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Missing hiker's hody fuullli —A Bend man missing since Wednesdayis found dead in theThree Sisters Wilderness.A5
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• More than 25% of facilities reported twice the number of nursesthey actually had. How did Central Oregon'snursing homesfare in watchdog organization's report? A recent investigation conducted by the Center for Public Integrity, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit investigative news organization, raises a red flag about one of a scant handful of websites — Singers belt out tunes as part of a fundraiser for the Court Appointed Special Advocates program.A5
And aWebexclusiveProfessional videogameplayers endure anintense, monthlong training session with onegoal in mind: to becomebetter at blowing awaytheir opponents. bendbnlletin.cem/extras
people can turn to when they're trying to find a long-term care facility where they or a loved one
PERCENTAGE OFNURSING HOMES THAT OVERREPORTED
nurses they have on duty. The center
0 -1 5%
found more than a fourth of these facilities said they had twice the
WA 8.3%
number of nurses they actually had.
While the two Central Oregon nursing homes reviewed by the
EDITOR'5CHOICE
mation about their staffing levels or slightly underreported them to the
As Ebola
website, the report found a high lev-
takes its toll, mistrust
business owner who specializes in
fadesaway
Sensenbach, co-owner of Bend's Home Instead Senior Care franchise. Sensenbach said Nursing Home Compare is one of three websites his company, which provides
By Adam Nossiter New York Times News Service
DANDANO, Guinea-
"Bring out your sick!" the chief shouted angrily at the crowd, shakinghis fist and warning of illness and death for the whole village if it did not obey. "Don't hide them," he yelled. "If you don't expose them, you will suffer!" Slowly, haggard and dazed, a procession trudged to the muddy village center — a student, a minibus driver, a 5-year-old girl and farmers — withbloodshot eyes betraying the symp-
This remote, mountainous partofGuinea is w here
the world's worst Ebola outbreakbegan nearly a year ago, in villages hidden by dense forest, high reedsand a long history of resistance to the distant central
government. SeeEbola /A6
NE l8%
NM 11.1%
accurate information," said Todd
home-based health care services to thousands of seniors across the
country, turns to when it needs information about planning for nurs-
30 - 45%
•
45 - 60%
) 600/0
•
ME 11.6%
VT 7.1% MHq NY 6.8% 34.1% MA 9.7% PA 15% Rl
MN 11.3% WI 2.2% 210/0
IA 16.4%
lL 2 p2 / 26.8%41.1% WV KA Ky 13/0 VA MO 3'8.7% 20 5% 31 7o/, NC TN 38.2+/r DK 45 90/ AK 39.7% 56 9 SC AL GA 14.5'% MS 152% • 34 9P/ TX 28.2' 47.1% F 0.7
CO 7.9%
54%
•
SD 12.2%
WY 5.6%
AZ 14 9'/
"It is imperative that we have
Source:Center for Public Integrity
p
CT 10.6% NJ 5.4 DE 10 3% MD 19.6% DC 11.1%
AndyZeigert /The Bulletin
to people who need constant medical attention. These facilities, which are
ing home needs. covered by M edicare for short-term Medicare-certified nursing homes stays and state Medicaid programs for provide care in a hospital setting long-term stays, are typically staffed
by a team of registered nurses, licensed practical nurses and certified nursing assistants who work around the clock
and provide 24-hour care. SeeNursing homes/A4
Calls to change arestaurant chain's name By Julie Turkewitz New York Times News Service
FORT COLLINS — The
"There are many, and they are still hidden," said a Red Cross nurse, ciimbing
CA 12.7%
his clients who can no longer live at home.
national debate over the use of the term "illegal immigrant," which has become anathema topeople who support relaxed immigration rules, has fixed on an unlikely lightning rod: the liberal-minded, pro-immigrant owner of a Mexican restau-
ambulance.
lD 8.5%
ND 22.6%
finding long-term care settings for
alone, two village elders flanking them at a wary distance. The crowd edged away fearfully. Then something just as unusualhappened: A Red freely, tossing water bags to the sick, sheathingthemin plasti crobes,rubbergloves and face masks. They were taken away down a rough dirt road by a waiting
15- 3 0 %
MT
NV 0%
el of exaggeration in other parts of the state, and that worries one local
toms of Ebola. They walked
Cross team went to work
OR 21.5%
center either posted accurate infor-
Southwest
The 29,000-square-foot project, located in the old
A recent investigation conducted by theCenter for Public Integrity found one-fourth of the country's nursing homes reported staffing levels for registered nurses that were more than twice what they actually were on theMedicare program's Nursing HomeCompare website.
most 10,500nursing homes posted to the Medicare program's Nursing Home Compare website (www. medicare.gov/nursinghomecompare) about the number of registered
Simpson Pavilion project will soon get under way, affectingtrafReuderihg ficnear the Oll A4 alrea d y busy son Avenue roundabout.
Center forPudlicIntegrity investigation
report reviewed the information al-
The Bulletin
Colorado Avenue and Simp-
can get the highest level of care. Released last week, the center's
By Tyler Leeds Construction on Bend Park 8z Recreation District's
By Mac McLeans The Bulletin
Broadway onWall Street
Simpson Pavilion project to begin soon
the word "illegal" held little of the political charge it does today.
-
Mt. BachelorPark and Ride lot, will host an 85-by-200-
foot seasonal ice rink and courts for basketball, volley-
ball, tennis and other sports. The site will also indude a lobby, changing rooms and a concessions area. The $11.35 million project is being funded by a $29 million bond voters approved in 2012. The cost of the project
includes everything from design to construction to ice skates and cash registers,
according to Michelle Healy, strategic planning and design director. Construction is set to
beginbefore Thanksgiving, with a pre-construction
meeting scheduled for today. SeePavilion/A4
Inmore cities, car commuting is in decline By Tim Henderson Stateline.org
WASHINGTON — Jil-
lian Golan got tired of paying repair bills for her 2001 Volkswagen Cabriolet convertible last year and
c r
"I never intended it to be
started walking the 20 min-
about undocumented immigrants," Turner said. "Never.
utes to her job at a dialysis clinic in Philadelphia. A
Not once." Turner seemed to have stum-
year and a half later, she
5
But in opening a new locale here — the chain's seventh-
"
m •
~ -
-
".==. n » xx I lii 8
hasn't lookedback, joining the growing ranks of people giving up cars for commuting. "I'm saving a ton of money. No car payment, no insurance, no worrying about a parking ticket," said
er, 43, opened his first Illegal
bled on a political tripwire he had not known existed, drawing ire from local and national immigrant rights groups that say his use of the
Pete's restaurant nearly 20
word in connection with a
Golan, 37. "If I were to buy
years ago, and says that the name was inspired by the
person's name is derogatory
a car again, I would have to
rant chain. The proprietor, Pete Turn-
name of a bar in a novel and
III 51
and offensive. Furthermore,they said,
cut back on a lot of things I Theo Stroomer i TheNew York Times
by his late father, also named Pete, who had a rebellious
they are alarmed that an additional Illegal Pete's is slated
Illegal Pete's, a Mexican restaurant chain owned by Pete Turner, in Fort Collins, Colorado, has drawn ire from local and national
streak. At the time, said Turner,
to open in Tucson in August. SeeRestaurant/A6
immigrant rights groups that say his use of theword "illegal" in connection with a person's name isderogatory and offensive.
TODAY'S WEATHER ~ A r eas ofhigh clouds High 32, Low14 Page BB
INDEX Calendar A5 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 8Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope
C4 Local/State A 5-6 SportsMonday B1-8 A7 Movies A7 Tee to Green 81, B7 A7 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A7
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Voc 112, No. 321, 24 pages, 3 sections
do socially, and I'm not willingto do that. I have a lot of friends who don't have cars
or never had cars." SeeCar/A6
Q l/l/e userecyclednewsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
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NATION Ee ORLD
ama: samic ae II'
ie By Rukmini Callimachi
meliCan
other Western hostages, whose group's third American victim. recordeddeaths were carefully GAZIANTEP, Ilfrkey — Is- The president's announcement choreographed. lamic State militants released was the first official confirmaIn the dip released early a chilling videotape Sunday tion ofhis death. Sunday, the Islamic State dis"Today we offer our prayers plays the head of Kassig, 26, at showing they had beheaded a fifth Western hostage, an and condolences to the parents the feet of a man with a BritAmerican aid worker the group and family of Abdul-Rahman ish accent, who appeared in had threatened to kill in retali- Kassig, also known to us as the previous beheading videos ation for airstrikes carried out Peter," Obama's statement said. and has been nicknamed Jiby the United States in Iraq and The president used the Muslim hadi John by the British news Syria. name that Kassig adopted after media. Unlike the earlier vidPresident Barack Obama on his capture, making the point eos, which were staged with Sunday confirmed the death of that the Islamic State had killed multiple cameras from differthe aid worker, Peter Kassig, a a fellow Muslim. He acknowl- ent vantage points, and which former Army Ranger who dis- edged the "anguish at this pain- show the hostages kneeling, appeared more than a year ago ful time" feltby Kassig's family. then uttering their last words, at a checkpoint in northeastern The footage in the video the footage of Kassig's death is Syria while delivering medical released Sunday was of poor- curtailed — showing only the supplies. er quality than some of the final scene. Kassig"was taken fromus in group's previous, slickly proA nalysts s ai d t h a t th e an act of pure evil by a terrorist duced execution videos. change in the videos suggestgroup," Obama said in a stateThe video shows a black- ed that something may have ment from aboard Air Force robed executioner standing gone wrong as the militants, One that was read to the news over the severed head of Kas- who havebeenunder sustained media in Washington. sig. Though the end result of attack from a U.S.-led miliIn recent days, U.S. intelli- the footage was grimly famil- tary coalition and have faced gence agencies received strong iar, it was strikingly different a seriesof setbacks in recent indications that th e I slamic from the executi ons of four weeks, carried out the killing. State had killed Kassig, the
New York Times News Service
Dtseuiesrs
RUNOFF ELECTION IN ROMANIA
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flew to North Korea on a mission to bring home two U.S.captives, he ran into a potential hitch. North Korean officials wanted adiplomatic concession of somesort in return for freeing the menand Clapper had none to offer. "I think they weredisappointed," Clapper said, fleshing out details of the secret trip a week after its completion. It was not until he wasushered into a hotel room for an "amnesty-granting ceremony" that he knewthe release of Americans Kenneth Baeand Matthew Miller would proceed as planned. All told, the trip unfolded more smoothly than his first foray into North Koreanair space, aboard aU.S. helicopter in December1985. "They shot at us, and fortunately we made it back to theSouth," he told CBS's"Facethe Nation" in an interview broadcast Sunday. At the time, Clapperwas intelligence chief for U.S. forces in South Korea.This time, he was a presidential emissary with a deal in theworks and permission to land.
of Chibok, the northeastern town wheremorethan 200 schoolgirls were kidnapped by Islamic extremists more than six months ago, said army officials. Thearmy wrested back control of Chibok on Saturday, about 48 hours after it had beencaptured by the Islamic militants of Boko Haram, Nigerian army spokesmanBrigadier General Olajide Olaleye told the Associated Press. "Chibok is firmly in the hands of the Nigerian army." Olaleye told the AP."Chibok is free. Secured." He encouragedChibok residents to return to their homes. The town of about 60,000 in Nigeria's northeastern Borno state hadbeen captured by BokoHaraminsurgents on Thursday night. Thousands of residents fled whenthe rebels entered the town shooting from pickup trucks and motorcycles.
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Nerth KOrea diplemaCy — WhenU.S. spy chief JamesClapper
Nigerian schoolgirls —TheNigerian armyhasregained control
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REDMOND BUREAU
Obama returnS hOme — After a productive trip abroad, President Barack Obamareturned homeSunday onacollision course with Republicans onimmigration and anoil pipeline project, showdownsthat threaten prospects for cooperation overhis remaining two years in office. Thecontentious immigration debatecould meanayear-end fight over keeping thegovernment running, if someGOPlawmakers get their way. Onthe foreign policy front, there is a Nov.24 deadline in nuclear negotiations with Iran, andquestions are surfacing within the administration about whether tooverhaul U.S.policy toward Syria. Givenhis faltering political support in theU.S.and his party's recent election losses, his trip to China,MyanmarandAustralia appeared to offer respite.
discredited" claims of sexual abusewith a response, his attorney said Sunday, the first comment from the famedcomedian's lawyer onan increasing uproar over allegations that heassaulted several womenin the past. In a statement released toTheAssociated Press and posted online, lawyer John Schmitt said the fact that the allegations are being repeated "does not makethemtrue." "He would like to thank all his fans for the outpouring of support and assure themthat, at age 77, he is doing his best work," Schmitt said. The renewedattention to a dark chapter for Cosby beganlast month when a comedian, Hannibal Buress, assailed him during a stand-up performance in Philadelphia, Cosby's hometown, calling him a"rapist." His remarks were captured on videoand posted online, gaining wide exposure.
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after Malaysia Airlines Flight17 was shot down over rebel-held eastern Ukraine, TheAssociated Press has obtained video that shows how close the burning passenger jet came to hitting village homes and suggests that residents first assumed it was a Ukrainian military plane that had beenstruck. The amateur footage, filmed by aresident of Hrabove, shows people reacting in alarm aswreckage blazes only a few meters awayfrom their homes on theafternoon of July17. The video is perhaps the first taken immediately after the planecame down. The ultimate cause of the MH17 disaster is the subject of major diplomatic disputes. Ukraine andWestern government say Russia-backed separatist fighters fired the rockets that felled the plane, while state-run television in Moscow over theweekend produced evidence it claims places blamewith Ukraine's air force.
Bill Cosby allegations —Bill cosbywill not dignify "decade-old,
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New video of Malaysia Airlines downing —Fourmonths
— Fromwirereports Octav Ganea/ Medrafax/The Associated press
Daciana Sarbu,wife of Romanian PrimeMinister Victor Ponta, comesout of a polling booth alongside her daughter, Irina before she casts her vote at a polling stationin Bucharest, Romania, onSunday. Thousands of peoplegathered in Bucharest to celebrate after Romania's prime minister concededdefeat
Sunday night in apresidential runoff against anethnic German Transylvanian mayor. Ponta hadbeenthe favorite to win but wasdefeated by Klaus lohannis, themayor of the city of Sibiu who promised to crackdown oncorruption. Ponta said he had personally congratulated lohannis.
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Groups inFergusonprep for grandjury decision By John Eligon, Julie Bosman and Monica Davey
gas. Yet the
m os t i m p ortant
New York TimesNews Service
part of the planning may FERGUSON, Mo. — Sev- also be the hardest: how to eral dozen people gathered prevent demonstrations from in a dim church basement turning violent. Organizers here Thursday night to share say they want their efforts plans for what to do if a grand here to blossom into a lasting, jury chooses not to indict the national movement. So they white police officer who shot say they hope for the protests Michael Brown, an unarmed to be forceful, loud and unreblack teen, three months ago. lenting — without the looting Among their ideas: descend or arson that could underin large numbers on the near- mine their message. "We've come tothe concluby county seat of Clayton at 7 a.m. on the day after the
sion that we really don't want
grand jury's announcement to snarl business. A day earlier, a different group, chanting "no justice, no profit," met in St. Louis to
violence," said one organizer with Lost Voices, who goes by the name Bud Cuzz. "We
announce it will boycott the
change. We still want to raise
region's retailers during the Thanksgiving shopping period as a response to Brown's
Now available inDeschutesCounty, St. CharlesHospice hasbeenproviding comfort anddignity for patients - andsupport for CentralOregonfamiliesfor 25 years. Inaddition toseeing patients fromanyphysician provider,we are alsotheonly hospice programinthe region whocandirectly connectto St. Charlesmedical records, makingadifficult transition a little smoother.
awareness. But we don't want
You haveachoice in whocaresfor youoryour lovedoneduring this time.
the city to turn upside down." No doubt, protest leaders here say, there have been
test not just the shooting of Brown, but also the broader
say that is the nature of a
police conduct.
decisionsyoucanmakefor yourself or your lovedone is who will providehospicecare.Andyou dohaveachoice.
want to fix this. We still want to fight t o m ak e th e l aws
death. Since August, a d i sparate array of demonstrators has been drawn here to proissues of racial profiling and
During this time of stress anduncertainty, one of the most important
conflicts, at times, over leadership, tactics and even over
St CharlesHospice,Apromise of comfort.
individuals. But leaders here m ovement that h a s t a k en place, in part, on social media and that does not match
Now, with the grand ju- an earlier-era protest strucry's decision expected in the ture where a single, outspocoming days, the groups are ken leader might have led the preparing with intricate pre- way. " This is no t y ou r m o m cision to protest the no-inma's civil rights movement," dictment vote most consider inevitable. Organizers are said Ashley Yates, a leader of outlining "rules of engage- Millennial Activists United. m ent" for dealing with t h e "This is a movement where police, circulating long lists you have several difference of equipment, including ban- voices, different people. The dages and shatterproof gog- person in charge is reallygles, and establishing "safe the people. But the message spaces" where protesters can from everyone is the same: escape the cold — or the tear Stop killing us."
~
S t . Charles
Hospice 541-706-6700 StCharlesHealthCare.org/Hospice69
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014•THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, Nov. 17, the 321st
day of 2014. Thereare 44days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Odama returnS — After a weeklong trip overseas, with stops in China, Myanmarand Australia, President Barack Obama returns to Washington, where he'll face Republican talk of a government shutdown.
FOreign StudentS —Oata will be released showing that the number of international students in the U.S.Iastyear rose to a record 886,052.
HISTORY Highlight:In1889, the Union Pacific Railroad Co.began direct, daily railroad service between Chicagoand Portland, as well as Chicagoand San Francisco. In1558, Elizabeth I acceded to the English throne uponthe death of QueenMary. In1800, Congress held its first session in Washington in the partially completed Capitol building. In1869,the SuezCanal opened in Egypt. In1917, French sculptor Auguste Rodin died in Meudonat age 77. In1934, Lyndon BainesJohnson married Claudia Alta Taylor, better known asLady Bird, in San Antonio, Texas. In1947, President Harry Truman, in an address to aspecial session of Congress, called for emergency aid to Austria, Italy and France. (Theaid wasapproved the following month.) In1973, President Richard Nixon told Associated Press managing editors in Orlando, Florida: "People havegot to know whether or not their president is a crook. Well, I'm not a crook." In1979, Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini ordered the release of13 black and/or female American hostages being held at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. In1987,a federal jury in Denver convicted two white supremacists of civil rights violations in the1984 slaying of radio talk show host Alan Berg. (Both men later died in prison.) In1989, the Walt Disney animated feature "The Little Mermaid" opened in wide release. In1994, the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical "Sunset Boulevard" opened onBroadway with Glenn Close asfaded movie star NormaDesmond. Ten years ago:It was announced that Kmart was acquiring Sears in asurprise $11 billion deal. In Washington state, officials said Republican gubernatorial candidate Dino Rossi led Democratic opponent Christine Gregoire by only 261 votes. (After three counts of the ballots, Gregoire was declared the winner by just129 votes out of 2.9 million cast.) Five years ago:President Barack Obamaheldformal, closed-door talks in Beijing with Chinese President Hu Jintao. Sarah Palin's autobiography "Going Rogue" was released;1 million copies sold in less than two weeks. One year ago:Intense thunderstorms and tornadoes swept across the Midwest, causing extensivedamagein several central lllinois communities, killing more than half a dozen people.
BIRTHDAYS Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., is 80. Singer Gordon Lightfoot is 76. Singer-songwriter Bob Gaudio is 73. Movie director Martin Scorsese is 72. Actress Lauren Hutton is 71. Actor-director DannyDeVito is 70. "Saturday Night Live" producer Lorne Michaels is 70. Baseball Hall of Famer Tom Seaver is 70. Former Democratic National Chairman Howard Dean is66. House Speaker John Boehner is 65. Actor William Moses is 55. Entertainer RuPaul is 54. Actor Dylan Walsh is 51.National Security Adviser SusanRice is 50. Actor BrandonCall is 38. Country singer Aaron Lines is 37. Actress Rachel McAdams is 36. Rock musician Isaac Hanson (Hansonj is 34. — From wire reports
STUDY
MISCONCEPTIONS
Healthy eating,
ese eain m s can raiseener Is
Happy Meal-s le By Abby Phillip
of between three and five op-
The Washington Post
Think programmable thermostats are a big money saver'? Or that fireplaces are an efficient source of heat? Think again.
tions, and if they chose the opSince the 1970s, when the tions that constituted the "powHappy Meal was developed er plate," they received a small by a Midwestern advertis- prize. It could be a pencil or a ing executive, McDonald's water-based tattoo or a sticker has made incentivizing food — all very inexpensive items. choices something of an art Of the 297 children at the form. The little box of fast- school, almost everybody-
By Gregory Karp
food calories with a little toy
Chicago Tribune
surprise has proven to be so patedinthe free and reduced appealing to children that in lunch program; very f ew 2010 San Francisco passed brought lunches from home. a law prohibiting toys from At the onset of the program, being sold with meals that fewer than 10 percent of kids
Advice about saving money on home heating costs abounds this time of year, but some of it is oversimplified, marketing hype or just plain wrong, while some long-standing myths persist about keeping warm on the cheap. For example, programmable thermostats are not the holy grail of home heating, cranking up the furnace does nothing to heat a chilly house
fail to meet certain nutri-
voluntarily chose the compo-
tional standards. Now, researchers are looking at ways of using a similar model to get kids to choose fruits and veg-
nents of the "power plate."
etables with their school
B ut when they w ere o f fered prizes,about 42 percent
picked up the healthier options. Even when the prizes were removed altogether, 36 percent
lunches. continued to choose healthier Childhood obesity is a options. High-quality prizes were growing problem that currentlyaffects aboutonethird more effective at incentiviz-
. . —;~ (
g@, g
fasterand fireplaces used as
heating sources literally suck — suck paid-for warm air up the chimney. Duct tape? Not good for sealing ducts.
about 99 percent — partici-
of American kids, and for
ing kids to make the healthier
choices. But "low-quality," less expensive prizes like tattoos
and unveil some myths, we which doesn't work as well Windows warning sought help from Max Sher- with widely varying temperaMarketers of window re-
years, public health officials — first lady Michelle Obama among them — have been arguing in favor of making school lunches healthier. In partnership with Cin-
man, a senior scientist at the
tures, the value of a program-
s tory
cinnati Public Schools, re-
"From a c ost-benefit perspective, our condusion is that
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory overseeing researchfor residential energy efficiency. Besides being a se-
mable thermostat can be di- half right. Replacing drafty minished, he said. "Because of windows with energy-effi-
searchers at the Cincinnati
the best way to carry this on is
Children's Hospital Med-
to do tattoos and stickers twice
the way heat pumps work, set-
cient ones will save on ener-
back can be a difficult thing for them and may not save nearly
gy use. But windows are so expensive, often thousands of
ical Center have piloted a a week if you're on a budget," program that made a rela- said Siegel, who was the lead
asmuch."
dollars, that the break-even
If you want the convenience of a programmable thermostat, remembertoactually program it, or use pricier "smart" ther-
will be measured in decades. Among energy u p grades aimed at saving money, replacing windows might rank dead last.
Thinkstock
While those roaring flames might makefor an enjoyable ambiance, a fireplace isn't an efficient heating method.
To truth-test heating advice
rious scientist, he gained notoriety in the late 1990s as Dr.
Duct Tape for discovering that the gray-backed sticky tape "failed reliably and often catastrophically" when used for sealing ducts. "It will get old and fall off after ayear or soof heatingcycles,"Sherman said. "Plenty of tapes are good for sealing, but standard duct tape isn't one of them." Here are a few other home
heating myths:
Fireplacefallacy
mostats that can learn how
"On the cost-benefit prioryour house works and make adjustments. The point is not to ity list, windows are usually avoid programmable thermo- behind air sealing, insulation stats. They can be convenient. and system efficiency improveIt's to use them wisely to use ments," Sherman said. less energy. Consumer Reports That said, if you have decidin its October issue rated mod-
the chimney. Not a recipe for financial savings. A possible exception is if you want to turn down the heat in the rest of the house
and close offand heatonlyone room — the one that includes the fireplace. Or, as Sherman
notes, it might be a net benefit if the fireplace has sealed
glass doors and "you've gone through the trouble of essentially turning it into a sealed wood stove ... then you no
longer have the nice, cheery fire you probably had in mind when you said, 'Let's use the fireplace.'"
Programmable thermostat problem These highly touted devices simply do automatically what you could do yourself, namely walk over to the thermostat and adjust it.
Many programmable thermostats require, as the name implies, progranuning. The simple or "dumb" ones are clocks that adjust the temperature at prescribed times — al-
though some might come with a built-in program. "It's definitely going to save you money in the default mode because it will turn it down at night and
save energy," Sherman said. However, like the fireplace, a programmable thermostat
might enhance your life but could end up costing you money, at least compared with dili-
gently setting the temperature manually every day. Sherman said his heatingbill went up when he installed one.
Why? Like mostpeopleheused to turn the heat up when he got
up in the morning. With a programmable, he could warm the house in advance of his feet hitting the floor. "I liked it, but
it did not save energy," he said. And if youhaveaheatpump,
ed to replace windows for a dif-
els ranging in price from $50 to ferent reason — perhaps cosmore than $500. metic reasons or to eliminate drafts — you might as well pay Crank it up for highly efficient ones. "While replacing them just Something in human nature leads homeowners who walk for energy may be quite costinto a frigid house to believe ly, moving to high-efficiency
If you enjoy the sound, smell and ambiance of a wood fireplace, go for it. Just don't think you're helping your wallet. "A fireplace is a particularly bad way of heating your home," that cranking the thermostat to Sherman said. 85 degreeswillsomehow heat First, there's paying for fire- the home quicker. "It is a comwood, as many urban and sub- mon misconception," Sherurban dwellers do. Then you man said. It doesn't work that feed the fire's appetite for oxy- way. Think of furnaces like gen with your paid-for heated light switches, not dimmers. indoor air, which it shoots up
placements have th e
windows when they need to
be replacedanyway isalmost always a good idea," Sherman said. "The marginal difference is small." What should you do? It's not rocket science. Sealing gaps They are either on or off. The and cracks around windows, only result of your thermostat doors, ducts, pipe cutouts and cranking will be heating your other areas is among the most house beyond a desirable tem- cost-effective moves. perature and wasting energy Consumer Reports says — and money. blowing sealant into ductwork, called aerosealing, is effecLeave it up tive, albeit expensive upfront, Another common refrain is $1,500 to $2,500 with promised that it's cheaper to keep your savings of $250 to $850 per home at a constant tempera- year. See aeroseal.com. Italso ture, even when you're not says a professional energy auhome. "Almost never true," dit can be worthwhile too, alSherman said, noting again though it costs $250 to $800. that homes with heat pumps And consider changes that can be an exception. allow you to lower the ther"If the system is runningless, mostat a few degrees, includit means it's using less energy," ing dressing for winter, which he said. might mean wearing a sweater Says the U.S. Department and slippers around the house. of Energy on energy.gov, "You Electric blankets use little encan easily save energy in the ergy and can make it easier winter by setting the thermo- to lower the thermostat a few stat to 68 degrees while you're more degrees at night. awake and setting it l ower For more information and while you're asleep or away suggestions on cost-effective from home." home energy improvements, Figure you save up to 1 per- see energystar.gov and hocent per year on your heating meenergysaver.lbl.gov. bill for each degree you setback The American Society of the thermostat for eight hours, Heating, Refrigerating and such as when you're sleeping Air-Conditioning Engineers or at work. A 10-degree drop offers tips at t i nyurl.com/ could be 10 percent savings. ashraetips.
a nd stickers still worked -
evenwhen they weren'toff ered every day.
tively small adjustment to
author on the program's ac-
the lunch program at one low-income public elementary school. "The components are the entree with whole grain,
companying study.
fruits, vegetables, a salad
most parents know, kids can
It's important to note that the study didn't look at wheth-
er the children actually ate the food they picked up. And as
bar and milk, which could be craft yinpursuitofrew ards. either be flavored or plain Students also weren't asked low-fat milk," said Robert
to choose between unhealthy
Siegel, aprofessorofpediat- foodsandhealthyfoods—they rics at Cincinnati Children's simply were asked to take addiHospital Medical Center.
tional healthy foods that they
"The problem is the stu- might have otherwise skipped. dents don't necessarily seThe study's limited duration lect the best combination of
— two months — doesn't tell us
those, and they often select
anything about whether the ef-
chocolate milk." Chocolate milk is often
fect of the prizes lasts.
high in sugar and can be no better than soda in terms of
plain milk, main dish or
entree,fresh fruit , fresh vegetables or salad," said Siegel, who presented the program's findings at the European Child Obesity Group Congress in Austria on Saturday. Students had the choice
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
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"If I was going to consider any type of Nursing homes third-party living, I would make a lot of
'
,
Continued from A1 In hopes of helping people find the right nursing home, the Medicare program's Nursing Home Compare website ranks more than 15,000 of these facilities on
unannounced visits just to see how the people are being treated." — Todd Sensenbach, co-owner of Bend's Home Instead Senior Care franchise
a five-star r ating system ' •
that judges overall quality of care.
.'
—Ecoparkinglot
Entry plaza
Part of these scores are
II
I
Eastlataa ] j
Courtyard green tl
underreported its staffing levels on the website; it re-
based on information the ported it had 0.76 registered nursing homes themselves nurses per resident per hour submit that details the num- when it had 0.98 registered ber of RNs, LPNs and CNAs nurses per resident per on duty at a given time. This hour. The Redmond Health information is presented on Care Center's reporting was the website as a ratio that fairly accurate; it reported lists the number of nurses it had 0.81 registered nursper resident per hour. es per day per hour when it According to N u r sing actually had 0.80 registered Home Compare, four Cen- nurses per resident per tral Oregon nursing homes hour. — Bend Transitional Care, T he staffing r a tios r e Cascade View Nursing and ported to Nursing Home Pilot Butte R ehabilitation Compare for other nursing Center in Bend and Ochoco homes in Oregon, however,
r
GreenStreet retrofits
Butte Rehabilitation Center
I'
ing homes overreported data so significantly. When he heard about these
findings, Sensenbach said he wasn't surprised Central Oregon's nursing homes passed the test. He said he has a good relationship with each one, and they have always complied with state and federal nursing home audits. He also said people who do not trust the data on Nursing Home Compare could try looking a t
o t her w e bsites,
calculations as closely. In
Bend Park & Recreation District/ Submitted photos
— maintained staffing ratios high enough to garner
fact, 14 of the 65 Oregon
such as those managed by not-for-profit groups Leading Age (www.leadingage.org) and the National Consumer Voice for Quality Long-Term Care (www.theconsumervoice.org).
The site plan for the Simpson Pavilion project includes an 85-by-200-foot seasonal ice rink and courts for basketball, volleyball, tennis and other sports.
a five-star rating. The Redmond Health Care Center
nursing homes covered in the review reported staffing
But Sensenbach said that even the i n f ormation con-
Jl
; ;/i s
r
Care Center in
P r i neville did not match the center's
and the East Cascade Re-
levels that were more than tained on these websites is twice what was reflected in no substitute for what somedras receivedfour-star rat- the center's calculations. one can gain from visiting a ings for their staffing levels. This includes a Happy facility. "If I was going to consider But many long-term care Valley facility that reported experts question the reli- it had 1.38 registered nurs- any type of third-party living, ability of the ratings be- es on duty per resident per I would make a lot of unancause the staffing data is hour when it actually had nounced visits just to see how self-reported. 0.37 and a Medford facility the people are being treated," In an analysis of its find- that reported it had 0.63 reg- he said, explaining these visings posted on the center's istered nurses on duty when its should be done at different website, the report's authors it actually had 0.21. times of the day so the person noted Medicare officials are Oregon's overreporting can get a true feel for how aware self-reporting could rate of 21.5 percent, how- many nurses are on duty at a lead to a situation where ever, pales in comparison particular time. nursing homes intentionally to what th e center found Sensenbach said these inoverreported staffing lev- in other states. According troductory visits should be els on the website and have to the report, 77 percent of followed with more visits vowed to d o s omething Louisiana's nursing homes once the person's loved one about it. But, so far, steps reported they had twice the has checked into the facility. have not been taken to cor- number of registered nurs— Reporter: 541-617-7616, rect it. es on duty than the center's mmclean@bendbulletin.com The Center for Public Incalculations found, and 56.9 tegrity's review found Pilot percent of Arkansas' nurstirement Community in Ma-
Pavilion Continued fromA1 "When it a c tually st arts w ill d e pend o n h o w th e weather is," Healy said. "If
nothing else, we'll soon see I them staging and getting equipment in place. There will definitely be activity." The Simpson Pavilion activity will add to the bustle stemming from the park district's Colorado Dam Safe Passage project, which is The 29,000-square-foot Simpson Pavilion is an $11.35 million projcreating new pathways in the ect that is being funded by a $29 million bond approved by voters Deschutes River suited to ev- in 2012. erything from kayakers and fish to floaters and frogs. "The city is also scheduled Because of t hat w o rk, E arlier t hi s m o n th , t h e McKay Park and the Colo- t o start sewer work i n t h e district's board of directors rado Avenue footbridge are area, and the pavilion will awarded t h e c o n struction closed. A detour leads walk- just add another dimension contract to Apollo Inc., a ers, runners and bikers to to all the work," Healy said. company based in Kennethe sidewalk and bike lane "We'll have contractors com- wick, Washington. on the north side of the Col- ing in and out, and once we — Reporter: 541-633-2160, orado Avenue bridge and get further into the project, tleeds@bendbulletin.com extends from the west side there could be occasional o f Shevlin H i xon D r ive t o delays with trucks. But those L
I
Carlon Avenue and I n dustrial Way east of the river.
Barriers will be erected on the southwest edge of McKay
Park to prevent access.
should be minimal, as most
of our work is on-site, not in the roadways, though we are doing work on Bradbury (Drive)."
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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014•THE BULLETIN
CIVIC CALENDAR TUESDAY
Bend Park 8 Recreation DistrictThe board is scheduled to hold a work session at 5:30 p.m., followed by a regular meeting at 7 p.m. at the district office, 799 SWColumbia St. The board is slated to approve the Riley Ranch Master Planand to adopt a resolution authorizing refinancing of debt incurred whenthe district renovated the Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center in 2005.
Bend-La Pine Schools boardThe board is scheduled to hold its regular meeting at 6 p.m. at theEducation Center, 520 NW Wall St. The board is planning to discuss the designandnamingofa new middl eschooland to hold a public hearing and approve arequest for contracting of 2015 renovation projects to district schools.
RedmondCity
Council —Thecouncil is slated to meetat 6:30 p.m., followed immediately by Urban Renewal District Agency meeting, at Council Chambers, 777 SW Deschutes Ave.The council is scheduled to accept a DUIIEnforcement grant awarded to RedmondPolice,which would fund overtime for patrol officers on certain holidays, and to approve the appointment of an owner's representative to the EvergreenElementary School renovation project.
i ssin en
i e r oun e a
By Claire Withycombe
ner when he fell at about 9,500
The Bulletin
feet off the west side of the mountain and disappeared from his climbing partner's sight. The pair had a base
A Bend man missing on Middle Sister since
Wednesday was found dead Sunday in the Three Sisters Wilderness.
According to Lane County Sheriff's Sgt. Carrie Carver, a 15-person search team
found 39-year-old Benjamin Newkirk approximately 800
nearly 7,000 feet, and were climbing along the southeast ridge of Middle Sister. The winter weather, in-
10,047-foot mountain west of
Bend at 10 p.m. Wednesday,
helicopter.
according to the Lane County
Searchers and aircraft surveillance located Newkirk on Sunday.
to 900 feet below where he fell on the mountain.
Newkirk had been missing since he fell high on the
Sheriff's Office. Newkirk was descending the peak with a climbing part-
SeeHiker /A6
BRIEFING
Body foundin Redmondditch Redmond Police found a deadperson in the Central Oregon Irrigation District canal off of U.S. Highway 97 in Redmond onSunday. According to Redmond Police Sgt. Curtis Chambers, dispatch received a call of a body in the canal shortly before 10 a.m. Sunday. The deceasedhas
camp at Camp Lake, between South and Middle Sister at
cluding high winds, freezing rain and snow, had prevented searches after 2 p.m. Thursday and all day Friday. On Saturday, teams continued their search for Newkirk by
A5
beenidentified, but
Submitted photo
no details are being released at this point in the investigation. There is no danger to the public, Chambers
A search and rescue team prepares to depart from Eugeneto
sald.
search for Bend hiker Benjamin Newkirk. Newkirk's body was found in the Three Sisters Wilderness on Sunday.
Library's drive-up drop boxclosed
BROADWAY ON WALL STREET
es itewintr weat er,t e s owmust an oon
The Deschutes Public Library system has removed the drive-up book drop in the back of the Downtown Bend Public Library. According to information from the library system, the book drop was closed in October and the system is currently considering other options for drop-offs. The walk-up book drops at the front of the library are still open. — Bulletin staff reports
Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!
The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver.................541-617-7831
Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.c....................... 202-662-7456
Central Oregon CommunityCollege
Business ............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
bOard —The boardis slated to meet at 6 p.m. in the Boyle Education Center, 2600 NWCollege Way inBend.The board will hear updates on, among other things, construction projects and the presidential search.
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
Contact:541-383-0354,
news©bendbunetin.com. In emails, please write Civic
• Civic Calendarnotices:
Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and
number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.
EVENT
CALENDAR TODAY REDMOND SENIOR CENTER800K CLUB: Initial meeting with discussion of future books to read; 1-2 p.m.; Redmond Senior Center, 325NW Dogwood Ave.;www. councilonaging.org or 541-617-7089. TUESDAY "BILLYELLIOT,THE MUSICALLIVE": Live production of the musical about a youngboy's struggle to be adancer; $18, $15 for seniors and children; 7 p.m.; RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901.
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Ken McClintock sings "Anything But You" with Virginia Felder during the Broadway on Wall Street performance at the Tower Theatre in Bend on Sunday.
