Bulletin Daily Paper 12-18-14

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Serving Central Oregon since190375 $

THURSDAY December18,2014

IN HEALTH:LOSINGWEIGHTBYFINDING THEFOODSTHATWILL FILLYOUUP

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Reservation coal plant

— In the FourCorners, finding a balance betweenenergy jobs and the environment.AS

$4qr/i

e

BEND

iceviews,noS i er S Council Students have rave reviews retoo s of new Warm Springs campus water rates

Blending traditionsWhen Christmas andHanukkah collide.Al

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

The Bend City Council on

Wednesdaynight changed

Kids' cartoons —Cuteand

how it will calculate water and sewer rates, attempting

cuddly they aren't — a tonguein-cheek study finds more death than in adult dramas.A3

to more closely align residents' andbusinesses'uses with the fees they pay. The change is not intended to increase revenue or

Deschutes deputyDADan Reesor is recovering from his liver transplant and speaks to donors via Skype.B1

connected to the rate raise

approvedearlierthisyear, but instead aims to reward those who conserve water

and more equitably distribute the cost of maintaining the system by shifting costs to those who inflict the most

And aWebexclusiveThe federal governmentfaces an aging workforce andstruggles to attractyoung employees. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras

wear and tear. As a result, in addition to a monthly fee,

the city will begin charging for all the water a customer uses, eliminating the cur-

rent policy of not charging

EDITOR'SCHOICE

Got a drone under the tree? Expect safety rules

for the first 400 cubic feet Joe Kline i The Bulletin

Kindergartners swing during recess Tuesday morning atWarmSprings K-8 Academy. The newschool opened this fall, replacing the aging K-5 WarmSpring Elementary School. It also draws students who live on the reservation but attended Jefferson County Middle School.

WASHINGTON — If

you find a drone under the Christmas tree next week,

it may also come with a list of U.S. government guidelines for safe flying and even software to keep the device away from airports. Sales of the small,

unmanned air craftare soaring this holiday season, prompting fears that first-time users could accidentally crash them into people, buildings or even aircraft. Retailers, including Amazon.com,aretaking steps to educate buyers of the high-tech toys.

"Is this rate structure perfect, no, I don't think it's

Thirteen-year-old Ellikaya Lopez was skeptical when she learned the Jefferson County School District was building a new school in Warm Springs. "At first I thought it was stupid, all

ing. Before the school opened, its staff

these res dogs come down here," El- worked on developing a new curriculum, likaya said, referencing the feral dogs one feature of which employs self-paced who run around the area. "And I didn't digital lessons that use the building's think it made sense to go to middle numerous computers. The school also school in Madras for two years and then worked to better integrate tribal services, come here for one and then graduate." placing a nurse in the building and openThe Warm Springs K-8 Academy ing a community room to tribe members. opened this fall, replacing the aging K-5 Now that the 650-student academy Warm Springs Elementary School and is approaching its first winter break, drawing in students, such as Ellikaya, Ellikaya concedes, "It's been pretty

thesesemis passed by.Thatwa sscary." Thalia Culpus, an eighth-grader, likes

United States.

Atlanta Hobby has seen business jump to about $20 million in annual sales, a

10-fold increase from five years ago that prompted Whitney to start a

drone-training school. The explosion in sales is worrying some airline pilots and even drone advocates, who said that newly minted unmanned aircraft operators don't understand the risks.

"The morefrequentthe operations of these un-

manned aircraft, the higher the risk factor is, especially as folks explore the edges of the envelope," said Sean Cassidy, the national safety coordinator for the Air Line Pilots Association,

the largest pilots union in North America.

SeeDrones/A6

perfect, but it gets us far enough down the road in encouraging conservation and fairness, two reallybig keys in my mind," Councilor Mark Capell said. SeeCouncil/A7

how every classroom has windows, which wasn't the case at the old school.

Even more, Ellikaya added, the view from a spot high up above the Deschutes River is a major improvement. "You look out and you can see the track, football field and then this big ol'

mountain," she said. "I like that." Josiah Spino, a seventh-grader, notwho live on the reservation but attended awesome." ed the playground is a bit smaller, but Jefferson County Middle School. The Part of the awesomeness comes from definitely more hospitable to his favorite $21.4 million project, funded evenly by the relative lack of spiders. recess activity — parkour, a sport that "There were a lot in the old school," treats jungle gyms more like gymnastic the Jefferson County School District and the Confederated Tribes of Warm said Patty Speakthunder, a sixth-grad- equipment or a wheel-less skatepark. Springs, isn't only about a new build- er. "Also it was so close to the road, all SeeSchool/A7

ANALYSIS

Cuba, U.S. still face challenges By Tracy Wilkinson Los Angeles Times

MEXICO CITY — It was

"I do not want to be

flying in my airplane and be run into by one of these things," said Cliff Whitney, a private pilot and owner of Atlanta Hobby in Cumming, Georgia, one of the largestindependentsuppliers of civilian drones in the

new"extra sttength charge" aimed atbusinesses that release hard-to-treat wastewater into the sewer system,

such as abrewery.

By Tyler LeedseThe Bulletin

By Alan Levin Bloomberg News

beyondthe initial flat fee. The city will also create a

Hot dogs onwheels turn heads in Kabul

a handshake a year ago at Nelson Mandela's funeral, and this week it was a long phone call. President Barack

Obama and his Cuban By Shashank Bengali

and his cousin and business

Los Angeles Times

partner, Abdullah Karim,

KABUL, Afghanistan — Hot

dogs, even the non-pork variety, are rare in Afghanistan. So it was particularly unusual when five vehicles painted to look like giant frankfurterswith bright yellow mustard zigzags instead of racing stripes

lnslde

counterpart,

RaulCastro, • More have takenthe on Cuba, strongest steps A4.5, C~ ever toward ending more

launched Lazeez, which means "delicious," hawking hot dogs, burgers and chicken sandwiches out of the back of five customized three-wheelers outfitted with hot plates

than half a century of an-

and mini deep-fryers. On a crisp fall morning,

their nations.

tagonist relations between

— popped up on the streets of

Noori visited one of his trucks,

The decision to reopen diplomatic ties — negotiat-

the capital city this year. The food-truck craze has

parked on a busy thorough-

ed between the two leaders

fare in central Kabuh The

with pushes from Canada,

made it all the way to Kabul.

hot-dog-on-wheels, with a yellowish sesame-seed bun for a

a Vatican led by a Latin

Naveed Noori, a 25-year-old IT worker and university student, introduced Afghanistan

to food trucks after studying the trend online and in Toronto, where his wife and baby daughter live. In May, Noori

roof, stood out in a sea of drab

sedans, sagging minibuses, carts pulled by the striving poor and gleaming SUVs belonging to the very rich. SeeKabul /A6

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 42, Low 31 Page BS

ShashankBengali/Los Angeles Times

A customer collects his order at a food truck run by the company

Lazeez in Kabul, Afghanistan. The cart serves up hotdogs, burgers and chicken sandwiches in Afghanistan's capital.

