him for trying popular.
By Marina Viiieneuve
waiting to receive trucks, according to Adriana Iza, who BOGOTA, Colombia — It's heads the program. Her work a startling sight in one of Lathas been c o mplicated by in America's biggest cities: a scam artistsposing as zorrerickety wooden cart pulled ros and the extra time needed by a mangy horse through to careforthe sickest horses. "There are some h orses traffic-choked streets. And if Mayor Gustavo Petro has who arrive in such awful conhis way, the 2,890 owners ditions, weak and sometimes of Bogota's horse carts will ) sick, it's clear they've been soon give them up as his govmistreated and n e glected," ernment works to modernize Iza said. " Then there ar e this city of 7.5 million. those people who are buying iS In one of the more invenhorses illegally and come to tive programs to remake a big us pretending they've been a city, horse-cart owners, who MannaVilleneuve/ For The Washington Post recycler for years." roam Bogota pickingup trash Jose Barreto, 44, a zorrero shown last month, said he is planning Norman Ri v e ra , w ho that they sell t o r e cycling on trading in his horse and cart soon for a new truck. works for the local Friends of centers, are being offered an the Planet Foundation, said $11,000 subsidy that they can that despite laws passed by use to buy a small truck, start The horse carts are a fixoutskirts. the city to regulate the work "All my life I've been work- of zorreros, the horses suffer. a small business or secure af- ture in B ogota's swankiest "Even though there's all fordable housing. neighborhoods, where they ing in t h i s," said B a rreto, For decades, the horse-cart vie with A ud i s edans and standingnext to his chestnut- this regulation, it's not enrecyclers, known as zorreros, BMWs on narrow streets. The colored horse. "I didn't even f orced," said R i v era, w h o workedwithlittleinterference. r ecyclers, who o f ten w o r k study. I went right into this." blames politicians, police ofBut in a city that sees itself as with their entire families, stop T he t r ansition P etr o i s ficers and the lack of animal a model of u rban mobility, in front of apartment buildpushing has not been easy. shelters for horses. "It's only with rapid-transit bus lanes ings to pick through garbage The zorreros said no to the this current administration and cycling paths, residents and haul away what they can city's previous efforts to get that has taken this problem have grown impatient with sell. A day's work can mean them to give up their horses seriously." the zorrerosand their carts. 1,500 pounds of recyclables, and carts, demanding someThrough Bogota's $18.6 milMotorists complain that they netting — on a good daything in r eturn. Even now, lion program, recyclers trade slow traffic. A n imal r i ghts perhaps $40. fewer than half of zorreros in their carts and horses at "Paper, cardboard, junk," who o r i g inally r e q uested designated locations around groups say forcing horses to haul up to 600 pounds of gar- muttered Jose Barreto, 44, trucks had received them as the city. Since February, the bage on city streets — some- as he oversaw a group sortof October. About 550 zor- city has received 2,033 horstimes w i t hout h o r seshoes ing through metal wire and reros who initially expressed es, and 1,788 of them have — amounts to abuse. breaking d ow n c a r dboard interest in the program have found new owners through Petro, a former leftist guer- boxes. failed to trade in their horses an "Adopt a Friend" program, rilla whose city has one of the Barreto leads a z o r r ero or hand i n d o cuments re- according to Iza. world's largest gaps between crew that often meets in the quired by the city. Among those who made "There are some people the trade is Jorge Neira, 44, rich and poor, says the plan Ernesto Samper M e ndoza is a way to give the zorreros neighborhood near the heart who are going to b e h oldwho has been working as a and horses a bit of dignity. of the city t o u n load their outs," said Andres Ruiz, a recycler since he was 4. He "This problem is not just carts. T heir t i r e d h o r ses, 32-year-old recycler who re- recalled being the target of poverty, it's about social in- some bony and with matted cently received his new truck. name-calling and j eers by "Some people just don't like some city residents, many of e quality, w h ic h h a s b e e n manes, rest while chewing growing for decades," he told on corncobs and grains. The the new program, and some whom equate being a zorrero reporters this year. "We've owners joke with one another people don't have the time or with being a criminal. "Hopefully, this program is been trying to get a solution as they kneel among the gar- money to take a safety course w here everyone w i ns: t h e bage, sorting trash from recy- or learn to drive. The ques- going to reduce the stigma of animals, the h a rd-working clable bits of metal, paper and tion is, what is going to hap- being a zorrero," Neira said poor, our growing city, our plastic, preparing to haul it to pen to those people?" as he placed blocks of wood society." recycling centers on the city's About 600 zorreros are still into his new truck. Special to The Washington Post
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2043
COLLEGE
PREP SOCCER: STATE FINALS
FOOTBALL
Pac-12 60regon Utah
44 2f
2f ArizonaState OregonState
30 f7
SouthernCal 5 Stanford
20 f7
WashingtonState Arizona
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Colorado California
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60 35
4Baylor TexasTech
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ff South Carolina Florida
f9 f4
f2 Oklahoma State 23Texas
38 f3
f4 Michigan State Nebraska
4f 28
f5CentralFlorida Temple
39 36
f7Wisconsin Indiana
5f 3
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The Summit boys soccer team celebrates after beating Hood River Valley to win the Class 5A boys state title on Saturday in Hillsboro.
The Sisters boys soccer team poses together with the trophy after taking the Class 4A state title in a victory over Henley on Saturday night in Hillsboro.
5A BOYS
5A GIRLS
4A BOYS
Summit secures its first title with a 2-0 win overHoodRiverValley
The StormbeatWilson 4-2for their secondstraight state crown
A late goal lifts Sisterspast Henley 1-0 for its first state championship
By Grant Lucas
By Grant Lucas
By Grant Lucas
The Buttetin
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
HILLSBORO — Ron Kidder joined his team in a single-file line, facing away from the field and toward the crowd at Hillsboro Stadium. The ninthyear Summit coach took a deep breath, and he shook his head. This was three years in the making. On Saturday, after two years of falling short, the Storm could do as senior C.J. Fritz instructed: "Put the No. I in the air, boys!" With Alex Bowlin logging a goal five minutes after assisting on Alec Fefferman's 34th-minute score, Summit held off late pressure to defeat Hood River Valley 2-0 in the Class 5A boys soccer state championship final. It was the Storm's first state title in program history. SeeSummit boys/B4
HILLSBORO — Shannon Patterson already had two state championships in her pocket. But both pale in comparison with this one. On Saturday afternoon, the senior midfielder scored in the 17th minute to give Summit an early 1-0 lead. She followed that up with an assist on Christina Edwards' 25th-minute score that sparked a run of three goals within five minutes that propelled the Storm to their second straight Class 5A girls soccer state championship. The 4-2 victory over Wilson of Portland completed a Summit High sweep of the 5A titles. The Storm boys downed Hood River Valley in the previous game at Hillsboro Stadium for their first state championship. SeeSummit girls/B4
HILLSBORO — This run for Jake McAllister started in his freshman season. On Saturday evening, the senior ended it, along with the state title drought of Sisters High. As soon as McAllister collected the pass from Colton Mannhalter, he knew it was the one. It was the 75th minute, and the Outlaws were in a scoreless tie with Henley of Klamath Falls. Sisters had been relentlessly pressuring the Hornets' defense, only to be kept off the scoreboard either by missed shots or goalie saves. But with five minutes remaining in regulation time, McAllister would not be denied. The standout forward made his fourth shot of the night count. SeeSisters /B4
SKIING
U.S. teen wins slalom opener
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ing reigning Olympic champion Maria HoeflRiesch of Germany by more than a second. "I'm really happy with howthe day went, and I'm also really excited because it looks like there are some pretty fast girls in the back of the pack," Shiffrin said. "I'm excited for the Olympics for sure but there are a couple of races between now and then, so hopefully I can just keep this going." Shiffrin, the slalom world champion, led by half a second after the first run and raced seamlessly at the top of the hill in the second to extend her advantage. She overcame a mistake near the end to finish in a combined time of 1 minute, 55.07 seconds. Hoefl-Riesch, tied for third place after the first run, skied a nearly flawless second run but still finished runner-up, 1.06 seconds behind. Tina Maze of Slovenia, last year's overall World Cup champion who struggled in the giant slalom opener in Soelden last month, was third, 1.61 back. Shiffrin emerged as a major star in the discipline last season by winning both the World Cup slalom title and the world championship race, making her one of the major medal favorites for Sochi. Her display on Saturday only heightened expectations. — The Associated Press
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Summit's girls soccer team celebrates after winning the Class 5A state championship match onSaturday in Hillsboro.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
With win, Ducksare back in control Beavers fall MARK MORICAL EUGENEt was as though we had to be reminded again of just what this Oregon football team is capable. The hangover from the Stanford loss nine days earlier crept into the first half of the Ducks' game against Utah on a cold, cloudy Saturday afternoon at Autzen Stadium. Utah quarterback Adam Schulz had just scored on a
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4-yard run to cut the Duck lead to 17-14 early in the second half. But De'Anthony Thomas — who had made no "explosion" plays since he was sidelined for four games with an ankle injury — took the ensuing kickoff 86 yards for a touchdown to give Oregon a 23-14 lead. Suddenly, the Ducks were back in control. Suddenly, they were the Ducks we have come to know. And after a 44-21 win and developments later Saturday night, suddenly, the Ducks were back in the Rose Bowl race. SeeDucks/B5
to Sun Devils By John Marshall The Associated Press
Don Ryan /The ASSOCIated Press
Oregon running back De'Anthony Thomas, left, celebrates his touchdown catch with quarterback Marcus Mariota (8) and other teammates during the first half of Saturday's game against Utah in Eugene. The Ducks are now in control their own destiny to reach the Pac-12 title game.
TEMPE, Ariz.— Oregon State rallied from a slow start, pulling within 10 points of No. 21 Arizona State in the third quarter. The Beavers couldn't sustain their momentum, hurt by too many mistakes. Sean Mannion threw interceptions for four of Oregon State's five turnovers and the Beavers stumbled after gaining momentum in the third quarter to lose their third straight, 30-17 to the Sun Devils on Saturday night. "It is usually the name of the game, turnovers," Oregon State coach Mike Riley said. SeeBeavers/B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
COREBOARD ON DECK Saturday FootbaN:4Astatesemifinal,Ridgeviewvs.Philomath, CottageGroveH.S,3p.m.
PREP SPORTS Football Class 6A Second Round Friday's Results Jesuit 21,LakeOswego19 Lakeridge28,Southridge21 Canby31, Beaverlon7 Sheldon45, Tualatin21 Central Catholic62,McNary7 Clacka mas 55,Glencoe21 Norlh Medford14,OregonCity9 Tigard62,GrantsPass3
Quarterfinals Friday's Games
Lakeridge atJesuit Canby atSheldon Clackamas at Central Catholic Norlh Medfordat Tigard
Class 6A Quarterfinals Friday's Results Sherwood 68, CrescentValley 7 Ashland13, Roosevelt 7 Silverlon 35,Springfield 3 West Albany 51, Dallas 6 Semifinals
(Sites TBO) Saturday, Nov.23
Ashlandvs. Sherwood Silverlon vs.WestAlbany
Class 4A Quarterfinals Friday's Results Ridgeview28,Henley21 Norlh Bend21,Scappoose20 CottageGrove42, Central 38
Saturday's Result
Philomath35,Gladstone17 Semifinals
Saturday, Nov. 23 Cottage GroveH.S.
Ridgeviewvs.Philomath, 3 p.m.
AutzenStadium, Eugene Norlh Bendvs. CottageGrove, 6p.m.
Class SA Quarterfinals Friday's Result Daylon20,BlanchetCatholic 7
Saturday's Results
Nyssa29, SantiamChristian 0 Cascade Christian 68, Rainier12 Vale 27,Harrisburg25 Semifinals
(Sites TBO) Saturday, Nov.23 Nyssavs. Daylon Vale vs.CascadeChristian
Class 2A Quarterfinals Friday's Results PorllandChristian21, Knappa7 Regis 44,Oakland19
Saturday's Results
Grant Union24,GoldBeach14 Heppner52,Monroe7 Semifinals
(Sites TBO) Saturday, Nov.23
Grant Unionvs. PortlandChristian Heppnervs. Regis
Class 1A Quarterfinals Friday's Results Lowell 60,St.Paul 22 TriangleLake40, Dufur30 Saturday's Results Camas Valley 52,Adrian 28 Imbler 74,Triad22 Semifinals (Sites TBO) Saturday, Nov.23 Camas Valley vs. Lowell TriangleLakevs. Imbler
Girls Soccer Class 6A Championship Saturday's Result At HiNsboro Stadium Tualatin 2,Sunset0
Class 6A Championship Saturday's Result At HiNsboro Stadium Summit 4,Wilson2
Class 4A Championship Saturday's Result At Liberty High, HiNsboro Scappoose 3,La GrandeI Class SA/2A/1A Championship Saturday's Result At Liberty High, HiNsboro ValleyCatholic I,OregonEpiscopal 0
Boys Soccer Class 6A Championship Saturday's Result At HiNsboro Stadium Jesuit 2, CentralCatholic I Class 6A Championship Saturday's Result At HiNsboro Stadium Summit 2,HoodRiver Valley0
Class 4A Championship Saturday's Result At Liberty High, HiNsboro Sisters I, Henley 0 Class SA/2A/1A Championship Saturday's Result At Liberty High, HiNsboro OregonEpiscopal2, St.Mary'sMedfordI
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AN Times PST AMERICANCONFERENCE
East
L T P ct PF PA 2 0 . 778234 175 N.Y.Jets W 3 4 0 . 556169 231 4 5 Miami 5 0 . 444193 209 Buffalo 7 0 . 300199 259 South L T P ct PF PA Indianapolis 3 0 . 700252 220 Tennessee W I 6 0 . 400227 226 2 4 Houston 7 0 . 222170 248 Jacksonville 8 0 . 1 11115 291 North L T P ct PF PA Cincinnati 4 0 . 600234 186 Cleveland W 3 5 0 . 444172 197 4 6 Baltimore 5 0 . 444188 189 Pittsburgh 6 0 . 333179 218 West L T P ct PF PA KansasCity 0 0 1.000215 111 Denver W 3 I 0 . 8 89371 238 4 8 9 San Diego 5 0 . 444212 202 Oakland 6 0 . 333166 223 NATIONA LCONFERENCE East L T P ct PF PA Dallas 5 0 . 500274 258 Philadelphia W 3 5 0 . 500252 244 5 N.Y.Giants 6 0 . 333165 243 Washington 6 0 . 333230 287 South L T P ct PF PA NewOrleans 2 0 . 778265 163 Carolina W I 3 0 . 667214 115 2 6 Atlanta 7 0 . 222186 251 TampaBay 8 0 . 1 11146 209 North L T P ct PF PA Detroit 3 0 . 667238 216 Chicago W 2 4 0 . 556259 247 5 6 GreenBay 4 0 . 556245 212 Minnesota 7 0 . 222220 279 West L T P ct PF PA Seattle I 0 . 9 00265 159 San Francisco W 4 3 0 . 667227 155 5 6 9 Arizona 4 0 . 556187 198 St. Louis 6 0 . 400224 234
NewEngland
Thursday's Game Indianapolis30,Tennessee27
Today's Games
AFC Individual Leaders Week 11 Quarterbacks Att Com Yds P. Manning,DEN 369 262 3249 P. Rivers,SND 324 232 2691 Roethlisberger,PIT 338 218 2534 Luck, IND 347 206 2430 Dalton, CIN 383 239 2861 Locker,TEN 183 111 1256 Brady,NWE 340 194 2256
TO Int 33 6 18 7 13 10 14 6 18 13 8 4 13 6 315 188 1919 9 4 331 202 2206 13 10 233 150 1552 8 9
Rushers Att Yds Avg LG TO 24 6 30I 4 59 6 23 I 35 2 25t 8 23 6 93I 2 61 I 25 3
Receivers No Yds Avg LG TO
Ant. Brown,PIT A.. Green,CIN And. Johnson,HOU Ke. Wright,TEN De. Thomas,DEN Welker,DEN Woodhead,SND A. Gates,SND Cameron,CLE Decker,DEN
67 805 12.0 65 1013 15.6 62 850 13.7 59 660 11.2 55 793 14.4 53 576 10.9 53 408 7. 7 52 612 11.8 50 600 12.0 49 721 14.7
Anger,JAX S. Powell,BUF McAfee,IND Lanning,CLE B. Colquitt, DEN Koch,BAL
Moreno,DEN De. Thomas,DEN Ju. Thomas,DEN Welker,DEN J. Charles,KAN Bernard,CIN M. Jones,CIN Royal, SND Cameron,CLE Cotchery,PIT
48 2356 43 2096 53 2574 49 2273 54 2502 35 1613 44 2020 50 2285 33 1498 58 2597
66 49.1 65 48.7 66 48.6 65 46.4 61 46.3 66 46.1 60 45.9 59 45.7 60 45.4 61 44.8
Scoring Touchdowns TO Rush Rec Ret Pts 9 9 9 9 8 7 7 7 6 6
8 0 0 0 6 4 0 0 0 0
I 9 9 9 2 3 7 7 6 6
Kicking Gostkowski,NWE Folk, NYJ M. Prater,DEN Vinatieri, IND Succop,KAN D. Carpenter,BUF Novak,SND Suisham,PIT J. Tucker,BAL Bironas,TEN
45 3 82I 6 62I 5 45 I 78I 9 33 9 26t 4 56t 2 53 6 61 3
Punters No Yds LG Avg
Fields, M IA Lechler,HOU M. King,OAK Ry. Allen,NWE
P AT F G 24 24 22 23 14 14 23 23 47 47 12 12 22 22 20 23 23 23 18 21 18 18 19 21 23 23 17 20 16 16 19 21 18 18 18 20 26 26 15 18
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
54 54 54 54 48 42 42 42 36 36
LG Pts 54 90 50 83 53 83 52 82 51 77 55 75 50 74 48 73 51 72 47 71
NFC Individual Leaders Week 11 Quarterbacks Att Com Yds TO Int Brees,NOR A. Rodgers,GBY R. Wilson,SEA Romo,DAL M. Stafford, DET M. Ryan,ATL S. Bradford,STL Cutler, CHI C. Newlon,CAR Vick, PHL
363 247 3064 251 168 2218 257 163 2132 370 239 2681 373 229 2836 368 248 2614 262 159 1687 265 167 1908 271 170 1970 141 77 1215
1 3.2 44 3 1 3.1 44 8 1 6.7 61t 7 14.9 56T 10 1 71 87 9 1 4.4 79 8 1 4.3 70I 4 1 5.8 76t 7 1 5.6 58 3 1 1.3 27 4
47 41 37 31 37 50 53 38 54 47
2285 62 48.6 1972 72 48.1 1768 63 47.8 1428 61 46.1 1705 65 46.1 2294 68 45.9 2419 63 45.6 1733 65 45.6 2435 62 45.1 2112 60 44.9
Punters No
Yds LG Avg
Scoring Touchdowns TO RushRec Ret Pts
J. Graham, NOR A. Peterson,MIN Cal.Johnson,DET B. Marshall, CHI D. Bryant,DAL M. Lynch,SEA Forle, CHI R. Cooper,PHL Ve. Davis,SNF Gore,SNF
10 10 9 8 8 8 7 7 7 7
0 9 0 0 0 7 7 0 0 7
10 0 I 0 9 0 8 0 8 0 I 0 0 0 7 0 7 0 0 0
60 60 54 50 48 48 44 42 42 42
Kicking FG LG Pts 22 23 53 93 21 25 52 89 17 19 53 80 16 22 55 79 16 21 48 76 16 17 58 73 15 17 48 68 16 17 52 65 12 16 53 64 13 14 55 64
PAT 27 27 26 26 29 29 31 31 28 28 25 26 23 23 17 17 28 28 25 25
NFE (Home teamsin CAPS) Favorite Opening Current Underdog Today Falcons 15 PK Jets 1 (B) I
NewEnglandat Carolina, 5:40p.m.
170 725 4.26 167 632 3.78 129 557 4.32 121 542 4.48 131 539 4.11 123 521 4.24 118 514 4.36 68 504 7.41 110 501 4.55 140 460 3.29
61 803 60 786 54 903 54 805 53 904 52 749 50 714 49 772 47 735 47 532
Betting line
Monday's Game
J. Charles,KAN Chr.Johnson,TEN F.Jackson,BUF A. Foster,HOU Ry. Mathews,SND Moreno,DEN Ridley,NWE Pryor,OAK Spiller, BUF GreenEllis, CIN
A. Lee,SNF S. Marlin, DET Bosher,ATL Morstead,NOR Norlman,CAR Weatherford,NYG Hekker,STL Locke,MIN Chr.Jones,DAL Zastudff, ARI
193 932 4 .83 41t 3 191 871 4 .56 43 7 159 825 5 .19 45I 5 173 786 4 .54 78I 9 162 700 4 .32 34t 7 157 691 4 .40 55 7 158 669 4 .23 56 4 133 623 4 .68 39 2 135 565 4 .19 27I 2 111 548 4 .94 41 4
Receivers No Yds Avg LG TO
Garcon,WAS B. Marshall, CHI De.Jackson,PHL J. Graham, NOR Cal.Johnson,DET D. Bryant,DAL Cruz, NYG J. Nelson,GBY Jeffery,CHI Witten, DAL
Hauschka,SEA Crosby,GBY D. Bailey,DAL Hartley,NOR Henery,PHL Gould, CHI Zuerfefn,STL Feely,ARI Akers, DET Gano,CAR
Baltimoreat Chicago,10a.m. Oaklandat Houston, 10a.m. N.Y.Jetsat Buffalo, 10a.m. Atlanta atTampaBay, 10a.m. Detroit at Pittsburgh, 10 a.m. Washingtonat Philadelphia, 10a.m. Cleveland at Cincinnati, 10a.m. ArizonaatJacksonville, 10 a.m. San Diegoat Miami, I:05 p.m. MinnesotaatSeattle, I:25 p.m. San FranciscoatNewOrleans, I:25 p.m. GreenBayat N.Y.Giants, I:25 p.m. KansasCityat Denver, 5:30p.m. Open:Dallas,St. Louis
Ale. Smith,KAN Tannehill, MIA Schaub,HOU
L. McCoy,PHL M. Lynch,SEA A. Morris,WAS A. Peterson,MIN Gore,SNF Forle, CHI Lacy,GBY Re. Bush,DET De. Williams,CAR D. Murray,DAL
25 7 15 4 17 6 21 6 19 7 16 10 14 4 13 8 13 8 5 3
Rushers Att Yds Avg LG TO
Lions FAGLES Chargers BEARS BENGALS TEXANS Cardinals BRONCO S SEAHAW KS SAINTS GIANTS
2 3.5 1.5 3 6 7 65 8 13.5 3 4
2.5 4.5 1.5 3 6 9.5 8 8 13 3 45
GrandCanyon91, W.New Mexico 41 Idaho 78,NWNazarene 64 Saint Mary's(Cal)67, Drake63 Seattle100,EvergreenSt. 59 UC Riverside72,MontanaSt. 67 Utah St.71,UCSanta Barbara 64 Wyoming85,ArkansasSt. 64
Women's College Saturday's Games
East Boston U.52,RhodeIsland49 Brown64,St. Peter's52 Colgate97, St. Francis(Pa.) 79 Cornell 79,Buffalo 72 Harvard84, N.DakotaSt. 56 Maine 75,Bryant65 Md. EasternShore68, UMBC45 Norlheastern70,NewHampshire 50 SacredHearl 67,Yale54 Siena82, FairleighDickinson58 St. John's66,St. Francis(NY)56 Temple78,Auburn 74 Towson 63, Manhattan43 South Campbell 73,W.Carolina 60 FAU120,Florida Memorial 43 GeorgiaSouthern63,Jacksonville St.50 Hampton74,Southern Miss.58 Longwood59,UtahValley57 NC Aff T 73, Stetson 68 NC State 85, Presbylerian45 Ohio64, MoreheadSt.56,0T SavannahSt. 75,CharlestonSouthern47 UNCAsheville 71, E.Kentucky 63 UNCWilmington65, N.Kentucky62 Virginia 95,LouisianaTech82 W. Kentucky86,MurraySt.63 Midwest Canisi us62,Oakland 57 Creighton63,Minnesota52 Idaho62,LoyolaofChicago60 Miami (Ohio)55, ChicagoSt. 39 Michigan83, Detroit 63 Mount St.Mary's86, IPFW77 Notre Dame 96, Valparaiso 46 SIU Edwardsville 79,UMKC76 Saint Mary's(Cal) 90,Butler 86,OT Southwest Arkansas74,Furman45 HoustonBaptist 88,S.Utah77 OklahomaSt. 87, N.Colorado51 StephenF.Austin 66,Georgia St.60 TCU63,Texas St. 50 UTEP 84, KansasSt. 39
Far West
Arizona51, UCSanta Barbara 49 BYU70,BostonCollege69,OT ColoradoSt.92, Drake77 Denver72,Air Force64 FresnoSt.68, CalSt. Fullerlon57 Hawaii 79,Mississippi 63 LoyolaMarymount81, NewMexico St.64 SMU 75,E.Washington 70 West Virginia88,Washington St.66
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AN Times PST
Eastern Conference Atlantic Oivision GP W L OT 20 14 6 0 19 12 6 I 20 12 7 I 21 9 5 7 21 10 9 2 19 8 7 4 21 5 1 2 4 22 5 1 6 I
PtsGF GA 28 64 50 25 53 36 25 57 47 25 54 60 22 52 45 20 57 58 1 4 46 70 11 41 68
3
GP W L OT Pittsburgh 2 0 12 8 0 Washington 20 1 1 8 I N.Y. Rangers 19 10 9 0 Carolina 20 8 8 4 NewJersey 20 7 8 5 N .Y. Islanders 21 8 1 0 3 Philadelphia 19 7 1 0 2 Columbus 1 9 6 10 3
PtsGF GA 24 56 47 23 65 58 20 42 49 20 39 55 19 42 49 1 9 61 68 1 6 35 48 15 48 56
Patriots
(B) Buffalo opened aslavorite
BASKETBALL Men's college Saturday's Games East Brown85, SacredHeart 73 Bryant 87,Vermont64 Bucknell 72,St. Francis(Pa.) 50 Buffalo 80,WVWesleyan60 Creighton83,Saint Joseph's 79 Dartmouth77,Mass. Lowell 59 GeorgeWashington 80,Manhattan 74 lona 76,Wofford55 La Salle78,Siena74 Loyola(Md.) 59,Fairfield 52 Navy68, Binghamton50 Norlheastern83, CCSU69 PennSt. 83,Penn71 Providence93,Marist 48 Quinnipiac79,Albany(NY)69 St. Bonaventure86, Canisius64 Syracuse 69, Colgate50 South Alabama St. 84,Jacksonville St. 73 Chattanooga108,Montreat51 E. Kentucky74,HighPoint 67 FIU 70,TexasSouthern 68 Florida 86,UALR56 GardnerWebb87,Jacksonville 78 GeorgeMason76,N.Iowa70 GeorgiaSouthern104,ToccoaFalls 50 LSU 88,Norlhwestern St.74 Longwood 88, MarsHil 70 Mercer 77,SetonHall 74,20T Middle Tennessee 80, Akron 73 Minnesot a 74,Richmond 59 Mississippi 72,Coastal Carolina70 NC State81,Campbell 66 Radford105,Brevard 57 San Diego75, N.Kentucky 44 Southern U.87,Norlh Florida 78 Tennessee 74,SCUpstate 65 The Citadel83, NorlhGreenville53 Tulane65,LoyolaofChicago59 UNCWilmington 80,Wingate61 VCU92, Winthrop 71 VMI 121,BluefieldSt. 80 Virginia 70,Davidson57 W. Carolina68,Liberly 63 W.Kentucky57, ETSU50 Midwest Butler 70,Princeton67 Cincinnati 77,AppalachianSt. 49 Dayton78,St. Francis(NY)58 DePaul81,Wright St. 72 E. Illinois 86,RI. Chicago66 Milwauke e77,JamesMadison66 Missouri 92,Hawaii80 Missouri St.96, Tulsa93 N. Illinois 60,SanJoseSt. 59 Ohio St.52, Marquette35 Pepperdine88, Cent. Michigan71 SE Missouri 76,IUPUI68 SIU Edwardsville100,Cent.Arkansas93 Saint Louis76,S. Illinois 67 Wichita St.85, TennesseeSt. 71 Wisconsi n69,GreenBay66 Southwest IPFW 66,Texas PanAmerican 60 IncarnateWord85, Huston Tilotson 78 Oral Roberls82, Texas St. 65 TennesseeTech62, Texas AffM CC60
Far West
Cal St. Fullerlon86,SantaClara73 Colorado94,JacksonSt. 70 ColoradoSt.88,WeberSt. 67 FresnoSt. 80,CSNorthridge 64
Formula One United States GrandPrix Lineup After Saturday qualifying; race today At Circuit of the Americas Austin, Texas Lap length: 3.426 miles Third Session 1. Sebastian Vettel, Germany,RedBull, I minute 36.338seconds. 2. MarkWebber,Australia, RedBull, I:36.441. 3. RomainGrosjean,France, Lotus, I:37.155. 4. Nico Hulkenberg,Germany, Sauber, I:37.296. 5. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,I:37.345. 6. Fernando Alonso, Spain,Ferrari, I:37.376. 7. SergioPerez,Mexico, McLaren,I:37.452. 8. HeikkiKovalainen,Finland,Lotus, I:37.715. 9. Valtteri Bottas,Finland,Wiliams, I:37.836. 10. EstebanGutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,I:38.034. Eliminated after secondsession 11. DanielRicciardo,Australia, ToroRosso, I:38.131 12. Paul diResta,Scotland, ForceIndia, I:38.139. 13. NicoRosberg,Germany, Mercedes,I:38.364. 14. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Ferrari, I:38.592. 15. JeanEricVergne, France,ToroRosso, I:38.696. 16. JensonButton, England,McLaren, I:38.217. Eliminated after first session 17. AdrianSutil, Germany,ForceIndia, I:39.250. 18. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams I:39.351. 19. Giedo Van der Garde,Netherlands, Caterham I:40.491. 20. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia, I:40.528. 21. MaxChilton, England,Marussia, I:41.401. 22. CharlesPic, France,Caterham,I:40.596.
GOLF PGA Tou
HOCKEY
Monday
PANTHERS 2. 5
17. (21)TrevorBayne,Ford,175.507. 18. (99)Carl Edwards,Ford, 175.433. 19. (43)AricAlmirola,Ford, 175.376. 20. (51)KyleLarson, Chevrolet, 175.353. 21. (88)DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet,175.347. 22. (14)MarkMarlin Chevrolet 175273 23. (9) MarcosAmbrose, Ford, 175.109. 24. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 175.092. 25. (15) ClintBowyer,Toyota, 174.78. 26. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,174.61. 27. (42)JuanPablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 174.537. 28. (I) JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,174.329. 29. (34)DavidRagan, Ford, 174.317. 30. (30)ParkerKligerman, Toyota,173.171. 31. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,173.099. 32. (83)DavidReutimann,Toyota, 172.563. 33. (93)TravisKvapil, Toyota,172.287. 34. (98) MichaelMcDowell, Ford,172.26. 35. (35)JoshWise, Ford,172.046. 36. (47) AJ Allmendinger, Toyota,171.734. 37. (36)J.J.Yeley,Chevrolet, OwnerPoints. 38. (7)DaveBlaney, Chevrolet, OwnerPoints. 39. (33) LandonCassill, Chevrolet, OwnerPoints. 40. (13)CaseyMears, Ford, Owner Points. 41. (32)KenSchrader, Ford,Owner Points. 42. (87)JoeNemechek, Toyota,OwnerPoints. 43. (40)TonyRaines, Chevrolet, OwnerPoints.
M etropolitan Oivision
Western Conference Central Oivision
GP W L OT PtsGF GA 20 13 3 4 30 73 60 18 13 2 3 29 65 42 19 14 5 0 28 59 41 20 12 4 4 28 53 43 19 10 7 2 22 56 55 21 10 9 2 22 56 59 20 9 9 2 20 46 63 Pacific Oivision GP W L OT PtsGF GA Anaheim 22 1 5 5 2 32 71 56 SanJose 20 1 3 2 5 31 71 45 Phoenix 21 14 4 3 31 73 66 LosAngeles 20 1 3 6 I 27 57 46 Vancouver 2 1 1 1 7 3 25 55 56 Calgary 20 6 11 3 15 54 75 Edmonton 2 2 5 15 2 12 53 83 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, one point for overlime loss.
Chicago St. Louis Colorado Minnesota Dallas Winnipeg Nashville
Saturday's Games
N.Y. Islanders5, Detroit 4,SO Toronto 4,Buffalo 2 N.Y. RangersI, Montreal0 NewJersey4,Pittsburgh I St. Louis 4,Carolina2 Nashville 7,Chicago2 Phoenix 6,TampaBay3 Florida4, ColoradoI Edmonton4, Calgary2
Today's Games
Columbusat Ottawa, 10a.m. St. Louis atWashington, 3 p.m. Los AngelesatN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. San Jose at Chicago, 4p.m. WinnipegatMinnesota, 5p.m. Dallas atVancouver,5p.m.
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR
Sprint Cup Ford EcoBoost400 After Fridayqualifying; racetoday At Homestead-MiamiSpeedway Homestead, Fla. Lap length:1.6 miles
(Car number inparentheses) 1. (20) MattKenseth,Toyota, 177.667mph. 2. (78) KurtBusch, Chevrolet, 177.445. 3.(22)JoeyLogano,Ford,I77.282. 4.(2) BradKeselowski, Ford,I77.061. 5. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,176.846. 6. (29) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,176.655. 7. (48) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 176.598. 8. (56) MarlinTruexJr., Toyota,176.436. 9. (17) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford, 176.436. 10. (55)Elliott Sadler, Toyota,176.413. 11. (18)KyleBusch, Toyota,176.355. 12. (27)Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 176.355. 13. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 176.304. 14. (31)JeffBurlon, Chevrolet, 175.747. 15. (39)RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 175.73. 16. (16)GregBiffle, Ford, 175.69.
OHL Classic Saturday At MayakobaResort (El Cama leon Golf Club) Playa del Carmen,Mexico Purse: $6 miNion Yardage: 6,987; Par:71 Completed SecondRound Kevin Stadler 67 63 130 Roberl Karlsson 63 67 130 Harris English 68 62 130 Rory Sabbatini 68 65 133 Tim Wilkinson 70 63 133 RyanMoore 67 67 134 JhonattanVegas 66 68 134 CharlesHowell RI 67 67 134 Chris Stroud 66 68 134 Pat Perez 66 68 134 JasonBohn 67 68 135 ScottBrown 69 66 135 Jeff Maggerl 69 66 135 Brian Stuard 65 70 135 Tommy Gainey 71 65 136 Justin Hicks 69 67 136 Jay McLuen 67 69 136 Erik Compton 67 69 136 Brendan Steele 70 66 136 ChadCollins 69 67 136 Bob Estes 68 69 137 Jose Coceres 68 69 137 Camilo Villegas 70 67 137 J.J. Henry 72 65 137 JamesDriscoll 69 68 137 BrendonTodd 71 66 137 Wes Roach 67 70 137 RussellKnox 67 70 137 Len Mattiace 69 68 137 Davis LoveRI 69 68 137 AlvaroQuiros 67 70 137 Justin Leonard 70 67 137 JamieLovemark 68 69 137 Matt Every 71 67 138 William McGirl 70 68 138 SpencerLevin 70 68 138 John Huh 70 68 138 RoberlAllenby 70 68 138 MichaelPutnam 69 69 138 Peter Malnati 69 69 138 Billy HurleyRI 69 69 138 Will MacKenzie 69 69 138 Joe Durant 70 68 138 Matt Jones 69 69 138 Jeff Overton 68 70 138 TyroneVanAswegen 69 69 138 FreddieJacobson 70 69 139 DerekErnst 69 70 139 CameronBeckman 72 67 139 SeungYulNoh 69 70 139 Tim Petrovic 71 68 139 TagRidings 70 69 139 DarrenClarke 71 68 139 Ben Martin 69 70 139 MorganHoffmann 69 71 140 GregChalmers 70 70 140 Ben Curtis 72 68 140 LucasGlover 70 70 140 RichardH.Lee 75 65 140 Marlin Flores 69 71 140 David Duval 67 73 140 Kevin Kisner 65 75 140 Scott Gardiner 70 70 140 OscarFraustro 72 68 140 RyanPalmer 70 71 141 Y.E.Yang 74 67 141 John Senden 73 68 141 Brian Davis 71 70 141 Josh Teater 68 73 141 Kevin Na 71 70 141 CharleyHoffman 73 68 141 Mike Weir 72 69 141 Tim Clark 71 70 141 BrianGay 70 71 141 Kyle Stanley 73 68 141 Mark Calcavecchia 70 71 141 LukeGuthrie 71 70 141 Lee Williams 73 68 141 Missed cut RoberlGarrigus 72 70 142 Scott Stallings 72 70 142 Scott Langley 70 72 142 Jim Renner 73 69 142 AndrewLoupe 71 71 142 Brice Garnett 73 69 142 Joe Ogilvie 74 68 142
BlakeAdams SteveMarino Briny Baird Jerry Kelly Brian Harman DanielSumm erhays EstebanToledo Dicky Pride Mark Wilson MiguelAngelCarballo Bud Cauley HeathSlocum Cameron Tringale DannyLee Alex Prugh Will Claxton BrooksKoepka HudsonSwafford StephenAmes Jose de Jesus Rodriguez TrevorImmelman KevinTway RickyBarnes HarrisonFrazar Chesson Hadley David Lingmerlh Troy Matteson John Rollins Scott Verplank JohnsonWagner D.H. Lee SeanO'Hair JamesHahn AndrewSvoboda Jordi GarciaPinto StevenBowditch Alex Aragon BobbyGates BronsonLa'Cassie Roberlo Diaz EdwardLoar
73 69 142 77 65 142 73 69 142 69 73 142 72 70 142 72 71 143 72 71 143 73 70 143 73 70 143 72 71 143 70 73 143 71 72 143 71 72 143 72 71 143 73 70 143 72 71 143 72 71 143 69 74 143 76 68 144 72 72 144 74 70 144 72 72 144 76 69 145 74 71 145 75 70 145 74 72 146 74 72 146 72 74 146 77 69 146 74 72 146 73 74 147 71 76 147 73 74 147 71 76 147 72 75 147 77 72 149 74 75 149 74 76 150 77 73 150 73 80 153 78 76 154
LPGA Tour Lorena OchoaInvitational Saturday At Guadalajara Country Club Guadalajara, Mexico Purse: $1 million Yardage: 6,633; Par 72 Third Round Lexi Thompson 72 64 67 203 I.K. Kim
70 67 67 204 72 66 67 205 68 67 71 206 68 67 72 207 66 69 72 207 70 68 70 208 70 67 71 208 68 68 72 208 69 73 67 209 71 69 69 209 72 69 69 210 67 73 70 210 70 68 72 210 71 65 74 210 76 67 69 212 73 69 70 212 74 66 73 213 73 66 74 213 69 69 75 213 74 68 72 214 75 67 72 214 70 72 72 214 72 68 74 214 73 73 69 215 74 71 71 216 77 67 72 216 71 72 74 217 75 72 71 218 74 67 77 218 75 72 73 220 72 74 74 220 75 73 73 221 74 72 75 221 74 77 76 227 72 77 WD
StacyLewis So YeonRyu AnnaNordqvist Pornanong Phatlum SuzannPettersen LizetteSalas InbeePark MichelleWie AzaharaMunoz Carlota Ciganda AmyYang Karine Icher Gerina Piller Brtttany Ltnmcome Mo Marlin l hee Lee
MorganPressel JennyShin Chella Choi Jodi EwarlShadoff Ai Miyazato JessicaKorda CarolineHedwall CatrionaMatthew Cristie Kerr BrittanyLang AngelaStanford PaulaCreamer MargaritaRamos SandraGal AlejandraLlaneza MeenaLee Taylor Collins BeatrizRecari
TENNIS Davis Cup WORLO GROUP
Final At BelgradeArena Belgrade, Serbia Surface: Hard-Indoor Czech Republic 2, Serbia 1 Singles Novak Djokovic, Serbia, def. Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, 7 5, 6 I, 6 4. TomasBerdych,Czech Republic,def.DusanLajo vic, Serbia,6 3,6 4,6 3.
Ooubles TomasBerdychandRadekStepanek,CzechRepub lic, def. IlijaBozoljacand NenadZfmonlfc, Serbia,6 2, 6 4, 76(4).
SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER AN TimesPST CONFERENCECHAMPIONSHIP
Eastern Conference Leg I Saturday,Nov9:Sporling KC0,Houston0 Leg 2 Saturday,Nov.23: Houstonat Sporling KC, 4:30 p.m.
Western Conference
Leg I Sunday,Nov.I0:RealSaltLake4,Porlland2 Leg 2 Sunday,Nov.24: RealSalt Lakeat Porlland,
6 p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA SuspendedMiami GMario Chalmersone gameforthrowingaforearm andmaking contact with the head of Dallas F Dirk Nowitzki during Friday's
game.
FOOTBALL
National Football League CHICAGOBFARS Signed DE Cheta Ozougwu from thepractice squad.ReleasedLBLarry Grant. CINCINNATI BENGALS Signed S TonyDyefrom the practicesquad.ReleasedCBChris LewisHarris. OAKLANDRAIDERS Signed QB TylerWilson from thepractice squad.ReleasedDLBrian Sanford. SFATTLESEAHAWKS Released QBB.J. Dan iels. ActivatedOTRussell Okungfrom injured reserve. HOCKEY
National HockeyLeague ANAHEIMDUCKS Assigned DJesseBlacker to Norfolk (AHL). DETROITREDWINGS Recalled C LukeGlen dening fromGrandRapids (AHL)andsent him back to GrandRapids. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS Traded D Jesse Blacker and a 2014third round and seventhround draft pick to Anaheimfor Fs Peter Hollandand Brad Staubitz.AssignedStaubitz to Toronto(AHL). WINNIPEG JETS Recalled D Julian Melchiori from St.John's(AHL). COLLEGE RUTGERS Announced freshman DB Jevon Tyreequit thefootball team.
Rookie goalie shines asRangers shut out Canadiens1-0 The Associated Press MONTREAL — Ryan Callahan ended New York's foury ear goal drought in M o n treal and rookie Cam Talbot made 22 saves for his first NHL shutout in the Rangers' 1-0 blanking the Canadiens on Saturday night. Callahan scored his sixth goal of the season for New York, which has won eight of its past 11 games. Talbot, who replaced Martin Biron as the backup goalje, became the first Rangers
NHL ROUNDUP goalie to earn a shutout in Montreal since Ed Giacomin in a 5-0 win on Feb. 25, 1967. The Rangers outshot Montreal 34-22. The Canadiens were coming off a 3-2 shootout win in Columbus on F r iday n i ght and spent most of the game a step behind the Rangers, who played the first of backto-back games before playing Los Angeles at home today.
Callahan broke the Rangers' Bell Centre drought just as a t w o - man a d v antage ended as he tipped Brad Richards' blast from the left circle past Carey Price 5:25 into the second period. Also on Saturday: Devils 4, Penguins1: NEWARK, N.J. — Jaromir Jagr scored two goals and Martin Brodeur made 27 saves to lead New Jersey over Pittsburgh. Blues 4, Hurricanes 2: ST. LOUIS — Alexander Steen scored h i s l e a gue-leading
17th goal and also added an assist to lead SL Louis over Carolina. Predators 7, Blackhawks 2: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Rookje Marek Mazanec made 39 saves for his first NHL victory and Nashville stopped Chicago's four-game winning streak. Panthers 4, Avalanche 1: DENVER — T i m T h o m as made 32 saves for his 200th N HL v i c t or y a n d Br i a n Campbell had agoal and an assist in Florida's win over
Colorado. Islanders 5, Red Wings 4: UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Kevin Poulin stopped all three Detroit skaters in the shootout after coming on in relief, and New York outlasted the reeling Red Wings. Oilers 4, Flames 2: CALGARY, Alberta — David Perron scored the go-ahead goal m idway through th e t h i r d period and Edmonton rallied from a two-goal third-period deficit to defeat Calgary. Maple Leafs 4, Sabres 2:
T ORONTO — J a mes v a n R iemsdyk s c o re d twi c e , Nikolai Kulemin got the winner and Toronto snapped a three-game skid by beating Buffalo. Coyotes 6, L ightning 3: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Martin Hanzal had a goal and three assists, L a ur i Ko r p i koski added a goal and two assists and Phoenix handed Eastern C onference-leading T a m p a Bay its f i rst l oss i n e i g ht games against Western Conference teams this season.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
SPORTS ON THE AIR
B3
NBA ROUNDUP
TODAY WINTER SPORTS Time U.S. Olympic Trials, m en's and women's curling 9 a.m. BASKETBALL Men's college, Indiana State at Notre Dame 9 a.m. 10 a.m. NBA, Portland at Toronto Men's college, Stanford at Denver 11 a.m. Women's college, California at Georgetown noon M en's college,Long Beach St.atKansasSt. 1 p.m. Men's college, Michigan at lowa State 2 p.m. Men's college, Towson at Villanova 2 p.m. Women's college, North Carolina at UCLA 3 p.m. Men's college, Charleston Southern at New Mexico 3 p.m. Men's college, Robert Morris at Kentucky 4 p.m. Men's college, Eastern Washington at Washington 5 p.m. Men'scollege,Oakland atGonzaga 5 p.m. FOOTBALL NFL, Baltimore at Chicago 10 a.m. 10 a.m. NFL, Washington at Philadelphia 1:25 p.m. NFL, Minnesota at Seattle NFL, Kansas City at Denver 5:20 p.m. GOLF PGA Tour, OHL Classic 11 a.m. MOTOR SPORTS Formula One, U.S. Grand Prix 11 a.m. NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Ford Ecoboost 400 noon SOCCER Men's college, Washington at Oregon State 11 a.m. VOLLEYBALL Women's college, USC at Washington State 1 p.m. FIGURESKATING ISU Grand Prix (taped) 1:30 p.m.
TV/Radio NBCSN Root CSNNW, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM Root Fox Sports1 Root ESPN2 Fox Sports 1 Pac-12 Root ESPN2 Pac-12 Root CBS Fox Fox NBC Golf NBC ESPN Pac-12 Pac-12 NBC
MONDAY BASKETBALL Men's college, Vermont at Providence NBA, Portland at Brooklyn
4 p.m. F o x Sports1 4:30 p.m. C S NNW, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM Men's college, Arkansas State at Colorado 6 p.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Sacramento State at UCLA 8 p.m. Pac-12 HOCKEY NHL, Anaheim at Pittsburgh 4 :30 p.m. NBC S N FOOTBALL NFL, New England at Carolina 5:25 p.m. ESPN
Rose,Bu sen Pacers' e ection The Associated Press CHICAGO — Derrick Rose came to work unsure if he'd be able to play. He left with his confidence intact and his team's future looking very bright. Luol Deng scored 23 points, Rose added 20and the Chicago Bullsknocked off the NBA's last unbeaten team with a 110-94 win over the Indiana Pacers on Saturday night. Taj Gibson had 15 points and eight rebounds for Chicago (5-3), which won its fourth straight game behind 11-of-19 shooting from 3-point range. "We got off to a g ood start," Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said. "(The Pacers) missed some shots that they usually make. Overall, I thought it was a good win. We played veryunselfishly." Indiana (9-1) was the NBA's first 9-0 team since the 2002-'03 Dallas Mavericks, who started 14-0. The nine wins to starta season matched a franchise record. Nursing a sore right hamstring, Rose was effective in his 30 minutes on the court. He weaved around and penetrated the league's best defense, which hadn't allowed more than 91 points to any opponentthis year. Rose was injured Monday against Cleveland, and did not play in Chicago's 96-80 win Friday at Toronto. "I was just being smart about the situation," he said about not playing Friday. "This is my first time having a hamstring injury. I don't know how it would go if I had played last night. I don't think I'd be able to play tonight." The 25-year-old former MVP shook off the rust after a pair of early off-balance misses. He sank a floater in the lane 3 minutes in, followed by a 3-pointer 30 seconds later to ignite a 12-2 firstquarter run for Chicago. "They were giving me shots," Rose said. "I've got to take those shots. I saw some go in, so I kept shooting." Also on Saturday: Heat 97, Bobcats 81: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — LeBron James scored 30 points to help Miami beat Charlotte for the 13th straight time. With Mario Chalmers suspended, Chris Bosh limited due to foul
Back from injury, Bryant practiceswith Lakers
' sr
Kamil Krzaczynski/The Associated Press
Chicago Bulls guard Derrick Rose (1) shoots over Indiana Pacers forward Solomon Hill during the second half of Saturday's game in Chicago. trouble, Ray Allen out with the flu and Dwyane Wade a non-factor, James came up big for the Heat. The four-time MVP was 13 of 18 from the field and had seven assists in his eighth 20-point game this season. Rockets 122, Nuggets 111: HOUSTON — Dwight Howard scored 18 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter, including 13 of 19 free throws in a 2'/~-minute stretch, to lead Houston past Denver. Mavericks 108, Magic 100: ORLANDO, Fla. — Monta Ellis had 19 points and eight assists to help Dallas win at Orlando for the eighth straight time. Hawks 110, Knicks 90: NEW YORKJeff Teague scored 16 points to lead eight players in double figures, and Atlanta sent New York to a fifth straight home loss. Cavaliers 103, Wizards 96:WASHINGTON — Kyrie Irving scored nine of his 41 points in overtime to help Cleveland snap a three-game skid. Timberwolves 106, Celtics 88:MINNE-
EL SEGUNDO,Calif. — Kobe Bryant returned to practice with the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday for the first time since he tore his Achilles tendon seven months ago. Bryant went through several light drills with his teammates during a short practice at the Lakers'training complex. "Helookedgood and did afew moves I didn't expect him to do right away," center Pau Gasol told the Lakers' official website. "I'm very happy for him and for us, and definitely looking forward to when he'll play in a game." Bryant has given no timetable for his return to the court, but had previously said he'll need significant practice time while getting into game shape for his 18th NBA season. — The Associated Press APOLIS — Kevin Love had 23 points and 12 rebounds and Nikola Pekovic had 20 points and 12 boards to lead Minnesota. Pelicans135,76ers 98:NEWORLEANS — Anthony Davis had 13 points, nine rebounds and a career-high eight blocks in less than three quarters, helping New Orleans emphatically snap a three-game skid. Thunder 92, Bucks 79: MILWAUKEE — Russell Westbrook scored 26 points and KevinDurant added 24 as Oklahoma City snapped a two-game skid. Clippers 110, Nets 103:LOS ANGELES — Blake Griffin had 30 points and 12 rebounds, J.J. Redick added 26 points and Los Angeles rallied to beat short-handed Brooklyn to improve to 5-0 at home. Brooklyn played without injured starters Kevin Garnett, Brook Lopez, Paul Pierce and Deron Williams, leaving Joe Johnson as the only regular in the lineup. Warriors 102, Jazz 88:OAKLAND, Calif. — Klay Thompson scored 25 points, Andre Iguodala had 16 points and six rebounds, and Golden State built a big lead before holding off Utah for its third straight victory.
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechangesmade by TVor radiostations.
NBA SCOREBOARD
SPORTS IN BRIEF MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
FOOTBALL
Standings
Summaries
NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PST
Thunder 92, Bucks79
Eastern Conference
st. pierre retains title-
Harvin daCk far Seattle?
Georges St. Pierre retained his welterweight title with a split decision over top contender Johny Hendricks on Saturday night in UFC167 in Las Vegas. Hendricks seemed to have the upper hand over the Canadian champion for most of the five rounds, landing the more significant blows and limiting any damage inflicted. St. Pierre was able to keep it close to extend his winning streak to 12 fights. Two judges scored it 4847 for St. Pierre, and the third had it 48-47 for Hendricks. In the comain event, former lightweight contender Rashad Evans stopped Chael Sonnen in the first round.
— Percy Harvin says he's ready to finally playfor the Seattle Seahawks. And while coach Pete Carroll tried to hedge, saying Harvin remains "day-to-day," all signs point to Harvin making his Seattle debut today against his former team, the Minnesota Vikings. Those indicators included the team listing Harvin as "probable" on its official injury report after the receiver was a full participant in Friday's practice, appearing to have just about fully recovered from hip surgery Aug. 1. Carroll said the team still wants to see how Harvin's body responds to having practiced the past three days before making a final call.
MOTOR SPORTS Dillon takesNationwide title —With tears in eyesand three fingers in the air, Richard Childress hardly had words to describe his latest NASCAR championship. His grandson, Austin Dillon, won the Nationwide Series title in the famed No. 3 and by three points. "Hard to believe," Childress said. "I couldn't be more proud of Austin. He drives with his heart every lap. What can you say? He's just a great competitor, a great grandson. I'm proud, really proud of him. He ran good and hard tonight." Sprint Cup regular Brad Keselowski won the season finale at HomesteadMiami Speedway on Saturday, moving up10 spots in the closing few laps to give an otherwise typical race a wild and wacky finish. But the night belonged to Dillon, who overcame a sluggish start and a scrape against the wall to finish12th. It was good enough to hold off Sam Hornish Jr. by three points. Hornish crossed the line eighth. "It was ugly," said Dillon, who won the Truck Series title in 2011. "Probably the worst car we had all year. But we fought. My guys kept me positive in the car."
Vettel WinSPOle —Worid champion Sebastian Vettel once again got the better of Red Bull teammate and rival Mark Webber, qualifying in pole position Saturday for the U.S. Grand Prix. Webber appeared set to earn his third pole in the last four races until Vettel lapped the Circuit of the Americas in 1 minute, 36.338 seconds on his last run. Romain Grosjean of Lotus will start third today.
TENNIS czechs leadDavis cupThe Czech Republic is one victory from winning a second straight Davis Cup. The defending champions defeated host Serbia in doubles for a 2-1 lead in the Davis Cup final Saturday when Tomas Berdych and Radek Stepanek beat Nenad Zimonjic and llija
Bozoljac 6-2, 6-4, 7-6 (4). The victory by the Czech pair on the indoor hard court at Belgrade Arena improved their Davis Cup doubles record to 14-1. Berdych playsNovak Djokovic,who is on a 23-match winning run, in the first reverse singles today. The final could be decided when Stepanek likely meets cup rookie Dusan Lajovic in the last match.