By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
"It's a hard-knock life," sang a group of children, punching the air and marching around with panache onstage at the
The proceeds of the musical
revue go to recruit, train and support CASA volunteers, who advocate for minors in the fos-
fromthe wry — "Always Look But these days, Fortier said, on the Bright Side of Life," from the folks at CASA have a parthe Monty Python musical ticular worry: theirbudget. "Spamalot" — to the heartfelt
ter care system in local courts,
— an all-cast rendition of "Tomorrow," also from "Annie."
Tower Theatre on Sunday.
according to Pam Fortier, CASA's executive director.
Aperformance of the wellloved song from the musical
olates to attendees before the
Fortier was offering choc-
"Annie" seemed to carry
show began as patrons milled about, chatting, dinking glasses and inspecting the raffle for Court Appointed Special prizepackages,which included Advocates. a pickleball gift basket and a Singers of all ages percoastal getaway. formed aseriesoftunes reflectThe audience clapped and ingthe show's themes ofhope, sang along to the songs, delove and community support livered with a great deal of in two performances this enthusiasm duringthe Sunday weekend. matinee. The selections varied particular meaning Sunday, featured as part of a fundraiser
at 6 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 NWWallSt., Bend; WEDNESDAY www.towertheatre.org or "THELEGACYJOURNEY": 54 I-317-0700. Learn about life-changing THANKSGIVINGTV financial choices andhow THROWBACK: Ashowing to make them, with Dave Thanksgiving-themed Ramsey andRachel Cruze; of TV episodes from the '90s, $15, $12.50 for children; including Friends, Seinfeld 7 p.m.; RegalOldMill and more; free; 7p.m.; Stadium16 & IMAX,680 The Old Stone,157 NW SW PowerhouseDrive, Franklin Ave., Bend;www. Bend; 541-312-2901. oldstonechurchbend.com AMY SPEACE: Thefolk or 541-383-0800. singer performs, with KALAI:TheHawaiian folkKenny White; $10plus blues artist performs, with fees in advance,$12at the Tim Snider; free; 9:30 p.m.; door; 7-10 p.m.; TheBelfry, Dojo, 852 NW Brooks St., 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; Bend; www.dojobend.com www.belfryevents.com or or 541-706-9091. 541-815-9122. POWDERHOUND PREVIEW:Localskiers THURSDAY and boarders showtheir BEND INDOORSWAP films and slideshows, MEET:Featuring arts with raffles and moreto and crafts, collectibles, benefit Central OregonTrail antiques, children'3 Alliance andDeschutes activities, music andmore; County SearchandRescue; free admission; 10a.m.-5 $12 in advance,$14at the p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap door; 7 p.m., doors open Meet, 679 SE Third St.;
541-317-4847. KNOW EXPLORING: EXPLORERSANDTHEIR EXPEDITIONS:Learn about explorers from the North Pole to theSouth Pole whochanged the world; free; 2:30 p.m.; Aspen RidgeRetirement Community, 1010 NE Purcell Blvd., Bend; 541-385-8500. ART WALKANDJAZZ NIGHT:Featuring local art and live jazzmusic; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Broken TopClub, 62000 Broken TopDrive, Bend; reception©brokentop.com or 541-363-8200. KNOW EXPLORING: EXPLORERSANDTHEIR EXPEDITIONS:Learn about explorers from the North Pole to the South Pole who changedthe world; free; 6 p.m.;East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road;www. deschuteslibrary.orgl eastbend or 541-330-3760.
THE CUTMEN: Thesoulfunk band performs, with Brian Miller; free; 8:30 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NWBrooks St., Bend; www.dojobend. com or 541-390-6234. "TRUTH ANDBEAUTY 3D":A screening of a three-dimensional mountain biking movie; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 54 I-382-5174. FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children'5 activities, music andmore; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 54 I-317-4847. HOOPS FORTHE HOUSE: A basketball gamebetween the HarlemAmbassadors andtheRonaldMcDonald
Members of the Summit High School cast of "Shrek: The Musical" joined in the effort, singing the number "Freak Flag" in full costume. Eleven-year-old Chelsea Kropp said duringthe show's intermission that although she'dnever been to a m usical
before, sheliked it"sofar."Her favorite number? "Hakuna Matata," the dassic tune from
"The Lion King," decrying worry and celebrating friendship.
House Defenders to benefit theBend Ronald McDonald House; $10-$12, $8-$10 for seniors and students, $5 for children ages 4and older, free for children 3 and younger; 6:30-8 p.m.; Trinity Lutheran Church & School, 2550 NEButler Market Road,Bend; www. rmhccor.ejoinme.orgl hoops4house, tsherry@ rmhcofcentraloregon.org or 541-31B-4950. "A FAIRYTALE CHRISTMASCAROL": The classic Dickenstale is narrated byMother Goose andfeatures other fairy tale characters; $10, $30 for Saturday dinner show; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road;christine© realtorinhouse.com or 541-585-5000. "THEIMAGINARY INVALID":A '605-inspired version of Moliere's satirical play about the
Last week's winter weather presented yet another chal-
lenge to ayear ofbudget cuts and other setbacks. "It was kind of like that perfect storm," said Fortier with
a laugh, adding that she didn't mean that metaphorically.
She said expectedticket sales for this weekend's event dropped due to the ferocious
wintry weather. Last February, another fundraiser showwas snowed out and the singers
couldonlyhold onemakeup performance. See Broadway/A6
medical profession; $10 in advance plus fees, $8for seniors in advance,$12at the door, $10for seniors at the door, $5 for students in advanceandat the door; 7 p.m.; RedmondHigh School, 675 SW Rimrock Way; www.redrnonhs. seatyourself.biz, rachel. sarrett©redmond.k12. or.us or 541-610-6248. "DAMNATION":A screening of the 2014 documentary about the health of our rivers; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SEESt., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC SERIES:Featuring a concert by pianist Robert Thies andviolinist Isabelle Senger; $35, $10 students and children 18and younger; 7:30 p.m., doors openat 6:30 p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680
NW BondSt., Bend;www. highdesertchambermusic. com, info© highdesertchambermusic. com or 541-382-1672. BIGBROTHERS BIG SISTERSCOMEDY BENEFIT:Featuring live comedy bySeanJordan and StaceyHallal, with live and silent auctions; $50 plus fees, $80 per couple; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; TowerTheatre, B35 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-3 I7-0700. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring jazz-fusion band Tizer, featuring violinist Karen Briggs; $49 plus fees; 8 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend;www. jazzattheoxford.com or 541-382-8436. CHAMPAGNECHARLIE: The ColoradoAmericanablues artist performs, with Big Evil; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70
Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com, with "CivicCalendar" inthesubiect and includeacontact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens'
academicac hievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details onthe Obituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
• Community events: Email events to communitylife@ bendbulletin.comorclickon "Submit anEvent" onlineat bendbulletin.com. Details onthe
calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. DJ BOYCAPEL:Thehiphop DJ performs;10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge,939 NW BondSt., Bend; www. astroloungebend.comor 541-388-0 I16. KEEZANDCALICOLEAF: Featuring Card1andDJ Poppin Jay;10 p.m4Dojo, 852 NW BrooksSt., Bend; www.dojobend.com or 541-706-9091. SATURDAY COWBOYBAZAAR: Featuring a silent auction, barrel racing andmore; free; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Rim Rock Riders Arena,17037 SW Alfalfa Road,Powell Butte; www.shilohranch. com or 541-410-9713. Contact:54t -383-035t, communitylileObendbullelin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least t0 days before publication.
A6
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
Ebola
But villagers kept dying. "We are in a crisis here," said Continued from A1 the village chief, Siba Koevogui Throughout the epidem- ' You've got to send help." ic, villages like this one have The consequences of resisbeen steadfastly cut off from tance have been disastrous. the outside world. Residents Though the refusal to acknowlin the region have killed local edge and help fight the disofficials proselytizing about ease appears to be dissipating, Ebola, blocked barely passable health officials and local auroadswith treesandvehement- thorities say, the resistance has ly refused help from outsiders, done its work, allowing the disviewing them as propagators of ease to spread unchecked for the virus in moon suits of pro- months on end. tective gear. After so much time, tracking But now, in Guinea's inac- down Ebola victims and evcessible Forest Region, where eryone who had contact with staunch resistance has stymied them — the traditional method efforts to fight the outbreak for halting outbreaks — has besince its inception, villagers are come allthe more difficult. "Since these villages have finally opening up, surrendering their sick and dead after be- been closed for such a long ingbatteredbythe virus. time, it is out of control," said "We said 'no' because when Sara Tomczyk,an epidemiolthere is a situation where you ogist for the U.S. Centers for don't know the details, you Disease Control and Prevention
tancewaspassive,borne of fear. "The people could just go
Hiker
hide inthebush" to avoidhealth
Continued from A5
workers, said PascalPiguet,a
Search and r escue per-
Doctors Without Borders official in the adjoining district,
sonnel used ropes and other equipment to move Newkirk's
Gueckedou, where the out-
body about six-tenths of a mile
"Hewas outthere as m uch as he couldbe. He really loved it. Youcould tell when Ben had been climbing. He looked a little happier and lightin his step." — Cheri Helt, owner of Zydeco Kitchen+ Cocktails,
resist; we were afraid," said
in the district capital, Macenta,
negotiations, will make a difLaville Sakovogui, one of the threehours awayon abadroad. ference against the outbreak in village elders here. At first, the region's resis- the region where it began.
where Benjamin Newkirk was a server to an area where he was then transported to Eugene. Newkirk, an experienced climber, had worked as a servA fter the mother of a doors, she said. "He was out there as much er at Zydeco Kitchen & Cock- co-workersuffered a heart attails in Bend for more than five tack, Newkirk sent the moth- as he could be," she said. "He years. Zydeco owner Cheri er — whom he had never met really loved it. You could tell Helt said the restaurant was — a gift basket full of her fa- when Ben had been dimbing. closed Sunday eveningin hon- vorite things. When another He looked a little happier and or of Newkirk after the restau- co-worker was worried about light in his step." rant held a celebration of life her daughter working late Helt said restaurant staff ceremony that afternoon. hours, Newkirk brought a can — the "Zydeco family"Helt described Newkirk as of mace for her the next day. would seek a way to preserve a compassionate, caring man Newkirk's com p assion Newkirk's legacy. Last week, who went out of his way to was also made manifest images on the restaurant's make others feel special. during his beloved climbing Facebook page showed a pho"(Ben) was one of the hap- excursions, Helt said, remem- tograph of Newkirk, a burnpiest, gentlest souls anyone bering him lending a coat to ing candle and a small statue could meet," Helt said. "He a fellow climber and turn- of the Buddha erected in honwas justalways very accom- ing back when he felt other or of the fallen dimber. m odating and kind andgener- climbers couldn't handle the — Reporter.541-383-0376, ous to everyone he met." terrain. He lived for the outcwithycombeCbendbulletlncom
Car
District of Columbia, where
Broadway
break was first identified in
March. "They thought we were the vectors." Vehicles belonging to Doctors Without Borders were
pelted with stones. In September, eight officials and local journalists, part of a delegation sent to warn of Ebola's dangers, were killed by a mob in the village of Womey, the dismembered bodies dumped in a septictank.
Now, with the Ebola epidemic refusing to go away, the tide of resistance appears to
be turning. It is too soon to say whether the new change in attitude,fostered over weeks of
like Golan, saving money is the rate declined 11 percent- paramount. Many millennials Continued from A1 age points to 39 percent; the are motivated by environmenNationwide, the percentage B ronx, N.Y., where it w a s tal and health concerns, acof workers who commute by down 9 percentage points to cording to a U.S. PIRG report car decli ned from 88 percent 28 percent; and Hudson Coun- released last month. Some in 2000 to 86 percent in 2010- ty, N.J., (home of Jersey City), older Americans are eager 2013, according to a Stateline where it was down 8 percent- to find alternative modes of analysis of census numbers. age points to 47 percent. t ransportation so t hey c a n Car commuting percentages The rate increased in only maintain their independence were down dramatically in three states — Louisiana, when they can no longer some urban areas, but also in North Dakota and South Da- dllve. smaller Western towns that kota — where new oil and gas Whatever the causes, state are making a focused effort to jobs prompted people to travel and local transportation offipromote alternatives. long distances to work. cials are facing a new world The places with the most People's motives for ditch- after decades of increased dramatic declines include the ing their cars vary. For people dnvtng.
Restaurant
The organization, which communities. h as been active i n t h e Some require an advoContinued from A5 tri-county area since 1991, cate for more than two years On top of that, the group has put on m u sical fund- while court cases endure experienced a reduction of its raisers since 2007, when the through twists and turns. Ofannual funds from both Unit- event started as a p r ivate ten, a CASA advocate is one ed Way and the state. The house party. of a few people consistent in "It was just so phenom- a foster child's life. The volorganization receives the remaining 65 percent of its e nal," said Fortier o f t h e unteers secure e ducation, budget through fundraising. event's early years. "We were housing and health careCASA currently serves busting at the seams." basic needs — for those too 249 children. If CASA could To Fortier, performing young to organize it themsupport m o r e v o l unteers, a collection of Broadway selves, Fortier said. "It's a human rights issue," Fortier said, it would be able songs demonstratesa "colto train sufficient advocates
"I had to check myself," he not change his own view of it. "The name to me was unique Continued from A1 this is offensive," Guevara said, have integrity, and when I said and countercultural," he wrote, "The crux of it is that it's be- urging the opposition to take a I'd listen, I did." "which I appreciated as a come a racial slur," said Cheryl doser look at the origins of the In early November, though, younger man. Still do. It's typiDistaso, 54, one of a group of restaurant's name. "I'm very he announcedin a lengthy let- cally the countercultural places local residents who are calling proud to be working for this ter on the restaurant's website in our society that are the most on the owner to change the company." that he had heard the concerns accepting of individuals from name. Distaso said shebelieved Turner said he gave a name of the opponents, but that their all differentwalks of life." that Turner had not meant to change real consideration. interpretation of the name did And on Thursday, he opened offend anyone when he opened Illegal Pete's in 1995."But the impact of that word in this day and this town is different," she
said, "and to be honest, I did. I
akin t o
said Fortier. — Reporter: 541-383-0376,
CASA's work on behalf of children in Central Oregon
the waiting list.
him apply for citizenship.
"I don't see why they think
l aborative effort"
for 66 children who linger on
cwtthycombe@bendbulletirLcom
Illegal Pete's in Fort Collins to a
giant tortillas. The crowd tend-
crush of enthusiastic patrons.
ed to be young, white and tat-
By 11:45 am., the airy, wareh ouse-style restaurant w a s
tooed, though there were also
families andolder couples. "There was no debate for us," packed,despite record-shattering low temperatures. Several said Brett Warr, 47, who works women bellied up to thebar and in information technology for orderedlocalbrews. Employees the city, explaining that he did working the burrito line operat- not understand the fuss."It's not ed sandwich irons that heated called'the illegalimmigrant.'"
•
said, "and ultimately it's the im•
pact of our actions that we're
responsible for." Fort Collins, about 60 miles
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north of Denver, is a city of
about 150,000 people, about 10 percentofwhom areHispanic.
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It is also home to Colorado State
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fessors, students, immigrants
and Latinos whose families came here generations ago. 'Bntter agreed to the meet-
ing, which was civil but emotional. About 45 people attend-
ed, with several saying why the word "illegal" was hurtful to them. At least one person cried.
Destiny Story, 21, who is of Mexican descent, recalled having the word hurled at her in a high school dispute. She was born in the United States — as were her parents — but said
that her legitimacy in the countryis constantly questioned. "I know he isn't a racist individual," she said later of'Ittrner. "But I also think there is a time
for change." Kimberly Baker Medina, 53, a local immigration lawyer, moderated the event.
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anti-immigrant. Turner, on the other hand, supports President Barack Obama's i n itiatives
already. "I believe in all these things
e
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grants who are in the country
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"If you're a young middle-class white person, you probably don't think it's a big deal," she said later. "But if you're a 60-year-old Chicano, and you, and your parents and grandparents have been victims of racial slurs, it's a big deal." Turner said the uproar had caught him off guard. He is particularly troubled by the barrage of supportive emails he has received from people who said they were proudly
to change the status of immi-
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stitution with a sizable minority population. This fall, after res-
idents who are sensitive to the word "illegal" heard about the opening of the new restaurant, they urged Turner to meet with them. Among them were pro-
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that the left has been pushing
for, that Obama has been pushing for," he said. "It's made for some strangebedfellows." Among his most passionate supporters is Milton Guevara, 30, a Salvadoran immigrant
who began working at Illegal Pete's in Boulder when he was 14. He has risen from dish-
washer to general manager. Along the way, Turner helped him acquire a green card, Guevara said, and is now helping
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College hoops, B3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Today
Tuesday
Friday
Saturday
Saturday
NBA basketball, NewOrleansat Portland, 7 p.m. (CSNNW): The Trail Blazers havewonfour in a row and look to continue their winning ways during a home-heavy start to theseasonwhentheyfaceAnthony Davis and the Pelicans at Moda Center. Yet another homegameis on tap Friday night against Chicago.
Prep girls soccer, Class 5A state championship at Willamette University, Salem, 3 p.m.: A dose of premature winter weather in Central Oregon resulted in this OSAA championship contest being movedfrom Saturday to Tuesday and from Hillsboro to Salem.What has not changed is the matchup: Intracity rivals Bend
College basketball, Toledoat Oregon, 4 p.m. (Pac-12);Oral Roberts at Oregon State, 6 p.m. (Pac-12):The Ducksentertain the Rockets as part of the Progressive LegendsClassic, then the Beavers andnewhead coach Wayne Tinkle host the Golden Eagles from Tulsa, Oklahoma.
College football, Colorado atOregon, 1:30 p.m. (Pac-12); OregonState at Washington, 7:30 p.m. (Pac-12):TheDucks will be big favorites against the Buffaloes in whatalmost certainly will be the last AutzenStadium gamefor Ducks star quarterback Marcus Mariota. In Seattle, the Beavers, fresh off anupset win over ArizonaState, will take on theHuskies in abattle of two teams still looking to becomebowl eligible.
Running, COCC Turkey Trot in Bend, 10 a.m.:Participants in this 15th annual pre-Thanksgiving event canchoose between a 3-mile run anda1-mile walk. Registration at Central OregonCommunity College's MazamaGym begins at 9 a.m. Cost is $10, free for all COCC and OSU-Cascadesstudents; proceeds will go to the COCC Foundation.
High and Summit face off for the third time this
season — this time for the state title.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL • • •
r •
• •
• e
Ducks remain at No. 3 in APpoll
•
Florida State is No.1 again in TheAssociated Press college football poll in another comeback of sorts for a team with a season full of remarkable rallies. The Seminoles (10-0) were preseason No. 1 before being replaced by Mississippi State in October. The Bulldogs (9-1) had a run of six weeksat No. 1 stopped by a2520 loss at Alabamaon Saturday. The Crimson Tide moved up four spots to No. 2. TheBulldogs dropped to fourth. The Seminoles received 43 first-place votes from the media panel. Alabamagot16 and No. 3 Oregon(9-1) got one. UCLA (8-2) rose to No. 11, ArizonaState (83) dropped six spots to No. 13 after losing to Oregon State onSaturday, Arizona (8-2) is up to No. 15, andUtah (8-3) is up to No. 20. Southern California (7-3) re-entered the poll at No. 24
e
COMMUNITY SPORTS
TEE TO GREEN
Trails
getting ready to open By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
You can finally stop with the dryland workouts. Last week's storm that brought 2 feet of snow to the
Cascades was welcomed with open arms by area nordic skiers. Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center
as the fifth team in the
reported 22 inches of snow
Pac-12's South Division to be ranked.
at its trailhead and Virginia
Meissner Sno-park received about 8 inches, according to
— The Associated P/ess
Meissner Nordic president
Inside
Michael Coe. "It gets people excited,"
• A closer look at Flonda State's many close calls this season and its return to No. 1,B6 • Associated Press, coaches polls. Scoreboard,B2
said Coe, whose organization
looks to groom its first trails at Meissner Sno-park on Dec. 1. "We've already received about 35 percent of our budget support and we haven't even
put skis to the ground yet." See Skiing /B4
ttt
Inside
tt)
I
NFL
• Community sports calendar and scoreboard,B4
Il
(it
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
wll I(
(V
yIJ
Itt'~
il> -'
I I/
ii/
gg
again pay
tp Greg Crosslrhe Bulletin
• USGA Pace of Playsymposium could spell changein golf o golfer wants to slog through 18
By Anne M. Peterson CORVALLIS —
event bringing together all of golf's most-
holes at a pace that only sloths and
Or e g on
moment — when asked if the crowd-rushing chaos following the Beavers' upset victory over Arizona State was one of the reasons he stayed for his senior year. "You know what'? Yeah," he said with a broad smile."The
Hills, New Jersey, headquarters to find ways
Some of us more impatient types
to speedup thegame — 74 percent
even struggle with anything longer
ZACK
of golfers said the time it takes to
than four hours.
HALL
play is "critical" to their enjoyment,
The theme is a consistent one in
things that last for you forever
are the stuff right down there in that locker room. To get to
golf: How does the sport retain golfers when so
celebrate with your teammates,
many seem to have too little time to play a full
to be on the sidelines when the defense makes a huge play.
round'?
Those are the moments that
are reall y special.Those are the moments that will stay with me the rest of my life, for sure."
A r ecognized organizations at the USGA's Far
Miss Daisy would enjoy.
nion hesitated — but only for a
In a USGA sur vey released at last week's Pace of Play Symposium — a second-year
A~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~ A ~
according to a Bloomberg News story about the event.
• Pac-12 football standings. Scoreboard,B2
Inside • Offseason update: Juniper Golf Club,Bg
• Hoffman wins after • Local another long drought. r esults, Roundup,BS Bg
2 20
Bengals Saints
2 10
exans Browns
2 7
Falcons Panthers
17
9 Giants Chargers Oakland
1 10 6
Cardinals Lions Packers Eagles
5 10
Patri
4 20
Colts
Inside
Only course conditioning rated higher as an enjoyment factor among the golfers surveyed, according to the USGA report.
• Fourth down is trouble in fourth quarter as Seahawks fall to Chiefs. NFLroundup, BS
See Pace /B8
See Beavers/B6
Inside
Chiefs Seahawks
uccaneers Redskins
The Associated Press
State quarterback Sean Man-
13
Rams Broncos
Beavers spol el' I'0 e
Vikings
"I'm trying to be creative this offseason and tackle thEit yery (pcICe) prpglem." — Louis Bennett, head golf professional at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend
NBA Rockets score just 69, still win NBA roundup,B3
B2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time TV/Radie Women's college, Baylor at Kentucky 4 p.m. E S PN2 College, Miami at Florida 4 p.m. E S PNU College, Maryland-Eastern Shore at Villanova 4 p.m. FS1 College, Washington State atTCU 5 p.m. Roo t Women's college, Connecticut at Stanford 6p . m . ESP N2 College, Georgia State at lowa State 6 p.m. E S PNU College, Bethune-Cookman at Arizona State 6 p.m. Pac -12 College, Binghamton at Providence 6 p.m. FS1 NBA, NewOrleans at Portland 7 p.m. CSNNW, BASKETBALL
KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1
College, SMU atGonzaga College, Detroit at Oregon College, TennesseeTechat Southern Cal College, Auburn at Colorado College, NewMexico State at St. Mary's College, High Point at Hawaii College, lona atWofford
8 p.m. E S PN2 8 p.m. E S PNU 8 p.m. P a c-12 10 p.m. ESPN2 midnight ESPN2 2 a.m. (Tue.) ESPN2 4 a.m. (Tue.) ESPN2
ON DECK Tuesday Girls soccer: Class 5Astatechampionship atWilametteUniversity, Salem,Summit vs. Bend,3 p.m.
ATP ATPWorld TourFinals Sunday atLondon Championship NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def.Roger Federer (2), Switzerland,walkover.
5:15 p.m. ESPN
TUESDAY BASKETBALL
College, Northern lowa at Stephen F. Austin College, Manhattan at UMass College, Baylor at South Carolina College, Memphis vs. Wichita State College, Utah atSan DiegoState College, Toledo atVCU College, Dukevs. Michigan State College, S.C.State at Virginia College, Long BeachState at Xavier College, TexasA&M-CCat Georgetown College, Marquette at Ohio State College, Kansas vs. Kentucky College, Drake atDePaul College, UT-Chattanooga atButler College, TexasTechat LSU College, Corban atOregonState
6 a.m. ESPN2 8 a.m. ESPN2 9 a.m. ESPN 11 a.m. ESPN 1 p.m. ESPN 3 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. Root 4 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. FS2 4:30 p.m. ESPN2 6 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. FS1 6 p.m. FS2 6:30 p.m. ESPN2 7 p.m. Pac-12, KICE-AM 940,KRCO-AM690, FM-96.9
SOCCER Friendly, Ireland vs. United States
11:80 a.m. ESPN2
HOCKEY
NHL, SanJose at Buffalo
4:30 p.m. NBCSN
Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby 7Vor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF SKIING KrIStofferSen WinS WC SlalOm —Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway won theWorld Cupmen's slalom opener, beating Austria's Marcel Hirscher by 0.12seconds in foggy conditions on Sunday.The 20-year-old Kristoffersen had acombined time of 1 minute, 50.39 seconds, while world champion Hirscher led after the first run on the Finnish Arctic slope in Levi. Olympic andworld giant slalom champion Ted Ligety finished 18th after coming 22nd in the first run. Ligety had a combined time of1:53.72.
FOOTBALL FIOrida COaCh MiiSChamP Oiit —WIII Muschamp is stepping down as Florida's coachafter the regular season, forced out after a four-year tenure that will be rememberedfor inept offense, conservative play-calling and nearly as manylosses aswins in the Southeastern Conference. Muschampwill coach the Gators against Eastern Kentucky and No. 1Florida State. He is 27-20, including 17-15 in conference play, in three-plus seasons at Florida. Thedecision came less than 24 hours after a 23-20 loss to South Carolina in overtime. It was Florida's sixth defeat in its last eight games inGainesville.
GeOrgia RBGurley Out fOr SeaSOn—Georgia tailback Todd Gurley's season hasendedwith a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. Theschool announced the injury Sunday. Gurley ran for 138 yards and atouchdown in Georgia's 34-7 win over then-No. 9 Auburn on Saturday night. The junior was injured with just over 5 minutes remaining on a6-yard run. Gurley was considered a leading Heisman Trophy candidate before receiving a four-gameNCAAsuspension for taking $3,000 for autographed memorabilia and other items over two years. Saturday's gamewas his first back.
OregOn teamS reaChPlayoffS — Linfield andSouthern Oregon will host playoff gamesSaturday. TheWildcats (8-1) from McMinnville, who clinched theNCAADivision III Northwest Conference with a 59-0 win over Pacific in Forest Grove onSaturday, will host Chapman (8-1), the Southern California Collegiate Athletic Conference champions. TheOrange, California school is making the first playoff appearance in program history. Southern Oregon(9-2) is hosting MidAmerica Nazarene(9-1), from suburban Kansas City, Kansas, in a first-round NAIA playoff game inAshland.
MOTOR SPORTS Enders-Stevenswins IIHRAProStock world titleErica Enders-Stevens won theAuto Club NHRAFinals on Sunday to become the first woman to earn the ProStock world championship title at Pomona, California. Enders-Stevens raced to her sixth victory of the season whenher closest points rival Jason Line fouled at the start of the winner-take-all final round at Auto Club Raceway.She is the third woman to win anNHRAworld championship, joining three-time TopFuel champion Shirley Muldowney and three-time Pro Stock Motorcycle champAngelle Sampey. In other races, Matt Hagan claimed the FunnyCarworld championship over John Force and also won the season-ending race, while Andrew Hines took the Pro Stock Motorcycle championship with a victory in the first round. Morgan Lucas won inTopFuel and Hector Arana Jr. won in Pro Stock Motorcycle.
,
+"
Y(0O
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
AH TimesPST EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA Montreal TampaBay Boston Detroit Ottawa Toronto Florida Buffalo
1 9 14 4 1 1 8 12 4 2 1 9 11 8 0 17 8 4 5 17 8 5 4 18 9 7 2 15 6 4 5 1 9 4 13 2
2 9 55 47 2 6 66 48 2 2 51 49 21 4 5 4 2 20 4 7 4 5 20 5 6 5 1 17 3 3 3 7 1 0 3 0 68
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA P ittsburgh 1 6 1 2 3 1 2 5 6 0 3 5 N .Y. Islanders 17 11 6 0 2 2 5 4 50 N .Y. Rangers 17 7 6 4 18 4 9 5 3 N ew Jersey 18 8 8 2 18 4 6 5 3 W ashington 17 7 7 3 17 5 0 4 9 P hiladelphia 16 7 7 2 16 5 1 5 3 C olumbus 17 6 1 0 1 1 3 4 4 5 9 C arolina 17 5 9 3 13 3 7 5 1 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA St. Louis 1 7 12 4 1 2 5 4 9 3 3 Nashville 1 7 11 4 2 2 4 4 3 3 5 Chicago 1 8 10 7 1 2 1 5 1 3 6 Winnipeg 1 9 9 7 3 21 3 7 4 2 Minnesota 1 7 10 7 0 2 0 5 0 3 9 Colorado 1 9 6 8 5 17 4 7 6 1 Dallas 1 8 6 8 4 16 4 9 6 1 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA Anaheim 1 9 11 4 4 2 6 5 1 4 6 Vancouver 1 8 12 6 0 2 4 5 3 5 2 Calgary 1 9 11 6 2 2 4 5 9 5 0 Los Angeles 1 8 9 5 4 22 4 5 4 0 SanJose 2 0 10 8 2 2 2 5 6 5 3 Arizona 1 8 8 9 1 17 4 7 5 7 Edmonton 18 6 10 2 1 4 44 60
Sunday'sGames
SanJose2, Carolina0 Minnesota4, Winnipeg 3, OT Montreal4,Detroit 1 Chicago 6, Dalas2 Florida 6,Anaheim2 Arizona 2, Edmonton 1
Today'sGame TampaBayat N.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. TuesdayrsGames St. LouisatBoston, 4p.m. TampaBayatN.Y.Islanders,4p.m. Detroit atColumbus,4 p.m. SanJoseatBuff alo,4:30p.m. Nashvllle atToronto,4:30p.m. PittsburghatMontreal,4:30 p.m. NewJerseyatWinnipeg,8p.m. CarolinaatDallas,5:30p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 6p.m. WashingtonatArizona, 6p.m. Florida atLosAngeles, 7:30p.m. Wednesday'sGames Philadelphia at N.Y. Rangers,5 p.m. Vancou veratEdmonton,5p.m.
FOOTBALL College AP Top25poll R ecord Pls P v 1 . Florida State(43) 1 0 - 0 1 ,476 2 2. Alabama (16 ) 9-1 1,4 3 9 4 3. Oregon (1) 9 -1 1,385 3 4. MississippiState 9 1- 1, 289 1 5. TCU 9 -1 1,237 5 6. Baylor 8 -1 1,232 6 7. OhioState 9 -1 1,167 8 8. Mississippi 8 -2 1,064 1 0 9. Georgia 8-2 94 8 16 10. Michigan State 8-2 9 4 1 12 11. UCLA 8-2 8 7 6 14 12. Kansas State 7-2 86 8 13 13. Arizona State 8-2 720 7 14. Wisconsin 8-2 7 0 7 22 8-2 69 5 17 15. Arizona 7 -3 5 3 1 9 16. Auburn 9-2 5 2 3 24 17. GeorgiaTech 10-0 383 21 18. Marshall 8 -2 37 6 N R 19. Missouri 7 -3 34 9 25 20. Utah 8-2 2 9 1 11 21. Nebraska 9-1 2 8 1 23 22. Colorado State 7 -3 20 6 N R 23. Oklahom a 7 -3 1 9 5 N R 24. SouthernCal 8-2 8 5 19 25. Duke Othersreceivingvotes: Notre Dame74, Clemson 52, BoiseState29, Louisville 29,LSU26, Minnesota 10, West Virginia8, Miami3,TexasA&M3,Arkansas2. CoachesTop25poll Record Pls Pvs 1 . Florida State(39) 1 0 - 0 1 518 2 2. Alabama (17) 9-1 1494 3 3. Oregon (6) 9-1 1434 4 4. MississippiState 9 112 9 6 1 5. TCU 9-1 1279 5 6. Baylor 8-1 1272 6 7. OhioState 9-1 1228 7 8. Mississippi 8 -2 1041 1 0 9. Michigan State 8 -2 1030 1 2 10. Georgia 8-2 9 8 1 14 11. Kansas State 7-2 88 0 13 12. UCLA 8-2 8 6 2 15 13. Arizona 8-2 7 2 6 18 8-2 7 2 1 8 14. Arizona State 15. Wisconsin 8-2 7 1 5 22 9-2 5 1 1 23 16. GeorgiaTech 7-3 50 8 9 17. Auburn 1 0-0 427 21 18. Marshall 8-2 4 0 9 11 19. Nebraska 8 -2 40 6 N R 20. Missouri 7 -3 28 6 N R 21. Utah 7-3 2 6 5 24 22. Oklahom a 9-1 25 9 25 23. Colorado State 7 -3 1 3 2 N R 24. SouthernCal 8-2 1 3 0 19 25. Duke Others receivingvotes: NotreDame118, Clemson 69, LSU 43, Boise State 32, Minnesota29, Louisvile 19, lowa7, Miami(Fla.) 6,Texas5, Cincinnati 3, Texas A&M 3,Northernllinois 2, Stanford2, Arkansas1, WestVirginia1.
MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomics.com/rnthebreachers
TENNIS
FOOTBALL
NFL, Pittsburgh at Tennessee
IN THE BLEACHERS
"Excessive celebration! Slamming the yellow flag to the turf!"
Pac-12 AH TimesPST
FARWEST California93,KennesawState 59 Denver 54, IdahoState38 North Division NewMexico67, CalState-Fullerton 59 Conference Overall Portland73,SanJoseState68, DT W L W L P F PA San Francisco 91, SCState52 Oregon 6 1 9 1 4 6 0 250 Stanford 84, SouthDakota73 Stanford 3 4 5 5 2 3 9 165 UC Davis57,HolyNames42 California 3 5 5 5 4 0 7 397 UC Irvine 68, Pacific 50 Washington 2 5 6 5 3 3 3 291 UCLA84,Coastal Carolina 71 Oregon State 2 5 5 5 276 295 UNLV59, SamHoustonState57 Washin gtonState 2 5 3 7 338 380 Wyoming 78,N.Colorado70 South Division W L W L P F PA Women's college Southerncal 6 2 7 3 35 2 233 Arizona State 5 2 8 2 357 259 TOP 25 Arizona 5 2 8 2 3 5 6 261 No. 5Texas A&M63, Texas-PanAmerican61 UCLA 5 2 8 2 3 4 7 279 No. 7Duke90, Alabama40 uiah 4 3 7 3 3 1 4 238 No.10Maryland97,Wagner 24 Colorado 0 7 2 8 2 9 8 386 No.12 Louisville77,UTMartin 43 No. 13NorthCarolina84, No.23UCLA68 Saturday'sGames No.14MichiganState69, EasternMichigan61 WashingtonStateatArizonaState, 10a.m. No.15 Californi84, a Pacific 64 Arizonaat Utah,12:30 p.m. No.16 Nebraska 83, AlcornState 49 StanfordatCalifornia,1 p.m. No. 18DePaul 97, NewMexico 59 ColoradoatOregon,1:30p.m. No.19 lowa85,Robert Morris 67 SouthernCalat UCLA,5 p.m. No. 20DregonState85, UtahState62 OregonStateatWashington,7:30p.m. No. 21OklahomaState77, TexasSouthern 58 Gonzaga75, No.22 Dayton65 No. 24Syracuse 59, Fordham42 PAC-12 BASKETBALL Washington St.84, IdahoSt.34 EAST Men's college Albany(N.Y.)54,PennSt. 53 Pac-12 Dartmouth68, NJIT63, OT AH TimesPST Delaware 70, Marist 60 Drexel62,Cornell 53 Sunday'sGames Maine65,LIUBrooklyn59, DT Stanford84, SouthDakota73 Manhattan 66, HolyCross60 California93,KennesawSt.59 Princeton79, Duquesne62 Arizona86,CalStateNorthridge68 Sacred Heart 82, lona80 UCLA84,Coastal Carolina 71 UMBC 81,Loyola(Md.) 58 Today'sGames SOUTH WashingtonStateatTCU,5p.m. Clemson 82,Troy 73 Bethune-Cookma nat ArizonaState, 6 p.m. CoastalCarolina69, Pfeiffer 62 Tennessee Tech at SouthernCal, 8 p.m. Elon69,Navy56 Detroit atOregon,8 p.m. FAU88, Bethune-Cookman68 AuburnatColorado,10a.m. Georgia62,TCU53 Tuesday'sGames Georgia Tech105, MorganSt. 76 Utah atSanDiegoState,1 p.m. JamesMadison76,St.Bonaventure43 CorbanatOregonState, 7p.m. Memphis 64,Samford48 Wednesd ay'sGame Mississippi91,MVSU38 UC IrvineatArizona, 6p.m. Mississi p piSt.93,ArkansasSt.83 ThursdaylsGames MoreheadSt. 79,GeorgeMason 70 Akronvs.Southern Calat Charleston, S.C.,TBD MurrayState102,AlabamaA&M81 LoyolaMarymountatArizonaState, 5p.m. NC State 81, CoppinSt. 61 Syracuse vs California, atNewYork, 6p.m. NorthAlabama72,Belmont69 NichogsStateatUCLA 8pm Richmond 65,Georgetown57 SouthFlorida59,Chattanooga57 Sunday'sGames Tulane 75, McNeeseSt.55 TOP 25 UNCWilmington75, UNCPembroke38 No. 1Kentucky71,Buffalo52 UNC-Green sboro 70, Col. ofCharleston68 No. 2Arizona86,CalStateNorthridge68 VCU55, Presbyterian36 No.3Wisconsin89,Chattanooga45 Virginia75,Radford 47 No. 6NorthCarolina103, Robert Morris 59 VirginiaTech63,Md.-Eastern Shore 41 No. 9Virginia 67, NorfolkState39 WrightState79, Lipscomb66 No. 10Texas85,Alcorn State53 MIDWEST No. 19Oklahoma78,Southeastern Louisiana53 No. 21Nebraska80, Northern Kentucky61 Cent. Michigan72,UMass70 No. 23Syracuse65,Hampton47 Detroit 88,Marygrove46 Holy Cross58, No.25 Harvard57 Evansville72,Austin Peay68 EAST Indiana St. 66,Butler 51 George Washington 70,Rutgers53 lowa St.98,SC-Upstate 76 Harfford51, StatePeter's 50 Kansas68,South Dakota60 Loyola(Md.)76,Cornell 71 Michi gan68,Buckneff 61 Northeastern71,Boston U.65 Milwaukee 77,N.DakotaSt.73 PennState73, Fordham54 Northwestern62, Hampton 36 Pittsburgh63, Samford 56 OhioSt.113,St.Francis(Pa.)97 RhodeIsland72,Mass.-Lowell56 Wisconsin 71, RlinoisSt.60 SetonHall63,Mercer47 SOUTHWE ST UMass71,BostonCollege62 Arkansas 75,SavannahSt.46 WestVirginia83,Lafayette 56 Oklah omaSt.77,TexasSouthern58 SOUTH SMU63, UTEP59 AustinPeay68, Berea63 UT Arlington 83,HoustonBaptist 73 Charlotte73,Elon60 FARWEST George Mason63,Princeton60 BostonCollege82,Saint Mary's (Cal) 72 Howard101, Goucher54 CS Northridge 81, SacramentoSt. 66 Jacksonville72,FloridaNational 61 FresnoSt.67, CalPoly56 Marshal66, l SavannahState47 Hawaii60,Denver 58 SouthFlorida73,JacksonState64 LongBeachSt.74, SanDiegoSt.62 UCF64, Stetson55 Montana St. 63,CalSt.-Fufferton47 UNCAsheville 83,East Carolina79 SanFrancisco83,SonomaState42 Vanderbilt83,TreveccaNazarene56 SanJoseSt.119, Columbia76 MIDWEST Seattle54,PortlandSt.47 Creighton84, ChicagoState66 UC Irvine54,GrandCanyon53 llinois114,CoppinState56 Miami(Ohio)76,Southern Utah63 Missouri56,Valparaiso41 Nebraska-omaha100,Central Arkansas75 SOCCER NotreDam e92, Navy53 Purdue77, IUPUI57 MLS playoffs Toledo71, NorthernArizona58 UtahState60, llinois State55 MAJORLEAGUESOCCER WesternMichigan87, Aquinas57 AN TimesPST WrightState76,OhioDominican64 Youngstown State71,Dberlin 53 CONFERNCE FINALS SOUTHWE ST (Two-legaggregateseries) Arkan sas97,AlabamaState79 Sunday,Nov.23 OklahomaState74,Prairie View52 NewEnglandatNewYork, 10:30a.m. UALR 77,Ark.-Monticego64 SeattleatLosAngeles,2p.m.