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

American pope, and others — could lead to a remarkable and historic shift in hemispheric dynamics.

C7-8 Comics/Puzzles D3-4 Health E1-8 Obituaries 82 Crosswords D 4 H o roscope E8 Sports D1-6 Dear Abby E8 Lo cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

85 C1-6 E8

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 352,

3e pages, 5 sections

But the thaw will not

come overnight. SeeCuba/A4

Q I/i/e userecyclednewsprint

': lllllllll III o

8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

How to reachUs TalidanmaSSaCre —Pakistan's army and intelligence chiefs traveled to Afghanistan onWednesday to seekhelp locating the Pakistani Taliban commanders responsible for the massacre of students at a school in Peshawar thedaybefore, officials said. The trip, by Gen.RaheelSharif and Lt. Gen. Rizwan Akhtar, the headof the Inter-Services Intelligence spyagency, wasdescribed by officials of both countries as an effort to find common ground. After the school attack, in which132 of the148 people killed bya group of Taliban gunmenwere young students, officials were quick to blame Afghan-based elements of the Pakistani Taliban.

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NeW YOrk fraCkiilg dall —Handing environmentalists a breakthrough victory, NewYork plans to prohibit fracking for natural gas because of what regulators say are its unexplored health risks and dubious economic benefits. NewYork, which overlies part of the gas-rich Marcellus Shale formation that has led to adrilling boom in Pennsylva niaandothernearbystates,hasbannedshalegasdevelopment since 2008, whenthestate began an environmental review of the drilling technique also known ashydraulic fracturing. Wednesday's announcement, though not final, means aban isall but etched in stone. "Never before has astate with proven gas reserves banned fracking," said DeborahGoldberg, anattorney with Earthjustice, adding that the decision "will give courage to elected leaders throughout the country and world: Fracking is too dangerous andmust not continue." Industry and its supporters expressed outrage at thedecision.

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Fed Patient' aPPrOaCh — TheFederal Reserveis edging

NEW YORK — Under the threat of terrorist attacks from hackers and with the nation's

extremely disappointed by this may make an announcement outcome." in the near future. The official Seemingly putting to rest spoke on condition of anonym- anyhope of a delayedtheatrical ity because the official was not release or a video-on-demand

largest multiplex chains pull-

authorized to openly discuss an

release, Sony Pictures spokes-

ongoing criminal case. Sony said it was canceling took the unprecedented step of "The Interview" release "in canceling the Dec. 25 release of light of the decision by the mathe Seth Rogen comedy "The jority of our exhibitors not to

woman Jean Guerin later added: "Sony Pictures has no fur-

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MeningitiS deathS —Two executives of a Massachusetts compounding pharmacywerecharged Wednesday with racketeering and murder in the production of tainted drugs that killed 64 people and sickened hundreds with fungal meningitis in 2012. TheU.S.attorney's office in Boston chargedBarry J. Cadden, anowner of New England Compounding Center Inc. andthe headpharmacist, and Glenn A. Chin, asupervisory pharmacist, with 25 acts of second-degree murder in sevenstates. "Senior NECCpharmacists knew that, despite the filthy conditions at NECC, the drugs that they made were not property tested for sterility," said CarmenOrtiz, the U.S. attorney for Massachusetts.

David Goidman/The Associated Press

A poster for the movie "The Interview" is carried away by a worker Wednesday after being pulled from a display case at a Carmike Cinemas movie theater in Atlanta.

hacking to North Korea and

ing the film from their screens, Sony Pictures Entertainment

Interview." The cancellat ion announced

show the film." The studio said it respected and shared in the

Wednesday was a startling blow to the Hollywood studio

exhibitors' concerns. "We are deeply saddened at that has been shaken by hack- thisbrazen effort to suppress er leaks and intimidations over the distribution of a movie, the last several weeks by an and in the process do damage anonymous group calling itself to ourcompany, our employGuardians of Peace. ees, and the American public,"

ther release plans for the film."

EarlierWednesday, Regal Cinemas, AMC Entertainment and Cinemark Theatres — the

COIOmbian redelS CeaSe-fire —Colombia's largest rebel

three top theater chains in

group announced anindefinite, unilateral cease-fire Wednesday, saying guerrillas will refrain from staging attacks so long asthey aren't targeted by the U.S.-backed military. TheRevolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia madethe announcement in Cubaat the endof another round of peace talks aimed at ending Latin America's oldest insurgency. In astatement signed by the FARC'sruling Secretariat, the rebels expressed hopethat the cease-fire beginning at midnight Dec. 20 would "transform into an armistice," and said it would seek the support of several Latin American nations andthe international Red Cross to verify its enforcement.

North America — announced

that they were postponing any showings of "The Interview." The comedy, about a TV host

(James Franco) and producer (Rogen) tasked by the CIA to assassinate North Korea's Kim

Jong Un (played by Randall by our filmmakers and their Park), has inflamed North Kohave now connected the Sony right to free expression and are rea for parodying its leader. A U.S. official said Wednesday that federal investigators

closer to raising interest rates from record lows given astrengthening U.S. economy. But it will be "patient" in deciding when to doso. Thatwas themessagesentWednesdayastheFedendedameeting amid heightened expectation about a forthcoming rate increase. At a news conference afterward, Chair JanetYellen said sheforesaw no rate hike in the first quarter of 2015. TheFedsaid in astatement that a"patient" approach to raising rates is consistent with its previous guidance that it would keepits key rate near zero for a "considerable time." Yellen said the strength of U.S.economic data andthe level of inflation, not a calendar date, will dictate when it raises rates. At a time of global economic turmoil and collapsing oil prices, she stressed that the Fedwas making no policy changes.

read the statement. "We stand

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

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By Jeffrey Collins

ings and Stinney's confession.