WINTER SPORTS speed skater dreaks
WOrld reCOrd again —Sou~h Korea's Lee Sang-hwa broke the world record in the women's 500 meters for the second straight day and third time in eight days, finishing in 36.36 seconds Saturday in a World Cup speedskating meet at the Utah Olympic Oval. The 24-year-old defending Olympic champion broke her own record last Saturday in Calgary, Alberta, with a run of 36.74 and topped it again Friday in Kearns with a 36.57. Heather Richardson was second in a U.S.-record 36.90. American Shani Davis won the men's 1,000 a day after taking the 1,500. The two-time Olympic champion finished in 1:06.02 in the 1,000. — From wire reports
W 9 7 5 5 6 5 4 4 3 4 4 3 3 2 2
L 1 3 3 6 4 5 6 6 5 7 7 6 6 7 7
d Indiana d Miami Chicago d Philadelphia Atlanta Charlotte Orlando Toronto Detroit Boston Cleveland NewYork Brooklyn Washington Milwaukee Western Conference W L d SanAntonio 9 1 d Porlland 7 2 d L.A. Clippers 7 3 GoldenState 7 3 Oklahoma City 6 3 Houston 7 4 Minnesota 7 4 Dallas 6 4 Phoenix 5 4 Memphis 4 5 Denver 4 5 NewOrleans 4 6 L.A. Lakers 4 7 Sacramento 2 6 utah 1 10 ddivision leader
Saturday's Games
Pct GB 900 700 2 625 3 455 4 I/2
600 3 500 4 400 5 400 5 375 5 364 5'Ir 364 5'Ir 333 5 I/2 333 5 I/2
222 o/r 222 o/r Pct GB 900 778 t'Ir 700 2 700 2 667 Z/r 636 Z/r 636 Z/r 600 3 556 3/r 444 4 I/2 444 4 I/2
400 5 364 5'Ir 250 6 091 ty/r
Saturday's Games Dallas 108,Orlando100 Cleveland103,Washington 96,Ot Miami 97,Charlotte81 Atlanta110,NewYork90 Chicago110,Indiana94 Minnesota106,Boston88 Houston12Z Denver111 NewOrleans135, Philadelphia 98 Oklahoma City9Z Milwaukee79 GoldenState10Z Utah88 L.A. Clippers110,Brooklyn 103
Today's Games
Porlland atToronto, 10a.m. Memphisat Sacramento, 3p.m. Detroit atL.A.Lakers,6:30p.m. Mottday' sGames Porlland atBrooklyn, 4:30p.m. Charlotte atChicago, 5p.m. Denverat OklahomaCity, 5p.m. Philadelphiaat Dallas,5:30p.m. GoldenStateat Utah, 6p.m. Memphisat L.A.Clippers, h30p.m.
OKLAHOMACITY(92) Durant 7157 724, Ibaka6133 415, Perkins 11 0 2 Z Westbrook10 20 5 826,Roberson1 10 0Z collison 1 5 1 23, Lamb3 110 0 7,Adams0 42 2 Z Jackson 5 10 t 211, Fisher 0 20 00. Totals 3482 19-27 92. MILWAUKEE (79) Middleton 5142 214,Udoh4 103 611, Pachulia 31311 7, Wolters 31011 7, Mayo 719 332z Henson5 80 010,Ridnour 1 40 0z Neal t 51 24, Antetokounmpo 1 30 0Z Totals 30-8611-15 79. Oklahoma City 23 17 3 2 20 — 92 Milwaukee 23 17 25 14 — 79
ROCketS122,NtiggetS111 DENvER (111) Hamilton 4 8 0 0 8, raried 4 11 0 0 8, Hickson 7 12 0 1 14, tawson 11 19 4 628, roye 2 12 22 8, Chandler 5 10 2 214, Mozgov3 6 3 4 9, Arlhur 35006, rournier4101210,AMiller03000, Robinson 1 21 13,QMiller 1 10 0 a Totals 4599 13-18 111. HOUSTON (122) Parsons 8 133 320, Jones6 111 4 14,Howard 4 6 17 2425, Beverley 4 7 0 011, Harden5 165 5 17, un 6 114 616,Casspi 3 90 07, Motielunas5 6 1 21Z Garcia 0 20 00,Brewer0 00 00, Brooks0 0 0 00. Totals 41-81 31-44122. Dettver 23 23 29 36 — 111 Houston 33 30 27 32 — 122
Pelicans135, 76ers 98 PHILADELPHIA (98) Turner 2 110 0 4,Young5 111 211, Hawes4 11 5 6 14, Wroten 6 165 6 19,J.Anderson 5 90 0 11, Thompson2 54 58,Allen 24 0 04,Morris6 96 9 20, Davies24004,0rlon12133. Totals35-82 22-31 98. NEWORLEANS(135) Aminu 4 5 2 4 10,Davis 5 10 3 513,Smith 4 4 0 0 8, Holiday 6 92 214,Gordon7 122 319, Evans 6 10 3 6 15,R.Anderson1016 00 26, Morrow0 3 2 2 z Roberls 5 91 114,Amundson12 0 0z Riv ers 4 6 3 41ZChildress00 0 00, Withey0 0 000. TotaIs 52-8618-27135. Philadelphia 22 24 20 32 — 98 New Orleans 34 33 36 32 — 135
Btills110, Pacers 94 INDIANA(94) George 3 14 6 6 1z West6 161 1 13,Hibberl 5 104 714, G.Hill 3 74 511,Stephenson5142 21Z SHill01000,Scola48008,Watson16002, Johnson 3 4 33 9,Mahinmi0 00 20,Copeland4 5
2 213, R.Butler 0 0 0 0.Totals 34-85 22-28 94. CHICAGO (110) Deng8146 723, Boozer6111213, Noah16 244,Rose 7160020,J.Butler235610,Hinrich 4104 413,Gibson7131115,Dunleavy4 50010, Mohammed110 OZSnell0 00 00. Totals40-79 19-24 110. Indiana 20 15 24 35 — 94 Chicago 31 29 24 26 — 110
Timberwolves106, Celtics 88 BOSTON (88) Green 0622Z Bass6103415, raverani 3 7 129, Crawford 4140010, Bradley12232227, Sullinger1 61 2 3,Brooks3 72 28,Wallace 1 400 Z Olynyk 2 5 2 26,Humphries1 2 2 2 4, Pressey12 0 0 Z Totals 34-8615-18 88. MINNESOTA (106) Brewer 2 8 0 04, tove 7 16 7 723, Pekovic 89 4 5 20,Rubio 1 51 2 3,Marlin 6 18 7820, Hummel 3 7008, Cunningham 610001ZBarea61500 13, Shved0 20 00,Williams 0 20 00, Price 1 200 3, Dieng 0 00 00. Totals 40-9419-22106. Boston 24 26 20 18 — 88 Minnesota 33 22 34 17 — 106
Cavaliers103, Wizards 96
0 0 7, Cole 3 102 28,Wade1 72 44,Andersen2 2 6 610, Lewis 3 72 29,Beasley7140015, Anthony 0 1 0 0 0,MasonJr. 2-5 3-3 9. Totals 35 6921 23 97. CHARLOTTE(81) Kidd Gilchrist 3 8 2 2 8, McRoberls 3 10 0 0 6, Biyombo 1 2 2 2 4,Walker 7 185 6 2Z Henderson 4124 513, taylor5142 514,Zeller0 20 00, Toll iver 1 9 0 0 3,Sessions 5 8 0 0 11. Totals 29-83 15-20 81. Miami 26 19 23 29 — 97 Charlotte 16 25 19 21 — 81
Clippers110, Nets 103 BROOKLYN (103) Anderson493315,Evans1200ZBlatche811 2 219, Livingston 4 143411, Johnson5171 213, Plumlee 710 51219, Terry3 7 2 29, teletovic 1 7 0 0Z Taylor3 66 813, Shengelia0 20 00. Totals 36-85 22-33 103. L.A. CLIPPERS(110) Dudley0 60 00, Griffin 12196 1130,Jordan2 3 5 89,Paul3124 41ZRedick9143426,Crawford 5 8 2 313, Hollins 2 2 00 4, Barnes1 30 0z col lison 2 50 04, Mullens4 40 010, Bullock0 10 00. Totals40-7720-30110. Brooklyn 26 29 20 28 — 103 L.A. Clippers 29 25 22 34 — 110
cLEvELAND (103)
Clark4 60 011,Thompson6 113 315, Bynum2 Warriors 102, Jazz88 82 26, Irving14 289 941, Miles2 32 28, Varelao 0 3 2 2 Z Gee12 1 2 3,Jack 5 132 2 13, Karasev UTAH(88) 1 2 0 0 Z Dellavedova1 5 0 0 ZTotals 36-81 21Jefferson 4 1022 tz Favors 8 12 1 2 17,Kanter 22 103. 5 12 0 0 10,Burks3 112 28, Hayward 5 1224 14, WASHINGTON (96) Garrett160 0 z Goberl0 00 20, Williams 5 91 2 Webster 4 12 4 414, Nene9 166 924, Gorlat 6 13 14, tucasIII 3 30 0 7, Harris 0 12 2 Z Clark 1 10 0 0 01Z Wall 3 13 3 39,Beal 11252 228, Seraphin Z Totals 35-7710-16 88. 1500z Rice Jr05121,temple1100zvesely GOLDENSTATE(102) 2 30 24. Totals 37-9316-2296. Iguodala681216, tee5103413, Bogut 5 7 Cleveland 18 26 2 0 26 13 — 103 221Z Curry 7201215, Thompson9142225, W ashington 2 5 2 4 20 21 6 — 9 6 Barnes5100 011,0'Nealz 22 26,speights0 30 0 0,Green1400ZKuzmic00000,Bazemore110 0 Z Nedovic 0 10 00. Totals 41-8011-14102. Mavericks108, Magic100 utah 13 21 29 25 — 88 Golden State 27 24 23 28 — 102 DALLAs(108) Marion 3 93411, Nowitzki 6122218, Dalem bert 3 50 26, calderon5 100 011,Ellis 9 191 219, Hawks 110, Knicks90 carler 4 10 2 21z Crowder3 50 0 7, Blair 7 9 46 18, Mekel 3 5 0 06. Totals 43-8412-18108. ATLANTA(110) ORLANDO (100) Carroll 4 81 110, Millsap 6 9 2214, Horford6 Harkless 4104 61Z Maxiell 3512 7, Vucevic 10 0 0 1z teague 5 9 6 1016, Korver 5 11 2 215, 8 12 0 0 16,Nelson 6 11 0 015,Afflalo 6 12 1314 Ayon 5 6 0010, Jenkins 120 0Z Scott 4 102 211, 25, Nicholson 4 5 0 18, Oladipo 3 8 3 4 10,Moore C.Marlin 3 5 0 0 8,Mack5 8 0 01Z Totals 44-78 2 4 1 1 5,Jones 1 10 0Z tamb 0 20 0 0. Totals 13-17 110. 37-7022-28 100. NEWYORK(90) Dallas 31 28 28 21 — 108 Anthony 8216 723, J.smith 3 180 0 7,Bargnani Orlando 24 22 34 20 — 100 5 11 5 6 16,relton 3 8 0 0 7,Shumperl 4 8 0 0 11, Prigioni24005,HardawayJr3 7018,KMarlin36 Heat 97, Bobcats81 0 06, Stoudemire2 51 25, Murry 0 0 000, Aldrich 1 20 OZ Totals 34-9012-1690. MIAMI (97) Atlanta 24 30 26 30 — 110 James13184 4 30, Battier112 25, Bosh 34 New York 26 21 22 21 — 90
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
Ohio State tops Marquette in Top-25matchup The Associated Press MILWAUKEE — Shannon Scott and Sam Thompson scored 13 points apiece, helping No. 10 Ohio State pull away from cold-shooting No. 17 Marquette for a 52-35 win Saturday. A aron C r af t a d d e d 1 0 points for the Buckeyes (3-0), who ended the Golden Eagles' 27-game home winning streak, second-longest in the nation. Ohio State slowly grabbed control with a 12-4 run to open the second half, which included six points from Scott. The 6-foot-I guard found gaps in
Marquette's interior defense, and then extended the lead to 44-28 with 6:31 left on a layup on the break. Todd Mayo led Marquette (2-1) with 11 points. It was the school's first loss at the Bradley Center since Vanderbilt beat the Golden Eagles 74-57 on Dec. 29, 2011. The Golden Eagles had 20 t urnovers and shot just 19 percent (10 of 53). Also on Saturday: No. 9 Syracuse 69, Colgate 50: SYRACUSE, N.Y. — C.J. Fairscored 20 points for Syracuse (3-0), and f r eshman guard Tyler Ennis hit four 3-
pointers for 12 points. No. 11 Florida 86, UALR 56: GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Casey Prather scored 27 points and Dorian Finney-Smith showed great versatility in his Florida
(4-0) to the victory. No. 20 Wisconsin 69,Wisconsin-Green Bay 66: GREEN BAY, Wis. — Frank Kaminsky scored 16 points and Sam Dekker added 13 to help Wisconsin (3-0) rally. (2-1) debut. No. 14 VCU 92, Winthrop 71: No. 25 Virginia 70, DavidRICHMOND, Va. — Briante son 57: CHARLOTTE, N.C. Weber scored 16 points and — Mike Tobey had 18 points, Virginia Comm o n wealth and Virginia (2-1) used a sec(3-0) pulled away in the sec- ond-half surge to get the win. ond half to remain unbeaten Colorado 94, Jackson State with a victory over visiting 70: BOULDER, Colo. — Askia Winthrop. Booker led seven Colorado No. 16 Wichita State 85, Ten- players in double figures with nessee State 71: WICHITA, 15 points and the Buffaloes Kan. — Tekele Cotton scored (3-1) pulled away in the sec18 points to lead Wichita State ond half.
B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
Summit boys
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Continued from B1 It was also the first outright crown everby a Central Oregon boys soccer team. "It's pretty s u rreal r i g ht now," said Kidder, who minutes earlier received a Gatorade bath from his players and rushed the field to join a dog pile with his team. "You go into every season hoping you'll get to this level, but it is so hard. You look at all the soccer teams that have come out of Central Oregon, there's very few that have made it to this game or won the championship." Only five other times had a Central Oregon program advanced to a boys soccer state final. An d o n l y M o u ntain View had ever won a piece of the title, sharing the then4A crown when the Cougars played Jesuit to a scoreless tie in the 1999 state championship match. "It's just a hard thing to do," Kidder continued. "We realize that. We respect that. To finally get it done is just so rewarding. I'm so happy for these guys. It's a very exciting day and it's such a relief to have that one under our belt." A relief, indeed. Each of the last two years, the Storm were dispatched in the state semifi-
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Pete C hosto pher / TheOregonian
Summit's Alex Bowlin (4) had a goal and an assist in Summit's 2-0 victoryover Hood River Valley in the Class 5A state championship match in Hillsboro on Saturday. nals. On Saturday they, along with the Eagles of Hood River Valley, were playing in their first state final. And with goalkeeper Levi Davidson recording four saves and the defense pitching its sixth straight shutout — against a fourth-seeded Hood River Valley team (162-1) that led all of Class 5A
in goal-scoring heading into Saturday's matchup, no less — Summit secured the elusive state title. "That's something you cherish forever," said Bowlin, who admittedly was at a loss for words. "This team has been amazing." In the 34th minute, Bow-
lin played a ball from the top of the box to the right side, where Fefferman collected the pass and delivered a strike to the left side of the goal, giving the second-seeded Storm (16-1-2) a lead they would not relinquish. "I actually didn't even think it was real," said Fefferman, a
senior forward. "When I put it in, and it rolled in, I thought for sure the ref was going to call me for offsides or call a foul or something. I was really afraid about that for a minute. But when it all became real ... it was unbelievable." Five minutes later, Bowlin received a pass from Fritz and sent a shot into the upper left corner to give Summit a 2-0 lead at the half. Four of t h e S torm's five shots on goal came in the first half. But it was the defense that received praise from players and coaches. "The guys in b ack, they killed it i n t h e entire playoffs," Bowlin said. "Zero goals through four games is unreal. Against these teams, this team (the Eagles) scored seven goals in their first playoff game. We were coming into that knowing we were a good defense, but it was just a matter of who could win, I guess. And our D was just better than every team." There was no d escribing the emotions and thoughts of Summit's players. There was no need. Because finally, after two straight years ofknocking on the door, the Storm busted it down. — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucasC<bendbulletin.com.
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The Summit boys and girls soccer teams pose with their trophies after sweeping the Class 5A state championships in Hillsboro on Saturday.
Summit girls Continued from B1 Edwards finished with two goals and an assist, Megan Cornett added a score and an assist, and Summit, the top seed in the 16-team playoffbracket, defeated the 15th-seeded Trojans. "I never really thought about senior year or anything," Patterson said."I've seen seniors go and everything, but being here now, knowing this is all our last (game) and everything, winning that state championship was more than anything I could have asked for." All four Summit goals came in the first half, beginning with Patterson's score on a free kick. From about 25 yards out, she lofted the ball over the outstretched hands of W ilson goalkeeper Nikki Hogan and found the upper right corner of the goal. In disbelief, Patterson collapsed to the ground, where she was rushed by teammates. "I've had some terrible free kicks this season," Patterson said. "Once that went in ... I'm glad it was this game that it went in." With the victory, Summit (17-0-2) picked up its third state title in four years and joined Bend High as the only Central Oregon teams to win back-to-
Sisters Continued from B1 McAllister netted a goal in the left corner to lift Sisters to a 1-0 victory over Henley in the Class 4A boys soccer state championship final at Liberty High School — the Outlaws' first state title in school history. "We've had games like this before where it's just battling it out," McAllister said. "There's no frustration. This team is really connected, and we knew that if we kept on battling, one would go in. It wasn't a problem for us." Sisters (17-I-I) opened Saturday's title contest a bit cautiously. It was the Outlaws' first championship final, so such an approach was understandable. But after heading into the halftime intermission in a scoreless draw, the nerves had to go. "We got in the locker room and (Sisters coach Rob Jensen) told us, 'Nerves are gone. Let's play some soccer,"' Mannhalter said. "We came out,got the job done." "In the second half, we really started playing good soccer," Jensen said. "We were pressing their side most of the
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Summit's Christina Edwards (9) battles for possession with Dana Nathanson (6) of Wilson during Saturday's Class 5A final. Edwards scored a pair of goals. back championships. The win completed Summit's sweep of the 5A state championships, a feat accomplished by no other program since the Oregon School Activities Association expanded to six classifications in 2006. Saturday's championship triumph
also extended the Storm's streak of games played without being defeated, which now stands at 36. "It's a testament to the girls," Summit coach Jamie Brock said. "All the wins aside — it's their play, it's their attitude. They're just a fun group of girls
to be around, and they deserve every bit of it. The wins, it's a pretty impressive streak, for sure. But again, a lot of it has to do with them and the passion for the game and them as a team, as well. They enjoy playing together, and it shows." Kenna Meinhart posted two goals for Wilson (8-7-3), which was in the state championship for the first time since 1977, but it was not enough to overcome a flurry of Storm goals midway through the first half. "For a state final game, it's usually 1-0. It's really close," said Edwards, who admittedly was shocked by the number of goals that were scored. "It just kept going back and forth, so I was really worried when they scored right after Shannon, but then we got on that roll. I was just like, 'OK, this is in the bag. Let's just keep playing our game.'" Summit not only playing for but winning the state title has become an expectation now, according to Edwards. The s ophomore m i dfielder has been a part of two championship teams already. And, she said, "I'm hoping to go for three next year." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucasC<bendbulletin.com.
Sisters defense recorded their second straight shutout and 12th of the season. It was a fitting end for the Outlaws, the kind of nail-biting thriller with which they were already all too familiar this postseason. Sisters eked into its first state semifinal appearance by way of two wins decided by shootouts. That experience just prepared the Outlaws for Saturday's final against Henley, which Sisters had defeated 2-1 earlier this season. L's "We really learned how to play as ,I a unit after those first two (playoff) Danny Moran/ The Oregonian games," Mannhalter said. "We came Sisters goalkeeper Keenan O'Hern is congratulated on the sideline after the Outlaws into this with a lot of confidence, knowwon the Class 4A state championship on Saturday night in Hillsboro. ing that we had to take care ofbusiness to get the job done." Going from a first-round exit in the half.... I just figured it was time to go McAllister on the right side. The rest 2012 state playoffs to state champions is already something of Sisters legend, in 2013 ... it was all just unbelievable get it, and these guys came through." The Outlaws, seeded seventh in the but Mannhalter would not be able to to Mannhalter. For McAllister, it is the 16-team playoffbracket, came through recount the event. perfectsend-off. "I've been striving to get to this exact in the 75th minute, when Mannhal"I kind of blacked out, to be honest, ter capitalized on a miscue by fifth- because I was just in the moment," spot since then," McAllister said, referseeded Henley (14-4-1) that gave the Mannhalter said. "I just remember giv- ring to his freshman year. "It's been a sophomore possession of the ball deep ing the ball off to Jake, him scoring and long journey. But it's totally worth it." in the Hornets' territory. Mannhalter running to the crowd." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, dribbled twice and dropped a pass to G oalie Keenan O'Hern an d t h e glucasC<bendbulletin.com.
MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR
Qn eve of another title, Johnson still fighting for his due By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press
HOMESTEAD, Fl a. — Jimmie Johnson is up almost every day by 5:30 a.m., the easiest time of day to do his training. H e runs f iv e d ay s a w eek, logging up t o 4 0 miles on foot, swims two days a week and cycles two days a week. Johnson has completed half marathons, multiple triathlons and now has his eyes set o n an Ironman and t h e Boston Marathon, perhaps as early as next year. Yet as the most dominant driver of the decade c loses in o n h i s s i x t h NASCAR c h ampionship in eight years, his accomp lishments fail t o e a r n proper due. T h e l a t est slight came from retired NFL quarterback Donovan McNabb, who said on a Fox Sports I p r ogram that Johnson is "absolutely not" an athlete. "He sits in a car and he drives, that doesn't take being athletic," McNabb said Friday night during a debate over the most dominant athletes in sports. " What athletically i s h e dolng? It triggered an immediate backlash on social media against McNabb, who ranked Johnson third on his personal list behind Tiger Woods and Kobe Bryant. Fellow drivers rallied to the defense of Johnson, who stayed silent on the subject u n t i l Sa t u r day morning. Johnson Tweeted his response, posting: "The debate continues... Everyone is entitled to an opinion. ¹DriversAreAthletes." Goaded by a fan to go harder on the topic, Johnson declined. "I choose to be respectful. There is way too much venom spewed these days," he tweeted in response. And that was his final word on t h e subject as Johnson headed off for the final two practice sessions before today'sseason finale race at HomesteadMiami Speedway. H e can wi n h i s s i x t h championship by f i n i shing 23rd or bet ter. Mat t Kenseth and Kevin Harvick both need for something to go terribly wrong with Johnson's Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet on the track to have any shot at snatching the title. A s p o keswoman f o r J ohnson said h e w o u l d have no further comment o n McNabb beyond h i s Saturday morning tweets She said Johnson was focused only on preparing the No. 48 for th e f i nal race of the year. "We're just working on comfort," Johnson said between practice sessions. "I was just out there running around on old tires, trying to find a little comfort in the car." Business as usual f or Johnson and h i s l a serfocused Hendrick c r ew. Johnson's 10-lap average ranked sixth in Saturday's first practice, and he shot to the top of the leaderboard in the final session before today's race. That's what has put him in this position, and put a NASCAR drivers' name in the debate of dominant athletes. Johnson's 66 Sprint Cup wins since 2002 are 30 more than any other driver has won during the same span, and a sixth title will put only the seven won by Richard Petty and the late Dale Earnhardt ahead of him on the all-time list. Neither Petty nor Earnhardt did it i n a n e ightyear span. A n d s h ould Johnson win the title, at 38 he would be four years younger than Earnhardt w as when h e w o n h i s sixth.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
stuns No. tan or The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The Coliseum stands emptied in waves that flowed onto the field after Stanford's final fumble. Thousands of Southern California fans enveloped the Trojans to celebrate an improbable win secured by an interim coach, an inconsistent kicker and a thin defense that wouldn't break. USC's surge for Ed Orgeron had just swallowed up No. 5 Stanford's national title hopes. Andre Heidari kicked a 47-yard field goal with 19 seconds to play, and a stalwartdefense repeatedly came up big in USC's 20-17 upset of the Cardinal on Saturday night. Cody Kessler passed for 288 yards as the revitalized Trojans (8-3, 5-2 Pac-12) earned their fifth win in six games under the irrepressible Orgeron, who replaced the fired Lane Kiffin in l ate September. Orgeron immediately returned fun to a dour program — and wins have followed, none bigger than this streak-snapping win over powerful Stanford. "In our tight-knit family, there was a belief that we were going to find a way to win the game," Orgeron said. "I'm proud of our young men. This is something that they've wanted for a long time now." USC's remarkable defensive performance included two fourth-quarter interceptions and a season-low 17 points from the Cardinal (8-2, 6-2), who followed up last week's win over Oregon by getting knocked out of the BCS title chase and maybe the Rose Bowl race as well. Heidari nearly lost his job twice this season, and he missed an extra point in the first quarter. But the junior coolly nailed the tiebreaking field goal — and then got an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty for running the length of the field to celebrate it. "They all said, 'We know you got this. You do it every day in practice,"' Heidari said of his teammates. "They believed in me." Moments later, thousands of USC fans flooded the field. Stanford had won in its last three trips to the Coliseum, including a t r i ple-overtime thriller two years ago, and its last four meetings with USC overall. Soma Vainuku caught an early TD pass and Javorius Allen rushed for a score for USC, which played 38 straight scoreless minutes until
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Southern California running back Javorius Allen celebrates a touchdown during the first half of Saturday's game against Stanford in Los Angeles.
Heidari's kick. Nelson Agholor had eight catches for 104 yards, while Marqise Lee had six catches for 83 yards — and both receivers made big plays on USC's final drive. "I don't know if I pulled them together," Orgeron said. "I think they just came together. The leadership of this program is really coming to the forefront." Tyler Gaffney rushed for 158 yards and two touchdowns for Stanford, which had won three straight while closing in on the chance to host the Pac-12 title game for th e second straight year. Kevin Hogan went 14 of 25 for 127 yards, but the Cardinal couldn't regain the lead after trailing 17-10 at half, despite repeatedly getting close. "I think this is the first time anyone on this team has lost to them," Gaffney said. "It's a tough thing to swallow." Also on Saturday: No. 1 Alabama 20, Mississippi State 7: STARKVILLE, Miss. — T.J. Yeldon rushed for 160 yards, A.J. McCarron threw two touchdown passes and Alabama overcame four turnovers to beat Mississippi State. It was a lethargic performance for Alabama (10-0, 7-0 Southeastern Conference), which led 10-7 midway through the third quarterbefore pulling away. No. 2 Florida State 59, Syracuse 3: TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Jameis Winston showed no effects from a tumultuous week during the Seminoles'
win. The redshirt quarterback completed 19-of-21passes for 277 yards and two touchdowns as Florida State (10-0, 8-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) rolled. News broke Wednesday that Winston was under investigation for an alleged sexual assault that took place in 2012. No. 3 Ohio State 60, Illinois 35: CHAMPAIGN, Ill.— Carlos Hyderan for 246 yards and four touchdowns and Braxton Miller had another 184 yards rushing and two scores for Ohio State. The Buckeyes (10-0, 6-0 Big Ten) needed a third-quarter defensive stop and safety to pull away. No. 4 Baylor 63, Texas Tech 34: ARLINGTON, Texas — Bryce Petty threw three touchdown passes and ran for two more scores as Baylor stayed undefeated and overcame its first double-digit deficit of the season. The Bears (9-0, 6-0), even without several key offensive players, stretched their school-record winning streak to 13 games. No. 7 Auburn 43, No. 25 Georgia 38: AUBURN, Ala. — Ricardo Louis scored on a deflected 73-yard pass on fourth and 18 with 25 seconds left to lift Auburn to a stunning victory. The Tigers (10-1, 6-1 Southeastern Conference) had blown a 27-7 lead but pulled out one more huge play to continue the biggest turnaround in major college football. They were 3-9 last year. Auburn's Nick Marshall heaved the ball downfield with two defenders around Louis. It bounced off safety
Josh Harvey-Clemons and right into Louis's hands. Quarterback Aaron Murray led Georgia (6-4, 4-3) all the way to Auburn's 20 but his final two passes fell incomplete as time ran out. No. 11 South Carolina 19, Florida 14: COLUMBIA, S.C. — Elliott Fry kicked four field goals and South Carolina won its school-record 16th straight at home, sending banged-up Florida to its fifth consecutive loss. The Gamecocks (8-2, 6-2 Southeastern Conference) struggled to score points against the Gators' SEC-leading defense until Fry gave them a 1614 lead with a 22-yard field goal with 6:43 remaining. No. 12 Oklahoma State 38, No. 23 Texas 13: AUSTIN, Texas — Clint Chelf ran for two touchdowns and Oklahoma State stayed in the Big 12 championship chase. Chelf also threw two scoring passes as Oklahoma State (8-1, 6-1 Big 12) won in Austin for the third straight meeting. This one may re-ignite pressure on Texas (7-3, 6-1) coach Mack Brown, who was dealt his worst home loss in 16 seasons — and at a time when speculation about his job security had just begun quieting down. No. 14 Michigan State 41, Nebraska 28: LINCOLN, Neb. — Michigan State converted five Nebraska turnovers into 24 points and took a big step toward winning the Big Ten Legends Division. Jeremy Langford ran 32 times for 151 yards and scored two touchdowns, and Keith Mumphrey caught a 27-yard touchdown from Connor Cook in the fourth quarter after the Cornhuskers pulled within six points. The Spartans (9-1, 6-0) beat the Huskers (7-3, 4-2) for the first time in eight all-time meetings. No. 15 UCF 39, Temple 36: PHILADELPHIA — Shawn Moffitt kicked a 23-yard field goal as time expired after Rannell Hall got behind the Temple defense for a 64-yard reception, and Central Florida (8-1, 5-0 American Athletic Conference) survived a scare. No. 17 Wisconsin 51, Indiana 3: MADISON, Wis. — James White rushed for a career-high 205 yards and Melvin Gordon added 146 for Wisconsin (8-2, 5-1 Big Ten). Wisconsin had 323 yards rushing at the half and finished with 554. No. 19 Louisville 20, Houston 13: LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Dominique Brown ran for a c a reer-high 137
yards and two touchdowns, including the go-ahead score in the third quarter, and Louisville (9-1, 5-1 American Athletic Conference) held on. No. 22 Oklahoma 48, lowa State 10: NORMAN, Okla. — Bob Stoops matched Barry Switzer's record for most coaching victories at Oklahoma as the Sooners cruised. Trevor Knight led the way as Stoops recorded win No. 157 with Oklahoma (8-2, 5-2 Big 12), which closed the game with 45 unanswered points over the final three quarters. Duke 48, No. 24 Miami 30: DURHAM, N.C. — Brandon Connette rushed for a career-high four touchdowns and threw for a fifth score, and Duke took sole possession of first place in the ACC's messy Coastal Division. The Blue Devils' changeof-pace quarterback had touchdown runs of I, 2, 3 and 4 yards, and threw a 22-yard TD to Shaq Powell while leading Duke (8-2, 4-2) to one of the program's most significant wins. Sacramento State 43, Portland State 42: PORTLAND, — Garret Safron passed for 554 yards and three second-half touchdowns and Sacramento State rallied from a 14point deficit, beating Portland State. Sacramento State (5-6, 4-3 Big Sky Conference) dominated the second half, scoring five touchdowns. DJ Adams had a career high 249 yards rushing, scoring five touchdowns, while Collin Ramirez passed for 272 yards as Portland State (6-5, 43) amassed a school record 713 total yards. Washington State 24, Arizona 17: TUCSON, Ariz. — Connor Halliday threw 25 yards to Isiah Myers for the tiebreaking touchdown with 2:15 to play to give Washington State (5-5, 34 Pac-12) the win. Halliday completed 39 of 53 passes for 319 yards and two scores, the junior's seventh 300-yard passing of the season. Ka'Deem Carey scored both touchdowns for Arizona (6-4, 3-4) on a 30-yard run and a 7-yard reception from B.J. Denker. Carey gained 132 yards on 26 carries, his 13th consecutive 100-yard game. Colorado 41, California 24: BOULDER, Colo.— Sefo Liufau threw for a career-high 364yards and Paul Richardson tieda team record for receptions in a contest with 11 to help Colorado (4-6, 1-6 Pac-12) snap a 14-game conference losing streak by beating
Cal (1-10, 0-8).
COLLEGE FOOTBALLSCOREBOARD SCOREBOARD Pac-12 Oregon Slanford Oregon State Washington Washington Slate California
Standings North Conf. Overall 61 62 43 34 34 08
South
Conf. Overall
ArizonaSlate UCLA USC Arizona Colorado
uah
91 82 64 64 55 1 10
61 52 52 34 16 16
Saturday's Games
82 82 83 64 46 46
WashingtonSl. 24,Arizona17 Oregon44,Utah21 Colorado41,California 24 SouthernCal20,Slanford 17 ArizonaState30,OregonState 17
No. 6 Oregon44, Utah21 Utah
Oregon
0 7 7 7 — 21 1 0 7 20 7 — 4 4
First Quarter Ore D.Thomas 8passfrom Mariota (Wogankick),
8:43. Ore FG Wogan 31,2:4t
SecondQuarter Utah J.Murphy 34 pass from Schulz (Phillips kick), 2:5z Ore Huff 5passfromMariota (Wogankick), 2:07. Third Quarter Utah Schulz 4run(Philips kick), 10:09. Ore D.Thomas 86kickoff return(kickhiled), 9:56. Ore Mundt 14pass fromMariota (Wogankick),
5:4z
Ore Marshall 17run(Wogankick),:32. Fourth Quarter Ore Marshall 16run(Wogankick), 12:09. Utah Poole 10 run (Philips kick), 6:Ot A 56,48t
U tah Ore First downs 17 21 Rushesyards 42 116 35 145 Passing 181 288 CompAtt Int 13 30 1 19 28 0 ReturnYards 0 17 Punts Avg. 9 400 6 38.8 FumblesLost 00 00 PenaltiesYards 4 50 1 0 80 Time ofPossession 35:57 2 4:03 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Utah: Poole 18 54, Radley 1745, Schulz 515, D.Anderson 13, Team 1(minus 1). Oregon: Marshall 1166, Tyner 757, Forde 523, DJhomas4 11,Roseberry 4 6,Mariota 4(minus 18). PASSING —Utah: Schulz13 30 1181.Oregon: Mariota19 26 0288,tockie 0 2 0 0. RECEIVING—Utah:D.Anderson 4 37,Denham 319, J.Murphy 243, Hatfield 148, Norwood 121, Fitzgerald 1 7,Radley16. Oregon: Addison 467, Huff 4 57,D.Thomas4 28,Hawkins355,Brown2 42, Baylis125, Mundt114.
No. 21 ArizonaState30, Oregon St.17 OregonSt. ArizonaSt.
0 3 7 7 — 17 13 7 0 10 — 30
First Quarter
ASU Grice1run (Gonzalekizck),11:57. ASU Foster 8run(kickblocked),:32.
SecondQuarter AsU Grice1run(Gonzalezkick),82z Orst FG Rom aine2z:00. Third Quarter OrSt Smith 6passfrom Mannion (Romaine kick),
Rushesyards Passing CompAtt Int ReturnYards Punts Avg. FumblesLost PenaltiesYards Time ofPossession
26 70 39 156 320 183 31 46 4 22 37 2 27 35
4 39.0 5 4z2
21 00 769 5 33 32:36 2 7:24 INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING — OregonState:Woods15 53,Cooks 211, Ward 711, Bolden14, Mannion 1(minus9). Arizona State: Grice 24118,Foster 4 20, R.Smith
115, T.Kelly86, Team 2 (minus3). PASSING —Oregon State: Mannion 31464 320. Arizona State: T.Kelly22 37 2183. RECEIVING —Oregon State: Hamlett 9119, Cooks9 99,Mull aney 3 43,Anderson 3 27,Gilmore 318, Smith 213, Woods11, Hatfield 1 0.Arizona State: Strong 7106,R.Smith 726, Grice4 13,Foster 21z Ozier121, Coyle15.
Top 25 No.1Alabama(100)beatMississippi Slate20 7.Next: vs. Chattanooga,Saturday. No. 2 FloridaSlate(10 0)beat Syracuse59 3.Nexl: vs. Idaho,Saturday. No. 3 OhioSlate (100) beatlllinois 60 35. Next:vs. Indiana,Saturday. No. 4 Baylor (9 0)beatTexas Tech63 34.Next: at No. 12 Oklahoma State,Saturday. No. 5 Stanford(8 2) lost to SouthernCal 20 17.Next: vs. California,Saturday. No. 6 Oregon(9 1) beatUtah442t Next: at Arizona, Saturday. No. 7 Auburn(10 1)beat No.25Georgia 4338. Next: vs. No.1Alabama,Saturday, Nov.30. No. 8 Clemson(91) beatGeorgia Tech55 31, Thurs day. Next:vs. TheCitadel, Saturday. No. 9 Missouri (9 1)didnotplay. Next: at Mississippi, Saturday. No. 10TexasAHM(8 2) did not play. Next:at No. 18 LSU,Saturday. No. 11SouthCarolina (8 2)beatFlorida 1914. Next: vs. CoastalCarolina, Saturday. No. 12OklahomaState (9 1)beat No.23Texas 38 13. Next: vs.No.4Baylor, Saturday. No. 13 UCLA(8 2) beatWashington 4131, Friday. Next: vs.No.21Arizona State, Saturday. No.14 Michigan State(9 1) beatNebraska41 28.Next: at Norlhwestern,Saturday. No. 15 UCF(8 1) beatTemple 39 36. Next: Rutgers, Thursday,Nov.2t No. 16 FresnoState(9 0) did not play. Next:vs. New Mexico,Saturday. No.17 Wisconsin (8 2)beat Indiana51 3.Next: atMin nesota,Saturday. No. 18 LSU(7 3) didnot play. Next:vs. No. 10Texas AH M,Saturday. No.19 Louisville (91) beatHouston2013. Next:vs. Memphis,Saturday. No. 20 Norlhernlllinois (10 0)beatBall Slate 4827, Wednesd ay.Next:atToledo,Wednesday. No. 21 Arizona State (8 2) beatOregon Slate3017. Next: atNo.13UCLA, Saturday. No. 22Oklahoma(8 2) beat lowaState 4810. Next: at Kansas Slate,Saturday. No. 23Texas(7 3) lostto No.12OklahomaState38 13. Next: vs.TexasTech, Thursday, Nov.28. No. 24 Miami (7 3)lost to Duke4830. Next: vs. Vir ginia, Saturday. No. 25Georgia(6 4) lost to No.7Auburn4338. Next: vs. Kentucky,Saturday.
Scores Saturday's Games EAST
Akron 14,UMass13 BostonCollege38, NCState 21 Bucknell 17,Georgetown7
cincinnati 5zRutgers17
Cornell 24,Columbia9 Darlmouth24,Brown20 Duquesne24, CCSU21 2:1 7. Harvard38,Penn30 Fourth Quarter Lafayette 27, Fordham14 ASU FG Gonzalez18,5:25. tehigh 31,Colgate14 ASU R.Nelson 23 interception return (Gonzalez Maine41,RhodeIsland 0 Marist 33,Mercer7 kick), 5:08. OrSt Hamlett 29 pass fromMannion(Romaine Monmouth (NJ) 21,Bryant18 kick), 2:4t Navy 4zsouthAlabama14 NewHampshire37,Albany (NY)20 A 6z386. O rSt A S U Norlh Carolina34,Pittsburgh27 First downs 20 20 PennSt.45,Purdue21
Princeton59,Yale23 Richmond46, Delaware43 sacredHearl4z RoberlMorris 25 UCF39,Temple 36 Wagner10,St.Francis(Pa.) 7 SOUTH Alabama 20,Mississippi St. 7 Alabama AHM50,Ark. PineBluff 42 AlabamaSt. 19,MVSU7 Alcorn St.48,JacksonSt. 33 AppalachianSt.33,Wofford21 Auburn43,Georgia 38
Bethun e cookman4z Hampton 12 Butler 58,MoreheadSt. 27 Cent.Arkansas17,Nicholls St. 10 CoastalCarolina46,Presbylerian 13 DelawareSl. 29,FloridaAHM21 Duke48,Miami30 EastCarolina63, UAB14 FAU41,Southern Miss. 7 FloridaSt.59,Syracuse3
Furman3z w. Garolina 20
GardnerWebb27, Charleston Southern10 GeorgiaSouthern38,tlon 20 Jacksonville45,Sletson24 Liberly 59,Brevard21 LouisianaLafayette35,Georgia St. 21 Louisville 20,Houston13 Maryland27,Virginia Tech24, OT McNeese St. 43, NorlhwesternSt. 17 Memphis23,SouthFlorida10 Mississippi51,Troy21 NC AH t 41,SavannahSt. 14 NC Central24,Norfolk St. 13
old Dominion 4z campbell 14
St Louisiana34,SamHouston St. 21 St Missouri36,Austin Peay34 Samford17,Chatanooga14,OT SouthCarolina19, Florida14 SouthernU.53,ClarkAtlanta 0 Stony Brook41,JamesMadison38 Tennessee St. 17,MurraySt. 10 The Citadel31, VMI10 Towson15,Wiliam 8 Mary9 UT Marlin 16, t. Kentucky7 Vanderbilt 22,Kentucky6 MIDWEST Cent. Michigan27,W.Michigan 22 Daylon45,Valparaiso20 t. Illinois 5zJacksonvillest. 14 Kansas31,West Virginia19 KansasSl. 33,TCU31 Michigan27, Norlhwestern 19,30T MichiganSt.41, Nebraska28 N. DakotaSt. 35,YoungstownSt. 17 N. lowa17,Missouri St.10 Ohio St.60,lllinois 35 S. DakotaSl. 27,SouthDakota12 S. Illinois 24,lllinois St.17 W. Illinois 21,IndianaSl. 14 Wisconsin51,Indiana3 SOUTHWEST AbileneChristian 65,Prairie View45 Arkansas Sl.38,TexasSt.21 Baylor 63,TexasTech34 Howard40,Texas Southern 6 tamar 46,StephenF.Austin 45 Oklahoma 48,lowaSt. 10 Oklahoma St.38,Texas 13 Rice 5zLouisianaTech14 SMU38, Uconn21 Uttp 33, FIU10 FAR WEST ArizonaSt.30, OregonSt. 17 BYU 59,IdahoSt. 13 BoiseSt.48,Wyoming 7 Colorado41,California 24 ColoradoSt.66,NewMexico 42
Easternoregon4z Montanawestern 20 t. Washington35,Cal Poly 22 Linfield 28,Pacific22 Montana42,WeberSt. 6 N. Arizona 24, N.Colorado7 Nevada38,SanJose St. 16 Oregon44,Utah21 SouthernOregon31,MontanaTech 10
s. Utah2z Montanasl.14
SacramentoSt.43, PortlandSt.42 San Diego 23, Drake13 SouthernCal20,Stanford 17 UC Davis34, NorlhDakota18 WashingtonSt.24,Arizona17 WesternOregon26,Humboldt State 14 Whitworlh61,Lewis8 Clark 28 Willamette60,PugetSound20
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 201 3
//
WASHINGTON WEEK
MIRROR POND
WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives passed a fix Friday to the Affordable Care Act that would allow individuals to stay on their current plan if they would prefer. The bill, introduced by Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., seeks to codify President Barack Obama's oft-repeated promise that if you like your plan, you can keep it. In response to mounting political pressure, Obama announced an administrative fix Thursday that would allow people to stay on their plans for an additional year. Under Upton's bill, insurance companies could revive plans that would otherwise have been canceled under the act, sometimes called ObamaCare. The bill passed by a 261-157 vote, with 39 Democrats joining 222 Republicans to vote yes. Four Republicans and 153 Democrats voted no.
U.S. 97 project won't limit
Dam I es anestimateinwor s By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
An estimate of the realistic lifespan of the Newport Avenue Dam should be available in early- to mid-December, a spokesman for PacifiCorp said Friday. PacifiCorp inspectors spent several days examining the condition of the dam two weeks ago, nearly a month after the utility discovered a hole in the dam that quickly
dropped water levels in Mirror Pond. The water dropped further when the dam gates were openedtoaccommodate inspectors. Due to the hole, water levels remain roughly 2 feet below where they would typicallybe this time ofyear. The future of the more than 100-year-old dam is central to ongoing discussions of whether Mirror Pond should be dredged to remove excess silt, or whether Bend should plan
for a post-dam future with a more natural flowing river. Until now, PacifiCorp has said only that the dam will eventually become uneconomical to operate as a hydroelectric generation facility, at which time the dam may have to be removed. Spokesman Bob Gravely said PacifiCorp expects to have a better idea of when that could happen once it completes a report on the
recent inspection. "I'm not sure we're going to come out and say it's going to be three years and four months; I'm not sure how specific a time frame, but when we consider the results of the inspection and the economic analysis is also finished, we will be able to come out and give a much more clear picture of our intentions than we've been able to do," Gravely said. See Dam/C2
accessto museum By Scott Hammers The Buttetin
An Oregon Department of Transportation proposal to enhance safety along U.S. Highway 97 south of Bend will not limit access to the High Desert Museum, museum President Janeann Fpp said Friday. In summer 2015, ODOT plans to install a barrier separating the northbound lanes from the southbound lanes from near Baker Road to near Lava Lands. Aside from the 4mile-long gap where the barrier would be constructed, northbound and southbound lanes are currently separated from Bend to just south of Sunriver. Friday, Fpp said ODOT had confirmed to the museum that its entrance would not only be maintained, but improved. The center lane in which southbound drivers slowbefore turning left into the museum will be extended, and signage will be improved to give drivers coming from the north more time to move into the left lane. ODOT spokeswoman Sally Ridenour said her agency will continue working toward an alternative access road, an undercrossing, or some other way ofproviding access to the museum while separating the northbound and southbound lanes. See Access /C5
JROTC REGIONAL COMPETITION I"
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U.S. HOUSEVOTE • Fix to the Affordable Care Act allowing individuals to stay on their current plans.
Walden(R)................... Y Blumenauer (D)........... N DeFazio (D)...................Y Schrader(D) ................Y Bonamici (D)................ N See Week/C2 Joe Kline i The Bulletin
BRIEFING
Body found in camper fire A man was found dead inside a camper that burned in Alfalfa early Saturday, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. The Sheriff's Office identified the man as 54year-old Bruce Hammer. Hammer's body was discovered as investigators began looking into the cause of the fire. Residents of 23370Alfalfa Market Road called 911 upon discovering the camper on fire on their property at around 4:13 a.m. The camper was destroyed, and a nearby shop building suffered minor damage. Oregon State Police and the Bend Fire Department are assisting with the investigation, which has not yet determined the cause of the fire. — Bulletin staff report Morebriefing,C2
Well shot! reader photos • We want to see your photos of signs of winter foranotherspecial version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best workat bendbulletin.cem
/signsefwinterand
we'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors
to readerphetes@ bendbulletin.cem and tell us a bit about where and when you tookthem. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must he high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot he altered.
Dividing 97
The Redmond High School Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps unit marches Saturday during the unarmed drill team exhibition portion of the JROTC regional competition at Redmond High School.
U.S.Highway 97 south ofBend is a divided highway with the exception of a 4-mile section between Knot Road and Lava Butte. The Oregon Department of Transportation plans to add a divider to the section, but will leave a gap so southbound drivers can still access the High Desert Museum.
u ens es
eir me ea Ie iona com eiion
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
REDMOND — Near the end of lunch Saturday, one of the cadets in Mike Trammel's Redmond High School Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps unit approached him with a worried look. The Redmond unit, hosting a regional JROTC competition for the first time, was minutes away from competing in the physical fitness portion of the competition, a series ofpushups, crunches and a I'/~-mile run. One of the other team cadets was nursing a nagging ankle injury, and the other
"If you can learn what I'm teaching you, you can't tell me you can't get AS and B'S." — Donny Jackson, Crook County High School JROTC commander
hoped to sub in for her but was concerned she'd eaten too much to keep her lunch down Trammel, commander of the unit for the last four years, told the cadet to use her best judgment, and not feel pres-
sured into competing. "They want to be that team player, they want to give back to each other because they know how hard they've worked together," he said. Several hundred students from 10 Oregon units and five Washington units came to Redmond for Saturday's event, competing in air riflery, physical fitness and armed and unarmed drill, where cadets march in formation either with or without a rifle. Trammel said his unit had done a solid job serving as host school, a very different experience than the classroom
www.bendbulletin.com/local
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instruction and drill exercises involved in a typical day of JROTC. Many of the unit's 74 cadets served behind-thescenes rather than as competitors, he said, checking in teams, cleaning bathrooms and serving food throughout the daylong event. Duringunarmed drill competition, Crook County High School Commander Donny Jackson leaned against the wall, whispering commentary and encouragement inaudible to any of his cadets stomping and shouting on the opposite side of the gym. SeeJROTC/C2
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Planned divider
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Andy Zeigert/ The Bulletin
3udge's letter to newspaper sparks controversy in1913 Com piled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies ofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Nov. 16, 1913
Pity the promoter! It was only after a great deal of consideration that The Bulletin decided to publish Judge Springer's letter, in which he so maliciously attacks J.F. Morson of La Pine. The hesitation was due not entirely to a weariness on the part of editor and readers for Mr. Springer's effusions, but chieflybecause it seemed unjust to give publicity to matter apparently so libelous and certainly so gratuitously insulting. However, The Bulletin had pledged itself to print what
YESTERDAY the judge sent it, regardless of whom it is, for Mr. Springer had complained that he could get no hearing in the county press. And, out of justice, submitting the communication to Mr. Morson, it is evident that while he far from relishes publication of such material, he is well prepared to retaliate. Indeed, there seems excellent reason to suppose that a handsome libel suit will result immediately. Regarding the letter itself, its last paragraph alone merits comment. It is hard to comprehend why it took the form it did, for so far as The Bulletin isaware,there isno reason at all why Mr. Morson's name should have been dragged in. Springer's most characteristic statement is that he "defies all promoters." Good enough;
afterall,the farmers are the backbone of the community. But how many powerful forces for the development of the county incur the judicial wrath? Pity the poor promoters! Sympathize with the railroad promoters who have opened up Central Oregon; with the promoters (including some of Prineville'sbest citizenship) who are endeavoring to get a railway for the county seat; with them miserable wretches who have promoted the electrical development of Deschutes water power; with the misguided capitalists who have promoted Crook County's irrigation enterprises; and, indeed, with each and every individual who is aware that the war's over and that the only way to develop a great country is to create great enterprises. See Yesterday/C7
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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REGON Medford d060r Is
convicted of malpractice The Associated Press MEDFORD — An Oregon gynecologist who removed a patient's healthy ovary and left a piece of plastic in her body aftera 2007 robotic surgery has been ordered to pay more than $100,000. The Mail Tribune newspaper reported that U.S. District Court jurors convicted Dr. Daniel Laury of medical malpractice on T h ursday after hearing two days of testimony from the plaintiffs and seven physicians. T he lawsuit filed by t h e woman an d h e r h u s band sought nearly $1 million in d amages. The jury o f f o u r women and three men awarded more than $10,500 in medical expenses and $100,000 as compensation for physical pain and mental anguish. Laury's attorney, Thomas Armosino Jr., did not immediately respond to a message left by The Associated Press seeking comment. A number listed for Laury was disconnected. Lauryused a da Vinci robotic device that malfunctioned during Michelle Elsey's Sept. 28, 2007, surgery at P rovidence Medford Medical Center in Medford, according to hospital records. Providence was not a party in the suit. Foreign objects were r evealed in Elsey's body during a CT scan in Bozeman, Mont., more than three years after the robotic surgery. A laparoscopy sheath and extraneous coils used as birthcontrol devices were removed from her pelvis at a Bozeman hospital.
No-school November:Extended holiday for students inEugene By Josephine Woolington The Register-Guard
"No-school EUGENE N ovember" c o n tinues t o build a legacy in Eugene. Students in t h e E ugene and Bethel school districts will have the entire week of Thanksgiving off this year because of unpaid furlough days the districts agreed to with the teachers' union earlier this year. Since 2004, students in the Eugene district have had, on average, 3.8 no-school days in November. This y ear's six no-school days — which doesn't count some days that some schoolscancel classes to make t im e fo r p a rentteacher conferences — is the most no-school days in November in the past decade. "Between conferences and holidays, and then having furlough days, they're not in school much," said Tara Sloan ofher two sons who attend Edgewood Elementary School and Spencer Butte Middle School, respectively. H er sons each had tw o days off for parent-teacher conference days this month, on top of the six district-wide no-school days, she said. The Eugene district's 165day school year is its shortest one yet, and its nine furlough days for teachers are nearly twice as many as last year. The furlough days are part of the district's way of creating a balanced budget. For her part, Sloan isn't necessarily com p l aining. Scheduling three of nine furlough days before Thanksgiving — a move Sloan describes as "making lemonade out of lemons" — is more
AROUND THE STATE Dahi POStS dail —The Washington County Sheriff's Office says David Dahl — the founder of Dave's Killer Bread — was released from jail Saturday after posting bail. Dahl was arrested late Thursday after allegedly using his Cadillac Escalade to ram the patrol cars of deputies who responded to a complaint he was acting erratically. Dahl was arraigned Friday on an assault charge. Defense attorney Stephen Houze described the events leading to the arrest as a mental health crisis. Dahl had been recognized for turning his life around after spending 15 years in prison. He returned to the family baking business and developed the Portland-area bakery that makes organic whole-grain breads. His story of redemption has been a marketing theme for the company.
"Between conferences and holidays,and then having furlough days, they're not in school much." — Tara Sloan, of her two sons who attend Eugene schools
Pilat ROCkraPe CaSe — An Oregonman has pleadedguilty to convenient for families, she said. "It's less disruptive," she said, adding that some students don't go to school on the days before Thanksgiving anyway, because of family travel plans. In all, students in the Eugene district will go to school j ust 15 s c hool d ay s t h i s month. Most elementary and middle school students will also miss one or two days of schoolfor parent-teacher conferences,district spokeswoman Kerry Delf said. High school students will not miss any days for conferences, she said. Students in the Bethel district have just 14 class days this month. Springfield students have a similar schedule, going to class for just 14 full days this month, plus on e h a lf-day. Students in the Springfield district will have school on M onday an d T u esday o f Thanksgiving week. Next month, middle and high school students in the E ugene district wil l g o t o class just 13 days before winter break on Dec. 23. Elementary students will have 14 school days in December. E ugene S c hool B o a r d Chairwoman Mary Walston said in an email that she has heard from teachers who say lumping three of nine furlough days together during
the holiday week is better than having them scattered throughout the school year. T he e x t ended br e a k , though, is especially difficult for some low-income families, she said. "Many parents only have the day of Thanksgiving off, thus creating a need for child care for the other days of the week," Walston said. Last year, Sloan and several other parents started organizing no-school-day field trips for students. She said the group took students to museums, libraries and even the state Capitol to lobby legislators for more education funding. The group doesn't have a nything planned yet f o r the Thanksgiving break, but may come up w it h s omething, she said. "There's a scr a m ble," Sloan said of parents trying to organize child care during no-school days. She said she's lucky to have a flexible job that allows her to adjust her hours during Thanksgiving week. Plus, her husband, who works as a speech pathologist for the Eugene district, will also be home to care for their kids. But he won't get paid for those days off. "With it being right before Christmas, it'dbenice to have that money," Sloan said.