SundayatHomestead-MiamiSpeedway, Homeslead, Fla. Lap length: 1.5 miles (Start position inparentheses) 1. (5) Kevin Harvick,Chevrolet, 267 laps,43 points,$346,498. 2. (21)RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 267,42,$244,450. 3. (4) Brad Keselowski, Ford,267,41, $231,758. 4. (16)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,267,40, $172,664. 5. (19)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,267,39, $165,239. 6. (3) MattKenseth, Toyota, 267,38,$160,151. 7.BDennyHamlin,Toyota,267,37,$108,315. 8. I6IClint Bowyer,Toyota, 267,36,$127,481. 9.(12)JimmieJohn on, s Chevrolet,267,35,$135001. 10.1)Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet,267,36,$143,626. 11.I2) KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 267,34,$82,340. 12.(23)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,267,32,$96,640. 13.(27)KyleLarson,Chevrolet,267,31,$109,085. 14.(11)DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet,267,30,$88 890. 15.(14)JustinAllgaier,Chevrolet,267,29,$108,523. 16.(9)JoeyLogano,Ford,267,28,$116,356. 17.(10)MartinTruexJr.,Chevrolet,267,27,$107,873. 18.(32)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,267,26,$87,665. 19. (18)AricAlmirola, Ford,267, 25,$116,276. 20. (29)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,267,24 $104373. 21. (38)MichaelMcDoweg,Ford,267,23, $75,290. 22. (22)RickyStenhouseJr.,Ford,267, 22,$114,265. 23. (13)BrianVickers, Toyota,267, 21,$110,215. 24. (36)Rml Sorenson,Chevrolet, 267,20,$91,998. 25. (24)Austin Dilon,Chevrolet,267,19, $123,751. 26. (42)ColeWhitt, Toyota,267,18,$77,290. 27. (17 MarcosAmbrose, Ford,267,17, $103,335. 28. (30 BrianScott, Chevrolet, 267,0,$85,448. 29.33 LandonCassig,Chevrolet,267,0,$76,590. 30.I31 DavidRagan, Ford,267,14,$94,912. 31. (35)DavidGililand, Ford,267,13, $81,165. 32. (37)JoshWise,Chevrolet,267,12, $72,940. 33.41Alex Bowm an,Toyota,264, 11,$72,740. 34.(15I CarlEdw ards, Ford,263,10, $91,540. 35. (39)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 263,9,$72,340. 36. (43)Brett Moffitt, Toyota,262,8,$80,115. 37.34) J.J.Yeley,Toyota,accident,254,0, $71,888. 38.I40)BlakeKoch,Ford,accident, 254,0,$66730. 39. (7)KyleBusch,Toyota, 246,5,$110,571. 40. (25)AJAllmendinger,Chevrolet, accident,235, 4, $58,730. 41. (20)GregBiffle, Ford,220,3,$99,305. 42. (26) TrevorBayne,Ford,accident,204,0, $50,730. 43 (28)TonyStewart Chevrolet accident182 1 $81,388. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner:122.280 mph. Time otRace:3hours, 16minutes, 31seconds. Margin ofVictory:0.500seconds. Caution Flags: 13for52laps. Lead Changes:18among5drivers. Lap Leaders:J.Gordon1-12;B.Koch13;Ku.Busch 14; K.Harvick15-25; J.sordon26-63; D.Hamlin 64-65; J.Gordon66-120; K.Harvick 121;J.Gordon 122-123; K.Harvick 124-157; J.Gordon 158-159; D.Hamlin160;J.Gordon161-165; D.Hamlin166-195; J.Gordon196-212; D.Hamlin 213-222; J.Gordon223252;D.Hamlin253-259;K.Harvick260-267.
LeadersSummary(Driver, TimesLed, Laps
Led):J.Gordon,8 times for 161 laps; K.Harvick, 4 timesfor 54 laps; D.Ham lin, 5 timesfor 50laps; KuBusch,ltimeforllap;BKoch tltimefor1lap, W ins: B.Keselowski,6;K.Harvick,5;J.Logano,5; D.EarnhardtJr., 4; J.sordon,4; J.Johnson, 4; C.Edwards, 2;AAllmendinger,1;AAlmirola, 1;KuBusch, 1; KyBusch,1; D.Hamlin, 1; K.Kahne,1. Top 16 in Points: 1. K.Harvick, 5,043; 2. R.Newman, 5,042;3.D.Hamlin,5,037;4.J.Logano, 5,028; 5. B.Keselowski,2,361; 6.J.Gordon,2,348; 7. M.Kenseth,2,334; 8. D.Earnhardt Jr., 2,301; 9. C.Edwards,2,288; 10.Ky.Busch,2,285; 11.J.Johnson, 2,274;12. Ku.Busch,2,263; 13. A.Almendinger, 2,260; 14.G.Biff le,2,247;15.K.Kahne,2,234;16. A.Almirola,2,195.
NHRA NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION
Sunday atAutoClub Raceway,Pomona, Calif. Final Results Top Fuel—MorganLucas,3.704seconds, 325.14 mphdef.TonySchumacher,3.742seconds,324.98mph. FunnyCar— Matt Hagan, DodgeCharger, 4.076, 310.77def.JohnForce, Ford Mustang,4.086, 276.58. Pro Stock—EricaEnders-Stevens,ChevyCamaro, 6.480,213.43def.JasonLine,Camaro, foul. Pro StockMotorcycle — Hector AranaJr, Buell, 6.832, 195.08def. EddieKrawiec, Harley-Davidson, 6.977,176.37.
Top Alcohol Dragster —DuaneShields, 5.412, 264.13def. CameronFerre,5.625,265.74. Top Alcohol FunnyCar —SteveHarker,Chevy MonteCarlo, 5.489,266.21def. JohnLombardo Jr., FordMustang,5.519,263.36. Competition Eliminator —AaronStrong,Chevy S-10, 8.116,16544def. Clint Neff,BantamRoadster, 10.668,78.17.
Super Stock —JeffTaylor, ChevyCobalt, 9.634, 124.03def. Marion Stephenson,Pontiac Sunbird, foul. Stock Eliminator — BobbyDeArmond, Chevyt Camaro,10.128,128.18def. PaulaCoten, Plymouth Duster,foul. Super Comp— Gabriel Torres,Dragster, 8.907, 168.16def.AlanKenny, Dragster, 8.905,170.08. Super Gas — TrevorLarson,ChevyCorvete, 9.917, 158.04def. Tomm y Philips, Chevy Camaro, 9.894,160.63. Summit SuperPro —SteveSisko, Dragster, 9648,11310 4def. Cliff Carr, Da rgster,foul. Summit Pro — GeraldHalle, Chevelle,9.506, 140.85def. Dustin Moore,ChevyNova,foul. SummitBike — Roy Hagadorn,Suzuki,8.862, 142.60def. BrendaKay,Suzuki,8.606,150.56. SummitSporlsman—Bil Crutcher,ChevyNova, 12.490,107.35def.ScottSmith, ChevyMalibu, foul.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
NationalLeague CHICAGOCUBS — Acquired INF Tommy La Stella anda number four international signingbonus slot fromAtlantafor RHPArodys Vizcaino andthree (numberstwo,threeandfour) internationalsigning bonusslots. FOOTBAL L National Football League BALTIMOR ERAVENS—ReleasedRBCierreWood from the practicesquad. KANSASCITY CHIEFS — Rel eased G Jarrod Pughsleyfromthe practice squad.SignedOTCurtis Feigt tothepractice squad. MIAMIDOLPHINS— Placed SWil Davison injuredreserve.SignedDBJalil Brown. SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS — Placed S Jimmie Wardoninjured reserve. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague COLUMBU SBLUEJACKETS— AssignedCDana Tyrell toSpringfield(AHL). COLLEGE FLORIDA —Announced the resignation of football coachWil Muschamp,effective at theendof the regularseason.Announcedmen's basketball GDilon Graham wil transferafterthefal semester.
NHL ROUNDUP
TENNIS
Sharks' Grosenickstops45 for shutout in debut
Federer PullS Out OfATPFinalS — Inapotential blow to
The Associated Press
Switzerland's Davis Cupambitions, Roger Federer pulled out of the ATP Finals less than onehour before his title match in Londonagainst Novak Djokovic on Sunday,handing athird straight title at the yearend event to the top-ranked Serb. The17-time GrandSlamchampion said he hurt his back in the nearly three-hour semifinal win over Davis Cup teammateStan Wawrinka onSaturday night in which Federer saved four match points. TheSwiss is set to play for Switzerland in the Davis Cupfinal against France, starting Friday. If he recovers in time, Federer will be chasing the only major trophy still eluding him. France hosts the match in the northern city of Lille and hasopted for clay, a slow surface that could further thwart Federer's chances to perform well.
RALEIGH, N.C. — Tomas Hertl scored his fourth goal
— From wire reports
Carolina defenseman Andrej
the third time in four games. Panthers 6, Ducks 2: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Nick Bjugstad had two goals and two assists, and Brad Boyes scored
2-0 win o ver C a rolina on
Sekera and between the pads Canadiens 4, Red Wings 1: of Anton Khudobin. DETROIT — Brendan GallaJ oe Thornton added a n gher had a goal and an assist empty-net goal with 7.3 sec- while Dustin Tokarski made onds left in the game for the 28 savesforMontreal. Sharks. Blackhawks 6, Stars 2: CHIAlso on Sunday: CAGO — Patrick Kane and Wild 4, Jets 3: ST. PAULKris Versteeg each had a goal
Sunday.
Marco Scandella scored at
and two assists, and the Chi-
M ONTON, Alberta — M i k -
1:01 of overtime after missing two games with an illness to
cago rallied with four goals k el Boedker scored t h e in the third period. Defense- game winner and Brandon
of the season and rookie goalkeeper Troy Grosenick stopped 45 shots in his NHL
debut to lead San Jose to a Hertl scored at 18:46 of the
first period on a Sharks' two-
on-one drive to the net. His give Minnesota a win. Zach shot sk ittered u n d erneath Parise scored two goals in his
return from a concussion.
twice during
t h e F l o rida's
four-goal second period. Coyotes 2, Oilers 1: ED-
men Duncan Keith and Brent
Gormley also scored for Ar-
Seabrook scored in the first period as Chicago won for
izona, which won its second straight.
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014• THE BULLETIN
NBA ROUNDUP
B3
NASCAR
RQckets shQQtPQQI; can't
scQI'estill , beat Thunder The Associated Press
Also on Sunday:
O KLAHOM A CI T Y Bucks 91, Heat 84: MIAMI J ames Harden s c ored 1 9 Brandon Knight made points, and the Houston Rock- t hree 3-pointers down t h e
ets beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 69-65 o n
stretchand scored 20 points,
S u nday leading Milwaukee to the road
night for their third consecu- win. Jabari Parker added 13 points for the Bucks (5-5), who Dwight Howard had 12 started 5-21 last season. Larry points and nine rebounds for Sanders, Giannis AntetokounHouston, and Patrick Bever- mpo and Zaza Pachulia each ley added 12 points and eight scored 11. Mario Chalmers boards. scored 18 for Miami, which The last time a team won was again without Dwya-
tive victory.
with 69 or fewerpoints was Detroit's 64-62 victory over Utah
on March 13, 2005, according to STATS. Both teams shot be-
ne Wade and lost its third
straight. Knicks 109, Nuggets 93:
low 30 percent from the field — the last time that happened in the second quarter and was Oct. 29, 2003, when Den- snapped a seven-game losverbeat San Antonio 80-72. ing streak. Carmelo Anthony Houston shot just 28.8 per- and J.R. Smith each scored 28 cent. The last time an NBA
= '
4ttt
NEW YORK — N e w Y o rk held Denver to on e basket
points for New York.
teamwon with alowerpercent-
Warriors 136, Lakers 115:
age was on Feb. 19, 2000, when
LOS ANGELES — Stephen Curry had 30 points and 15 as-
Chicago shot 28.6 percent and beat the Los Angeles Clippers sists, Marreese Speights add74-72. ed 24 points, and Golden State Reggie Jackson had 15 cruised despite 44 points by points and 11 rebounds for the Kobe Bryant. Andrew Bogut Thunder. Lance Thomas also had 15 points and 10 rebounds had 15 points.
forthe Warriors.
4v
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
Summaries rd
All Times PST
Eastern Conference W L Pct GB d-Toronto 8 2 800 d-Washington 7 2 778 '/t d-Chicago 7 3 700 1 Cleveland 5 3 625 2 Atlanta 5 4 556 2'/r Milwaukee 5 5 500 3 Miami 5 5 500 3 Brooklyn 4 5 444 31/2 Charlotte 4 6 400 4 Boston 3 5 375 4 Indiana 4 7 364 4'/r Orlando 4 7 364 4'/t Detroit 3 7 300 5 NewYork 3 8 273 5t/t Philadelphia 0 9 ppp 7 1/2 Western Conference W L Pct GB d-Memphis 9 1 900 Houston 9 1 900 d-Golden State 8 2 800 1 d-Portland 7 3 700 2 Dallas 7 3 700 2 L.A. Clippers 5 3 625 3 NewOrleans 5 3 625 3 Sacramen to 6 4 600 3 SanAntonio 5 4 556 3t/t Phoenix 5 5 500 4 4 7 364 5'/r Utah Oklahoma City 3 8 273 6'/r Minnesota 2 7 222 6'/t Denver 2 7 222 6'/t LA. Lakers 1 9 100 8 d-divisionleader
Sunday'sGames NewYork109, Denver93 Milwaukee 91,Miami84 Houston 69, OklahomaCity 65 GoldenState136,LA. Lakers115 Today'sGames DallasatCharlotte,4 p.m. Denverat Cleveland,4p.m. OrlandoatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Phoeni xatBoston,4:30p.m. Miami atBrooklyn,4:30 p.m. Housto natMemphis,5p.m. Philadelphiat a SanAntonio,5;30 p.m. NewOrleansatPortland,7 p.m. Chicago at L.A.Clippers, 7:30p.m. Tuesday'sGames LA. Lakers at Atlanta, 4:30p.m. NewYorkatMilwaukee,5 p.m. Oklahoma City at Utah,6 p.m. NewOrleansatSacramento, 7p.m.
Leaders ThroughSunday's Games Scoring G FG FT PTB AVG James,CLE 8 77 5 2 222 27.8 Bryant,LAL 10 92 70 273 27.3 Harden, HOU 1
0 70 9 5 2 55 25.5 10 86 45 248 24.8 Curry,GOL Davis,NPR 8 78 4 0 196 24.5 Anthony, NYK 1 1 9 9 5 1 263 23.9 Griffin, LAC 8 72 4 3 189 23.6 Thompson, GOL 9 6 8 4 8 2 12 23.6
I '
• >
Kf)icks109, Ntfggets 93 DENVER (93) Chandler4-140-011,Paried7-92-516, Mozgov 3 8 2 2 8,Lawson6 183 617, Afflalo 6 111-1 18, Arthur 4-70-010, Harris0-3 0-00, McGee0-0 2-4 2, Robinson1-5 3-4 5, Gaginari 1-5 2-25, Gee0-2 1-21, Hickson 0-00-00. Totals 32-8216-2693. NEWYORK(199) Acy3-7 2-28, Anthony10-146-828, Dalembert 4-8 0-0 8, Larkin3-5 0-0 7, J Smith10-166-8 28, Ja.Smith3-8 0-0 6, Stoudemire 3-7 3-5 9, Prigioni 2-4 0-0 5,HardawayJr 2-4 2-26, Wear1-3 2-24. Totals 41-7621-27199. Denver 31 8 36 19 — 93 New York 31 31 24 23 — 109
•
David Graham I The Associated Press
Kevin Harvick celebrates winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship in Homestead, Florida on Sunday.
• He holds off fellow contenderNewmanonthe 13th restart to win the championship By Andy Kent New York Times News Service
HOMESTEAD, Fla. — Kevin Harvick captured his first
Rockets 69, Thunder65 HOUSTON (69) Ariza 4-112-411, Motiejunas3-91-2 7, How ard 4-144-1312,Beverley4-102-212, Harden5-17 7-8 19, Terry0-20-00,Black1-30 02,Papanikolaou0-6 0-0 0, Garcia2-70-1 6, Daniels0-1 0-0 0. Totals 23-8916-39 69. OKLAHOM ACITY (65) Thomas4-117-815, Ibaka5-13 0-0 10,Adams 0-2 1-2 1, Jackson3-11 9-9 15, Lamb2-5 0-0 5, Morrow1-92-44, Perkins1-30-22, Collison1-3 2-24, Telfair3-91-1 9,Smith0-20-00. Totals 2968 22-28 66. 24 18 9 18 — 69 Houston OklahomaCit y 1 9 1 4 18 14 — 66
Bucks 91, Heat84 MILWAUKE E(91) Antetokounmpo 4-8 3-7 11,Parker5-11 3-413, Sanders5-101-311, Knight7-132-220, Dudley0-0 0-00, Henson0-10-00,Middleton3-73-310,Mayo 4-8 0-1 8,Pachulia5-91-1 11, Bayless0-3 2-22, l yasova1-20-02, Wolters1-21-3 3.Totals 36-74 16-26 91. MIAMI (94) Deng3-113-410, Wiliams5-90-013, Bosh2-17 5 810, Cole410 0 011, Chalmers7-133 418, Ennis4 60 09,Andersen0 01-41, Napier4 51-210, Haslem1-20-02.Totals 30-7313-2294. Milwaukee 19 19 26 27 — 91 Miami 23 23 13 26 — 84
NASCAR Sprint Cup championship in thrilling fashion by edging Ryan Newman to win at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Sunday.
f o r all four drivers competing four wide into the final turn to for the champion- determine the outcome, and he ship, with the de- almost got his wish. He had to Luke Lambert, to take only two tires
Newman, Denny Hamlin and
who started in 21st,
a t the
f r ont b e -
>S yeen
cision by Newman settle for a duel between him and hi s crew chief, and Harvick and for second
his victory lane reunion with
pit crew, Harvick
his wife, DeLana, and their
capped h s fi~ season driving for
his son in his car on pit road
before the race as a good-luck charm, as he has every week. "I'm just really excited, and
it's really special for everybody," said Harvick, 38, who finished the season with five victories. "I'm really happy,
and I just really don't know what to say. This new format
has beenso stressful,the racing has been phenomenal, and I'm going to sleep for a week." It took a veteran move-
on the 12th restart of the day,
Stewart-Haas Rac-
place in both the race and the
series, the highest Cup finish during the 1 1th of his career. Logano wound cauti o n nearly pay- up in 16th place Sunday and ing off. Newman, ended the season in fourth.
Joey Logano. But it was fitting fore having to deal ph e n O mena/, kep t moving up in that he took the checkered with N e w man'sgn Q I'm gpfng th e p ack, hanging flag. challenge. around the top eight P " ~ all afternoon and He had to win at Phoenix InWith a s t eilar ternational Raceway last week performance by his Week." into the night. just to stay in contention, and Chevrolet and his On the final re-
to the fore. Harvick had put
GOLDEN STATE(136) Barnes4-8 4-514, Green4-50-010, Bogut7-9 1-1 15,Curry10-195-530, Thompson5-11 6-618, Iguodala4-60-110,Barbosa1-42-24, Speights8-11 8-824, Livingston 0-43-43, Rush0-10-00, Ezeli1-2 1-2 3, Holiday1-40-0 3, Kuzmic1-2 0-0 2. Totals 46-86 39-34136. L.A. LAKER S(116) Johnson3-110-0 6, Boozer3-13 0-06, Hil 4-9 7-915, Lin 0-20-0 0, Bryant15-3411-16 44, Davis 5-100-010,Price0-32-22,Kelly1-22-24, Clarkson 2-66-610,Sacre5-80-010, Henry1-16-88. Totals 39-99 34-43 116. Golden State 34 4 9 41 21 — 136 L.A. Lakers 23 32 24 36 — 116
ter the 13th, and final, restart to dinch the victory.
In becoming the eighth champion to "ThiS neW winthefinalraceof fp f m g t h gS For Harvick to secure the the season, Harvick yee n Sp title under NASCAR's new led 54 laps, battling e limination format in t h e with Hamlin (who StreSSful, Chase for the Sprint Cup, he finished in seventh) the f.gCtng needed only to finish ahead of and Jeff Gordon h
2-year-old son, Keelan, on Sunday brought the emotion
Warriors 136, Lakers 115
when he shot to the lead, from H e a dded,"To close that much over." sixth — to put Harvick in po- deal with the championship Newman had said before sition to win, and he used his was pretty awesome." the race that he hoped the four savvy to hold off Newman afS t r ategy in the pits was keyseries contenders would go
Harvick credited the call
by his crew chief, Rodney Childers, to get four tires on his last pit stop for the win.
As intense as the race was going into the final lap, Har-
vick said that he was relaxed — SPrint CuP start after Harvick and that he was able to keep champlonKevln took'the high lme his focus on finishing ahead of and left the inside Newman and the others. "It seemed like everything to him, N ewman
ing, the team partly thought about at- today was so normal," Harvick ownedbyhisgoodfriendTony tempting a pass but decided said. "It seemed like when you Stewart. that was too risky at that stage. are inthatmoment and inyour "They gave us all the re"I could've kept it wide open element and doing the things sources that we needed," said and washed up into him, and it that you do on a weekly basis, Harvick, whose spot w it h wa s n't the right move; it wasn't that was the easiest thing for Richard Childress Racing what I would've wanted him to me. "The last thing that Tony was filled by Newman. "We do to me," said Newman, who never talked about money, we u sed such a pass at Phoenix Stewart told me today before never talked about anything to finish in 11th and land a fi- I gotin my car was: 'You're financial, and it was just, go nal-four spot. "If we were close going to go through a lot of get what you need and build a enough on the last lap, it might things today. You're going to team. We built all brand-new have been a different game, be ahead of guys and behind race cars, trucks, trailers with b u t I wasn't, and I slipped off guys, but don't ever quit until all new people, and this format of 'Turn 4 coming to the white, the checkered flag falls.' In the helped us build as a team." and at that point it was pretty end, that was ultimately true."
COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP
No.1Wi catstrai at a time, utroar ac to eatBu ao The Associated Press
straight home win.
LEXINGTON, Ky. — For 20 min-
Stanford 84, South Dakota 73: PALO ALTO, Calif. — Chasson Ran-
utes Buffalo staggered No. 1 Kentucky with the smashmouth aggres-
dlescored 23 points and Roscoe AlNo. 10 Texas 85, Alcorn State 53: len added a career-high 17 for Stan- AUSTIN, Texas — I s aiah Taylor ford. Stefan Nastic scored 14 points, scored12pointsand freshman Myles grabbed 11 rebounds and blocked Turner had six blocks for Texas. three shots for the Cardinal. No. 19 Oklahoma 78, SoutheastCalifornia 93, Kennesaw State 59: ern Louisiana 53: NORMAN, Okla. BERKELEY, Calif. — Tyrone Wal- — Buddy Hield hit all seven of his
sion that coach John Calipari want-
ed for his young, talented team. To his delight, the W i ldcats opened the second half with a quick
flurry of blows that helped seize a hard-fought victory. Trey Lyles lifted Kentucky out of a funk with five straight points to begin a 9-0 second-half run, and
lace had 18 points, nine rebounds
3-pointers to help the Wildcats rally for a 71-52 victory over Buffalo on
Sunday. Trailing 38-33 at halftime, Kentucky used a 3-pointer and subsequent steal and dunk by Lyles to get back on track. The 6-foot-10 fresh-
,
'tll)<
ANGELES — Freshman Kevon Loo-
tucky 61: LINCOLN, Neb. — Terran
ney had 17 points and 14 rebounds for
Petteway scored 25 points, making
his first double-double, and UCLA
six 3-pointers, and Nebraska opened its season with a victory in its first
pulled away in the second half.
Top 25 No. 3Wisconsin 89, Chattanooga
man forward finished with 12 points on 4-of-5 shooting as the Wildcats "It seemed like our shots in the
3-point shots and scored 25 points
and seven assists, Jordan Mathews as Oklahoma coasted in its season scored 16 for California. opener. UCLA 84, Coastal Carolina 71: LOS No. 21 Nebraska 80, Northern Ken-
Tyler Ulis scored 12 points on four
pulled away from the stubborn Bulls (1-1) in the final 20 minutes.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Justin Anderson scored 11 points, and Virginia hit 13 of 18 3-point attempts.
James Crisp/The Associated Press
Kentucky's Trey Lyles, left, is defended by Buffalo's Raheem Johnson during the first half of the Wildcats' 71-52 victory over the Bulls in Lexington, Kentucky.
45: MADISON, Wis. — Sam Dekker scored 18 points to lead Wisconsin, which built a 31-point lead in the first
game as a ranked team since January of 1995. No. 23 Syracuse 65, Hampton 47: SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Rakeem Christmas had 15 points and 16 rebounds,
freshman Chris McCullough added half. 13 points for Syracuse. No. 6 North Carolina 103, Robert Holy Cross 58, No. 25 Harvard 57:
second half were a lot more contest-
Morris 59: CHAPEL HILL, N.C.
ed and a lot more difficult to find,"
BriceJohnson scored 23 pointswhile
points, including a pair of free throws
Kennedy Meeks had 21 to lead North
to give Holy Cross the lead with 2
second-year Buffalo coach Bobby Hurley said. In other action Sunday:
-
BOSTON — Justin Burrell scored 16
Pac-12
Freshman Stanley Johnson scored 17
No. 2 Arizona 86, Cal State Northridge 68: TUCSON, Ariz. -
po ints, Rondae Hollis-Jefferson add- Carolina. minutes left as the Crusaders beat ed 14 and Arizona rolled to its 23rd No. 9 Virginia 67, Norfolk State 39: Harvard.
B4
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
OMMU1VITY P O RTS For ages 9andolder; developmental climbing team; $480; 4 p.m.; BendEndurance Academy, 500 SWBond St., Suite142; www.
BASEBALL BEND ELKSHOLIDAY HITTING CAMP: Nov. 24-25; Two-day camp focusing on hitting mechanics; led by former Elk coach Joe Dominiak, who recently coached in the Arizona Fall League; $100; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Bend Field House, 1182 Centennial Court; 541-385-5583 or joedominiakO bendbroadband.com
bendenduranceacademy.org.
RUNNING
BASKETBALL HOOPS FORTHE HOUSE: Nov. 21;A basketball game between the Harlem Ambassadorsandthe Ronald McDonald House Defenders to benefit the Bend Ronald McDonald House; $10-$12, $8-$10 for seniors and students, $5 for children ages 4 and older, free for children 3 and younger; 6:30-8 p.m.; Trinity Lutheran Church 8 School, 2550 NEButler Market Road, Bend; 541-318-4950, tsherry© rmhcofcentraloregon.org or www.rmhccor. ejoinme.org/hoops4house
CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCECOMPETITION CLIMBINGTEAM: Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays; Competitive climbing team; $1,600; 3:30 p.m.; BendEndurance Academy, 500 SW Bond St., Suite142; www. bendenduranceacademy.org BEND ENDURANCE DEVELOPMENT CLIMBINGTEAM: Mondays, Wednesdays;
Skiing Continued from B1 Meissner Nordic, which operates under an agreement with the National Forest Ser-
vice, grooms 40 kilometers of trails throughout the season.
The nonprofit purchased a new grooming machine last season — a PistenBully 100,
COCC TURKEYTROT:Nov.22;Central Oregon Community College's15th annual Turkey Trot; day of race registration at Mazama Gym; 3-mile run or1-mile walk; $10 for the public and free for COCCand OSU Cascade students; 10 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7700 or bdouglass©cocc.edu CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUNS: Thursdays; Locations vary. Call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more info; 5:30
ND
REFLECTIVERUN: Wednesdays, 6 p.m.; group fun run of 3-5 miles; bring headlamps; free; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or scott.white© fleetfeet.com. ROLLER YOGACLASS: Wednesdays, 7 p.m.; learn how to use your foam roller; free; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or www.fleetfeetbend. com. MOMS RUNNINGGROUP: Rain or shine, 3 to 4.5 miles every Thursday, 9:30 a.m; free; 9:30a.m.;FootZone,842 SW WallSt.,Bend; 541-317-3568 or angela©footzonebend.
p.m.; FootZone, 842 SWWall St., Bend; 541317-3568ormax©footzonebend.com REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP:Tuesday group runs in Redmond. Meet at 314 SW11 St. All abilities welcome; free; 6:30 p.m.; Downtown Redmond; www.
runaroundsports.com RORK SATURDAYRUNS: Weekly run or walk with the Redmond Oregon Running Klub. Saturdays at 8 a.m. Email Dan Edwards for more info; free; 8 a.m.; downtown Redmond; rundanrun19©yahoo. com or www.raprd.org STRENGTH 8CONDITIONING: Mondays; class for beginner to intermediate-level function strength conditioning with an emphasis on running; free; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalvestonAve.,Bend;541-3891601 or scott.white@fleetfeet.com
com or lisa.nasr©me.com
SATURDAYA.M. RUN: Meet at Fleet Feet at 8 a.m.; mostly trail runs, will carpool to trailhead when necessary; 4-8 miles; free; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or www.fleetfeetbend. com. p.m.; Bend. MOVE IT MONDAYS:First and third ENDURANCE RUNNINGMOVIE, Mondays of each month. Carpool from FEATURINGKAMI SEMICK: Nov.20; FootZone to trailhead when scheduled. All Showing of the short film "The Teaandthe Horse Trail," an ancient trail in western China other runs start and finish at FootZone. Usually 3-5 miles, paces 7-12 minutes per and eastern Tibet that dates back at least 600years. Bend'sKamiSemickandagroup mile; free; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 SW Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or melanieO of trail runners traced180 miles of the trail during filming. Audience is limited to100, so footzonebend.com please register at www.footzonebend.com; NOON TACORUN: Noon taco run on free; 7 p.m.; FootZone, 842 SWWall St., Wednesdays from FootZone. Order food Bend; 541-317-3568 from the Taco Stand it will be ready upon your return; free (tacosnot included); noon; GROWLERRUN: Group run of 3-5 miles on Thursday from Fleet Feet. Share a growler of FootZone, 842 SWWall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or teague@footzonebend.com beer from Growler Phil's after the run; free; 6 p.m.; Growler Phil's, 1244 NWGalveston PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP WITH Ave, Bend; 541-390-3865 or www. MAX KING: Tuesdays; Interval-based fleetfeetbend.com. running group. Locations vary; free; 5:30
"People should consider backcountry skiing at Swampy (Lakes Sno-park). Any they're more than welcome to come to Meissner (Sno-park and put skis on the ground. Hopefully we'll have someone brave enough to cut trails."
wait until December 1 to get
and nordic areas," said Drew Jackson, Mt. Bachelor ski ar-
ea'smarketing and communow, snowmobiles will be the big machines up." used to pack what snow there While th e M t . B a chelor nications manager. "We're 1S. Nordic Center has almost 2 still targeting Wednesday "Until then, people should feet of snow, officials there (Nov. 26). But we'll need a litconsider backcountry ski- a re asking s kiers t o w a i t tle bit of help from nature." ing at Swampy (Lakes Sno- until Nov. 26, the anticipatIn addition to Swampy park)," Coe said. "And they're ed opening day for both Mt. Lakes and Meissner snomore than welcome to come Bachelor's nordic and alpine parks, Coe suggested winto Meissner and put skis on centers. ter sports enthusiasts who
ed.... Our area has a real •
•
•
joys of winter; Noski passnecessaryand transportation is provide; Informational Parent Meeting October 22, BEAoffices; starts at$200;;Bend EnduranceAcademy, 500 SW Bond St., Suite142; www.
bendenduranceacademy.org CROSS-COUNTRY SKIWAXING CLINIC: Dec. 4; How-to-clinic for cross-country
skiers; beginners to racersarewelcome; free; 6-7 p.m.; Sunnyside Sports, 930 NW Newport Ave, Bend OR,Bend;
www.sunnysidesports.com
HunterDouilas
cannot wait to strap on their
•
BEA NORDICYOUTHCLUB: Bend Endurance Academy; Dec 20-March1; Ages 7-11; one- and two-day-a-week options; Satand/or Sun; The Youth Club focuses on fun and introducing youth to the basics of cross-country skiing and
SHE'S ONSKIS NORDIC SESSIONS: Nordic ski class for women who want to ski one day aweek with acoach;six-weeksessions open to advanced-beginner level and above; $160 for clinic only or $180 for clinic and trail TABLE TENNIS pass;9:30a.m.;M t.Bachelorskiarea,3000 Century Drive, Bend; www.mtbachelor.com/ TABLETENNIS EVENING PLAY: Monday site/winter/nordic/lessons eveningplay hosted by BendTableTennis SHE'S ONSKISNORDICSESSIONS: Starts Club; drop in fees are $3 for adults and $2 Dec. 3; Nordic ski class for women whowant for youths and seniors; 6-9 p.m.; Boys 8 Girls Club of Central Oregon (Bend), 500 NW to skione dayaweekwithacoach;six-week sessions open to advanced-beginner level Wall St., Bend; www.bendtabletennis.com and above; $160for clinic only or $180 for clinic and trail pass; 12:30 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 3000 Century Drive, Bend; www. SNOW SPORTS mtbachelor.com/site/winter/nordic/lessons BACKCOUNTRYBASICS: Nov. 19; Learn the basics of the back country, what to bring and how to prepare; 6 p.m.; Crow's Visit Central Oregon's FeetCommons, 875 NW Brooks St.,Bend; 541-728-0066
boots and skinny skis should check out Cascade Lakes Highway near the snow gate at Bachelor (the gate recently closed the highway to vehicle traffic for the season) and — Meissner Nordic president Michael Coe the area around Three Creek Lake south of Sisters. "This is great," Coe said "We got the machines up about the recent snowfall. the ground. Hopefully we'll have someone brave enough (Saturday) at both the alpine "People are getting excit-
to be specific — that will fire up once there is 12 to 18 inch- to cut trails. We just have to es of snow on the ground. For
E
Email events at least 10days before publication to sportslbendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.com/comsportscal.
•
strong appreciation for what nordic skiing brings to the community." — Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastesibendbulletin.com.
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Photos by Meg Roussos /The Bulletin
Left, Allen Taylor leads Heldl Blair up Tumalo Mountain while backcountry skilng Sunday wlth a group
from Portland. Right, Dakota Blackhorse von Jess gets some early training in at Meissner Sno-park. e
Shom your appreciation to your customers by thanlzing them in a group space ad that ~vi11 raan Nov. 27~, Thanlmgiving Day, ebe most-t end puper of tbe yeus! This special wrap will showcase your business
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Deadline for ad space and copy: Thursday, November 20, 2014 Publishes on Thursday, November 27~ Katie Selin, left, and Alec Peters, both of Portland, take advantage of the early snowfall during a backcountry ski session at Tumalo Mountain on Sunday.
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u cin
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•
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014• THE BULLETIN
B5
NFL ROUNDUP
ea aw scan't et ast4t The Associated Press
Seattle's Russell Wilson
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Seattle Seahawks coach Pete Carroll k new t h a t K a n sas
is sacked by Kansas City's Dontari Poe during the Seahawks' 24-20
City had not allowed a rushing touchdown all season, so he opted to throw for the end zone on fourth-and-goal at the 2-yard line.
loss Sunday. dgj- l »
It was the f i rst o f t h r ee fourth downs that the Seahawks failed to convert. By the time Russell Wilson
yards rushing for Seattle. But
minutes Sunday — the last of
the star running back, fresh off a four-touchdown game,
in his fourth career game. Texans 23, Browns 7:
was stuffed twice by the Kansas City defense with the out-
LOUIS — Shaun Hill was effective in his first start since
and tw o t o uchdowns, and and-18 at their 20-yard line M arshawn Lynch ha d 1 2 4 with 1:13 left in the game.