The Associated Press

Most of the evidence from the

COLUMBIA, S.C. — More than 70 years after South Car-

original trial was gone and almost all the witnesses were dead.

olina sent a 14-year-old black boy to the electric chair in the It took Mullen nearly four killings of two white girls in a times as long to issue her ruling segregated mill town, a judge as it took in 1944 to go from arthrew out the conviction, say- rest to execution. ing the state committed a great Stinney's case has long been injustice. whispered in civil rights cirdes George Stinney was arrest- in South Carolina as an examed, convicted of murder in a ple of how a black person could one-day trial and executed in be railroaded by a justice sys1944 — all in the span of about tem during the Jim Crow era three months and without an where the investigators, proseappeal. The speed in which the cutors and juries were all white. state meted out justice against The case received renewed the youngest person executed attentionbecause ofa crusade in the United States in the 20th

by textile inspector and school

century was shocking and extremely unfair, Circuit Judge Carmen Mullen wrote in her ruling Wednesday.

board member GeorgeFrierson. Armed with a binder full

"I can think of no greater in-

justice," Mullen wrote. The girls, ages 7 and 11,were beaten badly in the head with

• •

' is 0

of newspaperartides and other

evidence, he and a law firm believed the teen represented everything that was wrong with South Carolina during the era of segregation.

an iron railroad spike in the

Frierson said he heard about

town of Alcolu in Clarendon County, about 45 miles south-

the judge's decision from a co-worker. He had to attend a school board meeting later

east of Columbia, authorities said. A search by dozens of in the day, so the news hadn't people found their bodies sev- sunk in yet. "When I get home, I'm going eral hours later. Investigators arrested Stin- to get on my knees and thank ney, saying witnesses saw him the Lord Almighty for being so with the girls as they picked good and making sure justice flowers. He was kept away prevailed," Frierson said. from his parents, and authoriAttorneys argued that Stinties later said he confessed. ney should get a new trial, but His supporters said he was a Mullen went a step further by small, frail boy so scared that vacating Stinney's conviction. he said whatever he thought Her 29-page order induded refwould make the authorities erences to the 1931 Scottsboro happy. They said there was no Boys case in Alabama, where physical evidence linking him nine black teens were convictto the deaths. His executioners ed of raping two white women. noted the electric chair straps Eight of them were sentenced didn't fit him, and an electrode todeath. was too big for his leg. The convictions were evenDuring a two-day hearing tually overturned before the in January, Mullen heard from teens went to the death chamStinney's surviving brother ber and the charges were and sisters, someone involved dropped. Mullen noted Stinney in the search and experts who did not even get the considerquestioned the autopsy find- ation of an appeal.

e eason i in

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Dec.18, the 352nd day of 2014.There are 13 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

HAPPENINGS European leaders will meet in Brussels amid growing indications that pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainians could meet next weekfor talks under European auspices.

HISTORY Highlight:In1944, in a pair of related rulings, the U.S.Supreme Court, in Korematsu v. United States, upheld, 6-3, the government's wartime evacuation of people of Japanese descent, including U.S. citizens, from theWest Coast (the decision was limited to the exclusion policy, and did not take up the issue of internment), while in Ex parte Endo,the justices unanimously agreed that "concededly loyal" Americans of Japaneseancestry could not continue to bedetained. (Both rulings came aday after the U.S. Department of Warsaid it was lifting the internment policy.) In1865,the13th Amendment to the Constitution, abolishing slavery, was declared in effect by Secretary of State William Seward. In1892, Tchaikovsky's ballet "The Nutcracker" publicly premiered in St. Petersburg, Russia. In1912,fossil collector Charles Dawson reported to the Geological Society of London his discovery of supposed early human remains at agravel pit in Piltdown. (More than four decades later, Piltdown Man was exposed as ahoax.) In1915, President Woodrow Wilson, widowed theyear before, married Edith Bolling Galt at her Washington home. In1940,Adolf Hitler ordered secret preparations for Nazi Germany to invadethe Soviet Union. (Operation Barbarossa was launched in June1941.) In1958, the world's first communications satellite, SCORE (Signal Communication by Orbiting Relay Equipment), nicknamed "Chatterbox," was launched by the United States aboard an Atlas rocket. In1969, Britain's Houseof Lords joined the Houseof Commons in making permanent a1965 ban onthedeath penalty for murder. In1972, the United States beganheavybombing ofNorth Vietnamese targets during the Vietnam War. (Thebombardment ended 11days later.) In1992, Kim Young-sam was elected South Korea's first civilian president in three decades. Ten years ago: Theformer Iraqi general known as"Chemical Ali," Ali Hassanal-Majid, went before a tribunal of judges in the first investigative hearings of former members of Saddam Hussein's regime. (Al-Majid was executed in January 2010.) Five years ago: The infamous iron sign bearing the Nazis' cynical slogan "Arbeit Macht Frei" (Work Sets YouFree) that spanned the mainentrance to the former Auschwitz death camp in Polandwas stolen. (The sign was later recovered; six suspects in the theft were later jailed.) One year ago:A presidential advisory panel released areport recommending sweeping changes to government surveillance programs, including limiting the bulk collection of Americans' phone records by stripping the National Security Agency of its ability to store that data in its own facilities.

BIRTHDAYS Actor-producer Roger Smith is 82. Rock singer-musician Keith Richards is 71. Movie producer-director Steven Spielberg is 68. Movie reviewer Leonard Maltin is 64. Actor Ray Liotta is 59. Comedian Ron White is 58. Actor Brad Pitt is 51. Professional wrestler-turned-actor "Stone Cold" Steve Austin is 50. Country/ rap singer CowboyTroy is 44. Rapper DMX is 44.Actress Katie Holmes is 36. Singer Christina Aguilera is 34. — From wire reports

eec oes ea son sience

eaiin

Russia andUkraine-

0

Digital sound reconstruction allows researchers to listen to heartbeats that

That's all, folks: Death and mayhem in children'scartoons By Monte Morin

my advice: skip over the first

Los Angeles Times

5 minutes."

Think t here's nothing

were recorded by 19th-century physicians.

of popcornand aclassicchildren's animated film? Guess again, say Canadian researchers. When it comes to big-

By Ron Cowen

screen murder and mayhem,

Efforts to record the pattern of human heartbeats — the V

I

M

S

4 minutes and 3 seconds into

the film. (Compare that with "Tarzan," where the main character's parents are killed

by a leopard 4 minutes and 8 seconds into the movie.)

kids' animated films pack the deadliest wallop of all top-grossing films, according to a statistical survival analysis published this week

New York Times News Service

wavylines so familiar onhospital monitors — go back at least

The reason? Nemo's mother gets eaten by a barracuda

more wholesome than a tub

The authors c onducted

their research by watching 135 top-grossing North American films since 1937.

in the journal BMJ.