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committing sex crimes against a13-year-old girl last year. The 34year-old Justin Bedard of Pilot Rockwill spend morethan sixyears behind bars after accepting a plea deal Friday. Bedard's father told the judge his son should not receive such a harsh sentence. He said another man threatened to kill Bedard and his family if he did not rape the teen. The man accusedbythe father is scheduled to go on trial in December. A 32-year-old woman is also accused of violating the girl.
ROSedurg hameleSS — City Manager LanceColley plans to tell the Roseburg City Council next weekthat area homeless shelters havebeds availableforthose who needthem. The RoseburgNewsReview reports that Colley will present findings Monday that he compiled after being told by council to meet with an Occupy Roseburg member who wants the cityto designate a place where the homeless can camp legally. Colley says nearly half of the 78 beds available at the Roseburg Rescue Mission for men are empty each night, while up to 30 of the 50 beds at the Samaritan Inn for women go unused. Jeri Benedetto of Occupy Roseburg says private groups restrict who can stay and sometimes have aspects, like religion, that deter some people from staying. She wants the city to designate a campsite that's within walking distance of services and has portable restrooms.
Neighdar killing —A judge hasdenied bail to a Southern Oregon man who claimed self-defense in shooting his neighbor in a long-running feud. Josephine County Circuit Judge Pat Wolke told Donald L. Easley on Friday that he saw no evidence to support his claim he was justified in shooting 59-year-old Laron Estes. The 64-year-old Easley has been held on a murder charge since the Sept. 7 shooting in the community of Kerby. Barbara Hicks, Estes' longtime partner, testified that Estes was trying to fix some plastic sheeting they had put along a fence to blocka security light on Easley's property, when Easley came out of his house. She said Estes was unarmed and tried to leave, but stumbled and Easley shot him with a pistol poking through the fence.
Steraid traffiCking —A federal grand jury has indicted16 people on charges of conspiring to import illegal anabolic steroids, mostly from China, and using a Portland business as a front for drug trafficking and money laundering. The indictments say investigators identified nearly 50 Western Union wire transfers to Chinese chemical companies to buy anabolic steroids, and they tracked at least 68 shipments from China to the defendants between 2008 and August. Federal agents and Portland police arrested many of the suspects Thursday morning. — From wire reports
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
T HE
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Washingtonstate making health exchange work
Oil an as: Cali ornia overnor unveils propose rules or rackin
By Maria L. La Ganga Los Angeles Times
By Marc Lifsher
KENT, Wash. — Mindy Mansfield had health insurance when she worked at a factory that made air flow vents in Cl e Elum, a small town i n c e ntral Washington state. It covered the pills she took for her Type 2 diabetes and the ones she needed to ease her arthritis. But as she edged toward retirement age after nearly two decades as a machine o perator, Mansfield w a s laid off. She moved in with her older sister in K ent, lost her medical coverage and jettisoned her arthritis medication because "it was just too expensive." Two years of worry about whether she c ould s t ay healthy without a safety net were erased in just 20 minutes last weekend — the time it took the 62-year-old to navigate Washington's online insurance exchange with a little help from "inp erson a s sister" P e a r l Rodriguez. M ansfield was one o f 100 uninsured women and men who flockedto an aging community center here on a drizzly afternoon and signed up fo r i n surance coverage under the Affordable Care Act, as Obamacare is formally known. T hey were p ar t o f t h e Washington H e a lthplanfinder's "mobile enrollment tour." More than 55,000 people in Washington state en-
vation, officials said, plans to work closely with the Air ReSACRAMENTO, Calif. sources Board and regional The Jerry Brown administrawater boards to t r ack a ny — Catherine Reheis-Boyd, president of the Western States potential environmental probtion has released much-anticiPetroleum Association lems at oil fields and drilling pated proposed rules for fracking in California, a controversites. Well water would be regsial technique for drilling for ularly monitored during and oil and natural gas reviled by its productivity," said Mark tions were in response to a after drilling, and the names environmentalists. Nechodom, director of the state state law approved by the Leg- and concentrations of chemiThe p r o cess, fo r m ally Department of Conservation. islature this year. In addition, cals used would be made pubknown as hydraulic fracturCalifornia is the country's the new law — by Democratic lic on the Internet. ing, involves pumping water, third-largest oil- and gas-pro- Sen. Fran Pavley — mandates Fracking has been going on sand and a mixture of chemi- ducing state. that the state conduct an inde- for half a century in oil-produccals into geological strata to Environmentalists contend pendent scientific study of the ing regions of California, but free trapped hydrocarbons. that fracking could p ollute pros and cons of fracking. with no special oversight by S upporters say that i t i s drinking water wells, endanThe oi l i n d ustry f o ught state regulators. That changed opening up a vast new energy ger public health and release regulations in the Legislature, earlier this year, when Gov. source and creating high-pay- greenhouse gases that contrib- but fracking proponents say Jerry Brown signed Pavley's ing jobs. Opponents contend ute to global warming. that they are comfortable with bill. What's needed now, they that fracking could p ollute Friday's proposal. The governor's energy poli"These regulations are ex- cy has been a mix of supportu nderground d r i nking w a - said, is a statewide ban on ter supplies and cause health fracking an d r e lated tech- tensive but strike the right bal- ing increased oil production hazards. niques until scientists can pro- ance," said Catherine Reheis- and expansion of the state's Hailed by state officials as vide firm assurances that the Boyd, president of the Western legal goal of producing at least the toughest in the nation, the practice won't cause harm. States Petroleum Association, a third of its electric power "We want a timeout," said a trade group. They "will en- from nonpolluting, renewable draft regulations issued Friday would require those who con- Kathryn Phillips, state direc- sure that the potential energy sources, such as wind and soduct fracking to get state per- tor of the Sierra Club. "At best, r esources contained in t h e lar power, by 2020. Fracking, mits, test groundwater quality these regulations can be de- Monterey Shale formation can Brown said, should be encourand notify neighbors before scribed as a mixed bag," she be responsibly developed." aged as long as it is safe. starting work. The regulations said. "At worst, they provide Fracking, the oil industry F riday's unveiling of t h e cover fracking an d r e lated another example of an agen- and business groups counter, proposed regulations starts a 60-day publiccomment petechniques, and they provide cy's continued deference to a could be a bonanza. substantial new public infor- regulated entity, even at the They cite studies that esti- riod with a series of hearings mation about where and how expense of public health and mate that fracking could spur scheduled for January in Sacfracking is taking place. the environment." the recovery of 14 billion bar- ramento, Long Beach, Bakers"We believe that once these Nevertheless, even some op- rels ofoil locked deep under- field, Salinas and Santa Maria, proposed regulations go into ponents conceded that the pro- ground in the Monterey Shale the Department of Conservaeffect at the start of 2015, we posed regulations were better F ormation, stretching f r om tion said. will have in place the stron- than nothing. the Central Coast to the southWork on the current draft "There are some good pro- ern San Joaquin Valley. It also rules must be completed by gest environmental and public health protections of any v isions from our v ery p r e- could create 2.8 million jobs Jan. I, 2015. Oil producers oil- and gas-producing state in liminary review," said Bill Al- and $25 billion in additional must begin complying with the nation, while also ensuring layaud of the Environmental state and local government similarly w o r de d i n t e rim, that a key element in Califor- Working Group. revenues. emergency regulations as of nia's economy can maintain Friday's proposed regulaThe Department of Conser- nextJanuary. Los Angeles Times
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"These regulations are extensive but strike the right balance."
Seattle elects socialist to city council By Manuel Vaides
lishment. On election night, she trailed by four percentage SEATTLE — Seattle vot- points. She wasn't a veteran ers have elected a socialist to politician, having only run in city council for the first time in one previous campaign. modern history. But in the days following K shama S a w ant's l e a d election night, Sawant's share continued to grow on Friday, of the votes outgrew Conlin's. "I d on't t h in k s o cialism prompting 16-year incumbent Richard Conlin to concede. makes most people in Seattle Even in t hi s l i beral city, afraid," Conlin said Friday. Sawant's win has surprised While city council races are many here. Conlin was backed technically nonpartisan, Saby the city's political estab- want made sure people knew The Associated Press
Feds release 50-year planto restore wetlands,wildlife in SanFrancisco Bay By Paul Rogers San Jose Mercury News
second, it's a hymnal of sorts from which th e d ozens of groups working on bay projects can all sing in the years to come. "This is a road map for the future of bay recovery," said Cay Goude, assistant field supervisor in th e Sacramento field office of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "It provides guidance and information so you can best use your money. It helps coordinate so that people aren't duplicating efforts and are working in a more cohesive way — everyone, government a gencies, nonprofits, scientists." Technically, the plan aims to bring six endangered species that live around San Francisco Bay back to health. They are the C a lifornia c lapper rail, a diminutive bird, the salt marsh harvest mouse and four rare plants: Suisun thistle, soft bird's beak, California seablite and the northern population of salt marsh bird's beak. In restoring wetlands to help those species, however, it also will assist hundreds of other types of wildlife that use marshes and wetlands, from ducks to herons to salmon. "It's about fairness," said Florence LaRiviere, a retired Palo Alto schoolteacher who has worked for nearly 50 years to restore wetlands around the
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Noting that the ongoing effort to restorethousands of acres of marshes and wildlife around San Francisco Bay is the largest wetlands renaissance in the United States other than the restoration of the Florida Everglades, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Thursday unveiled a 50-year blueprint to finish the job. The 414-page document was released amid fanfare at a midmorning news conference. But in many ways the plan is more symbolism than substance. It estimates the cost to recover key endangered species around the bay and finish wetlands restoration at $1.2 billion between now and 2063. Yet the plan contains no new money or regulations. In fact, the blueprint's proposals for what lands to buy, which scientific projects to complete and what kinds of tactics should be used to restore the bay to conditions not seen since the 1800s are all voluntary. Still, federal officials and environmentalists who rolled the plan out said it performs two key roles. First, it offers a clear overview for politicians to help raise the money that will be needed in the decades ahead to turn old salt evapo- bay. "If we're here and multiplyration ponds i n t h e S outh Bay, hay fields in the North ing, I don't feel that the creaBay and other bay front lands tures with whom we share the from Richmond to Redwood Earth should be allowed to go City back into wetlands for extinct," she said. "The bay is fish, birds and wildlife. And what makes this area. It gives
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she was running as a socialist — a label that would be politically poisonous in many parts of the country. Sawant, a 41-year-old college economicsprofessor,firstdrew attention as part of local Occupy Wall Street protests that included taking over a downtown park and a junior college campus in late 2011. In 2012, she challenged the powerful speaker of the state House, a Democratand was easily defeated.
rolled in health coverage in October — most in Medicaid — and around 40,000 more applied for coverage, making the Evergreen State one of the brightest success stories in the rocky national rollout of the federal health law. Here in the home of online shopping giant Amazon.com, officials credit the exchange's success in part to th e P acific N o rthwest's high-tech bent. Colorado enrolled just more than 37,500 in the period. New York state — with a population nearly three times the size of Washington's — had enrolled just over 48,000 in h e alth plans as of Tuesday, state officials announced. Kentucky enrolled more than 32,000 in its first month. All are among the states that e mbraced Obamacare a n d crafted their own insurance exchanges rather than rely on the federal site,which hasbeen riddled with breakdowns. In addition to the enrollment tour, which brought a l ong, white trailer filled with workstations, laptops and enrollment assisters to cities throughout the state, Washington Healthplanfinder has wooed young and healthy residents with android and iPhone apps and an appearance at the University of Washington by Seattle's own Chris Walla, guitarist with Death Cab for Cutie.
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Shrinking bay S ince the Gold Rush o f 1849, San Francisco Bay has shrunk by a third, as people diked, dredged and filled its waters to create hay fields, h ousing s u bdivisions l i k e Foster City, even airport runways. From 1800 to 1988, the bay lost 79 percent of its tidal wetlands, going from 190,000 acres to about 40,000 acres. The rampant filling largely stopped in the 1970s, with the advent of m odern environmental laws such as the federal Clean Water Act.
Restoration effort Over the past 25 years, environmental groups and government agencies have been restoring wetlands around the bay, slowly pushing it back into its historic footprint. During that time, they have either restored, or are planning restoration, of 35,000 acres, the most high profile of w h ich has been the former Cargill salt ponds from Hayward to Alviso to Redwood City. Their goal: Finish those and do another 25,000. "This document reinforces the great work that a lot of agencies around the bay are implementing already," said John Bourgeois, project manager of the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration. "In the past decade, we've restored over 3,000 acres of South Bay salt ponds alone. This is a good road map to help us achieve the overall goal."
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
OREGON NEWS
Access
where you can't add a barrier because you've got to mainContinued from C1 tain access." Fpp said O D O T h a s In 200 3 , concrete barriers been w i l l in g t o wo r k an d m etal guardrails were inwith the museum, and is s t a l led to separate traffic on mindful of th e needs of t h e h i l l north of Lava Butte. the museum staff and its B a r r i ers went up just south of estimated 165,000 annual B e n d in 2007, restricting trafvisitors. fic coming from Romaine Vil"This is the short-term l a g e W ay, Ponderosa Drive solution, and we'll w or k a n d R o cking Horse Road to t ogether on a the s o uthbound long-term soluh ighway, an d tion," she said. '4S $Qe gegd traf f i c from Chi"They're very Redmpgd na Hat. Road to a ware of o u r the n o r t hbound value in t his Central Oregarl lanes. community." Traffic becfrecf grPMtS R iden o u r tween Lava Butte ><d <e jI>Ve said the highand Sunriver was mOre VO/ume w ay south o f separated i nt o
4 U.S. chemical weapons incinerators, including 1 in Oregon, to be scrapped • $2.8 billion facility in Umatilla on the list, Pentagonsays By Jay Reeves The Associated Press
ANNISTON, Ala. — The Pentagon spent $10.2 billion over t hree d ecades burning tons of deadly nerve gas and other chemical weapons stored in four states, Oregon among them — some of the agents so deadly even a few drops can kill. Now, with all those chemicals up in smoke and communities freed of a threat, the Army is in the middle of another, $1.3 billion project: Demolishing the incinerators that destroyed the toxic materials. In Alabama, Oregon, Utah and Arkansas, crews are either tearing apart multibilliondollar incinerators or working to draw the curtain on a drama that began in the Cold War, when the United States and the former Soviet Union stockpiled millions of pounds of chemical weapons. Construction work continues at two other sites where technology other than incineration will be used to neutralize agents chemically, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At the incinerator complex at the Anniston Army Depot — where sarin, VX nerve gas and mustard gas were stored about 55 miles east of Birmingham — the military this week said it's about one-third of the way into a $310 million program to level a gigantic furnace that cost $2.4billion to build and operate. Tim Garrett, the government site project manager, said officials considered doing something else with the incinerator, but t h e f a cility was too specialized to convert for another use. Also, the law originally allowing chemical incineration required demolition once the work was done. So teams are using large machines to knock holes in thick concrete walls and rip steel beams off the building's
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Workers continue the process of demolishing a chemical waste incinerator at the Anniston Army Depot in Anniston, Ala. For three decades, the Pentagon burned chemical weapons stored in four states, including Oregon. Now, the Army is demolishing the incinerators that destroyed the toxic materials. skeleton, which was previously decontaminated to guard against any lingering nerve agents or mustard gas. Metal pieces are being recycled, and the rest will be hauled to an ordinary landfill. "It's the end of an era," said Garrett, a civilian. The military said the incineration program cost $11.5 billion in all, with the cost of tearing down the four facilities built in from the start. A $2.8 billion incinerator is being demolished in Umatilla, Ore., the Pentagon said, and work will begin soon to tear down a $3.7 billion incinerator at Tooele, Utah. Workers already have finished demolishing the $2.2 billion Pine Bluff Chemical D emilitarization Facility i n Arkansas, the military said. The site is being cleaned up and will close officially. While opponents of the incinerators predicted dire consequences and the possibility of floating clouds of nerve gas in the event of an accident, the CDC said no nearby residents were exposed to or harmed by chemical agents. In east Alabama, before incineration workbegan in 2003, the military and emergency management workers spent
millions of dollars distributing emergency kits to households, erecting warning sirens and reinforcing schools with ventilation systems to keep chemical weapons at bay during any accidents. But Garrett said nothing worse than normal workplace injuries occurred by the time the last chemical weapons were burned in 2011. "This place has the safety record of a library or a public school," he said. More than 660,000 artillery shells, small rockets and land mines were stored in dirt-covered bunkers at the Anniston depot beginning in 1963 during the height of the Cold War. The prospect of a major accident was frightening because more than 3 60,000 people lived in the surrounding four counties by the time the incineration ended. Crates of munitions were loaded into special containers and trucked from the bunkers to the incinerator, where machines dismantled the weapons and burned the chemicals. With the incineration complete, employment at the incinerator has dropped from around 1,000 workers at the apex of the project to around 220 today, Garrett said. It will
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drop to a skeleton crew once all the work is done by spring; t he site is supposed to b e closed completely by then. "It's been a career for us. A good career," said M i ke Abrams, who has been working on the Anniston incinerator project in community outreach and public affairs since it began. Chemical weapons are outlawed by international treaty, and their destruction is a global concern. International efforts are underway to destroy Syria's stockpile by next year. This week, Albania rejected a U.S. request to host the destruction of Syria's arsenal. Multiple domestic sites have destroyed chemical weapons, and the Army says it has destroyed 90 percent of the U.S. stockpile. Plants being built in Colorado and Kentucky will destroy most of the remaining U.S. cache with a chemical process to make it harmless. Facilities previously finished destroying weapons and were idled in M a r yland, Indiana and Johnston Atoll, in the Pacific Ocean.
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A U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service employee keeps watch as pulverized confiscated ivory emerges from a rock crusher after being destroyed during an event at the National Wildlife Property Repository, at Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge, in Commerce City, Colo., on Thursday.
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Confiscated ivory is stacked in preparation to be destroyed during an event at the National Wildlife Property Repository. man trafficking, the State Department said in a statement. The message from Thursday's crush likely will reach consumers more than the faraway poachers and smugglers. Elephant poaching is at an all-time high, thanks in large part to U.S. demand and growing demand in Asia. The British-based Born Free Foundation estimates poachers killed 32,000 elephants last
year. It says black-market ivory sells for around $1,300 per pound. Most elephants are killed in Africa, where there are about 300,000 African elephants left. There arean estimated 50,000 Asian elephants found from India to Vietnam. The ivory being destroyed didn't include items legally imported oracquired before the 1989 global ban.
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COMMERCE CITY, Colo. — U.S. officials on Thursday destroyed more than 6 tons of confiscated ivory tusks, carvings and jewelry — the bulk of the U.S. "blood ivory" stockpile — and urged other nations to follow suit to fight a $10 billion global trade that slaughters tens of thousands of elephants each year. Thousands of ivory items accumulated over the past 25 years were piled into a large pyramid-shaped mound, then dumped into a steel rock crusher that pulverized it all into dust and tiny chips at the National Wildlife Property Repository just north of Denver. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will donate the particles to a yet-to-be-determined museum for display. "These stockpiles of ivory fuel the demand. We need to crush the stores of ivory worldwide," said agency director Dan Ashe. He said keeping stockpiles intact can feed consumer demand for illegal souvenirs and trinkets taken from slain elephants. Before the crush, Fish and Wildlife officials showed off thousands of confiscated ivory tusks, statues, ceremonial bowls, masks and ornaments — a collection they said represented the killing of more than 2,000 adult elephants. The items were seized from smugglers, traders and tourists at U.S. ports of entry after a global ban on the ivory trade took effect in 1989. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry announced a $1 million reward Wednesday for information leading to the dismantling of a Laos-based criminal syndicate, the Xaysavang Network, that Kerry said poaches elephants for ivory. That group and others poach to fund narcotics, arms and hu-
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OREGON NEWS
BITIjARIES DEATH NOTICES Gary Dean Wolcott, of Bend June 3, 1939 - Oct. 28, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life at Bend Nazarene Church on Nov. 23, 2013 at 2:00 PM.
Jean Stenkamp, of Bend June 16, 1936 - Nov. 1, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471. Services: No services are planned at this time.
Neil Davis, of Bend Aug. 9, 1925 - Nov. 10, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: 1:00 PM Saturday November 23, 2013 at Niswonger-Reynolds Chapel, 105 NW Irving Ave., Bend. Reception following at the Bend Golf Club. Contributions may be made to:
4-H Programs, 3893 SW Airport Way, Redmond, OR 97756.
Mary A. Hager, of Bend Sept. 11, 1925 - Nov. 14, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A committal of the urn will be held in Lancaster, Ohio at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Rt. Rev. William B. Spofford Jan. 28, 1921 - Nov. 5, 2013 F ormer B en d a n d R e d mond resident the Rt. Rev. William B. ( Bill) Spofford, 4th Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Eastern Oregon (1969-79) a n d A ss i s t ant Bishop of W ashi n g t on (D.C.) (1979-1984), died November 5,2013, at his home in Portland at the age of 92. Bishop Spofford was born January 2 8, 192 1 , i n B rooklyn, NY , t o B i l l S r , also an E p i scopal c l ergyman, and Dorothy Ibbotson Spofford, and was raised in Middletown, N e w J e r s ey. He graduated from L enox School for Boys in L enox, MA, from Antioch College, and f r o m t h e Ep i s copal Theological Sch o o l i n Cambridge. H e l ater studied at th e Y al e School of Alcohol Studies and earned an MSW from th e Univers ity of M i chigan. H e w a s ordained in 1945 and served churches in Boston, Detroit and Idaho, and was chaplain at Massachusetts General Hospital. I n 1969, after a s t in t a s dean of St . M i c hael's Cat hedral in B o i se, Bill w a s elected the Bishop of Eastern Oregon, where he spent 10 years before leaving to become assistant bishop of the Diocese of Washington (D.C.) an d l a t e r b i s h opchaplain a t S t . G e o r ge's C ollege in Jerusalem. H e was f o llowed a s E a s tern O regon b i shop b y R u s t y Kimsey of The Dalles. Bishop Spofford's wife of 64 years, the former Pauline (Polly) F a w cett, d i e d i n 2008. Until then, the couple kept a cabin at C amp Sherman for almost 30 years. He is survived by his sister, Suzanne Rester; s i ster-inlaw Temple Fawcett; sons T im, M ark , A n dr e w , S tephen, a n d Da n i el ; 8 grandchildren and 8 greatgrandchildren. M emorial s e r v i ce s a r e planned for 11:00 a.m. Dec ember 21, at T r i n ity C a t hedral i n Po r t l an d a n d 1 1:00 a .m . J a n u ar y 11 , 2014, at A scension Camp a nd School i n C o v e , O r egon. A mo r e c o m p l ete o bituary i s ava i l a bl e a t http://spof.org/bill-obit.html
Merl 'Beth' Elizabeth Carr Loflin Jan. 31, 1924- Nov. 14, 2013
Merl "Beth" Elizabeth Loflin, of Redmond Jan. 31, 1924 - Nov. 14, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: An Urn Committal Service will take place on Saturday, November 23, 2013 at2:00 PM at Diamond Crest Cemetery, in Johnstonville, California. A Celebration of a Life lived will immediately follow. Contributions may be made to:
Merl El i z a beth "Beth" L oflin, o f R e d m o nd , O r egon, passed away on November 14, 2013. She was 89. An Urn Committal Serv ice w i l l t a k e p l a c e o n S aturday, N o v e mber 2 3 , 2013, at 2 :00 p . m . at Di amond Crest Cemetery, in Johnston ville, CA. A Cel ebration Merl Loflln of a L ife Lived w i ll i m me d i a tely follow. Merl wa s b o r n J a n u ary 31, 1924, i n S p r i n gtown, A rkansas, to Jess L . a n d M ary ( W r i ght) C a rr . S h e a ttended school i n V e r a , O K, graduating f ro m C o pan High School i n 1 942. O n M a rch 3 1 , 1 9 50, s h e married Eurcel F. Loflin in Tahlequah, OK. I n 1951, Merl along wi t h her husband, moved to Sie rra Arm y D e pot a t H e r long, CA, where she lived until2005 when she moved to R e dmond, O R t o be closer to family. M erl is s u rvived b y h e r daughter, Trish Bowers of Redmond, OR; two grandchildren, Darcy ( husband, Douglas) M ar s h al l of Bend, OR and Hiram (wife, Keri) Francek of Redmond, O R; o t he r s u r v i v or s i n c lude o n e g r e a t g r a n d child, Kinley Francek; and numerous n i e c e s an d nephews. M erl m a d e m a n y g o o d f riends during h e r s n o w b ird years i n Y u m a , A Z , and leaves behind, them a nd o t he r fr i e n d s s c a t tered throughout the country. S he w a s p re c eded i n death by her husband, Eurcel; both parents; sisters, R uby, Opa l , Rach a e l , Jessie Mae, and Maryanne and two sons-in-law, Thomas B. Francek and Gary E. Bowers. Memorial C o n t r i butions i n Merl's memory may b e m ade to Partners I n C a r e H ospice, 2075 N E W y a t t Court, Bend, OR 97701. A utumn Fu n e r al s of R edmond h a s b e e n e n trusted w it h t h e a r r a ngements, (541) 5 0 4 - 9485. www.autumnfunerals.net
FEATURED OBITUARY
Lokkins was
symbolof same-sex
marriage movement By William Yardley New Yorh Times News Service
Elmer Lokkins and Gustavo Archilla kept their relationship private for nearly 60 years. Some knew; some just wondered. Most did not discuss the situation. Uncle Gus and Uncle Elmer, their family called them. Then, when they were both Dec. 20, 1944 - Oct. 20, 2013 in their 80s, after a lifetime of refraining from even holding Andy W h i p p le , p h o t oghands in public, they embraced r apher, j o u r n a l i st , and in front of their family for the l over o f w o r d s , l o s t h i s f ierce str u g g l e w i th first time. It was November Parkinson's d i s e as e on 2003, and they Oct. 20, in Hillsboro, OR. had just married He d e fied h i s d o c t o r s' in Canada, havexpectaing traveled there t ions, l i v from their home ing al in Manhattan. most Lokkins Soon t h e ywere sixty-nine being sought out years. His diagnosis, for interviews and appearances. in 19 9 1 , They participated in gay rights was a parades, including New York's b low, b u t annual Wedding March. As he mainsame-sex marriage gained moAndy Whipple t ained hi s mentum in the United States, independence and mobilthey became powerful symbols ity. He took several trips to for supporters: faces of commitEurope, f i s he d a n d ex ment, of enduring love. p lored, and p u b lished hi s second book, Riverwater. But they were also still Uncle B orn i n B o s t on, th e e l Gus and Uncle Elmer. dest of five children, Andy "When they got married and l ived i n A n n A r b o r , M I , started talking about it, it was a graduated Oberlin College little strange," Christina Dean, ( OH), and l ater settled in Archilla's niece, said this week. Eugene, OR (1971), where "Because you're used to them he was a su c cessful phobeing one way, and then they tographer. He and his wife, became famous." S tephanie Gu ti er r e z , moved to the Bay A rea in Lokkins died Oct. 12 in Mart he mid-1980s. Andy p u r co Island, Fla., less than a year sued commercial p h o togafter Archilla. Lokkins was raphy and j ournalism, be94, Archilla 96. They moved to came ed i t o r of t he Florida to be close to Dean and B erkeley V o ice, an d c o n other family members. tributed a 1 9 8 6 e s say t o When Archilla died, they had S ports I l l u s trated a b o u t been married for nine years. But e xchanging h is No r t o n they had been together since bike for domesticity. Andy had a glorious stint that September day in 1945 as director of th e A e gean when they met by chance in CoSchool of Fine Arts, on the lumbus Circle in New York. Greek island of Paros, with "I had never seen anything h is p a r tner, R o s e L o e f f , so handsome," Lokkins told and her sons, Berend and The New York Times in 2003. R emko D i d erich. A y e a r DEATHS Lokkins eventually moved later, he and longtime colinto the house in Manhattan laborator R o b A n d e r son ELSEWHERE that Archilla shared with his produced The English Pub (Viking Books, 1985), phonine siblings. Archilla's parents tos and lore about the disDeaths of note from around had died, and he and a sister tinctive signs fronting tavthe world: were helping raise their brothe rns a c r os s t h e Br i t i s h WilliamWeaver,90: Translator ers and sisters. Lokkins had his countryside. The book was whose translations of works by own room. shortlisted i n th e New modern masters like Italo CalE ven after L o k kins a n d York Times' Best Holiday vino, Umberto Eco and Primo A rchilla bought t h eir o w n Books for 1985. A ndy returned to O R i n Levi helped lift Italian literature apartment in t h e M o r ningto prominence among readers side Heights neighborhood of 1990 for an arts editor position with the Bend Bulleof English. Died Tuesday in Manhattan, they were careful tin; Rose and the boys folRhinebeck, N.Y. in public. Lokkins, who had lowed. He underwent deep Alex Calderwood,45: A found- graduated from City College, brain st imulation s u rgery er of the Ace Hotel chain, whose became the registrar of t he (DBS) in 2002, to counter quirky vintage interiors influ- Graduate Center of the City the disease's characterist ic t r e m o rs . T he D BS enced the industry and were the University of New York. Arhelped him c o mplete Riv- backdrop for countless Insta- chilla was hired as his assistant and helped plan public events. erwater, a deeply personal gram pictures. Died Thursday. Bobbie Handman, 85: A be- Again, some people knew, but t ribute t o t h e M c K e n z ie River, wit h d e signer Carl hind-the-scenes force in Demo- few talked about it. Oslund, in 2007. The Port"They always said they had cratic politics, a theater preserland Oregonian described vationist and the first person to no problems in New York," it as " A boo k a s l o v e ly , be awarded the National Medal Dean said. d eep and enduring a s i t s of Arts fo r a dvocacy. Died They retired in the 1970s, subject." Thursday at her home in Mantraveling frequently and doting A ndy w o u l d w a nt t o on their nieces and nephews. t hank L o r i B a u d e r a n d hattan, N.Y. Saul Kagan, 91: A f ormer A few family members never J udy Nedry f o r t h e i r e x t raordinary c ar e a n d D r . refugee who for decades led the accepted their relationship. But Meg Hayes and S h annon Jewish service organization most adored them. Donovan of Oregon Health that was primarily responsible Elmer Theodore Lokkins Sciences U n i v e rsit y f or for securing more than $70 bil- was born on May 20, 1919, in t heir compassion and e x lion in restitution for Holocaust Sunnyside, Wash., h alfway p ertise d u r in g h i s f in a l survivors and their heirs. Died between Seattle and Spokane. y ears. The f a m il y t h a n k s His survivors include a halfW ilson C u r le , T o m P e n - Nov. 8 in Manhattan, N.Y. Kalaparusha Maurice Mc- brother, Jerry Mullen, and dozrose, Oslund, and Gentiva H ospice fo r t h e i r i n v a l u - Intyre, 77: A saxophonist who ens of nieces and nephews. was a founding member of the He served in the Army durable support. The W h i p p l e si b l i n g s: Association for the Advance- ing World War II, saw combat Dana (Eugene, OR), Elizament of Creative Musicians, in the South Pacific and was b eth (Richmond, CA), D r . a pioneering Chicago avant- discharged in June 1945. Three Margaret (Prince G eorge, garde coalition. Died Nov. 9 in months later he met his match, VA), an d M a t t ( C h ehalis, the Bronx, N.Y. and they began their quiet life WA), plan a gathering with — From wire reports together. Andy's friends next spring. Partners ln Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.
Andy H. Whipple
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Eugene policeexplain use of flashgrenade By Jack Moran
rest the man, 34-year-old Beau Heleman Flynn. The p ercussion-grenade Police say Flynn, a contactics Eugene police used victed felon who faces fedThursday to arrest a sus- eral weapons charges in pected gang member with the case, is the leader of a criminal past m i r rored the West Side Gangsters, a those employed a year ago prison gang that he and othwhen the same team of offi- ers formed in the 1990s in a cers apprehended one of the west Eugene neighborhood. man's alleged cohorts. Weise, a 31-year-old EuPolice Sgt. Scott McKee gene resident, is b elieved acknowledged Friday that to have joined Flynn's gang the Sheldon Plaza parking while in prison, McKee said. lot off Coburg Road was According to state prison "not an optimal place" for spokeswoman Eli z a beth officers to have deployed a C raig, W eise s erved 1 3 percussion grenade shortly months behind bars in 2003 after 4 p.m. Thursday. and 2004. He spent four But the device — which more years in prison after works to disorient a crimi- being convicted in 2005 in nal suspect by p r oducing Lane County o f c h a rges a blinding f l ash o f l i g h t that i ncluded f i r st-degree and an ear-splitting sound burglary, unlawful use of a — allowed police to swiftly vehicle and being a felon in take assault suspect Cory possessionof a firearm. Charles Weise into custody Police on T hursday arwithout a fight. rested Weise in connection "We were trying to elimi- with a prison-style stabbing nate his ability to formulate of a man outside the Good a plan for escape," McKee Times Cafe in d o wntown said. Eugene on Oct. 4, McKee The main downside of us- said. ing a percussion grenade in Weise allegedly used an a busy, public place is that it " improvised stabbing d e can frighten unsuspecting vise, such as t h ose used passers-by caught off-guard i n prison" to carry ou t a "violent, rapid, unprovoked by the explosion. "It can cause alarm (when) a ttack" that l ef t t h e v i c bystanders are shocked by tim bleeding from 11 stab the sudden impact," McKee wounds, McKee said. Police said. allege that Weise was at the A witness to a similar inci- bar with other West Side dent thatunfolded in Novem- Gangster members w h en ber 2012 in the busy parking the incident occurred. lot of Costco on Chad Drive After be i n g arr e sted told The Register-Guard at Thursday, Weise was lodged the time that she had heard in the Lane County Jail on a loud blast and saw armed a s econd-degree a ssault officers, causing her to inicharge, as well as on additially believe that a man had tional counts of drug posbeen shot by police. s ession and delivery of a As it turned out, members controlled substance within of the police department's 1,000 feet of a school. He is special investigations unit also being held on a federal had used a percussion gre- charge of being a felon in nade outside Costco to ar- possessionof a firearm. The Register Guard
Judge dismisses suit by ex-ELlgenepolice auditor The Associated Press EUGENE — A Lane County judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by a former deputy Eugene police auditor who claimed she was fired for being a whistle-blower. Dawn Reynolds' original federal whistle-blower lawsuit sought $550,000 in damages. U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken dismissed the federal claims in that suit in 2011 and sent the state claims to Lane County Circuit Court for further action. Judge Charles C a rlson heard arguments last week and decided this week to dismiss the remaining claims. At i ssue w a s w h ether Reynolds was fired in 2010 for reporting two alleged instances of misconduct, one an off-the-recordreport of police misconduct she passed on to police auditor Mark Gissiner and the other the shredding of documents by staff at Gissiner's direction. Carlson found that nothing clearly connected Reynolds' firing to the delivery of the misconduct report to Gissiner. Moreover, Reyn-
olds took down the report of police misconduct in an offthe-record manner, and "one cannot base a whistle-blower claim on one's own alleged misconduct," Carlson wrote. Carlson said there was no evidence the shredding was covered up or done in secret, and said it appeared to be a simple disagreement over proper procedures. "This appears to have been nothing more than a difference of opinion (regarding) application of certain city and state public records laws and ordinances that resolved itself in an open and orderly manner within the city government," Carlson wrote. Judy Snyder, the attorney representing Reynolds, said she will take the case to the Oregon Court of A p peals. An appeal of t h e f ederal court dismissal already is pending before the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. "Our goal is to get it before a jury," Snyder told The Register-Guard. "That's what we want, so we plan on pursuing the only avenue that's available to us."
DEscHUTEs MEMQRIAL CHAPEL R GARDENs 6387S N. HIGHWAY 97 BEND
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Yesterday
nothing until I get the official greetings from the draft Continued from C1 board," he said. "I haven't got them yet." Got there just the same Then, in more typical Clay "I built that jail and you style he wisecracked: "Looks can't lock me in it." like Uncle Sam wants to miss So said George Gottlieb to out on the tax money from 15 Chief of Police S.E. Roberts million dollars, don't it? Well Friday night, when the chief that's his lookout." started to "jug" him after A t B a ltimore, M d., B o b Gottlieb had made trouble of Nilon, executive vice-presiseveral varieties about town. dent of Intercontinental ProGottlieb "mixed it" with Rob- motions Inc., said plans for erts, but was finally landed in the championship match are the new jail, his statement to moving apace. "We are going right ahead the contrary n o twithstanding. The next morning he was with hot plans because we fined $25 in Recorder Elis's are confident that the United court. S tates government i s t o o beneficent to grant a f o u rmonths' deferment so he can 75 YEARS AGO make the most of the greatest For the week ending opportunity in his life — to Nov. 16, 1938 fight for t h e w o rld h eavyweight crown and the wealth Thousands ofJewsjailed that goes with it," Nilon said. as hostages Clay and Liston signed for BERLIN — Fifty thousand the match Tuesday. The site Jews have b ee n a r r ested w as not designated and i t throughout the Reich in the was anybody's guess where it last few days, reliable sources would be held. estimated today. Many of those arrested are Bend's community tree put influential or w ealthy Jews in place at Wall and Oregon held as hostages. A stately blue-green fir, its As Hugh W i lson, United tip decked with tiny brown States ambassador, prepared cones, was moved into place to leave for Paris, the press on Oregon Avenue at the Wall sternly warned America that Street intersection this mornagitation a g a inst N a z i sm ing, to serve as Bend's 1963 would be reflected in further Christmas Tree. It will later ill-treatment of Jews here. be decorated and illuminated The newspaper Schwarze after Thanksgiving. Korps of the elite SS guards, Donors of the tree were Mr. declared that "we shall use and Mrs. Seaton H. Smith. Jewish hostages systemati- For the past 26 years, it grew cally no matter how shocking at the rear of Smith's Rivsome people may find it." The erside A p a r tments f a c ing paper went on to declare that Drake Park. using the Jewish principle of Smith recalls that he ob"an eye for an eye and a tooth tained the tree as a seedling for a tooth" the Nazis will in 1937. take a thousand eyes and a T ransplanted to th e R i vthousand teeth for every Ger- erside Apartment yard, the man eye or tooth. t ree flourished, but i t b e Ghetto-like measures were came evident in recent years, b eing f ormulated i n N a z i it was too close to a building. government bureaus. Panic- The tree was cut and erected stricken Jews i n in c r eas- this morning in d owntown ing numbers besieged the Bend. American and other foreign consulates. 25 YEARS AGO Despite repercussions on t he German course it w a s For the week ending indicated there would be no Nov. 16, 1988 recession in the drive which has swept the Jews from the Store owner's living out a fantasy financial business and cultural life of Germany. If he never wrote another word, D u n ca n Mc G e ary Hull recalls U.S.envoy would still be a w r iter. But to Nazi Germany like the cowboy whose legs P resident R o osevelt i n bow at the sound of creaking forceful language today con- saddle leather, he can't stay demned Germany's attack on away from words any more the Jewish population. than the cowboy can stay Roosevelt, departing from away from horses. W hite H ouse c u stom, a l M cGeary, wit h h i s w i f e lowed the direct quotation of Linda, owns an d o p erates his views. Pegasus books in downtown He made his statement less Bend and writes fantasy ficthan 24 hours after Ameri- tion in his spare time. can Ambassador Hugh WilDuring a slump in employs on was o r dered back t o ment he started writing a fanWashington from Berlin for tasy book. He sold the book, consultation. Star Axe, to the f i rst pubRoosevelt said: "The news lisher he sent it to. Star Axe of the past few days from was followed soon after by Germany has deeply shocked Snowcastles and Ice Towers, public opinion in the United a sequel. States. Such news from any In Bend, McGeary was led part of the world would inevi- by his interest in fantasy and tably produce a similar pro- science fiction to a part-time found reaction among Ameri- job in Pegasus under the forcan people in every part of mer owner. the nation. He met L i nd a a t a l o"I myself could scarcely cal writers group and with b elieve t ha t s u c h th i n g s h is new b r ide b ought t h e could occur in a 20th century bookstore. civilization. Since his early successes in "With a view to gaining a getting his books published, first hand picture of the situ- he has published several othation in G ermany, I a sked er books. the secretary of state to order Though the science fiction our ambassador in Berlin to a nd fantasy books sold i n return at once for report and Pegasus are the McGearys' "first love." A strong-selling consultation." Roosevelt, in response to secondary item is the basequestions for an elaboration ball cards they brought in as of his views, said that t he a sideline. "Many customers who colstatement speaks for itself. lect the baseball cards and r ead the comic books a r e 50 YEARS AGO adults who've kept the kid in For the week ending themselves," says McGeary. Nov, 16, 1963 S uperhero c omi c b o o k s though still account for the No draft yet I'll be there,' majority of comic books PegClay tells fans asus sells. Heavyweight c h a l lenger "Most p eople adults Cassius Clay fears not cham- — aren't going to pick up a pion Sonny Liston nor an up- comic book," McGeary says. "We're not going to ever be coming appointment for his Army draft b oard physical like Europe or Japan where examination. comic books aren't l ooked "I'll be t h ere," said Clay down on. In Japan, comics i n commenting on a n a n - are used to teach." "When I used to write," he nouncement from his hometown, Louisville, Ky., that he says, "writing was number has been ordered to report one on my list. Now I'm marfor his initial pre-induction ried and with a family and Nov. 21. owning a business and both The call to the colors could of those are full-time deals. deliver a k nockout sock to Now writing is number three C lay's fabulously r ich t i t l e on my list." fight with Liston in February. Even though M c Geary's Clay and h i s e n tourage, w riting ha s s l owed d o w n traveling in the challenger's some since his early years, private bus, s p ent F r i day he's still working at it. "I always wanted to be a night at a motel on Chicago's South Side en route to New writer," he says happily, "and York. I always wanted to own a "I ain't w o r r ie d a b o ut bookstore."
C7
WEST NEWS
Political ethics inshort supply in California By Laurel Rosenhal
The instructor went over rules t h a t f o r bi d l o b byS ACRAMENTO, Cal i f . ists f ro m g i v in g o f f i cials — Even for a political town gifts worth more than $10 a where claims of wrongdoing month, explained exceptions are woven into the competi- — such as those that allow tive fabric, Sacramento has lobbyists to entertain officials seen an unusual burst of ac- at their homes or invite them tivity alleging ethical breach- to a wedding — and advised es by the powerful. the 74 lobbyists in the audiOn a single day this past ence not to deliver campaign week, the Democratic leader checks to politicians' offices. "This is the part where I of the state Senate stood before the Capitol to address used to talk about what was the latest allegations in an known as 'shrimp scam' in FBI corruption probe, a Re- the late '80s and early '90s, publican state senator took which was an FBI sting," said the witness stand to testify instructor C ar y R u d m an, he had not engaged in money chief counsel to the Senate laundering, the state's politi- Committee o n L e g i slative cal watchdog handed down Ethics. fines to one current and two He explained that the case past lawmakers who admit- involved undercover agents ted campaign finance viola- posing as the operators of a tions, and three former gov- shrimping business, who ofernment officials who were fered bribes in exchange for recently fined for not register- b eneficial l e gislation. T h e ing as lobbyists sat through a case eventually led to the conrequired ethics class. victions of several lawmakThe Sacramento Bee
ers, staff members and lobbyists, Rudman said. The history lesson may no longer be necessary. "As most ofyou know, there has been some recent activity," Rudman told the class. "Allegations of corruption are here." T he high-profile FBI i n vestigation o f Cal i f o rnia state Sen. Ron Calderon has roiled the Capitol since agents raided his offices in June. The case has taken dramatic turns in recent weeks as Al Jazeera America published a 1 2 4page affidavit in which the FBI alleges Calderon accepted $88,000 in bribes from an undercover agent and a Long Beach hospital executive. Calderon, a Dem o crat, responded this week with a federal court filing alleging the government intentionally leaked the affidavit, and that two other Democratic senators — Darrell Steinberg of
S acramento and Kevin d e Leon of Los Angeles — were in fact the focus of the FBI's probe. No charges have been filed. Steinberg and De Leon have each said prosecutors told them they are not the subject of the federal investigation. Calderon's attorney has said his client has not done anything illegal. On Thursday, the c ommission fined former Democratic state Sen. Dean Florez, $60,000 for misusing campaign funds; fined f ormer Assemblyman Mike Roos, a Democrat, $3,000 for breaking state law by making political contributions while he was a registered lobbyist; and finalized a settlement with current Assemblyman Luis Alejo, a Democrat, in which he was required to return $21,000 to an i n dependent group that had illegally coordinated with his campaign.
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FIVE
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44/37
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Honolulu 85/72
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Tijuana
SOS
68/55
86/52 Ptesx/yyttean
HAWAI I
•
Chihuahua
lando
80s
72/45
4/67
• Miami
-Os Anchorage 10 17/4
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
50 35
49 37
47 32
46 32
a Paz 81/67
24/10
O'ALASKA
84/73
Monterrey . w m 48/GB~
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Juneau
FRONTS
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunnsetoday....,, 7;04 a,m Moon phases Sunset today....,, 4;37 p,m F ull Last N e w Sunnsetomorrow,, 7;05 a,m Sunset tomorrow... 4:36 p.m Moonnsetoday..., 4;57 p,m Moonset today.... 7:02 a.m Nov.17 Nov.25 Dec.2 Dec. 9
• Pl
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....519 am...... 353 pm. Venus.....1059 a.m...... 7:1 7p.m. Mars.......1:1 4 a.m...... 2:03 p.m. Jupiter......804pm.....11:17am. Saturn......604am......413pm. Uranus.....232 pm......303 am.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 46/36 24hoursending4p.m.'.. 0.00" Recordhigh........70in1929 Monthtodate.......... 0.19" Recordlow......... -2 in1955 Average month todate... 0.63" Average high.............. 47 Year to date............ 4.49" Average low............... 28 Average yearto date..... 8.40" Barometncpressure at 4 p.m.29.68 Record 24 hours ...1.52 in 1930 'Meltedhquid equivalent
FIRE INDEX
OREGON CITIES
WATER REPORT
Yesterday Sunday Monday Bend,westofHwy.97.....Low Slsters...............................Low The following was compiled by the Central City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Bend,eastofHwy.97......Low LaPlne...............................Low Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Preapitation values are24-hour totalsthrough4 pm Redmond/Madras........Low Prlneville..........................Low
a service to irrigators and sportsmen.