GLENDALE, Ariz. — Drew downs, and Chicago won for Stanton t h re w t o u chdown just the second time in seven
passes to Michael Floyd on Ar- games. Falcons 19, Panthers 17: and the Cardinals held Detroit CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Matt without a touchdown. Ryan threw for 268 yards
J . J . W att izona's first two possessions
CLEVELAND —
caught a 2-yard touchdown pass and dominated on de-
fense and Houston climbed back to .500. Along with his TD, Watt r ecorded a s t r ip
49ers 16, Giants 10: EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — San Francisco rookie l inebacker
sack, made five tacklesChris Borland intercepted a three for a loss — recovered a fourth-down pass by Eli Man-
quarterback Brian Hoyer into Also on Sunday: several bad throws. Rams 22, Seahawks 7: ST. Packers 53, Eagles 20:
regaining the St. Louis quarand moved into a tie with the come hanging in the balance. terback job, and rookie Tre Denver Broncos for first place The Seahawks' last-chance Mason had 29 carries for 113 in the AFC West. drive ended w hen W i l son yards. Wilson threw for 178 yards threw incomplete on fourthPatriots 42, Colts 20: INDIserved a tense 24-20 victory
chise-record four touchdowns
fumble and hurried Cleveland
threw incomplete in the final those failed fourth-down attempts — the Chiefs had pre-
Ed Zurga/The Associated Press
o w n in4t u a rter
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Aaron
ning at the 49ers 2 with 4:43 to
and a touchdown, Matt Bry-
ant added four field goals for Atlanta.
Chargers 13, Raiders 6: SAN DIEGO — Philip Rivers threw a 22-yard touchdown
play, capping a goal-line stand pass to Malcom Floyd on the and sending New York to its game's third play from scrimfifth straight loss. mage, and San Diego extendBengals 27, Saints 10: NEW ed Oakland's losing streak to
Rodgers passed for 341 yards ORLEANS — A ndy Dalton 16. and three touchdowns, Julius threw for three touchdowns, Buccaneers 27, Redskins Peppers returned his second and Cincinnati handed New 7: LANDOVER, Md. — Mike interception of the season for Orleans its second straight Evans caught seven passes a score, and Green Bay's de-
fense stuffed Philadelphia's ANAPOLIS — J onas Gray high-octane offense. rushed for 199 yards and a franCardinals 14, Lions 6:
loss.
for 209 yards and scored two
Bears 21, Vikings 13: CHI- touchdowns to help Tampa CAGO — Jay Cutler threw Bay end a five-game losing for 330 yards and three touch-
streak.
Bnccaneers 27, Redskins 7
Chargers13, Raiders 6
Tampagay Washington
Oakland SanDiego
NFL SCOREBOARD American Conference
Summaries
Chiefs 24, Seahawks20 g 13 7 g — 20 7 7 3 7 — 24 First Quarter KC — Charles1 run(Santoskick), 422.
Seattle Kansascity
SecondOuarler Sea —Baldwin 7 passfrom Wilson (Hauschka kick), 10:22. KC—Charle16 s run(Santoskick), 8:09. Sea—FG Hauschka24, 1:39. Sea—FG Hauschka27,:00. Third Guarter KC—FG Santos 23,7:39. Sea —Moeaki1 passfromWilson(Hauschkakick), :23. Fourlh Quarler KC — Davis 4 run(Santos kick),13:41. A—76,463. Sea
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
KC
25 20 3 72 29 8 37-204 30-190 1 68 108 1-10 1-9 5 -79 3 - 95 0-0 0-0 20-32-0 11-16-0 2-10 0-0 2-51.5 2-52.0 1-0 3-2 8-50 3-6 35;57 24;03
Timeof Possession
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Seatlle: Lynch 24-124, Wilson 8-71, Turbin 4-11, Michael1-(minus 2). Kansas City:Charles20-159,Thomas3-22, Davis5-10, A.Smith2-(minus1). PASSING —Seatlle: Wilson20-32-0-178.KansasCity:A.Smith11-16-0-108. RECEIVING —Seattle: Baldwin 6-45, Kearse 5-54, Willson 3-51, Richardson3-24, Helfet 1-2, Lynch1-1, Moeaki1-1. KansasCity: Kelce3-37, Charles2-19, Bowe2-18, Sherman1-13, Thom as 1-10, Davis1-8,Supernaw1-3. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.
Cardinais14, Lions 6 3 3 g g — 6 1 4 0 g g — 14 First Ouarter Ari — Floyd42passfromStanton(Catanzarokick), 12:02. Ari — Floyd12passfromStanton(Catanzarokick), 6:06. Det — FGPrater 50, 2:46. SecondGuarler Det — FGPrater 28,;25. A—62,487. Detroit Arizona
Det Ari 11 18 2 62 352 19-98 26-46 1 64 306 2-16 2-4 1 -26 1 - 21 2-42 1-0 18-30-1 21-32-2 4-19 0-0 6-41.5 5-39.4 2-0 0-0 9 -80 4 - 35 29:17 30:43
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING —Detroit: Bell 14-85,Tate1-8, Collins 2-3,Riddick2-2. Arizona: Elington19-42, Taylor 2-6,Hughes1-2,Stanton4-(minus 4). PASSING —Detroit: Stafford18-30-1-183. Arizona: Stanton 21-32-2-306. RECEIVING —Detroit: C.Johnson5-59, Ebron 4-22, Bell 3-30,Riddick3-24, Tate2-41, Ross1-7. Arizona:Jo.Brown5-69, Ellington 4-24, Carlson 3-37, Floyd2-54,Fitzgerald2-33,Hughes1-49,Housler1-27,Niklas1-5, Ja.Brown1-4,Taylor 1-4. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.
Bengais 27, Saints10 Cincinnati Newerleans
7 6 7 7 — 27
3 0 g 7 — 10 First Ouarter NO —FGS.Graham 31,8:53. Cin — Gresham12 passfromDalton(Nugentkick),
3:14.
SecondGuarler
Cin — FGNugent22, 2:52. Cin — FGNugent42,:00.
Third Guarler Cin — Gresham1pass fromDalton (Nugentkick), 6:03. Fourlh Guarler NO —Stils 9 passfromBrees(S.Grahamkick), 14:56. Cin — Green 24 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 11:29. A—73,073.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards
Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
49ers16, Giants10
East
W L T
NewEngland Miami Buffalo N.Y.Jets
8 6 5 2
2 4 5 8
0 0 0 0
W L T Indianapolis 6 4 0 Houston 5 5 0 Tennessee 2 7 0 Jacksonvile 1 9 0
Pct
.8 0 0 .6 0 0 .5 0 0 .2 0 0
Pct .6 0 0 .5 0 0 .2 2 2 .1 0 0
San Francisco 3 6 7 0 — 16 N.Y. Giants 7 g 3 0 — 1g PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC Div First Guarler 323 218 5 - 0-0 3 - 2-0 6-2-0 2-0-0 2-1-0 NYG — D onne l 19 pass fromManning (J.Brown 249 180 3 - 2-0 3 - 2-0 5-2-0 1-2-0 2-1-0 kick), 6:54. 200 204 2 - 3-0 3 -2-0 2-5-0 3-0-0 2-2-0 SF — FGDawson31,:59. 174 265 2 -4-0 0 -4-0 2-5-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 SecondGuarler SF — FGDawson37,10:15. South SF — FGDawson44,7:29. PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v Third Ouarter 310 253 3 - 2-0 3 -2-0 5-3-0 1-1-0 3-0-0 SF — Crabtree48passfrom Kaepernick (Dawson 229 204 2 - 2-0 3 -3-0 4-2-0 1-3-0 1-1-0 kick), 11:38. 144 223 1 - 3-0 1 - 4-0 2-5-0 0-2-0 1-2-0 NYG —FGJ.Brown43,8:18. 158 282 1 - 4-0 0 -5-0 1-6-0 0-3-0 0-2-0 A—80,352.
North
W 6 6 6 6
Cincinnati Baltimore Pittsburgh Cleveland
Denver Kansas City SanDiego Oakland
L 3 4 4 4
T 1 0 0 0
W
L T
7 7 6 0
3 0 3 0 4 0 10 0
Pc t PF PA H ome Away A FC NFC D i v First downs .6 5 0 224 221 4 - 1-1 2 - 2-0 4-3-0 2-0-1 2-1-0 TotalNetYards .6 0 0 261 181 4 - 1-0 2 -3-0 3-4-0 3-0-0 2-3-0 Rushes-yards .6 0 0 261 239 4 - 1-0 2 -3-0 5-3-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 Passing .6 0 0 216 195 4 - 2-0 2 -2-0 4-4-0 2-0-0 2-2-0 PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. West Comp-Att-Int Pct P F P A H o m e Away AFC N F C D i v Sacked-YardsLost .7 0 0 2 9 3 22 4 5- 0- 0 2 - 3-0 5 - 1-0 2 -2-0 3-0-0 Punts .7 0 0 2 4 1 17 1 4- 1- 0 3 - 2-0 5 - 2-0 2 -1-0 1-1-0 Fumbles-Lost .6 0 0 2 1 8 19 2 4 - 1-0 2 - 3-0 5 -3-0 1 -1-0 2-2-0 Penalties-Yards . 000 152 265 0 - 5-0 0 -5-0 0 -8-0 0 -2-0 0-3-0 Time ofPossession
East
W 4 4 3 2
Atlanta
NewOrleans Carolina TampaBay
L T 6 0 6 0 7 1 8 0
.7 0 0 .3 0 0 .3 0 0
Pc t .4 0 0 .4 0 0 .3 1 8 .2 0 0 194 279
Detroit GreenBay
Chicago Minnesota
L 3 3 6 6
T 0 0 0 0
Pct .7 0 0 .7 0 0 .4 0 0 .4 0 0
NO 22 24 4 05 330 36-186 26-75 2 19 255 1-9 1-4 2-74 0-0 0-0 0-0 16-22-0 33-41-0 1-1 0-0 2-44.0 3-44.0 2-0 2-1 4 -33 5 - 34 29:14 30:46
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING —Cincinnati: Hill 27-152, Peerma n 2-21, Dalton 5-12, Burkhead2-1. NewOrleans: Ingram23-67,Cooks1-5, Brees1-3, Cadet 1-0. PASSING —Cincinnati: Dalton 16-22-0-220. New Orleans: Brees33-41-0-255. RECEIVING —Cincinnati: Green6-127, Burkhead3-36, Sanu3-23, Gresham2-13, Hill 1-13, Wright1-8.NewOrleans: Ingram7-30,Cooks5-50, Colston 4-56, Stills 4-32, Cadet4-31, Lorig 4-5, J.Graham 3-29, Leonard 1-15, Morgan1-7. MISSED FIELDGOALS—None.
0 - 5-0 2 - 3-0 1-6-0 1-2-0 0-4-0
PF PA 188 156 330 225 215 290 181 220
H ome Away N FC AFC 4 - 1-0 3 -2-0 5-2-0 2-1-0 5 - 0-0 2 -3-0 5-3-0 2-0-0 1 - 3-0 3 -3-0 3-3-0 1-3-0 2 - 2-0 2 -4-0 4-4-0 0-2-0
West W Arizona 9 S an Francisco 6 Seattle 6 S t. Louis 4
L T 1 0 4 0 4 0 6 0
Pct .90 0 .6 0 0 .600 .40 0
PF PA 237 176 211 212 260 215 185 258
Thursday'sGame
Packers 53, Eagles 20 Philadelphia Greengay
0 6 7 7 — 20 17 13 9 14 — 53
First Quarter GB — FGCrosby27,12:58.
GB —D.Adams6passfromA.Rodgers (Crosbykick),
3:33.
GB — Hyde75punt return(Crosbykick),200. SecondQuarler Phi —FGParkey33, 13:08. GB — Nelson 27pass fromA.Rodgers(Crosby kick),
10:39.
GB — Iacy1run(runfailed), 2:00. Phi — FGParkey33,:00. Third Quarler GB — FGCrosby33,7:53. GB—Peppers 52 interception return(kick blocked),
5:56.
Phi — J.Matthews10passfromSanchez(Parkeykick),
2:21.
FourlhGuarler GB—Eacy 32 pass fromA.Rodgers (Crosby kick), GB—Hayward49fumblereturn(Crosbykick),10:39. Phi — Maclin 20passfromSanchez(Parkeykick),720. A—78,270.
Firstdowns TotalNetYards
Rushes -yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Y ardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yard s Timeof Possession
Phi GB 22 25 4 29 47 5 31-109 25-110 3 20 365 1 -6 1 - 75 4 -89 3 - 42 0 -0 2 - 54 26-44-2 24-38-0 3 -26 1- 2 4-39.8 2-20.0 4-2 2-0 6 -53 4 - 52 27:18 32N2
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Philadelphia: McCoy23-88, Sproles 2-21,Polk3-0, Sanchez3-0. GreenBay: Lacy 1(Hi9, A.Rodgers 3-32,Siarks8-9, Kuhn1-3, Flynn3-(minus3). PASSIN~hiladel phta:Sanchez 26-44-2-346. Green Bay:Flynn2-2-0-26,A.Rodgers22-36-0-341. RECEIVING —Philadelphia: Maclin 9-93,J.Matthews 5-107,Erlz 4-55, Cooper 4-39,Sproles2-23, McCoy1-18,Celek1-11. GreenBay: Cobb10-129,Nelson 4-109, Lacy3-45,Quarless2-35,Starks2-17,D.Adams 2-13,R.Rodgers1-19. MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Greengay:Crosby50 (WR).
Texans 23, Brewns7 Houston Cleveland
7 7 3 6 — 23 g 7 0 0 — 7 Div First Guarler 2-0-0 Hou—Watt 2 passfrom Mallett (Buffockkick) 3-1-0 7:09. 1-2-0 SecondGuarter 0-3-0 Cle — Hawkins32 passfromHoyer(Cundiff kick) 8:58.
Hou—Graham20passfromMaffett(Bullock kick) H ome Away N FC AFC D i v :23. Third Guarter 7-0-0 2-1-0 2-0-0 6 - 0-0 3 -1-0 Hou — FGBullock46,5:16. 2 - 2-0 4 - 2-0 5-3-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 Fourlh Quarler 4 - 1-0 2 - 3-0 4-2-0 2-2-0 0-1-0 Hou—FGBullock37,9:47. 2 - 3-0 2 -3-0 3-5-0 1-1-0 2-2-0 Hou—FGBullock50,2:47.
Thursday,Nov.2g Kansas CityatOakland,5:25p.m. Sunday'sGames Sunday,Nov.23 Chicago 21,Minnesota13 Green Bayat Minnesota, 10a.m. KansasCity 24, Seattle 20 CincinnatiatHouston,10a.m. Cincinnati27,NewDrleans10 TampaBayatChicago,10a.m. St. Louis22,Denver7 ClevelandatAtlanta, 10am. Houston23, Cleveland7 Tennessee atPhiladelphia, 10a.m. Atlanta19,Carolina 17 DetroitatNewEngland, 10a.m. TampaBay27,Washington7 Jacksonvilleatindianapolis,10a.m. SanFrancisco16,N.Y.Giants10 N.Y.JetsatBuffalo, 10a.m. San Diego 13, Oakland 6 Arizonaat Seattle, 1:05p.m. Arizona 14, Detroit 6 St. LouisatSanDiego,1:05 p.m. GreenBay53, Philadelphia 20 WashingtonatSanFrancisco, 1:25p.m. NewEngland42, Indianapolis 20 Miami atDenver, 1;25p.m. Open:Baltimore,Dalas,Jacksonvile, N.Y.Jets DallasatN.Y.Giants, 5:30p.m. Today'sGame Open:Carolina, Pittsburgh PittsburghatTennessee,5:30p.m. Monday,Nov.24 Baltimoreat NewOrleans, 5:30p.m. All TimesPST Miami22,Buffalo9
14HO,
Cin
2-2.
H ome Away N FC AFC Div PASSING —San Francisco: Kaep ernick15-295 - 0-0 2 -3-0 4-3-0 3-0-0 2-0-0 0-193, Lee0-1-0-0.N.Y.Giants:Manning22-45261 212 3 - 3-0 4 - 0-0 4-3-0 3-0-0 1-1-0 5-280. 205 263 2 - 3-0 1 -4-0 2-6-0 1-1-0 1-2-0 RECEIVING —San Francisco: Boldin 5-53, 204 256 2 - 3-0 1 - 4-0 1-6-0 2-1-0 1-2-0 Crabtree 3-85,Gore 2-19,Miler 2-16,S.Johnson1-8, V.Davis1-7, Hyde1-5. N.Y. Giants:Randle 7-112, South Beckham Jr. 6-93, Jennings4-8, Donnell 3-54, Parker PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC D i v 1-9, A.Wiliams1-4. 238 255 2 - 2-0 2 -4-0 4-4-0 0-2-0 4-0-0 MISSEDFIELDGOALS—None. 261 252 3 - 2-0 1 -4-0 4-4-0 0-2-0 2-1-0 215 300 2 - 4-0 1 -3-1 3-5-0 0-2-1 1-2-0
North W 7 7 4 4
37-148 21-65 1 85 265 2 -8 3 - 39 1-26 5-129 5-31 0-0 15-30-0 22-45-5 1 -8 2 - 15 4-46.8 3-43.0 3-1 1-0 4 -35 3 - 54 34:59 25:01
RUSHING —San Francisco: Gore 19-95, Hyde 9-25, Kaepernick 8-24, V.Davis 1-4.N.Y. Giants:Jennings18-59, Hynoski1-4, A.Wiliams
P c t PF PA .7 0 0 299 251
A—67,431.
H ou 29 4 24
7 — 27
g 7 g g — 7 First Ouarter TB — FGMurray32,11:10. TB — Banks 19 interception return(Murraykick),
3:56.
SecondGuarler
TB — FGMurray38,7:39. Was —Helu Jr. 30passfrom Griffin III (Forbath kick),:11. Third Guarler TB — Evans 36passfrom McCown (Murraykick), 4:36.
Fourlh Guarler TB — Evans 56passfrom McCown (Murraykick),
3 0 g 3 — 6 7 3 3 g — 13 First Quarter SD — Floyd 22 passfromRivers (Novakkick),
14:07. Dak—FGJanikowski 42,7:27.
SecondOuarler
SD — FGNovak23,4:12.
Third Guarler
SD — FGNovak52,7:19.
Fourth Quarter Dak—FGJanikowski 25,4:06. A—66,720.
O ak SD First downs 9 18 TotalNetYards 2 33 300 Rushes-yards 19-71 32-120 Tg W a s Passing 1 62 18 0 First downs 12 20 3 -7 4 - 44 PuntReturns TotalNetYards 3 29 3 2 2 KickoffRe turns 4 -75 1 - 25 21-48 31-155 Interceptions Rushes-yards Ret. 0-0 0-0 Passing 2 81 16 7 Comp-Att-Int 16-34-0 22-34-0 1-0 2-7 PuntReturns 2 -10 2 - 13 Sacked-YardsLost KickoffReturns 2-27 5 -117 9-49.6 9-42.2 Punts InterceptionsRet. 2-19 0-0 2 -1 0-0 Fumbles-Lost Comp-Att-Int 15-23-0 23-32-2 Penalties-Yards 8 -41 6 - 40 2 -7 6 4 0 Sacked-Yards Lost Timeof Possession 25;14 34:46 4-41.3 4-44.3 Punts 2-1 4-1 Fumbles-Lost INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS 11-101 9 - 67 Penalties-Yards RUSHING — Oakland:Murray4-43,McFadden Timeof Possession 25:49 34:11 8-21, Jones-Drew 4-6, Reece1-1, Carr 2-0. San Diego: RyMathews16-70,0liver13-36,Royal1-15, INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS D.Brown1-0,Rivers1-(minus1). RUSHING —Tampa Bay: Sims13-36, McCown PASSING —Oakland: Carr 16-34-0-172.San 3-8, Rainey 5-4. Washington: Morris 20-96,Griffin Diego: Rivers 22-34-0-193. I I 6-41,ReddJr.4-16, Jackson1-2. RECEIVING —Oakland: Rivera 3-40, Murray PASSING — TampaBay:McCown15-23-0-288. 3-16, Thompkins2-47,J.Jones2-35,Holmes2-19, Washington: Griffin III23-32-2-207. 2-(minus4), Butler 1-15, Leonhardt 1-4. San RECEIVIN G— Tampa Bay:Evans7-209,Jack- Reece Alen 8-63, Floyd4-44, Gates3-32, Royal son 3-43, Sims3-8, Myers1-21, Seferian-Jenkins Diego: 2-27, Green1-11, Ry.Mathews 1-5, D.Brown1-4, D. 1-7. Washington:HeluJr. 6-57,Jackson4-35, Paul Johnson 1-4,Dliver1-3. 3-17, Morris2-36, Reed2-22, Roberts 2-21,ReddJr. MISSEDFIELDGOALS—San Diego: Novak 2-9, Garcon 1-6, Young1-4. 48 (WL). MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Washington: Forbath 47(WR),50(WR).
N Y G 14:07. 17 A—77,442. 330
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
National Conference W L T Philadelphia 7 3 0 Dallas 7 3 0 N.Y.Giants 3 7 0 Washington 3 7 0
SF 20 3 33
10 3 7
Injury report
Rams 22, Broncos7 Denver St. Louis
Today'sGame
g 7 g g — 7
10 3 3 First Quarter
6 — 22
SIL — FGZuerlein 37, 9:14.
SIL — Britt 63passfromHil (Zuerleinkick),1:10. SecondQuarler SIL — FGZuerlein 29,3:57. Den—Sanders42 pass fromManning(McManus kick), 2:22. Third Quarler SIL — FGZuerlein 22,1:41. Fourlh Guarler SIL — FGZuerlein 55,11:59. SIL — FGZuerlein 53,4:44. A—59,401.
Cle First downs 24 D en StL TotalNetYards 37 5 First downs 21 16 Rushes-yards 54-213 24-58 TotalNetYards 3 97 33 7 Passing 2 11 31 7 Rushes-yards 10-28 33-131 PuntReturns 2-5 1-7 Passing 3 69 206 KickoffReturns 1-28 5-110 PuntReturns 1 -0 2 - 13 InterceptionsRet. 1-0 1-0 KickoffReturns 2 -24 2 - 49 Comp-Att-Int 20-30-1 20-50-1 InterceptionsRet. 0-0 2-4 Sacked-YardsLost 0 -0 2 - 1 3 Comp-Att-Int 34-54-2 20-29-0 Punts 5-39.4 6-38.5 Sacked-Yards Lost 2 -20 3 - 14 Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-1 Punts 5-36.6 6-43.3 Penalties-Yards 5 -55 8 - 67 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-0 8 -62 3 - 25 Timeof Possession 33:53 26:07 Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession 24:10 35:50 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS I N DIVIDUAL ST AT I S TICS RUSHING —Houslon: Blue36-156, Grimes13RUSHING —Denver: Anderson9-29, Manning 54, D.Johnson 1-6,Mallett 4-(minus3).Cleveland: Crowell 14-61,West5-12, Hoyer3-(minus 6), Tate 1-(minus1).St. Louis: Mason29-113, Austin 2-11, 2-(minus9). Cunningham 2-7. PASSING —Houston: Mallett 20-30-1-211. PASSING — Denver:Manning34-54-2-389.St. Cleveland: Hoyer20-50-1-330. Louis:Hill 20-29-0-220. RECEIVING — Houslon: A.Johnson 7-68, D. RECEIVIN G— Denver:Anderson8-86,D. ThomPatriots 42, Colts 20 Johnson5-21, Hopkins4-80, Graham2-34, Martin as 7-103,Sanders5-102, Tamme4-31, Welker 4-28, 1-6,Watt1-2.Cleveland: Hawkins6-97, Gabriel Caldwel l3-31,J.Thomas2-3,Thompson1-5.SkLouNewEngland 7 7 14 1 4 — 42 5-92,Austin3-31,Dray2-46, Crowell 2-30,Benjamin is:Britt 4-128,Cunningham4-31, Bailey3-26, Cook Indianapolis 3 7 3 7 — 2g 1-23, Barnidge1-11. 3-19,Austin2-10, Kendricks2-5, Mason1-1, Hil1-0. Firsl Guarler MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Houslon:Bullock52 MISSED FIELDGOALS—None. NE — Gray4run(Gostkowski kick), 8:37. (WR).Cleveland:Cundiff 38(WR). Ind — FGVinatieri 31,4:19. Faicens19, Panthers17 SecondQuarter Bears 21, Vikings13 NE — Gray2run(Gostkowski kick), 3:50. Atlanta g 6 1g 3 — 19 Ind — Nicks 10 passfrom Luck(Yinatieri kick), Minnesota 1 0 g 0 3 — 1 3 Carolina g 3 g 14 — 17 :55. Chicago g 14 0 7 — 2 1 Second Quarler Third Ouarler Car — FGGano23,14:57. First Guarler NE — Wright2 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), Min — FGWalsh50,11;21. Atl — FGBryant 34,9:26. 11:10. Min — Ellison 7 pass from Bridgewater (Walsh Atl — FGBryant 42,:02. Ind — FGVinatieri 53,8:31. kick), 3:16. Third Quarler NE — Gray2run(Gostkowski kick), 3:30. Second Quarter Atl — FGBryant26, 12:07. Fourth Quarter Chi — Jeffery 27 passfromCutler (Gouldkick), Atl — White 2passfromRyan (Bryant kick), 6:34. Ind — Castonzo1 passfrom Luck(Vinatieri kick), 13:06. Fourlh Quarler 13:32. Chi — M a rs hal l 44 pass from C u t l e r (Goul d ki c k), Car — Benjamin22passfromNewton(Ganokick), NE — Gray1run(Gostkowski kick), 8:43. 2:49. 9:12. NE — Gronkowski 26passfromBrady(Gostkowski Fourth Guarter Car—Brown 47 passfromNewton (Gano kick), kick), 6:46. Chi — Marshall 4 passfromCutler (Gould kick), 6:20. A—66,751. 8:51. Atl — FGBryant44,2:08. Min — FGWalsh26,4:04. A—73,314. NE In d A—61,792. First downs 33 17 Atl Ca r TotalNetYards 5 01 32 2 M in Ch i First downs 22 22 Rushes-yards 45-244 17-19 First downs 10 24 TotalNetYards 3 46 39 1 Passing 2 57 30 3 TotalNetYards 2 43 46 8 Rushes-yards 27-86 25-106 3-6 0-0 PuntReturns Rushes-yards 16-96 31-138 Passing 2 60 285 1 -21 2 - 5 3 Passing KickoffReturns 0 -0 4 - 16 1 47 3 3 0 PuntReturns 1 -10 2 - 10 PuntReturns Interceptions Ret. 0 -0 3 - 1 7 KickoffReturns 1 -19 4 - 73 Comp-Att-Int 19-30-2 23-39-1 KickoffReturns 3 -34 4 - 59 InterceptionsRet. 2-19 0-0 0-0 1-0 Sacked-Yards Lost Interceptions Ret. 2-52 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 31-45-0 23-37-2 Punts 1-59.0 3-56.7 Comp-Att-Int 18-28-1 31-43-2 Sacked-Yards Lost 2-8 2-7 0-0 1-0 Fumbles-Lost Sacked-YardsLost 2-11 0-0 Punts 7-49.1 6-35.7 Penalties-Yards 5 -53 4 - 29 Punts 4-41.3 2-29.5 Fumbles-Lost 1-1 0-0 Time ofPossession 34:21 25:39 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0 Penalties-Yards 5 -58 1 - 15 Penalties-Yards 2 -18 7 - 60 Time ofPossession 31:58 28:02 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Time ofPossession 21:22 38:38 RUSHING — New England:Gray38-199,EdelINDIVIDUAL STATISTICS man2-31,Vereen1-18, Brady2-(minus 2), Garoppolo INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Atlanta: S.Jackson17-41,Freeman 2-(minus2). Indianapolis: Luck 3-15, Bradshaw RUSHING —Minnesota: Sendejo1-48, McK- 6-28, Hester1-9,Rodgers2-4, Ryan1-4. Carolina: 7-4, Richardson 7-0. innon 8-38,Felton1-3, Patterson1-3, Bridgewa ter D.Williams10-41,Newton5-30, Stewart7-24, WhitPASSING —New England: Brady19-30-2-257. 4-2, Asiata 1-2. Chicago: Forte 26-117, Cutler taker 3-11. Indianapolis: Luck23-39-1-303. 5-21. PASSING —Atlanta: Ry an31-45-0-268. CaroliRECEIVIN G— New England: Edelman 5-50, PASSING —Minnesota: Bridgewater 18-28-1- na:Newton23-37-2-292. Gronkowski4-71, Vereen4-59, LaFell3-62, Amen- 158.Chicago:Cutler 31-43-2-330. RECEIVING —Atlanta: White 8-75,Jones6-59, dola 2-13, Wright1-2. Indianapolis: Fleener7-144, RECEIVING —Minnesota: Charle.Johnson Douglas 4-46,Hester 3-34, Rodgers3-8, Toilolo 2-23, Wayne5-91, Bradshaw4-7, Hilton 3-24,Nicks2-15, 6-87, McKinnon 4-20, Asiata3-12, Patterson2-24, DiMarco 2-14, SJackson2-6, Smith1-3. Carolina: Richardson 1-21,Castonzo1-1. Ellison 1-7, Ford 1-4, Jennings 1-4.Chicago: Benjamin9-109, Dlsen5-61, Stewart 3-15, Cotchery MISSEDFIELD GOALS— None. 2-20, Brown1-47, D.Wiffiams1-(miJeffery11-135,Marshall 7-90,Forte6-58, Bennett 2-43, Dickson 4-29, Wilson2-11, Rosario 1-7. nus 3). MISSEDFIELDGOALS—Minnesota: Walsh MISSEDFIELD GOALS— Carolina:Gano46 38 (WR). Chicago:Gould47(WR). (WL),63(BK).
PITTSBURGHSTEELERS at TENNESSEE TITANS —STEELERS: DNP: NTSteveMcLendon
(shoulder), S TroyPolamalu (knee), LBRyan Shazier (ankle). LIMITED : CBCortez Allen (thumb),CBIke Taylor (forearm), SShamarko Thomas (hamstring). FULL: DE Brett Keisel(not injuryrelated), LBArthur Moats (not injury related), SRossYentrone (hamstring). TITANS; DNP: TEDelanie Walker (concussion). LIMITED: RBDexter McCluster (knee),RBLeon Washington(ham string). FULL:NTSammieHil (hamstring), CB Blidi Wreh-Wilson (back).
Leaders Defense • J.J. Watt, Texans, hada strip sack,madefive tackles — threefor aloss—recoveredafumbleand caught a2-yardtouchdownpasswhile leading Houston to a23-7winoverCleveland. • Chris Borland, 49ers, intercepteda fourth-down pass by Eli Manningatthe49ers2with 4:43 toplayto cap agoal-linestandinSanFrancisco's16-10 win at NewYork.Therookie linebackerfinishedwithtwoINTs and ateam-high12 tackles. • Julius Peppers, Packers,returnedhis second interceptioof n theseasonfor a score in Green Bay's 53-20winoverPhiladelphiaand becamethefirst player in NFLhistory with 100sacksandfour INTreturns for TDs. • Johnthan Banks,Buccaneers, returnedaninterception19yardsfor a touchdownand also caused a fumble inTampaBay's27-7 winatWashington. • RyanMundy,Bears,interceptedTeddyBridgewater's 29-yard passintheendzoneintheclosingminute and Chicago heldonto beat Minnesota21-13.
Milestones TampaBay' sMikeEvanscaughtsevenpassesfor 209yardsandtwoscoresinTampaBay' s27-7winat Washington,becom ing thefirst rookiein NFLhistory with seven ormorecatches,100-plus yardsreceiving and a TD catch inthreeconsecutive games. He'sthe youngestplayer in leaguehistory with 200or more yardsreceivinginagame.... AgainsttheGiants, Chris BorlandandMichael Wilhoitebecamethe first two 49ers linebackers to makeinterceptions in thesame gamesinceNov.12,1995, whenRickeyJacksonand LeeWoodall did it againstDallas. Borlandis alsothe first 49ersrookielinebackerwith twoINTs ina game and joinedKenNorton (1995) astheSanFrancisco linebackers with twoin agameinthepast 40years.... GreenBay'sAaronRodgers(322) brokeTomBrady's NFLrecordof 288straight passesat homewithout an interception.... SanDiego'sNickNovak extendedhis franchise-recordstreakto 32consecutive field goals by making a23-yarderlateinthesecondquarter ofthe Chargers'13-6winover Oakland, but thenpusheda 48-yardattemptwideleft asthefirst halfended.
Streaks & stats Denver'sPeytonManning was34 for 54 for 389 yards withtwointerceptions, butwasheldto a 42yard touchdownpasstoEmmanuelSandersina22-7 loss atSt.Louis,endingastreak of 15consecutive gameswith at least twotouchdown passes. Manning has passedfor 300yardsagainst every opponent. His best in threepreviousgames against St. Louis, aff withIndianapolis, was235yardspassingin 2009. ... Denver' sDemaryiusThomashadsevenreceptions for 103 yards,hisseventhconsecutive 100-yardgame to match Charley Hennigan(1961)andMichael Irvin (1995) for thesecond-longestsingle-seasonstreak in NFLhistory. Calvin Johnsonholds the recordwith eight straight.... TheBroncoshadbeenthe loneNFL team togounbeaten onthe roadagainst teamswith losing recordssince 2012according to STATS, going 9-0.... Chicago allowed243total yardsin a21-13win over Minnesota,thefewest by theBears sincethey held Houston to 215on Nov.11, 2012.... Afterthrowing six interceptions intheGiants' first ninegames, Eli Manningnearly equaledthat number while tyinga single-game career highwithfiveina16-10 lossto the San Francisco49ers.... GreenBay,which scored30 points inthefirst half ofits 53-20winover Philadelphia, isthefirst teamin NFLhistoryto scoreatleast 28 points inthefirst halfoffourconsecutive homegames. . . New Englandhaswonsix straight andits 8-2record tops theAFC.... ColtsOBAndrewLuck extendedhis franchiserecordof consecutive 300-yard game s to eightandmovedwithin oneof DrewBrees' NFL record, but Indianapolisfell 42-20to NewEngland.
B6
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Anot er'No es come ac t is time to No.1 By Ralph D. Russo
quarterback DeShaun Wat-
The Associated Press
son, who has missed much of the season with injuries.
Florida State just keeps on wlnnlng.
The Seminoles beat Louis-
Good or lucky — probably ville when it had two of its both — the Seminoles have best players (quarterback defied logic to stay undefeat- Will Gardner and receiver ed and extend their winning Devante Parker) healthy and streak to 26 games. playing together for one of In a season filled with re- the few times this season. markable rallies, Florida Knock Miami (6-4) and State followed up its latest Notre Dame (7-3), but are one on the field Saturday they that much worse than night at Miami with another Texas A&M (7-4) or LSU (7comeback of sorts on Sunday. 4), teams that Alabama and The Seminoles are No. 1 Mississippi State have built again in the AP Top 25, re- their resumes on that are curturning to where they start- rently unranked? ed the season after spending And then, of course, there six weeks behind Mississippi are the off-the-field issues,
WOMEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL
ar ina c an e,s eevoves By Janie McCauley The Associated Press
last spring, she would have to move away from the tried-and-
true triangle offense the Cardinal ran for years.
)
t
The shift did not come nat-
urally for the Hall of Fame collegewomen's basketballcoach, who saw no choice with the de-
parture of Pac-12 Player of the Year Chiney Ogwumike, off to the WNBA ranks to join big
sister and fellow former No. 1 pick, Nneka.
1
So, VanDerveer called in ex-NBA coach Mike D'Antoni, Milwaukee Bucks assistant Joe
including the sexual assault
The Seminoles were preseason No. 1 before being replaced by the Bulldogs in October. The Bulldogs (9-1)
allegations against Winston and the case of the stolen
comfort zone," V anDerveer said. "I'm a little cranky some-
crab legs. Florida State has
times. It's a little stressful. You lose your all-time leading scorer and rebounder, your offense gets put in a handbag and goes to hell, and you've got a lot of freshmen you're counting on. I'm glad I have a long-term con-
stopped after losing 25-20 at Tallahassee, Florida — love Alabama on Saturday. to hate. "At the end of the day, it's The Crimson Tide moved up four spots to No. 2 in the about winning and losing, poll. The Bulldogs dropped and we're winning, so why to fourth. The Seminoles re- constantly criticize us when ceived 43 first-place votes we are making it possible to from the media panel. Ala- win games and continue to bama got 16 and No. 3 Ore- chaseour goals?" Seminoles gon has one. receiver Rashad Greene said Florida State is the only un- after beating Miami. "At the beaten team remaining from end of the day, that's their job the Big Five conferences af- to criticize us, and it's my job ter Jameis Winston and the to go out there and play foot'Noles erased a halftime defi- ball and get my teammates cit for the fifth time this sea- going, and we will continue to son to beat Miami 30-24. win and getbetter." Along the way to 10-0, the Maybe it's just a matter Seminoles have caught a few of time before Florida State breaks. Clemson's bad snap falls, but the Seminoles seem in the red zone. An offensive to be growing stronger with pass interference that wiped every near-loss experience. out a potential game-winning Coach Jimbo Fisher said the touchdown against N o t re slow starts are just part of his Dame. In the Miami game, team's "personality." "They never panic," he Winston had a pass batted at the line of scrimmage turn said. "They look each other into a touchdown. in the eye and they handle the The Seminoles are a long next play." way for being last season's And now they're No. 1 juggernaut, which had most again, at least in the AP and games in the bag by halftime. coaches'polls. They get criticized for playThe College Football Playing a schedule with few mar- off rankings come out Tuesquee games, but some of that day. Florida State had already is overblown. been jumped by Oregon (9-1) Florida State beat Clemson in that top 25 so don't be surwithout Winston and when prised if Alabama goes past the Tigers had star freshman the 'Noles, too.