The films included 45 children's animated movies and

tist pressed a weighted plate against an artery, connected it

"Rather than being the 90 dramatic films for adults. innocuous form of entertain- (Children's' films that fea-

to a stylus made of a strand of

ment they are assumed to be,

tured only robots, planes or

hair, and traced the pulsations on a moving strip of paper

children's animated films cars were excluded, as the are rife with on-screen death concept of mortality for a and murder," w r ote l e ad non-living, yet anthropomorstudy author Ian Colman, an phizedcharacteris unclear, associate professor ofepide- the authors wrote.) miology at the University of The r esearchers f ound Ottawa, and his colleagues. that two-thirds of the carAmong other findings, toons depicted the death Colman and his colleagues of an important character, found that murder occurred compared with half of those three times more often in in adult dramas. top-grossing animated chilResearchers ob s e r ved d ren's films than it did i n deadly animal attacks in five comparable adult dramas. films ("A Bug's Life," "The

8

-

T

to 1854, when a German scien-

blackened by the soot of an oil

lamp. Now, using innovative digital processing techniques to turn

pictures of repeating waveforms into sounds, an artist and a sound historian have

Library and Artifact Collections of the Bakken Museum vla The New YorkTimes

The19th-century device called a sphygmograph was used to

converted that mute pattern of record pulses. An artist and a historian used digital processing lines into the rhythmic lub-dub techniques to listen again to the pulses of people who have been of a heart. And working with dead for more than a century. a slightly newer medical chart, they have resurrected in sound

the pulse of a 100-year-old 19th-century physiologist and work "needs to be in the mediFrenchman whose heart start- cinema pioneer. In 1865, Mar- cal literature." ed beating in 1769, 20 years be- ey used a new type of stethoThis fall, after the exhibit fore the French Revolution. scope in which two membranes opened, Feaster and RobleThe artist, Dario Robleto, filled with water were pressed to discovered a photographwas doing research on artifi- against a patient's chest; in- ic chart created in 1869 by a cial hearts for a conceptual art stead of attaching them to rub- French physician, Charles Ozainstallation in Houston when ber listening tubes — as Karl nam, depicting the pulse of a he met the historian, Patrick Rudolph Koenig, the inventor 100-year-old Frenchman, one Feaster, while both were on a of that type of stethoscope, Monsieur Leger, a few months fellowship at the Smithsonian had done — he connected the before his death. Feaster conInstitution in 2011. (Feaster had membranes to a recording verted the tracings into sound, already discovered a technique device. The wavy lines gen- bringing to life the pulse of a to give voice to pictorial pat- erated by the device were the man born in the 18th century. terns that were never intended earliest recorded sounds of a Robleto traces his fascinato be heard, like those on an beating heart. Feaster relied tion with the human heartbeat oscilloscope.) on software normally used to to a recording hefirstheard Together, the two scoured old play movie soundtracks — the when he was 6 or 7. Home sick medical journals, delving into same method he and his col- from school, he heard a news the history ofhow 19th-century leagues have used since 2008to report giving a toll-free number physicians recorded the pulse give voice to pictorial tracings created by NASA to hear the and heartbeat of patients and of human speech that predate sounds of space. Expecting to sounding out the information Thomas Edison's phonograph hear a communication from an in a way that had never been by 20 years. alien civilization, he asked his attempted. After digitizing Marey's re- mother to dial the number"We're really, in a certain cording, which displayed the only to be disappointed and besense, bringing these physio- amplitude of t h e h e artbeat wildered, for all he could hear logical processes back to life," changing over time, Feaster was static. said Feaster, 43. "I'm not sure edited the image into a form But he became haunted by what we stand to learn from that the film soundtrack soft- the recording, convinced he these recordings, but there is ware could convert into a WAV had missed something importa certain sense of access to file.The resurrected sounds ant. Only years later did he the pulse from hearing it that I "demonstrate that thresholds learn that the noisy passage don't think anybody would get we once thought were perma- was actually electrical recordfrom just looking at a wavy line nentbarriers to accessinghisto- ings of the heart and brain on apiece of paper." ry aresometimes more porous waves of a young writer, Ann To Dr. O.H. Frazier, a car- and malleable," said Robleto, Druyan. diac surgeon and researcher 42, the conceptual artist. In September, after years at the Texas Heart Institute in Many of the audios, along of c onversation w i t h the Houston (and a co-inventor of a with Robleto's sculptures and a rtist, Druyan came to t h e beatless artificial heart), the re- models of the artificial heart, installation. "I can't believe I was listencordings "open up a new arena are part of his new installation, "The Boundary of Life Is Qui- ing to your heart when I was a tobe studied." "The heart sounds were in- etly Crossed," on exhibit at the little boy," he told her. strumental in heart diagnoses Menil Collection in Houston During a public talk at the in the old days," Frazier said. through Jan.4. Menil,Druyan harked back to "That was when medicine was Frazier, the heart surgeon, the much older heartbeats. "I found it so satisfying, so really an art." said the exhibit reminded him Until the mid-19th century, of the French phrase "cri de gratifying," she said, "to know charting a pulse required the coeur," or cry from the heart. In that there were scientists 150 doctor to cut into an artery and the recordings,heartbeats "are yearsago who were firsttrying place a metal device or a glass crying out over a century or to figure out how to record the tube inside. There were no hu- more," he said, adding that the sounds we make." man volunteers, and studies

In fact, the parents of main

Croods," "How to Train Your

Dragon," "Finding Nemo" and "Tarzan"); gunshot slaychildren's flicks, and were ings in three films ("Bambi," five times as likely to meet "Peter Pan" and "Pocahonan untimely end than they tas"); and fatal stabbings in were in films for adults. two films ("Sleeping Beauty" "There was no evidence and "The Little Mermaid"). characters were the primary

targets of on-screen death in

to suggest these results had

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changed over time since children's literature and the 1937, when Snow W h ite's works of the brothers Grimm stepmother, the evil queen, have long featured gruesome was struck by l ightning, deaths. forced off a cliff, and crushed However, as child mortaliby a boulder while being ty rates have decreased over chased by seven vengeful the centuries, the researchdwarves," the authors wrote. ers say death has become an The analysis appeared increasingly taboo subject in BMJ's tongue-in-cheek to discuss with children. As Christmas issue this week, such, many youngsters may which has explored such be unprepared for what they topics as the on-screen tip- encounter in a G-rated Displing habits of James Bond, ney film. "Exposure to o n -screen the propensity for "idiotic" behavior in male Home sa- death and violence can be piens, and why your doctor's frightening to young chilwaiting room has such old dren and can have intense magazines. and long-lasting effects," The cartoon study, accord- authors wrote. "This might ing to authors, was inadver- be particularly problematic tently inspired by some ad- when children have not been vice Colman received from prepared, through candid a friend: "You're watching discussion with parents or 'Finding Nemo' with your caring adults, to face these children this evening? Take themes."

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

"I don't think we are going to see broadbased American investment on the island day after tomorrow."