Astona ........50/45/0.07 ....53/41/sh... 51/46/sh Med = Mederaie,lxi. =Fxiieme Rese rvoir Acrefeet Capacity Baker City......41/30/0.1 1 .....40/24/c... 42/30/pc To report a wildfire, call 911 Crane Praine..... . . . . . . . 32,821..... . 55,000 Brookings......52/45/0.58 .....55/42/c... 56/48/sh Wickiup..... . . . . . . . . . . 101,041..... 200,000 Burns..........47/31/0.00 .....41/23/s... 50/27/pc Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 58,443...... 91,700 Eugene........54/45/0.09 ....51/38/sh... 52/43/sh Ochoco Reservoir.... . . . . . 9,809..... . 47,000 Klamath Falls...4604/0.02 ....46Q2/pc... 49/30/pc The higher the UV Index number, the greater Pnneville..... . . . . . . . . . . 80,756..... 153,777 Lakeview .......46/34/0.00 .....45/23/s... 51/32/pc R iver flow Stat i on Cubic ft.lsec La Pine ........43/34/0.01 ....40Q2/pc... 44/27/sh the need for eye and skin protection. Index is solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Praine ...... . 174 Medford .......55/42/0.00 ....51/35/pc... 50/40/sh Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . . 37.0 Newport.......52/46/0.10....54744lsh... 52/46/sh Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 14 LOW MEDIUM HIGH North Bend.....55/48/0.02 ....56/42/sh... 55/48/sh Littl e DeschutesNear La Pme............. 135 Ontano........50/36/0.07 ....46QB/pc... 49/33/pc 2 4 6 8 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 407 Pendleton......4909/0.02 ....55/32/pc... 52/38/sh 0 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . . 518 Portland .......50/45/0.14....52/43/sh... 51/45/sh Crooked RiverAbove Pnnewge Res.. ... . . . . . 57 Pnneville.......42/36/0.00 ....47QB/pc... 50/31/sh Crooked RiverBelow Pnneville Res. .... . . . . 71.7 Redmond....... 4707/0.00 ....47Q6/pc... 51/34/sh Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. .... . . . . . 2.20 Roseburg.......53/47/0.02 ....54/41/pc... 55/44/sh Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne .... . . . . . . . 135 Salem.........52/46/0.03 ....52/39/sh... ..52/43/sh ~~ Sisters.........48/37/0.00 .....42/25/c.....46/29/sh ~YLOIN Contact:Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM The Dalles......51/43/0.00 ....54/37/pc.....52/40/sh or go towww.wrd.state.or.us Legend:W-weather,Pcp-preapitation,s-sun, pc-partialclouds,c-clouds,h-haze, sh-showers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowllurnes, snsnow, i-ice,rs-ram-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-dnzzle,tr-trace
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
ltr'tJI bv' I I
CONDITIONS eW+x
» » » '
4 4 4 4 4
++++x 4 d 0 d
Cold Warm Stationary Showers T-storms Rain
+ ek ev
ae + Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Gty Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pqi Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pqi Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pqi Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W AbileneTX......83/57/000... 80/43/s.. 68/41/s Grand Rapids....57/36/000... 66/41/t..43/29/rs RapidCity.......48/26/000 ..37/19/pc. 45/29/pc Savannah.......78/60/000... 76/65/c...77/54/t Akron..........60/41/000... 64/44/t. 47/32/pc GreenBay.......52/33/017... 57/32/t.. 35/24/c Reno...........59/34/0.00...57/31/s. 60/33/pc Seattle..........50/41/0.05..49/42/sh. 49/45/sh Albany..........59/38/000..59/57/sh .. 61/34/c Greensboro......59/48/001 70/61/sh. .. 68/37/pc Richmond.......60/50/0.27...70/62/c. 70/41/pc SiouxFalls.......54/37/0.00..45/24/sh.. 45/25/s Albuquerque.....59/45/0.00...60/35/s.. 61/37/s Harnsburg.......58/37/0.02 ..62/54/sh. 59/38/sh RochesterNY....60/41/000..68/51/sh. 52/29/pc Spokane........45/33/012.. 41/32/rs. 44/35/sh Anchorage......25/13/0.00....17/4/s... 15/1/s Hartford,CT.....61/37/0.00...59/54/c...65/38/t Sacramento......65/44/0.00... 64/43/s .. 67/47/s Spnngfidd, MO ..70/5110.03.. 68/36/pc.. 55/32/s Atlanta.........67746/0.00..67759lsh.69/41/pc Helena..........4413310.00..35/27/pc. 46/30/pcSt Louis.........64/48/0.01... 74/40/t .. 54/29/s Tampa..........74/69/0.04... 85/69/c...84/64/t AtlanscCity.....50/39/009...64/58/c. 67/42/sh Honolulu........83/73/000 ..85/72/pc.. 83/72/c Salt Lake City....42/33/0.1 2.. 44/37/pc. 50/40/pc Tucson..........77/60/0.00 ..75/50/pc. 76/51/pc Austin..........82/57/0.00..86/58/pc. 74/50/pc Houston........81/57/0.00... 85/68/t. 77/55/pcSanAntonio.....83/66/000..87/63/pc. 77/56/pc Tulsa...........74/55/008... 71/39/s .. 61/36/s Balsmore.......52/44/015..66/55/sh. 66/40/sh Huntsville.......67/52/001 ... 74/51/t.. 63/35/s SanDiego.......66/61/0.01 .. 66/57/pc.. 66/58/s Washington, DC..54/46/0.35 .. 67/58/sh. 66/43/sh Billings .........47/36/003..35/25/pc.. 44/29/s Indianapolis.....59/42/000... 67/41/t.. 49/29/s SanFranasco....62/49/0.00... 63/49/s .. 62/50/s Wichita.........77/53/0.00... 61132/s.. 56/34/s Birmingham.....66/53/0.00... 75/57/t .. 66/39/s Jackson, MS.....76/57/0.00... 82/59/t .. 72/42/s SanJose........63/40/000...65/46/s.. 65/47/s Yabma........54/38/trace..50/31/pc. 51I35/sh Bismarck........45/18/000..34/16/sn. 39/21/pc Jacksonvile......76/57/000...78/66/c...78/53/t SantaFe........53/39/030..55/31/pc.. 56/31/s Yuma...........75/54/000... 75/54/s .. 78/55/s Boise...........42/32/0 25 .. 44/27/pc. 50/37/pc Juneau..........30/22/0 00.. 24/10/pc... 19/7/s INTERNATIONAL Boston..........59/42/0.00...59/56/c...65/41/t KansasCity......70/50/0.00...60/34/s.. 54/33/s BndgeportCT....57/39/002...60/56/c...65/41/t Lansing.........57/36/000... 65/41/t..43/28/rs Amsterdam......45/45/000..44/38/sh. 48/42/sh Mecca..........81/79/000..84/69/sh. 84/66/pc Buffalo .........60/39/000..66/50/sh. 50/30/pc LasVegas.......67/48/000... 65/48/s.. 68/49/s Athens..........64/57/0.00 ..62/49/pc.59/50/pc MeacoCity......77/52/0.00.. 77/55/pc.. 74/49/s Burlington, VT....57/32/0.00 .. 57/52/sh. 59/33/sh Leangton.......63/44/0.00... 70/46/t .. 55/32/s Auckland........70/59/000... 68/61/c. 69/58/pc Montreal........54/36/000..49/47/sh. 54/32/sh Canbou, ME.....48/32/0.00.. 49/47/pc. 54/34/sh Lincoln..........64/46/0.00... 56/28/s .. 48/30/s Baghdad........75/55/0.00 ..76/60/pc.. 77/61/c Moscow........39/37/0.06 ..40/30/sh.. 33/28/s Charleston, SC...78/57/0.00... 76/64/c. 77/52/sh Little Rock.......70/55/0.01 ... 80/45/t .. 63/38/s Bangkok........77/75/0.18.. 78/74/sh. 88/73/sh Nairobi.........66/63/0.00 ..78/54/sh. 78/57/sh Charlotte........65/48/000..69/60/sh. 73/38/sh LosAngdes......67/58/000 ..66/54/pc. 67/57/pc Beiyng..........43/28/0.00...47/37/s.. 49/37/s Nassau.........84/75/0.00..80/73/pc. 80/73/pc Chattanooga.....56/46/0.00... 69/54/t.. 64/37/s Louisville........62/46/0.00... 73/46/t.. 56/33/s Beirut..........66/66/0.00..71/61/pc. 72/60/pc NewDdhi.......55/50/0.00...80/57/s.. 81/56/s Cheyenne.......53/3110 00.. 40/26/pc.. 53/29/s MadisonWl.....57/37/016... 58/32/t .. 41/24/s Berlm...........36/36/0.00... 48/41/c .. 43/34/c Osaka..........54/45/0.00 ..63/46/sh. 54/48/sh Chicago.........58/42/005... 68/38/t.. 45/32/s Memphis........69/53/000... 77/46/t.. 63/41/s Bogota.........68/48/000... 81/50/t...77/48/t Oslo............48/45/000..36/31/pc. 39/30/sh Cinannas.......60/47/0.00...70744lt.. 51/31/s Miami..........83/76/0.00..84/73/pc. 84/72/pc Budapest........36/36/0.00... 50/37/c. 48/36/pc Ottawa.........54/36/0.00 ..49/45/sh. 48/28/sh Clevdand.......62/41/0.00... 69/46/t. 47/34/sh Milwaukee......54/38/0.04... 60/35/t. 40/29/pc BuenosAires.....77/46/000...78/57/s. 82/60/pc Pans............39/39/000..46/37/pc.. 43/37/c ColoradoSpnngs.59/33/000..49/25/pc.. 56/30/s Minneapolis.....49/41/011 .. 49/27/sh. 36/22/pc CaboSanLucas ..84/68/0.00 .. 84/70/pc.. 84/68/s Rio de Janero....97/75/0.00.. 73/68/sh. 77/69/sh ColumbiaM0...66/52/0.07..68/36/pc.. , 52/31/s Nashville........64/50/0.00... 73/48/t.. 60/35/s Cairo...........66/64/0.00 ..75/56/pc.74/56/pc Rome...........57/57/0.00 ..65/57/pc. 64/57/sh ColumbiaSC....75/54/0.00...73/65/c. , 78/44/sh NewOrleans.....77/61/0.00... 80/67/t. 73/53/pc Calgary.........27/10/002 ..19/19/pc.. 19/7/sn Santiago........91l54/0 00.. 71/55/pc. 72/60/pc Columbus GA....70/55/0.00... 76/66/t. 73/43/pc NewYork .......60/45/0.04...69/58/c. 68/40/sh Cancun.........88/72/0.00..84/77/pc...84/75/t SaoPaulo.......88/68/0.00..66/61/sh. 71/62/sh Columbus OH....59/47/0.00... 68/44/t. 51/32/pc Newark, NJ......60/46/0.05...69/58/c. 69/39/sh Dublin..........52/48/0.00..50/41/sh. 42/34/pc Sapporo........50/38/0.02..42/39/pc. 45/37/sh Concorrt NH.....58/26/000..57/48/sh. 61/33/sh Norfolk VA......61/52/000... 73/64/c. 71/44/sh Edmburgh.......43/43/000..34/29/pc.39/30/pc Seoul...........45/41/001..46/35/pc. 42/35/pc Corpus Chnsti....81163/000..87/70/pc...79/62/t OklahomaCity...77/58/002... 70/37/s.. 58/37/s Geneva.........41/411000..46/37/sh.. 45/35/c Shanghai........54/48/000... 56/43/s .. 54/44/s DallasFtWorlh...80/63/000... 86/52/s.. 71/46/s Omaha.........65/44/000... 54/29/s.. 45/29/s Harare..........72/72/0.00..87/64/pc. 90/64/pc Singapore.......81/79/0.03..87/78/sh. 84/76/sh Dayton .........57/45/000... 68/43/t. 49/31/pc Orlando.........76/68/017 ..84/67/pc...84/66/t HongKong......72/66/0.00..66/63/pc. 74/64/pc Stockholm.......48/48/0.00...40/34/s.. 42/40/c Denver..........61/26/000..51/28/pc.. 58/32/s PalmSpnngs.....72/52/000... 74/52/s.. 77/55/s Istanbul.........54/52/000..54/47/sh. 55/50/pc Sydney..........64/59/000..71/56/pc. 73/57/sh DesMoines......68/45/0.08.. 57/32/pc.. 47/27/s Peona..........59/42/0.08... 66/33/t .. 45/27/s Jerusalem.......67/53/002 ..68/54/pc. 67/51/sh Taipe...........68/59/000... 67/56/s. 63/58/pc Detroit..........56/34/0.00... 67/46/t. 48/32/pc Philadelphia.....56/44/0.00...67/59/c. 69/39/sh Johannesburg....82/62/0.47..82/58/sh.. 84/59/s TelAviv.........63/61/0.00..74/61/pc. 74/58/sh Duluth..........46/41/022 ..45/27/sh.33/19/pc Phoenix.........73/62/000... 75/55/s.. 79/56/s Lima ...........72/63/0.00...72/62/c. 73/61/pc Tokyo...........55/50/0.00...65/47/s.. 63/43/s El Paso..........75/57/0.00... 71149/s .. 73/43/s Pittsburgh.......60/39/0.00 ..65/45/sh. 50/33/pc Lisbon..........50/50/0.00 ..61/53/pc.. 61/51/c Toronto.........52/4110.00.. 57/45/sh. 46/32/sh Fairbanks........19/11/0.00..-1/-12/pc..-4/-14/c Portland,ME.....53/31/0.00...53/50/c. 56/37/sh London.........46/46/000... 46/43/c. 45/31/sh Vancouver.......45/36/047..48/46/sh...48/43/r Fargo...........47/33/000..41/22/sh. 36/19/pc Providence......61/36/000... 61/56/c...65/40/t Madnd.........41/41/007..48/40/sh. 52/36/pc Vienna..........37/32/000...46/38/c. 47/37/pc Flagstaff........46/35/0.00...52/20/s.. 56/21/s Raleigh.........69/50/0.00...73/64/c. 72/40/sh Manila..........82/77/0.00 ..86/74/pc.88/74/pc Warsaw.........39/39/0.00 ..43/40/sh. 43/36/pc
WEST NEWS
Tribal dispute haseroding Alaska village in limbo By Rachel D'Oro The Associated Press
A NCHORAGE, A las k a — The flood-prone village of Newtok near Alaska's stormbattered coast is running out of time as coastal erosion creeps ever closer to the Yup'ik Eskimo community. As residents wait for a new village to be built on higher ground 9 miles away, a dispute over who is in charge has led to a rare intervention by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, which ruled that the sitting tribal council no longer represents the community of 350 as far as the agency is concerned. Council leaders are appealing the BIA's decision, which gave the funding-administrative power to a new group that claims it is the rightfully elected council. Until the matter is resolved, millions of dollars in government funds for the relocation effort have been halted, as nature's relentless erosion continues, oblivious to who is in charge. "Who's suffering here is the community m embers," said Scott Ruby, director of the state agency that administers the relocation grants. Newtok is one of Alaska's most eroded coastal villages and the only one that has begun a physical move, with the raging Ninglick River steadily inching toward homes. Officials estimate Newtok, 480 miles west of Anchorage, has until the end of the decade before erosion causes severe damage. G overnment f u nd s h a v e been used over the last seven years to build six homes, a barge landing, roads and five storage structures at the site of the new village. Now those structures sit as reminders that a community's dreams of a rebirth are still unrealized. nWe're just falling wayback," said Stanley Tom, a longtime tribal administrator who is part of the group whose authority is no longer recognized. In its ruling, the BIA said
Partly cloudy with a slight chance of showers late.
WOLLEN COUNT
• 55'
47/28
Paisley
• Brookings
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
45/25
ra nts
ll
4825
Lake
g
44728
41 /23
Riley
45/30
Juntura
• BurnS
46/23
S lver i
•
Nyssa •
Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers.
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
Vale• 45/29
Chnstmas Valley
•
40I21
46/28
• Pauhna 42/23
Cr escent • Fort Rock44723 43/20
Chemult
54I41
• 52/43
45/30
pg
Unity 37/25
g~ • Brothers 42/25
La pInedooz
Crescentm •
57/44 •
• John Day
•
SISterS
Eugene •
40/24
• Mitchell 46/30
'
sssssCamp Sherman•
CENTRAL Rain and snow showers possible in the north.
39/25
45I3
Wigovvdale
ss 52/39• sss
• Hermiston 53/32
53/35
mwas co
•
s s ssCwmp 35/31h Lmcoln Ci ss s s s 50I~'emxss 55/4fi
COrvalli
Mostly cloudy with a chance of light rain.
BEND ALMANAC
~FORECAST:5TATE I
I '
State of Alaska via The Associated Press
W ooden boards connect houses in Newtok, Alaska, in this 2006 photo. The village of Newtok near Alaska's storm-battered coast is in jeopardy as coastal erosion wreaks havoc on the Yup'ik Eskimo community. required elections were purportedly not held for more than seven years, so the old council had been operating on expired terms. The old council denies the allegations. The new council members were first elected in October 2012. The following month, members of the old council held another election. The resulting dispute reached a boiling point in June when the new council got more votes during a community meeting attended by both sides. That victory carried significant weight in the BIA's decision, which said its decision applies to such purposes as bureau funding. Members of the new council have not responded to requests from The Associated Press for comment. The state, which is not bound by the BIA decision, has been sitting on $6.5 million in reimbursable grant funds for the relocation effort, including proceeding with building out an evacuation center at the new location called Mertarvik. Any payout has been delayed by the dispute and failure of the new faction to establish an official bank account until recently. The state expects to soon issue $51,000 in revenue sharing funds to the new council that should have been distributed last summer.
Relocations funds probably won't be disbursed until next spring at the earliest. Adding to the complication, recent audits by the state concluded that the old faction mismanaged the administration of other relocation grants, such as changing the architectural design of the evacuation center after it took over the project from the state in 201L The audit also noted apparent payroll improprieties, including exorbitant compensation for certain employees. The audit recommends that the tribe return about $300,000 to the state for alleged improprieties including duplicate payments on invoices and retroactive wages for employees. Officials have denied any mismanagement. At the same time, members of the new council failed to hold a required election last month, saying they w anted to wait until the dispute was resolved, according to Ruby of the state Division of Commerce, Community and Economic Development. He would have liked to have seen an election held so that anyone who wanted to run, including members of the old faction, could have done so. He said the issue will have to be revisited later.
We're celebrating you! FrOm all of uS at SELCO, thank you fOr your memberShiP. During thiS SeaSOn Of aPPreCiatiOn and giving, we're Celebrating With Weekly PriZe draWingS — juSt a Small eXPreSSian Of Our
gratitude fOr you.
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selco.org/thankyou • 800-445-4483 Several locations in Bend and Redmond
NCUA Eoe x oexme oeeormmrx
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE (0 ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
SPOTLIGHT
Master Gardener series starts soon Oregon State University's Master Gardener Program is taking applications for its upcoming series of courses. Designed for people who want to learn and share research-based gardening information, it features 10 classroom trainings to be held at OSU-Cascades on Saturdays from Jan. 18 to April 5, and a hands-on training program that will run through September. Tuition for the program is $275. Partial scholarships available. For more information or for an application visit extension.oregonstate .edu/deschutes or call the Deschutes County Extension Office, 541548-6088. Applications are due Jan. 8.
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Lidrary sets up computer training The Deschutes Public Library system is offering free computer training at its branches throughout Central Oregon. Topics include exploring word-processing and spreadsheet software, using Facebook and Craigslist, navigating the Internet and accessing digital downloads from the library's collection. For a full list of upcoming classes, visit deschuteslibrary.org/ events/classes. Space is limited and reservations are recommended. Various branches also offer open lab sessions, where visitors can practice computer skills with library staff on hand to help. Reservations are not required. Contact: www .deschuteslibrary.org or 541-617-7050.
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• The Seattle suburb has become amajor hub for Washington wineries
Living off the grid? Geton TV If you're living a subsistence lifestyle off the grid, National Geographic Channel wants to hear from you. The channel is casting for a documentary about individuals, couples, families or groups living off grid who are hunting, growing their own food and generating their own power. If this sounds like you, or someone you may know, contact the research team at
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By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
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offgrid48©gmail.com or Ally Siegel at 323785-8658.
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Aldum raisescash for kids' program Local musicians have contributed to a digital album for sale to raise money for Central Oregon's Healthy
Beginnings program, which provides physical, developmental and behavioral screenings to children from birth through age 5. The album, "November," is available at songs4november.band camp.comfor$5.Eleven artists from Bend, Portland and San Francisco donated a song each to the project. The local bands include: Voodoo Highway, Chris Evans, Jason D. Scheitzer, Victory Swig, Stan Roach, The Rum and The Sea, The Quons, Hilst 8 Coffey and Jason Chinchen. Also included are Three Times Bad from San Francisco and Steam Engines from Portland. Sales will end at the end of November when the album will be deleted from the lnternet. — From staff reports
WOODINVILLE, Wash. f you can't bring the people to the wineries, you've got to bring the wineries to the people. That's the philosophy that created a tourism boom in Woodinville, a town of 10,000 people located a half-hour's drive northeast of Seattle. Beginning in the 1970s, scores of vineyards were planted in the warm, semi-arid climate of eastern Washington, three to six hours' drive southeast of Seattle. Grape growers established their wineries amid their vines in the Yakima and Columbia valleys and the Walla Walla region. Only a few winemakers considered the obvious advantages of building their businesses closer to metropolitan Puget Sound. SeeWoodinville /D4
Qo See additional photos on The Bulletin's website:
bendbulletin.com/ travel
John Gottherg Anderson/For The Bulletin
Chateau Ste. Michelle, the oldest winery in Washington, established its Woodinville presence in 1976 on the former estate of an early-20th-century Seattle lumber baron. The 87-acre grounds include a historic home and a venue for outdoor concerts as well as the winery itself.
NORTHWEST TRAVEL In two weeks: Austin, Texas
NATIVE AMERICAN HISTORY MONTH
'Atra icstor 't attime or ot • Story of the Chiricahua Apaches' 27-year imprisonmentcomesto light in new film By Mac McLean The Bulletin
During April 1886, more than 500 Chiricahua Apaches — including Pascal Enjady's great-great grandfather — were rounded up and sent to Fort Marion, Fla., where they were held as prisoners of war for more than two decades.
"None ofthe men, none of the women, none of the children were ever found guilty of a crime, but they were all sent to prison," said Enjady, who made a documentary earlier this year to chronicle what happened to his tribe so it will never be forgotten. Enjady's film, "Two Year Promise," is being shown
Tuesday at Central Oregon Community College's Hitchcock Auditorium as part of the college's Native American History Month celebra-
tion (see "If you go").
The imprisonment Before the 1860s, the Chiricahua Apaches occupied a territory that stretched across the southwest corner of New Mexico, the southeast corner of Arizona and a corresponding portion on the other side of the U.S.-Mexico border
that included parts of Sonora and Chihuahua. According to the Chiricahua Apache Prisoner of War Committee, a group of direct descendants of the POWs, the U.S. government actively moved to take these lands from the Indians after the Civil War so settlers could use them for mining, grazing and as the path for a railroad that would run through Tucson, Ariz., on the way to the Pacific coast. SeeFilm /D7
If yougo What: Screening of "Two Year Promise," a documentary about the Chiricahua Apaches' 27-year imprisonment
When:1 p.m.Tuesday, followed by a discussion featuring its producers and descendants of the Chiricahua prisoners Where:HitchcockAuditorium at Pioneer Hall, Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend Cost:Free Contact:541-318-3782
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
M ILESTONE~
Formsforengagementweddinganniversaryorhirthdayannouncementsareavaiiahieat7heBulletin,t777SttrChandlerhveugendorhy emailing milestonesC~bendbulletin.com. Forms andphotos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
MARRIAGE
ANN I V ERSARIES
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Marilyn and John Rivera
Rivera Christie Myers and Todd Cox
Myers — Cox Christie Myers and Todd Cox, both of Bend, were married Aug. 3 at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. The bride is the daughter of David and Kathy Myers, of Bend. She is a 2002 graduate of Bend High School. She works for Willamette Valley Bank.
The groom is the son of Doug and Rhonda Cox, of Bend, and Tammy and Craig Tomlinson, of A gua D ulce, Calif. He is a 2001 graduate of Bend High School and a 2007 graduate of t h e U n iversity of Houston, where he studied economics. He works for BendBroadband. They will settle in Bend.
John and Marilyn (Voight) Rivera, of Bend, celebrated their 35th wedding anniversary with family and friends on trips to Hawaii, Disneyworld and Palm Springs. The couple were married Oct. I, 1978, at Chapel of The Wedding Bells in Bellflower, Calif. They were high school sweethearts. They have two children, Kelli (and T.C.) Anderson, of Bend, and Kristin, of Portland; and two
Jane and Sam Catterlin
Catterlin
grandchildren. They own a n d o p erate " Curves fo r W o m en" i n Bend. Mr. Rivera worked in the construction industry for more than 30 years in Southern California and Bend and enjoys traveling, spending time with family and friends, and playing golf. Mrs. Rivera enjoys spending time with their grandchildren, traveling and attending Westside Church. They have lived in Central Oregon for 21 years.
Vad 10 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Sam and Jane (LaBrier) Mr. Catterlin was a Navy Catterlin, of Bend, will cele- combat pilot for 26 years and brate their 65th wedding an- a mechanical engineer at niversary at a family reunion General Electicfor 20 years in Bend this Christmas. until his retirement in 1989. The couple were married He is a l i f e-long Shriner Dec. 18, 1948, in C orpus where he plays the bagpipes Christi, Texas. Theyhave five and is a member of the Aschildren: Kyle (and Suzanne), sociation of Naval Aviators. of Bend; Cliff, of Bend; Lau- Mrs. Catterlin was a homerie (and Steve) Wilkes, of maker and enjoys spending Bend; Cynthia (and Bruce) time with her family. DeGroat, of Bend; and Brett They have lived in Central (and Joe) Titman, of Madison, Oregon for 10 years.
BIRTHS
If it all doesn't fit, build a bigger box
Kip Crum and Liz Rufener, a girl, Blakely Marie Rufener, 7 pounds, 2 ounces, Nov. 4. Kip Crum and Liz Rufener, a boy, Blaine NathanRufener,6 pounds, 3
• Recording studios are compiling epic CD sets of classicalmusic,despite low returns DVD and an extensive booklet. It presents carefully remasT he c l a ssical-music r e - tered recordings of the Horowcording industry i s c o llaps- itz concerts at Carnegie Hall ing. Right? That's what we've recorded live by Columbia and heard. RCA, 21 in all, as well as the 1968 "Horowitz on Television" But hold on. Even with the virtual disappearance of retail performance and the historic chain stores, CDs keep being 1943 radio performance of produced and purchased, and Tchaikovsky's First Piano ConI'm speaking of physical com- certo with Toscanini conductpact discs, not downloaded ing the NBC Symphony Orrecordings, a ph e nomenon chestra. Though some of these long popular in other genres of recordings have long b een music and an increasing factor available, eight recitals were in the classical field. Smaller previously unreleased. And classical labels are noticeably there arerecordings of three active, presenting emerging or recitals Horowitz gave in 1949 overlooked artists in perfor- and 1950 taken from his private mances of unusual repertory, archive, now housed at the Yale including the works of living Collection of Historic Sound composers. Recordings. The suggested reThe catch is that recordings tail price is $149.98. do not generate the amounts For 'a certain audience' of money, either for artists or producers, common in earlier Still, who is the target buyeras. Most artists, eager for ex- er? What is Sony up to? To try posure, are willing to make to find out, I went to Bogdan recordings for little compensa- Roscic, the president of Sony tion, or even as self-produced Classical, who discussed the projects. classical-music industry in a reDespite this, the financial cent telephone interview from challenges in the industry are Berlin. very real, as companies grapRoscic fully concedes that ple with how to make online ac- "the classical-music market cessing profitable. has been shrinking," in part So, how do you explain the because of the marginalization burst of special boxed-set col- of classical music "in society, in lections of CDs that keep get- certain countries." In addition, ting produced? A boxed set classical music may finally be of the complete Haydn string buckling "under the w eight quartets, or all the works of of its own magnificent tradiLigeti, or the collected record- tion," he said. "How many sets ings of Heifetz might seem a of Mahler symphonies can the prestige product for a limited market handle?" consumer base. Still, "physical carriers," as Lately, the major labels have Roscic calls CDs, remain "a issued what seems a plethora of very good and popular format both deluxe and bargain-price for classical-music buyers, with boxed sets. This June, in honor good sound and convenience in of the centennial of the birth of terms of pricing." And classical Benjamin Britten, Decca issued music is catchingup with other "Britten: The Complete Works," fields, he pointed out, in "mia comprehensive 65-disc set grating to digital." o ffering e s sentially e v e r y Given this overall picture, work he wrote, including some boxed sets may seem an anomjuvenilia. aly, a counter-cycle to the deIn the last year alone, focus- cline of the CD market and the ing just on boxed sets of historic growth of digital. "It's true that these are not a recordings made by some major pianists, Sony, which con- volume product," Roscic said. trols the storied RCA Red Seal "But a certain audience wants catalog, has released: "Leon them." Fleisher: The Complete Album Some boxed sets are expenCollection" (23 CDs), "Gary sive prestige products. He cited Graffman: The Complete RCA "Yo-Yo Ma: 30 Years Outside and Columbia Album Collec- the Box," a collection of 90 CDs tion" (24 CDs) and "Byron Ja- featuring this revered Amerinis: The Complete RCA Album can cellist, including all of his Collection" (I I CDs and a DVD). ventures outside the classical As it happens, all three of these "box," as the title suggests, into great American artists turned collaborations with A p pala85 this year. Also, they all suf- chian folk musicians, jazz artfered debilitating hand injuries ists and the Silk Road Project, that impeded their careers. which explores crosscurrents Then there is "Legendary in world music. Van Cliburn: The Complete Album Collection" (28 CDs), For piano lovers which Sony/RCA issued in For now, lovers of the piano February around the time that certainly have a trove of new Cliburn died at 78 at his home collections to enjoy. Just those in Fort Worth. featuring the pianists I have Recently, an ambitious ar- mentioned here contain a total chival project was released by of 127 CDs. So far, I have only Sony. "Vladimir Horowitz: Live been able to sample these reat Carnegie Hall" is a deluxe cent releases. Some of the in41-CD boxed set with a bonus cluded recordings, of course,
ounces, Nov. 4. Jacob and Lisa LaPlante, a boy, Evan Edwin Bryant LaPlante, 6 pounds, 9 ounces, Nov.4. Tyler and AmandaTrask, a boy, Jaxon Edward ThomasTrask, 6 pounds, 15 ounces, Nov.7.
Delivered at St. Charles Redmond
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Pianist Van Cliburn is pictured in an undated photo. Sony/RCA released a 28 CD collection, "Legendary Van Cliburn: The Complete Album Collection," in February, part of the continued flood of classical multi-CD sets from record labels. are deservedly renowned and very familiar to me, like Fleisher's distinguished accounts of the five Beethoven concertos, recorded with George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra between 1959 and 1961; or Graffman's brilliant 1966 recordings of Prokofiev's First and Third Piano Concertos, also with Szell and the Clevelanders. But it has been fascinating to go backto recordings that either were dropped from the catalogs or have been overlooked, like Fleisher's Brahms album from 1956, with a bracing account of the "Handel" Variations and a whole batch of charmingly played waltzes. Then there is Graffman's Schumann album from the mid-1950s, with a rhapsodic account of the Second Piano Sonata and a noble, exciting Symphonic Etudes. Those who think of Janis from the 1960s as a virtuoso's virtuoso might be surprised by his recording, made in the mid1950s, of two Beethoven sonatas: an Apollonian "Waldstein" and an insightful, poetic reading of the late Piano Sonata No. 30. The Horowitz collection is a major contribution to the piano discography, deserving of a full review after I have done more than dip into it. I am already excited by several of the recordings from the private collection, particularly a searching, brilliant account of Samuel Barber's Piano Sonata from a 1950 recital, just three months after Horowitz gave the premiere of the piece. For me, the Cliburn collection has been especially meaningful. Talk about eerie timing. The set arrived in my mailbox Feb. 27, the day Cliburn died. (I had just returned from the office, having written an obituary for Cliburn, when I opened the
Kiril Kondrashin conducting the RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra. It was recorded in May 1958, shortly after Cliburn returned to America triumphant, having won the gold medal in the first International Tchaikovsky Competition. That recording would sell I m i l lion copies, becoming the h ighest-selling classical recording ever at the time. It sounds as magnificent today as it did to me when, as a boy studying the piano, I bought it and listened to it over and over. Maybe there will continue to be a small but solid market for these boxed sets. It is hard to say. Even Roscic may not know. But Cliburn must have been so pleased to know that this collection was in the works when his health deteriorated. And I'm glad to have it.
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
03
roa on e ara oram • Ancient history, modern convenience mingle together in China andPakistan By Andrew Jacobs New Yorh Times News Service
Stretching more than 800 miles from A b b ottabad i n Pakistan to Kashgar in China's western Xinjiang region, the Karakoram Highway is the world's highest transnational roadway and a testament to modern China's determination to shape and contain nature's most daunting obstacles. Completed in 1979, the roadway's ostensible aim was to foster trade between Beijing and Karachi, but also to sweeten a marriage between two allies united in their enmity for India. Except for the smooth asphalt and steady cellphone service that puts Verizon and AT8T to shame, the journey is little changed in the 2,000 years since Silk Road traders shuttling b e tween E u rope, Asia and th e M i d dle East found safe passage through the Karakoram Mountains at the Khunjerab Pass. Visitors today are confronted with the same barren stretches of duncolored stone punctuated by the occasional glacial lake, t he roiling Gez R iver a n d emerald grasslands speckled with white yurts and black yaks. For accredited journalists in China like me, and the two others I was traveling with, a reporting trip to southern Xinjiang can be a frustrating experience, with local police officers often serving as unwanted chaperones. This time, we enlisted the services of Kashgar Guide, an officially sanctioned travel agency, and made clear we would be on holiday. B esides gu aranteeing a seamlessly e x ecuted v i s it, the arrangement apparently convinced the authorities that we had left ou r n otebooks at home. We would have a rare unfiltered look at a timeless place, weaving through the myriad communities for whom it is simply just home. D espite some newer d epressing structures faced with clay-colored stucco, Kashgar retains much of it s Central Asian charm. The streets of the Uighur quarter are a cacophony of blacksmiths hammering out copper ewers and donkey carts heaving w i th yellow-skinned Hami melons. At busy intersections, hazeleyed vendors hawk mounds of sugary shaved ice and offal stew — its main ingredient advertised by a goat head poised atop giant, bubbling caldrons.
A woman shops for scarves at a market in Kashgar, in the far western Xinjiang region of China. The Karakoram Highway, which starts in Kashgar, has changed little since Silk Road traders first began using it 2,000 years ago.
a gargantuan market t h at overflows with Chinese-made textiles, M alaysian s weets, Turkish appliances and a full range of doppa, the traditional embroidered hats that crown the heads of Muslim men from I stanbul to Bishkek. A f e w blocks away is a pigeon market, where collectors practically coo over prized specimens, some of which sell for more than $1,000. W e headed south on t h e Karakoram Highway, passing a lute factory festooned with plaster musical instruments, and the fast-expanding Special Economic Zone, t hree years in the making, that the government hopes will turn Kashgar into the manufacturing and trading dynamo of Central Asia. After whizzing past cotton fields and grape arbors watered by a c e nturies-old skein of i r r i gation c anals, we stopped for provisions in Upal, a dusky town that hosts a lively market on Mondays. It i s a u t hentically U i ghur; few people here speak fluent Mandarin, and the town and surrounding countryside have a timeless feel that highlights the challenges Beijing faces as it tries to nudge southern Xinjiang into its idealized vision of a harmonious Greater China. Residents have a deep connection to their history and are quick to cite the region's associations with Marco Polo, w hose 13th-century c r a w l from the Republic of Venice to the M o ngol-ruled imperial capital in Peking is said to have taken him along a route that follows the modern-day Karakoram Highway. The explorer certainly left his mark here, with residents insisting the origins of spaghetti can be traced back to the thick, chewy lahman noodles that are a stable of Uighur cuisine. "Italians think they invented pasta but they are mistaken," boasted an elderly man pulling noodles at a roadside stand. Beyond Upal, the well-irriExperiencing the culture gated farms quickly give way Kashgar's markets are your to the parched foothills of the easiest entry point into Uighur Kunlun Mountains and later, culture. The city's other main a deep river valley tracing the draw is the Central Asia InGez River that can be chalternational G r an d B a z aar, lenging to the acrophobic. For
ANSWER TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
2IQ@L/hLL X Answer: BLOTCH W A LRUS DROWSY GASKET
UNFAIR BISHOP
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Photos by Gilles Sabhe/New York Times News Service
A Kyrgyz village by Karakul Lake in the western Xinjiang region in China. Stretching from Abbottabad in Pakistan to Kashgar in Xinjiang, the Karakoram Highway is the world's highest transnational roadway.
A climbing highway From there, the road ascended above 11,000 feet, leaving half our party unpleasantly lightheaded. The next stop, Karakul Lake, had little to offer in the way of increased oxygen, but its placid waters reflecting glacier-capped peaks helped ease the malaise. K arakul, t h e l a k e t h a t launched a million Chinese postcards, is surprisingly unspoiled, with almost no development along its banks, except for a once-picturesque Kyrgyz village that the local government is rapidly "modernizing" with rows of concrete boxes. We avoided the unsightly Chinese-built hotel (reportedly owned by r e l atives of a powerful Communist Party official) and instead settled down with a family of shepherds who had t u rned their summer encampment of yurts into no-frills tourist accommodations. There are roughly 145,000 ethnic Kyrgyz in China, a nomadic people who have been cut off from their brethren in neighboring Kyrgyzstan since a falling-out between Mao and Stalin in the early 1960s effectively sealed the border. These days, the Kyrgyz in Xinjiang still depend on w a ndering flocks of yaks and goats for survival, although y ounger people are heading to the cities in increasing numbers. In the morning, we awoke to blinding sunshine and a train of horses waiting to take us around the lake. The hourlong c ircumambulation wa s l e d by a trio of teenage boys who listened to Chinese pop music on their cellphones but spoke
of their traditions, also distinguish themselves from the region's other ethnic minorities by greeting one another with an elaborate exchange of handshakes and kisses.
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Domestic chores at Karakul Lake are done in the shadows of the Karakoram Mountains in western China. halting Mandarin. The ride was magical; less so the plastic bags and bits of Styrofoam that floated in the crystalline waters. S outh o f K a r a k ul , t h e highway climbs to the windwhipped Subash pass, which rises to a woozy 13,400 feet. There, we gasped for air and briefly marveled at a lonely bus stop beneath a propaganda billboard extolling ethnic harmony, and then descended into Tashkurgan, a city noted by the Greek scholar Ptolemy in his second-century B.C. geographic guidebook of the known world. Set in a lush river valley near the borders of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, the city is the westernmost settlement in China and still has the feel of a frontier outpost. O nce the capital o f t h e Sarikol Kingdom, it is peppered with evocative ruins, including a crumbling stone fortress at the center of town that gives Tashkurgan its name. The Stone Fort has been destroyed and rebuilt numerous
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hours, as the highway climbs higher, there is little sign of human habitation. Then the rockstrewn desolation is suddenly interrupted by a blinding expanse of aquamarine, a giant glacial lake whose southern end is framed by enormous sand dunes.
times through the centuries; the final sacking, locals say, took place during the decadelong Cultural Revolution that ended in 1976. These days, the tumbledown walls of the fortressprovide a rookery for squawking crows. T ashkurgan r e m ain s a thoroughly Tajik city whose 5,000 residents speak an IndoEuropean dialect related to Persian. We arrived near sunset, and as we walked through the center of town l ooking for a place to eat, we found o urselves distracted by t h e faces of passers-by: women with striking green eyes, their heads topped by circular hats draped in c olorful scarves, and square-jawed men who c ould easily b l end i nt o a lunchtime crowd i n R o m e. The Tajiks, famously proud
A few blocks away, a group of Pakistani merchants from t he Swat V a lley h a d j u s t stepped off a l o ng-distance bus, weary from their travels, their white shalwar kameez flapping in the wind. Inside their oversize bundles were cheap metal b angles t hey planned to sell in cities farther east. "Chinese women love anything that shines like gold," one of the traders, Mohamed Razwan, said hopefully. It was their inaugural trip outside Pakistan, and the men, all in their 20s, were thrilled to be m e eting A m ericans, their first face-to-face encounter with a people frequently vilified at home as hegemonic warmongers. The two groups of strangers could barely communicate, but we reveled in the moment, snapping pictures of one another, and marveling at our unlikely encounter on a strange, far-flung corner of the world.
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How much can I gift every year without a tax being imposed? This year the annual gift tax exclusion allows you to make gifts of up to $14,000 annually to as many people as you would like. You do not need to report these annual exclusion gifts on a tax return. You can also make John D. Sorlie gifts in excess of the annual exclusion amount by Arr rneyar Law uhtizing your $5.25 million tifehme gift exemption. BRYANT, LOVLIENUse of the tifehme gift exemphon requires titing a gift tax return, but will not result in a gift tax unht & JARVIS, P.C. you haveused your fulltifehme exemphon. Both the ATTORNEYSATLAW annual exclusion and the tifehme gift exemphon are 591 S.W. Mill view Way indexed for inflahon. For 2014, the annual exclusion Bend, Oregon 97702 will stay at $14,000, but the tifehme gift exemphon 541-382-4331 will increase to $5.34 million.
REAL ESTATE W hat warranhes exist f o r n e w h o u se construchon and remodeling? In the absence of an express warranty, any contractor who works on a house impliedly warrants that the workmanship and materials will not be defechve for a minimum of one year from the dateof complehon. The contractor who builds a new house must offer that, or a better Craig Edwards warranty, in wrihng. Better warranhes cover defects Arr rneyar Law in smrcturat, plumbing, elechtcat, and heahng and may last for up to 10 years on certain EDWARDS LAWsystems, items. M any builders offer warranhes through a OFFICES PC third party, such as the 2-10 Home Buyer's Warranty. 225 N.W. Franklin Ave When choosing a contractor, be sure to ask about and Suite 2 compare thecoverage and cost forthe warranty that Bend, Oregon 97701 your builder is willing to provide.
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ELDER LAW I recently moved from Washington to Oregon. I have ahealth care power of attorney (HCPOA) from Washington.Ialso have a Physician Order for Life Sustaining Treatment ( POLST). Is that enough or do I also need to sign a new HCPOA in Oregon'? •
Or egon no longer uses HCPOA's. Instead, Oregon uses an Advance Directive which is a legal document a person can execute to appoint a health Lisa Bertalan caresurrogate to make healt h care decisions fortheperson Attorneyar Law if he or she cannot communicate those decisions on his or Hendrix, Brinch hcr own. An Advance Directive should be signed by all R Bertalan, L.L.P. competent adults residing in the State of Oregon. A POLST is a medical order signed by your doctor that communicates ATTQRNEYS ATLaw information about specific medical treatments a patient 716 NW Harrima n St does or does not want. POLST's are usually only given for Bend, OR97701 those diagnosed with a serious advance illness or frailty. 541-382-4980
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EMPLOYMENT I heard interns in O regon now have anti discrimination protections, just like employees'?
Yes! H B 2669gaveunpaid interns manyof theprotections from discrimination that already apply to Oregon employees. You name the protected class or activity, it is likely included: race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, marital status, age, military service, disability, whistleblowihg, participation ih civil ahd criminal proceedings there's also protection concerning genetic information, Kurt Barker polygraph tests, ahdmore. Don'tworry, the new law doeshot, by Arr rneyar Law itself, create ah employment relationship with interns (although Karnopp you should consult with your lawyer to determine whether Petersen LLP your college creditseeker is a true "intern" or a potentially 1201 N.W.Wall Street misclassified employee —the ramifications for a misclassification Suite 200 are serious). Another word to thewise: The bill took effect June Bend, Oregon 97701 13, 2013, so be sure to familiarize your managers ahd unpaid 541-382-3011 interns with your compahy's anti discrimihatiohlahtl harassment www.karnopp.com policies ahd how to report any cohcems
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
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Continued from D1 One of them, however, was the state's oldest winery, the American Wine Co., founded in Seattle in 1934 with the repeal of Prohibition. At tiny Woodinville, its owners discovered an e a rly-20th-century lumber baron's 87-acre estate ripe for redevelopment. They built a French-style chateau — in the process renaming their company Chateau Ste. Michelle — on the former Hollywood Farm (holly trees once lined the main drive) and began trucking its grapes over from a Columbia Valley vineyard. T he C o lumbia W i n e r y opened up across the street in 1988. Over the next 20 years, a few other growers followed suit. But the rush didn't begin until the 21st century, after the Washington State Legislature passed a law that allowed wineries to have satellite tasting rooms away from their wineries. Within a few years, dozens of tasting rooms — and a few wine-production facilities — were offering flights of wine in a location where their direct-to-consumer salesand brand awareness campaigns could burgeon. Today there are nearly 100 wineries and tasting rooms in Woodinville, and the number continues to grow. As the wineries multiplied, Woodinville's hospitality industry flourished. A luxurious urban resort, the Willows Lodge, opened near Chateau Ste. Michelle and Columbia in the fall of 2000, and greater Seattle's best-known prix-fixe restaurant, the Herbfarm, established itself on the same grounds in early 2001. Craft breweries a n d di s t i lleries followed. Today, a visit to the Woodinville Wine Country — and yes, that's a proper name — is a popular weekend getaway destination for r esidents of the greater Seattle area, and out-of-staters are increasingly identifying it as a place for one-stop wine shopping.
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(All addressesin IVashington) INFORMATION •Woodinville Chamber of Commerce. 17401 N.E. 133rd Ave., Suite A3, Woodinville; 425-481-8300, www. woodinvillechamber.org •Woodinville Wine Country. P.O. Box 2114, Woodinville, WA 98072; 425-205-4394, www. woodinvillewinecountry.com
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Country Inn.16400 N.E. 216th Ave., Woodinville; 425-8444102, www.edgeofseattle. com. Rates from $255
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Baymont Inn 8Suites. 12223 N.E. 116th St., Kirkland; 425822-2300, 800-337-0550, www.baymontinns.com. Rates
from $89 Matthews Estate HouseBed
John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin
The Columbia Winery, established in 1962 by a group of university professors and their friends, opened its Woodinville Winery in 1988. For three decades, until his death in 2009, master winemaker David Lake was renowned for his experimentation with new varietals.
Willows by the river Woodinville was pioneered in 1871, when Susan and lra Woodin left Seattle and traveled up the Sammamish River to harvest timber and farm cattle on the cleared land. A town grew up around their log cabin, which subsequently became the first school and post office. But it remained s omewhat remote until t h e years following World War II, when improved transportation knitted Woodinville (situated immediately north of the Microsoft hub of Redmond) into the Seattle metropolitan area. The town remained unincorporated until 1992, when residents voted t o b e come their own city r ather than be annexed by neighboring Bothell. Frederick Stimson built his Manor House, now a state historic site on the Ste. Michelle grounds, in 1912. In 1923, he added a hunting lodge in the low woodlands along the Sammamish River. When the ne w W i l l ows Lodge opened in the same location as the lodge in September 2000, it retained the heritage not only of Stimson's time, but also of the Native Americans who preceded him and lra Woodin in this valley. And it quickly became the
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set courses are served over five hours, matched with a half-dozen Northwest wines. The menu isn't determined until the afternoon before it's served, based entirely upon the best and freshest produce available on that particular
day.
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Greg Cross/ The Bulletin
hub of Woodinville tourism. Spreading across five acres beside the Sammamish River, the Willows is surrounded by well-tended gardens that extend south to state Highway 202 and north along the riverbank to dog-walking trails and a corporate team-building ropes course. In addition to 84 guest rooms, the hotel incorporates a serene day spa with an outdoor hydrotherapy pool, extensive meeting space, and the Fireside lounge where music and other special events are commonplace. The heavy use in construction of locally milled Douglas fir and quarried stone perpetuate a Northwest-themed lodge feel. And t h ere's extensive display of Northwest coastal tribal art, i n cluding reproductions of pieces by the late Haida woodcarver Bill Reid. They complement numerous historical photos of Frederick Stimson's Woodinville. ln the heart of a traffic circle in front of the lodge, the charred remains of a 1,500year-old Olympic Peninsula cedar stump artistically separates the hotel from its Barking Frog restaurant. A large f ire pit, centerpiece of a n eight-seat dining table, greets diners to this three-meals-aday restaurant. Its farm-to-table emphasis is underscored by the ready availability of vegetables, fruits and herbs within the lodge's decorative gardens.
Indeed, the Barking Frog shares the gardens with The Herbfarm, perhaps the most renowned restaurant in the Pacific Northwest. National G eographic T r aveler o n ce named it the "number one destination restaurant in the world," and its multitude of other accolades have included a James Beard award to chef Jerry Traunfeld as the best in the Northwest. From humble beginnings as a rural farm and herbal n ursery, T he Her b f a rm morphed into a popular small restaurant in tiny Fall City from 1986 until the start of 1997, when it was destroyed by fire. Owners Ron Zimmerman and Carrie Van Dyck slowly rebuilt, operating first from a tent, then from temporary quarters in the Hedges Winery in lssaquah. The restaurant gained a permanent home in Woodinville when it opened beside the Willows Lodge in early 2001. Dinner here is a s pecial occasion, and it's priced accordingly: A c ouple should not expect to say goodnight without having spent $500. Then again, this is an event as much as it is a meal. Nine
It's a short walk and a shorter drive — not much more than a quarter-mile — from the Willows Lodge to Chateau Ste. Michelle. Visitors enjoy wandering the grounds, from t ree-lined lanes an d d u ck ponds to a 4,300-seat outdoor amphitheater that hosts a popular summer concert series, before entering the chateau to begin a free winery tour. As one of just four guests who accompanied a company tour guide, I was led past fermentation tanks and down a long corridor that eventually led to a palatial tasting room. I learned that all of the winery's red wines (mainly merlot and cabernet sauvignon) are produced at its Canoe Ridge Fstate, in the Columbia Valley's Horse Heaven Hills, but its whites (primarily riesling and chardonnay) ar e p r oduced here in Woodinville. ln fact, Ste. Michelle is the world's largest producer of r iesling, turning ou t m o r e than 2 million cases a year. But the grapes never find their way across the Cascade Range: They are pressed in e astern W a shington, a n d their juice is then carried to Woodinville in tanker trucks, where the winemaking process is completed. The tour ends in the tasting room — in truth, a series of interconnected rooms that host about 300,000visitors a year. ln addition to several elegant tasting bars and a broad selection of wine-related souvenirs, a special Plexiglas enclosure in the heart of the room is home to a partner winery, ltaly's high-end Col Solare. Continued next page
Woodinvige Brewery 8 Forecasters Public House. 14300 N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; 425-483-3232, www.redhook.com. Lunch and dinner daily. Moderate
WINERIES Alexandria NicoleCellars. 14810 N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; 425-483-2968, www.alexandrianicolecellars. com
Brian Carter Cellars.14419 N.E. Woodinville-Redmond Road, Woodinville; 425-8069463, www.briancartercellars. com
Chateau Ste. Michelle. 14111 N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; 425-488-1133, www.ste-michelle.com
ColumbiaWinery. 14030
8 Breakfast. 16116 N.E. 140th Place, Woodinville; 425-4879810, www.matthewswinery. com. Rates from $195
N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; 425-482-7490, www. columbiawinery.com
Redmond Inn. 17601
N.E. 142nd Ave., Woodinville; 425-806-8636, www. covingtoncellars.com DeLille Cellars.14208 N.E. Woodinville-Redmond Road, Woodinville; 425-877-9472, www.delillecellars.com
Redmond Way, Redmond; 425-883-4900, 800-6348080, www.redmondinn.com. Rates from $144 Willows Lodge.14580 N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; 425424-3900, 877-424-3930, www.willowslodge.com. Rates from $199. Includes Barking Frog restaurant (425424-2999; three meals daily; moderate to expensive).
DINING The CommonsKitchen 8
Major wineries
Kirkland
483-7129, www.purplecafe. com. Lunch and dinner daily. Moderate to expensive
Bar. 14481 N.E. WoodinvilleRedmond Road, Woodinville; 425-892-2012, www. thecommonscafe.com. Three meals daily. Moderate Gobble.13300 N.E. 175th St., Suite 3, Woodinville; 425-4861486, www.gobblerestaurant. com. Lunch and dinner daily. Budget The Herbfarm.14590 N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; 425485-5300, www.theherbfarm. com. Dinner Thursdayto Sunday. Very expensive.
HollywoodTavern. 14508 N.E. Woodinville-Redmond Road, Woodinville; 425-610-7730, www. thehollywoodtavern.com. Lunch and dinner daily. Budget and moderate Le Petit Terroir. 14455 N.E. Woodinville-Redmond Road, Suite C, Woodinville; 425-296-2525, www. lepetitterroir.com. Lunch and dinner Wednesday to Sunday. Moderate
Purple Cafe 8 WineBar. 14459 Woodinville-Redmond Road N.E., Woodinville; 425-
CovingtonCellars. 18580
Elevation Cellars.19495 N.E. 144th Ave., Suite A-115, Woodinville; 425-483-2800, www.elevationcellars.com
Kestrel Vintners.19501 N.E. 144th Ave., Suite C-900, Woodinville; 425-398-1199, www.kestrelwines.com
Robert Ramsay Cellars. 19495 N.E. 144th Ave., Suite A-235, Woodinville; 425-686-9463, www.robertramsaycellars.com
StevensWinery. 18520 N.E. 142nd Ave., Woodinville; 425-424-9463, www. stevenswinery.com
OTHER ATTRACTIONS Bon Vivant WineTours. 2120 W. Montvale Place, Seattle; 206-524-8687, www. bonvivanttours.com
Hollywood Schoolhouse. 14810 N.E. 145th St., Woodinville; 425-481-7925, www. hollywoodschoolhouse. com.
Molbak's Garden+Home. 13625 N.E. 175th St., Woodinville; 425-483-5000, www.molbaks.com
Woodinvige Lavender. 14223 N.E. WoodinvilleRedmond Road, Woodinville; 425-398-3785, www. woodinvillelavender.com
WoodinvigeWhiskey. 16110 N.E. WoodinvilleRedmond Road, Woodinville; 425-486-1199, www. woodinvillewhiskeyco.com
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Don't overdo Europe on your anniversary trip
From previous page T he C o l umbia Wi n e r y is almost d irectly opposite Chateau Ste. Michelle on the north side of Highway 202. It was established in 1962 by 10 friends, most of them university professors, one of whom donated his garage for wine production. It flourished under master winemaker David Lake, who for three decades (until his death in 2009) was renowned fo r n e w -varietal e xperimentation that led t o the first production of syrah, cabernet franc and pinot gris wines in Washington. From 1993 to 2007, Columbia was well-known regionally as the northern terminal of the Spirit of Washington Dinner Train, which traveled up the east side of Lake Washington from Renton. Only the tracks remain; there has recently been talk about turning it into a rails-to-trails corridor, supplementing th e 1 1 - mile Sammamish River Trail that links Woodinville's Wilmot Park with Redmond's Marymoor Park. Between Columbia Winery and the Willows Lodge stands the modern Redhook Ales' Woodinville Brewery. Relocated in 1994 from a former transmission shop in Seattle's Ballard district, where it was started in 1981, Redhook is one of the country's largest craft breweries, even adding a second production facility in New Hampshire in 1996. Today, it is as much beloved for its gourmet pub-style cuisine as it is for its Long Hammer IPA. W here there's wine a n d beer, there is also whiskey. The W oodinville W h i skey Co., established in 2010 by Maker's Mark veteran David Pickerell, p r o duces h a n dcrafted, Kentucky-style bourbon aged in oak barrels. Until now operating out of a warehouse facility, the small-batch distiller is about to move into a new, custom-built factory and tasting room within shouting distance of the Columbia Winery — and next to the Hollywood Tavern, which is in itself a story. Generations of Woodinville visitors have been greeted to the city by a red neon "TAVERN" sign atop a roadhouse at the foot of Kingsgate Hill. It was built as the Hollywood Corner Service Station in the 1920s, not long after Frederick Stimson's nearby hunting lodge, and converted in 1947 to the Hollywood Tavern. After a major facelift, it remains a restaurant, but now with a menu of "wine country farm cuisine" under the direction of Seattle restaurateur Josh Henderson. And it's added a rotisserie and firepit,horseshoe pits and special-event space.
The Hollywood District A half-mile east of the Hollywood Tavern, Woodinville's official H o llywood D i strict focuses upon a r oundabout w here Highway 202 t u r n s south toward Redmond. A chic, 24-acre residential-commercial development, to be known as Woodinville Wine Village, has been envisioned nearby; but until it becomes a reality (ground has yet to be broken), the hub of the neighborhood is the historic Hollywood Schoolhouse. Built of red brick in 1912, the old school has also been a community center, grange hall, agricultural warehouse, auction house, antique mall and banquet facility. Renovated in 1994, its main floor remains special-event space. But visitors can enjoy an upper-floor museum of antiques and m emorabilia, r a nging
05
The Washington Post My husband and I • are taking a special trip to Europe for our fifth a nniversary. We plan t o spend about $10,000 and want to take in everything we can. How many cities are doable in two weeks? Do you think cruising is good for acouple of firsttime-to-Europe travelers? • Cruising is the easiest • way to see a chunk of Europe with m i nimal planning. The downside: You won't get substantial time in any city. For a land tour, choose one or two cities, such as Paris and London, and spend a few days in each and then arrange a few side trips to smaller towns. I s t rongly advise a gainst v i siting a ne w city every few days. You'll burn out and leave Europe exhausted. — Andrea Sachs
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The Willows Lodge has been a hub of tourism in the Woodinville area since it opened in the fall of 2000. Built on the site of a 1923 hunting lodge, the luxurious Willows features lush gardens and a design-art theme that reflects the traditions of the Pacific Northwest.
Expenses Gas, Bend toWoodinville, 696 miles (round-trip) at $3.30/gagon:$91.87 Lunches (two), enroute: $15 Lodging (twonights), Willows Lodge:$398 Dinner, BarkingFrog: $89.90 Breakfast, Barking Frog: $21.70 Lunch, LePetit Terroir: $25 Dinner, HollywoodTavern: $26 Breakfast, TheCommons: $17 TOTAL:$684.47 Owner-winemaker Tim Stevens of the boutique Stevens Winery poses with bottles of his red wine and examples of his own whimsical, avant-garde art. Stevens himself designs the labels to his varietals, which include viognier, malbec, syrah and cabernet franc.
A young couple consider a wine purchase from racks in the Chateau Ste. Michelle tasting room. Washington's oldest and largest winery, the Chateau sees more than 300,000 visitors a year, not including those who come merely to attend its summer outdoor concert series. from toys to old gas pumps to set props from the old "Northern E x p o sure" t e l evision series. The S c hoolhouse b a sement is now a popular tasting room and clubhouse for the Alexandria Nicole Cellars. A century-old water tower rises above expansive gardens on the north side of the building, where weddings are frequently held in summer. The H o l lywood S c hoolhouse dominates the northeast corner of the Highway 202 roundabout. No f e wer than 30 wineries and/or tasting rooms are m ere steps away, including such w ellknown Walla Walla names as Pepper Bridge, J. Bookwalter, Forgeron, Fidelitas and Dusted Valley. Two personal favorites, in
the H o l lywood V i n eyards C enter t ha t o c c upies t h e southwestern quadrant of the intersection, are Brian Carter Cellars and the DeLille Cellars Carriage House, both of whom source their g r apes from several Eastern Washington v i n eyards, i n c luding the unique terroir of Red Mountain. Also here are several restaurants worthy of a m e al, including the Purple Cafe 8 Wine Bar, whose wine-directed Woodinville menu is repeated at three other Seattlearea locations; The Commons Kitchen 8 Bar, which offers a more casual dining experience; and the secluded Le Petit Terroir, an authentically French-style b i stro t u c ked around the back side of the Hollywood Vineyards Center.
The Warehouse District There's one m ore m ajor wine center in Woodinville, not quite three miles north of the Hollywood District on the far side of downtown. The Warehouse District packs a remarkable 47 wineries (at last count) into a series of adjacent buildings east of WoodinvilleSnohomish Road, otherwise known as state Highway 9. Most of the tasting rooms here are open on weekends only. A majority are on the north side of N o rt h W o odinville Way. These include the outstanding K e s trel W i n e r y, whose main production facility is near the foot of Red Mountain at Prosser, and such shining lights a s E l evation Cellars and Robert Ramsay Cellars. Ramsay, in particular, is worth a visit not only for its
wines, but also for a gallery of fine art that includes expressionist portraits by regional painter Pepper Peterson. Winemaker Ti m S t evens displays his own avant-garde work at the tiny Stevens Winery, which has a nook in another set of warehouses south of North Woodinville Way. Nearby Covington Cellars incorporatesa casual restaurant that serves Friday night dinners and weekend afternoon lunches. F or visitors l o oking f o r activities that don't i nvolve eating and drinking, Woodinville has also become a gardening center. Molbak's Garden+Home, for instance, is one of the best-known nurseries in the Northwest, and it incorporates a popular cafe and grill open for breakfast and lunch daily. Woodinville Lavender, on three acres just south of the Hollywood District, offers all manner of fragrant artisan products — even when the purple blooms are not on the shrubs.