I
came to a realization: After Stanford's latest Final Four run
State.
become the team college football fans — outside of
r
of her roster suddenly devoid of a star Ogwumike sister and
Prunty, and Jenny Boucek of the Seattle Storm and sought their guidance in developing a more guard-oriented game. "It has me totally out of my
had a run of six weeks on top
I)-
STANFORD, Calif. — Tara VanDerveer took a quick scan
Marcio Jose Sanchez/The Associated Press
Stanford, which for years has run the triangle offense under
coach Tara Vanoerveer, left, has undergone a change to a more guard-oriented offense out of necessity. San Diego, "was very helpful too."
tract. But it's fun."
The No. 6 Cardinal will provide a glimpse of their newlook, up-tempo offense when
they host two-time defending NCAA champion and top-
to just get my triangle fix." Even going into September "it was
s t ressful," but
VanDerveer notes, "I kind of Maples Pavilion. The Huskies had to let that go and get off the are riding a 47-game winning dock and get on the boat and go ranked Connecticut tonight at
streak after opening the season
withit."
with a 102-43 victory Friday at
Beginning her 29th year as
UC Davis. "It seems like there are a lot
Cardinal coach, VanDerveer
is leading a team picked by the of teams right now that are Pac-12 coaches to win a 15th looking for reasons not to play consecutive conference reguus," UConn coach Geno Au- lar-season title — though she is riemma said. "They're always not counting on anything comlooking for a reason to stay in ing easily, especially with all of the game, to stay in the series. the changes. I don't think Tara thinks a regA fter last seaso n , ular-season game, win or lose VanDerveer and her staff deMonday night, is going to have cided to go in a different direcanything to do with winning a tion with the offense. They held national championship. I don't a retreat with the men's coachthink the team that wins Mon- ing staff andbeganbrainstormday night has a head start on ing ideas, then brought in some winning a national champion- experts who run guard-friendship, and I don't think the team ly offenses. "Working on our new ofthat loses has no chance. These games are important for wom- fensive system has been a sixen's basketball." month project with all of us as VanDerveer has caught her- coaches watching lots of film self sneaking into Stanford
and talking with other coach-
men's basketball practices "be- es," VanDerveer said. cause they're running triangle, Her sister, Heidi, coach at
VanDerveer used to
h o st
area coaches and "open her
D'Antoni spent parts of two playbook." "She's always looking to pick days on campus over the summer, as did Prunty. Boucek vis- up a tidbit, and it doesn't matter ited Stanford this fall. if it comes from a junior high The visit by D'Antoni did coach or from Geno," Simpson wonders for VanDerveer feel- said. "There's no ego involved ing more comfortable making with Tara." such a daunting transition. Auriemma has no idea what "We spent all day. He would to expect from the Cardinal diagramlik ecrazy.Hewatched tonight. us work out with our team," she He is counting on a competisaid. "We were at breakfast, tive game. "Tara's smart enough to lunch, dinner talking basketball. It was just a jolt, another realize, 'Well, just because it pro coach. We got professional worked for this other team for consulting." these years, doesn't mean I can "It was really fun, it was awe- make it work for this group,'" some," she said. Auriemma said. "You'd be pretShe made sure the visitors ty hard-pressed to find somewere well fed at Jimmy V's body better than Mike at offenSports Cafe in the athletic de- sive basketball. When he was partment headquarters. in New York we certainly took D'Antoni h a d a blast. advantage of that ourselves." VanDerveer impressed him
with how secure she is as a coach to keep learning and finding new ways to get the most from her players. "It was very much fun hang-
Struggling to hear?
ing around someone that's so
accomplished like she is," D'Antoni said. "Plus, it's fun talking basketball, it's fun exchanging ideas and visiting Stanford's
Call for your
campus. It was a win-win situation.... It says how dedicated
she is to her student-athletes and that she's always trying to push herself to be better, which in turn will make the athletes
HEARINGTEST.
she's coachingbetter." Former UC
~ ssW f
D a vi s c oach
Sandy Simpson recalls how
I/,
BeltoneWeekly Arts Sr Entertainment In
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Serving Central Oregon for over 22 years!
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541-389-9690 141 SE 3rd• Bend •
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TheBulletin
5413826447i2|sONEWyttc
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Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
Troy Wayrynen /The Associated Press
Oregon State football fans rush the Reser Stadium field after upsetting then-No. 7 Arizona State 35-27 on Saturday night in Corvallis.
Beavers
Nextup
Oregon State Continued from B1 at WashIngton Oregon State is known for pulling out the big upset wins When: 7:30 p.m. in Corvallis, and the Beavers Saturday did it again on Saturday night TV:Pac-12Radio: KICE-AM940, KRCO-AM 690, FM-96.9
It was another big home win
35-yard interception return for
in the fourth quarter in the last
•
No. 13 Wisconsin — which went to the Rose Bowl that
season — at Reser Stadium. In 2008, the Beavers were
26-point underdogs when they knocked off then-No. 1 USC 27-21 on a Thursday night in The victory gives Oregon State (5-5 overall, 2-5 Pac-12) the Beavers within one game Corvallis. Two years earlier, something to be proud of in an of becoming bowl eligible. Or- Oregon State topped the thenotherwise disappointing sea- egon State visits Washington No. 3 Trojans at Reser 33-31. son. The evidence was clear in Seattle this weekend before Many Oregonians rememon the face of Mannion, who hosting No. 3 Oregon in the ber the Giant Killers of 1967, greeted linebacker Michael Civil War rivalry game on Nov. who bested the top-ranked Doctor with a huge smile and a 29 to finish the regular season. Trojans and running back O.J. "I am really happy for our Simpson 3-0 in Corvallis. Rislap of the hand when the two seniors ran into each other fol- players," said coach Mike ley's father, the late Bud Riley, lowing the game. Riley, who was increasing- was the defensive coordinator Mannion's 67-yard touch- ly feeling heat from fans un- for that Beaver team. "I told most of those seniors, down pass in the fourth quar- happy with a four-game slide. ter pulled Oregon State in front "Theyhave competed welland it will be a great memory for of the Sun Devils, and Doctor's they'vebeen ahead threetimes them," Riley said. "This was when then beat the then-No. 7 Sun Devils 35-27.
•
in Beavers' lore. In 2012, the Beavers upset
our opportunity to beat anoth-
a score sealed it. month and haven't won. It was er ranked team coming into The victory snapped a four- a greatreward forthem to fin- our stadium. Those are always game losing streak and pulled ish and win." special."
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W EAT H E R
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014 I
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TODAY
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WED NESDAY "'" 42'
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Sun and areas of high clouds and chilly
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TUESDAY "'" 41'
Mainly cloudy
EAST: Very cold with TEMPERATURE times of clouds and Yesterday Normal Record sun today.Partly 28 47 70' i n 1929 cloudy and bitterly -4' 28' -4'in 2014 cold tonight.
Seasid
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51/36
city
Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W 52/25/0.03 45/25/s 36/26/Tr 34/11/sn 40/22/Tr 42/30/sn 53/32/0.01 44/24/s 31/23/0.00 38/32/sh 50/37/Tr 57/23/r
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UV INDEX TODAY
ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
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expected. ORE 58 atWigamette Pass:Noweatherrelated travel problemstoday with a partly sunny sky. ORE138atDiamond Lake:Cloudsandsun today with no travel problemsexpected.
48 contiguousstates) National high: 86
Smmurck
43/25
Billings
14/4
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SKI REPORT
Pace Continued from B1 "It (pace of play) is a problem that isn't unique to any one entity, and it's going to require all of us to participate and work toward a resolution
for the game," said Jeff Hall, the USGA's managing director of rules and competition, in a video released by the golf organization. Also at the symposium, the
is not so simple.
For one, course conditioning and pace of play often are at odds in the operation of a
golf course, especially on the greens, says Louis Bennett, the head golf professional at
golf course, difficulty of the golf course, weather and (caliber of players in the) field,"
Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. ma," says
B ennett. "Most
the OGA's tournaments are
golfers care alotaboutcourse conditions, and fast greens
conducted. "I am interested in what (the
are almost always attribut-
USGA) has to say and I am sure we may use things they advise during (the symposium)," Whittaker says. "But I can't imagine we will dramatically change our policy because of what is presented." At a challenging course with public access like Tetherow, ways to improve pace of play are always on Bennett's
"It's an intriguing dilem-
ed to 'great' condition — not USGA released specific data necessarily by golf course suabout what slows the game perintendents, but by golfers down. The insights were not themselves." shocking, but they were interE rik Nielsen, the p r oesting nonetheless. fessional at Bend Golf and Not all the findings from Country Club, sees the same data collected all year have dilemma. been released yet, but some of At his private club, which the keys include: typically hosts fewer rounds • Slower greens most often daily than a busy public famean faster play. cility, health of the greens A round of golf can take as and conditioning of the golf
Clouds andsun; rain and sleet at night
50/27/s 42/21/c 27/11/pc 45/21/pc 77/37/I
52/32/s 35/20/pc 21/14/pc 44/20/s 52/24/pc
59/32/r 51/22/s
55/26/r 30/19/pc 46/21/r 14/-4/pc 22/12/pc 55/37/r 57/33/r 37/21/sn
39/31/sn 35/32/sn 77/36/r 64/25/r
48/23/r 30/15/pc 22/12/sf 33/9/sn 34/13/sn 33/13/pc 24/11/c 71/29/r
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lus Vegus Lexington Lincoln Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Pucriu Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Providence Raleigh
Rapid City Renu Richmond Rochester, NY
Sacramento SI. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio Ssn Diego Suu Francisco Ssn Jose Santa rc Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa W ashingt on,OC
84n2/s 84n4/s
Wichita
Yakima Yuma
49/41/pc 47/41/pc 70/57/pc 70/60/pc 67/57/r 65/56/pc 77/55/I 74/54/s 91/75/s sgn2/s 54/28/s 55/28/s 70/61/sh 72/62/s 50/44/sh 47/43/r 68/46/c 68/48/I 50/42/sh 51/41/r 84/69/s 87/68/c 84/63/s 83/60/s 75/59/s 75/60/s 33/25/s 36/12/s 86/70/I
Yesterday Today Tuesday
City
82/70/I
51/45/pc 51/46/pc 52/42/c 51/43/pc 48/39/sh 46/36/sh 77/55/I 66/52/r 76/64/s 74/64/s 60/55/pc 65/57/pc 60/48/pc 62/47/s 65/49/I 67/49/c 73/62/pc 73/61/pc 62/51/s 63/56/r 50/44/r 52/44/pc 58/38/pc 56/42/pc 89/77/pc 88n7/I
S
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 34/18/0.00 39/29/pc 42/34/c 29/15/0.03 23/9/c 33/23/s 32/25/0.02 30/16/sf 24/14/sf 64/43/0.00 59/39/u 63/43/s 42/31/0.15 33/13/sn 24/16/pc 23/6/0.01 21/3/s 32/23/s 40/37/0.10 40/19/s 44/28/s 74/55/0.00 77/54/u 79/56/pc 41/34/0.06 34/12/sn 27/17/pc 27/20/0.07 19/10/sf 20/13/c 44/38/0.37 36/20/pc 37/27/s 83/74/0.00 85n1/pc 77/60/I 30/20/0.05 21/12/sf 20/14/sf 22/7/0.04 17/3/sf 15/10/c 45/37/0.86 37/19/c 32/20/pc 77/54/0.00 52/32/r 50/34/s 45/35/Tr 55/32/r 34/26/pc 44/29/0.01 58/29/r 35/23/pc 53/31/0.05 73/38/r 41/25/pc 31/26/0.03 36/19/u 50/29/s 23/6/Tr 19/5/c 28/22/pc 83/56/0.00 84/55/I 60/39/pc 71/60/0.00 73/48/s 76/54/pc 33/28/Tr 24/11/c 24/17/pc 45/32/0.03 53/31/r 34/25/pc 71/58/0.00 70/46/s 73/48/s 39/27/Tr 37/13/sn 22/12/sf 42/21/0.00 46/35/r 41/23/pc 42/24/Tr 58/36/r 40/23/pc 49/28/0.02 70/27/r 40/19/pc 26/-13/0.11 1 7/0/pc 40/15/pc 44/23/0.00 49/20/pc 55/33/pc 52/29/0.00 68/30/r 39/21/pc 40/31/Tr 39/21/sn 28/20/sf 62/46/0.00 67/41/pc 66/49/c 35/23/0.15 28/15/pc 31/22/pc 29/14/0.00 34/18/s 41/21/s 55/47/Tr 54/28/s 54/38/s 73/59/0.00 75/54/s 78/55/pc 63/56/0.00 69/52/pc 69/55/pc 64/45/0.00 68/48/pc 68/52/pc 49/19/0.03 39/14/s 43/18/s 71/47/Tr 77/34/r 51/25/pc 49/28/0.00 49/31/c 49/34/pc 21/-5/0.01 13/-2/c 20/15/pc 32/13/0.00 31/17/pc 33/19/pc 33/30/0.13 25/9/pc 34/23/s 81/57/0.00 80/49/I 59/38/pc 68/53/0.00 69/42/s 71/42/s 38/26/0.05 34/15/s 45/31/s 48/37/0.01 57/30/r 37/25/pc 25/15/0.21 30/10/u 41/24/s 36/8/0.00 37/15/pc 39/19/pc 68/61/0.00 68/47/s 73/49/pc
I
Mecca Mexico City
93/75/0.22 73/55/0.00 Montreal 37/30/0.00 Moscow 26/22/0.04 Nairobi 75/61/0.00 Nassau 84/72/0.02 New Delhi 81/52/0.00 Osaka 60/43/0.00 Oslo 39/37/0.06 Ottawa 34/28/0.17 Puris 50/48/0.24 Riu de Janeiro 77/65/0.28 Rome 68/61/0.32 Santiago 86/54/0.00 Suu Paulo 73/59/0.00 Suppcrc 39/33/0.04 Seoul 50/28/0.16 Shanghai 60/51/0.03 Singapore 83/76/0.28 Stockholm 43/39/0.00 Sydney 75/61/0.00 Taipei 77/63/0.24 Tel Aviv 72/56/0.70 Tokyo 59/47/0.00 Toronto 32/28/0.06 Vancouver 43/16/0.00 Vienna 50/46/0.00 Warsaw 41/38/0.00
91/72/s 72/49/I 36/25/un 25/15/pc 79/60/sh 85/72/pc 81/52/pc 61/42/pc 44/43/pc 35/19/sn 51/42/pc 76/63/s 66/53/I 85/56/s 73/55/u 40/32/pc 50/27/pc 61/50/pc 86n6/I 42/37/pc 78/62/s 71/64/r 73/58/pc 59/50/pc 35/15/sn 47/32/c 50/44/uh 41/36/sh
94n2 s
71/47/pc 31/1 8/sf 26/13/s 80/59/c 83/69/sh 80/52/pc 57/39/pc 44/40/pc 30/15/sf 50/41/pc 78/64/s 64/50/pc 78/53/s 76/58/s 41/30/sh 49/27/s 61/50/pc 87/76/I 41/35/pc 78/63/pc 68/65/r 74/62/s 60/46/s 28/1 5/sf 48/34/pc 50/41/sh 43/37/pc
HOUDAZ KBD~ PESTIVAL
cant alterations to the w ay
November 21, 22, R 23 FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY
mlIld.
He likes the idea of stretching tee-time intervals from
10 minutes to 11 minutes and Bend G&CC's greens are encourages golfers to use the 11.5 on the Stimpmeter rather most often kept at a relative- "desert rule," a local rule at than 11, a difference of just 4.5 ly quick Stimpmeter speed many Central Oregon courses percent. The reasoning is sim- of about 11, though the green that allows wayward golf balls ple: The faster the greens, the speeds fluctuate all y ear, that slide off the course and more putts it takes to finish a Nielsen says. Anything faster into the desert to be played as much as 18 minutes longer if
3 1'
~~WtJ~ Z
s ays Brent W h i ttaker, t h e OGA's director of tournament
operations. Whittaker, though, is not ready to make any signifi-
63/25/r 34/11/sn 39/28/sn 54/36/pc 44/24/s 32/11/sn 33/14/pc 20/7/c 34/16/sf 17/5/sf 50/29/s 20/10/pc 15/3/sf 44/13/s 28/17/sf 21/11/sf 61/24/r 50/25/r 48/33/r 30/13/pc
Hi/Lo/W 54/34/s 22/9/sf 33/22/cf 48/27/s 39/33/r 38/22/s 37/25/pc 52/29/s 33/21/pc 41/17/pc 37/20/c 28/8/pc 26/15/pc 40/26/pc 38/24/pc 27/20/su 34/25/sf 35/20/sf 51/26/pc 41/17/pc 35/19/pc 40/19/s 21/16/c 23/11/pc 25/10/sf 44/22/s 30/21/c 46/20/pc 43/22/s 21/9/sf 36/20/pc 55/48/pc 52/34/s 22/10/sf 45/20/c 25/18/pc 27/14/sf 16/7/sf 54/31/c 27/21/s 19/12/c 49/20/s 25/16/cn 19/11/sf 37/19/pc 31/21/pc 38/22/pc 38/15/s
r
Amsterdam Athens
50/45/1.98 64/52/0.00 at Plant City, FL • 22/12 * * Auckland 61/55/0.22 17 National low: -29' * * . *sr/1 «1w Baghdad 75/64/0.03 *uurit at Big Trails, WY Che n Bangkok 91/77/0.00 d d d /Sk x x 77 * * * d Precipitation: 2.82" 30/1 * eeijing 53/34/0.00 *Ccag~+ Beirut 70/62/0.24 at Jackson, MS an uucisco Su l t Lakeity ~ 8 3 / h t x x i Omah uu 2 12 ufu • Den 34/18 Berlin 51/46/0.10 d9/52 28/ L o usvul g'~ o, ~i ~i In inches asof 5 p.m.yesterday 33/1 LauV us Bogota 64/50/0.08 34/ Ski resort New snow Base 59/3 Kansas Cfty Budapest 46/43/0.24 23/9 dd Anthony LakesMountain: est. opening Dec.1 BuenosAires 84/59/0.00 44/24 Lou Au Iuu homa Gty Cubc Sun Lucus 86/66/0.00 Hoodoo SkiArea: est. opening Nov.22 40/19 7/54 • Cairo 73/63/0.00 Pb Mt.Ashland:est opening Nov.23 Anchorage Calgary 27/23/0.01 w 70/45 Mt. Bachelor: est. openingNov.26 34/3 5 no Cuncun 86n7/0.00 Mt.Hood Meadows:est.opening Nov.22 7 54 Dublin 52/41/0.02 Dallai * * * j r uh Mt. Hood Ski Bowl: est. opening Dec.13 uc Edinburgh 43/39/0.27 44/24 ~ "„~„ * 39/ 29 SO/29 Geneva 54/45/0.09 Timberline Lodge:est. opening Nov.28 P Harure 86/63/0.07 Wigamette Pass:est. opening Nov.26 V5 Hong Kong 80/67/0.00 Honolulu Chihuahua S affuai i ' 4 Aspen/Snowmass,CO:est.opening Nov.27 7 Istanbul 57/54/Tr wu gq IL x x x x x 84/72 55/29 Jerusalem 59/52/0.07 Vail, CO:est. opening Nov.21 Iuuruu 7 52/37 , NE'aN X N X N X ' Johannesburg 72/47/0.00 MammothMtn.Ski,CA 0 12-16 Lima 73/64/0.00 SquawValley,CA:est.opening Nov.26 Lisbon 63/50/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. Park City Mountain, UT:est. opening Nov. 22 London 52/46/0.13 T-storms Rain Showers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Sun Valley, ID:est, opening Nov.27 Cold Front 55/45/0.00 Manila 88/77/0.08 Source: OuTheSncw.ccm aois
4 3'
r
Yesterday Today Tuesday
Abilene Akron 61/40 /21 Albany PRECIPITATION Albuquerque Tdlamo • 2 6 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Partly andy • Anchorage 28/17 Mc innviu 2/25 Goveu 1.52"in 1930 sunny andchilly today. Joseph Atlanta Record • He ppner Grande • n t • u p i Condon 1/15 Atlantic City 47/30/0.01 • 29 3 10 Month to date (normal) 1.7 5 " (0.63") Mostly cloudy andcold Lincoln union Austin 50/45/0.02 35/ Year to date(normal) 8.16 " (8.40") tonight. Partly sunny 52/40 Sale Baltimore 45/27/0.09 " Graniteu Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 4 2" and chilly tomorrow. 42/2 • 7/13 Billings 32/6/0.00 a 'Baker C Newpo 34/4 Birmingham 54/44/0.57 SUN ANDMOON /25 51/35 • Mitch 8 24/2 Bismarck 22/1/0.01 CamP Sh man Red WEST:Varying Today Tue. orv llle Boise 22/4/0.00 36/15 • John uU Sunrise 7:03 a.m. 7: 0 4 a.m. amounts of clouds Yach 43/23 Boston 42/29/0.00 52/41 • Prineville oey 9/4 tario Bridgeport, CT 46/27/0.00 Sunset 4:37 p.m. 4: 3 6 p.m. and cold today.Partly • Pa hna 3 9 n 19 Buffalo 39/31/Tr Moonrise 1 :59 a.m. 2:58 a.m. cloudy andfreezing Floren e Eugene 'Be d arothers 38 Valeu 54/41 Burlington, VT 39/28/0.00 Moonset 2:1 2 p.m. 2:4 0 p.m. cold tonight. 13 Su Iver' • 32/1 4 20/11 Caribou, ME 31/1 7/Tr Nyssa Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston,Sc 57/40/0.24 • La Pine 21/7 Grove Oakridge New F i r s t Full Last Charlotte 53/28/0.00 • Burns Junturs OREGON EXTREMES 28/11 50/25 /30 Chattanooga 44/43/0.38 59 6 • Fort Rock Riley 28/2 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 39/13 Cheyenne 26/-2/0.00 31/4 44/12 Chicago 31/18/0.01 High: 64' don Ro s eburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 39/31/0.04 Nov 22 Nov 29 D ec 6 D e c 14 at Brookings Jordan V aey 59/39 Beaver Silver 38/10 Frenchglen 52/30 Cleveland 34/26/0.02 Low: -19' 30/13 Marsh Lake 40/7 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 32/3/0.08 47/20 at Redmond Po 0 41/15 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 32/29/0.06 T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley Columbia, SC 50/29/0.00 • 32/14 Mercury 6:00 a.m. 4: 0 9 p.m. Chiloquin 1 MedfO d '46/te Columbus,GA 58/37/0.00 Gold ach Rome Venus 7:35 a.m. 4 : 5 5 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 37/29/0.01 31/10 Mars 11:09 a.m. 7 : 5 4 p.m. • Klamath Concord, NH 38/16/0.00 Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 10:54 p.m. 1 : 0 0 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 61/53/0.04 Uro inge 54/2 46/18 Saturn 7:02 a.m. 4: 4 8 p.m. 60/ 45/8 41n Dallas 40/34/0.04 Dayton 36/29/0.06 Uranus 2:49 p.m. 3: 3 0 a.m. Denver 31/-1/Tr Yesterday Today TUesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday ues Moines 20/13/0.04 City Hi/Lu/Prsc. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lo/W C i tv Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lu/W City Hi/Lu/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lu/W Detroit 35/28/0.01 53/26/0.00 51/31/c 54/37/pc L u Grande 19/ - 9/0.00 32/10/pc 34/11/pc Portl and 4 4 /27/0.00 43/26/c 47/32/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asfuriu Duluth 17/8/0.02 21/-8/ 0.00 24/2/pc 26/3/pc Lu Pine 41/-3/0.00 41/1 3/pc 46/26/pc Prineville Baker City 30/ - 13/0.00 29/9/pc 46/17/pc El Paso 64/46/0.01 1 NI~ 2 ~ 1~ N 0 ercckings 64/46/0.00 60/42/pc62/48/pc Medfcrd 5 6 /29/0.00 51/26/pc 53/37/pc Redmond 2 2 /-1.009/0 25/7/pc 35/1 5/pc 13/-1/0.00 Fairbanks The highertheAccuWssurur.rxrmuVIndex number, eums 28/-2/ 0.00 28/2/pc 32/6/pc Newport 50 /34/0.00 51/35/c 56/42/pc Ruueburg 5 0/35/0.00 52/30/c 55/38/pc Fargo 23/7/0.01 the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protecgcn.0-2 Lcw, Eugene 42/21/0.00 42/23/c 46/31/pc North Bend 61/37/0.00 59/38/c 62/45/pc Salem 48/21/0.00 42/24/c 45/30/pc Flagstaff 36/28/Tr 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Klamuth Falls 40/1 3/0.00 46/1 8/pc 48/28/pc Ontario 19/-1/Tr 1 9/9/pc 23/1 0/pc Sisters 29/-1 7/0.00 33/9/c 42/20/pc Grand Rapids 33/27/0.12 Lukeview 41/7/0.00 45 /8/pc 4 8/22/pc P e ndleton 2 1/2 / 0.00 2 7 /14/pc 28/15/pc The Oalles 2 8 / 8/0.00 2 8/17/pc 32/21/pc Greenesy 28/18/0.08 Greensboro 51/28/0.00 Weuther(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-ruin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwI-ice,Tr-frsce,Yesterday data ascf 5 p.m. yesterday I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Partly sunny today; no Harrisburg 43/27/Tr travel problems. Hsrffcrd, CT 43/21/0.00 Helena 25/3/0.00 US 20 at SantiamPass:Dryroadstoday with 84/72/0.00 a partly sunnysky. ~ t os ~2 06 ~a os ~4 0s ~50s ~606 ~708 ~a os ~gos ~toos ~ttos Honolulu ~ tos ~os ~ o s Houston 57/48/0.94 US26atGov'tCamp: Dry roadsexpected + Huntsville 50/43/0.76 : ***++ + + + + + Calgu NATIONAL today with apartly sunny sky. Indianapolis 35/28/0.11 + ++ + + + + + +'* * 5 33/25 'mpe "7 i * Jackson, MS 59/46/2.73 EXTREMES US 26 atOchocoDivide:Partly sunny today WW + ~+ + uuu49/31 ++ 17 , "„ * Jacksonville 77/48/0.00 with no weather-related travel problems YESTERDAY (for the
Cannon
'~
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 29/17 RiVer Rufus • ermiston /18 lington 28/'l4 Portland Meac am Lomine 6 • W 003 / 16 33/14 Enteqrlse dl8ten •31/6 he Oaa • • 33/13
ria
'
~
Mostly cloudy; rain, then ice at night
Mostly cloudy
Partial sunshine
FRIDAY
26'
28'
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
THU RSDAY "'" 44'
course come first.
a course sets green speeds of
rOLtlld.
could hurt the turf.
•
a lateral hazard.
The LPGA Tour was able to reduce the average round by 14 minutes by simply widening the start times of the tour's threesomes from 10 minutes to 11 minutes and amending its time-par policy (the length of time in which a golfer should finish a round). The idea is that the slightly
longer intervals help prevent bottlenecking on the course. • Longer intervals between Still, he would expect resistee times help speed up play. tance from golfers if any golf For example, the L P GA course wanted to slow down Tour was able to reduce the the greens significantly. "We're well past the point average round by 14 minutes by simply widening the start of people caring about greens times of the tour's threesomes being slower and healthier, from 10 minutes to 11 minutes and for pace-of-play reasons," and amending its time-par Nielsen says. "People just
•
He says he recently read about a course in Europe that
allows players 3 hours, 50 minutes to complete a round — beyond that, the course be-
gins to charge by the minute. Bennett does not necessarily endorse that idea for Tetherow, but "I'm trying to be creative
POliCy (the length of time irt want them to be too fast and this offseason and tackle that which a golfer should finish a too smooth." very (pace) problem," he says. round). The Oregon Golf AssociaMe? I LOVE that 3:50 idea. The idea is that the slightly tion also has to weigh pace of That extra practice swing will longer intervals help prevent play in competition. not seem so important when bottlenecking on the course. The OGA will speed up actual cash is at stake. (At one particularly con- greens for elite championships In fact, I like almost every gested course studied by the such as the Oregon Amateur idea to speed us up. USGA, it took the last group and will slow down greens There is not place I would of the day 91 minutes longer for tournaments that include rather be than on a Central to play 18 holes than the day's higher handicappers. And the Oregon golf course. But I do first group.) OGA will adjust its time par not want to be there forever. Pace of play, of course, is a depending on the difficulty of — Reporter: 541-617-7868, local issue in Central Oregon a given course. zhall@bendbulletirLcom. "So many factors go into as much as it is a n ational concern. pace of play: the setup of the Where Buyels And Sellels Meet At golf courses, though, golf course (fast greens and Classifieds change to speed up the game tucked pins), the length of the
Gourmet Food Handmade Gifts 1000's of Gift1deas Visit Santa Daily l.oca1 Wine Q. Spirits
Cool Gadgets Q, Toys Arts Q, Crafts Entertainng 1deas Local Artisans Holiday Home Decor
((~~> HOuI-S
Fri3<y 10-6 S~turd~y '10-6 SU T)P<y 10-4 A mission A)U ts 5 IC(gs (12 arld Urlger) Free
WWW. hfg f.COIT)
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014 •
•
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
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Call for package rates
=e
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
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I ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood 208
Pets & Supplies
202
Want to Buy or Rent
CASH PAIDfor wood dressers 8 dinette sets. 541-420-5640
203 Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows
3 Sisters Lions Club HOLIDAY FAIR 103 Hood Ave., Sisters, G reat selection o f handmade items from local vendors, 11/28 -12/21, Mon-Thurs, 10-5. Fri-Sun, 10-6. Vendor info? call Helen 541-595-6967.
... A BIG Deal ...
• VENDORS WANTED» for Craft Fair Dec. 6, 9-5; Dec. 7, 10-3
Booths: Crafts, $30; Commercial, $50. Accepting Donations for Rummage Sale thru Dec. 5th (receipts avail.) TACK & EQUIPMENT 15% Consignment. Let us sell your tack! For more information: 541-548-6088 or ~ki oe i . iffeheei oe ~ o etete.edo
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: '10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only) Country Christmas & More!Come experience unique holiday shopping with a western flair! Fri., Nov. 21, 9-7 Sat. Nov. 22, 9-4 Smith I-iock Community Church, 8344 11th St., Terrebonne.Non-per/shable foods apprec/aled for church food bank. 541-419-8637 Find It in
The Bulletin Classifieds! 541 e385 e5809
208
• P ets & Supplies
S
W .
C h a n d l e r
A v e .
• B en
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d
O r e g o n
9 7 7 0 2
210
212
212
246
257
260
Furniture & Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
Antiques & Collectibles
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Musical Instruments
Misc. Items
CASHII For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
Anti ue table Top Beautiful Oval Table Solid walnut, handcrafted by an Amish artisan for Schanz Furniture Co. Excellent condition w/lovely patina. 27" H, top 30" L and 20" wide. Graceful curved e legs with 2-1/2
hand-turned center support. Orig. $649; sell $275. 541-385-4790
e 35t/2 diameter, has
Wash bowl 8 pitcher set, large, exc. cond. $175 541-4'I 9-6408
image of sailing ship e. -i ~ on the top. Base is oak capstan. Very unique piece could sell separately. $400 541-419-6408.
G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a
garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809.
240
Crafts & Hobbies
I
Quilting Machine-
H u sqvarna/ Viking, 10-ft bed, computerized,
I
ss5oo. I
i5 41-416-0538
J
IMl'T NjIIIS TIIS DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?
Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 or
~eweeke eo!
Ad must include price of
eo ie item oi«eoo
Jack LaLanne Power Juicer w/recipes $100 541-389-0719 after 5pm Lawn Crypt, double interment, Deschutes Memorial, near the Pond, $1500. 541-771-4800 2009 Beautiful Lowrey Juiceman juicer, Adventurer u Organ Original like new condition, $70. Absolutely perfect 541-382-3865 condition, not a Ultimate Ladder Rack scratch on it, about Ram owners: 8-ft beds, 4-feet wide, does 7'-ft wide x 11-ft long, everything! Includes rack on each side, 11 ft a nice bench, too. x 7" tall enclosed stor$450 obo. age area. Custom-made, 541-385-5685 black steel. 2 racks, $700; single rack, $380. 541-480-7823 Grand Piano Beautiful American Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & stumade (1 926) Kurtzmann parlor dio equip Mclntosh JBL, Marantz, Dygrand piano for sale. 5'5", manaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. hogany case, matching bench, reCall 541-261-1808 cently serviced and Work bench, 9-ft long, tuned. Family Formica top, 3 drawers, owned since origi$50. 541-389-5017 nal purchase. $3200 (appraised 262 value) or OBO. Commercial/Office 541-306-6770. Equipment & Fixtures
~ 241 Dahlia Dairy wood milk or less, or multiple bottle crate + 20 glass Bicycles & items whosetotal mattresses, $75. bottles. $195 obo Accessories does not exceed 206-794-7170 (Sunriver) 541-419-6408 $500. Dining set: table, 8 King Bed and mat- chairs, Call Classifieds at hutch/buffet, handtress set,Sleep 541-385-5809 carved, 1927, seats 10Comfort massager, www.bendbulletin.com 12. $2500. 541-548-2797 includes linens, and electric blanket, $800 obo Men's Enhanced Alumi- M arlin 917V 1 7 c a l 541-516-8578 num Alloy-constructed HMR, custom stock, Crossroads Sport 2012, hard case, scope, 7 S/N ENI14764,has magazines, cleaning Maytag high-end dryer never been used or rid- rod, 800 rounds of bisque color, exlnt cond Great-Grandma's den. Wheel & rear reammo. $800. $175. 541-382-3865 Trunk! flectors, remoyable front 541-728-1900 Wurlitzer basket, special order About 150 yrs old, FIND IT! ultra Console comfort seat, Planet Bike Savage Model 16 .308 this piece came from Model ¹2636 aycrvry I eco-rack, unisex bar, Prussia and is in Win., 3x9 Nikon ProSerial ¹1222229. Shimano non-slip gear SELL IT! very good condition! Staff, metal case, like Made in USA. system. Was $940;sellAlso comes with The Bulletin Classifieds new, 500+ rnds, $950. Genuine maple wood. some written history lng for $775 cash firm Ruger P345, extra matching 1-231460-5105 from that era. mags, 500+ r n ds, Includes bench.$900. SOFA - dark brown $475. 541-516-8695 $350 cash. (541) 598-4674 days, leather, Hit a c hi 541-383-9308 Santa Cruz Solo or (541) 923-0488 brand, l i k e n e w, mtn. racing bike, 249 evenings. $300; and matching med. full-suspenMahogany Glass China Art, Jewelry chair and ottoman sion, good cond, 68wH x 39wW x like n ew , $ 2 0 0. Closet, & Furs Yamaha piano / harpsi16 eD, 3 d r awers, must sell, $2000. 541-280-0892 chord keyboard, 71 key, 541-480-2652 glass front d o ors, CP-30, w/pedal, stand & good shape. $425. cord, $150. 541-385-4790 541-382-6773 IKEA trundle bed with 2
Norwich Terriers AKC, The Bulletin recom- rare! House raised, good mends extra caution family dogs. Females, when purc h as- $2500; males, $2000. ing products or ser- 541-487-4511 or email vices from out of the sharonm ©peak.org area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in- POODLE or POMAPOO puppies, toy. Adorable! f ormation may b e 541-475-3889 subjected to fraud. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the O r egon State Attorney General's Office C o nsumer Protection hotline at Pug pups-1/4Chi. 1-877-877-9392. Healthy noses & eyes. M $400; F $450. Champ The Bulletin stud.541-389-2517 text ok SeteteyCeetrel Oregoneieoe «SB Queensland Heelers & Mini, $150 Adopt a rescued cat or Standard & up. 541-280-1537 kitten! Altered, vacci- www.rightwayranch.wor South Korean nated, ID chip, tested, Motorola radio, table dpress.com Apothecary chest ewx7 wdx8ti2e more! CRAFT, 65480 top 1 3 «/~ typical of what was 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 1-5. Great ext. cond. but used decades ago to 541-389-8420 Take care of non-working $100, sell herbs and mediciwww.craftcats.org 541-419-6408 your investments nals. This piece is believed to have been with the help from produced in 1940sw or The Bulletin's later. 35wW x 9.5 Aussie pups mini/toy, deep x 42" high. "Call A Service all colors, 1st shots, Asking $2500 cash $340 cash. Professional" Directory 231-360-5105(Bend) 541-678-7599 Pump Organ, ¹11948 built fn 1870 Scotty AKC pups, ready Boston Terrier, 6 year old now! Mom/Dad on site, by New England female, ver y s w eet,1st shots. 541-771-0717 Organ Co. needs new home, $100. IT ljyORKS! 541-227-1502 Siberian Husky/Wolf Beautiful carved pups, bundles of love! cabinet. In 1878, it $400. 541-977-7019 took 2nd place in Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., Sydney, Australia. South Korean Was presented to a non-profit rescue, for feBlanket Chest minister after his serral cat spay/neuter. typical of storing vice in the Civil War. Trailer at Jake's Diner, blankets for frigid $350. 541-385-4790 Hwy 20 E; Petco (near nights. Dimensions Wal-Mart) in Redmond; w long x 14.5w are 31 or donate M-F at Smith wide x 22" high. The Bulletin reserves pups, 8 wks., Sign, 1515 NE 2nd Bend; Whoodle the right to publish all 1st shots, dewormed, 3 Asking $800 cash. or CRAFT in Tumalo. 1-231-360-5105 ads from The Bulletin Can pick up large amts, males left. Guaranteed. newspaper onto The $950. 541-410-1581 (Bend) 541-389-8420. Bulletin Internet webwww.craftcats.org Yorkie M, 8 wks, docked, site. 1st shots, dewormed, English Bulldog, AKC, $550 obo. 541-416-1615 The Bulletin The Bulletin recommends extra ' C hampion sired 4 Servieg Central 0«eitoe sincetitts i caution when purmos old male availchasing products or • able to pe t h ome. services from out of I $1800. 541-728-8249 k the area. Sending k www.tannersbulldogs.com ' cash, checks, o r ' i credit i n f ormation German Shepherds Yorkie. Super healthy. may be subjected to www.sherman-ranch.us Flxed. Ready!$600. 541-281-6829 i FRAUD. For more Local only 541-977-7773 information about an c Three Chinese Men produced in solid advertiser, you may i Kitten & cat adoptions at teak. Dimensions: 210 f call t h e Ore g on f big Petsmart event high x 6.5w wide. Furniture & Appliances ' State Atto r ney ' 15 wFigures Fn-Sat-Sun noon-4. were Call/text 815-7278 for i General's O f f i ce produced in info on kittens. Consumer Protec• Thailand in 1978. A1 Washers&Dryers tion h o t line a t i Full warranty. $200 for i 1-877-877-9392. Labrador, AKC 12 wk all 3 statues, cash. FREE delivery! Also b lack Female, 1 s t Wanted: used W/D's. > TheBulletin > 1-231-360-5105 shot & wormed, $500. 541-280-7355 Serving Ceorrat Oregon sincetette (/n Bend) 541-876-5079
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Golf Equipment
Misc. Items
CHECK YOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. wSpellcheckw 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
Above artwork, created in 1975 in Bangkok, Thailand, is fabricated from literally thousands upon thousands of wax particles, and can only be described as unimaginable art! Painting is 44" x 32". Asking $2,500 cash 231-360-5105 (Bend)
Mint condition, hit one time, Cobra Baffler Irons 3-5-HB with covers, 6-PW, senior graphite. $395.