Cuba

gone hand in hand with economic openings. The diplomatic ties announced Wednesday will in— Julia Sweig, a Council on Foreign Relations expert on Cuba evitably lead to more U.S. investment in Cuba, something desired by parties on both

Continued fromA1 C uba's government

re-

mains nervous about change — its military, especially, intent on maintaining control

over domestic developments and the opening-up of poli- and returned home. tics and the economy. The five have long been a Still, Cuba has an increas- cause celebre in Cuba, where ingly savvy newer genera- they are hailed as freedom tion, a small crop of enthu- fighters unfairly imprisoned siasticentrepreneurs and a by the U.S. Their images appressing need for access to pear on billboards all over global markets and aid that Havana and greet travelers can serve as impetus for at the c i ty's i nternational movement. airport. " When y o u 've b e e n And so, for Castro, their waiting for 55 years for return is an important vicsomething like this, this tory, one that he can parlay is huge, significant and a into positive outreach to the game-changer," said T ed U.S. without angering his Henken, a Cuba expert at government's h ard-liners,

Pablo Martinez Monsivais/The Associated Press

AlanGross,accompanied byhiswife,Judy,speaks during anews conference at his lawyer's office in Washington onWednesday. Gross was released from Cuba after five years in a Cuban prison.

Prisoner gainsfreedom

the City University of New York.

he thought impossible

At first glance, the prisoner releases that took place Wednesday benefit each country enormously and in different ways. Americans can welcome the return of

By Julie Hirschfeld Davis

Maryland. "It's good to be home," a W ASHINGTON — A l a n gaunt but cheerful Gross Gross stood up, raised his said at a news conference in New Yorh Times News Service

arms and let out a gratified

Washington. "It's the best Ha-

Alan Gross, a little-known subcontractor for th e U .S.

gasp when the pilot of the military aircraft c arrying him back from five years as a prisoner in Cuba announced Wednesday morning t hat

nukkah I'll be celebrating in a long time." Gross had lost more than 100 pounds in custody, as well

Agency for I n ternational Development who says he was distributing computers, which is illegal in Cuba.

h e had

as five teeth, most of the sight c r ossed i nto U . S. in his right eye and some mo-

airspace. "I'm free," he told his two

Cuba is receiving the last

three of five men, the socalled Cuban Five, who are regarded as heroes. The five intelligence officers were arrested in 1998 in Miami by

bility. He said he was confined in the cell — 8'/z feet by

11 feet — for up to 23 hours a phone calls from the plane, day. shortly before speaking with The bright lights were nevPresidentBarack Obama, ac- er turned off, and he thought cording to people who were about suicide, telling recent onboard the plane. visitors that he would not be It had been just hours since around to celebrate his birthGross, who spent most of the day next year. "He was very depressed, past five years in a cramped cell at a Havana military hos- and he had kind of a suipital, had received word from cide-escape plan in mind," adult daughters in separate

the FBI and convicted three

years later by a federal jury on charges of acting as illegal foreign agents and conspiring to obtain military secrets from U.S. Southern Command headquarters in Miami.

Cuba says they were in

his lawyer that he was to be

s aid Peter Kornbluh, a r e -

fact counterterrorism agents,

released.

searcher at the National Security Archive in Washington

acting to find information on

and an author of the book

exiles operating in Miami who planned to attack Cuba.

"I'll believe it when I see it," said Gross, 65, a native New Yorker who trained as a social worker and traveled the world as an independent contractor specializing in inter-

extremist anti-Castro Cuban

"Back Channel to Cuba." H e v isited

G r oss t w i c e

One of the five, Gerardo

The release of Gross, who was detained Dec. 3, 2009,

during his imprisonment. Grosspassed histime reading, talking Cuban politics and economics with cellmates and exercising, Kornbluh said

and labeled a spy, was part of

in an interview from Hava-

murder in the deaths of four

a historic thaw in Cuban-U.S.

na. Gross tried to keep up his strength by doing pullups and

pilots from a Miami-based exile organization who were shot down by Cuban fighter

national development.

Hernandez, portrayed as the group's leader and who arrived in the U.S. as an immi-

grant, was also found guilty of conspiracy to commit

r elations a n nounced b y Obama. The announcement eating jars of peanut butter did not come, however, until brought to him by officials afterGross landed safely at from the U.S. Interests SecAndrews Air Force Base in

w ere previously released after serving their sentences

-

-

~

States resolved before he

soon. "I don't think we are going

leaves," said Philip Peters,

who heads the Cuba Re- to see broad-based American search Center, a U.S.-based investment on the island day think tank. Castro makes after tomorrow," Julia Sweig, most changes according to a Council on Foreign RelaCuba's agenda and less at tions expert on Cuba, said in U.S. insistence, Peters said. a conference call. On Wednesday, Castro, R emoving t he Un it e d in an olive-green military States as the ultimate boogeyuniform, went on n ational man in Cuba and scapegoat television at midday to an- for all its troubles might force nounce the prisoner releases the Cuban government to acas part of what he called the knowledge its mishandling of whose force remains strong. possible advent of signifi- domestic policies and empower civil society, Peters said. Other f a ctors m a y b e cantly better relations with "It might force them to expushing Castro. Cuba nearly the United States. two decades ago lost its prinExtolling the virtues of amine the Cuban embargo cipal sponsor with the fall nearly 56 years of revolution, against its own people," he of the Soviet Union and was Castro nevertheless praised said. "Why don't Cubans have plunged into d evastating Obama's overture as deserv- access to Internet? Why don't economic crisis. In the early ing of "the respect and rec- they have access to what they 2000s, it found a generous ognition of our people." produce?" There had been growing ally in Venezuelan President Despite the progress, he Hugo Chavez, who supplied said, "it does not mean the expectation among experts cheap oil and helped keep basic issues have been re- on Cuba that Obama would the country afloat. Even with solved." The U.S. embargo, make a major move on reChavez's death last year, his which Cubans refer to as a storing relations with Havana successor, Nicolas Maduro, blockade, has not been lifted at some point after the U.S. has maintained the financial despite enormous damage to midterm election in Novemfriendship. the Cuban people and econo- ber and before a Pan-Ameri can summit i n A p r il . T h e But Venezuela now is in my, Castro said. "It must end," he said. oft-excluded Cuba has been its own abysmal crisis, with the fall of oil prices further Since he assumed power invited to the meeting at the inhibiting its ability to help in 2006 to take over for his insistence of the rest of Latin Cuba or any other country. ailing brother, revolutionary America, and Obama will inPerhaps more important leader Fidel Castro, Raul evitably be forced to deal with than that, however, is Cas- Castro has slowly ordered Castro there. tro's timetable. At 83, and It is unclear what, if any, important changes that ushhaving announced his plans ered in a modicum of eco- further steps the U.S. will be to step down in 2018, Cas- nomic freedom by allowing able to expect from Cuba. In tro has long insisted he was limited private enterprise fact, some experts have recwilling to free Gross and by small businesses such as ommended that the Obama open up to American diplo- restaurants, hair salons and administration act unilateralmacy, as long as the Cuban carwashes. Cubans could, ly and not be held hostage to Five were freed. Most of the after many decades of prohi- actions by the unpredictable potential Castro successors bition, buy and sell cars and Castro government. The United States has long come from the same milieu real estate. of Communist Party and More important, he loos- been the last man standing in military hierarchy that has ened the rules for travel, formally shunning Cuba. It is long ruled the island, al- eliminating a requirement the only major country withthough some have a more that Cubans obtain an exit out full diplomatic relations open world view, several an- visa. For the first time since with the island. alysts said. the early years of the revoCastro's tight-wire bal- lution, even dissidents could C A CADE H U G E ance between h a rd-liners leave and return without and reformers in his govern- punishment. ESS MOVING But Internet access, the SAEE ment has neverthreatened his power but could under- right to protest and other mine efforts at long-term freedoms remain restricted. +~ W ~ nor thwest Political liberties have not change. 20505 Robal Rd. • 541-678-7378