Q •• aI'mshortcontemplating getaway in early February. Is that a good time to go to N ew Orleans? • Weatherwise, it's a • great time to be there; last February,the weekend of Feb. 8-10, for example, had highs of 67-80 and lows of 56-67. (Historically the
averages are a little colder, of course — mostly 50s-60s.) — JoeYonan My wif e i s t r aveling Q •• alone with o ur i n f ant son for the Christmas holidays. It would be helpful if I were able to go with her to the gate. Do you know who qualifies to get a gate pass? • When you get to the air• port, go to the check-in desk and ask an agent. Airline reservation agents have become more willing to hand out these passes, but it's subject to change. If there has been a recent security breach or issue, they tend to get stricter. I've had no trouble getting passes to accompany my spry and with-it mom to the gate, but she does have gray hair. — Carol Sottili
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DIFFICULTY RATING: *** *
Courtesy MaryAnn Anderson via McClatchy-Tnbune News Service
Washington Oaks Gardens State Park on Highway A1A in Florida stretches from the Intracoastal Waterway to the Atlantic and is nearly 400 acres of formal gardens and oak hammocks.
* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON D3
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For a taste of the old Florida, drive down to Flagler Beach
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
A game without borders By FRANK STEWART
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F LAGLER B EACH, F l a . — From my car window along Highway AIA in Flagler County, somewhere between the towns of Marineland and Flagler Beach, the Atlantic Ocean and its sugar-soft dunes glide by in a dizzying landscape of colors and textures. There is the beach, its sand polished to copper and ginger by billions of fragments of coquina shells, and beyond that the Atlantic, luscious in pastels of green and blue, and beyond that only the curvature of the Earth. But the best is yet to come. It is nearing sunset, and the sky explodes into unreal shades and contrasts reminiscent of fruit-basket turnover. Oranges slowly spill over into deeper tangerines before melting into hues of pomegranate and berries. Everything is cloaked in a golden glow and the sky is simply mesmerizing. It is as fine of a sunset as I've ever seen, and I cannot look away until the last of the light fades into twilight and finally darkness. There is the fast-paced Florida of Disneyworld, Panama City and South Beach. Then there is the old Florida, that of Highway AIA, where the sunrises and sunsets are spectacular and there is no such thing as "in a hurry." It is best enjoyed slowly. Highway AIA i s mostly a two-lane, sometimes four-lane, road that stretches along the east coast of Florida from Miami Beach all the way to the Georgia-Florida border. Meandering through storied towns like Palm Beach, Jupiter, Boca Raton, Cape Canaveral and Fernandina Beach, AIA w as the original U.S. I in Florida — they are separate highways now — and is still sometimes referred to as the Dixie Highway, although U.S. I often gets that distinction, too. Just a few miles away, Interstate 95 parallels AIA for almost its entire length. Here i n F l a gler C ounty, where I've come to visit for a couple of nights, I'm captured by the nostalgic romance of the old highway. I've always enjoyed driving back roads, but because of the faster nonstop 1-95, I had completely forgotten about HighwayAIA. Its ubiquitous old hotels and neon restaurants are relics — maybe survivors is a better word — from the 1950s when the road trip was born. Now I would discover itagain. From the town of Marineland on the northern fringes of Flagler County to Flagler Beach on its southern end, driving AIA provides a rare snapshot into the Florida that much of today's I-Want-It-Now generation has forgotten. Few know that Marineland is an actual town that was incorporated in 1942. Its current population ebbs and fl ows, peaking with a high of about 16 to its current five permanent residents. Marineland, the attraction, first opened as Marine Studios in 1937 as an underwater movie studio, churning out corny '50s fright-fest movies like "Creature from the Black Lagoon" and "Revenge of the Creature from the Black Lagoon." Marine Studios, once the world's first oceanarium and largest aquarium, eventually metamorphosed into today's Marineland Dolphin Adventure. It is just the coolest place around as Atlantic bottlenose d olphins dance a n d t w i r l through the air before splash-
Courtesy Manneland Dolphin Adventurevia McClatchy-Tnbune News Service
Founded as Marine Studios, the ocean-side facility now known as Marineland Dolphin Adventure, opened in 1937 as the world's first oceanarium and, at the time, the world's largest aquarium.
ing with great fanfare back into their tanks. The thing about dolphins is that they always look happy and playful, and if you want to get in the water and personally interact with them, there are oceans of programs available. Traveling farther south on AIA, the highway curves more inland to Palm Coast. Palm Coast is sort of the modern side of Flagler County, with chain hotels and restaurants mixed in with quieter, laid-back resorts of nearby Hammock Beach and plenty of championship golf courses. Etched with nearly 80 miles of saltand freshwater canals, Palm Coast is rife with hiking and biking trails. A favorite stop for my husband and me was the picturesque Washington Oaks Gardens State Park with easy access directly on AIA. The rose gardens were in full bloom when we visited, and the sweet perfume of the flowers complimented perfectly with our afternoon walk. On our way to Flagler Beach, we passed through Beverly Beach. Just a mile long and a mile wide, it is surrounded by sand dunes. Near Beverly Beach, just off AIA, we stayed overnight at t h e H a mmock Beach Resort directly on the Atlantic an d w e r e t r e ated to the most v i vid s unrises imaginable. I would be remiss if I didn't m ention Captain's BBQ o n AIA, where I had my first-ever pulled pork tacos with all the Southern trimmings of baked beans, cole slaw, sweet cornbread and macaroni salad. But it is Cheesecake Mike's a ward-winning N e w Y o r k style cheesecakes that stole the show for me. Baked onsite, the red velvet and devil's food cheesecakes were divinely rich, but be forewarned. Captain's BBQ, immensely popular with the locals, makes only a certain amount of barbecue, ribs and desserts each day, and when it's gone, it's gone. F lagler Beach w a s o u r last stop on this slice of AIA Americana. No high-rise condominiums spoil the view here and the r estaurants, beach boutiques and roadside motels are one-of-a-kind. Roy and I walked the pier near the Funky Pelican Restaurant after a meal of shrimp, shrimp and more shrimp and were absolutely thrilled to see a mama North Atlantic r ight w h ale and her calfclose to shore as t hey e v er-so-slowly s w a m southward. Highway AIA crawls out of Flagler County north to St. Augustine and Fernandina Beach and then southward it winds to the much more crowded Daytona Beach. In between, though, in this quieter side of Florida, the beer is cold, the food is good, and the atmosphere is just right for a fall or winter getaway down nostalgia lane.
Ifyou go GETTINGTHERE For driving access, Flagler County is bisected by Interstate 95. Several international airports are nearby, including Daytona Beach, about an hour's drive, and Jacksonville and Orlando, both about a 90minute drive.
WHERE TOSTAY • Hammock Beach Resort, 200Ocean Crest Blvd., Palm Coast; 866-841-0287, www. HammockBeach.com An AAA-Four Diamond fullservice beachfront resort offering spa, golf, romance, and family packages. • Island Cottage Oceanfront Inn and Spa, 2316 S. Oceanshore Blvd., Flagler Beach; 877-662-6232, www.islandcottagevillas. com Elegant and romantic sevenroom beachfront boutique
inn and spa.From$249 per night. • Si Como No Inn, 2480 Oceanshore Blvd., Flagler Beach; 386-864-1430, www.sicomonoinn.com Fun old Florida-style inn situated high on the dunes. From $125 per night.
WHERE TOEAT • Blue at the Topaz, 224 S.
OceanshoreBlvd. (A1A), Flagler Beach; 386-4394322, www.blueatthetopaz. com Fresh seafood, steak, pastas, lamb and duck with an ocean view. Entrees from
$17. • Captain's BBQ, 5862 N.
OceanshoreBlvd. (A1A), Palm Coast; 386-597-2888, www.captainsbbqbaittackle. com Award-winning Southern barbecue, sides, and dessert. A local favorite. Entrees from $8. • Funky Pelican, Flagler Beach Pier, 215 Highway A1A, Flagler Beach; 386-439-0011, www. funkypelican.com Breakfast, lunch, and dinner with fresh fish and seafood specialties. Entrees from $8. • Golden Lion Cafe, 500 Florida A1A, Flagler Beach; 386-439-3004, www. goldenlioncafe.us Won the distinction of Favorite Beach Bar many times. Entrees from $9.
FOR MORE INFORMATION • Flagler County Chamber of Commerce and Affiliates, 20 Airport Road, Suite C, Palm Coast; 386-437-0106 or 866-736-9291 www.palmcoastand theflaglerbeaches.com
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 7
nceu ona ime in enns vania • Princess Grace'sfairytale life is the focus of an exhibit in a smallcharming , town By Robert DiGiacomo
screen success, winning the 1954 Academy Award for Best Grace Kelly w o uld h a ve Actress for "The Country Girl" approved. before giving up Hollywood to That thought ran through my marry her prince. mind as I surveyed the tasteful During my childhood in the retrospective on the Hollywood 1970s, Princess Grace reguprincess turned real-life royal larly adorned the covers of my at the James A. Michener Art mom's magazines and the gosMuseum in Doylestown, Pa. sip pages of the newspapers. "From Philadelphia to Mo- There were sightings of her in naco: Grace Kelly — Beyond the the summer at the Kelly famIcon" touches on Kelly's briefbut ily vacation home in Ocean memorable career in the mov- City, N.J., and one final public ies while focusing on her much appearance in her hometown longer roles as the wife of Prince in the spring of 1982 at a film Rainier III of Monaco, the moth- festival in her honor. Later that er of three children and a cham- year,she died at age 52, after suffering a stroke while drivpion of the arts and culture. For a Philadelphian like me, ing to her vacation home in the the exhibition conjures up plen- south of France. ty of memories of this local girl T he exhibition, which i s who made really good. being mounted at the Bucks The daughter of an Olympic County museum an hour north gold medalist rower who owned of Philadelphia in cooperation a construction company, Kelly with the Grimaldi Forum Mogrew up among the upper mid- naco and Montreal's McCord dle class in Philadelphia before Museum, mixes the personal moving to New York and later with the official. The installaHollywood to pursue an acting tion of about 40 dresses and career. In less than five years, couture gowns and dozens of she reached the pinnacle ofbig- objects maintains the air of deSpecial to The Washington Post
corum one might expect from a blonde starlet who stood out in 1950s Hollywood for her white gloves, cool reserve and understated sense of style. "I've been accused of being cold, snobbish, distant," acknowledged Princess Grace, accordingto one of a series of quotes adorning the walls of the exhibit space."Those who know me well know that I'm nothing of the sort. If anything, the opposite is true. But is it too much to ask to want to protect your private life, your inner feelings? Lots of things touch me and I don't want to be indiscreet." The case for Kelly as an icon of elegance is easily made in the main display of her frocks by such major designers as Yves Saint Laurent, Givenchy and Marc Bohan for Christian Dior, and her signature "Kelly" bagby Hermes. A special room is dedicated to her storybook 1956 wedding, with her shoes, a silk-covered "Bride's Manual" and other items on display. Phe wedding dress itself, created by MGM costume designer Helen Rose under "top-secret conditions," is too fragile to be exhibited, according to Philadelphia Museum ofArt curator and Kelly expert Kristina Haugland.)
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At the same time, Princess Grace was known to — gasp! — wear dresses a second time. Or, as Haugland put it, she was "as loyal to old clothes as to old friends." The real w oman b ehind the fashion plate also comes through, via f a mily p h otographs and m ementos and glimpses of life behind the palace gates. The former Grace Kelly could just as easily dress the part of a mom in a scarf and a casual blouse and pants and didn't mind being photographed that way. Normal life for her wasn't quite like yours and mine, however. Video clips show her children mingling with such old Hollywood pals of hers as Cary Grant, Bing Crosby and Alfred Hitchcock. The overall effect is to create a portrait of a very public woman who valued her privacy and never told all, a rarity in the currentclimate ofready access to celebrity through Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and other media du jour. Although it's not clear whether Princess Grace ever visited Doylestown, she made her professional stage debut in 1949 at the Bucks County Playhouse in nearby New Hope. Her appear-
Rosemary Taghalatela/2oays Photos
Fonthill, a rambling, poured-concrete mansion constructed in the early 20th century without blueprints, is Doylestown's own castle in Pennsylvania. ance in a production of "The Torch-Bearers," a play written by her Pulitzer Prize-winning uncle, George Kelly, is part of a concurrent exhibition at the Michener marking the 75th anniversary of the playhouse, which has featured many once-andfuture screen and theater stars over the course of its history. D oylestown has i t s o w n castle — Fonthill — a rambling, poured-concrete mansion constructed in the early 20th century without blueprints and consistingofa seriesofcrooked rooms that are exuberantly decorated with tiles produced by owner Henry Mercer's Moravian Pottery 8 T i l e W orks.
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Tribe at its reservation in New Mexico. Continued from D1 About two-thirds of them The U.S. moved the Chir- t o o k t his latter route and deicahuas to three different res- c i ded to join another Apache ervations before they w er e tr i b e rather than risk losing finally m oved t o t h e S a n th e i r tribal identity altogether. "It's a tragic story t h a t Carlos Reservation in 1872 and those who resisted this p e o ple just don't see," Fnjady m ove — sometimes violently s a i d , e x plaining t ha t v e r y — were referred to as "blood- f e w p eople know about the thristy savages," hunted down i m p r isonment of his tribe. He and killed or captured, aca d ded that an exhibit telling cording to the prisoner of war t h e tribe's history at the Chircommittee. icahua National Monument These scuffles continued i n A r i z ona stops the story in until March 1886 when U.S. 1 8 86. "The U.S,governmentnever Gen. George Crooknegotiated a peace treaty with the Chir- k e p t its promise," he said, exicahua in which the Indians p l a i ning that even though the agreed to leave their homes i m p r isonment happened more and head east, provided they t h a n a century ago, the "ongocould return intwoyears. This i n g w r ong that happened to two-year t r eaty a g reement t h e people is still there." is the namesake of Fnjady's In an ef f o r t t o e ase this film. pain, the nonprofit Chiricahua "They didn't want the Chir- A p a che Nde Nation set out icahua in A r i zona," Fnjady r e u n ite the estimated 75,000 said as he talked Chiricahua deabout the n egoscendants — peo"The Th6 $ d l dA t ple who s e ancestiations. government came g/gg$ $/7g tors were e ither a nd lied t o t h e held in captivity or ~ ~ Chiricahuas, and escaped the mass they never got a AAZO A B. T tl6 a rr est s b y mo v chance." ing to Mexico or gpVgmmggf A ccording to living in the wilt he p r isoner o f derness — so they war committee's li ed tO the can preserve their website, President Qg j t . ICggUgS cultur e . T h e s urGrover Cleveland viving Chiricahua vetoed the terms ><d ~I <~ descendants also
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When their imprisonment came to an end, the surviving Chiricahuas were given the choice of staying at Fort Sill, Okla. — the last place where they were held — or joining the Mescalero Apache
The castle is part of the Mercer Mile, which includes the Tile Works, a key producer during the Arts and Crafts movement that's open for tours, and a sixstory museum built in 1916 to house Mercer'scollection of 50,000 tools, folk art and other objects from the pre-Industrial Age. Together, Mercer's overthe-top holdings make for quite the contrast to Princess Grace's judicious sense of restraint. But if H o l lywood hadn't worked out and Rainier hadn't come calling, it's not hard to imagine someone of Grace Kelly's background settling down with a more common prince in a quiet burg just like this one.
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before Crook even er of war commitnl y presented i t to tee to d ocument the C h iricahuas. the imprisonment Crook w i t h h eld and push the govthis information from the Indi- e r n ment to honor the two-year ans during the negotiations so p r o mise it made so long ago. the IndianswouldleavepeaceTh e t r i be also gave Fnjady fully an d t h e g o v ernment a n d hi s fellow producers the could divvyup the territory to m o n ey t o m ake "Two Year settlers without anyviolence. Pr o m i se" and access to more Suspecting there wa s than 27 years of video recordsomething fishy about these i n g s its members filmed with negotiations, m e mbers o f p eo p l e who talked about the t he Chiricahua tribe tried to i m p r i sonment an d w h a t i t return to Arizona once they m e ant to their tribe. "It's a documentary about started heading east. Others fled south to Mexico in hopes a n o ngoing legal battle with they could regroup and mount t h e U .S. government," Gina acampaigntotaketheir land R i c ketts, the coordinator of COCC's Native American Proback. But t h e U. S . mi l i t ar y gr a m , said of the film and why launched a monthslong cam- s h e chose to show it during Napaign to capture or kill th e ti v e American History Month. Indians who fled so they could "And unfortunately we as Innot return to their homes. Over d i a n people continue to have the course of the year, 523 t h o se." Chiricahuas — 475 of whom Rick e t ts' group started its were women, scouts and other c e lebration earlier this month non-combatants — were sent w i t h a quilting demonstration to an internment camp at Fort t h a t she hopes will entice the COCC's 282 Native American Marion in Florida. They were h eld a t F o r t st u d ents to assemble a large Marion and four other federal q u i l t they can put on display prisons for 27 years, until Con- a t the college's student center. gress passed a law declaring Nati v e A m e rican H i story that they were to no longer a M o n t h w ill also feature abook threatin 1913. discussion of Louise Frdrich's Only 110 of the original 523 "The Round House" — a NaChiricahuas who were cap- t i o nal B ook A w ard-winning tured survived the 27 years at n o vel about life on an Ojibwe Fort Marion and other federal r e servation in North Dakota prisons, Fnjady said. Another — that will take place from 180 Indians were born during n o o n to I p.m. Wednesday at the imprisonment and "start- t h e Bend campus center's muled their lives as prisoners of t i c u lturalroom. war." — Reporter: 541-617-7816,
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T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
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e r s a utesMomsMa e
TV SPOTLIGHT By Jacqueline Cutler © zap2it
Moms Mabley was the first. She was th e f i rst b l ack woman t o h e adline m ajor clubs. She was the first standup comedian who told stories, not one-liners, and influenced generations of c o mics. Yet mention her t o a n yone for whom the 1960s is history, not a memory, and you get a blank stare. Whoopi Goldberg aims to correct that w i t h " W h oopi G oldberg P r esents M o m s Mabley" airing M onday on HBO. "I would challenge anyone to find a stand-up comic that precedes her — male or female," Goldberg says. Acknowledging there were vaudeville acts before Mabley, Goldberg says, "She was a single." And while blacks were playing the Chitlin Circuit, Mabley did that and then broke through. In 1939, Mabley became the first woman to play the Apollo Theater for $10,000 a week, an amazing achievement and salary for the time. "I hope it imparts a little bit of info that there was someone named Moms M abley, who really shook the world up, dressed as a little old lady that she grew into," Goldberg says of the film. "And, baby, she took out her teeth, and she did not care, and she was funny, and the jokes still work."
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Moms Mabley was the first stand-up comedian to tell stories, not one-liners, during the 1960s. Her life will be the focus of a new documentary, cWhoopi Goldberg Presents Moms Mabley," airing Monday on HBO. Footage s h ow s Ma b l ey dancing, which she did well, and telling stories. Why and how she adapted this character and played it from 1929 to 1975 is not clear, and the film makes no suppositions. The documentary m a rks Goldberg's foray into directing, though she quickly says it is not as if she is directing a scripted movie. She is also quick to add that she wanted to make a traditional biography of Mabley, but the information was not there. Goldberg took flak w h en she financed some of this film through Kickstarter. Obtaining the rights to photos was
far more expensive than anticipated, and simply because she's an actress does not mean she has unlimited funds, Goldberg says. Instead, there is a little of Mabley's life in some wonderful, previously unseen photos, clips mingled with odd bits of animation, and interviews with comedians. Jerry Stiller, Anne Meara, Bill Cosby, Robert Klein and Kaye Ballard are among those who credit Mabley for her astute observations and fearlessness. Eddie Murphy says the grandmother in "The Nutty Professor" is his version of Mabley.
Everyone in the film credits is an integrated party going Mabley with being different, on, and everyone is just in the a trailblazer and, above all, groove, and you see Harry funny. Footage shows that her Belafonte saying, 'I needed to stories are still pointed and convince folks to just be part still work. She had an attitude of this.' And Sidney Poitier that was decades ahead of the talking about it i s f r eaking country's. people out. And it is still freakShe was also out and gay in ing people out." the 1930s. Offstage, she wore Mabley influenced Goldmen's clothes. Onstage, she berg, as she did so many othtook out her dentures to per- ers. Decades ago, Goldberg form, giving her the look of a performed a play, impersonatvery old woman long before ing Mabley. she reached that stage. She One of t h e f e w E G OTs wore printdresses and floral (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and housecoats or j a ckets over Tony winners), Goldberg rethem. Her accessories were a calls watching Mabley on TV simple hat and flat shoes. She when she was growingup. "Because she was a storywas aggressively frumpy. "It was almost like she was teller, she made it OK to tell hiding how smart she was and the story without having to be sneaking her message in the funny all the way through," back door," Arsenio Hall says Goldberg says. "Moms gave in the film. me the ability to not have to do "It's brilliant, it's subtle, it's that, so I lucked out. It wasn't smart, and you know exactly joke after joke after joke." what she is saying," Goldberg And when Mabley, born Losays. "I want people to see the retta Mary Aiken in Brevard, art of stand-up as performed N.C., in 1894, was not performby old school, by a woman ing, she was working for juswho performed history in the tice. She met with presidents, middle of change for people of urging equality, and marched color, and for women. in the streets to protest. Her "This documentary turned plangent rendition of "Abraout to be a really great piece ham, Martinand John" made of Americana because you see her the oldest person to have a the beginning of i nterracial top 40 hit when she was 75. "This is one of those shows partygoing, and you see that Hugh Hefner was not just al- that reminds you why people ways about twins and girls," fought so hard for the right to Goldberg continues. "And he vote," Goldberg says, "and to was the No. I guy who fought be heard, and why it took a the hardest to integrate televi- united effort for all of us to see sion with just having 'Playboy each other as equal, and she After Dark.'And you see there was at the forefront of that."
Daughter pleads for caretakers' respect Dear Abby: My elderlymother was nity I deserve. All too soon, you will recently placed in a nursing/rehabil- want the same." itation facility. After several months — Daughter in Anderson, Ind. of observation, I would like to offer Dear Daughter: Your letter carries an open letter to those who work in an important message. But please such places. remember that the staff in nurs"Dear Caretaker, ing homes work long hours, often "It is true I have for minimum wage, g rown o l der. M y and they all may not body won't do what have been properly DEAR it used to do. My eyes trained in caring for ABBY I~ aren't as bright, and elderly and dementia s ometimes I h a v e patients. The work is trouble finding t he hard, and the facility right words. But I do have a name, may also be understaffed. and it's not 'Honey' or 'Sweetie.' I It takes a special kind of person have experienced much, and I have to do this work, and many of them learned much. Your history books deserve medals. However, ifyou feel are my personal history. There is a that your mother's care is not up to lot I could teach you. par and that her dignity is not being "You don't have to shout; I will tell respected, you should discuss it with you if I can't hear you. I have known the director of the facility. great love and great tragedy in the Dear Abby: For the last 10 years, a years I have spent on this earth. I family of four has come to our home have spent decades learning to take for every Christmas and Easter care of myself, and it's hard having meal. It started when my wife invitto rely on others. ed a co-worker. They had no family "I need your help, but please don't in town and nowhere else to go. talk to me as if I were a 2-year-old or My wife's relationship with the a puppy. I'm too polite to say so, but I woman has cooled, but the famsee when you roll your eyes or heave ily assumes they are automatically a sigh that says you'd rather be any- invited and show up without being where else but with me. These are asked. They spend more time talkmy final years, and I've worked a ing to our other family members lifetime to get here. Give me the dig- than they do to us.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, NOV. 17, 2013: Thisyearyou might optfor a conservative course, especially as you often will feel as though you need to defend yourself. You really don't need to explain where you are coming from, butyou will be out Stars showthe kind of sorts if you feel of day you'll have m isunderstood. ** * * * D ynamic If you are single, ** * * P ositive no t e a tendency ** * A verage to g i ve too much ** So-so of yourself as you * Difficult start to date. At first, this behavior might be OK. Recognize that you are setting a precedent for behavior patterns. If you are attached, the two of you seesaw back and forth with give-and-take. GEMINI makes you laugh.
YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
you have cleared the air, you will feel great. Invite him or her to join you in fun plans. Tonight: Try a newspot.
CANCER (Jnne21-Jnly 22) ** * * You could be wondering what to do next and whichway toturn.Yousense conflicting moods, opposing plans and other such contradictory elements around you. Consider that your company could be more important than the activity. Tonight: Make it early.
LEO (Jnly 23-Ang. 22)
** * You love being out and about, but steer clear of a situation that triggers any anger. Chill out. Nothing will be gained ARIES (March 21-April19) by having a discussion at this point. Late ** * Even the best-laid plans could afternoon, follow through on joining your go awry in the morning. You might be surprised by a family member's generosity. friends in afavorite activity. Tonight: You don't need to make it early. By late afternoon, you'll want to sort through someone's motives. An element VIRGO (Ang. 23-Sept. 22) of confusion continuesto permeate plans. ** * * M ake calls to those at a distance Tonight: Stay close to home. whom you rarely chat with. You might hear some startling news. A misunderstanding TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * Y ou might not be as in control with someone you care about could happen too easily. Try to be clearer, and as youthoughtyou'd be.Someone might make more time for this person. Tonight: not be challenging you as much, as this Think Monday. person wants others to notice his or her ideas. Take afriend outfor a late brunch. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Laugh and relax. Tonight: Know that the ** * * M ake time for a special person playfulness will continue. with whom you enjoy lounging around. GEMINI (May 21-Jnne20) What starts out as a busyday could become a day of Rand R. Incorporate a ** * * You might want to deal with something you havenot discussed up until little more laziness into your life. You could now. Choose your confidant with care. You feel pressured by someone's expectations. want this person to understand you. Once Tonight: Rent a movie.
How do I politely let them know we no longer wish for them to come to our family meals? — Family Only in Mississippi Dear Family Only: Your wife should tell her co-worker that your plans for the holidays have changed, that the two of you are scaling back the festivities to include ONLY FAMILY MEMBERS. She should be sure to convey this news in PLENTY of time for her co-worker to make other arrangements — whether it will be preparing something herself or getting together with another family. NOW would be a perfect time to do it. Dear Abby: I would like to be fluent in another foreign language, but I don't have enough time to practice the language. What could I possibly do? — Rafaela in Brazil Dear Rafaela: Regardless of what language you want to learn, it won't be possible unless you are willing (and able) to put in the time to practice. If I were in your situation, I'd take a basic grammar class in the language, then try to find exchange students who speak it and spend time with them. And if you're not married and find an attractive man among them, that will give you even more incentive. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or po. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * You tend to find others irritating, yetyou understand one keyperson so well that you will refuse to take his or her actions or words personally. Make time for someone you care about. Being together is what's important, not whatyou end up doing. Tonight: Enjoythe moment.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * Make it OKto not want to join the crowd. Trust thatyour choices workfor you.You mightfeelpushed beyond your normal limits. By late afternoon, you will want to join friends who are celebrating. Your mood will change quickly. Tonight: Act like it's Friday night.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D andIMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARS SLAVE A (R) Noon, 3:05, 6:15, 9:20 • ABOUT TIME (R) t:40, 4:35, 7:25 • ALL IS LOST (PG-13) 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45 • THE BEST MANHOLIDAY(R)12d0,3:15,6:25,9:30 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS (PG-13) 1205, 3d0, 6 20,9:25 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG)1:30, 4:15 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 6:55, 9:40 • ENDER'S GAME (PG-13) 1, 350,640, 9 40 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) td0 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 3:35, 6:05, 9 • FREE BIRDS3-D (PG) 12:30 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 12:45 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13) 330,720,9:55 • JACKASS PRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 2,4:55,740, 10 • LAST VEGAS (PG-13) 1:50, 3:35, 4:45, 7:10, 7:45, 9:50 • THOR: H TE DARK W ORLD (PG-13)12:20,1:20,3,4:05, 6:35, 7:35, 9:15 • THOR: THEDARK WORLD 3-D(PG-13)12:35,3:25,6:50, 9:35 • THOR: H TE DARK W ORLD IMAX3-D (PG-13)1250,340, 7, 9:45 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. I
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG)11a.m. • MORTAL IN STRUMENTS: CITYOF BONES(PG-13)2 • WE'RE THE MILLERS (R) 9 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 6 • After 7p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian. •
TV TODAY 8 p.m. on l3, "Almost Hnman" — This new police drama stars Karl Urban as Detective John Kennex, who lost a leg and now has a synthetic limb. He also has a synthetic partner. an android named Dorian (Michael Ealy). Dorian has emotions — undesirable in a robo-cop, but this "flaw" helps him relate to his new partner. 9 p.m. on l3, "The Simpsons" — After Homer delivers a baby in an elevator, and the grateful mom names the child after him, he forms a deep bond with his new namesake. The cheerleaders of the local football team, the Springfield Atoms, recruit Lisa in the new episode "Labor Pains." 9p.m. on TLC, Movie:"Letters to Jackie: Remembering President Kennedy" — After President John E Kennedy's assassination, his widow, Jacqueline, received more than 800,000 condolence letters. In this moving new documentary, an impressive list of famous voices brings some of those letters to life. Readers include Anne Hathaway, Kirsten Dunst, Zooey Deschanel, John Kraskinski, Mark Ruffalo, Octavia Spencer and many more. 9:30 p.m. on l3, "Family Gny" — The Griffins visit Italy and must deal with aggravating immigration laws when Peter destroys their passports. Michelle Dockery ("Downton Abbey") provides a guest voice in the new episode "Boopa-dee Bappa-dee." Seth MacFarlane and Alex Borstein also star. 10 p.m. on0, "The Mentalist" — After the shocking turn of events at Jane's (Simon Baker) house, the list of suspects who could be serial killer Red John has gotten shorter, and the CBI gives top priority to investigating those still on it. Robin Tunney and Tim Kang guest star in the new episode "The Great Red Dragon." 10:30 p.m. on HBO,"Hello Ladies" — Stuart (Stephen Merchant) is excited about his upcoming date with Kimberly (Heather Hahn) and lets everyone he meets know about it. At a birthday party for her "frenemy" Amelia (Jenny Slate), Jessica (Christine Woods) enjoys the fact that the tables have turned in their relationship. Nate Torrence also stars in the season finale, "The Drive." © Zap2it
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • MUSCLE SHOALS (PG)7:15 • SHORT TERM12 (R) 5 • WADJDA(PG) 2:30 I
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Redmond Cinemas, 1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • ENDER'SGAME (PG-13)11:30 a.m.,2,4 30,7,9 30 • FREEBIRDS(PG)11a.m.,1,3,5,7,9 • JACKASS PRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 11:30a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD(PG-13)11a.m., 1:30,4,6:30,9 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court,541-549-8800 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS (PG-13) 1:30 • ENDER'S GAME (PG-13) 2, 4d5, 6:45 • LASTVEGAS(PG-13) 1:45,4,6:15 • MUSCLE SHOALS (PG)4:15, 6:45 • THOR: H TE DARK W ORLD (PG-13)1:30,4,6:30
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CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * You might need to understand exactly what is going on with a love interest. Even if you do not seeany changes, spend time with this person. Later todayyou could decideto get into a project and complete someextra work. Tonight: Be OKwith doing nothing.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Check in with an older relative you care a lot about. Your call will be most appreciated. Why not make plans in the nearfuture? Find afriend orloved one with whom you can beyourself. Let go of recent tension; the fun starts now. Tonight: Playfulness is the theme.
Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W.U.S. Highway 97,541-475-3505 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS (PG-13) td5,4,645 • ENDER'S GAME (PG-13) 2:05, 4:35, 7:10 • FREE 8IRDS (PG) 2:35,440,6:50 • FREE BIRDS3-D (PG) Noon • JACKASS PRESENTS: BADGRANDPA(R) 1:30,3:30, 5:30, 7:40 • THOR: H TE DARK W ORLD (PG-13)12:05 • THOR: H TE DARK W ORLD 3-D(PG-13)2,4:30,7 •
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Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • ENDER'S GAME (PG-13) 1:10, 4d0, 7:15 • THOR: THE DARKWORLD(Upstairs — PG-13) 1, 4, 7 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * I nitiate a conversation with a roommate or family member in the morning. It would be evenbetter if this chat were to happen over afavorite breakfast. Catching up on news might leave both of you laughing. By late afternoon, you'll want to slow down. Tonight: Order in. © 20t3 hy King Features Syndicate
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Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
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0 G O! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at
bendbulletin.com/movies
Tinq Tiny is a s w eet 3 V ear old Chihvahva mix that is looking for his forever home. He was brovght to the shelter with another crog becavse their previovs owner covlcr no longer afford to care for them. He loves to hang ovt, go on long walks ancr even car rides. If Tiny sovncrs like the perfect new addition to Vovr family, come to the shelter to get to know him tocray!
HUMRNC SOCICTYOF CCNTRRLORCGON/SPCR 61170 S.i. P7th ih BEND (541) 381.3537
Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/business
Electric
CENTRAL OREGON REAL ESTATE
Region was among the hardest hit during crisis
cars give rise to a
charging industry By Matthew L. Wald
• Opinions are mixedonwhether it will continue to slowdown or if it's just a seasonaldownturn
New Yorh Times News Service
WASHINGTON — Tens of thousands of new electric cars are zipping into traffic this year, and with them come a trunkful of strategies about how to recharge them. There are atleastfour ways to go: recharging slowly through a standard 120-volt wall socket, the type a consumer would use for a hair dryer; buying a faster 240-volt home charger, about the size of a garden gnome, for several thousand dollars; plugging into the same 240-volt charger in a public parking space but paying a price; or using a $30,000 superspeedy public charger that takes only minutes but is not widely available. The only consensus is that the more opportunities there are to recharge, the better the sales of vehicles that can generally go fewer than 100 miles between plug-ins. Not surprisingly, the chief executive of a company that has bought up thousands of high-voltage devices thinks they are the best way to recharge. The CarCharging Group, based in Miami, has quietly purchased four companies with networks of chargers, 13,430 in all. CarCharging has installed the high-voltage devices, some dressed up to mimic a gasoline pump, in underground parking garages, where drivers plug in and pay for the electricity through a device that resembles a credit card. But the price, 49 cents a kilowatt-hour — roughly four times what people pay for electricity in their homes — often makes the electric car more expensive per mile than the gasoline car it replaced. The high-voltage devices, though, take less than an hour to charge a car that has been driven 20 miles from home to office, enabling garage valets who park the cars to move them around, charging several during the day. Such public charging has an advantage over the 240-volt charger that a car owner can install in a garage or car port, said Michael Farkas, the founder and chief executive of the CarCharging Group, because in a private home, the charger is typicallyused for just one car. "We're able to amortize it over several users," Farkas said. The smaller home chargers typically take two or more hours to recharge a car. CarCharging installs chargers like soft drink machines, retaining ownerships and revenue, and giving landlords a cut. Another company, ChargePoint, manufactures the devices (including some for CarCharging) and sells them, usually to landlords, to use as they please. A shoppingmall owner, for example, could set up a machine to dispense electricity free for two hours and then bill at a high rate after that, encouraging shoppers to visit but not hog the charger. An employer might program the machine to provide free electricitybut only to authorized users. SeeCharging/E3
By Elon Glucklich
Median homeprices andmonthly sales
Median home prices (in thousands)
The Bulletin
Real estate has been a bright spot in Central Oregon's economic recovery this year, with homes selling at a pace not seen since 2006, prices rising, foreclosures falling and building activity rebounding. But talking to a half-dozen local real estate officials will yield a half-dozen different opinions about the state of the market today and the nearterm outlook. Not all of them are rosy. "Things have without a doubt slowed down," said Kip Lohr, owner and principal broker of Lohr Real Estate in Bend. "There was a point even two months ago where I could put a property on the market, and in two or three days it would have five offers and end up selling for $10,000 above the listing price. Now, almost like a light switch, we're seeing very well-priced properties stay on the market." Nationwide, home sales, including those pending,declined each month between June and September, according to the National Association of Realtors. The association's chief economist said late last month that higher interest rates along with tighter lending standards and a low supply of homes could drag the slowdown into next year. Several local Realtors said those factors are in play across Central Oregon. In particular, rising interest rates and a lack of inventory could sap the housing market's rally in 2014. See Real estate/E3
By Tim Doran The Bulletin
Median home prices and monthly sales have risen steadily in Bend and Redmond since the end of 2012. But some local real estate officials said a variety of factors, from rising interest rates to lack of new inventory, could slow the market down next year.
$298K
$300K
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$270K
Bend
The economic crisis and real estate crash in 2008-09 caused home values to plummet and forced many people to lose their homes, according to data released Thursdayby the U.S. Census Bureau. That's not exactly new information. However, the data also quantifies the magnitude of the loss and shows Central Oregon among the hardest hit regions in the state. Out of the 27 Oregon counties surveyed by the Census Bureau, Deschutes County's median home valuedropped the most — $87,300 — from 2007-09 to 2010-12. Crook County came in second, with its median falling $64,900. The two counties fared slightlybetter in declining rates of homeownership. Crook County had the third highest loss of homeownership, dropping about 5.6 percentage points from 2007-09 to 2010-12. SeeCensus/E3
$250K
$256K
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$182K
$150K 140
$180K
Redmond
$139K $100K
NOV Oes Jan Feb MarChAPril May June July Aug SePt OCt 2012
201 3
Total monthly home sales 250
219
200
Bend
150 100
72
79
108
50
43
Redmond
l 32
39
NOV Oes Jan Feb MarChAPril May June July Aug SePt OCt 2012
201 3
Source: Bratton Appraisal Group
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
The time that homes, like this new one on Northwest Awbrey Road in Bend, stay on the market has started to creep up, although it's still below levels seen over the last six years. Elon Gluck0ch/The Bulletin
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Cultivating entrepreneurs The gameconsole and churningout startups as media concierge By lan Mount
By Chris Sukentrop and Stephen Totilo
New Yorh Times News Service
Conventional wisdom holds that some 90 percent of startups fail. After years of observation, Adeo Ressi — a serial entrepreneur who founded TheFunded.com, an online community where entrepreneurs rate investors; Methodfive, a website developer; and Total New York, which became AOL Digital Cities — concluded that the high failure rate was the result of the wrong people startingbusinesses and not getting the right training. In 2009, Ressi started the Founder Institute to teach the basics. Unlike other incubators, the Founder Institute does not take students who already have a company. Instead, applicants are chosen through a personality test. Those accepted learn the process and develop their ideas through a mixture of workshops and what might be called entrepre-
New Yorh Times News Service
Peter Dasilva/New YorkTimes News Service
Adeo Ressi, a serial entrepreneur, started the Founder Institute to teach the basics of starting a business, in Mountain View, Calif. neurial immersion. The program has opened in 60 cities around the world and charges a sliding scale, from nothing at a Johannesburg scholarship program to about $1,000 in the United States. It also takes a 3.5 percent stake in the companies started by its students.
In a conversation that has been condensed and edited, Ressi, 41, said that more than 1,000 companies had come out of the program, which he said had flipped the failure rateto 10 percent from 90 percent and created 10,000 jobs. SeeRessi/E2
The video game console is dead, and the body has been cold for a long time. Sure, Sony and Microsoft are releasing what everyone describes as new game consoles, but the term is a misnomer. The Sony PlayStation 4, released Friday, and Microsoft's Xbox One, due next Friday, are game consoles in the same way that the iPhone is a telephone. There hasn't been a true game console under most TV sets for almost a decade, maybe longer. The aging Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, which begin their descent
into obsolescence this week, do a lot more than play games. So does Nintendo's high-definition Wii U, which was released a year ago. You could watch National Football League and Major League Baseball games on the PlayStation 3. You could watch ESPN and HBO Go on the Xbox 360. You could surf the Internet, listen to music, connect with friends and feast on a buffet of streaming-video options — YouTube, Amazon, Hulu, Vudu and more — on both. SeeConsoles/E5 Sony's Playstation 4 features an updated controller with a touch pad and a social-media button. Sony via New York Times News Service
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
Ressi
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 days before publication date to business@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
TODAY Oregon Alcohol Server Permit Training:Meets the minimum requirements bythe Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com.
MONDAY Managing YourBusiness Social Media Presence:Learn how to take care of business through social media while staying in touch with clients, registration required; $69; Mondays and Wednesdays through Nov. 20, 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. SCORE Small Business Counseling:Free, confidential business advice from business professionals, no appointment required; 4-6 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1 050. A Career in Real Estate:Join Jim Mazziotti, principal broker of Exit Realty, learn everything about the real estate profession, registration suggested; free; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 N.E. Greenwood Ave., No. 100; 541-480-8835 or soarwithexit@gmail.com.
TUESDAY Professional Enrichment Series: Keeping your stress at bay through the holiday season, registration required; $20 for chamber members; 7:30a.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.bendchamber.org/. Master Gmail to Maximize Productivity:Learn howto integrate all components of Gmail to be more productive, registration required; $80; 8-10 a.m.; webinaC info@ simplifynw.com. Visit Bend Board ofDirectors Meeting:8 a.m.; Bend Visitor Center, 750 N.W. Lava Road; 541-382-8048 or valerie@visitbend.com. Business After Hours:8:30-9:30 a.m.; Comfort Suites, 2243 S.W.Yew Ave., Redmond; 541-504-8900. Agricultural Safety Seminar:Learn the basics of safety, ways to prevent fatal hazards, how to makeyour work easier while making it safer and review the Oregon OSHAagricultural requirements, registration required; free; 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Inn at Cross Keys Station, 66 N.W.Cedar St., Madras; 800-285-8525 or saif. com/agseminar . General Membership Meeting: registration required; free; 4:30 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery Mountain Room, 901 S.W. Simpson Ave., Bend; 541385-8606 or www.bendchamber.
org/. Crooked River Ranch Terrebonne Chamber of CommerceNetworking Social:Event will be combined with a ribbon cutting for Mail and More; free; 5:30 p.m.; Mail and More, 8222 North Highway 97, Suite103; 541923-2679. Identity Theft, Who HasYour Number?:Learn tips to protect yourself in this free financial workshop, registration required; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union,1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend; 541-3821795 or www.midoregon.com.
You've launched in 60 workshops. How did you develop your curriculum? • cities, many of them in Continued from E1 • I a s ked m e mbers o f nontraditional entrepreneurial His goal is to create 20,000 • T heFunded.com, w h o environments like Colombia jobs a year by 2020 and to are all CFOs, to give me some and Vietnam and Saudi Ara"globalize Silicon Valley." feedback. About 2,000 CFOs bia. Why? • W e're n ot a mon e y Once you have identi- participated. Then we l ogiYou try to identify po• fied l i kely e n trepre- cally arranged those topics, • driven o r ga n i zation. • tential e ntrepreneurs neurs, what do you teach and that became the first cur- We're mission-driven. I firmly through personality testing. them? riculum. When we ran that believe that 2 percent of the What do you look for? • Our role is not to teach curriculum, we realized there population has the "entrepre• There are a number of • them but to condition was a lot of duplication in it, so neurial genes," and I believe • traits that combine to someone who has the traits we ended up merging a bunch it's our mission to help them create entrepreneurial poten- to become a successful en- of topics and that became ver- launch meaningful and endurtial. We find that openness trepreneur. We essentially sion 2.0. In version 3.0, we ing technology c ompanies, coordinates very well with give them the types of work modernized the curriculum. wherever they are. If it's on an successful e n t r epreneurs. that an entrepreneur would A few years ago, social media island off the coast of Sumawasn't critical to your success tra or in Riyadh or Santiago The more open-minded you do and we put them in the are, the more you see the kinds of situations that an but today you really need to de Chile, if we can help them world as it actually is. The e ntrepreneur w o ul d f i n d factor it in. achieve their dream, we'll do m ore c losed-minded, t h e himself in. And we increase it. more you see the world as the intensity over time and There's got to be a downyou want it to be. An open- manage that t r a nsforma• s ide to w o r king w i t h W hat p e r centage o f minded p e rson r u n n i ng tion from an employee to an pre-company entrepreneurs. • y our participants a r e a business might catch a entrepreneur. • The downside is t h a t women? problem faster than a closed• the c ommitment level • Thirty-six percent of our minded person. And when How do you do that? in someone quitting their job • graduates are female, they identify a problem they and starting a company is low, up from 14 percent when we can fix it much faster. • A lot of times a compa- even when they say they are started. • ny's initial employees 100 percent committed. When In comparing yourself are a very interesting and you push them, they quit enHow much do you adapt • to startup accelerators diverse group of people. We trepreneurship. So we have a • your program to indilike Y Combinator and 500 try to replicate what a found- number of strategic inflection vidual countries? Startups, you have said that ing team would look like and points that make founders in • Zero. We t r a nslate it. • W e're in a l ot o f l a n while they make jewelry, you we place these entrepreneurs the program decide if t hey m ine diamonds. What do in those founding team envi- really want to be an entrepre- guages. But we don't localize you mean? ronments. We create workneur. As a result, we see that the program. Because the pro• The Founder Institute ing groups with four or five 65 percent of those who start gram is the same everywhere. • t akes p e o ple r i g h t peers, and they meet multi- the program drop out and go A graduate in Vietnam or Cowhen they are taking the first ple times per week to discuss back to their previous lifestyle. lombia or South Africa is the steps to launching a busi- their progress in b u ilding You have to kiss a lot of frogs same quality as someone in ness. We help them launch their business. These groups to find a prince. Silicon Valley. But the pool of the business and become act like a founding team beentrepreneurs in that culture is full-time entr e preneurs. cause they help one another What happens to the 65 of much lower quality, so they Most other programs take build their businesses. • percent who drop out? are exceptional there. Compafounders who have already • For some, the entrepre- nies that come out of these forestablished companies. The When you say employ• neurial lifestyle is too eign markets dominate their inputs to m ost i ncubators • ees can be interesting much of asacrifice or others local markets. don't have a good idea they're today are the output of the and diverse, do you mean Founder Institute. difficult and contentious? passionate about. It's not like they're dropping out and say• There is a s aying in Why start prelaunch? • e ntr e p r e n e u r s h i p ing, 'The program is terrible. that your early employees I'm going to start my own comOFFICE SYSTEMS • Because we're d e al- are all commandos. Com- pany.' The vast majority go Lovv-cost, High Quality • ing with people at the m andos are p e ople w h o back to the corporate world. Compatible Print Cartridges point of inception, we can can do almost everything help them avoid mistakes be- well: emails, strategy, code, Free Business Delivery and fore they are made. Startups design. Founders are also .Printer Service often die in the first 18-24 often commandos. So these lES SCINAB months because of formative working g r oups r esemble mistakes, like choosing a closely what your company Local since19ee bad co-founder or the wrong will look like over the first corporate entity or an inap16-24 months of existence. AUTHORIZED DEALER propriate platform. Ninety Are they super easy to deal • copy• print percent of the companies the with and friendly? No. They • scan • fax Founder Institute has cre- are usually supersmart and ated are alive because we've hardworking, and they usuBob Browning Owner helped them a void t h ose ally don't suffer fools very •) r mistakes. well. Soyou have to manage your working group like ' i ~ I i I Ninety you'll manage your early em• Really? ployees and that's not going • We've recently helped to be easy. But if you don't Redmond PharmacyL Compounding Centeryour • launch o u r 1, 0 0 0th h ave experience doing i t , LOCAL full service pharmacy and compounding company and about 10 per- you're going to fail. • specialists here for all your pharmacy needs. cent — 116 — are dead. Another 15 percent — 146 — are You also have CFO 'PAnn~ hibernating or being run by • mentors teach subject
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people still at their day job. The 75 percent of our businesses that aren't dead or hibernating are producing jobs.
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WEDNESDAY November AdBite:Learn howto find your company's brand voice; $25 for members, $45 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321 or www. adfedco.org. Business After Hours:registration required; free; 5 p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, 2555 N.W. CampusVillageW ay,Bend;877-5412433 or www.bendchamber.org/. N.E.W. Relationship Networking that Works:Join the Network of Entrepreneurial Women for an evening of networking; $25 for members, $40fornonmembers; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541382-4321 or www.networkwomen. org.
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THURSDAY Soroptimist International of Bend: $10, registration required by Nov. 20; noon-1 p.m.; Boston's, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite140; 541408-9333 or www.sibend.org. BNI Chapter DeschutesBusiness Networkers:7 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-610-9125.
FRIDAY How to Start a Business: Workshops for people contemplating business ownership, registration required; $29;11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541383-7290.
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Oregon Alcohol Server Permit Training:Meets the minimum requirements bythe Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza,1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com.
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DEEDS Deschutes County • Lands Bend LLC to Franklin Brothers LLC, South Deerfield Park, Lot37, $243,580 • Steven G. andDawnM. Thomas to Gayle andCameronGowandTomand Jeanette G.Meloy, EmpireEstates, Lot 62, $181,000 • John C. andMarie A. Fettig to Barton P. andTara J. Butler, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top,Phase5, Lot181, $750,000 •PlazaBend LLC toW .Leeand Mary L. Ayling, trustees for theAyling Living Trust, PlazaCondominiums, Unit104, Parking SpacesP-69, StorageSpace S-46, $329,000 • Donald E. andSusanS.Stevens, trustees for the Donaldand Susan Stevens Trust, to Robertand Ashley Strauch, River Bluff Section of Sunrise Village, Lot8, Block3, $588,000 • John W. Warrickand Ruth Jenkins, trustees for theWarrick-Jenkins Living Trust to SeanBlair, Wildflower/Sunriver II, Stage III, Unit 56, $215,000 •PacwestIILLCtoTonyJ.Lemons, Angus Acres, Phase 3,Lot 73, $259,785 • David H. andMarilyn C. Brunn to Ray E. and Deborah A.Kampfer, trustees for the Kampfer Living Trust, Ridgeat Eagle Crest 44, Lot137, $210,000 • Scottand Kristen McBride to Robert C. and Doreen M.Murdock, Lazy River South, Lot5, Block16, $250,000 • Michael J. Tennant to Timothy R. and Carolyn T.White, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 7and 11,Lot 356, $375,000 • Daniel and Kristi B. O'Neill to Ronald C. and Shelly Dalton, Deschutes River Woods, Lot18, Block5, $225,000 • Richard A. andCheryl L. Valentine to Chancy E.and KayleeN. Hull, Deer ForestAcres, Lot9, Block3, $189,900 • Randy A. andSharon L. Wiliams to James L. andGail S. Montgomery, Third Addition to Woodland Park Homesites ,Lot4,Block2,$223,000 • James E.and Carole L. Leonard, trustees for the LeonardFamily Trust, to Garth H. andMarjorie A. Jensen, Summer Creek, Phase 2,Lot23, $171,100 • Edward B. Weiser to John R.and Cynthia L. Bell, Paladin RanchEstates, Lot 2, Block 2,$488,000 • Greg L. Henleyto Miles C.and Shannon L.Johnson, ParkwayAddition Lot 7, Block1, $190,000 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLCto Pahlisch HomesInc., Bridges at Shadow Glen, Phase1, Lot38and 42, $153,000 • Ezra G. Rossto Brenda Grigsby and
Dale Parkinson, Township17, Range 12, Section 26, $359,892.04 • Kathyand Perry Lenhart to Robert Berg, First Addition to Meadowview Estates, Lot8,Block2,$265,000 • John R. andJulie M. Ritchie to Kristi and Robert O'Neill, Tollgate, Sixth Addition, Lot 303, $345,000 • Gary E. andTamra L. Grubb to Robert S. and Eleanor L.Hammond, Villageat Cold Springs, Lot9, $211,500 • Pahlisch Homeslnc. to Gary L. and Paulene P.Mellema, trustees for the Living Trustof Gary L.Mellemaand Paulene P.Mellema, Stonegate P.U.D., Phase1, Lot83, $415,000 • Claire H. andSally R. Limbeckto Jill M. andThomas D.Bazemore, Homestead, SecondPhase, Lot18, Block1, $302,500 • Teater Rentals LLC to Michael M. Binns, BendGolf ClubAddition, Lot4, $329,000 • Larry D. Pennington to Chad and Michele Ooten,Whispering Pines, Second Addition, Lot 3, Block 25, $260,000 • Constance Tallent to Carolyn L. Cobb, Aspen Rim, Lot69, $215,000 • Janice Murphy to Anthony D.Gullo, Cascade View Allotment, Lot E, $290,000 • Caldera Springs RealEstate LLCto Michael andMargie Liening, Caldera Springs, Phase 2,Lot 220, $160,000 • Teresa L. Roesch, trustee for the Teresa L. RoeschRevocable Trust, to Three PeaksLLC,Township 20, Range 10, Section 34, $300,000 • Plaza BendLLCto Robertand Donna Matteson, PlazaCondominiums, Lot 301, $337,000 • Steve Dorn lnvestments LLC to Sherry L. andShaneM.Petersen, Copper Ridge,Phases2-4, Lot 28, $190,000 • Jean P.Peyralans to Joseph M.and Christina C.Kennedy, EmeraldVilla, Lot 2, $188,000 • Daniel Komaiko, trustee for the Daniel Komaiko Inter Vivos Trust, to Keith L. and Deborah K.Periman, Lot3, Block 1, $575,000 • Charles W. Zeutenhorst to Gregand Dawn Ross, Riverview Vista Estates, Phase 3, Lot 28, $510,500 • Triple KnotAssociates LLC to Paula Fleitell and DavidZarzycki, Golf Homes at Tetherow, Lot 5, $589,750 • Darren R. and AnnaKinney to Kenneth L. and Stephanie A.Osborn, Fairway Point Village 3, Lot 25, Block16, $479,000 • Michael and Heidi E. Schmidt to David P. andPaulaA. Garcia, Ponderosa
Pines, First Addition, Lot135, $225,000 • Wells Fargo BankN.A. to Rachel K. Evans, Fifth Addition to West Hills, Lots 14 and15, Block 5, $365,000 • Craig G. andLisa Phelps to Daniel C. Smith and Sandra K.Harper, trustees for the HarperSmith RevocableFamily Trust, RoseTerrace, Lot13, $231,500 • Franklin 0. and Michel V. Miller to Don P. and Stacy M.Horton, Miller Heights, Phase 1,Lot12, $480,000 •SFICascadeHighlandsLLCto Douglas J. Homand Sharon E. Lee, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot92, $200,000 • William and HelenF.Nisbet to Lester 0.and Lynne M.Gardner,Foxborough, Phase 5, Lot 253, $228,000 • Caroline Putney to Jonathan H. McGillivray, SunMountain Ranches, Lot 4, Block 4, $170,000 • Warren M. KeeneyIVto Colleen E. McNally, Elkhorn Estates, Phases1-3, Lot 40, $185,000 •PlazaBend LLC toJRRM LLC,Plaza Condominiums, Unit9, Parking Spaces P-3 and P-4, StorageSpaceS-5, $306,000 • Dale H. andArvena M.Emerson, cotrustees of the Dale H.Emerson Trust and the Arvena M.EmersonTrust, to Marlene B.andWilliam F. Myers, Jefferson MeadowCondominium, Unit 13, $242,000 • Columbia Property Resources LLC to MarkA. andAmelia L. Carter, South MeadowHomesit e Section,Second Addition, Lot101, $575,000 • Robert N. and Betty L. Ledbetter to David K.andJoan R.Thompson, Copper Ridge,Phase1, Lot45, $229,900 • Peter F. andMarcia J. Lyons to Matt J. Silver andCatherine C.Blue, First on Hill Sites, Lot 7, Block 4,$437,100 • James R. Uerlings andWashington Federal to David C.Lepezand First American Title InsuranceCompany, as trustee for the SouthValley Bankand Trust, Tetherow Crossing, Lot 8, Block 1, $477,917.28 • Michael A. andVictoria A.B. Miller, trustees for the Michaeland Victoria Miller RevocableTrust, to Rodney Trepess andTracey March, First Addition to Kenwood, Lots1 and 2, Block 29, $472,000 • John Corso to Anthony E. Peeters and Bonnie J.Bachman,trusteesfor the Bachman-Peeters Trust, Boulevard Addition to Bend, Lot1, Block27, $242,000 • Jim and Elaine Frost, trustees for the Jim and ElaineFrost RevocableTrust, to Clinton W.VanFleet Jr. and Branda K. Van Fleet, Mountain Village East II, Lot17, Block13, $211,300
• Angelika M. andGeorgeS. Ericson to Jeffrey A. andErika M. Frickey, Wiestoria, Lots 7-9, Block 46, $220,000 Crook County • James H. andEmily M. Hite to Clint Bentz, trustee of the Matthew G.Decker Trust II, GreenValley Acres, Lot13, $215,000 • Jeffrey P. Walter and Patricia A. Carroll to Larry M. andTerrie A.M. McFerrin, Stone Ridge, Phase 8,Lot 116, $195,000 • Malcolm D. andMary M.Gotshall to Bryan S.and Melinda E.Bentley, Crystal Springs Subdivision, Phase1, Lot11, $235,000 • Jerimiah B. Kenfield to John A. and Joyce A. Rounds,Crystal Springs Subdivision, Phase 2,Lot 35, $189,000 • John A. andJoyce A. Rounds to Larry W . Paul us,CarolJ.Myzakand Paul E. Robinson, Partition Plat2011-02, Parcel 2, $344,500
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Charging Continued from E1 Strategies differ, said Dimitrios Papadogonas, vice president of marketing for ChargePoint, but "it's not surprising that there's some confusion, because it's a new industry and it's getting sorted out." Papadogonas and Farkas agreed that public charging was needed because some potential buyers could not plug in at home. A new study by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and the University of Glasgow found that in the United States, less than half of vehicles have a regular off-street parking spot at a place owned by the driver, where a charger could be installed. Stepping into this picture, eight states announced a joint effort last month to bolster electric cars, partly by requiring the installation of chargers in certain categories ofbuildings, like multifamily apartment structures. But it is a tough business. Last m o nt h C a r C harging bought the Blink n etwork's 12,450 chargers because its owner, Ecotality, had gone bankrupt despite $114.8 million from the Energy Department to help build the network. (Blink had trouble keeping its chargers in good repair) In February, CarCharging bought Beam Charging, which has contracts with 400 parking garages. In April it bought EVPass, with chargers in central and upstate New York, and 350Green, with 600 installations, in the Midwest and California. But Farkas acknowledged that 49 cents a kilowatt-hour was equivalent to the cost of gasoline at current prices for a car that gets 21 mpg, a substandard rate in 2 013. The company is considering offering a flat monthly rate, $100 f or off-peak charging a n d $150 for anytime charging, which, he said, mimicked the gasoline expense of a typical car. Still, the car would have
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Rejecting billions, startup gambles on a better offer
Michael Farkas is the founder and chief executive of the CarCharging Group, a company that operates recharging stations that use high-voltage devices such as this one in San Diego.