951-454 2561
(ln Redmond) 246
Guns, Hunting & Fishing As new, B ushmaster Mod. XM15-E2S cal .223/5.56mm five 30 rd mags $795 CASH. 541-549-1230 Bend local pays CASHH
for all firearms & ammo. 541-526-0617
Bird & Big Game hunting access in Condon, OR. 541-384-5381
Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
Landscape lithograph 1906, artist Branson. $50. 541-419-6408
Stocking Stuffers!
Britannica "Great Books of the Western World," 54 volumes, $110. 541-526-5164
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today! 255
Computers T HE B U LLETIN
re-
quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.
IBIMATIC plastic comb binding system, includes supplies, excellent cond., $110. 541-526-5164 263
Tools C ommercial Delt a Unifence table saw, e xtended ben c h , router, new lift, complete grip m a ster. Many extras. $1500. 541-923-6427 Homelite chainsaw, 24" bar, less than 10 hrs use; and Honda pressure washer, excellent cond. $1 75 ea. 541-548-2718 265
Building Materials MADRAS Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale
Quality at
LOW PRICES 84 SW K St. 541-475-9722
Open to the public. Natural gas Ruud tankless water heater, brand new! 199 BTU, $1600.
In Sunriver area. 530-938-3003
BUYING 8« SE LLING Prineville Habitat All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, BuildingReStore Supply Resale rounds, wedding sets, 1427 NW Murphy Ct. class rings, sterling sil541-447-6934 ver, coin collect, vinOpen to the public. tage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming, 266 541-382-9419. Heating & Stoves FREE Rain gutter system in exchange for Life Smart quartz infraFREE tree removal. red heater for medium 541-480-7823 sized room, never used, $40. 541-382-3076. Hou/ fo avoid scam NOTICE TO and fraud attempts ADVERTISER PBe aware of internaSince September 29, tional fraud. Deal lo1991, advertising for cally whenever posused woodstoves has sible. been limited to modP Watch for buyers els which have been who offer more than certified by the O ryour asking price and egon Department of who ask to have Environmental Qualmoney wired or (DEQ) and the fedhanded back to them. ity eral E n v ironmental Fake cashier checks Protection A g e ncy and money orders (EPA) as having met are common. smoke emission stanv'Nevergive out perdards. A cer t ified sonal financial inforw oodstove may b e matlon. identified by its certifiv'Trustyour instincts cation label, which is and be wary of permanently attached someone using an to the stove. The Bulescrow service or letin will not knowagent to pick up your ingly accept advertismerchandise. ing for the sale of The Bulletin uncertified Serw'oit Ceorret Oregonsince «903 woodstoves.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
C2 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014•THE BULLETIN
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RENTALS 682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent 605 - RoommateWanted REALESTATE 616- Want ToRent 705 - Real Estate Services 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 713 - Real EstateWanted 630- Rooms for Rent 719 - Real EstateTrades 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 726- Timeshares for Sale 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 730- New Listings average of $3,000 per 8 vacation relief. If 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 732- Commercial Properties for Sale month until your skills i nterested ple a se 738 - Multiplexes for Sale improve, I will TRAIN provide contact de- 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 740-Condos & Townhomesfor Sale you; train you well. PAY tails, address history, 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend you; pay you well and driving 8 employment 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 744- Open Houses provide a d vancement history. Send to: 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 745- Homes for Sale limited only to your own oofmi©hotmail.com 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 746- Northwest BendHomes ability. 648- Housesfor RentGeneral 747- Southwest BendHomes • We offer $60k - $80k 748- Northeast BendHomes 1st year potential. Looking for your next 650- Housesfor RentNEBend • Cash Bonuses employee? 652- Housesfor RentNWBend 749 - Southeast BendHomes • Incredible Incentives Place a Bulletin help 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 750- RedmondHomes • 2 retirement programs wanted ad today and 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 753 - Sisters Homes Place aphoto in your private party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES If you are teachable and reach over 60,000 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes for only $15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines dnven, we will match this readers each week. career against anything 659-Houses for Rent Sunriver 756- Jefferson CountyHomes Your classified ad *UNDER '500in total merchandise OVER '500 in total merchandise you see in this paper. 660- Houses for Rent LaPine 757 - CrookCounty Homes will also appear on Call Jerry Rump 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 bendbulletin.com 661 - Houses for Rent Prinevige 762 - Homeswith Acreage 9 00 AM 7 00 PM which currently 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 662-Houses for Rent Sisters 763- Recreational Homesand Property 503-784-7879 receives over 1.5 *fllfust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 663Houses for Rent Madras 764- Farms andRanches million page views 771 - Lots 28 days .................................................$61.50 Security Alarm Moni664 - Houses for Rent Furnished Garage Sale Special every month at 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 773 - Acreages tor - Entry level posi4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 Icall for commercial line ad rates) no extra cost. tion with an exciting Bulletin Classifieds 675 - RV Parking 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes team processing sigGet Results! 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land nals received from Call 385-5809 A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: customer l o cations or place 638 Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. and answer inbound your ad on-line at • XSI AptlMultiplex SE Bend * calls. Part/full t i me bendbulletin.com BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) available, with swing ® Dmtl(IICIW Country setting, perfect REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well and overnight shifts for writer or artist. Small 486 open. Starting pay as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin furnished 1 bedroom apt. $ 10.25-$10.75 w i t h Independent Positions No pets/smoking; referbendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at benefits and periodic ences req'd. $650+ utiliany time. is located at: r eviews. Great f o r Sales Help Wanted: ties. (Some rent might be s tudents! Send r eE nergetic kios k credited in return for light 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. sume/qualifications to sales person needed house work or s mall 528 Bend, Oregon 97702 csposition Ovyanet.co immediately for the chores.) 541-389-0566 Homes for Sale Loans & Mortgages m so we can set up Bend-Redmond an interview. area. Secured loca640 WARNING PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction NOTICE tions, high commis- The Bulletin recom- AptJMultiplex SW Bend All real estate adveris needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right sions paid weekly! mends you use cauto accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these tised here in is subFor more information when you pro- 2 bdrm, 2 bath, dbl ga- Iect to the Federal newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party t ion, p l ease c a l l vide personal rage, cul-de-sac, all F air Housing A c t , Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. information to compa- appl. +w/d. No pets/no which makes it illegal I chasing products orI Howard at • services from out of • 541-279-0982. You nies offering loans or smoking, $1300 mo., to advertise any pref476 credit, especially 1st/last, 541-388-1290 l the area. Sending c an a l s o em a i l erence, limitation or Employment c ash, checks, o r those asking for addiscrimination based tcolestbyourneighvance loan fees or l credit i n f ormation borhoodpublications. Opportunities on race, color, reli648 • may be subjected to companies from out of ion, sex, handicap, com for more inforCan be found on these pages: Houses for state. If you have Cleaning service, Mon. I FRAUD. amilial status or namation. - Fri., off by 5 p . m . For more informaconcerns or quesRent General tional origin, or intenEMPLOYMENT FINANCEANDBUSINESS tions, we suggest you weekends & holidays, tion about an advertion to make any such 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts free. N o n -smoking.l tiser, you may call consult your attorney Say "goodbuy" PUBLISHER'S preferences, l i mita541-815-0015 the Oregon State or call CONSUMER NOTICE 421 - Schools and Training 514 -Insurance tions or discrimination. to that unused l Attorney General's HOTLINE, All real estate adver- We will not knowingly 454- Looking forEmployment 528 - Loans and Mortgages Need help fixing stuff? s Office C o n sumer s item by placing it in 1-877-877-9392. tising in this newspa- accept any advertis470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 543 - Stocks and Bonds Call A Service Professional l Protection hotline at l is subject to the ing for real estate 476 - Employment Opportunities 558 - Business Investments The Bulletin Classifieds BANK TURNED YOU per find the help you need. I 1-877-877-9392. air H ousing A c t which is in violation of DOWN? Private party F 486- Independent Positions 573 - Business Opportunities www.bendbulletin.com which makes it illegal this law. All persons will loan on real esLThe Bulletin g to a d vertise "any are hereby informed 541-385-5809 tate equity. Credit, no 267 286 limitation that all dwellings adFinance problem good equity preference, disc r imination vertised are available Fuel & Wood Sales Northeast Bend City of Prineville is is all you need. Call or based on race, color, on an equal opportuseeking an experiOregon Land MortClerical/Office religion, sex, handi- nity basis. The Bulleenced, highly motigage 541-388-4200. We are looking for a full-time employee that is WHEN BUYING cap, familial status, tin Classified ** FREE ** vated, professional resourceful and self-motivated to assist a marital status or naLOCAL lyfONEyrWe buy FIREWOOD... a pplicant fo r t h e Garage Sale Kit large staff and write daily clerical reports. This secured trustdeeds & tional origin, or an inposition of Finance Place an ad in The To avoid fraud, person should like working in a fast-paced note,some hard money tention to make any Redmond Homes Assistant II. Full-time Bulletin for your gaThe Bulletin environment and be able to meet tight deadloans. Call Pat Kellev such pre f erence, position and salary rage sale and rerecommends paylines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial 541-382-3099 ext.13. limitation or discrimiwill DOE and DOQ. ceive a Garage Sale ment for Firewood for your next experience preferred. nation." Familial sta- Looking Full benefit package 421 Kit FREE! emp/oyee? only upon delivery tus includes children included. To v iew and inspection. Place a Bulletin help Schools & Training Organization, flexibility and a high level of under the age of 18 KIT INCLUDES: job description, go to • A cord is 128 cu. ft. computer proficiency are essential. A solid living with parents or wanted ad today and • 4 Garage Sale Signs www.cityofprineville. 4' x 4' x 8' HTR Truck School knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a legal cus t odians, reach over 60,000 • $2.00 Off Coupon To com. Y o u may • Receipts should REDMOND CAltriPUS typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. pregnant women, and readers each week. use Toward Your apply online. The include name, Your classified ad Our Grads Get Jobs! Next Ad people securing cusCity of Prineville is will also appear on phone, price and 1-888-438-2235 Ability to work for long periods of time doing • 10 Tips For "Garage tody of children under an equal opportukind of wood bendbulletin.com WWW.11TR.EDU Sale Success!" detail-oriented work i s n e cessary. This 18. This newspaper nity employer. which currently repurchased. person must understand the importance of will not knowingly ac• Firewood ads ceives over 470 accuracy and thoroughness in all duties. cept any advertising 1.5 million page MUST include PICK UP YOUR for real estate which is HEATING/HVAC Domestic & species & cost per GARAGE SALE KIT at views every month Excellent customer service and interpersonal • R ooms for Rent in violation of the law. In-Home Positions at no extra cost. cord to better serve 1777 SW Chandler skills are required. Must enjoy working with O ur r e aders a r e HVAC our customers. Bulletin Classifieds Ave., Bend, OR 97702 the public. College degree or previous office Furn. room quiet home, hereby informed that Installers Get Results! experience preferred. Pre-employment drug all dwellings adverno drugs, alcohol or Therapeutic Foster The Bulletin Call 385-5809 or Experience preThe Bulletin screening is required prior to hiring. serving central oregon since rse smoking. $450/mo. 1st & tised in this newspa- place P arents ar e ur servins centraloregon since f9t8 ferred, but will train. your ad on-line per are available on last . 541-408-0846 gently needed for at Pay depending on To apply, please send a resume to: an equal opportunity youth in your comexperience. bendbuffeti n.com nolson©bendbulletin.com 632 A/I year Dependable basis. To complain of munity! Work from Fax resume to EOE Firewood: Seasoned; d iscrimination cal l Apt JMultiplex General home part-time and 541-382-8314 or HUD t o l l-free at Lodgepole, split, del, get reimbursed up apply in person at: 1-800-877-0246. The B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 CHECKYOUR AD Manufactured/ to $1800 per month Cascade Heating toll free t e lephone or 2 cords for $365. for each youth in Mobile Homes General 1507 NE 1st St. Call fo r m u lti-cord number for the hearyour care (max 2). Bend, Oregon The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturdiscounts! ing i m p aired is For more info call List Your Home day night shift and other shifts as needed. We 541-420-3484. 1-800-927-9275. 1-888-MSOREGON JandMHomes.com currently have openings all nights of the week. www.maplestaror.org Heating / HVAC We Have Buyers 269 Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts 325 675 Get Top Dollar Service Techs on the first day it runs start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Gardening Supplies Large HVAC co. Iooking end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoFinancing Available. to make sure it is corHay, Grain & Feed RV Parking 476 & Equipment for experienced Service sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. 541-548-5511 rect. "Spellcheck" and Techs. Full-time, yearEmployment human errors do oc- Full hookup RV s i te New DreamSpecial 1st Quality mixed grass Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a round work; some oyercur. If this happens to avail. through April hay, no rain, barn stored, Opportunities of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts 3 bdrm, 2 bath BarkTurfSoil.com time and on-call rotation. minimum your ad, please con- 30th, $325 + e l ec. $250/ton. are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of $50,900 finished Re uie e t s : ~ tact us ASAP so that Call 541-549-3831 Central Oregon KOA loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackon your site. • Minimum 3 yrs exper. PROMPT DELIVERY Patterson Ranch, Sisters CAUTION: corrections and any 541-546-3046 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup J and M Homes • Clean, valid driver's lic. 542-389-9663 Ads published in adjustments can be 541-548-5511 and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Orchard grass mix, 2-tie "Employment O p - • Pass pre-employment made to your ad. offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, bale, Madras OR, drug test portunities" include 541 -385-5809 Just too many short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid 541-420-9736 Craftsman lawn mower, CFC certified and inde- •Must vacation and sick time. Drug test is required The Bulletin Classified collectibles'? w/extra blade & baq, runs Premium orchard grass, employee have own hand pendent positions. prior to employment. good, $50. 541-382-3865 barn stored no rain, Ads for p o sitions tools and meters. Senior ApartmentWidowed senior lady dependent on Sell them in Independent Living 1st cutting $225, 2nd that require a fee or Wages wants to meet a good, experience. Fax resume Please submit a completed application attenALL-INCLUSIVE For newspaper $250, delivery avail. upfront investment to The Bulletin Classifieds honest man. I want a tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available or email with 3 meals daily delivery, call the Call 541-420-9158 or must be stated. With da541-382-8314 friend first, and see what l@cascadeheat. com at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanMonth-to-month lease, 541-948-7010. Circulation Dept. at develops. I love the outany independentjob dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be 541-385-5809 54'I -385-5800 check it out! opportunity, please doors, 4x4's & animals; Quality Orchard/Mixed obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Police Captain Call 855-435-1284 To place an ad, call call 458-206-9636 (Culver) i nvestigate tho r - The City of PrinevGrass hay, between Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). 541-385-5809 oughly. Use extra Bend & Redmond. No phone calls please. Only completed appliille is s e eking a or email caution when ap$230/ton, small bales. cations will be considered for this position. No classified@bendbulletimcom dynamic, resilient, Deliv. avail. 541-280-7781 plying for jobs onresumes will be accepted. Drug test is reexperienced i n d iline and never proquired prior to employment. EOE. The Bulle6n vidual with excellent servlnyceneal oregon slncessr vide personal inforLooking for your m anagement a n d mation to any source next employee? interpersonal skill to The Bulletin you may not have servins central oregon since rsB Place a Bulletin act as ou r P olice Good classified adstell Call54I 3855809tsprcmcteyourservice• Advertise for 28dap stortingattl4I fffarfrrrtrf~atr t rrrtarrtrffr e er rrrtarl researched and help wanted ad Captain. F u ll-time the essential facts in an deemed to be reputoday and position and salary interesting Manner.Write table. Use extreme reach over will DOE and DOQ. NEWSPAPER from the readers view not c aution when r e Full benefits packBuilding/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care 60,000 readers the seller's. Convert the s ponding to A N Y age included. To each week. facts into benefits. Show online employment view complete ad, NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon LandYour classified ad the reader howthe item will ad from out-of-state. job description and law requires anyone scape Contractors Law will also We suggest you call help them insomeway. apply, go to who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all appear on the State of Oregon This The Bulletin is looking for a resourceful and enwww.cityofprinevile.c construction work to businesses that adbendbugetin.com Consumer Hotline advertising tip thusiastic reporter with broad sports interests to om. App l ication be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Serving Central at 1-503-378-4320 which currently join a staff that covers the wide range of combrought to you by Oregon Since 2003 Construction ContracLandscape Construcdeadline is 11-21-14 For Equal Opportureceives over petitive and recreational activities for which our tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Residental/Commercial 5 pm. The City of The Bulletin nity Laws c ontact 1.5 million page region is famous. active license p lanting, deck s , sewing cenlul 0 esan slnce l9ts Prineville is an equal Oregon Bureau of views every Sprinkler means the contractor fences, arbors, opportunity emLabor & I n dustry, We are seeking a reporter who can cover ev- is bonded & insured. water-features, and inmonth at no ployer. BIOW-Out 270 Civil Rights Division, erything from traditional sports to the offbeat Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irextra cost. Sprinkler Repair 971-6730764. Lost 8 Found and extreme, with particular emphasis on comCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be Bulletin munity (participation) sports and preps. Neces- www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Maintenance Classifieds The Bulletin Get your Found: Blue case with sary skills include feature writing, event coverserving centrel oregon since rse contractor.com Landscape Contrac- • Fall Clean up Get Results! reading glasses on business age, and the ability to work well on deadline. A or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit 541-385-5809 Mowing Blakely Rd., Bend, Nov. Call 541-385-5809 college degree is required. Reporting experi- The Bulletin recom- number is to be in- •Weekly or place your ad & Edging 12. Call 541-388-3715 ence, polished writing skills and a track record mends checking with cluded in all adver& Monthly on-line at Add your web address a ROWI N G of accuracy and reliability are a must. Many of the CCB prior to con- tisements which indi- •Bi-Monthly bendbugetin.com to your ad and readthe duties of this position require evening and tracting with anyone. cate the business has Maintenance ers onThe Buiietin's weekend availability. Some other t rades a bond,insurance and with an ad in ~Landsca in REMEMBER:If you 341 also re q uire addi- workers compensaweb site, www.bendThe Bulletin's have lost an animal, tion for their employ- •Landscape bulletin.com, will be Also important is the ability to conceptualize the tional licenses and Horses & Equipment "Call A Service Construction don't forget to check ees. For your protecable to click through multimedia components that might complement certifications. The Humane Society tion call 503-378-5909 •Water Feature automatically to your stories, including video, audio and slide show Professional" Debris Removal or use our website: Installation/Maint. Bend website. elements. Experience using social media sites, Directory www.lcb.state.or.us to •Pavers 541-382-3537 including Facebook and Twitter, is preferred. check license status •Renovations Redmond JUNK BE GONE RESTAURANT Caregivers Needed before contracting with •Irrigations Installation 541-923-0882 The Bulletin is an independent, family-owned I Haul Away FREE the business. Persons at Luxury Madras newspaper in Bend, a vibrant city of 80,000 surFor Salvage. Also Senior Discounts Senior Home doing land scape Bonded 541-475-6889 rounded bysnow-capped mountains and home Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Silverado 2001 5th 8 Insured maintenance do not Club Inc.has Prineville to unlimited outdoor recreation. The Bulletin is a wheel 3-horse trailer Leisure Mel, 541-389-8107 541-815-4458 require an L CB 541-447-7178 29'x8', deluxe show- shift positions availdrug-free workplace and an equal-opportunity LCB¹8759 able. Work includes cense. or Craft Cats employer. Pre-employment drug screening is Handyman man/semi living caring for the elderly 541-389-8420. required prior to hiring. quarters, lots of exPainting/Wall Covering p remium s tyle I DO THAT! tras. Beautiful condi- in U$E TIIE CLAS$IFIED$1 Pastini Paataria homes. Starting pay is To apply, please email cover letter, resume tion. $21,900. OBO Home/Rental repairs Find exactly what $175 per 24-hr. shift; in the Old Mill Districtis ALL AMERICAN and writing samples to: Small jobs to remodels Door-to-door 541-420-3277 excellent w o r king seeking professional, sellingwith you are looking for in the PAINTING s ortsre orter©bendbuffetin.com Honest, guaranteed friendly, service-focused conditions. Interior and Exterior CLASSIFIEDS 375 work. CCB¹151573 fast resul t s! It' s the easi e st leaders to take on the Please ca/I Family-owned No phone inquiries please. Dennis 541-317-9768 Meat & Animal Processing roles of Assistant Gen541-550-8612 or way in theworldto sell. Residential & Commercial eral Managerand a REWARD! Lost leopard40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts email seniorleisure Just bought a new boat? looking Bengal cat All natural grass-fed beef Kitchen Manager. Com5-vear warranties lube ahoo.com c~ Sell your old one in the The BulletinClassified evening of 11/6. on the hoof, ready to etitive salary, excellent HOLIDAY SPECIAL! classifieds! Ask about our for more information/ Skyliner's area, $300 butcher. $3.30/lb. enefits. Apply online at Super Seller rates! Call 541-337-6149 quesrions. 541-385-5809 5erving Central Oregon since f903 reward. 541-508-8001 Call 541-389-6934 www. astini.com/careers 541-385-5809 CCB ¹193960
am looking for a Requirements: Current Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Iparticular Class A CDL with 1 yr type of experience; medical person. Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. card, doubles experiOne who will take per- ence preferred. Must interest in my local pass drug test, backWednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. sonal business. If you're willing ground check, have follow instruc- clean driving record. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. totionswork, and can live on an Night runs, part-time
Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
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• • 5:00 pm Fri •
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, NOV 17, 2014
DAILY BRIDGE CLUBMonday, November 17,2014
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will shprtz
Pleasant reunion
ACROSS 1 German auto
33 Japanese rice 60... with steelies wine and aggies whose logo 34 Swiss watch city 61 Plays the market depicts a rearing 35 and don'ts 62 Watches horse secretly 36 wi t ha mat 8 Spr o ckeb', with colored George Jetson's circles DOWN employer 38 Like one after 1Dell and HP 15It's played with work?: Abbr. products mallets and wickets ... 39 Cousins of 2 Mined rocks giraffes 16... with 108 3 Bird in "Arabian cards 41 Slippery Nights" 17Fastened 4 Leg-building 42 Prefix with cycle exercises 18Six years, in the 43 "Don't worry U.S. Senate 5 Biceps-building about it!" exercises 19Reply (email 44 Infomercial, e.g. option) 6 Achilles' weak 45Additionally spot 20Chewslike a 46 and sciences 7 When to expect beaver takeoff, for short 47 Chaz Bono's 21 Exems for H.S. mom 8 Ornamental light juniors fixture 24 Frilly, as lingerie 48 Enter, as data 9 Philippine island 49 Place to get a 25 Autos in W.W. II fighting perm 29 N o ifs, o r 10 From square one 51 Counterpart of his buts 11X-ray type 52Test taker going 30 Here, boy! 12W NW's opposit e "Psst!," say 31Onewhose 13 81/2" x 11" job is to park 55 Brave deeds paper size: Abbr. 25-Across 59... with dashes 14Candied 32 Silent "yes" onpaper Thanksgiving food ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 20 Playoff series finale ... or ATW HOL E SA L E SO D an apt title B R E AK I N G B A D E P A for this puzzle B A B YS I T T E R S M EW considering the number and EV E E S T E EM I N G length of its Y E R S WA R D L I S T theme entries SOC E CO S W A B 21 Box opener of AF T ERM A T H S H E B A myth G R E A S E T H E W H E E L S 22... with cues and 22 balls HOR 5 E M AT U R A T E S AGR A T E N S ER 23 Season to taste, in 8 certain way M A LTA T S K K I P BAR TE N D E R T A R A 24 Trickster of myth AR I A D I M E A D O Z E N 26With attentiveness I CU KE V I N D U R A N T with blackOHM S M A R T P H O N E S 27... and-white disks
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
On a July evening in Birmingham, Alabama, I enjoyed dinner and a fun bridge game with three old friends: Jim Foster, Mark Jones and Doug Levene. I was today's South. North's cue bid of two hearts showed length in spades and a minor. When West competed to four clubs, never having shown heart support, I w a s s ure North had a singleton club, so I took a chance and bid four spades. West led the ten of hearts, and I won, took the ace of diamonds and ruffed a diamond before leading a trump. Then I was able to set up dummy's fifth diamond for my 10th trick.
heart, he bids one spade and you try two clubs (a stalling "fourth-suit" bid). Partner bids 2NT. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner's bidding has not been aggressive, but slam is possible even if he has minimum highcard values. He might hold K 10 6 5, K, A Q 10 7 6, Q 4 3. Raise to 4NT (not Blackwood since no trump suit is agreed, but "quantitative"). North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 48Q J 87 2 Q52
0AJ652
A4 DUMMY ENTRY If I lead a trump at Trick Two, West can win and lead a club, and East can win, cash his ace of trumps and force d ummy to r uff a c l u b , k i l l ing a dummy entry so I can't score the long diamond. East-West could have won 10 tricks at notrump, and West could have beaten four spades with the unlikely opening lead of the king of trumps. That was about the only g o od result I had. My three friends are all accomplished experts. DAILY QUESTION
WEST 49 K
EAST 49 A 4
Q 103 0 Q1073
6QJ764 0 K94 c%A K7
A Q J108 5 2
SOUTH 4 91096 5 3 Q AK 98
08
A963 North Pass 29 Pass
E ast 1g 2NT P ass
Sou t h Pass 3 49 4 49
West 1 NT 44 All Pass
You hold: 4 A 4 8 Q J 7 6 4 Op en i ng lead — Choose it 0 K 9 4 A A K 7. Y o ur partner opens one diamond, you respond one ( C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.prg. BIZARRO
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11/17/14
TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN•MONDAY NOVEMBER 17 2014 880
870
Boats & Accessories
I
850
Snowmobiles
4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 860
Motorcycles & Accessories 1985 Harley Davidson 1200C with S portster frame and '05 Harley crate motor. Rat Rod look, Screaming Eagle tips, leather saddlebags, e xtras. Sacrifice a t $4000. Call Bill Logsdon, 458-206-8446 (in Bend).
2008 11'x2' Zodiak, like new, ActiV hull, safe lock canister, 15HP Yamaha w/ t r olling plate, 6 gal Transom tank, less 30 hrs, 2 chest seats, full Bimini top, Transom wheels, cover, RV's special. $5500. 541-923-6427 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
882
Moto r homes
Fifth Wheels
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Winnebago 22' 2002 - $28,500 Chevy 454, heavy duty chassis, new batteries & tires, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w /brake, 21k m i ., more! 541-280-3251
The Bulletin
Antique & Classic Autos
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Chevelle Maljbu 1966 Complete restoration, $32,900.
tact us ASAP so that
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(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
1/3interestin
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882- Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent
•
AUTOS& TRANSPORTATION 908- Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Columbia 400,
933
935
940
$150,000
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Financing available.
Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago Bayliner 185 2006 original owners, nonopen bow. 2nd owner 31J, smokers, garaged, only — low engine hrs. 18,800 miles, auto-level— fuel injected V6 ing jacks, (2) slides, up— Radio & Tower. graded queen bed, bunk Great family boat beds, micro, (3) TVs, Priced to sell. sleeps 10! Lots of stor$11,590. age, maintained, very 541-548-0345. clean!Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or fi875 nancing avail to qualified Watercraft buyers! 541-388-7179 Servin Central Ore on since Sggi
C5
932
(located O Bend)
CHEVELLE MALIBU 1969 350-4spd, 3" exhaust. $12,000. 541-788-0427
Jee Patriot 2014 Freightliner custom 5th wheel puller, sleeper cab, rebuilt engine with 20k miles, Honda Ri d g eline Chrysler Town & 6.5 generator, 120 cu. RTL 2006. 2nd owner Country LXI 1997, ft. storage boxes - one only 7k miles a lot of 112,000 mi.. Records beautiful inside 8 8' long. Gets 10.9 1/3 interest in wellvehicle for$16,977 since owning car for 5 out, one owner, nonmpg, many more equipped IFR Beech BoVin¹619102 years. Truck crew cab smoker, loaded with features. All in good nanza A36, new 10-550/ w ith 3.5 V 6 , a u t o options! 197,892 mi. shape. See to appreprop, located KBDN. 1965 Mustang trans, very clean with ROBBERSON Service rec o rds ciate (in Terrebonne e $65,000. 541-419-9510 Hard top, most options, 17 alclllceca ~ SM gga r ds published in eWa available. $4 , 950. 881 area).$24,000. www. N4972M.com 6-cylinder, auto trans, loy wheels with Toyo tercraft" include: Kay Call Mike, (541) 815Harley Davidson 503-949-4229 Travel Trailers power brakes, power 541-312-3986 Tires at 80%. Custom aks, rafts and motor 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 2001 FXSTD, twin steering, garaged, Dlr ¹0205. Price t onneau cover f o r Ized personal cam 88, fuel injected, well maintained, good thru 11/30/14 watercrafts. Fo bed, and tow hitch. Vance & Hines short 975 engine runs strong. "boats" please se Pnce to sell$14,997. shot exhaust, Stage I 74K mi., great condiAutomobiles Class 870. dagreene75©hotmail. with Vance& Hines c. tion.$12,500. JEEP WRANGLER com or 610-909-1701 fuel management 541-385-5809 Must see! Buick LeSabres, system, custom parts, 1/5th interest in 1973 Toyota Tundra 4x4, 2002 Everest 5th 541-598-7940 2002 132k $3999; extra seat. 2007 Jayco Jay Flight Keystone SR5 access cab, with Wheel, 2004 Cessna 150 LLC Servrng Cenfral Oregonsince rg03 29 FBS with slide out & 2005 179k $4999. $10,500OBO. canopy, $8500 o b o. 150hp conversion, low 541-419-5060 awning - Turn-key ready Model 323P - 3 slides, Call Today 541-280-1650 880 time on air frame and rear island-kitchen, e'e 54'I -516-8684 to use, less than 50 toarv fireplace, 2 TV's, engine, hangared in Motorhomes tal days used by current CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner Bend.Excellent perowner. Never smoked in, 2009 hard top formance & affordno indoor pets, excellent w/surround sound, A/C, 16,000 miles. autoable flying! $6,000. cond., very clean. Lots of custom bed, ceiling fan, ae matic, AC, tilt & P 541-410-6007 bonus features; many W/D ready, many extras. cruise, power winNew awning & tires. Mercedes 380SL 1982 have never been used. dows, power steerRoadster, black on black, Toyota Tundra Ltd. Ed. ing, Honda Accord SE 2006, Asking $18,000. C a l l Excellent condition. power locks, alsoft 8 hard top, excellent 4-cyl, great mpg, non$18,900. More pics CrewMax, 2011 Only Lisa, 541-4200794 f o r loy wheels and Harley Fat Boy 2002 condition, always ga- 29,700 miles & loaded! smoker, well maint'd, more info / more photos. available. 541-923-6408 running boards, 14k orig. miles.. Exraged. 155 K m i les,381hp, TRD off road pkg, 95K mi., clean. 1 owner. 2007 Winnebago garaged. cellent cond. Vance & e BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS $11,500. 541-549-6407 Reduced $8250 firm. Bilstein shocks,18 alloys, Outlook Class "C" Hines exhaust, 5 Dutchman Denali $22,500. 480-266-7395 (Bend) 31', solar panel, Search the area's most sunroof, rear s l i ding 541-419-5980 spoke HD rims, wind 32' 2011 travel comprehensive listing of catalytic heater, window, backup camera, 1974 Bellanca vest, 12e rise handle trailer. 2 slides Evclassified advertising... 12-spkr JBL sys, running excellent condition, 1730A bars, detachable lugerything goes, all real estate to automotive, brds, hitch/trailer sway more extras. gage rack w/back kitchen ware, linens merchandise to sporting kg, 10-way adj leather Need to get an ad Asking$55K. rest, hwy pegs & many 2160 TT, 440 SMO, etc. Hitch, sway goods. Bulletin Classifieds td seats, dual climate Ph. 541-447-9268 chrome accents. Must in ASAP? 180 mph, excellent bars, water & sewer appear every day in the control, sonar, 6-disc CD, see to appreciate! condition, always hoses. List price Bluetooth, more!$36,500. print or on line. $10,500. In CRRarea Mercedes Infiniti I30 2001 hangared, 1 owner 541-390-6616 $34,500 - asking Fax it to 541-322-7253 call 530-957-1865 Call 541-385-5809 great condition/ $26,800 Loaded. 450SL, 1975 www.bendbulletin.com for 35 years. $60K. 935 97K Miles well maintained, Must see to appreciThe Bulletin Classifieds Sport Utility Vehicles 127k miles. ate. Redmond, OR. $8999. In Madras, The Bulletin HOFatBo 1996 Senrng Cenlral Oregons>ncereaa 541-604-5993 541-504-8399 call 541-475-6302 $5,900 obo. 541-420-3277 Allegro 32' 2007, like Lexus GX470 new, only 12,600 miles. HANGAR FOR SALE. Mercedes-Benz 450 SE Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 30x40 end unit T Four Winds 2008 1973 Gasoline. Best transmission, dual exhanger in Prineville. offer. 541-576-2380. 18' travel trailer haust. Loaded! Auto-levDry walled, insulated, Used very little eling system, 5kw gen, and painted. $23,500. BMW X3 35i 2010 Completely power mirrors w/defrost, $8500. Keystone Raptor, 2007 Tom, 541.788.5546 Exlnt cond., 65K miles Rebuilt/Customized 2 slide-outs with aw37 toy hauler, 2 slides, 541-719-1217 w/100K mile transfer2003, well cared for, 2012/201 3 Award nings, rear c amera, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, able warranty. Very and a wonderful Winner traifer hitch, driyer door satellite system w/auto clean; loaded cold AWD SUV. Showroom Condition w/power window, cruise, seek, in/out sound sysNearly perfect! Must weather pkg, premium VIN ¹013528 Many Extras exhaust brake, central tem,sleeps 6,m any exOldsmobile CUSTOM see! vin¹ 142671 pkg & technology pkg. $13,977 Low Miles. vac, satellite sys. Asking (I.~ tras.$29,999. In Madras, CRUISER WAGON 1991 Keyless access, sun$11,977 $67,500. 503-781-8812 call 541-771-9607 or 1 owner, 8 seatbelts, $15,000 roof, nayigation, satelROBBERSON 541-548-4807 541-475-6265 Save money. Learn 118K mi, 350EFI V8, lite radio, extra snow ROBBERSON clllaesa ~ II IR W R to fly or build hours auto, $3000 tires. (Car top carrier Llaeecll ~ ~ 541-385-6168 or Heartland P rowler Laredo 30'2009 with your own airnot included.) $22,500. 541-312-3986 c raft. 1968 A e r o Norm06O msn.com 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 541-915-9170 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. pricing like new, 2 slides-livCommander, 4 seat, Dlr ¹0205. Special good thru 11/30/14 HD Softtail Deuce 2002, 150 HP, low time, i ng area & l a r ge pricing good thru broken back forces closet, 15' power awfull panel. $21,000 11/30/1 4 sale, only 200 mi. on obo. Contact Paul at ning, power hitch & Beaver Marquis, new motor from Har541-447-5184. stabilizers, full s ize 1993 ley, new trans case queen bed, l a r ge MAZDA 38 2011 and p arts, s p o ke 40-ft, Brunswick shower, porcelain sink overall length is 35' ee 916 floor plan. Many V W CONV. 1 9 78 wheels, new brakes, has 2 slides, Arctic & toilet. n early all o f bi k e extras, well mainTrucks & $8999 -1600cc, fuel package, A/C, table $25,000or make offer. Mercedes MBZ ML500, injected, classic 1978 brand new. Has proof tained, fire sup8 chairs, satellite, Heavy Equipment 541-999-2571 BMW X5 2006 2003, loaded, 102K, facVolkswaqen Convertof all work done. ReArctic pkg., power pression behind tory rims w/snow tires incl. AWD,6-cylinder ible. Cobalt blue with movable windshield, refrig, Stow Master awning, in excellent fully loaded, excelAll records, exlnt cond., a black convertible T-bags, black and all condition! More pix 5000 tow bar, $11,500. 541-322-6281 Certified preowned lent condition, top, cream colored chromed out with a at bendbulletin.com $22,995. beige/gold, moonwith warranty. interior & black dash. willy skeleton theme 541-383-3503 $22,500 ¹401047 This little beauty runs roof, 74K miles, alon all caps and cov541-419-3301 and looks great and ways garaged Onl $16,947 ers. Lots o f w o r k, Peterbilt 359 p o table turns heads wherever $16,500. heart and love went ROBBERSON y Call The Bulletin At water t ruck, 1 9 90, it goes. Mi: 131,902. KeystoneLaredo 31' 541-536-5067 into all aspects. All sI II c 0 ce ~ I M RDR 3200 gal. tank, 5hp RV 2006 w ith 1 2 ' Phone 541-504-8399 541-385-5809 e done at professional p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, slide-out. Sleeps 6, Mercedes MBZ Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-312-3986 shops, call for info. The Bulletin's queen walk-around At: www.bendbulletin.com camiocks, $ 2 5,000. ML500 2007 Must sell quickly due Dlr ¹0205 price 541-620-3724 933 "Call A Service bed w/storage undersilver, fully to m e d ical bi l l s, good thru 11/30/14 neath. Tub 8 shower. Pickups Professional" Directory Fleetwood D i scovery equipped, 74,100 $8250. Call Jack at 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 2 swivel rockers. TV. Garage Sales is all about meeting miles, mounted 541-279-9538. options - 3 slide outs, Air cond. Gas stove & snow tires on alloy your needs. Want to impress the refrigerator/freezer. Garage Sales satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, WiT rims. Original relatives? Remodel KAWASAKI etc., 32,000 m iles. Microwave. Awning. Call on one of the owner, all records sho w er. Garage Sales KLX125, 2003, your home with the Wintered in h eated Outside professionals today! $19,500. s torMONTANA 3585 2008, good condition. shop. $82,000 O.B.O. Slide-through 541-322-6281 help of a professional a ge. E a s y Lif t . Find them exc. cond., 3 slides, $1100. 541-447-8664 from The Bulletin's $29,000 new; Ask541-593-8748 king bed, Irg LR, Cadillac Escalade in "Call A Service 2005 Diesel 4x4 ing $13,600 Arctic insulation, all What are you Chev Crewcab du541-447-4805 The Bulletin Professional" Directory options - reduced by ally, Allison tranny, is Yamaha V-Star, 250cc looking for? $3500 to $31,500. Classifieds tow pkg., brake con2011 motorcycle, new 541-420-3250 You'll find it in troller, cloth split custom seat for rider, RV Nercedes300E 541-385-5809 front bench seat, vinyl coating on tank, CONSIGNMENTS The Bulletin Classifieds RV only 66k miles. 2 helmets included. WANTED 2011 Has everyFreightliner 1994 CONSIGNMENTS Very good condition, Gets 60mpg, and has SEMI-DRY VAN We Do The Work ... thing, seriously!! i~. Custom WANTED Original owner, 3,278 miles. You Keep The Cash! 53' long x102 e wide, Vin¹301832 541-385-5809 Motorhome We Do the Work, $34,000 Asking $4700, firm. On-site credit good tires, no dings, $49,977 You Keep the Cash! haul small SUV or best offer. Call Dan 541-550-0171 Will approval team, $8500. On-site credit or toys, and pull a Nfercury Mariner ROBBERSON 541-408-7826 1993 sharp, well web site presence. 541-719-1217 approval team, trailer! Powered by 865 co ~ sss aaaaa maint. Vin¹657877 We Take Trade-Ins! web site presence. 8.3 Cummins with 6 Bargain Corral ATVs We Take Trade-Ins! speed Allison auto 541-312-3986 925 Price $3,977 BIG COUNTRY RV trans, 2nd owner. Dlr ¹0205. pricing Bend: 541-330-2495 Utility Trailers Polaris Ranger 4x4, 500 Very nice! $53,000. e BIG COUNTRY RV good thru 11/30/14 ROBBERSON Redmond: 7s. EFI, winch, l ights, 541-350-4077 Bend: 541-330-2495 541-548-5254 Llaeecll ~ ~ metal roof, extras, low Aluma 54" x 10' utility Redmond: 2009 All wheel trailer, spare tire, rehrs, like new, $8500. 541-546-5254 drive, same vehicle 541-312-3986 541-516-8695 movable racks, Chevy S i lverado asthe Escape, Dlr ¹0205. Pnce $1750. 541-516-8695 Looking for your 1500 2 0 1 4, L T , in great shape! good thru 11/30/14 870 next employee? 4 WD, crew c a b , 931 Vin¹J13074 Place a Bulletin help Boats & Accessories short box, 5.3L, new Only $13,977 Automotive Parts, wanted ad today and Feb. 28, 2014. Not Chevrolet Trailblazer 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, HOLIDAY RAMBLER reach over 60,000 Service & Accessories driven since June ROBBERSON 2008 4x4 readers each week. like new, 135hp I/O, fow Mercedes Benz C280 2014. Gar a ged. Automatic, 6-cylinder, VACATIONER 2003 Llaeecll ~ ~ time, Bimini top, many 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, Your classified ad 14" steel winter wheels, 1999, like new, only Snowbird Special! Loaded, brown tan tilt wheel, power winextras, Karavan trailer workhorse, Allison 1000 will also appear on from Subaru, $99 all 4. 60K original miles, Open Road 36' w/3 cloth interior, 4900 541-312-3986 dows, power brakes, with swing neck, current 5 speed trans., 39K, bendbulletin.com 541-385-6168 $10,000 OBO. Dlr ¹0205. pricing slides! King bed, m i., $34,9 9 0 . air conditioning, keyregistrations. $7000. NEyI/ TIRES, 2 slides, which currently re541-368-3036 hide-a-bed, glass 541-480-5634 good thru 11/30/14 (4) Snow Tires 2013 541-350-2336 less entry, 69K miles. ceives over 1.5 milOnan 5.5w gen., ABS shower, 10 gal. wagythrpOgmail.com Schwab studless, Excellent condition; brakes, steel cage cock- lion page views evter heater, 10 cu.ft. 225/60R-16/98T, $375. tires have 90% tread. ery month at no pit, washer/dryer, fireSubaru Forester fridge, central vac, 541-382-5063 $11,995. extra cost. Bulletin lace, mw/conv. oven, satellite dish, 27" TV Call 541-598-5111 ree standing dinette, Classifieds Get Re4 studded Les Schwab /stereo system, front sults! Call 385-5809 tires on rims, was $121,060 new; now, power leveling jacks People Lookfor Information $35,900. 541-536-1008 or place your ad 245/75R-16 off '98 & scissor stabilizer About Products and MERCEDES-BENZ on-line at Toyota 4Ru n ner, 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 jacks, 16' awning. Services Every Daythrough $275. 541-815-0668. GL450 2 0 10 Im bendbulletin.com 2005 model is like Wakeboard Boat Chevy Stlverado The Bulletin Classifieds maculate, c ustom 1999 runs good! new! $25,995 I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, 4 studded P205/75R-14 2012 4x4 Crew Cab wheels and new 20" 541-419-0566 Vm ¹715926 tons of extras, low hrs. tires on GM wheels, apIsuzu Rodeo 1998, 4WD, 39K miles, tires. 2nd set MBZ Need to get an Bargain Corral Full wakeboard tower, prox 500 miles on them White Diamond paint, 1 owner, new all-terrain wheels with snowprice $3,977 light bars, Polk audio ad in ASAP? 885 $350. Bob, 541-548-4871 Tonneau cover, leather tires, great in snow, clean, flake tires. Full new speakers throughout, $2000 obo. 541-550-9980 Providence2005 You can place it Canopies & Campers 4 studded P205/75R-15 heated seats, running ROBBERSON'L car ext. warranty completely wired for Fully loaded, 35,000 boards, tow-ready, tires, 90% tread, $200. March 2017. 59,500 online at: Jeep Cherokee 1995 «o c ~ m esm sa amps/subwoofers, unmiles, 350 Cat, Very Skamper 1990 8-ft popnew tires (only 200 green with tan leather miles. Fully loaded derwater lights, fish clean, non-smoker, www.bendbulletin.com up cabover camper, im- Call Bob, 541-548-4871 miles on them), like 541-312-3986 incl. DVD and NAV. interior. Good shape, finder, 2 batteries cus3 slides, side-by-side studded tires on rims, maculate, many extras, (4) new inside and out! Dlr ¹0205. Price no damage history. tom black paint job. $34,500. L235/75R-15 (fit SUV or refrigerator with ice 541-385-5809 3-burner stove, heater good thru 11/30/14 $29,900. 541-815-3049 $2200 or best offer. $12,500 541-815-2523 maker, Washer/Dryer, w/thermostat, hot water truck), excellent cond, 541-350-0775 541-410-1135. Flat screen TV's, In heater, oversized pres- $500. 541-388-3022 882 motion satellite. sure water s y stem„ '65-'66 Mustang original Toyota FJ Cruiser Fifth Wheels Jee Liberf 20 1 2 $95,000 Fantastic Fan, lots of bucket seats, completely Ford F-150 1991 2012, 4WD, w/trac541-460-2019 storage, sleeps 4, $3750. rebuilt, better than new. tion control, alloy 541-617-0211 wheels, mud & snow Price lowered, must sell. 541-447-7272 t ires, tow pkg. + RV trailer break, back CONSIGNMENTS Call a Pro P195/65-R15 Hankook up camera, roof WANTED VOLVO XC90 2007 2007 Bennington Whether you need a studded tires, low miles, We Do The Work ... rack, ABS breaks + Limited Edition. AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, Pontoon Boat $80 all 4. 541-385-6168 Good runner 4x4 fence fixed, hedges independent system, You Keep The Cash! PRAYING FOR power everything, 2275 GL, 150hp Alpenlite 28 ft. Only $4,998 blue tooth connecOn-site credit Shop automotive 6hp trimmed or a house SNOW! Vin¹149708 grey on grey, leather Honda VTEC, less Vin¹A10401 1987, New stove, 60-gallon special vertion, hands free cell approval team, heated lumbar seats, built, you'll find 21,977 than 110 hours, fridge. Good furweb site presence. tical air compressor phone c a p ability, 3rd row seat, moonoriginal owner, lots professional help in nace, AC. Stereo, ROBBERSON ROBBERSON ~ compass, o u tside We Take Trade-Ins! tank, $600 roof, new tires, alof extras; TennesDVD player. Queen 541-385-9350 temp, inclinometer, ways garaged, all The Bulletin's "Call a ~ maaa a o. ~ na aaa see tandem axle bed WITH bedding. 32K mi., p r istine BIG COUNTRY RV maintenance up to Service Professional" trailer. Excellent Winter radial studded 20 ft. awning. 541-312-3986 541-312-3986 condition, $31,900. Bend: 541-330-2495 date, excellent cond. 225/70R-16 set of 4 condition, $23,500 Directory 541-549-1736 or Good shape. $4500 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing Dlr ¹0205.Price good A STEAL AT$13,900. Redmond: 503-646-1804 tires, $100 each obo 541-548-5254 541-977-5587 thru 11/30/1 4 541-647-0081. 541-223-2218 541-385-5809 good thru 11/30/14 541-288-3333
The Bulletin
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
C6 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014•THE BULLETIN
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Legal Notices
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class, certified mail, and attorney's fees i n interest t o t h e Bend, County of DEr eturn receipt r e - i ncurred herein b y grantor as well as any SCHUTES, State of quested, addressed to reason of said default; other person owing an Oregon, sell at public the trustee's post of- any further sums ad- obligation, the perfor- auction to the highest fice box address set vanced by the benefi- mance of which is se- bidder for cash the forth in this notice. ciary for the protec- cured by said trust i nterest in th e d e Due to potential con- tion of t h e a b o ve deed, and the words scribed real property flicts with federal law, described real prop- "trustee" and "benefi- which the grantor had erty and its interest ciary" include their re- or had power to conAgee and Mary Anne persons having no Agee, as tenants by record legal or equi- therein; and prepay- spective successors vey at the time of the the en t irety, as table interest in the ment penalties/premi- in interest, if any. The execution by grantor grantor, to Rockwood subject property will ums, if applicable. By trustee's rules of auc- of the trust deed, toTitle, as trustee, in fa- only receive informa- reason of said default tion may be accessed gether with any interat ww w .northwest- est which the grantor vor of Mortgage Elec- tion concerning the the beneficiary has tronic R e g istration lender's estimated or d eclared al l s u m s trustee.com and are or grantor's succesSystems, Inc., solely actual bid. Lender bid owing on the obliga- incorporated by this sors in interest acas nominee for Na- i nformation is a l s o tion secured by the reference. You may quired after the exthe trust deed i mmedi- also access sale sta- ecution of the trust tionpoint a Division of available a t Nat. City Bank of IN, trustee's web s ite, ately due and pay- tus a t ww w . north- deed, to satisfy the www.northwestas beneficiary, dated able, said sums being westtrustee.com and foregoing obligations trustee.com. Notice is the following, to wit: www. USA-Foreclothereby secured and 05/03/06, r e corded sure.com. For further t he costs and e x 05/19/06, in the mort- further given that any $197,199.33 with ingage records of Des- person named in ORS terest thereon at the information, p l ease penses of sale, in86.778 has the right, rate of 2 percent per contact: Kathy Tag- cluding a reasonable chutes County, Orbe g inning gart North w est charge by the trustee. egon, as 2006-34567 at any time prior to annum and subsequently as- five days before the 06/01/11; plus prior Trustee Services, Inc. Notice is further given signed to Deutsche date last set for the accrued late charges P.O. Box 997 Belle- that for reinstatement Bank National Trust s ale, to h av e t h is of $170.72; plus ad- vue, WA 98009-0997 or payoff quotes reCompany, as Trustee foreclosure proceed- vances of $1,720.00 425-586-1900 ALLYN, quested pursuant to for F i rs t Fr a n klin ing dismissed and the that represent paid J AMES R . (TS¹ O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Mortgage Loan Trust trust deed reinstated foreclosure fees and 7023.97001) 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a 2006-FF11, Mortgage b y payment to t he costs and property in- 1002.273665-File No. Pass-Through Certifi- beneficiary of the en- spections; t ogether written request that c omplies with t h at cates, Series tire amount then due with title e x pense, LEGAL NOTICE 2 006-FF11 by A s - (other than such por- costs, trustee's fees TRUSTEE'S NOTICE statute addressed to tion of the principal as the trustee's "Urgent signment recorded as and attorneys fees in- O F SALE File N o . 2011-23896, covering would not then be due curred herein by rea- 7023.98503 R e f er- Request Desk" either t he f o llowing d e - had no default oc- son of said default; ence is made to that by personal delivery scribed real property curred) and by curing any further sums ad- c ertain t rust d e e d to the trustee's physisituated in said county any o ther d e fault vanced by the benefi- made by S u zanne cal offices (call for adand state, to wit: Lot complained of herein ciary for the protec- Barnett, as grantor, to dress) or b y f i r st T hirty-Four (34) o f that is capable of be- tion of t h e a b o ve Amerititle, as trustee, class, certified mail, Hayden View Phase ing cured by tender- described real prop- in favor of Mortgage r eturn r e ceipt r e O ne, City o f R e d- ing the performance erty and its interest Electronic R egistra- quested, addressed to mond, De s chutes required under t he therein; and prepay- tion Systems, Inc. as the trustee's post oftr u st ment penalties/premi- nominee for Hyperion fice box address set County, Ore g o n. o bligation o r PROPERTY AD- deed, and in addition ums, if a p plicable. Capital Group, LLC, forth in t his n otice. DRESS: 3163 South- to paying said sums W HEREFORE, n o its successors and Due to potential conwest Newberry Avor tendering the per- tice hereby is given assigns, as benefi- flicts with federal law, enue Redmond, OR formance necessary that the undersigned ciary, dated 03/1 8/08, persons having no 97756 Both the ben- to cure the default, by trustee will on Febru- recorded 03/25/08, in record legal or equieficiary a n d the paying all costs and ary 11, 2015 at the the mortgage records table interest in the trustee have elected expenses actually in- hour of 10:00 o'clock, of DESC H UTES subject property will to sell the real prop- curred in enforcing the A.M. in accord with County, Oregon, as only receive informaerty to satisfy the obli- obligation and t rust the standard of time 2008-13278 and sub- tion concerning the deed, together with established by ORS gations secured by sequently assigned to lender's estimated or the trust deed and a trustee's and 187.110, at the f ol- Wells Fargo Bank, actual bid. Lender bid notice of default has attorney's fees not lowing place: inside N.A. by Assignment i nformation is a l s o been recorded pursu- exceeding the the main lobby of the recorded as available a t the amounts provided by web s ite, ant to Oregon ReDeschutes C o u nty 2012-00358, covering trustee's said OR S 8 6 .778. t he f o llowing d e - www.northwestvlsed Statutes Courthouse, 1164 NW 86.752(3); the default Requests from per- Bond, in the City of scribed real property trustee.com. Notice is for which the foreclo- sons named in ORS Bend, County of Des- situated in said county further given that any s ure i s m a d e i s 86.778 for reinstate- chutes, State of Orand state, to wit: Lot person named in ORS grantor's failure to pay ment quotes received egon, sell at public two (2) of replat of lot 86.778 has the right, when due the follow- less than six days auction to the highest four (4) Floyd Acres at any time prior to ing sums: monthly prior to the date set bidder for cash the Farm, recorded Sep- five days before the date last set for the payments of for the trustee's sale i nterest in t h e d e - tember 27, 1995, in will be honored only at $1,524.24 beginning scribed real property Cabinet D, Page 157, s ale, to h av e t h is 1 2/01/1 0; plus l a te the discretion of the which the grantor had Deschutes C o unty, foreclosure proceedcharges of $0.00 each b eneficiary or if r e - or had power to con- Oregon. PROPERTY ing dismissed and the month beg i nning quired by the terms of vey at the time of the ADDRESS: 2445 trust deed reinstated 1 2/1 6/1 0; plus prior the loan documents. execution by grantor Northeast Burks Court by payment to t he accrued late charges In construing this no- of the trust deed, to- Bend, OR 97701 Both beneficiary of the enof $180.75; plus ad- tice, the singular in- gether with any inter- the beneficiary and tire amount then due vances of $3,728.50; cludes the plural, the est which the grantor t he t r ustee h a v e (other than such portogether with title ex- word "grantor" inor grantor's succes- elected to sell the real tion of the principal as pense, costs, trustee's cludes any successor sors in interest acproperty to satisfy the would not then be due fees and attorney's i n i nterest t o th e quired after the exobligations secured by had no default occurred) and by curing fees incurred herein grantor as well as any ecution of the trust the trust deed and a by reason of said de- other person owing an deed, to satisfy the notice of default has any o ther d e fault fault; any further sums obligation, the perfor- foregoing obligations been recorded pursu- complained of herein advanced by the ben- mance of which is se- thereby secured and ant to Oregon Re- that is capable of beeficiary for the protec- cured by said trust t he costs an d e x - vised Statutes ing cured by tendertion of the above de- deed, and the words penses of sale, in- 86.752(3); the default ing the performance scribed real property "trustee" and "benefi- cluding a reasonable for which foreclosure required under the and i ts inte r est ciary" include their re- charge by the trustee. is made is grantors' o bligation o r tr u s t therein; and prepay- spective successors Notice is further given failure to pay when deed, and in addition ment penalties/premi- in interest, if any. The that for reinstatement due th e fo l lowing to paying said sums ums, if applicable. By trustee's rules of auc- or payoff quotes re- sums: monthly pay- or tendering the perreason of said default tion may be accessed quested pursuant to ments of $885.41 be- formance necessary at w w w .northwest- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d the beneficiary has inning 10/01/11 and to cure the default, by trustee.com and are d eclared all s u ms 86.789 must be timely 880.05 b e g inning paying all costs and owing on the obliga- incorporated by this c ommunicated in a 3/1/12; plus prior ac- expenses actually intion secured by the reference. You may written request that crued late charges of curred in enforcing the trust deed i mmedi- also access sale sta- c omplies with t h at $ 1 01.70; plus a d - obligation and trust ww w .north- statute addressed to vances of $1,370.00 deed, together with ately due and pay- tus a t and able, said sums being westtrustee.com and the trustee's "Urgent that represent paid trustee's the following, to wit: www.USA-ForecloRequest Desk" either foreclosure fees and a ttorney's fees n o t sure.com. For further exceeding the $232,217.18 with inby personal delivery costs, property i nterest thereon at the information, p l ease to the trustee's physi- spections and bro- amounts provided by rate of 4 percent per contact: Kathy Tag- cal offices (call for ad- kers price opinion; to- said OR S 8 6 .778. annum be g inning gart Northwest dress) or b y f i r st g ether w i t h tit l e Requests from per1 1/01/t 0; plus l a t e Trustee Services, Inc. class, certified mail, expense, costs, sons named in ORS charges of $0.00 each P.O. Box 997 Belle- r eturn r eceipt r e - t rustee's fees a n d 86.778 for reinstatemonth begi n ning vue, WA 98009-0997 quested, addressed to a ttorney's fees i n - ment quotes received 1 2/1 6/1 0 until paid; 425-586-1900 Agee, the trustee's post of- curred herein by rea- less than six d ays plus prior accrued late Richard B. and Mary fice box address set son of said default; prior to the date set (TS¹ forth in this notice. any further sums ad- for the trustee's sale charges of $180.75; Anne p lus a dvances o f 7777.19990) Due to potential con- vanced by the benefi- will be honored only at flicts with federal law, ciary for the protec- the discretion of the $3,728.50; t o gether 1002.273535-File No. with t itle e x pense, persons having no tion of t h e a b o ve beneficiary or if r eLEGAL NOTICE costs, trustee's fees record legal or equi- described real prop- quired by the terms of and attorneys fees in- TRUSTEE'S NOTICE table interest in the erty and its interest the loan documents. curred herein by rea- OF SALE File No. subject property will therein; and prepay- In construing this noson of said default; 7023.97001 R e f e r- only receive informa- ment penalties/premi- tice, the singular inany further sums ad- ence is made to that tion concerning the ums, if applicable. By cludes the plural, the vanced by the benefi- c ertain t rust d e e d lender's estimated or reason of said default word "grantor" inciary for the protec- made by James R. actual bid. Lender bid the beneficiary has cludes any successor tion of t h e a b ove Allyn, single man, as i nformation is a l s o d eclared al l s u m s i n interest t o t h e the owing on the obliga- grantor as well as any described real prop- grantor, to Deschutes available a t other person owing an erty and its interest County Title C o m- trustee's web s ite, tion secured by the therein; and prepay- pany, as trustee, in www.northwesttrust deed i mmedi- obligation, the performent penalties/premi- favor o f M o rtgage trustee.com. Notice is ately due and pay- mance of which is seums, if a p plicable. Electronic Registra- further given that any able, said sums being cured by said trust W HEREFORE, n o - tion Systems, Inc., as person named in ORS the following, to wit: deed, and the words tice hereby is given nominee for M o rt- 86.778 has the right, $197,164.74 with in- "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their rethat the undersigned gagelt, its successors at any time prior to terest thereon at the trustee will on Febru- and assigns, as ben- five days before the rate of 2 percent per spective successors ary 10, 2015 at the eficiary, dated date last set for the annum beg i nning in interest, if any. The hour of 10:00 o'clock, 09/19/05, r e c orded s ale, to h av e t h is 09/01/11; plus prior trustee's rules of aucA.M. in accord with 09/23/05, in the mort- foreclosure proceed- accrued late charges tion may be accessed the standard of time gage records of Des- ing dismissed and the of $101.70; plus ad- at ww w .northwestestablished by ORS chutes County, Or- trust deed reinstated vances of $1,370.00 trustee.com and are 187.110, at the folThe default for which incorporated by this egon, as 2005-64223 by payment to t he lowing place: inside and subsequently as- beneficiary of the en- foreclosure is made is reference. You may the main lobby of the signed to Wells Fargo tire amount then due grantors' failure to pay also access sale staww w .northDeschutes C o u nty B ank, N.A. by A s - (other than such por- when due the follow- tus a t Courthouse, 1164 NW signment recorded as tion of the principal as ing sums: monthly westtrustee.com and www.USA-ForecloBond, in the City of 2011-35595, covering would not then be due payments of $885.41 beginning 1 0/01/1 1 sure.com. For further Bend, County of Des- t he f o llowing d e - had no default occhutes, State of Or- scribed real property curred) and by curing and $880.05 begin- information, p l ease egon, sell at public situated in said county any o t her d e fault ning 3/1/12; plus prior contact: Kathy TagNorth west auction to the highest and state, to wit: Lot complained of herein accrued late charges gart bidder for cash the Thirteen, Windance that is capable of be- of $101.70; plus ad- Trustee Services, Inc. i nterest in t h e d e - Estates, Phase 1, De- ing cured by tender- vances of $1,370.00 P.O. Box 997 Bellescribed real property schutes County, Or- ing the performance that represent paid vue, WA 98009-0997 which the grantor had egon. P R O PERTY r equired under t h e foreclosure fees and 425-586-1900 BAR1718 o bligation o r or had power to con- ADDRESS: tr u st costs, property in- NETT, SUZANNE M. vey at the time of the S OUTHEAST V I R - deed, and in addition spections and b ro- PS¹ 702 3 .98503) execution by grantor GINIA ROAD BEND, to paying said sums kers price opinion; to- 1002.273664-File No. of the trust deed, to- OR 97702 Both the or tendering the per- g ether w i t h titl e gether with any inter- beneficiary and t he formance necessary expense, costs, FIND YOUR FUTURE est which the grantor trustee have elected to cure the default, by trustee's fees and ator grantor's succes- to sell the real prop- paying all costs and torneys fees incurred HOME INTHE BULLETIN sors in interest ac- erty to satisfy the obli- expenses actually in- herein by reason of Yourfutureisjust apageaway. quired after the ex- gations secured by curred in enforcing the said default; any fur- Whetheryou'relookingforahai or ecution of the trust the trust deed and a obligation and t rust ther sums advanced by the beneficiary for aplacetohangil, TheBulletin deed, to satisfy the notice of default has deed, together with Classifiedisyourbest source. foregoing obligations been recorded pursu- trustee's and the protection of the thereby secured and ant to Oregon Re- attorney's fees not above described real Everydaythousandsofbuyersand t he costs an d e x - vlsed Statutes exceeding the property and its interpenses of sale, in- 86.752(3); the default amounts provided by est therein; and pre- sellersoi goodsandservicesdo business inthesepages.They cluding a reasonable for which foreclosure said OR S 8 6 . 778. payment charge by the trustee. is made is grantors' Requests from per- penalties/premiums, if knowyoucan't beatTheBulletin Notice is further given failure to pay when sons named in ORS applicable. WHEREClassified Sectionforselection that for reinstatement due th e f o l lowing 86.778 for reinstate- FORE, notice hereby andconvenience- everyitemis or payoff quotes re- sums: monthly pay- ment quotes received is given that the unjust aphonecal away. quested pursuant to ments of $ 1,122.10 less than six days dersigned trustee will O RS 8 6 .786 a n d beginning 0 7 / 01/11 prior to the date set on February 11, 2015 TheClassifiedSectionis easy 86.789 must be timely and $1,100.03 begin- for the trustee's sale at the hour of 10:00 c ommunicated in a ning 5/1/12; plus prior will be honored only at o'clock, A.M. in ac- lo use.Everyitemis categorized written request that accrued late charges the discretion of the cord with the stan- andeverycategoryis indexedon the section'sfront page. c omplies with t h a t of $170.72; plus ad- b eneficiary or if r e - dard of time estabstatute addressed to vances of $1,720.00 quired by the terms of lished by ORS Whetheryouarelookingfora home the trustee's "Urgent that represent paid the loan documents. 187.110, at the folaservice,yourfutureis in Request Desk" either foreclosure fees and In construing this no- lowing place: inside or need ofTheBulletin Classiied. by personal delivery costs and property in- tice, the singular in- the main lobby of the the pages to the trustee's physi- spections; t o gether cludes the plural, the Deschutes C o unty "grantor" incal offices (call for ad- with title e x pense, word Courthouse, 1164 NW The Bulletin Serving Central Orcgon since 19t8 dress) or b y f i r st costs, trustee's fees cludes any successor Bond, in the City of LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7777.19990 R e f e rence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made by Richard B.
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7023.111746 Reference is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d
made by Larry Bashian and Diane Lee Bashian, as tenants by the entirety, as grantor, to Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., as trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for A ccredited Hom e Lenders, Inc., a California Corporation, its successors and assigns, as beneficiary, dated 07/20/07, recorded 07/30/07, in the mortgage records of DESC H UTES County, Oregon, as 2007-41733 and subsequently assigned to Wells Fargo B ank, N.A. by Assignment recorded as 2012-10122, covering t he f o llowing d e scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Beginning at the Southeast corner of Section 31, Township 17 South, Range 13 East of the Willamette Meridian, Des c hutes County, Ore g o n; thence South 89 degrees 49' 33" West along the Southerly line of said Section 31, a d i stance of 467.00 feet; thence North 00 degrees 02' 13" East parallel to the Easterly line of said Section 31, a distance of 4 6 7.00 feet; thence North 89 degrees 49' 33" East parallel to the Southerly line of said Section 31, a distance of 467.00 feet; thence South 00 degrees 02' 13" West along the Easterly line of said S ection 31, a d i s tance of 467.00 feet to the point of beginning.
foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs an d e x penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes reuested pursuant to R S 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a wdtten request that c omplies wit h t h a t statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent
Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or b y f i r st class, certified mail, r eturn r eceipt r e quested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to h ave t h is foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated b y payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her d e fault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance r equired under t h e o bligation o r tr u st PROPERTY ADDRESS: 22390 Bear deed, and in addition Creek Road B end, to paying said sums OR 97701 Both the or tendering the performance necessary b eneficiary and t h e trustee have elected to cure the default, by to sell the real prop- paying all costs and erty to satisfy the obli- expenses actually incurred in enforcing the gations secured by the trust deed and a obligation and t rust notice of default has deed, together with been recorded pursu- trustee's and ant to Oregon Re- a ttorney's fees n o t the vlsed Statutes exceeding 86.752(3); the default amounts provided by for which foreclosure said OR S 8 6 .778. is made is grantors' Requests from perfailure to pay when sons named in ORS due t h e fo l lowing 86.778 for reinstatesums: monthly pay- ment quotes received ments of $ 1,452.38 less than six days beginning 0 7 /01/12 prior to the date set and $1,462.48 begin- for the trustee's sale ning 3/1/13; plus prior will be honored only at accrued late charges the discretion of the of $682.08; plus ad- beneficiary or if r evances of $1,798.90 quired by the terms of that represent paid the loan documents. foreclosure fees and In construing this nocosts and property in- tice, the singular inspections; t o g ether cludes the plural, the with title e x pense, word " grantor" i n costs, trustee's fees cludes any successor and attorney's fees i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; other person owing an any further sums ad- obligation, the perforvanced by the benefi- mance of which is seciary for the protec- cured by said trust tion of t h e a b o ve deed, and the words described real prop- "trustee" and "benefierty and its interest ciary" include their retherein; and prepay- spective successors ment penalties/premi- in interest, if any. The ums, if applicable. By trustee's rules of aucreason of said default tion may be accessed ww w .northwestthe beneficiary has at d eclared al l s u m s trustee.com and are incorporated by this owing on the obligation secured by the reference. You may trust deed i mmedi- also access sale staately due and pay- tus a t ww w . northable, said sums being westtrustee.com and the following, to wit: www.USA-Foreclo$316,045.32 with in- sure.com. For further terest thereon at the information, p l ease rate of 2 percent per contact: Kathy Tagannum be g inning gart North w est 06/01/12; plus prior Trustee Services, Inc. accrued late charges P.O. Box 997 Belleof $682.08; plus ad- vue, WA 98009-0997 vances of $1,798.90 425-586-1900 Bashian, Larry and Diane that represent paid foreclosure fees and Lee (TS¹ 7023.111746) costs and property in1002.274144-File No. spections; t o gether with title e x pense, costs, trustee's fees LEGAL NOTICE and attorneys fees in- TRUSTEE'S NOTICE curred herein by rea- OF SALE File No. son of said default; 7023.99505 R e f e rany further sums ad- ence is made to that vanced by the benefi- c ertain t rust d e e d ciary for the protec- m ade b y Ste v e tion of t h e a b o ve Bleasdell, as grantor, described real prop- to Pacific Northwest erty and its interest Title, an Oregon cortherein; and prepay- poration, as trustee, in ment penalties/premi- favor o f M o r tgage ums, if a p plicable. Electronic RegistraW HEREFORE, n o tion Systems, Inc. as tice hereby is given nominee for Pacific that the undersigned Residential Mortgage, trustee will on Febru- its successors and ary 19, 2015 at the assigns, as b enefihour of 10:00 o'clock, ciary, dated 08/1 1/05, A.M. in accord with recorded 08/16/05, in the standard of time the mortgage records established by ORS of DESC H UTES 187.110, at the fol- County, Oregon, as lowing place: inside 2005-54086 and subthe main lobby of the sequently assigned to Deschutes C o u nty Wells Fargo Bank, Courthouse, 1164 NW N.A. by Assignment Bond, in the City of recorded as Bend, County of DE- 2012-07863, covering SCHUTES, State of t he f o l lowing d e Oregon, sell at public scribed real property auction to the highest situated in said county bidder for cash the a nd state, t o w i t : i nterest in t h e d e - L OTS 11 AN D 1 2 , scribed real property BLOCK 5, SISTERS, which the grantor had DESCHUTES or had power to con- COUNTY, OREGON vey at the time of the PROPERTY A Dexecution by grantor DRESS: 203 EAST of the trust deed, to- A DAMS AVE N UE gether with any inter- SISTERS, OR 97759 est which the grantor Both the beneficiary or grantor's succes- and the trustee have sors in interest ac- elected to sell the real quired after the exproperty to satisfy the ecution of the trust obligations secured by the trust deed and a deed, to satisfy the
notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revlsed Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which foreclosure is made is grantors' failure to pay when due th e f o l lowing sums: monthly payments of $ 1,373.71 beginning 12/01/11, $1,364.67 beginning 3/1/12, $1,379.85 beinning 10/1/12 and 1,365.24 beginning 10/1/13; plus prior accrued late charges of $ 176.88; plus a d vances of $1,535.00 that represent paid foreclosure fees and costs and property inspections; t o gether with title e x pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b ove described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared all s u ms owing on the obligation secured by the t rust deed i m m
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN•MONDAY NOVEMBER 17 2014
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trustee will on Februa ry 9, 2015 at t he hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in th e d e scribed real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs and e x penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that c omplies with t h a t statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or b y f i r st class, certified mail, r eturn r e ceipt r e quested, addressed to the trustee's post office box address set forth in t his notice. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the s ale, to h av e t h is foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated b y payment to t he beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her d e fault complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the o bligation o r tr u s t deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.778 for reinstatement quotes received less than six d ays prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if r equired by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at ww w .northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status a t ww w .northwesttrustee.com and www. USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, p lease contact: Kathy Taggart North w est Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 425-586-1900 BRADLEY, SYLVIA (TS¹ 7023.111268) 1002.273582-File No. The Bulletin is your
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5 41 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 to advertise. www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
SwvingCentral Oregon slnce 19IB
quested, addressed to
$ 790.74; plus a d - beneficiary or if r e- vey at the time of the ing, design, installavances of $ 7 37.50 quired by the terms of execution by grantor tion, operation and that represent paid the loan documents. of the trust deed, tomaintenance of a soforeclosure fees and In construing this no- gether with any inter- lar array, under the tice, the singular inest which the grantor terms of a solar power costs and property inspections; t o gether cludes the plural, the or grantor's succes- purchase agreement, with title e x pense, word " grantor" i n sors in interest acplanned f o r the costs, trustee's fees cludes any successor quired after the ex- College's Redmond and attorney's fees i n interest t o t h e ecution of the trust Oregon Campus. grantor as well as any deed, to satisfy the For further informai ncurred herein b y reason of said default; other person owing an foregoing obligations tion, or for a copy of tion concerning the any further sums ad- obligation, the perfor- thereby secured and the draft written findlender's estimated or vanced by the benefi- mance of which is se- t he costs and e x - ings in support of the actual bid. Lender bid ciary for the protec- cured by said trust penses of sale, in- exemption r equest, i nformation is a l s o tion of t h e a b o ve deed, and the words cluding a reasonable contact Julie Mosier, available a t the described real prop- "trustee" and "benefi- charge by the trustee. Purchasing C oorditrustee's web s ite, erty and its interest ciary" include their re- Notice is further given nator, 2600 NW Colwww.northwesttherein; and prepay- spective successors that for reinstatement lege Way, Bend, OR, trustee.com. Notice is ment penalties/premi- in interest, if any. The or payoff quotes re- 97701, 541-383-7779. further given that any ums, if applicable. By trustee's rules of auc- quested pursuant to person named in ORS reason of said default tion may be accessed O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Published 86.778 has the right, the beneficiary has at ww w .northwest- 86.789 must be timely November 17, 2014 at any time prior to d eclared al l s u m s trustee.com and are c ommunicated in a DJC five days before the owing on the obliga- incorporated by this written request that Bend Bulletin date last set for the tion secured by the reference. You may c omplies with t h a t sale, to h ave t h is trust deed i mmedi- also access sale sta- statute addressed to The Bulletin foreclosure proceed- ately due and pay- tus a t ww w . north- the trustee's "Urgent To Subscribe call ing dismissed and the able, said sums being westtrustee.com and Request Desk" either 541-385-5800 or go to trust deed reinstated the following, to wit: www.USA-Forecloby personal delivery by payment to t he sure.com. For further to the trustee's physi- www.bendbulletin.com $388,343.85 with inbeneficiary of the en- terest thereon at the information, p l ease cal offices (call for adtire amount then due rate of 6.5 percent per contact: Kathy Tag- dress) or b y f i r st LEGAL NOTICE (other than such por- annum be g inning gart North west class, certified mail, T RUSTEE'S N O tion of the principal as 02/01/11; plus prior Trustee Services, Inc. r eturn receipt r e - TICE OF SALE The would not then be due accrued late charges P.O. Box 997 Belle- quested, addressed to Successor Trustee, under the terms of had no default ocof $790.74; plus ad- vue, WA 98009-0997 the trustee's post ofcurred) and by curing vances of $ 7 37.50 425-586-1900 DEN- fice box address set the Trust Deed deany o t her d e fault that represent paid HAM, MARTIN S. and forth in this notice. scribed herein, at complained of herein foreclosure fees and THERESA 1. ( T S¹ Due to potential con- the direction of the that is capable of be- costs and property in- 7023.96606) flicts with federal law, current B eneficiaries, hereby elects ing cured by tender- spections; t o gether 1002.273723-File No. persons having no ing the performance with title e x pense, record legal or equi- to sell the property d escribed in s a i d r equired under t h e costs, trustee's fees LEGAL NOTICE table interest in the o bligation o r tr u st and attorneys fees in- TRUSTEE'S NOTICE subject property will Trust Deed to satdeed, and in addition curred herein by rea- OF SALE File No. only receive informa- isfy the obligations to paying said sums son of said default; 7023.111426 R efer- tion concerning the secured thereby. A. PARTIES TO THE or tendering the per- any further sums ad- ence is made to that lender's estimated or DEE D : formance necessary vanced by the benefi- c ertain t rust d e e d actual bid. Lender bid T RUST Grantor: DANIEL K. to cure the default, by ciary for the protec- made by Andrew W. i nformation is a l s o VARCOE; Trustee: paying all costs and tion of t h e a b o ve Engel and F r ancie available a t the expenses actually in- described real prop- Engel, as grantor, to trustee's web s ite, WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMcurred in enforcing the erty and its interest Fidelity National Title www.northwestobligation and t rust therein; and prepay- Insurance Company, trustee.com. Notice is PANY; Beneficiary: deed, together with ment penalties/premi- as trustee, in favor of further given that any CHARLES A. HAand trustee's and ums, if a p plicable. Wells Fargo Bank, person named in ORS SELIP a ttorney's fees n ot W HEREFORE, n o - N.A., as beneficiary, 86.778 has the right, RHONDA L. HASELIP ("Original Benexceeding the tice hereby is given dated 10/31/06, re- at any time prior to amounts provided by that the undersigned corded 1 1/06/06, in five days before the eficiary"); B . D E OF said OR S 8 6 .778. trustee will on Febru- the mortgage records date last set for the SCRIPTION Requests from per- ary 11, 2015 at the of DESC H UTES s ale, to h av e t h is THE P ROPERTY: sons named in ORS hour of 10:00 o'clock, County, Oregon, as foreclosure proceed- "All of Block 1, all of 86.778 for reinstate- A.M. in accord with 2006-73593 and sub- ing dismissed and the Block 2, all of Block EXC E PTING ment quotes received the standard of time sequently assigned to trust deed reinstated 8, THEREFROM that less than six days established by ORS Bank of America, N.A. by payment to t he portion of Block 8 of prior to the date set 187.110, at the folby Assignment re- beneficiary of the enfor the trustee's sale lowing place: inside corded as tire amount then due FIRST A D DITION will be honored only at the main lobby of the 2013-17143, covering (other than such por- TO LA PINE, Desthe discretion of the Deschutes C o u nty t he f o llowing d e - tion of the principal as chutes County, Orbeneficiary or if r eCourthouse, 1164 NW scribed real property would not then be due egon, lying westerly quired by the terms of Bond, in the City of situated in said county had no default oc- of the continuation the loan documents. Bend, County of Des- and state, to wit: Lot curred) and by curing of the centerline of In construing this no- chutes, State of Or- 54 of Awbrey Park, any o t her d e fault Walker Street betice, the singular in- egon, sell at public Phase Two, City of complained of herein t ween First a n d cludes the plural, the auction to the highest Bend, Des c hutes that is capable of be- Second Streets, all word "grantor" i nbidder for cash the County, Ore g on. ing cured by tender- o f Block 9, all of cludes any successor i nterest in t h e d e - PROPERTY AD- ing the performance B lock 10, a l l o f B lock 11, a l l o f i n interest t o t h e scribed real property D RESS: 3462 N W required under t he grantor as well as any which the grantor had B RYCE tr u st B lock 12 , a l l o f CAN Y ON o bligation o r other person owing an or had power to con- L ANE BEND, O R deed, and in addition B lock 13, a l l o f obligation, the perfor- vey at the time of the 97701 Both the ben- to paying said sums B lock 14, Lots 1 mance of which is se- execution by grantor eficiary a n d the or tendering the per- through 16, Block cured by said trust of the trust deed, to- trustee have elected formance necessary 15, all of Block 18, deed, and the words gether with any inter- to sell the real prop- to cure the default, by all of Block 19, all of "trustee" and "benefi- est which the grantor erty to satisfy the obli- paying all costs and B lock 20, a l l o f ciary" include their re- or grantor's succes- gations secured by expenses actually in- B lock 21, a l l o f spective successors sors in interest ac- the trust deed and a curred in enforcing the Block 22 , F I R ST in interest, if any. The quired after the ex- notice of default has obligation and t rust ADDITION TO LA trustee's rules of auc- ecution of the trust been recorded pursu- deed, together with PINE, D e schutes tion may be accessed deed, to satisfy the ant to Oregon Re- trustee's and County, Oregon." C. ASSIGNIIIIENT OF at ww w .northwest- foregoing obligations vised Statutes attorney's fees n ot trustee.com and are thereby secured and 86.752(3); the default exceeding the B ENEFICIAL I N incorporated by this t he costs and e x - for which foreclosure amounts provided by TEREST: The benreference. You may penses of sale, in- is made is grantors' said OR S 8 6 .778. eficial interest of the also access sale sta- cluding a reasonable failure to pay when Requests from per- Original Beneficiary tus a t ww w . north- charge by the trustee. due th e f o l lowing sons named in ORS in the Trust Deed westtrustee.com and Notice is further given sums: monthly pay- 86.778 for reinstate- was assiqned to LA www.USA-Foreclothat for reinstatement ments of $2,065.23 ment quotes received PINE RODEO ASsure.com. For further or payoff quotes re- beginning 0 3 /01/1 3, less than six days SOC. by A s signment of Trust Deed information, p l ease quested pursuant to $1,886.33 beginning prior to the date set contact: Kathy Tag- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 1 2/1/1 3, $ 1 ,850.93 for the trustee's sale by Beneficiary regart North w est 86.789 must be timely beginning 3/1/14 and will be honored only at c orded July 2 4 , Trustee Services, Inc. c ommunicated in a $2,396.99 beginning the discretion of the 2014, as Recorder's 201 4 -23877 P.O. Box 997 Belle- written request that 4/1/14; plus prior ac- b eneficiary or if r e - No. vue, WA 98009-0997 c omplies with t h a t crued late charges of quired by the terms of ("Beneficiary"), all in 425-586-1900 statute addressed to $ 232.56; plus a d - the loan documents. t he D e eds a n d Chesser, Michael and the trustee's "Urgent vances of $2,075.00 In construing this no- R ecords of D e s Peggy (TS¹ Request Desk" either that represent paid tice, the singular in- chutes County, Or7023.96624) by personal delivery foreclosure fees and cludes the plural, the egon. D. T R U ST DEED I NFORMA1002.273980-File No. to the trustee's physi- costs; together with word "grantor" incal offices (call for ad- title expense, costs, cludes any successor TION: Dated: JanuLEGAL NOTICE dress) or b y f i r st t rustee's fees a n d i n i nterest t o th e ary 18, 2002; ReDate: TRUSTEE'S NOTICE class, certified mail, a ttorney's fees i n - grantor as well as any cording OF SALE File No. r eturn receipt r e - curred herein by rea- other person owing an January 18, 2002; No. : 7023.96606 R e f e r- quested, addressed to son of said default; obligation, the perfor- R ecorder's Reence is made to that the trustee's post of- any further sums ad- mance of which is se- 2 002-03279; cured by said trust c ording Plac e: c ertain t rust d e e d fice box address set vanced by the benefiforth in this notice. ciary for the protec- deed, and the words Deeds and Records made by Martin S. Deschutes Denham, Theresa I. Due to potential con- tion of t h e a b ove "trustee" and "benefi- of Denham, h u s band flicts with federal law, described real prop- ciary" include their re- County, Oregon; E. The and wife, as grantor, persons having no erty and its interest spective successors DEFAULT: to First American Title record legal or equi- therein; and prepay- in interest, if any. The Grantors are in deInsurance Co. of OR., table interest in the ment penaltIes/premi- trustee's rules of auc- fault and the Benefias trustee, in favor of subject property will ums, if applicable. By tion may be accessed ciaries elect to forew w w .northwest- c lose t h e Tr u st Mortgage Electronic only receive informa- reason of said default at Registration Systems, tion concerning the the beneficiary has trustee.com and are Deed by reason of Inc., as nominee for lender's estimated or d eclared al l s u m s incorporated by this the Grantors' failure Suntrust M o rtgage, actual bid. Lender bid owing on the obliga- reference. You may to pay: (1) monthly Inc., its successors i nformation is a l s o tion secured by the also access sale sta- p ayments in t h e the trust deed immedi- tus a t ww w .north- amount of $895.54 and assigns, as ben- available a t eficiary, dated trustee's web s ite, ately due and pay- westtrustee.com and each, commencing 04/07/06, r e c orded www.northwestwith the p ayment able, said sums being www.USA-Foreclo04/14/06, in the mort- trustee.com. Notice is the following, to wit: sure.com. For further due July 18, 2012 further given that any information, p l ease and continuing each gage records of Des$572,489.25 with inchutes County, Orperson named in ORS terest thereon at the contact: Kathy Tag- month t h e reafter; Northwest and (2) real propegon, as 2006-25506 86.778 has the right, rate of 3.25 percent gart t a x e s for and subsequently as- at any time prior to per annum beginning Trustee Services, Inc. erty signed to Wells Fargo five days before the 02/01/13; plus prior P.O. Box 997 Belle- 2010-2011 plus inB ank, N.A. by A s - date last set for the accrued late charges vue, WA 98009-0997 terest; 2 0 1 1-2012 signment recorded as s ale, to h av e t h is of $232.56; plus ad- 4 25-586-1900 EN - plus interest, 2011-32784, covering foreclosure proceed- vances of $2,075.00 GEL, FRANCIE and 2012-2013 plus int he f o llowing d e - ing dismissed and the that represent paid A NDREW W ( T S¹ terest and 2013-2014 plus inscribed real property trust deed reinstated foreclosure fees and 7023.111426) situated in said county by payment to t he costs; together with 1002.273741-File No. terest. F. ANIOUNT and state, to wit: Par- beneficiary of the en- title expense, costs, DUE: By reason of LEGAL NOTICE t he d e fault, t h e cel 2 of Partition Plat tire amount then due trustee's fees and atNo. 2001-8, being a (other than such por- torneys fees incurred NOTICE OF PUBLIC Beneficiaries have Replat of Parcel 1 of tion of the principal as herein by reason of HEARING declared all sums P artition P la t No . would not then be due said default; any fur- EXEMPTION FROM owing on the obliga1 998-31 located i n COMPETITIVE tion secured by the had no default oc- ther sums advanced Section 7, Township curred) and by curing by the beneficiary for BIDDING Trust Deed immedi18 South, Range 14, any o ther d e fault the protection of the Pursuant to the r eately due and payE ast o f the Wil - complained of herein above described real quirements of O RS able, those sums lamette Meridian, De- that is capable of be- property and its inter- 279C.335, C e n tral being the principal schutes County, Oring cured by tender- est therein; and pre- Oregon C ommunity amount of egon. P R OPERTY ing the performance payment College will hold a $ 77,673.81, pl u s A DDRESS: 24 7 8 0 r equired under t h e penalties/premiums, if p ublic h earing a t interest at the rate Doods Road Bend, o bligation o r tr u st applicable. WHERE- 6:30pm on Monday of 6.0% per annum OR 97701 Both the deed, and in addition FORE, notice hereby December 1, 2014 at from May 19, 2012, beneficiary and the to paying said sums is given that the un- the Redmond Cam- u ntil p a id ; pl u s trustee have elected or tendering the per- dersigned trustee will pus Technology Edu- amounts, if any, adto sell the real prop- formance necessary on February 17, 2015 cation Center, Room vanced pursuant to erty to satisfy the obli- to cure the default, by at the hour of 10:00 1 24, 2030 S E C o l- the Trust Deed or gations secured by paying all costs and o'clock, A.M. in ac- lege Loop, Redmond applicable law, plus the trust deed and a expenses actually in- cord with the stan- O R 97756, for t h e foreclosure c o sts notice of default has curred in enforcing the dard of time estab- purpose of t a k ing and attorney fees. been recorded pursu- obligation and t rust lished by ORS comments on the G. ELECTION TO ant to Oregon ReCollege's draft written SELL: NOTICE IS deed, together with 187.110, at the folvised Statutes trustee's and lowing place: inside findings prepared in H EREBY GI V E N 86.752(3); the default attorney's fees not the main lobby of the support of the that the Beneficiafor which the foreclo- exceeding the Deschutes C o u nty College's request for ries and the Sucs ure i s m a d e i s amounts provided by Courthouse, 1164 NW an exemption from cessor Trustee, by grantor's failure to pay said OR S 8 6 . 778. Bond, in the City of competitive bidding. reason of said dewhen due the follow- Requests from per- Bend, County of DE- If the Local Contract fault, have elected, ing sums: m onthly sons named in ORS SCHUTES, State of R eview Board a p - and do hereby elect, of 86.778 for reinstate- Oregon, sell at public proves the request, to foreclose said payments $3,269.78 beginning ment quotes received auction to the highest the College will be Trust Deed by adan d 03/01/11, $3,21 7.48 less than six days bidder for cash the authorized to use the v ertisement beginning 4/1/12 and prior to the date set i nterest in t h e d e - Request for Propos- sale pursuant to Or$3,097.87 beginning for the trustee's sale scribed real property als (RFP) contracting egon Revised Stat4/1/13; plus prior ac- will be honored only at which the grantor had method to solicit pro- utes $86.705 et crued late charges of the discretion of the or had power to con- posals for the financ- seq., and to cause
the trustee's post ofLEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE fice box address set forth in this notice. O F SALE File N o . 7023.96624 R e f er- Due to potential conence is made to that flicts with federal law, c ertain t rust d e e d persons having no made by M ichael record legal or equiChesser and Peggy table interest in the Chesser, as tenants subject property will by the entirety, as only receive informagrantor, to Western Title 8 Escrow Co, as trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Securitynational Mortgage Company, a Utah Corporation, its successors and assigns, as beneficiary, dated 02/07/07, recorded 02/15/07, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as 2007-09684 and subsequently assigned to Wells Fargo B ank, N.A. by Assignment recorded as 2011-28634, covering t he f o llowing d e scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot 17, Tollgate Addition, Deschutes C o unty, Oregon PROPERTY A DDRESS: 6 9 336 SILVER SPUR SISOR TERS, 97759-9562 Both the
beneficiary and t he trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revlsed Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which the foreclos ure i s m a d e i s grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly of payments $1,921.40 beginning 05/01/1 1 and $1,91 5.44 beginning 5/1/12; p l u s advances of $1,843.00 that represent property inspection fees and paid attorneys' fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and i t s int e rest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $255,741.45 with in-
terest thereon at the rate of 6.25 percent per annum beginning 0 4/01/1 1; plus l a t e charges of $0.00 each month beg i nning 05/t 6/1 1 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.00; plus advances of $1,843.00 that represent property inspection fees and paid attorneys' fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and pre-
payment
penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on February 19, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the s tandard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in t h e d e scribed real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor
or grantor's succes-
sors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs and e x -
penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee.
Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that c omplies with t h at statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or b y f i r st class, certified mail, r eturn receipt r e -
to be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash or certified funds, the interest in said described property which Grantors had, or had the power to convey, at the time of the execution of the Trust Deed, together with any interest the Grantors acquired after the e xecution of t h e Trust Deed, to satisfy the obligations s ecured by s a i d T rust D ee d to gether with the expenses of sale, including the compensation of the Successor Trustee as provided by law, and the reasonable fees of the Successor Trustee's attorney. H. DATE, TIME A ND PLACE O F SALE: Date & Time: December 30, 2014, at 11:00 a.m. Place: Inside the front entrance of the Desc hutes Coun t y Courthouse, 1 164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon; I . RIGHT TO REINSTATE: NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that at any time prior to five (5) days before the sale, this f oreclosure pr o c eeding may b e dismissed and the Trust Deed r einstated by payment to th e S u ccessor Trustee of the entire amount t h en due (other than a portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default o ccurred), and by curing any other default complained of h e rein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed, and in addition to paying s aid sums or b y tendering the performance n e cessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses to th e S u ccessor Trustee actually incurred by the Bene ficiaries and t he Successor Trustee in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with the Succ e ssor Trustee's fees and attorney's fees. J. NOTICE: The Federal Fair Debt Practices Act requires we state that this is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. K. NOTICE TO RESIDE
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
CS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014•THE BULLETIN
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Request Desk" either charges of $0.00; plus by personal delivery advances of $ 0.00; to the trustee's physi together with title excal offices (call for ad pense, costs, trustee's dress) or b y f i r st fees and attorney's class, certified mail, fees incurred herein r eturn r eceipt r e by reason of said dequested, addressed to fault; any further sums the trustee's post of advanced by the benfice box address set eficiary for the protecforth in this notice. tion of the above deDue to potential con scribed real property flicts with federal law, and i t s int e rest persons having no therein; and prepayrecord legal or equi ment penalties/premitable interest in the ums, if applicable. By subject property will reason of said default only receive informa the beneficiary has tion concerning the d eclared al l s u m s lender's estimated or owing on the obligaactual bid. Lender bid tion secured by the i nformation is a l s o trust deed i mmediavailable a t the ately due and paytrustee's web s ite, able, said sums being www.northwestthe following, to wit: trustee.com. Notice is $335,220.88 with infurther given that any terest thereon at the person named in ORS rate of 3.375 percent 86.778 has the right, per annum beginning at any time prior to 0 2/01/1 3; plus l a t e five days before the charges of $0.00 each date last set for the month beginning until s ale, to h av e t h is paid; plus prior acforeclosure proceed crued late charges of ing dismissed and the $0.00; plus advances trust deed reinstated of $0.00; together with b y payment to t he title expense, costs, beneficiary of the en trustee's fees and attire amount then due torneys fees incurred (other than such por herein by reason of tion of the principal as said default; any furwould not then be due ther sums advanced had no d efault oc by the beneficiary for curred) and by curing the protection of the any o t her d e fault above described real complained of herein property and its interthat is capable of be est therein; and preing cured by tender payment ing the performance penalties/premiums, if required under the ob applicable. WHEREligation or trust deed, FORE, notice hereby and in addition to pay is given that the uning said sums or ten dersigned trustee will dering th e pe r for on February 17, 2015 mance necessary to at the hour of 10:00 cure the default, by o'clock, A.M. in acpaying all costs and cord with the stanexpenses actually in dard of time estabcurred in enforcing the lished b y ORS obligation and t rust 187.110, at the foldeed, together with lowing place: inside trustee's and the main lobby of the attorney's fees not Deschutes C o u nty exceeding the Courthouse, 1164 NW amounts provided by Bond, in the City of said OR S 8 6 . 778. Bend, County of DesRequests from per chutes, State of Orsons named in ORS egon, sell at public 86.778 for reinstate auction to the highest ment quotes received bidder for cash the less than six days i nterest in t h e d e prior to the date set scribed real property for the trustee's sale which the grantor had will be honored only at or had power to conthe discretion of the vey at the time of the b eneficiary or i f r e execution by grantor quired by the terms of of the trust deed, tothe loan documents. gether with any interIn construing this no est which the grantor tice, the singular in or grantor's succescludes the plural, the sors in interest acword " grantor" i n quired after the excludes any successor ecution of the trust i n i nterest t o th e deed, to satisfy the grantor as well as any foregoing obligations other person owing an thereby secured and obligation, the perfor t he costs and e x mance of which is se penses of sale, incured by said trust cluding a reasonable deed, and the words charge by the trustee. "trustee" and "benefi Notice is further given ciary" include their re that for reinstatement spective successors or payoff quotes rein interest, if any. The quested pursuant to trustee's rules of auc O RS 8 6 .786 a n d tion may be accessed 86.789 must be timely at ww w . northwest communicated in a trustee.com and are written request that incorporated by this c omplies with t h at reference. You may statute addressed to also access sale sta the trustee's "Urgent tus at www.northwest Request Desk" either trustee.com and by personal delivery www. USA-Forecloto the trustee's physisure.com. For further cal offices (call for adinformation, p l ease d ress) or b y fi r st contact: Kathy Tag class, certified mail, Northwest r eturn r eceipt r e gart Trustee Services, Inc. quested, addressed to P.O. Box 997 Belle the trustee's post ofvue, WA 98009-0997 fice box address set 425-586-1900 Lovell, forth in this notice. Harold P and Helen L Due to potential con(TS¹ 7 0 2 3.111606) flicts with federal law, 1002.273622-File No. persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the LEGAL NOTICE subject property will TRUSTEE'S NOTICE only receive informaO F SALE File N o . tion concerning the 7042.14452 R e f e r- lender's estimated or ence is made to that actual bid. Lender bid c ertain t rust d e e d i nformation is a l s o made by Sidney A available a t the web s ite, McClung and Hilda A trustee's McClung, as tenants www.northwestby the entirety, as trustee.com. Notice is grantor, to LSI, A Fi- further given that any delity National Finan- person named in ORS c ial Company, a s 86.778 has the right, trustee, in favor of at any time prior to Mortgage Electronic five days before the Registration Systems, date last set for the Inc. solely as nomi- s ale, to h av e t h is nee f o r Qu i c ken foreclosure proceedLoans Inc., as benefi- ing dismissed and the ciary, dated 07/20/05, trust deed reinstated recorded 07/25/05, in b y payment to t h e the mortgage records beneficiary of the enof Deschutes County, tire amount then due Oregon, as (other than such por2005-47506 and sub- tion of the principal as sequently assigned to would not then be due Green Tree Servicing had no default ocLLC by Assignment curred) and by curing recorded as any o t he r d e f ault 2013-27547, covering complained of herein t he f o llowing d e - that is capable of bescribed real property ing cured by tendersituated in said county ing the performance and state, to wit: Lot required under t he Twenty in Block Two o bligation o r tr u s t of Fall River Estates, deed, and in addition First Addition, Desto paying said sums chutes County, Or- or tendering the peregon PR O PERTY formance necessary A DDRESS: 15 1 5 3 to cure the default, by River Loop Drive East paying all costs and Sunriver, OR 97707 expenses actually inBoth the beneficiary curred in enforcing the and the trustee have obligation and trust elected to sell the real deed, together with and property to satisfy the trustee's obligations secured by a ttorney's fees n ot the trust deed and a exceeding the notice of default has amounts provided by been recorded pursu- said OR S 8 6 .778. ant to Oregon Re- Requests from pervlsed Statutes sons named in ORS 86.752(3); the default 86.778 for reinstatefor which the foreclo- ment quotes received s ure i s m a d e i s less than six d ays grantor's failure to pay prior to the date set when due the follow- for the trustee's sale ing sums: monthly will be honored only at payments of the discretion of the $1,290.33 beginning beneficiary or if re0 3/01/1 3; plus l a te quired by the terms of charges of $0.00 each the loan documents. month beginning In construing this noplus prior accrued late tice, the singular in-
cludes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at ww w .northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status a t ww w .northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, p l ease contact: Nanci Lambert North w est Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 4 25-586-1900 Mc Clung, Sidney A. (TS¹ 7042.14452) 1002.274095-File No.
actual bid. Lender bid trustee have elected i nformation is a l s o to sell the real propavailable a t the erty to satisfy the oblitrustee's web s ite, gations secured by www.northwestthe trust deed and a trustee.com. Notice is notice of default has further given that any been recorded pursumade by James Plog person named in ORS ant to Oregon Reand Sharlotte Plog 86.778 has the right, vlsed Statutes Husband and Wife, as at any time prior to 86.752(3); the default rantor, to Deschutes five days before the for which foreclosure ounty T i t le , as date last set for the is made is grantors' trustee, in favor of Na s ale, to h av e t h is failure to pay when tional City Mortgage a foreclosure proceed due t h e fo l lowing division of N ational ing dismissed and the sums: monthly payCity Bank, as benefi trust deed reinstated ments of $721.21 beinning 10 / 0 1/09, ciary, dated 01/12/07, by payment to t he recorded 01/22/07, in beneficiary of the en 832.65 b e g inning the mortgage records tire amount then due 3/1/11 and $759.74 of Deschutes County, (other than such por beginning 3/1/12; plus Oregon, as tion of the principal as prior accrued l ate 2007-03934 and sub would not then be due charges of $640.64; sequently assigned to had no d efault oc p lus advances o f Green Tree Servicing curred) and by curing $3,150.50 that repreLLC by Assignment any o t her d e fault sent paid foreclosure recorded as complained of herein fees and costs, lawn 2010-11446, covering that is capable of be care, property inspect he f o l lowing d e ing cured by tender tions an d b r o kers scribed real property ing the performance p rice opinion; t o situated in said county required under the ob gether with title exand state, to wit: Lot ligation or trust deed, pense, costs, trustee's Twenty-One, B l o ck and in addition to pay fees and attorney's Seven of Tall ing said sums or ten fees incurred herein dering th e p e r for by reason of said deP ines-Second A d d i tion, Desc h utes mance necessary to fault; any further sums cure the default, by advanced by the benC ounty, Oreg o n PROPERTY AD paying all costs and eficiary for the protecexpenses actually in tion of the above deD RESS: 16076 E l k Horn Lane La Pine, curred in enforcing the scribed real property obligation and trust and OR 97739 Both the i ts inte r est beneficiary and the deed, together with therein; and prepayand ment penalties/premitrustee have elected trustee's to sell the real prop a ttorney's fees n o t ums, if applicable. By exceeding the reason of said default erty to satisfy the obli gations secured by amounts provided by the beneficiary has the trust deed and a said OR S 8 6 .778. d eclared al l s u m s notice of default has Requests from p er owing on the obligabeen recorded pursu sons named in ORS tion secured by the ant to Oregon Re 86.778 for reinstate trust deed immedivised Statutes ment quotes received ately due and pay86.752(3); the default less than six d ays able, said sums being for which the foreclo prior to the date set the following, to wit: s ure i s m a d e i s for the trustee's sale $73,566.55 with intergrantor's failure to pay will be honored only at est thereon at the rate when due the follow the discretion of the of 7.875 percent per ing sums: monthly b eneficiary or i f r e annum beg i nning of quired by the terms of 09/01/09; plus prior payments $1,043.81 beginning the loan documents. accrued late charges 05/01/1 3; and monthly In construing this no of $640.64; plus adpayments of tice, the singular in vances of $3,150.50 $1,084.81 beginning cludes the plural, the that represent paid 1 0/01/1 4; plus prior word " grantor" i n foreclosure fees and accrued late charges cludes any successor costs, l aw n c a r e, i n interest t o t h e property inspections of $531.40; plus ad vances of ($170.00); grantor as well as any and brokers p rice other person owing an opinion; together with together with title ex pense, costs, trustee's obligation, the perfor title expense, costs, fees and attorney's mance of which is se trustee's fees and atfees incurred herein cured by said trust torneys fees incurred by reason of said de deed, and the words herein by reason of fault; any further sums "trustee" and "benefi said default; any furadvanced by the ben ciary" include their re ther sums advanced eficiary for the protec spective successors by the beneficiary for tion of the above de in interest, if any. The the protection of the scribed real property trustee's rules of auc above described real and i st inte rest tion may be accessed property and its intertherein; and prepay at www . northwest est therein; and prement penalties/premi trustee.com and are payment ums, if applicable. By incorporated by this penalties/premiums, if reason of said default reference. You may applicable. WHEREthe beneficiary has also access sale sta FORE, notice hereby declared all sums ow tus at www.northwest is given that the uning on the obligation trustee.com and dersigned trustee will secured by the trust www.USA-Forecloon February 17, 2015 sure.com. For further at the hour of 10:00 deed immediately due and payable, said information, p lease o'clock, A.M. in acsums being the follow contact: Nanci Lam cord with the stanNorth w est dard of time estabing, to wit: bert Trustee Services, Inc. lished by ORS $1 98,897.27 with in P.O. Box 997 Belle 187.110, at th e f o lterest thereon at the rate of 5.98 percent vue, WA 98009-0997 lowing place: inside Plog, the main lobby of the per annum beginning 586-1900 04/01/13; plus prior James and Sharlotte Deschutes C o unty 70 4 2 .14482) Courthouse, 1164 NW accrued late charges (TS¹ 1002.273407-File No. of $531.40; plus ad Bond, in the City of vances of ($170.00); Bend, County of DesPUBLIC NOTICE together with title ex T he Bend Park 8 chutes, State of Orpense, costs, trustee's Recreation D i s trict egon, sell at public fees and a ttorneys Board of Directors will auction to the highest fees incurred herein meet in a work ses- bidder for cash the by reason of said de sion at 5 :30 p .m., i nterest in th e d e fault; any further sums Tuesday, November scribed real property advanced by the ben 18, 2014, at the dis- which the grantor had eficiary for the protec trict office, 799 SW or had power to contion of the above de Columbia, Bend, Or- vey at the time of the scribed real property egon. Agenda topics execution by grantor and i st inte rest deed, tofinancial poli- of the trust therein; and prepay include with any interand vision state- gether ment penalties/premi cies est which the grantor A regular busi- or grantor's succesums, if a p plicable. ment. n ess meeting w i l l W HEREFORE, n o convene at 7:00 p.m. sors in interest actice hereby is given for the board to con- quired after the exthat the undersigned sider approval of the ecution of the trust trustee will on Febru Riley Ranch Master deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations a ry 5, 2015 at t he adoption of a hour of 10:00 o'clock, Plan, authorizing thereby secured and A.M. in accord with resolution costs and e xr efinancing of th e the the standard of time JSFC penses of sale, in2005 debt, and cluding established by ORS to amend a reasonable the Board of charge by 187.110, at the follow the trustee. Director's Procedures ing place: inside the Manual. Notice is further given main lobby of the De that for reinstatement s chutes Coun t y T he a g enda a n d or payoff quotes reCourthouse, 1164 NW s upplementary r e - quested pursuant to Bond, in the City of 6 .786 a n d are posted on O RS 8must Bend, County of Des ports be timely the district's website, 86.789 chutes, State of Or communicated in a www.bendparksanegon, sell at public drec.org. For more written request that with t h at auction to the highest information call complies bidder for cash the in 541-389-7275. statute addressed to terest i n t h e de the trustee's "Urgent scribed real property LEGAL NOTICE Request Desk" either which the grantor had TRUSTEE'S NOTICE by personal delivery or had power to con O F SALE File N o . to the trustee's physivey at the time of the 7777.19997 R e f e r- cal offices (call for adexecution by grantor ence is made to that d ress) or b y fi r s t of the trust deed, to c ertain trust d e ed class, certified mail, gether with any inter made by Ray Talk r eturn r e ceipt r e est which the grantor and Shirley Talk, hus- quested, addressed to or grantor's succes b and and wife, a s the trustee's post ofsors in interest ac g rantor, t o Fir s t fice box address set quired after the execu American Title Insur- forth in t his n otice. tion of the trust deed, ance Company, as Due to potential conto satisfy the forego trustee, in favor of flicts with federal law, ing oblig a t ions Mortgage Associates, persons having no thereby secured and Inc., as beneficiary, record legal or equit he costs an d e x dated 02/07/02, re- table interest in the penses of sale, includ corded 02/1 4/02, in subject property will ing a re a sonable the mortgage records only receive informacharge by the trustee. of Deschutes County, tion concerning the Notice is further given Oregon, as lender's estimated or that for reinstatement 2002-09081 and sub- actual bid. Lender bid or payoff quotes re sequently assigned to i nformation is a l s o quested pursuant to U.S. Bank National available a t the O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Association, as trustee's web s ite, 86.789 must be timely Trustee, successor in www.northwestinterest to Bank One, trustee.com. Notice is communicated in a written request that National Association, further given that any c omplies with t h at as Trustee for Credit person named in ORS statute addressed to Suisse First Boston 86.778 has the right, the trustee's "Urgent Mortgage Securities at any time prior to Request Desk" either Corp. CSFB M o rt- five days before the by personal delivery gage-Backed date last set for the to the trustee's physi Pass-Through Certifi- s ale, to h av e t h is cal offices (call for ad cates, Series 2002-26 foreclosure proceedd ress) or b y fi r st by Assignment reing dismissed and the class, certified mail, corded as trust deed reinstated r eturn r e ceipt r e 2012-02055, covering b y payment to t he quested, addressed to t he f o llowing d e - beneficiary of the enthe trustee's post of scribed real property tire amount then due fice box address set situated in said county (other than such porforth in this notice. and state, to wit: Lot 7 tion of the principal as Due to potential con in Block 52 of Oregon would not then be due flicts with federal law, Water W o nderland, had no default ocUnit 2 , D e s chutes curred) and by curing persons having no record legal or equi County, Ore g o n. any o t he r d e f ault PROPERTY AD- complained of herein table interest in the subject property will DRESS: 17335 Mer- that is capable of beonly receive informa ganser Drive Bend, ing cured by tendertion concerning the OR 97707 Both the ing the performance required under t he lender's estimated or beneficiary and t he
LEGAL NOTICE pense, costs, trustee's TRUSTEE'S NOTICE fees and a ttorneys O F SALE File N o . fees incurred herein 7 042.14482 Re f e r by reason of said de- ence is made to that fault; any further sums c ertain t rust d e e d
advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and i ts inte r est therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if a p plicable. W HEREFORE, n o tice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on February 18, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the i nterest in t h e d e LEGAL NOTICE scribed real property TRUSTEE'S NOTICE which the grantor had OF SALE File No. or had power to con7777.00315 R e f e r- vey at the time of the ence is made to that execution by grantor c ertain t rust d e e d of the trust deed, tomade by Keith D. Ol- gether with any interson and Marilee A. est which the grantor Olson, husband and or grantor's succeswife, as grantor, to sors in interest acWestern Title and Es- quired after the excrow, as trustee, in ecution of the trust favor of M o rtgage deed, to satisfy the Electronic R egistra- foregoing obligations tion Systems, Inc., as thereby secured and nominee for Green- t he costs and e x Point Mort g age penses of sale, inFunding, Inc., it's suc- cluding a reasonable cessors and assigns, charge by the trustee. as beneficiary, dated Notice is further given 03/20/03, r e corded that for reinstatement 03/25/03, in the mort- or payoff quotes regage records of DE- quested pursuant to SCHUTES C o unty, O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Oregon, as 86.789 must be timely 2003-19480 and sub- communicated in a sequently assigned to written request that Wells Fargo Bank, c omplies with t h a t N.A. DBA Amerca's statute addressed to Servicing Company the trustee's "Urgent by Assignment reRequest Desk" either corded as by personal delivery 2012-21567, covering to the trustee's physit he f o llowing d e - cal offices (call for adscribed real property d ress) or b y fi r st situated in said county class, certified mail, and state, to wit: That r eturn r eceipt r e portion of the North- quested, addressed to east Quarter of the the trustee's post ofSoutheast Quarter of fice box address set Section 4, Township forth in this notice. 15 South, Range 13 Due to potential conE ast o f t h e Wi l - flicts with federal law, lamette Meridian, de- persons having no scribed as f o llows: record legal or equiC ommencing at a table interest in the point on the East line subject property will of said NE1/4 SEt/4, only receive informawhich said point is at tion concerning the a distance of 680 feet lender's estimated or measured Northerly actual bid. Lender bid along said East line i nformation is a l s o from the Southeast available a t the corner of said NE1/4 trustee's web s ite, SE1/4; Thence from www.northwestsaid point North along trustee.com. Notice is said East line of said further given that any N Et/4 SE1/4 to t he person named in ORS Northeast corner of 86.778 has the right, s aid NEt/ 4 S E t / 4 ; at any time prior to Thence Wes t erly five days before the along the North line of date last set for the said NEt/4 SE1/4 to s ale, to h av e t h is the East line of the foreclosure proceedright-of-way of the ca- ing dismissed and the nal of the Central Or- trust deed reinstated egon Irrigation Dis- b y payment to t h e trict; Thence beneficiary of the enSoutherly along said tire amount then due E ast line o f sa i d (other than such porright-of-way to its in- tion of the principal as tersection with a line would not then be due passing through the had no default ocpoint of commencing curred) and by curing and parallel with the any o t he r d e f ault S outh line o f s a i d complained of herein NE1/4 SEt/4; Thence that is capable of beEasterly along said ing cured by tenderline passing through ing the performance t he point o f c o m - required under t he mencing and parallel o bligation o r tr u s t with the South line of deed, and in addition said NEt/4 SE1/4 to to paying said sums the Point of Begin- or tendering the perning. PR O PERTY formance necessary ADDRESS: 2232 to cure the default, by N orthwest Cana l paying all costs and Boulevard Redmond, expenses actually inOR 97756 Both the curred in enforcing the b eneficiary and t he obligation and trust trustee have elected deed, together with to sell the real prop- trustee's and erty to satisfy the obli- a ttorney's fees n ot gations secured by exceeding the the trust deed and a amounts provided by notice of default has said OR S 8 6 .778. been recorded pursu- Requests from perant to O regon Resons named in ORS vlsed Statutes 86.778 for reinstate86.752(3); the default ment quotes received for which the foreclo- less than six d ays s ure i s m a d e i s prior to the date set grantor's failure to pay for the trustee's sale when due the follow- will be honored only at ing sums: monthly the discretion of the payments of $837.24 beneficiary or if rebeginning 04/01/12, quired by the terms of monthly payment of the loan documents. $91 4.16 b e ginning In construing this no10/1/2012; plus prior tice, the singular inaccrued late charges cludes the plural, the of $576.72; plus ad- word "grantor" invances of $1,612.00; cludes any successor together with title exi n interest t o t h e pense, costs, trustee's grantor as well as any fees and attorney's other person owing an fees incurred herein obligation, the perforby reason of said de- mance of which is sefault; any further sums cured by said trust advanced by the ben- deed, and the words eficiary for the protec- "trustee" and "benefition of the above de- ciary" include their rescribed real property spective successors and i ts inte r est in interest, if any. The therein; and prepay- trustee's rules of aucment penalties/premi- tion may be accessed ww w . northwestums, if applicable. By at reason of said default trustee.com and are incorporated by this the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s reference. You may owing on the obliga- also access sale station secured by the tus a t ww w .northtrust deed immedi- westtrustee.com and ately due and pay- www. USA-Forecloable, said sums being sure.com. For further the following, to wit: information, p l ease $98,463.25 with inter- contact: Kathy Tagest thereon at the rate gart Northwest of 6.375 percent per Trustee Services, Inc. annum beg i nning P.O. Box 997 Belle03/01/1 2; plus prior vue, WA 98009-0997 accrued late charges 425-586-1900 Olson, of $576.72; plus ad- Marilee A. and Keith vances of $1,612.00; D. (TS¹ 7777.00315) together with title ex- 1002.273909-File No.
o bligation o r tr u st deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.778 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if r equired by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at ww w . northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale sta