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

astro survive o ,an otenine t, • .scemes By Jack Gillum and Desmond Butler

Efforts to take out

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON

-

Cuban leader For

Fidel Castro, shown here in

more than half a century, the

1961, ranged from poisonous cigars to exploding

U.S. government's schemes to

overthrow the Castro government were, if not successful, always creative: the poisonous

cigars, the exploding seashell, the secret Twitter-like service

% /i 'j

seashells. The Associated Press file photo

in Cuba.

President Barack Obama said Wednesday the U.S. will re-establish diplomatic t i es

with Cuba and bring change to the longstanding trade embargo. But it was unclear if all

secretoperations would cease. Disclosures by The Associated Pressthis year revealed

how the U.S. Agency for International Development contin-

ued Washington's stealthy democracy-promotion work as some lawmakers and others

pressedfora return to normalcy with Cuba. The W h it e H o use's a n nouncement of r evived ties

came hours after American Alan Gross, a USAID contrac-

tor,was freed after serving five years in a Cuban prison for smuggling communications technology. Also on Wednesday, USAID administrator Rajiv Shah said he was

leaving his post early next year. In programsrevealedbythe AP this year, USAID secretly created a primitive social mediaprogram called ZunZuneo, staged a health workshop to recruit activists and infiltrated

Cuba's hip-hop community. Those programs were part of a campaign aimed at undermining the Castro government through the citizenry, rather than directly targeting political leaders. Yet they were

still fraught with danger and incompetence.

Following the disclosures, USAID prepared i nternal rules that would effectively

end the agency's risky undercover work in hostile countries. The AP found USAID and its contractor, Creative Associates International, had concealed their involvement

in the Cuban programs by setting up front companies, routing money through overseas

Key events inU.S.-Cndarelations Thestart: Fidel Castro's rebels took power as dictator Fulgencio Batista flees Cuba onJan1, 1959. The United States soon recognized the newgovernment. But relations began to sour as Americans criticized summary trials and executions of Batista loyalists. In 1960 Cubanationalized U.S.-owned oil refineries after they refused to process Soviet oil. Nearly all other U.S. businesses were expropriated soon afterward. Expanding crises:TheU.S.declared anembargoonmostexports to Cuba inOctober1960 and brokediplomatic relations in January1961. Threemonths later Castro declared Cubaa socialist state — just a daybefore the doomedU.S.-sponsored Bay of Pigs invasion meant to topple Castro. Meanwhile, U.S.agents organized repeated efforts to assassinate theCubanleader. Armageddon averted: In October1962, a U.S.blockadeforced removal of Soviet nuclear missiles from Cuba after a standoff brought the world near nuclear war. President John F.Kennedy agreed privately not to invadeCuba. Foiledrapprochement:President Jimmy Carter tried to normalize relations with Cubashortly after taking office in 1977, re-establishing diplomatic missions andnegotiating releaseof thousands of prisoners. But conflicts over Cuba's military mission in Africa, tension caused by a flood of Cuban refugees in 1980 and the election of Ronald Reaganendedthe rapprochement. Cubastands alone: The1991 collapse of the Soviet Union devastated the Cubaneconomy, but the country limped along, first under Fidel andthen, after he falls ill in 2006, under his brother Raul, head of theCubanmilitary. Clashes with exiles: Cuba's hostile relations with manyFlorida-based migrants repeatedly led to confrontation. In1996, Cuban jets shot down two planesoperated bythe Brothers to the Rescue group dedicated to saving migrants found atsea,killing four. In 1999, U.S.-based relatives fought to keepElianGonzalez, rescued at sea at age 5after his mother died. U.S. officials finally wrenched him awayandsent him back to his father in Cuba in2000. Prisoners:The U.S. arrested five Cubanspies in1998 and Cuba mounted an international campaign to free them,saying they were defending the island against U.S.-based terror attempts. In December 2009, Cubaarrested USAID contractor Alan Gross, accusing him of subversion. That stifled incipient efforts to improve U.S.-Cuba ties under President BarackObama. Breakthrough: Obama and RaulCastroannouncedtheyarerestoring diplomatic ties andexchanging prisoners, including Gross and the remaining three members of CubanFivespy ring.

(s I

A

A •

o

— Tffe Associated Press •

bank transactions and fash-

ioning elaborate cover stories. The aid agency's recent secret missions were the latest in a series of efforts by the U.S. government — from

presidents John F. Kennedy to Obama — that began shortly after Fidel Castro's rise to

power in 1959. Washington broke diplomatic relations two years later, around the time

the doomed CIA-led Bay of Pigs invasion was launched to topple the new leader.

The U.S. government was not deterred. The CIA considered a plan to kill Castro by exploding an exotic seashell where he went diving, but it was deemed impractical. An-

other scheme, in 1960, was designed to inject poison into Castro's favorite cigars, but nothing came of that, either. In more recent times, Gross

— using backpacks and carry-on bags — smuggled secret

communications e q uipment into Cuba to try to build an

however, that they supported

the aid agency's efforts, notuncensoredInternet network ing Cuba's human rights repurportedly for the island's cord and its repression against small Jewish community. He dissidents. was arrested, convicted and Congress directed USAID declared a spy by Cuban Pres- recently not to do work in poident Raul Castro. litically repressive countries USAID's recent Cuba pro- unless the agency can execute grams, although less dan- it with its own staff, and withgerousthan some past mis- out extensive secrecy. In any adventures, received sharp event, any work by USAID in criticism this year from some Cuba is illegal under Cuban U.S. lawmakers who called law. them "reckless," "boneheadO n W e d nesday, W h i t e ed" and "downright irrespon- House Press Secretary Josh sible." Cuban artists swept up Earnest said the administrain theprogram were detained tion would continue the deor interrogated by Cuban au- mocracy initiatives in Cuba thorities. The secret U.S. hip- that the Castro government hop operation backfired after has complained about. "USCuban authorities found that AID programs that have been an independent music festival in place and that have drawn — one of the largest on the is- the criticism of the Cuban reland — was really backed by gime will continue even after the Obama administration. Dr. Shah transitions out of his Others in Congress said, current job," he said.