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By Jenna Wortham New Yorh Times News Service
What business makes no money, has yet to pass its third anniversary and just turned down an offer worth billions of dollars? Snapchat, a social media platform run by a pair of 20-somethings who u ntil last month worked out of a beachfront bungalow in Venice, Calif. Thanks to today's rabid rat race for the hottest social-media startups, Snapchat has joined the list of tech companies — like Tumblr and Instagram — with no money coming in but multiple sky-high takeover offers. So far, Snapchat's leaders have balked at the offers,according to three people with knowledge of the overtures, including a recent m u ltibillion-dollar proposal from Facebook, the biggest social network of them all. It's not that they don't want billions of dollars. In part, it's because they think making a dealnow would leave many billions more on the table. The service, started in 2011 by Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy, two former Stanford fraternity brothers, lets users send photo and video messages that disappear after they are viewed. Snapchat quickly gained a reputation as an easy way to send sexually suggestive photos, but it also picked up steam among young users as a fun and easy way to trade photo messages.
Sam Hodgson/ New York Times News Service
to go about 600 miles a month department program's spendfor the driver to break even, ing $12 million for 80 chargers difficult in a car that cannot at Baltimore-Washington Inmake long trips. ternational Airport, train staA cheaper way to use elec- tions and other locations. "It's ludicrous," he said, betricity to save gasoline, said Jeremy Michalek, an author cause the chargers were inof the Carnegie Mellon study, stalled in places where cars was a plug-in hybrid, a car park for many hours or days that carried a small battery at a time, meaning a standard pack that could be recharged 120-volt outlet, which takes from a standard 120-volt out- about six hours to charge a let, and would switch to gaso- car, would have been more line when that charge was than fast enough. The $12 milexhausted. lion could have paid for thouSome experts say that the sands of standard outlets, he 2 40-volt chargers ar e n o t said, in park-and-ride lots and needed, since most electric other places that would encars are used for commuting courage daily use. and are parked most of the In Annapolis, he said, he day. Standard AC outlets, at parks about six feet from a a cost in the low hundreds of standard AC outlet, but he is dollars, would b e p erfectly not allowed to use it because adequate even though charg- the government wants him to ing takes hours, these experts pay for the electricity, but cansay. not figure out how to charge Robert Bruninga, an aero- him the 50 cents. At the naspace engineer and instructor tional average retail price for at the U.S. Naval Academy in electricity, most electric cars Annapolis, Md., has an electric plugged into a standard outlet car that he calls "a commuting absorb only about 20 cents' appliance." He said it charged worth of energy an hour. just fine overnight in his gaB runinga said t h a t a n y rage. He has been driving the electronic payment systems car to and from his home and would be overkill fo r such the Naval Academy, about 15 small transactions and instead miles away, for years. said he should be charged a Bruninga, a participant in monthly fee, in exchange for the Maryland Electric Vehicle a card he could leave on his Infrastructure Council, an ad- dashboard to let the parking visory group, argued against police know he was authothe Maryland transportation rized to charge.
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Oregon is encouraging big retailers to set up the speediest type of chargers in parking lots and offer the electricity free. Giving away power is a good way to lure shoppers into a store, said Ashley Horvat, who works in the Oregon Department of Transportation and is the state's chief electric vehicle officer. Horvat, who drives a Nissan Leaf electric car, said the state, which has installed 34 fast chargers with grant money, was encouraging the use of the speedy chargers. (They work on DC, or direct current, which is different from the AC, or alternating current, that powers most household devices.) Some are maintained and operated by Aerovironment, a California firm with a long history in the electric carbusiness, which for now allows them to be used without payment. Others are owned by a big-box retailer, Fred Mayer, which plans to give away the power. "I've driven 438 miles in one day using fast chargers and have enjoyed spending my time and resources in these communities I've stopped at along the way," Horvat said in an email. One luxury-car maker, Tesla, has established a network of high-speed chargers just for its customers.
T he company has in r e cent months become one of the most sought-after businesses in the tech industry, g etting attention f ro m t o p Silicon Valley companies and venture capital firms, as well as international technology companies. In the past, several startups found even greater success by passing up a billion dollars or more, includingFacebook and Twitter. Even Twitter, with its red-hot debut on the public market, still has skeptics who question whether it can grow enough to justify its current market capitalization of more than $20 billion. But Silicon Valley is littered with many m or e entrepreneurs whose big dreams went unfulfilled, people who were at the helm of the next big thing and lost momentum before they could cash out. "I think this is classic birdin-hand versus bird-in-bush," said Julie Ask, an analyst at Forrester Research. "Snapchat must believe the bird-in-bush
is bigger." Snapchat recently said that it now processed upward of 350 million messages a day. In February, th e c ompany was processing 60 million a day. That rocketlike growth has emboldened Snapchat's leaders to hold out for a better deal, and with a suitor of their choice, at least for now.
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Census
for nine Oregon counties. Officially, the Great RecesContinued from E1 sion started in December 2007 Jefferson County's 4.8-point and ended in June 2009, acdrop put it in fourth place, and cordingto the National Bureau Deschutes County f i n ished of Economic Research. sixth out of 27 counties with a The Census Bureau exloss of 3.8 percentage points. amined median home values Curry County recorded the and homeownership rates in greatest loss in homeowner- the middle of the recession, ship, about 6. 5 p ercentage 2007-09, and compared them points. to those after the downturn, The figures released Thurs- from 2010-12. Using data from day came from the Census Bu- three-year spans allowed the reau's American Community agency to look at smaller arSurvey. It contained no data eas, such as Crook County,
population 20,650, as of July 2012. Crook County's m edianhome value decline merited a mention in the Census Bureau's report. Its loss was the greatest among the 50 least populated counties in the nation examined by the agency. Deschutes County had a greater dollar-value loss, but it was not among the least populated counties. As a state, Oregon saw a decline of $29,300 in median home value, while for the na-
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tion as a whole it was $17,300. Of the 27 O regon counties, only Umatilla saw an increase in median home value — $4,200 — from 2007-09 to 2010-12. Nationally, the rate of homeownership dropped 1.7 percentage points between the two time periods, which the Census Bureau considers statistically significant. Oregon's statewide rate dropped about 2.3 points. — Reporter: 541-383-0360, tdoran@bendbulletin.com
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streak started, Bend hadn't seen a 200-sale month since Continued from E1 August 2006. "I'm worried interest rates At the same time, though, will continue to climb," said t he median home price i n J im Mazziotti, owner a n d Bend dropped to $256,000 in principal broker of Exit Re- October, an eight-month low. "It's not a scary slowdown alty Bend. Interest rates on a 30-year by an y m e ans," A d k isson m ortgage have risen a f u l l s aid, adding t h at, fo r t h e percentage point, from 3.34 first time in a s much as a percent to 4.35 percent, since decade, Realtors are seeing the start of the year, accord- a traditional m a rket, w i t h ing to data from Freddie Mac. activity peaking in the sumFifteen-year rates have risen mer and declining in the fall nearly as much, and winter months. She said That I p e r cent i n crease the biggest i ssue m o ving could mean a n a d d i tional forward could be t h e l a ck $100 to $500 per month in of development-ready land mortgage payments on a new within Bend's urban growth home, Mazziotti said, an in- boundary. crease first-time buyers i n R ecent sales s ho w t h e particular may balk at. impact of declining land inStill, he said, the market v entory on p r ices. In m i d is on solid footing. A slow- September, a Sal e m -area down this winter could just developer bought 19 of the 99 be seasonal. Typically, few home lots in a northeast Bend homebuyers make a purchase subdivision for about $1.38 during the Thanksgiving and million, or $72,500 per lot. Christmas seasons. Three years ago, a local deAnother factor could be a veloper paid $1.92 million for decline in the buying of fore- 60 of the lots, or $32,000 per closed properties by investors lot, meaning the value of the who stormed the Bend mar- land rose 127 percent in three ket in the years after the 2008 years. housing collapse. Available lots are being de"I think what some people veloped at a rapid pace. The think is a red flag is really a city of Bend issued 610 perfalse indicator of the drop-off mits for single-family homes in investor activity," Mazziotti between January and Octosaid. ber, up from 367 during the O thers said Central O r same periodlastyear. egon, and Bend in p articuOther Realtors said the delar, could buck the national pressed marketfrom 2008 to slowdown. 2011, and the frantic pace be"The market is still really tween mid-2012 and the midstrong," said Wendy Adkis- dle of this year, may be in the son, principal broker of Cas- rearview mirror. "There isn't a frenzy right cade Sotheby's International now," said Bruce Dunlap, prinRealty. In October,219 Bend single- cipal broker with Redmondfamily homes sold, the sixth based Central Oregon Realty straight month of sales rising Group. "Earlier this year, if I above the 200 mark, accord- saw a good property, I'd tell a ing to data from the Bratton buyer they needed to be in my Appraisal Group. Before that office that afternoon ... In the
last 90 days, it has shifted a little bit, to the point where it's not that frenzy — except for the lower price points." Indeed, 72 percent of the Bend homes sold in October were priced at $350,000 and under, Bratton figures show. Just 13 percent of the sales were $500,000 and above. The lower end is dominating the l ocal m arket, said Lynnea Miller, principal broker with Bend Premier Realty. Still, buyers looking for higher-priced homes came back in a big way this summer after largely staying away for several years. "We're seeing a really active second-home market," Miller said. "We're talking to a lot of people from Portland, California, e ven C o l orado a nd Vermont, people w h o came out here for vacation and loved it so much they thought maybe they'd make Bend home." But Lohr said there's some concern that prices could continue to drop over the next year, driven by a state foreclosure mediation law t h at prompted banks to hold off on thousands of pending foreclosures, creating a backlog. A Eugene-based firm that tracks f o reclosure a ctivity across the state issued a report last week forecasting "a spike in foreclosure filings in 2014," as a result of the law. F oreclosures an d sh o r t sales have dropped significantly across the High Desert, but still a ccounted for 198 transactions in Bend during the third quarter of the year and 97 transactions in Redmond, according to Central Oregon Association of Realtors data. Lohr said hi s o f fice has counted roughly 1,600 homes across Central Oregon that
have received a notice of default on their mortgages or notices of judicial foreclosure, but haven't come onto t he sales market. Some of them have been i n l i m b o s i nce 2009, he said, with the owners giving up hope on keeping the home years ago. "We've got a b a cklog of these distressed homeowners. I think a lot of them have just abandoned their homes," Lohr said. "I think we're going to see a lot of distressed inventory come onto the market" into 2014.
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Prices startPo BUY BEFOREIT'Sl P ALL GONE
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— Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluclzlichC~bendbulletirLcom
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A PHYSICIAN'S QUEST TO TRANSFORM CARE THROUGH THE END OF LIFE
DR. IRA BYOCIC Aich with stories and ezamples ofp r ograms that work, Dr. Byock reveals pracri cal ways to get the best errd- fo life care for yourself or those you love.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
Ij NDAY DRIVER
Fiat 500e
a cassy, thrifty commuter By Brad Bergholdt McClatchy-Tribune News Service
After e v aluating s everal very neat hybrid, alternativefuel and electric vehicles at the Western Automotive Journalists' Future Cars-Future Technology symposium two weeks ago, I was struck by how darn fun the little Fiat 500e was to drive. After l earning m ore about this little electric car and the inexpensive lease deal available in California, I began to ponder the possibilities. With some number-crunching, I discovered I was an ideal candidate for an electric vehicle: My work commute was long enough that I was spending a small fortune on gasoline but was still within the 90mile EV range. In fact, I was spending more with my V-8 guzzling gasoline each month than the entire cost of the Fiat lease and electricity needed to drive it — about $1 per day for electrons. I obtained one of the in-demand 500e's and have enjoyed a huge learning curve and some interesting new challenges. I just get by using the supplied 120-volt c h arging device, called electric vehicle supply equipment or EVSE. With this simple but very slow EVSE, I r echarge at n ight, w hen electricity r a tes a r e cheap. A better solution is the optional $800 220-volt fastcharge EVSE, which needs a dedicated 30-amp wall outlet or a public plug-in fast charger where available. The 220V EVSE takes 4 h o urs f r om empty to full. I found it's easy to do better than the 116 miles-per-gallonequivalent mileage rating, unless I use the heater or air conditioning extensively — either zaps about 10 miles from the 90-100 mile estimated range — or ascend lengthy hills. Fiat did its homework on this car; most folks would have no idea this thing runs on electrons. Acceleration is b r isk, braking regeneration is imperceptible, steering and handling are crisp, and it's surprisingly roomy inside for two full-size adults, despite the tiny exterior dimensions. My last Fiat w a s m any, many moons ago, and I can safely say this car is from a different planet. Fit and finish are Honda-like, it's loaded with cool features, and the warranty will run out well after the lease ends. I have a hunch the attractive lease terms on many EVs may be a short-lived strategy to get thesecars on the road to meet California emission mandates and build green-car credits. My hope is battery technology will improve such that greater range and lower cost will get here in time to keep me EVing continuously. These cars drive magnificently. It is an acquired chore to plug in, unplug and search for outlets — the EVSE plug-in device comes along, just in case. Each day I try new routes to work and experiment with accessoryuse. I've found this car loves slow-speed city driving — the more stoplights, the better. On the way to work, with lights, bun warmers and defroster blaring, running with the big dogs on the freeway at 75 mph, I average 120 mpge. Using surface streets during mild daylight hours on the way home, I can squeeze 145 or more mpge. Each 20-mile trip gradually drains between 17 to 23 percent of projected battery capacity. The projected range reading on the non-glitzy but c ool instrument d isplay i s clumsy but appreciated. Miles per gallon equivalent is a r e asonably calculated comparison of tank to wheel and wall plug to wheel operating costs. For those with a simple two-way commute and another vehicle for longer trips, EVs are worthy of consideration. — Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hoodC<earthlinlz.net.
ame ma icwi more musc e By Ezra Dyer New Yorh Times News Service
If I were an executive at Mazda, I'd be doing some serious headhunting over at Subaru. T hat company, once a weird northern phenomenon — the Japanese equivalent of Saab — is now RP/J EW cr u shing its own sales records year after year, gunning for 400,000 sales by year-end. And kudos to them. They deserveit. But Mazda also deserves more sales than it's getting. Should not Mazda be at least as popular as Subaru? I argue that it should, and I submit the CX-5 as proof. The CX-5 is Mazda's first n ew c rossover s ince t h e c ompany's b r eakup w i t h Ford in 2008. While the CX5's predecessor, the Tribute, was a lightly disguised Ford Escape, the CX-5 shares not a bolt with the current Escape. Mazda says it's the first completely new product — not a carry-over scrap from a previous Mazda or another manufacturer — s ince the Cosmo. Which, if you're not up on your Mazda history, was introduced in 1967. Upon its introduction late last year, the CX-5 was available with only a 2-1iter, 155horsepower four-cylinder, an engine that is available with either a six-speed automatic transmission or a six-speed manual. I d r ove the latter and loved it; manual-transmission crossovers are uncommon, and Mazda's stick shifts are among the best on the road. But I suspected, given the public apathy for manuals, that this wasn't really a representative CX-5. And according to Mazda, it's not: The manual-transmission version accounts for just 3 percent of CX-5 sales. The current high-volume model, introduced this year, uses the larger, more powerful 2.5-1iter Skyactiv fourcylinder. Fuel economy suffers slightly — about a mile per gallon compared with the 2-liter automatic model — but the added power is well worth the penalty. Buyers seem to agree, as the 2.5-1iteraccounts for81 percent of sales. I drove a f u ll y d eckedout 2.5-1iter Grand Touring
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Mazda North Amenca via The New York Times
Mazda has said the CX-5, which features a 2.5-liter in-line 4-cylinder engine with a 6-speed automatic transmission, is the first completely new product — not a carry-over scrap from a previous Mazda or another manufacturer — since the Cosmo was introduced in 1967.
2014 Mazda GX-5 Grand TouringAWD Base price:$29,665 As tested:$31,890 Type:AWDcrossover Engine:2.5-liter four-
cylinder (184 horsepower, 185 pound-feet of torque) with six-speed automatic transmission.
Mileage:24 mpg city, 30 mpg highway
AWD and found it to epitomize the challenge facing the company. It's an outstanding little crossover, but its appeal lies in Mazda's mastery of the nuances — the feel of the steering wheel in your hands, the chamfered smoothness of the m o tor, th e t i g htly dampened body motions as you navigate a twisty road. There's nothing you can slap a number on and cry "Best! S uperlative!" and y e t y o u emerge from a drive wanting to convert anyone who will listen. All of the company's vehicles are like that, really. From the Mazda 3 tothe Mazda 6 to the big CX-9 people mov-
er, they're all masters of the intangibles, the i nteraction between power and grip and the response of the controls. Even Mazda's signature engine technology, Skyactiv, is a collection of small, worthy upgrades (high compression ratio, friction reduction, direct injection) rather than one killer app. I'm sure Mazda marketers would rather offer the CX-5 Blammo Turbo - "So much power you'll spin the tires off the r ims or w e 'll buy you a sandwich!" — but i nstead they're left t r y i ng to extol the virtues of a 4-2I exhaust manifold and an automatic transmission that uses a torque converter and a clutch. I feel your pain, Mazda. By the way, the redesigned Ford Escape offers as much as 240 horsepower. Blammo! The CX-5, though, weighs a couple of hundred pounds less. May I interest you in some finesse? I hope so. Because you don't have to understand every facet of Skyactiv to realize that the CX-5 captures some of the driving magic that BMW once held the patent on. W hen Ford cu t M a z d a
loose, I was curious to see how the dissolution of that r elationship w o u l d af f e c t the post-breakup Mazdas. It seems the company knows perfectly well what kind of cars it wants to build. Now i t just needs the w orld t o notice. How much?: $29,665 base, $31,890 as tested, with Soul R ed paint ( $300) and t h e Grand Touring tech package
($1,625) that includes navigation, keyless ignition, high-intensity headlamps and a precollision emergency braking system. Is It thirsty? With a federal rating of 24 mpg in the city and 30 mpg on the highway, the CX5 2.5 AWD is thrifty enough, but can't touch the 35 mpg highway rating for the mileage-champ 2-liter model with a manual gearbox.
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INSIDE: BOOICSW Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
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Veterans
worthy of coverage t don't know another newspaper that has demonstrated a greater commitment to our veterans. These are the folks who have risked life and limb to defend us, and public recognition is the least we at The Bulletin can do for them. Last week — the week of Veterans Day — I attended the annual economic forecast breakfast sponsored bythe Chamber of Commerce. The moderator asked anyone in the audience ofhundreds who had served in the military to stand up. Very few got to their feet. That's a product of our times, a product of volunteer services and no draft. It's also a problem. There are a lotofpluses to a draftless society, but the steep downside is that there is a fading attachment between citizen and soldier. Although we all have a visceral response to terror, not to mention wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, very few Americans know anyone who has put on a uniform. Returning from Vietnam, I came home to a divided nation for sure, but waiting for me were generationsof men and women who had answered the call in the two world wars and Korea. Theirs was an accepting reservoir of common experience, which regardless of conflicting political views, supported me because they had shipped out, fought, lost friends and shipped home, in one piece or not, mentally sound or tortured. That doesn't exist today. And that's why any newspaper or, for that matter, any medium has a special, democratizing responsibility toward the military. Veterans Day was, as it always has been, Nov. 11. I pulled newspapers starting with the edition of Nov. 3. From that date through Nov. 12, I counted 11 section-front stories, columns and photos celebrating or recording the extraordinary narratives ofveterans from Central Oregon. On our pages were tales and images of World War I, World War II, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. This collection does not include our website slide shows of veterans' events or the many announcements of upcoming veteran activities in our community and civic calendars. As I said, one good reason for this extensive coverage is that these men and women have risked all for us. As President Obama said at Arlington National Cemetery, these veterans stood up, swore an oath to the nation, put on a uniform and risked their lives for all ofus. But the better reason is to remind the nation that these men and women in the nondraft, volunteer military of today are part ofus and we are part of them. For all of its faults, the draft democratized the services and threw up a restraint on our more pugnacious instincts, even Vietnam. The last thing a democracyneeds is an isolated, self-perpetuating military caste — a Praetorian Guard. I'm not suggesting that wars should be avoided at all costs, or that some values are not worth fighting for. I'm not a pacifist. Tuesday is the 150th anniversary of the Gettysburg address, the finest commemoration of citizen soldiery in our history. These men, volunteers and those drafted, from the North and the misguided South fought and died from a sense of conviction in a cause that gives pride to most people today. But that great cause produced more killed, wounded or dismembered than the total battlefield casualties in all of our nation's other conflicts. It took Lincoln to immortalize our enduring obligation, declaring, "The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here."
— John Costa is editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcostaC<bendbulletin.com
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New York Times News Service file photo
• In the rare instances in which drivers are cited for hitting and killing cyclists, the penalties areastonishingly meager By Daniel Duane
Moullac, 24, pedaling inside a bike lane in San Francisco's SAN FRANCISCO SOMA district when a truck — Everybody who knows turned right and killed her. In me knows that I love cycling these articles, I found a recurand that I'm also completely ring phrase: to quote from The freaked out by it. I got into the San Francisco Chronicle story sport for middleabout Le Moullac, "The truck driver aged reasons: fat; CQM M creaky knees; the stayed at the scene delusional vanity and was not cited." of tight shorts. Registering In stories where the driver for a triathlon, I took my first had been cited, the penalty's ride in decades. Wind in my meagerness defied belief, like hair, smile on my face, I dethe teenager in 2011 who drove cided instantly that I would into 49-year-old cyclist John bike everywhere like all those Przychodzen from behind beautiful hipster kids on fixon a road just outside Seattle, ies. Within minutes, however, running over and killing I watched an SUV hit another him. The police issued only cyclist, and then I got my own a $42 ticket for an "unsafe front wheel stuck in a streetlane change" because the kid hadn't been drunk and, as car track, sending me to the pavement. they saw it, had not been drivI made it home alive and ing recklessly. bought a stationary bike You don't have to be a lefty trainer and workout DVDs pinko cycling activist to find with ex-pro Robbie Ventura something weird about that. guiding virtual rides on WisBut try a Google search for "cyclist+ accident" and you consin farm roads, so that I could sweat safely in my Caliwill find countless similar stofornia basement. Then I called ries: On Nov. 2, for example, my buddy Russ, one of 13,500 on the two-lane coastal highdailybike commuters in waynear Santa Cruz, Calif., a Washington, D.C. Russ swore northbound driver lost control cycli n g was harmless but con- and veered clear across southfessed to awakening recently bound traffic, killing Joshua in a Level 4 trauma center, Alper, a 40-year-old librarian havingbeen hit by a car he cycling in the southbound bike could not remember. Still, lane. As usual: no charges, Russ insisted I could avoid no citation. Most online comharm by assuming that every ments fall into two camps: driver was "a mouth-breathing cyclists outraged at inattentive drug addict with a murderous drivers and wondering why hatred for cyclists." cops don't care; drivers furious The anecdotes mounted: My at cyclists for clogging roads wife's childhood friend was and flouting traffic laws. cycling with mom and dad My own view is that everybody's a little right and that when a city truck killed her; we're at a scary cultural crosstwo of my father's law partners, maimed. I began noticroads on the whole car/bike ing "cyclist killed" news artithing. cles, like one about Amelie Le See Bike/F6 New Yorh Times News Service
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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t's time for the folks deciding the future of Bend's Mirror Pond to break from their weakness and their secrecy. E RR O R
Put the pond's future on the ballot. We normally expect elected leaders to represent the public and make decisions. They made a mess of Mirror Pond. After they had been wrestling with the issue for years, they conducted a survey to find out what the community wants for M i rror Pond. They didn't even try to make it a scientific poll. So it was meaningless. The Bend City Council and the Bend Park & Recreation District then formed a committee that would make r ecommendations about Mirror Pond's future. The Mirror Pond committee tried to hold meetings in secret. But as The Bulletin pointed out to the committee, that violates Oregon law. The committee started over with open meetings. But the affinity for secrecy was reborn at the meetingon Wednesday. The committee members used secret ballots to determine who the three new citizen members of the committee would be. The ballots were tabulated and collected without ever making it publicly clear how members of the body voted. Members of a public committee using secret ballots to choose other committee members at a public meeting — that has to be a new standard for obscurity. If that is not enough secrecy for you, a subset of the committee met privately with Pacific Power. From what the subcommittee members said about the secret meeting, nothing much couldhappen. The subcommittee couldn't tell Pacific Power what the community wants.
The committee's plan is now to make a recommendation to the Bend City Council and the Bend park board aboutwhat the committee thinks should happen with Mirror Pond. Don Horton, the executive director of Bend park district, is drafting it. The draft should, at least, be posted publicly before the Mirror Pond committee's next meeting on Dec.2. Presumably, the Mirror Pond Committee will vote on it and send the recommendation to the Bend City Council and the Bend park board. Those entities will vote on what they think is the right option and send that back. Nobody brought up the possibility that the Bend City Council and the park board could recommend different things. Perhaps they assumed that the Mirror Pond process has been going so well, they would just get lucky. There are of course many issues that the community needs better answers to. We wouldn't blame Pacific Power if it wanted out of the dam, but what does it want to do? How stable is the dam? How much would it cost to repair the dam? How much would mitigation cost? Would the state allow the dam to remain if it were no longer used to generate power? Those are the questions the committee needs to get the best answers it can for the community. Then it s h ould pu t M i r r or Pond's future on the ballot. There should be related ballot measures that would pay for the options. No more secrecy.No more elaborate posturing. Let the voters decide. It's the perfect poll.
HEAR IN6
LOSS
vate suppliers, among them Pacific Power. Meanwhile, there are important issues that do affect nearly every community east of the Cascades. Small cities like Fossil, which is part of District 59, are losing population because, farming aside, there's little to draw people to them. Wheeler County, of which Fossil is the county seat, has a population of only about 1,400 people, and supplying even basic services to them is difficult at best. As is true anywhere in Oregon, taxes, how to raise them and how to spend them will always be important, as will such things as schools and health care. Those are the sorts of issues we'd liketo see Storkson address in the primary campaign, and we'd like to see him talk about the issues with cold, hard, provable facts. Voters in the 59th District, like voters across Oregon, deserve nothing less.
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Storkson needsto focus on facts, important issues tate Rep. John H u ffman, R-The Dalles, is being challenged for the second time in four years by Britt Storkson, also a Republican from The Dalles. For the sake of voters in the 59th District that Huffman represents, which includes Jefferson and a small bit of northern Deschutes counties, we're hoping for a more substantive campaign from Storkson than the last time the two men met. As was the case four years ago, Storkson is running because he continues to believe he has unfairly been denied a seat on the board of directors of the Wasco County Electric Cooperative. That he cannot prove his claim, he says, is proof of its validity. The law governing co-ops, he notes, does not require "free and fair" elections. While we're in no position to judge the fairness of co-op politics, we do know that they have little impact on most of the voters in the 59th District, who get their power from public utility districts or pri-
PANI|: ATTACK
Hear ye!, Hear ye! Councilors! Listen to Ed! Ed LeChapelle, of Bend, that is, who on this page on Oct. 27, wrote H just these 21 words: Why don't we figure out how to move Mirror Pond muck into that mine site on the new OSU-Cascades campus?" Anyone with the very slightest knowledge of construction costs knows that it costs at least two and a quarter times less to move dry — or somewhat dry — soils than it does to move underwater soils. Here is a real cost-saving opportunity. Grab it! U se this opportunity t o d r aw down the water level of Mirror Pond and excavate the problem materials using o r dinary l a nd-based construction equipment to return Mirror Pond to its decades-long attractiveness. These materials came down the river naturally, and they are suitable fill for many locations.
to sign up for a replacement policy through the Oregon Health Exchange, or shop the open market. My options through Cover Oregon are: A) Equivalent benefits to what I currently have at a substantially higher price ($300-plus per month
more),
or B) Reduced benefits at a price similar to what I pay now. Will I be entitled to a subsidy? Good question — it cannot be answered because the federal website and income verification is not working! So, Mr. President, tell me again why this is a good deal for my family and me? I am not wealthy (2012 taxable income was $58,700). Since 2010, I've been investing in building a technology company that has created seven full-time jobs. Your landmark legislation — which should help people like me — will cost money that I do not have. You and the members of Congress Dale E. Mccoig who determined that this healthBend care reform legislation, and the rollout timetable and mechanism, was in the "best interest of Americans" Sacrificial pawns in fit to exempt yourselves from botched health law rollout saw it. Why is that? Not good enough Mr. President, shame on you. My for the President and Congress but family is part of the 5 percent who good enough for the rest ofus? you consider to be sacrificial pawns Dave Edlund in your botched health-care rollout. Bend We have paid for individual health insurance since 2009 (we pay 20 to Don't letthe door... 25 percent of take-home in premiums, equivalent to my mortgage). That policy will be canceled Dec. I would like t o a ddress Mike 31. Now, I have a handful of weeks Benfield about who holds whom
hostage. You are correct about the 16 days. Seems to me that was and is nothing compared to the country being held hostage to Obamacare. Using where we are today (Nov. 8), it has been 39 days and counting; you are also right, there are many clowns in D.C., on both sides of the aisle, but you should look from the top down, as we have not only a clown but a liar and now the biggest excuse maker there ever was. Yes, there was a little pain, however very short-lived and for good reason. Where is the reason in what we are being subjected to now? Good job, Rep. Greg Walden. Keep up the good work, and those who don't like it ... well, don't let the door ...! Jlm Engels Bend
Timing terrible on spy story They say timing is everything! Well I think your timing was terrible regarding the front-page article about a former spy living among us! What a slap in the face to the veterans of this country, who we are celebrating and acknowledging this very weekend. Apparently, you have forgotten the sacrifices given in order that you may have freedom of speech, when and where you like. I guess the "coup" of the story, which romanticizes this person's behavior, outweighs the insults to the rest of us. If you needed to tell this story, you should have picked a different time. Karen and George Oldham Bend
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Driver cards for undocumented don't make roads safer By David Olen enate Bill 833, passed by the Oregon Legislature and signed into law on May I by Gov. John Kitzhaber will undermine Senate Bill 1080, legislation passed in 2008 that requires legal presence in the state to obtain an Oregon driver's license. Ever since the passage of SB 1080, the Oregon Department of M otor Vehicles has been required by Oregon law (House Bill 3624) to provide an annual report on the number of persons driving without licenses or insurance. In a report filed on Jan. I by DMV Administrator Tom McClellan, he stated: "Four years after implementing a legal presence requirement in Oregon, changes in driver licensing requirements have not had a major impact on the rate of unlicensed and uninsured driving." Translation: There is no current documentation available since the passage
S
of SB 1080 that more people legally or not legally present in the state are driving unlicensed and uninsured. Oregonians should realize by now there was no justification for the Legislature and governor to make SB 833 state law this year, allowing those without documentation to obtain access to apseudo-driver's licensecalled a driver card. Looking back to 2012: When Oregonians for I mmigration Reform, opponents to the issuance of driver's licenses to the undocumented, found out about proposed legislation that would change the legal presence requirement, OFIR asked to participate in what was called the "Governor's Driver License Task Force." After repeated requests to the governor's office asking to participate or attend Driver License Task Force meetings, according to OFIR, its leadership was told by the governor's state capital office staff "that staff knew nothing
IN MY VIEW about the existence of a Driver License Task Force." Not believing the Driver License Task Force didn't exist, OFIR leadership filed two public information requests addressed to the governor's office requesting the names of Task Force members and meetingminutes. The governor's legal counsel denied both public information requests. An appeal was filed and that appeal was rejected by the attorney general's office. Exclusion of public input continued even after SB 833 was introduced during the regular 2013 state legislative session. To avoid scrutiny or critiques of the legislation, pro-SB 833 legislators dominated, with their own testimony, most of the time they made available for public oral testimony on the legislation. Before hearing from citizens who had signed up to speak in opposition,
the Senate committee chair invited lengthy oral testimony from an alleged undocumented motheraccompanied by her small child, a political tactic known as "baby waving." It gets worse yet; to avoid further public scrutiny of SB 833, the senators and representatives controlling the legislative process moved the legislation from the Senate directly to the House floor for a debate and vote — side-stepping the normal procedure of hearings in both chambers. To open up the democratic process to citizens shunned by the pro-SB 833 cabal in the governor's office and state Legislature, State Reps. Kim Thatcher and Sal Esquivel, along with Richard LaMountain, vice president of OFIR, stepped forward and placed their names on Oregon referendum 301. The referendum campaign being successful would stop SB 833 from becoming state law on Jan. 1. With guidance from OFIR and the
Protect Oregon Driver Licenses Committee, Oregonians across the state worked together and gathered 70,973 r eferendum signatures that w e r e turned into the state elections office by the Oct. 4 deadline. On Oct. 18, after the first statistical check by state election officials of 1,000 referendum petition signees, election officials validated the signatures of 58,291 registered Oregon voters, more than the minimum number of signatures the referendum campaign needed to put SB 833 before the state's voters in November 2014. The 70,973 registered Oregon voters who signed the referendum 301 petition did their homework. These Oregonians understand there simply are no data to back up proponents' claims that making SB 833 a state law will make Oregon's roads any safer. — David Olen, of Salem, writes on immigration issues and foreign national crime.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
America um so he United States has ridden — and tamed — the wild global tiger since the end of World War II. The frantic ride has been dangerous, to us, but a boon to humanity. At the same time, America's leadership role has been misrepresented and misunderstood abroad and at home, including by some of our country's own leaders. Accordingly, our current president, Barack Obama, has decided to climb down from the tiger, with the certain consequence that it will run wild again. The crowning achievement of postwar American policy was the defeat of Soviet communism. After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, America then aimed at a "new world order." There was to be no place, at least in theory, for renegade dictators like Saddam Hussein or Slobodan Milosevic. After 9/II, the U.S. declared a "war on terror" and led an international effort to stop Osama bin Laden, al-Qaida and Islamist jihadists. Despite the occasional mishaps, setbacks and errant strategies, U.S. leadership n o n etheless e n sured worldwide free commerce, travel a nd c ommunications. W he n i t could, America promoted free-market economies and democracy in authoritarian states Our key allies — the United Kingdom and its former commonwealth, Europe, Japan, South Korea and Israel — were assured of our unwavering support and got rich. Neutrals and enemies alike assumed that it was as unwise to be on the wrong side of America as it was beneficial
t e t i er's
tions suffers terribly from the erratic nature of the supposedly pro-UN O bama administration. W e e x ceeded the resolutions of the UN on Libya; we never even sought them in Syria; and we are now undermining them over Iran. to be on friendly terms. Turkey, under i ncreasingly IsThe Obama administration ap- lamist Prime Minister Recep Tayyip parently has tired of the global order Ergodan, is closer to the Obama that American power created. The a dministration t h a n is Isr a e l , president seems determined that America's best friend in the Middle America should become unexcep- East. The Muslim B r otherhood's tional, and his five-year-long efforts Mohamed Morsi came to power in are now bearing fruit. The result is Egypt on assurances of American that no one knows where global vio- support — before being removed by lence will break out next, much less Egyptian generals for subverting the who will stop it. constitution. France, not th e U nited States, It is not clear to Japan, Taiwan, pushes for a tougher front against South Korea, or e ven A u stralia radical Iran, Islamism and WMD and New Zealand that they are still proliferation. Its socialist govern- firmly under the American defense ment is to the right of the United umbrella. China often seems to reStates. Germany is the more adult mind — and warn — them of just fiscal power, Japan the more realis- that reality. tic about Chinese aggression, Israel There are many r easons why and the Gulf states the more accu- America jumped off the tiger. Afrate in assessing Iranian nuclear ter five years of near record budget ambitions, and Russia the more de- deficits, we are struggling with the pendable problem-solver. highest level of national debt as a The superpower United States percentage of GDP than at any time chose to be led in Libya by much during the immediate postwar peweaker Britain and France. Syrian riod .That dismal fact is known to president Bashar al-Assad ignored both allies and enemies who expect serial American red lines. In r e- the U.S. military to limp homeward. sponse, Obama vowed to intervene Abroad too many states do not before vowing not to — and finally trust the word of an American presioutsourced influence to V ladimir dent. Obama has misled over BengPutin. That back step apparently hazi, flipped and flopped over Syria fulfilled the president's pre-election and Egypt, and deceived the Ameriopen-mic promise to Russia to be can people on the Affordable Care more flexible. Act. When the American secretary The prestige of the United Na- of state has to assure the world that
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
its proposed military action "will be unbelievably small" while the president is forced to explain that our military doesn't "do pinpricks," we appear hardly credible or formidable. Obama himself seems unable to fathom the fallout from the NSA's tapping of German chancellor Angela Merkel's cell phone, or from allowing Vladimir Putin to adjudicate the Syrian mess. It is unclear whether Obama has even appreciated the traditional U.S. role of world leadership. Or perhaps he feels America lacks either the moral assurance or material resources to continue to ride the global tiger. Obama rightly senses that Americans certainly seem tired after the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. We are reaching oil and gas independence from the Middle East and don't see it as central to our security. After the Arab Spring, and the rise and fall of dictators, Islamists and generals, things still stay mostly the same and beyond remedy by more American blood and treasure. America does not seem to have any strong preferences for our old allies,free markets or democracies. If Obama wanted to change America's role in the world, he instead has changed the world itself. Riding the tiger's back was always risky, but not as much as jumping off and allowing it to run wild. The world now wants someone to get back on — but is unsure about who, when, how and at what cost.
Los Angeles Times
I call it the swimming pool at the end of time. Roots were chopped, earth scraped, white pipes snaked like the insides of a rocket ship, rebar netted down before the concrete was poured and the tap turned on, filling the pool — which is in mybackyard — with water from mountain snowmelt via the Colorado River, the Central Arizona Project and fossil water from the local aquifer. If there's one thing a nature writer shouldn't do, it's fill a big hole with water in the arid Southwest. When Kathe suggested a pool for our tiny backyard, I hesitated. Even my stepmother, not exactly famous for her environmental views, objected. It would be a waste of the most precious resource in Arizona, akin to installing a snowmaker in Dubai. I considered voicing objections, but Kathe — who for y ears has missed the lakes of her Wisconsin childhood — really wanted a pool. And once into my first Tucson summer, which f e atured o ccasional stealthy swims at the pool of the nearby Arizona Inn, I reconsidered. The heat was astonishing, and the water — well, the water felt good. It helped when I remembered that another nature writer in town had a whopping big pool in her patch of desert. She said something like: "People back East are so critical of pools here. But they're a necessity, like trees in Vermont."
New York Times News Service
Then I found out that a university scientist I work with also has a pool. She told me, a few weeks after she met with the Dalai Lama to talk about global warming, that when the desert weather gets really toasty, she floats in her pool, looks at the stars and meditates. Private pools are mostly a new thing under the American sun, part of the post-World War II boom of suburban leisure, though perhaps the oldest known bathing pool dates from Bronze Age Pakistan. People in the desert love pools. They cool off the body and connect some to a sense of the sacred. The cult of the American backyard pool is, to historian Thomas A.P. van Leeuwen, less divinely inspired. He calls it "hydro-vulgarity." With an estimated 10 million pools in the United States, this vulgarity is big business. And many of those pools are in the arid West. Another historian, Evan Ward, speaks ofmod-
ern "mirage culture" in the American West, consisting of the non-native lawn, golf courses, fountains, artificial lakes and swimming pools. We bought our Tucson house from a native-plants landscape designer, so it is ringed with barrel cactus and desert marigold. No grass. We don't play golf, have no plans for Las Vegas-style fountains and w ouldn't build an artificial lake — other than our pool. Ever ready to privately grouse about h omeowners w i th lawns, Kathe and I have given in to one aspect of mirage culture. How soon before you catch us watching Esther Williams on Netflix? A 2007 Arizona Republic article puts the water cost of a pool in perspective: "Because of evaporation losses, a pool in the desert has to be virtually refilled every year, wasting enough potable water to supply an average household for a month or more." And that doesn't touch the electrical and chemical costs of filtration or the carbon footprint of building the thing. We talk of wind farms and bioregionalism, smart grids and phenology, sulfur aerosols and extreme weather, microbes per acre and, yes, carbon footprints. Let's talk about a hypocrisy footprint. What would that look like? Would it look like a hole in the ground with pumps and electrical lines in tubes? Like a liberal politician with two homes across one continent? A global warming activist who racks up frequent flier
make a recess appointment when the Senate said it wasn't in recess; of course courts objected. In the financial case, the court merely said that the Securities and Exchange Commission had to follow the law about responding to public comments on a regulation's costs and benefits before issuing it. As Adam White points out in the Weekly Standard, the court hasn't touched regulations that followed the law. One of the vacancies Democrats are trying to fill used to be held by John Roberts. After he became chief justice, Bush nominated the impeccably qualified Peter Keisler for the spot. The Democrats blocked him, and the seat has gone empty ever since. A reasonable case can be made against a minority party blocking judicial nominations, or for it. What can't reasonably be argued is that Democrats should be able to use the tactic to keep a judgeship open until they have the power to fill it with a liberal, at which point Republicans have to stand down. Republicans shouldn't accept these rules. On this issue, the president's agenda deserves to be frustrated. — Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg View columnist.
— Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New York Times.
— Victor Davis Hansonis a classicist and historianat the HooverInstitution, Stanford University.
miles like a touring rock star? Humans are a l most i n f initely flexible in how we adapt and justify. It's one of the things that makes us so capable of dealing with changing circumstances. Without these traits, our species would be long gone. It also means we indulge in hypocrisy. Thing is, we who try to do right by the world often do wrong by it, and consciously so. We juggle the personal calculus — carbon footprint on this side of the column, hypocrisy footprint on the other — and make the choices we do, choices we often can't defend. Guilt is a fine force for altering behavior, but only to a point. Doing your best means having done worse. The swimming pool will be a catalyst for some local eco-volunteering and maybe for a household gray-water system. (But Tucson wastewater helps recharge the city's Santa Cruz River) Would it help if I flush less? (We don't much already) Up my offsets? I ride my bike to work now. Am I justified? What would Wendell Berry say? Maybe I'll invite the literati over for a swim and see what they think. We'll talk about the end of the world, of the Holocene, drink bottles of organic pinot noir, laugh and, in conclusion, get up the next morning and do whatever it is we think we ought, or whatever it is, in fact, that we do. — Christopher Colzinos is the author,
most recently, of "Bodies, of the Holocene."
Illogical arguments cloud court of appeals fight By Ramesh Ponnuru
filled. Democrats replied that the courts, especially the D.C. Circuit, The fifth and sixth years of a presi- were underworked and that the Redency often end up being high noon publicans were trying to pack the for judicial politics. This time the first courts with like-minded judges. Now confrontation concerns the powerful the sides are reversed, and so are the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, the talking points. venue for many important regulatory As it happens, the Republicans issues and a training ground for fu- have the better of the current arture Supreme Court justices. gument. They aren't conducting a "blockade" that violates past norms. Senate Majority L eader Harry Reid says he intends to force a vote President Barack Obama's nominees this week on the nomination of Cor- are getting confirmed at a faster pace nelia Pillard to the court. Pillard's than Bush's were at the same point is one of three nominations Repub- in his presidency. One of Obama's licans are opposing. They say the nominees, Sri Srinivasan, was unanDemocrats are trying to pack the imously confirmed in May. court. The Democrats say they're just And the D.C. Circuit now has even trying to fill vacancies, and argue less work than it did when Demothat the Republicans' behavior is so crats were blocking nominees. Merabusive they'll restrict the filibuster if rick Garland, the court's chief judge it continues. and an appointee of President Bill Republicans should r e member Clinton, informed the Senate that what happened the last time we had the number of oral arguments per such a fight, and they shouldn't give active judge has fallen over the past in. decade. So have the number of writStarting in 2003, the Democratic ten decisions issued and appeals minority embarked on an unprec- taken. Sen. Chuck Grassley, an Iowa edented series of filibusters to stop Republican, says that one judge on President George W. Bush's appoint- the circuit wrote to him to argue that ments to appeals courts. Back then, "there wouldn't be enough work to Republicans said there was a crisis go around" if more were appointed. of judicial vacancies needing to be Grassley has introduced a bill that Bloombert, News
would shrink the circuit by three seats and urges the administration to fill vacancies in other circuits. I'll let you in on a little secret: Nobody on either side of this debate actually cares about how big the circuit's caseload is. What they care about is the court's ideological balance. Liberals say the D.C. Circuit has been making too many conservative rulings. It "has made decisions that have frustrated the president's agenda," complains Democratic legal activist Nan Aron. Jonathan Chait, of New York magazine, says today's D.C. Circuit has been "one of the right's most potent weapons during the Obama era." The court is actually balanced between Democratic and Republican appointees. In recent testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, C. Boyden Gray noted that the court has been reversing the Obama administration's regulatory actions at a lower rate than it did those of the Bush administration. Putting too much weight on such statistics is a mistake; the reasoning in the cases is more important. Yet when you look at the specifics, the Democratic indictment is even more offbase. Obama is the first president to
Why we need deal with Iran t goes without saying that the o nly near-term deal with I r an worth partially lifting sanctions for would be a deal that freezes all the key components of Iran's nuclear weapons development program, and the only deal worth lifting all sanctions for is one that verifiably restricts Iran's ability to breakout and build a nuclear bomb. But there is something else that goes without saying, but still needs to be said loudly: We, America, are not just hired lawyers negotiating a deal for Israel and the Sunni Gulf Arabs, which they alone get the final say on. We, America, have our own interests in not only seeing Iran's nuclear weapons capability curtailed, but in ending the 34-year-old Iran-U.S. Cold War, which has harmed our interests and those of our Israeli and Arab friends. Hence, we must not be reluctant about articulating and asserting our interests in the face of Israeli and Arab efforts to block a deal that we think would be good for us and them. America's interests today lie in an airtight interim nuclear deal with Iran that also opens the way for addressing a whole set of other issues between Washington and Tehran. Some of our allies don't share those "other" interests and believe the only acceptable outcome is bombing Iran's nuclear facilities and keeping Iran an isolated, weak, pariah state. They don't trust this Iranian regime — and not without reason. I don't begrudge their skepticism. Without pressure from Israel, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and the global sanctions on Iran they helped to spur, Iran would not be offering to scale back its nuclear program today. But that pressure was never meant to be an end itself. It was meant to bring Iran in from the cold, provided it verifiably relinquished the ability to breakout with a nuclear weapon. "Just because regional actors see diplomacy with Iran as a zero-sum game — vanquish or be vanquished — doesn't mean America should," said Karim Sadjadpour, the expert on Iran at the Carnegie Endowment. Why? Let's start with the fact that Iran has sizable influence over several of the United States' most critical national security concerns, including Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, terrorism, energy security, and nuclear proliferation. Whereas tension with Iran has served to exacerbate these issues, detente with Tehran could help ameliorate them. Iran played a vital role in helping us to defeat the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2001 and can help us get out without the Taliban completely taking over again. "Iran has at least as much at stake in a stable Iraq and a stable Afghanistan as we do — and as an immediate neighbor has a far greater ability to influence them, for good or ill," said Nader Mousavizadeh, the IranianAmerican co-founder of Macro Advisory Partners and a former top aide to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan. There is a struggle in Tehran today between those who want Iran to behave as a nation, looking out for its interests, and those who want it to continue behaving as a permanent revolution in a permanent struggle with the United States and its allies. What's at stake in the Geneva nuclear negotiations — in part — "is which Iranian foreign policy prevails," argued Mousavizadeh. A mutually beneficial deal there could open the way for cooperation on other fronts. Moreover, there is nothing that threatens the future of the Middle East today more than the sectarian rift between Sunni and Shiite Muslims. This rift is being used by President Bashar Assad of Syria, Hezbollah and some Arab leaders to distract their people from fundamental questions of economic growth, unemployment, corruption and political legitimacy. It is also being used to keep Iran isolated and unable to fully exploit its rich oil and gas reserves. All of this is whythe deal the Obama team is trying to forge now that begins to defuse Iran's nuclear capabilities, and tests whether more is possible, is fundamentally in the U.S. interest. "The prize of detente with Iran is critical to allowing the U.S. a sensiblybalanced future foreign policy that aligns interests with commitments, and allows us to rebuild at home at the same time," said Mousavizadeh.
Hypocrisy footprint shaped like a pool By Christopher CokInos
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
t
F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
Latest novel from Q.J. osecutor arcia Clark
ic ar
or si some in
"Furious Cool: Richard Pryor and the World That Made Him" by David Henry and Joe Henry (Algonquin Books, $25.95)
2005) a grand reading. He was a superlative American monologist and comic writer. "Furious Cool" maps Pryor's cultural heritage (Jerry Lewis and the Chitlin' Circuit, vaudeville organs and whorehouse pianos) and suggests how he transformed such influences into an unprecedented voice creating works in the genre — naturally enough for a black American — of absurdism. The Henrys acknowledge this with the book's epigraph, which comes courtesy of Antonin Artaud — a passionate lament about our living hell of artists "dallying with forms, instead of being like victims burnt at the stake, signaling through the flames." The authors link Pryor to Artaud's "Theatre of Cruelty," thus encouraging a view of Pryor's best work (which by any count includes "That N---'s Crazy," "... Is It Something I Said?,"
By Troy Patterson Slate
"Killer Ambition" by Marcia Clark (Mulholland Books, $26) By Oline H. Cogdill Sun Sentinel
The seamy side of Hollywood never fails to fascinate, and it delivers enough intrigue and general nastiness to make for a gripping plot. And few know what that underbelly of t i nsel town can entail as does Marcia Clark, who forever will be associated with being the prosecutor in the O.J. Simpson trial. But Clark also should be known as an author of compelling legal thrillers. In her third novel, Clark wraps a tight, unpredictable plot around a look at unbridled ambition, greed, fame and family vagaries. Clark keeps the brisk plot of "Killer Ambition" twisting from the mansions built on the movie industry to a tense trial. Los A n g eles d e puty district a t torney R a chel Knight's latest case involves the kidnapping of celebrity producer Russell Antonovich's teen daughter, Hayley. Neglected by her parents, the 16-year-old did pretty much what she wanted to, staying by herself at one of her father's houses, sneaking into n i ghtclubs and drinking. But she also had a generous side and was well-liked at he r p r ivate school. Although Russell paid the ransom, the outcome takes a fatal turn. But the prosecution will not have an easy time. Rachel appears to have a solid case, but the trial erupts into a media storm as ind ustry insiders and t h e public clearly support the popular suspect. Clark's storytelling skills take another leap with the impressive "Killer Ambition," keeping several plot threads in motion as she draws them to a realistic conclusion. Clark again proves she knows her way around the courtroom.