4

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Legal Cuban cigars? Not so fast By Jessica Contrera WASHINGTON -

sellers. Cigar enthusiasts have long speeches about their reajacket says. soning on this at the ready: A sweater-vested man raises Nicaragua, the Dominican his eyebrows. Republic and elsewhere have "The price!" improved the quality of their S togies were not a t t h e cigars to compete, and now center of President Barack they are just as good or better. Obama's announcement that You can buy a box of Cubans, the United States will be nor- and some of them will always malizing relations with Cuba fall apart. There are so many after half a century of re- fake Cuban cigars out there, strictions. But it's rare to hear you might not even be getting "commerce" and "Cuba," with- the real thing. out the mention of the coveted Oh and, "the price!" "There'sno realmystique or product. They say that for as long magic. But the novices will buy as Cuban cigars have been into that," said Rob Schmidt, banned, they have been smug- who was enjoying his cigar gled from countries where it is at the famed smoking patio at legal to buy them. Wrappers Morton's Steakhouse. He gets are slid off, cigars are hidden his cigars specially made in in luggage, friends know a guy Nicaragua and shipped to him who knows a guy. from a supplier in Chicago. That's how they came to "There will be a rush to get understand what's behind the them at first. But when the hype of smoking a Cuban. mystery is gone, I don't know If the U.S. opens its doors if they will still compete," to a flood of Cuban cigars said Bob Materazzi, owner of — which it hasn't yet — that Shelly's Back Room, "D.C.'s doesn't mean those will be top Civilized Cigar Tavern." suit and bow tie answers. "How it's rolled," a leather

The Washington Post

"Have

you ever had something that you knew you weren't allowed to have'? That's how good it is. That's a Cuban." They could already smell them — the Cohibas, the Upmanns, the Montecristo No. 2s — or maybe that was the smell

of the cigars already in their hands. All around Washington on Wednesday, the regular cigar smokers were on their lunch breaks and afternoon breaks and l eft-work-early breaks, in their favorite steakhouses and cigar shops, smoking like always, but talking about something new. Cuban cigars might be easier to get their hands on soon.

"What's the one thing that's

most notable about a Cuban?"

a clerk at JR Cigars in Washington was asking the dozen men standing in an aisle packed with cigars on both sides. "The taste," a customer in a

4

BLOG

••s•

A5


A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

Kabul

The FAA prohibits hobbyists from guiding a drone by video images, insisting they be flown only within line of sight. Yet such video equipment is widely available and marketed to drone buyers. Long-range radio links, which allow drones to fly far from a user's view, are also available.

supermarkets and restaurants brand they liked. Custom-printed menus, napdogs aren't sold here. The cous- kins and other paper goods insbriefly considered rebrand- are also transported overland ing the humble sausage for Af- from Pakistan, as are the halal ghans but decided in the end to chicken hot dogs. (Beef franks keep its name. are available at one high-end "A hot dog is a hot dog," said grocery store in Kabul; pork Karim,30. products are forbidden in the Battle-scarred Kabul has not Islamic nation.) traditionally been hospitable to The deliveries from Pakistartups. Entrepreneurs com- stan are usually swift: If Noori plain about corrupt authorities, calls in an order by noon, the customs restrictions, copycat hot dogs arrive by 9 p.m. that competitors and a poor supply day, shipped through a border chain. But the Lazeez trucks crossing in the Pakistani city of are among several small West- Lahore. ern-style businesses that have The rest of the food, includrecently brought new consum- ing more than 3,000 chicken er experiences to the city, in- patties and 7,000 samosas each cluding a paintball park, a fro- week, is cooked at their rented zen yogurt shop and a bowling offices, a small bungalow with alley. a second-story kitchen overNoori's family fled Afghan- looking a courtyard where the istan when the Taliban came trucks are parked overnight. to power in the 1990s, and he The cousins have plans to spent most of his childhood in double their fleet to 10 trucks, launch a home delivery service Pakistan before returning to Kabul in 2007. Here, he reunit- andproducetheir firstvideo ad. ed with Karim, whose father For now, Noori said, they sell owns an electronics workshop, about $450 in food every day, and the two began testing con- enough to turn a small monthly cepts for a mobilebusiness. profit but far from recovering that cater to expatriates, hot

Continued from A1 Several cars came to a

halt, the drivers peering with puzzled expressions as other motorists swerved

and honked. The truck driver, who doubles as cook, had donned a hair net and plas-

tic gloves and was grilling burgersas smoke billowed from an exhaust fitted to the

roof. " People don't

k n ow

what exactly this is," Noori

said. "At first some people thought it was a new kind of rickshaw. We had to say, 'No, this isn't for passengers."' Afghans have no problem buying food from stationary vehicles. Wooden carts

piled high with ripe bananas and plump pomegranates sit on seemingly every corner in

K a bul. Bolani,

a potato-stuffed flatbread served with yogurt sauce, is a cheap and popular street snack. But dishing up a f ull meal — Lazeez also sells

Brian Mark Peterson/The Minneapolis Star Tribune via The Associated Press file photo

The nation's largest drone makers say sales are strong as new types of unmanned aerial vehicles

With an initial investment

become available for the holiday season. "It's out of control," said Patrick Egan, a website editor who

advocates for expanded permission for drone flights and clearer FAA rules. "I was at the grocery store and you can buy a drone," he said. "Everybody's selling them now. It's going to get weird."

the cooks pack the food in

Drones

The drone manufacturers and some retailers such as

Continued from A1

Whitney'scompany have be-

link to a hobby group's safety guide. Still, in some cases flight

The Federal Aviation Administration reported drone

gun efforts to better educate

limits can be overridden and

last month, showing incidents had grown to more than 40

The latest versions of DJI's Phantom, which sells for as

For example, the FAA says

wrappers and paper bags printed with t h e L a zeez logo. Metal trash cans are

affixed to each truck to discourage patrons from adding to the garbage that clogs roadside sewers. A black sedan carrymg five young medical students screeched to a stop in front of the truck. Mohammed

users and to use technology to they don't always match up with the FAA's restrictions. safety cases for the first time limit dangerous flights. per month.

little as $600, includes soft-

Just in November, a drone struck and injured a woman

ware automatically preventing flights within 1.5 miles

drones shouldn't be flown within five miles of an airport without permission from

agency controllers.

a small copter flown at a TGI

Enthusiasm over the new D J I ' s devices has shown up in the

w orld, according t o

Fridays restaurant in New York cut the nose of a news photographer. In September, a man was arrested and charged with flying a drone

website. Parrot's new Bebop Drone and other company models can't be flown more than 400 feet above the ground, Pe-

within 50 feet of a New York

ter George, vice president of

Police Department helicopter, sales and marketing in North and an airline pilot report- America, said in an interview. ed a flight into New York's LaGuardia Airport almost hit

a drone.