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"Is stand-up comedy l i terature?" David Henry and Joe Henry, a fraternal author t eam, ask this a s "Furious Cool: Richard Pryor and the World That Made Him" enters the home stretch. Their answer cites Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams, and follows a confident discussion about the resonance of Pryor's "Live on the Sunset Strip" with Dante's "Inferno," a discussion made alongside a daring critical interpretation of Eudora Welty. T hus, their answer to t h at question is an excited "Yes, of course." One is willing to go with them a long way in giving the work of Richard Pryor (1940-
Nearly 40 yearsafter 'The Great Santini,'
Pat Conroyfollows up "The Death of Santini: The Story of a Father and His Son"
morning to read the newspaper and chat. He turned into by Pat Conroy (Knopf the world's most a t tentive Doubleday Publishing Group, grandfather. "My daughters 352 pgs., $28.95) s imply adored h i m," C o nroy said. "I said, 'Dad, why don't you break one of their By Laurie Hertzel (Minneapotis) Star Tribune jaws so they can see what In hi s 1976 novel, " The y o u ' re really l ike?' and h e Great Santini," Pat said, Dont listen to C onroy spilled a l l him, girls, that boy t he beans t ha t a exaggerates.'" good son is n eve r nl r n A O I : H is f a t her s t i l l supposed to spill: gPN'f t N t had a mouth onhim, He w r ote a b out but, " I t h in k h e ' s his b r u ta l f a t h er, the first person I've his cowed mother, e ver heard of w h o his frightened and changed his entire abused siblings, and l ife based o n h i s son's novel," Conroy his own defiant and terrorized young self — all said. "The book gave Dad thinly disguised, of course, as a road map to not be like he fiction. was when we were growing Like Bull Meecham in the up. novel, Donald Conroy really The metamorphosis didn't was a Marine fighter pilot, re- happen i m m e diately, of ally did beat and terrorize his course, nor did Donald Conwife and kids, really did drink roy love "The Great Santini" to excess, really did swagger right off the bat. When he around and call himself "The first read it, he was furious. Great Santini." The book was Then he wept. Then he disa bestseller, and it was later appeared for a few days, and made into a blockbuster mov- his family feared that he had ie starring Robert Duvall as gone off to commit suicide. the volatile dad. Such drama! All this caused enormous But he came back, wrote turmoil in the extended Con- an open letter endorsing the roy family. "Nice going, Pat," book, slapped GREAT SANConroy's mother reportedly TINI license plates onto his said. "You stabbed your own car, and began showing up, f amily r i g h t t h r o ugh t h e pen in hand, at his son's book heart." events, where they s i gned His gr andparents, aunts books side by side. "He signed longer inscripand uncles were horrified at the airing of family secrets, tions than I would," Conroy and they picketed his book said. "He'd write, 'I hope you events, urging people to stay enjoy my son's work of ficaway. His siblings were divid- tion,' and he'd underline 'fiction' five or six t i mes, and ed; they agreed the depiction was accurate, but they didn't sign it, 'Ol' lovable, likable agree on whether it should Donald Conroy.'" have been written. Growing up i n a v o l atile And what o f h i s f a ther? home had a profound effect What was the reaction of the on all seven Conroy children. brutal an d s neering Great For much of his life, Conroy Santini? said, he has battled depresAh, well, guess what: He s ion, anxiety a t tacks a n d loved it. thoughts of s u icide. Other Conroy, 68, lives in Beau- siblings have also been deepfort, S.C., with his third wife, ly affected. His sister Carol, a novelist Cassandra King. He's distinguished poet, has batthe author of 11books — nov- tled mental illness and disels, memoirs and a cookbook associated herselffrom the - most of which are about that family. The youngest brother, brutal upbringing. His new Tom, "the prettiest child our memoir is "The Death of San- parents produced," suffered tini: The Story of a Father and numerous breakdowns and His Son," and Conroy recent- finally leapt to his death from ly took a break from signing a Columbia, S.C., building on books - 8,000 of them! - at the a summer night in 1994. "The Death of Santini" is Random House warehouse in Maryland to talk. filled w i t h c o n t r adictions: "Here's what I was trying to Conroy hates his father, he do," he said. "I certainly had loves his father; his father is a eaten Dad alive in the novel. brute, his father is a pussycat; But in this book, this memoir, Conroy himself is tough, but I wanted to write about Dad's he frequently breaks down change after the novel came and sobs — the whole book is out." both macho and sentimental. After publication of "The This dichotomy makes perGreat Santini" - perhaps be- fect sense to Conroy. "I have cause of "The Great Santini" f ound human nature a b i t - Conroy said, his father mel- contradictory in my living of it," he said. "Human life is inlowed. He started dropping by Conroy's apartment every credibly strange." •
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and "Jo Jo Dancer, Your Life Is Calling") as surrealism attacking societal sickness. But the Artaud quote takes on a special meaning in light of the death-defying, life-defining 1980 incident in which Pryor — during the most unpleasant of many mean and crazy drug binges — lit himself aflame. The Henrys are at once serious about reading Pryor rigorously and onto the game of riffing on his celebrity i mage an d c u ltural s ymbolic value, and so f o r them that crazed self-immolation suggests not just temporary psychosis but an instance of performance art. Which is a legitimate reading. The only way to construct narrative order from the ugly mess of Pryor's biography is to understand the freebasing
incident as existential protest art — as the act of a loudmouth voicing something unspeakable and of an author burning the text of his only book. This seems soft headed, somehow — People m agazine stuff, a tabloid fallacy of the Hollywood beat. But Richard Pryor's particular pathos is that this is the view of his life in which he's most legible. "Richard is a junkie first, a genius second," said Paul Mooney, Pryor's longtime friend and writer. This is not true of, say, Miles Davis, the comedian's patron, colleague and drug buddy. Reading Davis' life, you can grapple with a coherent self. Pryor's life was formless except where it was hollow. A girlfriend here describes him as a sure genius and "a very dead personality."
sai ?' Pryor's lack of inhibition in picking at the scabs of black American history encourages a comparison to his era's pop icons of black masculinity. He had designs on updating the snazziness of Sammy Davis Jr., but lacked the Candyland sweetness or the ability to be apolitical. He lacked the confidence and discipline to be a triumphant Ali and the smoothness to polish his raunch a la Redd Foxx. When we consider, also, Pryor's flagrant history of abusing women, it becomes clear that it's impossible to salvage him as a hero. "Richard's characters were wiser and m ore clear-eyed in their understanding of the world than he ever managed to be in navigating his own life," they write. "But when he was all alone in command of a bare stage with no obstacles, he could go with them anywhere and not stumble."
Rice returns toDallaswith tale of wolves, family andChristmastime "The Wolves of Midwinter" by Anne Rice (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group,
calls her werewolves. "When I secular humanist. "Your mind feels immortal. lived in New Orleans, we would have these gigantic Christmas It's so hard to grasp from mo400 pgs., $25.95) parties at St. Elizabeth's," an ment to moment that we're all orphanage she once owned going to die. And when people By Joy Tipping and converted into living quar- do grasp it, they never get over The Dallas Morning News ters, "and we'd have priests and it. I don't think Stan ever got Fans of novelist Anne nuns and 1,000 cousins, and over Michele's death," she said, Rice's last b o ok, 2 012's great sopranos would sing. referring to her late husband, best-selling "The Wolf Gift," I wanted to bring that to life who died in 2002, and their will no doubt be again." daughter, who died at age 6 in thrilled to l earn In a d d ition to 1972 of leukemia. t hat she's w r i tmelding families in As for what's in store for her " Midwinter," Ric e writing, Rice says she definitely ten a second in the series. Called also mingles yuletide sees at least one more Wolf Gift "The Wolves of traditions going back book, and another set in New Midwinter," it conto pagan times with Orleans. Television fans can tinues the story current C h r i stmas alsoget ready to meet some of of journalist and • rituals. Her charac- her characters: Her 2009 book nascent man-wolf ters participate in the "Angel Time" recently sold to Reuben Golding. ceremonies of many CBS for adaptation as a series. What m a y su r p r i se beliefs and see no conflict in some readers is that, at its doing that. "We all have to heart, "Midwinter" is not so come to religion on our own much about fangs and fur terms," she says. as about family and, of all Rice, best known for 1976's "Interview With the Vampire" things, Christmas. "I couldn't stop myself," and itssequels, says her fascishe says with a laugh from nation with the supernatural her home in Palm Desert, stems from one of mankind's Calif. "I just had to write a most urgent quests: to know big Christmas book. I've what happens after death. "I had it in me for a long time." would like to believe in someRice was born in New Or- thing after," says the 72-yearleans and spent part of her old, who was raised Catholic teen and young-adult years but now considers herself a in North Texas; she graduated from Richardson High School and briefly went to Texas Woman's University ' NQRTHWEsT in Denton. CROSSING She spent most of her adult life in San Francisco, Amard-mi,nni,ng N ew Orleans an d n o w Southern California, where neighborhood Serving Central Oregon her son, novelist Christofor over 22 years! on Bend's pher Rice, also lives. "All my big novels seem mestside. to have two centers — in 'The Witching Hour,' it was www.northwestcrossing.com 141 SE 3rd • Bend about witches, but it was also so much about family, the relationships, and how those two groups — t he witches and the familycome together," she says. "Here, it's w erewolves and family. It always comes back to family for me — natural family or one you create yourself — but it can't be either-or. It's got to be a mixture of those supernatural elements with the family life. I'm always writing a mixed bag, and that throws some people off, but that's the way it is." In " Midwinter," set i n Northern California, she tackles both how Reuben deals with having become yourr vvee'kly natio» a werewolf — not an easy entertainment, to Qd transition, she makes quite lifestyie rnagazine clear — and also how he handles the necessary pulling away from his still-human parents and especially his brother, who is a Catholic priest and is the only family member who knows Reuben's secret. Reuben's travails unfold w ithin the setting of a n enormous yuletide party being planned and executed by the leader of his pack of Morphenkinder, as Rice
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Trash talesoffer view of consumersociety
ome si eo ouis a n By Alexandra Lange
demption of an alcoholic failed poet who dissects his fall and shares his rue within a comic 400 pgs., $26) rant against the carrier that has stranded him at O'Hare. " Want N o t " b e g in s o n By Jeffrey Burke Bloomberg News Thanksgiving Day 2007, with Before you gird your loins Talmadge Bertrand, a young a nd stuff y o u r b i r d s f o r man searching the trash bags Thanksgiving, spend s ome outside a Manhattan food store highly rewarding hours with for sweet potatoes to accoma ll th e t r ash a n d pany the evening's waste in J o nathan meal. Nearby street Miles's new n ovel, people are f eeding "Want Not." bottle-redemption From three vastly machines for small ipNA'INAN MILES different U.S. housechange. Tal is trying holds emerge three to exist off the grid in seemingly unrelated an abandoned buildr stories that show no ing with M i cah, a sign of c o nnecting woman who follows for hundreds of pagthe creed of Free anes. Yet Miles floats so much ism (living as much as possible jetsam on the garbage theme on what she can get free). that even readers who prefer About 40 miles west in the sailing along on a linear plot New Jersey suburbs, a linguiswon't be at sea for long. ticsprofessor crams the deer he's just road-killed into the There's trash seen from a New Jersey commuter train, trunk of his murderous Jeep. He'll eat and share the meat thrown from a train in India and flung from a car by a 102- and think often of his obesity, year-old Pomo Indian who's his recently busted marriage supposed to revere the land. and a project to craft a warnPeople dig through trash for ing system for a New Mexico food and recycle it for money nuclear-waste depository. and seek ways to store it when Elsewhere in th e Garden their e x c ess o v e r whelms State, a housewife enters her them. rentedunit in the LifeSolutions It's classical: "We came, we 24-Hour SelfStorage to search saw, we trashed," one charac- through piles of saved cast-offs ter thinks. for a roasting pan. Her marIt's ecological: "We were riage is rocky, her daughter a gnawing the planet alive ... challenge, her husband, Dave, The e n t ir e m a s s-produce, a successful specialist in "junk mass-dispose system was like debt collection." some terrible endgame buffalo While Miles doesn't fully rehunt, a horrow-show of unsolve any of these narratives, picked carcasses." his writing is so compulsively And it's echoic: "Garbage creative you may be too exwas the only truthful thing hausted to miss neat wrapcivilization produced" rever- ups. Riffs, lists, digressions, berates more than hundred backstories constantly color pages later with: "Garbage outside the lines of each scant was the only pure crop that plot. It's a relief and a delight civilization produced." when a larger life-and-death Miles's first novel, "Dear motif behind ou r w a steful American A i r lines," voiced ways finds expression in tellthe desperate search for reing parallels and confluence.
The architect Louis Kahn, who died in 1974, is known for his spare, geometric institutional work like the Salk Institute for Biological Study W. 'it' Rf in the La Jolla section of San Diego and the Yale Center for British Art in New Haven. The 2003 documentary "My Architect," directed by his son, N athaniel K a hn, highlighted those buildings, along with Kahn's romantic life. The architect had three children, with three different women, two of whom were professional c o l l aborators. A new book, "The Houses of Louis Kahn" (Yale University Press, $65), provides an architectural bridge between the personal and the professional stories, focusing on the nine houses Kahn completed, and designs for two dozen more. The storytoldbythe authors, What was the genesis George H. Marcus and Wil• for the book? liam Whitaker, is one of warm • It started with a curatoclient relations, attention to the • rial seminar at the Unismallest domestic detail and versity of Pennsylvania on a philosophical search for the Louis Kahn's furniture and best arrangement of rooms to interiors. When Bill Whitacall home. Marcus, an adjunct ker, curator and collection assistant professor in the his- manager of t h e A r c h itectory of art at the University of tural Archives at Penn, and Pennsylvania, spoke about it I looked through the thouby phone late last month. (This sands of drawings in the Louinterview has been condensed is Kahn archive, we saw a toand edited.) tally different architect there.
Q•
"A Life of Barbara Stanwyck: Steel-True 1907-1940" by Victoria Wilson(Simon@. Schuster, 1,044 pgs., $40) By Janet Maslin New YortE Times News Service
Victoria Wilson's gargantuan biography of Barbara S tanwyck manages to f i l l 860 glittering pages of text w ith only the f irst half of Stanwyck's story. It ends after "Stella Dallas" (1937) but before "The Lady Eve" (1941) is even a twinkle in Preston Sturges' eye. And it ends with a cliffhanger, creating eager anticipation for Wilson's concluding volume. What kind of Parkinson's law, about how work expands to fill available time, can possibly have expanded the Stanwyck story to these proportions? One answer: "A Life of Barbara Stanwyck: Steel-True, 1907-1940" is not about the actress alone. It's bigger and s plashier. Stanwyck k n ew the most notable directors, writers, actors, studio chiefs and Broadway impresarios
rLiminatianS OnOtherneSS (McSweeney's,$24) By David L. Ulin Los Angeles Times
Hilton Als' "White Girls" is as much about white girls as the author's previous effort "The Women" was about femininity — which is to say quite a lot and not at all. Like its predecessor, "White Girls" is an inquiry into o t herness, and by extension, commonality, what keeps us apart and also what brings us close. "I see how we are all the same," Als writes in "Tristes Tropiques," the book's opening e ssay, "that none of u s ar e w h ite women or black men; rather, we're a series of mouths, and ... every mouth needs filling: with something wet or d r y, like love, or unfamiliar and savory, like love." These are the contradictions that Als, as a gay African American writer, has woven into the very center of his work. "White Girls" is a collection of essays that blurs the line between criticism, memoir, even fiction and n onfiction — 13 takes on, among others, Flannery O'Connor, Michael Jackson, Louise Brooks and Truman Capote, all of whom r epresent the figure of t h e "white girl" in actual or invented ways. It is Als' first book since "The Women" came out more than 15 years ago, and if you don't think this is momentous, think again. A staff writer for the New Yorker who also contributes to the Believer and the New York Review of Books, Als is one of the most consistently unpredictable and surprising essayists out there, an author who confounds our expectations virtually every time he writes. "Tristes Tropiques" is a case in point, a 90-page examination of his relationship with a straight man identified only as SL ("Sir or Lady"), a bond both platonic and romantic, a kind of doubling (Als' con-
he entered elementary school and the time he entered high school. When he married, he and wife, Esther, moved into his wife's family home. It was o nly sup posed to be for a s h ort time, bu t t hey li v e d there for 37 years.
Q
•What is the state of his •nine houses today? Steve Legato The • Three of the houses are New York Times • still owned by the original families, which is quite extraordinary. One, the Esherick House, has been on the market. That's one of the houses that people usually call the iconic Kahn house. It was built for a single woman, so it only has one bedroom, but th e a rchitectural historian Vincent Scully We focused on his statement described it as "a brimming that architecture begins with chalice of light." The Weiss the making of a room. House near Norristown, Pap is also on the market. The Fisher How does that apply to House has been preserved. • the house? The Fishers left it to the Na• W e b e lieve t hat t h e tional Trust for Historic Pres• whole search in his de- ervation, but they realized you sign ofhouses is for the idea of can't make a museum out of home. Kahn had never had a every house. There are certain home. He was an immigrant, restrictions put on the house he came from Estonia when so that it will be preserved for he was about 5, and he had 11 the future, but it was sold to a addresses between the time private client.
Q•
Stanwyckstory revealsloreof old Hollywood
'White Girls' essaysare cept) that leads to unexpected juxtapositions, personal and cultural. There are whispers of James Baldwin: Als' description of his father — "When I was your age, I didn't like my father to hug me either," the older man tells him — brings to mind "Notes of a Native Son." There is a sense of the futility of writing and also of its necessity. "What is writing but an I insisting on its p oint of v i ew," Al s writes, even as he acknowledges that "details ... diminish me, or rather, the whole s torytelling en t e r prise does, w o r ds limit things." This is the most essential contradiction, that once we begin to frame something, to createa story or a setofm eanings, we distance ourselves from the experience as it has been lived. And yet, for Als, the critic's posture is not a way of stepping back from life; it is a matter of engaging with the world. Most of the pieces in "White Girls" use their subjects as a starting point, but the genius has to do with where Als goes from there. Thus, Eminem (or Marshall Mathers, as Als refers to him, getting underneath his persona) is not just a white boy appropriating b lack m u sic, nor is appropriation a p articularly clarifying lens. "To say, as many critics have," Als writes in one of the book's many provocative passages, "that whites steal from blacks who originate important work in music or fashion is beside the point.... Unlike many of the whites he grew up with, Mathers never claimed whiteness and its privileges as his birthright because he didn't feel white and privileged." The focus is privilege, who has it and who will never have it, and what those without it a re supposed to do. As A l s notes of Capote, "It is hard to garner privilege when you begin with none — for those who have to reach for it, it remains perpetually out of reach."
George Marcus relaxes at his apartment in Philadelphia earlier this month. Marcus has written a book with William Whitaker on the work of architect Louis Kahn,"The Houses of Louis Kahn."
New YortE Times News Service
"Want Not" by Jonathan Miles (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt,
"White Girls" by Hilton Als
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of her day, and W ilson is interested in all of them. A remarkable array of still photographs present supporting characters like Florenz Ziegfeld, Annie O akley, Clark Gable and Z eppo Marx, all of whom have their p l aces in this account. An even more startling collection of movie ads an d p o s ters tells a riveting tale of sexism, even as they chronicle Stanwyck's career. And each of her two marriages, to the vaudeville maestro Frank Fay and the pretty-boy heartthrob Robert Taylor, could fill a book alone. So could the rough-andtumble childhood of R uby Stevens, the name by which Stanwyck is known for the first 80 pages of this biography. She was the last child of parents who had three much older daughters. When the mother died, the father could not raise his two youngest children, Malcolm and Ruby
(about 6and4years old). They lived with foster parents, and Ruby also traveled with her sister Millie, who became a vaudeville star. From an early age, Ruby had big ambition and a smart-talking style. The biggest hustler in these early p ages i s Lu c i l l e L eSueur, who s e tactics supposedly included s p i l l ing water on Jake Shubert's lap and then wiping it u p v ery attentively. Wilson sometimes appears to scramble small details, as with Lucille, who seems still to have been part of Ruby's crowd in 1924. Not long after, that crowd went to see the 1925 film "Sally, Irene and Mary," with a title role played by a familiar face. The friends seem not to know or c are that Lucille has morphed into Joan Crawford. At one cafe where she performed, Ruby was accosted by Al Jolson — who ripped
open her costume and held a burning cigar to her breast until she passed out, according Wilson. She has conducted many interviews for this book. The Jolson story is attributed to both a Stanwyck relative and Modern Screen. When a stirring Broadway performance in "The Noose" catapulted her to fame and to the Stanwyck stage name, her luck with men did not much improve. She fell for Fay, whose rapier wit, expert timing and "effeminate saunter" greatly influenced the young Jack Benny, George Burns and Milton Berle. Both of Stanwyck's husbands, especially Taylor, were said to have feminine qualities. But Wilson does not explore issues of personal sexuality. What she does tackle is the outrageous ways in w h i ch sexual stereotypes were marketed to pitch movies. In her early years of stardom, Stanwyck r o u t inely denounced Hollywood's superficial values and identified herself as a homebody.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013
Bike
Aut or o car etta noves uc s i eas rom ea ines
a car hits abike, it's like there's Smart people are working to a collective cultural impulse change all this. Protected bike Continued from F1 to say, "Oh, well, accidents lanes are popping up in some American cities are dense happen." I f y o u r 1 3 -year- cities, separated from car trafenough — and almost half of old daughter bikes to school fic. Several states have passed urban car trips short enough, tomorrow i n side a f r e shly Vulnerable User Laws placing under three miles — that cities painted bike lane, and a driver extra responsibility on drivers from Denver to Miami are put- runs a stop sign and kills her to avoid harming cyclists and ting in bike-share programs. and then says to the cop, "Gee, pedestrians. If there's one thing New York I so totally did not mean to do Nobody wants to kill a cyCity's incoming and departing that," that will most likely be clist, but the total absence of mayors agree on, it's the need good enough. consequence does little to fo"We do not know of a single cus the mind. These laws seek for more bike lanes. The American Medical As- case of a cyclist fatality in to correct that with penalties sociation endorses National which the driver was pros- soft enough for authorities to Bike to Work Day, and more ecuted, except for DUI or hit- be willing to use them, but sethan 850,000 people commute and-run," Leah Shahum, the vere enough to make drivers on a bicycle, according to the executive director of the San pay attention. In the Oregon League of A m erican BicyFrancisco Bicycle Coalition, version, that means a license clists. Nationwide, cycling is told me. suspension and a maximum the second most popular outLaws do f o rbid r e ckless fine of $12,500 or up to 200 door activity after running, driving, gross negligence and hours of community service supporting a $6.1 billion in- vehicular manslaughter. The and atraffic-safety course. dustry that sold 18.7 million p roblem, according t o R a y Cycling debates often break bikes last year. Thomas, a Portland attorney along predictable lines — ruBut the social and legal cul- who specializes in bike law, ral-suburban c o n servatives ture of the A merican road, is that "jurors identify with o pposed to spending a r e d not to mention the road itself, drivers." Convictions carry cent on bike safety, urban libhasn't caught up. Laws in most life-destroying penalties, up erals in favor. But cycling isn't states do give bicycles full ac- to six years in prison, Thomas sky diving. It's not just thrillcess to the road, but very few pointed out, and jurors "just seeking, or s e lf-indulgence. roads are designed to accom- think, well, I could make the It's a sensible response to a modatebicycles, and the speed same mistake. So they don't changing transportation enand mass differentials — bikes convict." vironment, with a clear social That's why police officers upside in terms ofbetter public sometimes slow traffic, only cyclists have much t o f e ar and prosecutors don't bother health, less traffic and lower from a crash — make sharing making arrests. Most cops emissions. The world is going the road difficult to absorb at spend their lives in cars, too, this way regardless, toward an emotional level. Nor does so that's where their sympa- ever denser cities and resultit help that many cyclists do thies lie. ing changes in law and infraignore traffic laws. Every time Take Sgt. Richard Ernst structure. But the most imporI drive my car through San of the San Francisco Police tant changes, with the potenFrancisco, I see cyclists runDepartment, who confronted tial to save the most lives, are ning stop signs like immortal, people holding a m emorial the ones we can make in our entitled fools. So I understand at the scene of Le Moullac's attitudes. the impulse to see cyclists as death. Parking his squad car So here's my proposal: Evrecreational risk takers who in the bike lane, forcing other ery time you get on a bike, deserve their fate. cyclists into the very traffic from this moment forward, But studies performed in that killed Le Moullac, Ernst obey the letter of the law in Arizona, Minnesota and Ha- berated those gathered, ac- every traffic exchange everywaii suggest that drivers are cording t o w i t n esses, and where to help drivers (and poat fault in more than half of insisted that Le Moullac had lice officers) view cyclists as cycling fatalities. And there is been at fault. Days earlier, the predictableusers of the road something undeniably screwy department had told cycling who deserve respect. And evabout a justice system that activists that it had been un- ery time you get behind the makes it de facto legal to kill able to find surveillance foot- wheel, remember that even the slightest inattention can people, even when it is clearly age of the crash. your fault, as long you're drivProvoked by Ernst, people maim or kill a human being ing a car and the victim is on at the memorial decided to enjoying a legitimate form of a bike and you're not obvilook for themselves. It took t ransportation. T ha t a l o n e ously drunk and don't flee the them all of 10 minutes to find will make the streets a little scene. When two cars crash, an auto shop nearby with a safer, although for now I 'm everybody agrees that one of camera that had footage of sticking to the basement and the two drivers may well be to the incident. The police even- maybe the occasional country blame; cops consider it their tually admitted that the truck road. job to gather evidence toward driver was at fault, but they — Daniel Duaneis a contributing that determination. But when still have not pressed charges. editor for Men's Journal.
By Hillel Itaiie
Patricia Cornwell, author of the Kay Scarpetta novels, says she shares her character's "very analytical mind."
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — P atricia Cornwell never runs out of ideas for her intrepid forensic investigator, Kay Scarpetta. "Cybercrime is now a reallybig deal, and so Scarpetta is inevitably going to get involved in crimes that have to do with the Internet, or the high technology with communications," the best-selling author said during a recent interview at the Manhattan offices of The Associated Press. "I also have to look at the types of weapons that are available now, because those might be used in one of her cases, whether an extremely high-tech firearm or it could be a verybizarre knife ofsome kind an assassin might use, or poison." Cornwell talked about invented crime, true crime and the facts and fiction behind her 21st S carpetta n ovel, "Dust," which has just been published. The novel is a characteristically tangled mystery that begins with the discovery of a young woman's body at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. On her body is a mysterious residue, dust that becomes colorfully visible under ultraviolet light and leads Scarpetta on a frightening hunt for the truth. The plot of "Dust" is imaginary, but the book includes some referencesto crimes in the headlines. The 2012 school shootings in Newtown, Conn., happened while Cornwell was working on "Dust," and when the author realized they took place near Scarpetta's fictional office, she made sure that Scarpetta volunteered to help on the crime scene. "Dust" also refers to the Wall Street scandals of recent years. The murder victim in "Dust" had a pending lawsuit against her former financial managers,
The Assoaated Press file photo
the kind of legal battle Cornwell learned firsthand after suing a financial firm and earlier this year being awarded nearly $51 million by a federal
jury. Cornwell describes Scarpetta as one of those obsessively curious souls who never relents on a case. Scarpetta shares Cornwell's "very analytical mind," the author explains. She likes to investigate the most well-traveled territory as if never seen before "because you might be startled by something that's in plain view that people have missed for 125 years." Cornwell wrote a controversial book in 2002 that purported to solve the mystery of Jack the Ripper's identity, and she follows modern stories closely, from the trial of Casey Anthony to the murder of Jon Benet Ramsey. She believes the Amanda Knox case in Italy is an example of a poorly investigated crime, rejecting speculation that British exchange student Meredith Kercher was killed as part of a wild sexual ritual. (Knox and then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito were jailed,then freed, and are currently being tried again.) "The case is not the elaborate scenario it's been spun to be. Instead, it's more a sexual predator who went after this woman and tried to rape her, or did. And it's a very violent assault," Cornwell says. "They've made a great big
deal about the victim's stomach contents and how they placed the death at a certain time because her food had not really digested all that much. It's like, 'Hello, when you go into flight or fight mode, your digestion either shuts down completely or at least it slows, because all the blood is going to your extremities so you can defend yourself or run.' And if somebody is being assaulted, their digestion quits. I've seen it in the morgue where somebody who ate 8-10 hours earlier — their food is exactly as they swallowed it." Cornwell also keeps up on crime fiction and r ecently reread Thomas Harris' "The Silence of the Lambs." She admires him as an innovator on the narrative use of forensic science and finds that the carnivorous Hannibal Lecter is less frightening to her than the recent perpetratorsof mass shootings in Newton; Aurora, Colo.; and elsewhere. "This is going to sound crazy," she says. "But when you've got a serial killer of a psychopath like a Hannibal Lectertype of monster, they usually at least have some feelings about their victims, even if it's an object they have a compulsion about, or whether it might even be a hatred, as opposed to total desensitization, where these people are almost like something in a video game, when you care nothing about anybody."
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Sending cash, 24 hrs. to cancel P eople g i ving p e t s the right to publish all your ad! checks, or credit inaway are advised to ads from The Bulletin f ormation may b e be selective about the newspaper onto The subjected to fraud. new owners. For the / Want to Buy or Rent Bulletin Internet webFor more i nformaprotection of the anisite. tion about an advermal, a personal visit to CASH for dressers, Chihuahua puppies, tea the home is recomtiser, you may call dead washers/dryers the O r e gon State cup, shots & dewormed mended. Sergog Ceoival Oregoooore l903 541-420-5640 $250. 541-420-4403 Attorney General's 240 Office Co n s umer Chihuahua/Yorkie mix, GREAT SOFA Sergog Ceoival Ovegoo oore l903 COWGIRL CASH 9'x28 oh x 37 od. Crafts 8 Hobbies Protection hotline at We buy Jewelry, Boots, 2 males, $150. Pomeranianpuppy, male 1-877-877-9392. 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Estate, Honest Artist 541-389-8430; kitten fos541-595-6967 Standard & Mini, $150 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 ter appts 541-815-7278 & up. 541-280-1537 241 www.craftcats.org. www.rightwayranch.wor Bicycles 8 dpress.com Dachshunds mini, AKC Accessories parents, long / shortRodent issues? F ree HANCOCK 8[ haired & double coat, adult barn/ shop cats, MOORE SOFA $350. 541-389-2517 f ixed, s h ots , so m e in salmon/coral che... ABIG Deal... friendly, some not. Will nille fabric with diaVENDORS WANTED Donate deposit bottles/ deliver. 541-389-8420 mond pattern. Tradifor Craft Fair & Bazaar BLU E NOS E P ITBULL cans to local all voluntional styling w ith Dec. 7; 9-5 & Dec. 8; PUPS, 4 FEMALES. teer, non-profit rescue, Siberian Husky, 7-yr old pillow back, Shots, Vet Check-up, for feral cat spay/ neuter. n eutered male, up t o loose 10-3. Booths: $30 seat 2005 Maverick ML7 for deta i l s. Cans for Cats trailer at date shots, free to good down-wrapped crafts / $50 commercial call cushions, roll arms, M ountain Bike, 1 5o home only. 541-280-6172 541-876-5155 or Bend Pet Express East, Accepting donations skirt, two matching frame (small). F ull Ask across from Costco; or f or Rummage S a l e . 541-977-1705. Siberian-Husky pups, pillows a n d ar m suspension, Maverick Mon-Fri at Smith AND Wolf-Husky pups, Donate items through for Brad or Suzanne donate c overs. L i k e n ew s hock, S RA M X O Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or at $400 ea. 541-977-7019 Dec. 6. Receipts availcondition. $ 1500. drivetrain & shifters, 9 CRAFT in Tumalo. Call able for donations. 541-526-1332 speed rear cassette, for pickup of large quanTACK 8 EQUIPMENT, 34-11, Avid Juicy disc tities, 541 - 389-8420. 15% Consignment www.craftcats.org brakes. Well t a ken Let us sell your tack & Table, beautiful bev care of. $950. eled glass, 130 rnd equip. For info call 541-788-6227. 541.548.6088 or kim- Blue Tick/Walker Cross DO YOU HAVE $69. 928-300-771 6 NOVARA hooded cylcling berly.griffithsoorSOMETHING TO Good Hunting ParWhoodle PuPPies, 14 Whirlpool Washer/Ken- jacket, women's Ig, pink & SELL egonstate.edu ents. Ready to start wks 2nd shots, wo'rmed, more Dryer, work well gray. Retail $99; sell $69, FOR $500 OR training today, $250 2 males left! Reduced to $100 both 541 410 7930 worn 1 x. 541-815-2737 LESS? 3rd Holiday Fair each. Been wormed $800 ea. 541-410-1581 Coming to Sisters at Non-commercial 242 healthy, & eating solid Yorkie/Maltese (1) and The Bulletin OutlawStationHShopadvertisers may food 541-81 5-6705 Exercise Equipment ping Center close to place an ad with Yorkie Chihuaha (1), recommends extra ' Ray's Food Place, Border Collie purebred our males, $200 ea. obo. l caution when pur"QUICK CASH Hwy 20. Open11/29 puppies, ready 12/15; will Cash. 541-546-7909. chasing products or • Nordic Trac A2350. thru 12/22, Mon. hold until Christmas with SPECIAL" services from out of I Presents beautifully. Yorkie mix males, (2), Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. deposit. Working parents, 1 week 3 lines 12 Hardly used. A the area. Sending 8 $150 each. 4 males available. $325. g k I oi Sun., 10-6. ~ perfect holiday gift. 541-771-2606 c ash, checks, o r 541-280-5217 Ad must include Vendors wanted! $350.00 l credit i n f o rmation 541-595-6967 price of single item 210 may be subjected to Cash and carry. Canary Males. of $500 or less, or 541-390-1713. l FRAUD. For more Furniture & Appliances Red colorbreds and Blue/ multiple items information about an 8 white gloster. 4 O $60whose total does advertiser, you may l Proform Crosswalk 380 Items for Free 7t/3' couch, white & blue $65 each. 541-548-7947 not exceed $500. fabric, clean, $175. I call the O r egon $ treadmill, like new, $275 State A ttor ney ' obo. 541-408-0846 Printer/fax/scanner Cat — grey tabby, young, 503-730-4529 Call Classifieds at copier, HP PSC950X1 2 yrs, neutered male. l G eneral's O f fi c e 541-385-5809 Consumer P r otec- • Sears Proform exercise works. 541-330-5683 Good w/humans, but www.bendbulletin.com A1 Washers&Dryers recumbant bike, $150. tion h o t line at l not w/other cats or $150 ea. Full war541-388-371 5 l 1-877-877-9392. Toshiba 27" TV Univ. dogs. Needs loving ranty. Free Del. Also remote, n ot f lat home, indoor/outdoor, German Shorthair AKC Weslo exercise bike in wanted, used W/D's s creen, g r eat p i c . & safe from coyotes. female pup , $ 5 0 0. good shape. Asking 541-280-7355
00
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T HE N E W
Y O R K T I M E S C R O S SW O R D
BYE-LINES By A l an OIschwang / E d i t ed by Wi ll S hortz
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5 3 Opportun i t i e s , m etaphorica l l y
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1 03 Home of B a n f f National Park
1 5 One of the v o n T rapp girl s
7 Just says no
5 5 Trig r a t i o
104 Animal h o u se
1 4 Cremona cr a f t w o r k
5 9 Old camera setti n g s , for shor t
105 2004 Chevy d e but 107 " can't"
1 6 Do some banki n g , say
61 Add (up)
108 Beefeaters, e.g. )09 Red Skenon
1 8 Holy sm o k e
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22 Wise guy
62 Fran vois Truffaut's field
1 12 Record o f t h e Y e a r
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23 T he Lone Ran g e r
6 3 Sweet-t a l k
25 Phill ip , e.g., in Disney's " Sl eeping
64 P orky Pig
I Former B e l g i a n n ational a i r l i n e
2 0 Origami st a p l e s 2 1 1993 5x p l a t i n u m N irvana al b u m
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1 14 Rays' di v .
3 4 Mosey al o n g
27 Kemo Ranger)
7I W hen d o u b l ed, on e o f the Tel e t u b b i e s
115 Luna' s c o u n t e r Part
36 "Beowulf" quaff 3 8 Jesse and Leo of T V sitcoms 4 1 Poky s o r t s
2 8 Mov e a m u s c l e ?
7 2 "N o w ! "
2 9 No l o n ge r i n
7 3 "A u g u s t :
1 17 Potenti a l s weethear t s
3 4 Inf u s in g w i t h a s o d a
maker
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7 6 Mi m i c r y
2 Massenet op era based
o n Greek my t h
79 G eorge B u r n s
3 Bears' home in T e x a s 4 2005 D r am a P u l i t z e r
3 8 Strike ca l l e r s
8 3 Genus of sm al l rodents
3 9 Massachusetts m o t t o
8 6 Items somet i m e s
5 Costner ro l e
f inalist W i l l
sniffed at a supermarket
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7 4 Blac k H i l l s n a t i v e
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9 2 Voll ey b al l v e n u e
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5 8 Company that o w n s Gerber
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98 Something you want t o come dow n f r o m quickly
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For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
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P ulitzer w i n n e r f o r
Drama)
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1 16 Auto steeri n g system components
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C ounty" ( 2 0 0 8
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enemy
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hands
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Beauty"
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G rammy n o m i n e e f or " L o se Yo urself "
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s llppo r t
8 2 Extreme poi n t 8 3 Sights no t t o b e
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believed
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8 4 Poem that e n d s ,
76 Lace's end 7 7 Vit t l e s
6 2 Groups of st r i n g s , maybe
8 0 Possible an swer t o "Is t hat y o u ? "
6 3 Sword f i g h t s o u n d s
81 Apple pr o d uct
1 00 Nobel is t w r i t e r
Andric
101 Go by bik e 1 04 Beginning of s o m e temple nam es
" This ghoul -
9 4 Bit o f f i e l d s p o r t equipment
haunted woodl and
9 5 Li f t s
1 06 Preceder of " d i " o r " da" in a B e a t l e s
of Weir"
9 7 Where to f i n d " books in t h e running br o o k s ," per Shakespeare
1 09 Invoice f i g .
98 Star, maybe
I II"
8 5 What a j u dge mi g h t
{ 10 I ayered coi f s
91 Thomas Jefferson or Jimmy Carter, once
d o during a heari n g 8 9 "A S e n t i m e n t a l
J ourney" au t h o r
song 1 10 Since I / I
Sy l ph id e s "
(ballet)
9 9 Indian mel o d i e s
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
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PRIVATE PARTY RATES
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Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500 in total merchandise
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A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW OVER '500 in total merchandise MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 PREPAYMENT as well as any 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since19IB *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Garage Sale Special Oregon 97702 (call for commercial line ad rates) ~VISA 4linesfor4 days . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00
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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central Oregon MarketplaceeachTuesday.
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Guns, Hunting tk Fishing
TV, Stereo tk Video
Misc. Items •
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269
Commercial/Office Equipment tk Fixtures
Gardening Supplies tk Equipment
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Est a te Sales
Sales Northeast Bend
Hay, Grain tk Feed
D irecTV — Over 1 4 0 Baby Crib, convertible How to avoid scam Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of channels only $29.99 to toddler/full sz bed, ** FREE ** and fraud attempts 2-drawer metal file cabiFor newspaper a month. Call Now! $25. 541-923-6449 everything in av'Beaware of interna- nef w/keys, $25. Call/text Garage Sale Kit Triple savings! Buying Diamonds delivery, call the The Bulletin's daily Place an ad in The tional fraud. Deal lo- 541-350-1555. $636.00 in Savings, Circulation Dept. at garage and yard sale Bulletin for your gacally whenever pos/Gotd for Cash 265 Free upgrade to Ge541-385-5800 section. From clothes rage sale and resible. FNH 40 cal. wtih (3) To place an ad, call nie & 2013 NFL Sun- Saxon's Fine Jewelers av'Watch for buyers to collectibles, from Building Materials ceive a Garage Sale 541-389-6655 14-rnd clips, M6 tactical day ticket free!! Start 541-385-5809 housewares to hardKit FREE! who offer more than laser sight, new condi- saving today! Just bought a new boat? or email ware, classified is REDMOND Habitat your asking price and Iion, $800. 541-255-9705 classuied@bendbulletm com Sell your old one in the 1-800-259-5140 always the first stop for RESTORE KIT INCLUDES: classifieds! Ask about our who ask to have cost-conscious (PNDC) • 4 Garage Sale Signs Building Supply Resale Leupold Vari-X II Sx9 money wired or Super Seller rates! consumers. And if • $2.00 Off Coupon To sereng cenvuoreganenre 1903 Quality at scope, nice c o n d,DISH T V handed back to them. Ret a i ler. 541-385-5809 you're planning your use Toward Your LOW PRICES $185. 541-647-2441 Fake cashier checks Starting at Next Ad own garage or yard BUYING 1242 S. Hwy 97 and money orders Prompt Delivery • 10 Tips For "Garage Mossberg 930 JM Pro, $19.99/month (for 12 Lionel/American Flyer sale, look to the clas541-548-1406 are common. Rock, Sand & Gravel Sale Success!" Tactical, 24", as new, mos.) & High Speed sifieds to bring in the trains, accessories. Open to the public. av'Never give out perI nternet s tarting a t Multiple Colors, Sizes $795. 541-647-7894 541-408-2191. buyers. You won't find sonal financial inforInstant Landscaping Co. $14.95/month (where Steel Building a better place Ruger .22 single six flat 541-389-9663 PICK UP YOUR available.) SAVE! Ask BUYING & SE LLING mation. Allocated Bargains. for bargains! gate Ser ¹798. $1100. GARAGE SALE KIT at About SAME DAY In- All gold jewelry, silver av'Trustyour instincts 40'x60' on up. Call Classifieds: Sako Mdl 995 .338 w/ 1777 SW Chandler stallation! CALL Now! and gold coins, bars, and be wary of 270 We do deals. 541-385-5809 or rings, $950. rounds, wedding sets, 1-800-308-1563 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 someone using an www.gosteelbuildings.com Losttk Found email 541-447-4101 class rings, sterling sil(PNDC) escrow service or Source¹ 18X classdled@bendbulletln.com coin collect, vinagent to pick up your 541-227-6921 Wanted: Collector seeks Headphones, iFrogz by ver, Lost small brown metal Iage watches, denfal merchandise. high quality fishing items Vertex, silver/white, $20. gold. Bill suitcase, containing car Fl e ming, 266 & upscale bamboo fly Call/text 541-350-1555 jack & other parls, may541-382-9419. Heating tk Stoves rods. Call 541-B78-5753, be downtown near JackJust bought a new boat? or 503-351-2746 Grill, Saf Ocf. 29. SAVE on Cable TV-InLittle G r ee n c a r petNapoleon 2100 wood- alope Reward! 541-389-7329 ternet-Digital Phone- Sell your old one in the shampooer, p e rfect stove, new, w/pedestal, Satellite. You've Got classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! for apt. or RV, $79 $1050. Whitfield WP4 Sporting Goods A C hoice! O ptions 541-385-5809 obo 5 41- 330-9070 Quest p e llet s t o ve, from ALL major ser- Misc. Men's boots, Buffalo, like $550. 541-815-2406 vice providers. Call us Cemetery plot at th" tops, sz 9E, new, 12 Snow shoes with poles, to learn more! CALL Regency small gas fireTumalo cemetery. Today. 888-757-5943. $199. 541-388-9270 Find them in Guide Pro V , Bx21, place blk, model¹ C34A bargain at $450. (PNDC) $40. 541-317-5028 Older Necchi Super Nova NG3, used for 1 yr ask- Missing: Chihuahua 541-848-7436 The Bulletin automatic sewing ma- ing $1500 OBO Pictures since 8/2 in Crooked 255 Hay, Grain tk Feedg Classifieds! c hine i n c a binet w / available. (541) 647-4106 River Ranch. Male, 8 Computers E clipse Model B L E 1 yrs old, about 6 lbs. First quality Orchard/Tim267 serger, all attachments & There has been a ofhy/Blue Grass mixed T HE B U LLETIN r e Fuel tk Wood many extras. $300 obo. sighting of him with a hay, no rain, barn stored, quires computer ad541-548-0913 man in his late 50's $250/Ion. Patterson Ranch vertisers with multiple 1 cord dry, split Juniper, with black hair, musSisters, 541-549-3831 *REDUCE YOUR ad schedules orthose $200/cord. Multi-cord Iache & glasses in CABLE BILL! Get an discounts, & sA cords selling multiple sysC RR. $5000 c a s h All-Digital Sat e l lite Classic Stallion temsl software, to disavailable. Immediate reward, no questions system installed for delivery! Boots close the name of the 541-408-6193 asked. 541-825-6629 FREE and programLadies size 7sA, business or the term or 503-805-3833 ming s t a rting at A-1 DRY JUNIPER "dealer" in their ads. seldom worn, 14 carrot white gold $24.99/mo. FR E E $185 split, or $165 rnds "AD RUNS Paid $1100; Private party advertisladies wedding band HD/DVR upgrade for multi-cord discount, deliv. selling for $290. ers are d efined as with a bright polish new callers, SO CALL Call 541-977-4500 541-480-11 99 those who sell one finish, 1.66 c a rrot NOW (877)366-4508. computer. REMEMBER: If you diamond Hearts and All Year Dependable (PNDC) have lost an animal, GENERATE SOME arrows round c ut, Firewood: Seasoned 257 don't forget to check The Bulletin Offers Sl -1 Clarity, F color. EXCITEMENT Lodgepole, Split, Del. Free Private PartyAda Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 The Humane Society Musical Instruments IN YOUR Appraised at • 3 lines — 3 days Bend $15,000. Very NEIGBORHOOD. for $365. Cash, Check 541-382-3537 Plan a garage sale and • Private Party Only unique piece. Ask- TK Obrien's Lapharp, or Credit Card OK. like new, case, $49 don't forget to adver- • Total of items adver- 541-420-3484. Redmond ing $9500. 928-300-7716 tised must equal $200 541-923-0882 541-281-7815 tise in classified! or Less LODGEPOLE PINE Pi 541-385-5809. Violin/fiddle stand, FOR DETAILS or to Cut, split & delivered, 541-447-717e folding like new, $30. High Chair, hard plastic, $200/cord PLACE AN AD, or Craft Cats 541-330-9070 $20. Hot Tubs tk Spas Call 541-385-5809 (delivery included) 541-389-8420. 541-923-6449 541-604-1 925 Fax 541-385-5802 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809
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• • I s o ~ o~ ~ ~ UNTIL SOLD!
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BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Advertise V A CATION comprehensive listing of classified advertising... SPECIALS to 3 m i llion P acific N o rth- real estate Io automotive, westerners! 29 daily merchandise Io sporting newspapers, six goods. Bulletin Classifieds states. 25-word clas- appear every day in the print or on line. sified $540 for a 3-day a d. Cal l (916) Call 541-385-5809 2 88-6019 o r v is i t www.bendbulletin.com www.pnna.com for the Pacific Nort h west The Bulletin Daily Con n ection. Ssniaa CsaeslOnaeasia« tasa (PNDC) Travel/Tickets
Northwest Spa Hot Tub, seats 8 people, has cover, $400 or best offer. You haul! 541-385-0454
I TV, Stereo tk Video
50" Samsung rear pro- SIX DAY VACATION in jection TV.DVD player Orlando, Flor i da! $100. 541-788-4229 Regularly $1,175.00. Yours today for only Bose Wave Radio $389.00! You SAVE w/remofe, $90. 435-669-5013 (Prineville) 67 p ercent. P L US One-week car rental Console 27" TV o a k, included. Call for deg ood p i cture, $ 7 5 tails. 1-800-712-4838. cash. 541-389-8609
(PNDC)
Home Security System 2GIG
Brand new installed by AbbaJay includes 2 hour installation and one year basic security service. $375. (Valued at $850) 541-382-3479
Wall weaving from EcuaPine & Juniper Split dor, 17"x20" ready Io hang, $15. 541-382-6379 D E LIVERY Wall weaving from Ecua- PROMPT 541-389-9663 dor, 34"x35" ready Io hang, $30. 541-382-6379 269 Wanted- pa ying cash for Hi-fi audio & stu- Gardening Supplies dio equip. Mclntosh, tk Equipment J BL, Maranfz, D y naco, Heathkit, SanBarkTurfSoil.com sui, Carver, NAD, etc. •
Call 541-261-1808
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Wilson Electronics cellphone booster, $110. 435-669-5013 (Prineville) Women's shoes, flats, var. colors. 9-9sA narrow. 541-312-2951
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Estate Sales
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Exquisite Estate Sale! This will be an extremely large sale! 2 e s t ates combined: 1 fr o ma beautiful 7-bdrm vaca(LAIUkEIJBo(2ILKI Iion home af the RunTwo dark oak night ning Y Ranch in Klamafh stands and matching Falls OR, AND an entire head boards condition: ReplaceThatold tired Bedroomsetyou got fromyour Parents! household from CaliforNo scratches. VerY nia. 4-day sale, Thurssturdy. Was $1200 new, Sat, 10-6; Sun 12 noononeringfor only • Under $500 $29 5 af the Bend Factory $550 OBO PROMPT D E LIVERY • $500 to $99 9 $39 Stores, 61334 S. Hwy 541-000-000 541-389-9663 97, in Bend. Items in• $1000 to $2499 $49 clude custom dining sef • $2500 and over $59 Have Gravel, w/seafing for 12, pool Will Travel! table, game table, foosIncludes up Io 40 words of lext, 2" in lenglh, with 11 Cinders, topsoil, fill ball table, baby Grand T hC BII IC I tm bord er, full colorphoto, bold headline andprice. Sesvlne Central Oregon since Sela material, efc. Driveway & piano, 7 beds, dressers, • The Bulletin, • The Central OregonNickel Ads road work, excavation & couches, outdoor furni54 'I 385 58Q9 septic systems. Iure, lamps, nighfsfands, • Central Oregon Marketplace e bendbulletin.com Some restrictions apply Abbas Construction and so much more! CCB¹78840 See pics at Private partymerchandiseonly - excludespetsI livestock,autos,Rys,motorcycles, boats,airplanes,andgarage solecategories. CalI 541-548-6812 farmhouseestatesales.com
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013 G3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
THE NEWYORKTIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLEANSWER S C H U S S
A R I A N E
B A Y L O R
E N A N E S 0 S I L S A B B N O U M L E S S B A L C D O O S T O H T H T A B S G E O S A Y G M E L S S A T A I L E R T A R D S N E M E N E
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E S I S N U T E E R A W F L E A C I D L I A A T I N Y I S S D O C I N T H A T H O M O E R I O D N I N S P E F O B A D B A R N N D M A A G E N I E R O
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A S P E R S E S
M A R T A
A V I A T E
T A N K I N G
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
I S N T Planning Directorl C E Applications are beI ing accepted for the ~ E N J position of Planning J N G Director. For more S E ( details and a job de- ( I scription, please visit ~ E L our w e b site at
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Cut y ou r S T UDENTA Classified ad is an LOAN payments in EASY W A Y TO HALF or more Even if REACH over 3 million Late or in Default. Get Pacific NorthwesternGrowing d e a lership caution when purRelief FAST. Much ers. $54 0 /25-word seeking salespeople chasing products or I LOWER p a yments. c lassified ad i n 2 9 looking for a perfor- services from out of I Call Student Hotline daily newspapers for mance-based pay 855-747-7784 3-days. Call the Paplan, potential com- c ash, c hecks, o r cific Northwest Daily (PNDC) I oans & Mortgages missions of up to 35% F D f credit i n f o rmation Connection (916) equaling $1 0 0 ,000 2 88-6019 o r em a i l www.cityofprineville. may be subjected to > WARNING LOCAL MONEyrWe buy T H E O E D plus, retirement plan, com. Your applicaFRAUD. > The Bulletin recomsecured trust deeds & elizabeth Ocnpa.com vacation, and a I For more informaE A P R C O T A N f tion and r e sume' paid mends you use caunote,some hard money for more info (PNDC) competitive m e dical f an adverloans. Call Pat Kelley Extreme Value Adverbe submitted ~ benefit tion when you propac k a ge. tion about A S A T C A J 0 L E I may o nline also at o u r you may call f 541-382-3099 ext.13. vide personal tising! 29 Daily newsL ooking for a t e a m f tiser, the Oregon S t ate • T H T H L F O L K S information to compapapers $540/25-word player with a positive Attorney General's I nie s offering loans or 573 c lassified 3-d a y s. attitude, t o o p e rate R E H A S T A T Consumer g I Office credit, especially with energy and to be protection hotline at > Business Opportunities Reach 3 million Pathose asking for adO S A T N G E L L cific Northwesterners. customer service orivance loan fees or WARNING The Bulletin For more information BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS ented. Will p r ovidef 1-877-877-9392. f companies O G R A C I E from out of -te pulletitl training. Search the area's most recommends that you call (916) 288-6019 or „,...„„'.„.„„,„..„.„,J• state. If you have Send resume' to: MU S O S U comprehensive listing of investigate every email: concerns or quesclassified advertising... rv4fun2001 © ahoo.com phase of investment elizabeth Ocnpa.com B P EACH I L E T tions, we suggest you or apply in person at real estate to automotive, opportunities, e s pe- for the Pacific Northconsult your attorney TRUCK DRIVER Big Country RV R A T S P X E R O merchandise to sporting c ially t h os e fr o m west Daily Connecor call CONSUMER Long term full time 63500 N Hwy 97 goods. Bulletin Classifieds out-of-state or offered tion. (PNDC) HOTLINE, A L B E O NO I work. CDL needed; Bend, OR 97701 appear every day in the by a p e rson doing Mobile Knife Sharpen1-877-877-9392. doubles endorsement print or on line. business out of a lo- ingbusiness for sale. InG U A A D B L E S S & good driving record BANK TURNED YOU BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS cal motel or hotel. In- cludesvan, equipment, Call 541-385-5809 required. Local haul; E M I M A L E A S T www.bendbulletin.com DOWN? private part vestment of f e rings inventory & training, Search the area's most homeevery day! Truck wiii ioan on real esbe r e gistered $5000. 503-860-2885 S E L T L A S S E S comprehensive listing oi leaves & returns to Ma- tate equit C redit, no must with the Oregon DeScrving CentralOregon sinre 1%8 classified advertising... problem, good equity partment of Finance. Call a Pro 541-546-6489or PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 real estate Io automotive, is all you need Call We suggest you conROOFERS 541-419-1125. Whether you need a Oregon Land M ort merchandise Io sporting sult your attorney or with experience, gage 541-388-4200. call CONS U M ER fence fixed, hedges needed. goods. Bulletin Classifieds HOTLINE, Call River Roofing, trimmed or a house appear every day Inthe Press Operator 541-31 6-7663 1-503-378-4320, print or on line. built, you'll find The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. C an be found on these pages : seeking a night time press operator. We are part professional help in Call 541-385-5809 What are you www.bendbulletjn.com of Western Communications, Inc. which is a People Lookfor Information The Bulletin's "Call a looking for? small, family owned group consisting of 7 newsEMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS About Products and Service Professional" papers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our 410 - Private Instruction 507 - RealEstate Contracts You'll find it in ideal candidate must be able to l earn our Services Every Day through Directory Seniny Centni Oregonsince 58 421 - Schools and Training 514 - Insurance equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style The Bulletin Class//iads The Bulletin Classifieds 541-385-5809 454- Looking for Employment 528 - Loans and Mortgages is a requirement for our 3 ~/2 tower KBA press. In Sales Recruiter 470 - Domestic 8 In-Home Positions 543 - Stocks and Bonds Local Exec. recruiting addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we 476 - Employment Opportunities 558 - Business Investments 541-385-5809 firm w/ nat'I clientele have numerous commercial print clients as well. ores o is looking for a highly In addition to a competitive wage and benefit 486 - Independent Positions 573 - Business Opportunities motivated i n dividual program, we also provide potential opportunity 8 RV Technician Z DESCHUTES COUNTY o RV dealership seeks w/sales exp. to join for advancement. 476 476 service t e chnicians. our team. Candidate If you provide dependability combined with a CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Employment Employment L ooking for a t e a m must h av e s t r ong positive attitude and are a team player, we i lpII~ K i s Opportunities Opportunities player with a positive communication skills would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable attitude t o op e rate & an entrepreneurial work environment that provides a great place to BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST IPARTS MANAGER with energy and to be spirit. If interested in live and raise a family, let us hear from you. OPERATIONS/ Growing dealership has customer oriented. RV a career t hat c a n Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at Case Manager, Child & Family Program. CLIENT immediate opening for & Camper experience generate income and anelsonOwescom a ers.com with your comSERVICE full time experienced required. Competitive a re willing to w o r k piete resume, references and salary history/re- Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, Parts Manager who pay plus, retirement hard for high rewards, quirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is 11/24/1 3. Growing Bend-based will share our complan, paid v acation send resume w/cover required prior to employment. EOE to NES, 476 investment adviser mitment to our cusand medical benefit letter nes@nes-llc.com. Full office looking for an tomers. Will train the package. S end reBEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST IIEmployment Sal. + Comm. + Ben. operations/client r ight person. C o m - sume to: Opportunities OlderAdult. Full-time POSitiOn. Deadline: s ervice per s o n. petitive pay plus, Rerv4funO ahoo.com Prior bro k erage/ tirement Plan, P a id or apply in person at USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Pressroom THURSDAY, 11/21/1 3. investment adviser Vacation and Medical Big Country RV Accounting Night Supervisor Door-to-door selling with operations e x periBenefit Pack a ge. 63500 N Hwy 97 Growing CPA firm The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orence and financial Come find out why we Bend, OR 97701 BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II seeks a CPA or CPA fast results! It's the easiest egon, is seeking a night time press superviknowledge preare one of the best Candidate with 2 to way in the world to sell. sor. We are part of Western Communications, Just bought a new boat? — Access Team. Full-time position. f erred. M u s t b e : p laces to w o r k i n Sell your old one in the 5 years public acInc. which is a small, family owned group conCentral Oregon. counting experience. proficient i n MS classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin Classified sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH Please visit Office, tech savvy, Email your resume to: Super Seller rates! and two in California. Our ideal candidate will 541-385-5809 organized, selfRV4FUN2001 www.bendcpa.com/ 541-385-5809 manage a small crew of three and must be FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON jobs for application starter, team player, @YAHOO.COM able t o l e ar n o u r e q u ipment/processes information. able to work under or apply in person at MONDAY, 12/02/1 3. Banking quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for pressure, and have BIG COUNTRY RV our 3~/2 tower KBA press. Prior management/ great written & ver63500 N Hwy 97, leadership experience preferred. In addition to Add your web address CLINICAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS bal communication Bend, OR 97701 our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuto your ad and reads kills. Start i ng merous commercial print clients as well. BeANALYST —Behavioral Health Division. ers on The Bulletin's $36,000 plus benCredit Union USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! sides a competitive wage and benefit proweb site, www.bendefits. Please email Two full-time positions. Deadline: OPEN gram, we also provide potential opportunity for Department Coordinator bulletin.com, will be your r e s ume to Door-to-door selling with advancement. Members Financial Services able to click through resume@valentinUNTIL FILLED. fast results! It's the easiest If you provide dependability combined with a automatically to your eventures.com. way in the world to sell. positive attitude, are able to manage people Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a team website. and schedules and are a team player,we COMMUNITY JUSTICE TECHNICIAN player to assist the Financial Planner. As part would like to hear from you. If you seek a The Buiietin Oassified of an interdependent two-person team, the A bou t P r o d u c t s a n d — Juvenile Justice Division. On-call What are you S ervices E v er y D a y t h r o u g h stable work environment that provides a great MFS Coordinator sets appointments, sched541-385-5809 The B ul l e t in C l a a s i f ie C k place to live and raise a family, let us hear ules meetings, files correspondence, and looking for? positions. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL A from you. deals extensively with the public by phone and Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at You'll find it in Office Specialist face-to-face. This position is 20 hours per SUFFICIENTPOOL OF APPLICANTS HAS anelson@wescompapers.com with your comweek with flexibility in the schedule. The Bulletin Classifieds Office Specialist 1 / OS1 piete r e sume, r e ferences a n d sa l a ry BEEN ESTABLISHED. history/requirements. No phone calls please. Oregon State University — Cascades, Bend has This position requires someone with a pleasDrug test is required prior to employment. a full time employment opportunity. The ant, friendly demeanor, professional appearCOUNTY LEGAL COUNSEL — County 541-385-5809 Office and Campus Operations Assistant will EOE. ance and excellent communication skills. The p rovide support i n t h e Gr a duate a n d person selected must be willing to obtain inCounsel Office. Full-time position. Research Center and duties include reception, dustry-specific licenses and certification. Apartment Manager(s) front office support and a ssistance with Deadline:SUNDAY,12/22/13. wanted for small comCity of Redmond Go to www.midoregon.com for more informaplex in Bend. Please fax facilities and operations. Airfield & Facilities tion. Please send resume, cover letter, and resume to 541-388-6973 DEPUTY SHERIFF (PATROL) 8( Maintenance Worker Preferred qua l ifications inc l ud e a application to: Mid Oregon FCU, Attn: Human Roberts Field - Airport demonstrated commitment to promoting and Resources, P.O. Box 6749, Bend, OR 97708. CORRECTIONS DEPUTY (JAIL) —Sherjff's enhancing diversity. Salary: $3,440 - $4,22B -
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Gutter Installer Are you the best? if so, do you want to work for the best?
To review complete position descriptio and apply on-line, go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and use posting number 0011542. The closing date is 11/25/13. OSU is an AA/EOE.
B & R is hiring. Excellent pay and group insurance.
Graphic Designer
Call 541-480-7823
Oregon State University — Cascades, Bend has a full time employment opportunity.
and tell me about yourself.
Healthcare
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prestige senior Living, L L c
Start your Career Today!
Join our Prestige Care Team in Bend, OR
Looking for: Executive Director To apply, please visit our website: www.prestigecare.com/ careers EEO/AA Employer Heavy Line T e chnician Needed. Dodge Cummings diesel tech needed. Work for the best and busie st d e a lership i n Central Oregon. Bring your resume and apply to Don Mueller at Smolich Motors, 1865 NE Hwy 20, Bend. No phone calls please. MANAGEMENT
Assistant General Manager needed at S u nriver Owners A ssociation. Duties include: P e rform complex admin., professional, supervisory & technical duties in the management of Assn. functions. Education/ Ex p erience: Degree in b u siness admin., mgmt or related field & 5 yrs mgmt experience in a large c ommunity assn. o r membership org. Please see our web site for full job description. S tarting Wage: $71,362 depending on experience, s a laried exempt. Gen e rous benefits: medical/ dental ins. sick/vac & 401k plan . EOE Pre-emp drug screen required. Job closes 11/22/13. Please compiete our application form (REQUIRED) which can be found on our website: www.sunriverowners.or
The Graphic Designer provides a full range of graphic artwork for print and digital communications, and related technical assistance at OSU-Cascades. Preferred qualifications include a d e mons trated commitment t o pr o moting a n d enhancing diversity. To review complete position description and apply on-line, go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and use posting number 0011544. The closing date is 12/1/13. OSU is an AA/EOE. General
Jefferson Count Job 0
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Staff Assistant IV - Public Works $3,125.14 to $3,518.60 DOQ Closes November 25th, 2013
F or c o mplete j o b des c ription a n d application form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click o n H uman Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to: Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. Jefferson Countyis an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
The Bulletin Advertising Account Executive Rewardingnew business development The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full-time position requires a background in c onsultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of m edia sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate. The p o sition i n c ludes a comp etitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an a ggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director brandt@bendbulletin.com or drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace
Mid Oregon Credit Unionisa drug-free workplace
General
Black Butte Ranch Director o/ Rental Operations Black Butte Ranch, one of central Oregon's premier Golf Resorts is currently searching for a dynamic individual to join our "Results Oriented" Leadership Team. Responsibilities include overseeing the Rental Management program for the Ranch including Welcome Center O perations, Vacation Rental S a les a n d Housekeeping. Ideal candidate will exhibit the following qualifications: • B.S. in Business, Hospitality Management or related field. • Five to seven years management exp. in the hospitality field and/or rental operations. • Background & exp. in sales & marketing, front desk operations, housekeeping, rental operations & advertising. This position is a full-time year round position which includes a competitive professional salary and excellent benefits! Join our team of professionals today! Visit our website & apply online ab www.BlackButteRanch.com or contact Diane Ross in Human Resources at 541-595-1523. BlackButte Ranch is a drug free work place. EOE.
Career Services Coordinator
Oregon State University (OSU) - CascadesinBend, Oregon isseeking applicants for a 12-month, full-time (1.0 FTE), professional faculty position as Career Services Coordinator. The salary range is $35,300 to $60,000 with the anticipated starting s alary b etween $35,300 and $47,600. The Career Services Coordinator provides expertise and leadership in career services for students and alumni of OSU-Cascades. These services include, but are not limited to, developing and presenting workshops on appropriate topics, working with faculty in all disciplines, providing relevant testing and c a r eer counseling for students and providing the overall leadership for career services del i very for the campus. The coordinator m a r kets c areer services to new and current students through orientation and classroom presentations and the website. This resource provided by OSU-Cascades contributes to retention and theacademic and personal success of students accessing this service.
Required qualifications include a m aster's degree in Counseling or related discipline; Experience providing counseling or advising; Experience in career planning, assessment, or vocational counseling; and outstanding oral and written communication skills. To review posting, additional requirements and apply, g o to htt p ://oregonstate.edu/jobs. Apply to posting ¹0011578. Closing date is 11/18/13. OSU is an AA/EOE.
Non-exempt, Represented Performs a variety of unskilled, semi-skilled and skilled tasks related to airfield, facilities, and ground maintenance. This includes corrective and preventative maintenance, construction, carpentry, demolition, and remodeling projects for Airport airfield and facilities, maintains HVAC systems located in Airport structures, and maintains the baggage handling system within the terminal building. Mandator Re uirements: High school graduation or GED equivalent, plus a minimum of four (4) years of experience in facilities maintenance to include skills in construction, carpentry, HVAC maintenance, plumbing and e lectrical, heavy equipment operation or any equivalent combination of experience and training which demonstrates the ability to perform the above described duties.
HOW TO APPLY:
Request application packetfrom DeAnne Wakefield, City of Redmond Human R
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Central Oregon Community College has openings lis t e d belo w . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7 -1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Campus Public Safety Officer Provide patrol services on COCC campus to ensure the safety and security of staff, students, and the public. Responsible for interveningand managing de-escalations, and preparing incident reports. Must be 21yrs of age with 1-yr exp. required. POST Test req. $12.38 — $14.74/hr. Extended Close Date to Nov 24. Program Developer o/MATC Non-Destructive Test 8 inspection Provide leadership in the development of a new self-paced manufacturing education program NDT / NDI. See website for requirements. Part Time position, temporary Aug 2 014 u n ti l FT posi t ions a r e fil l e d. $17.60-$20.95/hr. Closes Nov 21. Assistant Professor I of Nursing, Nurse Educator (Tenure Track) Provide instruction to nursing students teaching medical-surgical content with components of maternity, pediatrics, pharmacology, and mental health nursing. Master's degree, current Oregon RN License + 3-yr exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9-mo contract. Closes Dec 18. Part Timeinstructor New: Engineering, Developmental Writing, College Composition, Art-Design and Drawing Looking for t alented individuals to t e ach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
Office. Full-time positions. Deadline:
WEDNESDAY, 01/1 5/1 4. HEALTHSERVICES DIRECTOR- Full-time position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON TUESDAY, 01/21/14. PUBLICHEALTH NURSE I— Reproductive Health, Public Health Division. Part-time position, 70% FTE. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. lOUALITY IMPROVEMENT SPECIALIST — Behavioral Health Division. Full-time position. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF — Sherjff's
Office. On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS ANON-GOING RECRUITMENT. TELECOMMUNICATOR I —911 Service District. Full-time positions. Deadline: THIS IS AN ON-GOING RECRUITMENT. COMING SOON: BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALISTI
—Wraparound Program. PSYCHIATRICNURSE PRACTITIONER — Child & Family Program. DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISITOUR WEBSITE AT www.
deschutes.org/jods.All candidates will receive anemail response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reVieWed. NOtifiCatiOnS to CandidateS are Sent vja email Only. If you need aSSiStanCe, PleaSeCOntaCt the DBSChuteS County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541j 617-4722. DBSChuteS COunty PrOVideS reaSOnable
accommodations for persons with d isabilities. This material will b e furnished jn alternative format jf needed.
For hearing impaired, please call TTY/ TDD 711. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
G4 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013• THE BULLETIN I
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 648
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Houses for Rent General
Mobile/Mfd. Space
Open Houses
860
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
865
Moto r cyclee & Accessories
ATVs
3 bedroom 2 bath, $675 Tuscany-style singleHarley Davidson 2009 month. 541-213-0488 or level home ony2acre, PUBLISHER'S FACTORY SPECIAL Super Glide Custom, 541-480-5133 close-in, NE Bend. 2 NOTICE New Home, 3 bdrm, Stage 1 Screaming master suites, 2900 sq ft All real estate adver$46,500 finished RENTALS 682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage Eagle performance, 687 great open floorplan. on your site. tising in this newspatoo many options to 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 603 - RentalAlternatives Open Sunday 12 noonJ and M Homes per is subject to the Commercial for list, $8900. 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent 3pm, 21420 Belknap Dr Honda TRX 350 FE 604- Storage Rentals 541-548-5511 F air H o using A c t 541-388-8939 Rent/Lease $615,000. 2006, 4 wheel drive, REAL ESTATE 605 - Roommate Wanted which makes it illegal MLS¹201309771 Immaculate 4 bdrm, 2 electric start, electric 616- Want To Rent 705 - Real Estate Services to a d v ertise "any Fenced storage yard, Eric Andrews, Principal bath in THE PINES s hift, n ew tire s , preference, limitation building an d o f f ice Broker, Windermere 627- Vacation Rentals Ik Exchanges 713 - Real Estate Wanted for only $36,000. Ap$2500, 541-980-8006. or disc r imination trailer for rent. In conCentral Oregon Real 630 - Rooms for Rent 719 - Real Estate Trades pliance incl u ded! based on race, color, venient Redmond loEstate, 541-771 -1 168 Check out the S pace r e n t $5 4 5 631 - Condos IkTownhomesfor Rent 726 - Timeshares for Sale religion, sex, handi- cation, 205 SE Railclassifieds online month incl. w/g. New 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 730 - New Listings cap, familial status, road Blvd. Reduced to roof, windows, floorwww.bendbulletin.com 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale marital status or na$700/mo. Avail. 10/1. Tick, TOCk ing. Fenced yard. Updated daily tional origin, or an in- 541-923-7343. 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 738 - Multiplexes for Sale Call Theresa Ramsay, Harley Davidson tention to make any Tick, Tock... 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 740 Co - ndos IkTownhomes forSale Broker 541 -81 5-4442 2011 Classic Limsuch pre f e rence, 693 John L Scott 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 744 - OpenHouses ited, LOADED, 9500 Boats 8 Accessories I limitation or discrimi...don't let time get Real Estate miles, custom paint 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 745 - Homes for Sale nation." Familial sta- Office/Retail Space away. Hire a "Broken Glass" by 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 746 - Northwest BendHomes tus includes children for Rent Just too many Nicholas Del Drago, professional out under the age of 18 648 - Houses for Rent General 747 - Southwest BendHomes new condition, collectibles? living with parents or 500 srf. ft. upstairs of The Bulletin's 650- Houses for Rent NEBend 748 - Northeast Bend Homes heated handgrips, legal cust o dians, office on NE side of "Call A Service 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 749 - Southeast BendHomes auto cruise control. pregnant women, and town, private bath, all Sell them in $32,000 in bike, only 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 750 - RedmondHomes Professional" people securing cus- util. paid. $500 month The Bulletin Classifieds 16'9" Larson All Ameri$23,000 obo. 656 - Houses for Rent SWBend 753 - Sisters Homes tody of children under plus $500 d e posit. Directory today! 541-318-6049 can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp 18. This newspaper 541-480-4744 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes I/O, 1 owner, always gawill not knowingly ac541-385-5809 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 756 - Jefferson County Homes raged, w/trlr, exc cond, 745 cept any advertising $2000. 541-788-5456 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 757 - Crook County Homes for real estate which is Homes for Sale LOT MODEL Bwjj %~w 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 762 - Homeswith Acreage in violation of the law. LIQUIDATION 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty O ur r e a ders ar e VC0P@Al% Prices Slashed Huge NOTICE hereby informed that 663 - Housesfor Rent Madras 764- Farms and Ranches Savings! 10 Year All real estate adverall dwellings adver664- Houses for Rent Furnished 771 - Lots tised here in is sub- conditional warranty. Harley Davidson Sporttised in this newspaject to t h e F e deral Finished on your site. ster 2 0 0 1 , 12 0 0 cc, 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 773 - Acreages per are available on ONLY 2 LEFT! F air H o using A c t , 675 - RV Parking 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 9,257 miles, $4995. Call 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, an equal opportunity Redmond, Oregon which makes it illegal Michael, 541-310-9057 inboard motor, g r eat 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land basis. To complain of 541-548-5511 to advertise any prefcond, well maintained, d iscrimination cal l JandMHomes.com erence, limitation or 744 $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 627 632 HUD t o l l -free at discrimination based Say "goodbuy" Rent /Own Open Houses Vacation Rentals Apt./Multiplex General 1-800-877-0246. The on race, color, reli- 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes to that unused toll f re e t e l ephone Want to impress the B KiM @ 8 Exchanges gion, sex, handicap, $2500 down, $750 mo. number for the hearrelatives? Remodel CHECK YOUR AD item by Placing it in familial status or naOpen 12-3 OAC. J and M Homes ing im p a ired is tional origin, or inten1900 NVV 541-548-5511 The B u l letin Classifieds your home with the 1-800-927-9275. tion to make any such help of a professional Monterey Park Dr. preferences, l i m itaChic New Cottages from The Bulletin's Get your tions or discrimination. 5 41 -385-58 0 9 in Prime Location "Call A Service We will not knowingly 0 business Janis Grout, Professional" Directory accept any advertison the first day it runs Broker Christmas at ing for r ea l e s tate Get your to make sure it is cor541-948-0140 HDFat Bo 1996 the Coast which is in violation of rect. "Spellcheck" and a ROW I N G WorldMark this law. All persons Cl business human errors do ocDepoe Bay, OR are hereby informed cur. If this happens to with an ad in 2 bedroom condo, that all dwellings adyour ad, please con".I sleeps 6 The Bulletin's vertised are available tact us ASAP so that 12/22 — 12/29 or on an equal opportu"Call A Service corrections and any 12/23 -12/30. 19' Seaswirl 1969 I/O, thegarnergroup nity basis. The Bulleadjustments can be Professional" Completely Snowmobiles $1399 il l E t t LLC 160hp 6-cyl MerCruiser, tin Classified made to your ad. Rebuilt/Customized 541-325-6566 heavy duty trailer, $1000 With an ad in Directory 541 383 4360 541 -385-5809 2012/2013 Award wwwthegarnergroup.com • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 obo. 541-389-1473 The Bulletin Classified Have an item to Winner The Bulletin's Rented your EXT, $1000. Showroom Condition Property? • Yamaha 750 1999 630 sell quick? Small studio downtown Many Extras The Bulletin Classifieds Mountain Max, SOLD! "Call A Service Rooms for Rent area, $495 mo. inc. If it's under Low Miles. • Zieman 4-place has an Open 12-3 util., $475 d e p. No "After Hours"Line. trailer, SOLD! $17,000 Professional" 2123 NVV Lemhi '500 you can place it in Room for rent in Redpets/smking. 541-330All in good condition. 541-548-4807 Call 541-383-2371 mond, $350+ utilities. No 9769, 541-480-7870 Pass Dr. The Bulletin 24 Hours to Located in La Pine. Directory s moking. Mature, r e NorthWest Crossing Sunchaser Pontoon « I Call 541-408-6149. sponsible, & stable. Call Brand New Home Classifieds for: boat - $19,895 634 Jim, 541-419-4513 Suzanne Iselin, Suzuki DRZ400 SM 20' 2006 Smokercraft 656 860 Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 2007, 14K mi., Broker '10 - 3 lines, 7 days cruise, S-8521. 2006 Houses for Rent Motorcyclee & Accessories 541-350-861 7 4 gal. tank, racks, 75hp. Mercury. F u ll '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Want to impress the Call for Specials! SW Bend recent tires, fully camping e n c losure. Meet singles right now! Limited numbers avail. (Private Party ads only) serviced. Pop u p cha n ging No paid o p erators, relatives? Remodel 1, 2 & 3 bdrms $3900 OBO. L uxury living i n t h e room/porta-potty, BBQ, your home with the just real people like w/d hookups, 541-383-2847. country! 4600 sq. ft. 4 swim ladder, all gear. you. Browse greet- help of a professional 746 patios or decks. bdrm, 4 b a th, c ovTrailer, 2006 E a syings, exchange mesfrom The Bulletin's Mountain Glen Northwest Bend Homes ered front porch, hot loader gal v a nized. sages and c o nnect "Call A Service thegarnergroup 541 -383-931 3 P urchased new, a l l tub. $2900 mo. Info live. Try it free. Call Professional" Directory Professionally 2013 Harley managed by http://www.investoreseAwbrey Butte records. 541-706-9977, now: 8 7 7-955-5505. 541 383 4360 Davidson Dyna Norris & Stevens, Inc. c luded quiet 3/2 o n cell 503-807-1973. gon.com/index.php/av wwwthegarnergroup.com Wide Glide, black, (PNDC). 12,000 + sq . ft . I ot! ailable-homes/60083-r only 200 miles, Nicely rebuilt. Granite/ idgeview-drive 21' Crownline Cuddy brand new, all stock, slate stainless. Only Cabin, 1995, only plus after-market 658 $398,000. Call Glenn 325 hrs on the boat, exhaust. Has winter Open 12-3 Oseland, P r incipal Triumph Da y tona 5.7 Houses for Rent Merc engine with 2203 NVV Lemhi cover, helmet. Broker, 541-350-7829, 2004, 15K mi l e s , Redmond outdrive. Bimini top Selling for what I Pass Dr. Holiday Realty perfect bike, needs & moorage cover, owe on it: $15,500. NorthWest Crossing nothing. Vin Crii 54!3855809 topromoteyour service Advertisefor 28dap starting at 'l40 Iru speaapadueisnof availableonorrrwebeo Newly renovated SW $7500 obo. Central Courtyard Call anytime, ¹201536. 750 Redmond home, 1008 sq 541-382-2577 541-554-0384 Shelley Griffin, $4995 ft 3 bed/2 bath. 2-car gar, Redmond Homes Broker Dream Car fenced backyard w/extra 541 -280-3804 Auto Sales Building/Contracting El e c trical Services L a ndscaping/Yard Careparking. No s moking. Need to get an $775/mo + WSG & secuLooking foryour next 1801 Division, Bend ad in ASAP? emp/oyee? DreamCarsBend.com rity dep. Taking applicaNOTICE: Oregon state 541 -678-0240 tions. 541-419-1917 Place a Bulletin help You can place it law r equires anyone Mike wanted ad today and Dlr 3665 who contracts for online at: 659 reach over 60,000 construction work to 21' Sun Tracker Sig. sewww.bendbulletin.com Houses for Rent readers each week. be licensed with the Electric thegarnergroup ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker Your classified ad Take care of Construction ContracSunriver 50hp, live well, fish fndr, will also appear on 541-385-5809 tors Board (CCB). An 541 383 4360 new int, extras, exc cond, • Flectricai a%(V.-,. your investments wwwthegarnergroup.com active license bendbulletin.com VILLAGE PROPERTIES $7900. 541-508-0679 Troubleshooting SERVING CENTRAL OR/GON 21" aluminum spoke which currently rewith the help from means the contractor Sunriver, Three Rivers, since 2003 is bonded & insured. • Generator Systems ceives over wheel. '03 Sportster Ads published in the La Pine. Great The Bulletin's Residential a Commercial Selection. Prices range Verify the contractor's • Newpanel installations 1.5 million page $95. 928-300-7716 "Boats" classification "Call A Service CCB li c ense at Find exactly what views every month include: Speed, fish$425 — $2000/mo. Sprinkler • ServiceWork www.hirealicensedat no extra cost. ing, drift, canoe, View our full you are looking for in the Professional" Directory contractor.com Blowouts Bulletin Classifieds house and sail boats. • z4 yearsexp. inventory online at CLASSIFIEDS or call 503-378-4621. Get Results! For all other types of Village-Properties.com Sprinkler Repair The Bulletin recom- I,ic. & Bonded ¹I92I7I Call 385-5809 or watercraft, please go 1 -866-931 -1 061 mends checking with place your ad on-line The Perfect Home in to Class 875. Fall Clean Up Cell 503-949-2336 the CCB prior to conGood classified ads tell Awbrey Park —Main at 541-385-5809 Health Forces Sale! tracting with anyone. (In Sisters) the essential facts in an level master, huge triple bendbulletin.com SnowRemoval 2007 Harley Davidson Some other t r ades interesting Manner. Write garage, gigantic bonus FLHX Street Glidealso req u ire addiSchedule for 2014 rm, formal dining, from the readers view - not Too many extras to list! t ional licenses a nd BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS elegant offc, terrific 771 the seller's. Convert the 6-spd, cruise control, stee Weekly & Monthly Search the area's most certifications. city-light views all on Victory TC 2002, facts into benefits. Show Lots reo, batt. tender, cover. Maintenance comprehensive listing of /2 acre. Open Sun.12-3, Set-up for long haul road runs great, many the reader hcw the item will classified advertising... e Landscape 1033 NW Yosemite Dr. S HEVLIN Debris Removal RIDGE trips. Dealership svc'd. help them in someway. accessories, new real estate to automotive, MLS¹201309074, Construction Only 2,000 miles. 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apmerchandise to sporting This tires, under 40K $619,000. PLUS H-D cold weather proved plans. More S Water Feature advertising tlp goods. Bulletin Classifieds miles, well kept. Beautiful h o u seboat, Eric Andrews, Principal gear, rain gear, packs, details and photos on appear every day in the Inetallation/Maint. brought toyouby Broker, Windermere $5000. helmets, leathers $85,000. 541-390-4693 craigslist. $ 1 59,900. print or on line. Central Oregon Real e pavere & much more. $15,000. 541-771-0665 www.centraloregon 541-389-861 4 Estate, 541-771-1168 Call 541-385-5809 541-382-3135 after 5pm ScAh9 CNIOQI Ort9NI $hco St8 houseboat.com e Renovations www.bendbulletin.com e Irrigations Installation •
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GROWING
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Will Haul Away
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~FREE@ •
S\Mllg CNltPII OI%90II SIIKC 5t8
For Salvage.v:. Any Location ..~t Removal
1,. j& Cteanouts' < Also Cleanups
Handyman
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Handyman/Remodeling Eesidentiet/Commerclal
Domestic Services j
! A.SSISTING,: b '.; SENIORS'~'' :.Assietinirl Seniors';: ;.+i;at Ho me.'~~ " I.lght housekeeping,:, ,- >s other servikes.,k.~ -
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- I.icensed 5 uonded:g„. 888 Certified~v ';
$50~3-75'6"-3544 j;:Loc' uted In'Redmond
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
small Jobs ro Entire Roo>n Remr>dels
Garage organrraur>n Home InsPection RePairs Qualily, Hrnresl Work
Dennis 541.317.9768 ccwieis~sBosdedlnsund
ERIC REEVE ~% HANDYr~ SERVICES All Home & Commercial Repairs Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's. Small or large jobs, no problem. Senior Discount Au work guaranteed.
541-389-3361 541-771-4463
Senior Discounts Bonded and Insured
541-815-4458 LCBI 8759
NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that a dvertise t o pe r f orm Landscape Construction which includes: p lanting, decks , fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed w i t h the Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit n umber is to be i ncluded in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond,insurance and workers c o mpensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909
or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing land s cape maintenance do n ot r equire an L C B cense.
your web source for STATEWIDE ciassifieds
30BsIREAL EsTATE IcLAssIFIEDs SuppOrtedby OregOn neWSpaperS, "ClaSSifiedS.oregon.Com n iS a neW
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Painting/Wall Covering
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541-81 5-2888
BROWSETHE ENTIRE STATE OFOREGON
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ore On .Com
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY NOVEMBER 17 2013 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
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Motorhomes •
881
881
Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
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882
882
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
882
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Fifth Wheels
CHECK YOUR AD •
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80ATS 8 RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmodiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870- Boats 8 Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent
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AUTOS 8r 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 - Automodiles 880
Boats 8 Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
TIFFIN PHAETON QSH 2007with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $129,900. 30,900 miles, great condition! dishwasher, washer/ dlyer, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands cf readersi
Call 541-885-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds
GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
Tioga 24' ClassC Motorhome I Bought new in 2000, L currently under 20K Fleetwood D i s covery NATIONAL DOLPHIN miles, excellent 40' 2003, diesel mo- 37' 1997, loaded! 1 Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 shape, new tires, torhome w/all slide, Corian surfaces, professionaly winteroptions-3 slide outs, wood floors (kitchen), ized every year, cutTURN THE PAGE satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 2-dr fridge, convection off switch to battery, microwave, Vizio TV & etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. For More Ads plus new RV batterWintered i n h e a ted roof satellite, walk-in ies. Oven, hot water The Bulletin shop. $84,900 O.B.O. shower, new queen bed. heater & air condiWhite leather hide-a541-447-8664 tioning have never bed & chair, all records, been used! no pets o r s moking. I Wat e rcraft $24,000 obo. Serious $28,450. Need to get an ad inquiries, please. Call 541-771-4800 A ds published in nWaStored in Terrebonne. in ASAP? tercraft" include: Kay541-548-5174 Need help fixing stuff? aks, rafts and motorCall A Service Proressional ized personal Fax it to 541-322-7253 find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e The Bulletin Classifieds Class 870.
The Bulletin
541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Den-
4~4 & =
Motorhomes
COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine — just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10
w/Banks pwr pkg,
14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500. 541-548-4969
G ulfstream S u n sport 30' Class A 1988 new f r i dge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelc hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W g enerator, Goo d condition! $1 2,500 obo 541-447-5504
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
Reduced $1 Ok!
Fleetwood Discovery 2008 40X, Corian counters, convection/ micro, 2-door fridge/ freezer, washer/dlyer, central vac, new tile & carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, window awnings, levelers, ext'd warranty, multi media GPS, 350 Cummins diesel, 7.5 gen. Many extras! $119,900. 541-604-4662
Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 nis, 541-589-3243 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, Find It in 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice The Bulletin Classifieds! maker, Washer/Dryer, 541 -885-5809 Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. 395,000 Travel Trailers • 541-480-2019
Rexair 28-ft motorhome, 1991Ideal for camping or hunting, it has 45K miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, automatic levelers, Onan generator, king-size bed, awning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $8700. 541-81 5-9939
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motor-
home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
RV
2 0 06 w i th 1 2 '
slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen w alk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside shower. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking 318,600 541-447-4805
WANTED 1950's-60's TRAVEL TRAILER. Needing some restoration ok, prefer no leaks. Will pay up to $1000 cash for the right trailer. (541) 637-7404
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn correct. nSpellcheck 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
WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearancein good condition. Smoke-free.
The Bulletin Serving CentrerOregonsince igle
Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895.
heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
541-420-3250
I~I, W
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Get your business
Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
a.
Keystone Challenger
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located @ Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, @ $400/mo. 541-948-2963
2004 CH34TLB04 34'
fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & o ut . 27 " T V dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4
882
times total in last 5 t/g
Fifth Wheels
trade for camper that fits 6ya' pickup bed, plus cash).
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
541-316-1388
MONTANA 3585 2008
Fleetwood Prowler
Call 541-385-5809
www.bendbulletin.com
Monaco Lakota 2004 RV Transport 5th Wheel Local or Long Dis34 ft.; 3 s l ides; imtance: 5th wheels, maculate c o ndition; camp trailers, toy l arge screen TV w / haulers, etc. entertainment center; Ask for Teddy, reclining chairs; cen541-260-4293 ter kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. Find exactly what $20,000 OBO. you are looking for in the (541) 548-5886 CLASSIFIEDS
•a
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... Tow with t/g-ton. Strong real estate to automotive, suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds even a small car! Great price — $8900. appear every day in the CaII 541-593-6266 print or on line.
Orbit 21'2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONFleetwood A m e ri- DITION. All accescana W i lliamsburg sories are included. 2006. Two king tent 314,51 1 OBO. end beds w/storage 541-382-9441 t runk b e lo w on e , slideout portable din ette, b e nch s e a t , cassette t o i le t & shower, swing level galley w/ 3 bu r n er cook top and s i nk. outside grill, outside shower. includes 2 Tango 29.6' 2007, propane tanks, 2 batRear living, walkteries, new tires plus around queen bed, bike trailer hitch on central air, awning, back bumper. Dealer 1 large slide, serviced 2013. $8500 $15,000 obo (or 541-948-2216
The Bulletin FIND IT! To Subscribe call BVY IT! 541-385-5800 or go to SELL IT! www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classifieds
541-548-0318 (photo aboveis oia similar model & not the actual vehicle)
Keystone Laredo 31'
y ears.. No pets, n o smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for 324,000 including slidi ng hitch that fits i n your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to
Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear kitchen, very good condition. Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577
see. 541-330-5527.
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
1/5th interest in 1973 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 5B, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no
1 /3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest Keystone Raptor, 2007 way in the world to sell. 37' toy hauler, 2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, The Bulletin Classified satellite system w/auto 541-385-5809 seek, in/out sound system, sleeps 6,many extras. $32,500. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265
dealer calls, please). Call or text 541-325-1 956.
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 54 t -385-5809
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellentperformance 8 affordable flying! $6,500. 541-410-6007
el 1974 Bellanca 1730A
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room 5th wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $42,500 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
( in La Pine )
call 541-475-6302
WILL DELIVER
In Madras,
"Little Red Corvett "
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Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months
"R giri hBVe I< ke thi I
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472,5pp 547 000
(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
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• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • 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 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com ~
* A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features,publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
. e~~ '
G6 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2013• THE BULLETIN 908
931
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
933
• • S p ort Utility Vehicles Automotive Parts, Pickups Service 8 Accessories Chevy 1986, long bed, four spd., 350 V8 reDramatic Price ReducLes Schwab Mud 8 built, custom paint, tion Executive Hangar Snow blackwall great ti r e s and at Bend Airport (KBDN) Murano w heels, ne w t a g s , 60' wide x 50' deep, P245/50/R-20 1 02T $5000 obo. w/55' wide x 17' high biObserve G02, used 541-389-3026 iphoto forillustration only) fold dr. Natural gas heat, 1 winter. Pd $1200. Dodge Durango 2005, offc, bathroom. Adjacent CRAMPEDFOR 4WD, V8 5.7L, Tow Will take reasonable to Frontage Rd; great offer. 541-306-4915 CASH? pkg., running boards. visibility for aviation busiUse classified to sell third row seat, moonness. 541-948-2126 or those items you no roof. email 1jetjock@q.com R epair m anual f o r longer need. Vin¹ 534944 2004 Lexus RX330, 3 Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, volumes Call 541-385-5809 $10,999 $100. based in Madras, al- 541-504-0783 Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
ways hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 total t i me . $6 8 ,500. 541-475-6947, ask for Rob Berg.
Ntt//Z/"
~The Bulletin
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2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Have an item to Dlr ¹0354 sell quick? Ford Explorer LTD 2012 If it's under dark blue, 11,500 mi, ¹A370009, $28,988 '500 you can place it in
STUDDED SNOW TIRES
size 225/70-R16 and Hyundai Santa Fe wheels, new! $600. 541-388-4003
The Bulletin Classifieds for:
Oregon AnloSonrce
Studded tires (4) and rims for F ord p / up '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 235/85/16, 10- p l y. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days New $970, sell $550. (Private Party ads only)
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours 541-923-8202 with your own airc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Toyo mud/snow tires (4) 2 25/60R-16/98H, o n Commander, 4 seat, Subaru rims, $350. 150 HP, low time, 541-923-8226. full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at Toyo studless s n ow 9 541-447-5184. tires (4) on 17 silver rims w/lug nuts, $400. 541-504-0783 Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an 932 interesting Manner. Write Antique 8 from the readers view - not Classic Autos the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them in someway. This 1921 Model T advertising tip Delivery Truck brought toyouby
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Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD SLT quad cab, short box, auto, AC, high mileage, $12,900. 541-389-7857
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonautosource.com What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
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infiniti FX35 2012, Platinum silver, 24,000 miles, with factory war r anty, f ully l o aded, A l l Wheel Drive, GPS, sunroof, etc. $35,500. 541-550-7189
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Automobiles
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
Buick La Cross CXS 2 005, loaded, n e w battery/tires, p e rfect $8995. 541-475-6794
Cadillac El Dorado 1994 Total Cream Puff! Body, paint, trunk as showroom, blue leather, $1700 wheels w/snow tires although car has not been wet in 8 years. On trip to Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., $4800. 541-593-4016.s
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Honda Accord LX, 2004, 4-door, silver exterior with charcoal interior, great condition, 67,000 miles, asking $9000.
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Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today!
A s k about our "Whee/ Deal"! for private party I advertisers
Automo b iles
Subaru Imp r e za 2006, 4 dr., AWD, silver gray c o lor, auto, real nice car in great shape. $6200. 541-548-3379.
Toyota Matrix S 2009, FWD, power window, p ower l ocks, A / C . Vin ¹023839 $13,988
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S UB A R U . 9UBBRUOBBRtlDCQM
E Hwy 20, Bend . Just bought a new boat? Subaru impreza WRX 2060 N Call 435-565-2321 877-266-3821 Sell your old one in the (located in Bend) classifieds! 4 Cyl., Turbo, 5 Dlr ¹0354 Ask about our 2006, spd, AWD, moon roof, Super Seller rates! leather. Vin ¹508150 541-385-5809 Honda Civic 1991 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! $18,888 runs good, needs . '~Q, staaa~ nu t Door-to-door selling with clutch. Asking $900 S UB ARU. 9UBBRUOBBRtlDCQM 541-480-3179 fast results! It's the easiest 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. way in the world to sell. Advertise your car! 877-266-3821 Add A Picture! Dlr ¹0354 The Bulletin Classified Reach thousands of readers~ Call 541-385-5809 Nissan Versa S 2011, 541-385-5809 Get your The Bulletin Classifieds Gas saver, auto, air, CD, alloys, Vin business WHEN YOU SEE THIS Lexus RX 350 2009, ¹397598 charcoal gray, 38K mi $11,888 ~OO ¹108142 $27,495. a ROW I N G fphoto for lllustration only)
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Oregon
AnloSonrce
541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonautosource.com Lexus RX350 2013 Comfort pkg Prem pkg.
CHECK YOUR AD ¹C171298 $43,995. Please check your ad on the first day it runs Oregon to make sure it is corAnloSonrce rect. Sometimes in541-598-3750 s tructions over t h e www.aaaoregonautophone are misundersource.com stood and a n e r ror
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S UB A R U . 9UBBRUOBBRRD CQM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Porsche 911
Carrera 993 cou e
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Toyota Avalon Limited 2007, V6, auto, FWD, leather, moon r oof, A lloy w h eels. V i n
can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ¹178907 ad, please contact us Restored & Runs $17,988 the first day your ad The Bulletin $9000. SMMBS CRBURI 0 BSMI «999reta appears and we will S UB A R U . 541-389-8963 be happy to fix it as m s oon a s w e ca n . Lincoln LS 2001 4door 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. S UB A R U . Chevy 1955 PROJECT Deadlines are: Week877-266-3821 sport sedan, plus set Want to impress the car. 2 door wgn, 350 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend days 12:00 noon for Dlr ¹0354 of snow tires. $6000. small block w/Weiand relatives? Remodel next day, Sat. 11:00 541-317-0324. 877-266-3821 Good classified ads tell dual quad tunnel ram a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 541-322-9647 your home with the Dlr ¹0354 the essential facts in an with 450 Holleys. T-10 12:00 for Monday. If FIND IT! Superhawkhelp of a professional 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, interesting Manner. Write The Bulletin recoml we can assist you, BVY IT! from The Bulletin's Only 1 Share Just too many Weld Prostar wheels, from the readers view - not mends extra caution ~ please call us: Find It in SELL IT! "Call A Service Available extra rolling chassis + when p u r chasing > collectibles? 541-385-5809 the seller's. Convert the The Bulletin Classifiedsl Economical flying extras. $6500 for all. Professional" Directory The Bulletin Classified The Buiietin Classifieds facts into benefits. Show f products or services 541-385-5809 in your own 541-389-7669. the reader howthe item will from out of the area. Sell them in IFR equipped The Bulletin's f S ending c ash , help them in someway. Check out the The Bulletin Classifieds Cessna 172/180 HP for "Call A Service checks, or credit inPorsche 911 Turbo Thls classifieds online only $13,500! New formation may be I Professional" Directory advertising tip Garmin Touchscreen www.bendbulletin.com [ sublect to FRAUD. 541-385-5809 is all about meeting brought toyouby avionics center stack! Updated daily For more i nformayourneeds. Exceptionally clean! tion about an adver9 The Bulletin iphoto forillustration only) f SBtMRSAntral ODB eBDBf999 nta Hangared at BDN. 9:Mle ELK HUNTERS! tiser, you may call Call on one of the Mercedes-Benz C230 CalI 541-728-0773 Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. I the Oregon State 2005, V6, auto, RWD, Toyota Camry CXL 1998, professionals today! owner, 87k only 3k on General's g leather, moon r oof, 2003 6 speed, X50 70K miles, good cond. Attorney new 258 long block. Office Co n s umerI added power pkg., $6000. 541-385-9289 alloy wheels. Trucks 8 C lutch p kg , W a r n / Protection hotline at 530 HP! Under 10k Vin ¹778905. hubs. Excellent run1-877-877-9392. Heavy Equipment Chevy Wagon 1957, Ford Supercab 1992, miles, Arctic silver, $9,888 Call a Pro ner, very dependable. 4-dr., complete, brown/tan color with gray leather interior, Northman 6~/s' plow, S UB A R U . Whether you need a new quality t i res, $7,000 OBO / trades m atching f ul l s i z e SerVing Central Oregan smCD1903 Ford 1965 6-yard Please call c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 Warn 6000¹ w i nch. fence fixed, hedges 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. and battery, Bose dump truck, good $9500 or best rea541-389-6998 lphoto forillustration only) over drive, 135K mi., premium sound ste877-266-3821 trimmed or a house paint, recent oversonable offer. C hevy Malibu L T Z full bench rear seat, reo, moon/sunroof, Dlr ¹0354 haul, everything 541-549-6970 or built, you'll find IUIIRIIIO 2010, V6, auto car and seat covers. slide rea r w i ndow, works! $3995. 541-815-8105. w/overdrive, leather, bucket seats, power Many extras. Gaprofessional help in H(ocj@co 541-815-3636 loaded, 21K m i les, Mercedes Benz seats w/lumbar, pw, raged, perfect conThe Bulletin's "Call a Vin ¹103070 E500 4-matic 2004 HD receiver & trailer dition $5 9 ,700. Service Professional" M Q S R 86,625 miles, sun541-322-9647 brakes, good t i res. $17,988 roof with a shade, Good cond i t ion. Directory Ford Model A 1930 S UB A R U . loaded, silver, 2 sets $4900. 541-389-5341 541-385-5809 Coupe, good condition, BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS of tires and a set of 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $16,000. 541-588-6084 Search the area's most iphoto forillustration only) chains. $13,500. 3m-:. 9= fn 877-266-3821 l~ ' comprehensive listing of Nissan Pathfinder SE 541-362-5598 Peterbilt 35 9 p o table ~ Toyota Celica Dlr ¹0354 1000 classified advertising w ater t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, Convertible 1993 real estate to automotive, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp roof rack, moon roof, Legal Notices 9 Need to get an ad Need help fixing stuff? merchandise to sporting hoses, p ump, 4 - 3 t ow pk g . , all o w Pri ceReduced! Call A Service Professional goods. Bulletin Classifieds camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. wheels. Vin¹722634 LEGAL NOTICE in ASAP? 541-820-3724 appear every day in the Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 find the help you need. The undersigned has $12,988 FORD XLT 1992 print or on line. engine, power evelywww.bendbulletin.com been appointed per3/4 ton 4x4 S UB A R U . thing, new paint, 54K sonal representative Fax it te 541-322-7253 Call 541-385-5809 matching canopy, Utility Trailers original m i les, runs of the Estate of HAMercedes C300 2009 www.bendbulletin.com G T 2200 4 c y l , 5 30k original miles, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. great, excellent condiZEL JEAN OLSON, The Bulletin Classifieds 4-door 4-Matic, red possible trade for 877-266-3821 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, tion in/out. $7500 obo. The Bulletin with black leather inteclassic car, pickup, Dlr ¹0354 nicest c o n vertible Deceased, by the DeLitt $999iBe centralOMs99 sincerna 541-480-3179 schutes County Cirmotorcycle, RV rior, navigation, panaround in this price cuit Court of the State oramic roof, loaded! $13,500. range, ne w t i r es, of Oregon, probate O ne o w ner, o n l y Porsche Carrera 911 In La Pine, call wheels, clutch, timnumber 1 3 P B0121. 29,200 miles. $23,000 2003 convertible with 928-581-9190 ing belt, plugs, etc. hardtop. 50K miles, All persons h aving obo. 541-475-3306 111K mi., r emarknew factory Porsche Atwood Tilt Trailer, able cond. i n side c laims against t h e 4' 2" wide x 7' 10 motor 6 mos ago with estate are required to The Bulletin and out. Fun car to 18 mo factory warSubaru Ba ja Tu r bo long, great condition, GMC Vston 1971, Only Corvette 1979 present the same with To Subscribe call d rive, M ust S E E ! ranty remaining. $350. 541-389-9844 $1 9,700! Original low Sport 2005, Auto, tow L82- 4 speed. vouchers $5995. R e d mond. proper 541-385-5800 or go to $37,500. pkg., two tone, moon 85,000 miles within four (4) months mile, exceptional, 3rd 541-322-6928 541-504-1993 www.bendbulletin.com roof, alloys. Garaged since new. after the date of first owner. 951-699-7171 Vin¹103619 I've owned it 25 publication to the unGMC Sierra 2002 SLE $15,999 dersigned or they may years. Never damGarage Sales Z71 4x4 extended cab, aged or abused. be barred. Additional A RE P V B L I C 63K miles, $12,000 or S UB A R U . i nformation may b e $12,900. Garage Sales best offer. 541-389-1473 o btained f ro m th e N O T I C RS 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dave, 541-350-4077 New 2013 Wells Cargo Garage Sales court records, the un877-266-3821 V-nose car hauler, 8ys' x dersigned or the atI M P O R T A N T P Look at: Dlr ¹0354 20', 5200-Ib axles. Price torney. Date first pubFind them new is $7288; asking Bendhomes.com International Fla t lished: November 3, in Take care of $6750. 541-548-3595 for Complete Listings of Bed Pickup 1963, 1 2013. JAMES C. OLAn important premise upon which the principle of The Bulletin ton dually, 4 s p d. Area Real Estate for Sale SON, Personal Repyour investments democracy is based isthat information about trans., great MPG, resentative c/o Ronald Classifieds with the help from Automotive Wanted could be exc. wood L. Bryant, Attorney at government activities must be accessible in order hauler, runs great, The Bulletin's Law, Bryant Emerson 541-385-5809 DONATE YOUR CARfor the electorate Io make well-informed decisions. & Fitch, LLP, PO Box new brakes, $1950. "Call A Service FAST FREE T OW541-41 9-5480. 4 57, Redmond O R Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo ING. 24 hr. Response Professional" Directory I 97756. citizens who want fo know more about government Tax D e duction. CORVETTE COUPE U NITED B RE A S T activities. Glasstop 2010 PUBLIC NOTICE CANCER FOUNDASport Utility Vehicle Vans • Grand Sport — 4 LT The Bend Park & RecTION. Providing Free loaded, clear bra Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin reation District Board Mammograms & hood & fenders. of Directors will meet Breast Cancer Info. GMC Sierra 1977 short classifieds or go fo vrtww.bendbulletin.com and bed, e xlnt o r i ginal New Michelin Super in a work session and 888-592-7581. cond., runs & drives click on Classified Ads Sports, G.S. floor r egular meeting o n (PNDC) great. V8, new paint mats, 17,000 miles, Tuesday, November and tires. $4750 obo. C rystal red. 19, 2013, at the Dis$ 541-504-1050 trict Office, 799 SW $42,000. Automotive Parts, SUBARU OUTBACK GMC 1995 Safari XT, 503-358-1164. Columbia, Bend, OrLTD 2006 - $13,495 Service 8 Accessories A/C, seats 8, 4.3L V6, egon. The work sesOne owner, Immacustuds on rims, $1700 sion will begin at 5:30 late 2.5i AWD runs and (4) 235/65-17 Wintercat obo. 541-312-6960 p.m. at which time the looks like new with a studded tires, like new, board will discuss the sun/moonroof, leather $400. 4 c hrome rims Say Mgoodbuy" Discovery Park Purheated seats, 6 d i sc from 2002 Jeep Grand CD, 100k c h eckup, chase and sale and to that unused Cherokee, $100. MGA 1959- $19,999 development agreenew belts, timing belt, 541-280-0514 Convertible. O r igiitem by placing it in water pump, transmisments, receive a prebody/motor. No 4 Mini Cooper wheels & nal sion fluid & filter. Auto. sentation on a The Bulletin Classifieds Hankook studded tires, rust. 541-549-3838 trans. with sport shifter. district-wide messag195/60R-15, 2 seasons, 541-549-6028. ing concept, and dis$220. 541-389-9819 ~ OO 5 41 -385-580 9 cuss public process. • s An executive session PixatBterldbliletili com 4 studded Les Schwab More will be conducted beNokians 225/55 on 17 ginning at 6:30 p.m. alloy rims (off Subaru), Automobiles • pursuant t o ORS $400 cash 541-382-6409 192.660(2)(e) for the 4 studded Wintercat tires, M purpose of discussing 9 My little red BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K mounted on 16 rims, real property transacmiles, premium pack- Corvette" Coupe 225/70R-16, $250. tions a nd ORS age, heated lumbar 541-390-7270 Plymouth B a r racuda supported seats, pan- Ir 192.660(2)(h) for the 1966, original car! 300 oramic purpose of consulting moonroof, The Bulletin's hp, 360 V8, centerwith legal counsel reBluetooth, ski bag, Xe"Call A Service lines, 541-593-2597 garding current litiganon headlights, tan & Professional" Directory tion or litigation likely black leather interior, to be filed. A regular is all about meeting n ew front & rea r Tlck Tock 1996, 350 auto, business meeting will brakes @ 76K miles, yourneeds. 132,000 miles. be conducted beginone owner, all records, ICk, TOCk... Non-ethanol fuel & n ing at 7 : 0 0 p . m . very clean, $16,900. Call on one of the synthetic oil only, Rpttrl Rtrts 541-388-4360 Agenda items include ...don't let time get professionals today! premium Bose ste«9 c odification of p e r U Bttt Btelt away Hirea reo, always garaged, sonnel policies, conDash topper for Chevy bindings in great sita!I . RePlaCe Chevy Tahoe 1998, i professlonal out $7 7,000. that Ol d ti r ed Set of SkiS you got fram yaur Ski Bum Buddy! sideration of P E RS S uburban, 2 0 0 7 4x4, 5.7L V8, 197K 2 seasons of use 541-923-1781 Resolution No. 358, 2014. Medium gray, ofTh e Bulletln s mi., g oo d c o n d., approval o f lan d scrapes or dlngs in the $25. 541-593-0204. runs great, w/stud"Call A Service transactions, and ap• Under $500 $29 base andfreshly waxed ded tires on extra TURN THE PAGE proval of a P a cificProfessional" Need to get an • $500 to $99 9 $39 factory rims. $3000 and tunedfortheseason C orp p a r king lo t For More Ads $450 OBO Directory today! OBO. 541-480-8060 ad in ASAP? • $1000 to $2499 $49 lease. The a g enda The Bulletin 541-000-000 • $2500 and over $59 You can place it and meeting report for t he N ovember 1 9 , online at: BMW 525 2002 Includes upio 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, 2013, meeting will be www.bendbulletin.com p osted Friday, N o Luxury Sport Edifull color photo, bold headline and price. tion, V-6, automatic, servingcenaRIoregon since rstn vember 15, 2013, on Chevy Tahoe 2001 9 • The Bulletin, • The Central OregonNickel Adt the district/s website: 541-385-5809 loaded, 18 new 5.3L V8, leather, 541-385-5809 tires, 114k miles. www.bendparksanVW Bug Sedan, 1969, air, heated seats, • Central Oregon Marketplace e bendbulletin.com Some restrictions apply FJ Toyota 4 snow tires fully restored, 2 owners, fully loaded, 120K mi. drec.org. For m o re $7,900 obo 9 on 17 rims, $495 wit h 73,000 total miles, $7500 obo information call (541) 419-4152 'Privatepartymerchandiseonly -excludespetsft livestock,autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats,airplanes, ondgaragesalecategories. Ford F350 Super Duty Crew Cab 2004, V10, auto, 4WD, tow pkg., alloy wheels, w i de tires. VIN ¹A53944 $9,888
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