Call Jerry Gilmaur ~NMLS¹ 124521)

surveyed the menu, finally orderingfive chicken sand-

halls of Congress, even with growing controversy over safety and privacy posed by the devices. "I've got a quad-copter on my Christmas list as I suspect quite a few people do," Rep-

wiches. The bill came to

resentative Blake Farenthold,

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the middle class, and as Idris bit into his sandwich he

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"It's my first time here," he said. "I didn't know what

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Amazon's Drone Store in-

cludes instructions on how to "Fly Responsibly," including a

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Idris, 20, stepped out and

at a Florida antique show, and of major airports around the

their initial investment.

Rohit Shuja was unemployed of $70,000, they bought five of the motorized local rickshaws and had never cooked before he known as zaranj and spent the appliedto work forLazeez.He nextyear retrofittingthem with now grills chicken and works mobile kitchens, tryingto make the fryer like a pro. The biggest them dirt-proof. They focused challenge, he said, is dealing on the details, inviting friends with police officers who hassle to taste-test multiple burger rec- him about parking. "We give them a burger or ipesand ketchup packets they purchased from Pakistanwhen two," Noori said, "and they go they couldn't find an Afghan away."

fries,samosas, salads and drinks — on Kabul's smogchoked boulevards is different. To promote cleanliness,

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cination. Apart from a few

"It's out of c ontrol," said

Patrick Egan, an editor at the website sUASNEWS.com who has mostly been on the

other side, pushing the FAA to expand permission for drone flights while crafting clearer rules. "I was at the grocery store

I

and you can buy a drone," he said. "Everybody's selling them now. It's going to get

• s

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into the market, and Amazon has even set up a Drone Store. While th e F A A p e r m its

hobbyists to fly drones for fun, the equipment being sold goes far beyond the agency's parameters. The FAA p r o hibits hob-

byists from guiding a drone by video images, insisting they be flown only within line of sight. Yet such video equipment is widely available and marketed to drone buyers. Long-range radio links, which allow drones to fly far from a user's view, are also available. Three of the largest drone

makers, closely held SZ DJI Technology Co., France's Parrot SA and Berkeley, Califor-

nia-based 3D Robotics Inc., said sales are strong as new models arrive for th e h oli-

day-buying season.

Revenue at DJI, the lead-

ing drone manufacturer, has grown by a factor of three to five times per year since 2009, said M i c hael P erry,

the company's Hong Kongbased spokesman. While he wouldn't provide specific numbers, the South China Morning Post reported the

company had sales of $131 million in 2013. Colin Guinn, 3D Robotics'

senior vice president for sales and marketing and a former p artner w i t h D J I ' s N o r t h American unit, said the atten-

tion drones are getting this

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Amazon is selling more than 10,000 drones a month, according to t w o i n d ustry

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

School

e r istmasi ication o anu a By Michelle Boorstein Is there anything un-Jewish

The Star of David, a Jewish

about a snowflake'? So goes the theological mulling for many U.S. Jews in December, when the joyful

icon, has six points. "Or if they see red and green they'll run the other way, they

can't relate to it; it's an enigma

but minor festival of Hanuk-

kah collides with Christmas, turning it into by far the biggest-selling Jewish holiday on the calendar. Buying means deciding. In

to them," she said. "They relate to the dreidel, the Jewish star."

• 0

On theotherhand,atop Amazon holiday seller for the past few years is called the "Hanukkah Tree Topper," which is

• •

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Wa etaa ssastast ~ 'Sa alMISSk® sstkktte sstkstoak I~ N wo

this case: What kind of Jew

are you? The kind that sticks to traditional blue and silver

a six-point star meant to top a Christmas tree.

'Td never use his product

kWik

Hanukkah toys and decora-

Manischewitz Co. via The Washington Post

"Christmasification" of Hanukkah has been fueled in part by the growth of interfaith families and the ease of selling products

tions, or meanders off into Christmukkah, where greeting cards blend Stars of David with snowmen and homes are

online. Manischewitz Co. began selling a gingerbread cookie kit

decorated with strings of white

because we wouldn't get a tree," Hoffman said of Morri Chowaiki, the Jewish man

who designedthe tree-topper. "We have very different points of view, but he's an inspiration."

nationally for the first time this Hanukkah. A spokesperson says the kit is designed to tap into the do-it-yourself trend and "give families a new holiday tradition."

lights? Even in an era when religious pluralism is embraced as a public aspiration and in- the Shelf" — the plush Christterfaith marriage is ho-hum, mas toy that has become a for many Jews the specifics of massive bestseller — Hoffman their Hanukkah c elebration just made a joke. "I said, 'Dude, you can't have can feel consequential. "Christmas has gone so sec- an Elf on a Shelf, we're Jewish! ular, and Santa and elves and But you can have a Mensch on w reaths are so removed from a Bench,'" — he said, using the Christianity, we could just say: Yiddish term for a good guy. 'We can adopt these. There's Then the former toy company no harm.' But I feel guilty," said executive decided there really

Kimberly Wasserman, 47,

remembers pining for a Christmas tree growing up. A mothour house, I won't allow elves, er of twin 14-year-old boys, wreaths, trees, because I'm ex- the therapist for adolescents tra-sensitive," he said. saidshe works to keep the tw o Views on what constitutes a holidays distinct. They walk legitimately Jewish Hanukkah around the neighborhood and vary. One-third of Jews have look at the Christmas lights, Christmas trees, but to many, while at home they share small the questions are far m o re gifts, light menorahs and play subtle. with dreidels. She avoids anyCan red or green be used in thing that blurs the line. "No lights of any color. No any decorations? How specific was a market for better Jewish doyou need to be about stars'? wreath of any nature that rep"If a customer goes into a resents the thing on Jesus's Hanukkah items and created a stuffed "Mensch" last year, store and wants to buy a star, head. All those things, for me, modeled after the elf. they don't want five points, feel religious and kind of forBased on last year's sales, he they want six — that's the only eign," she said. expects to sell 50,000 this year. kind they'd purchase," said She has a question, though. "As an interfaith f a mily, Gitelle Steinfeld, president of "A snowman isn't Christmasy, we go through 'The Decem- The Kosher Cook, which sells right? Unless he's wearing a ber Dilemma.' Personally, in Hanukkah-themed gifts in- Santa hat."

Neal Hoffman, a Jewish mar-

keting executive. Because his wife is Catholic, "I have a chip on my shoulder a bit" about protecting the Jewish holidays, Hoffman said. Two years ago, when his then4-year-old son, Jacob, asked in a shopping mall for an "Elf on

work out."

Ellikaya, Josiah, Patty and Thalia are helping to smooth "It's safer than the one out the kinks as elected repreat th e o l d e l e mentary sentatives of the student body. school," he said. "If you So far, the students are optifall off, there's mats. At the mistic about their chances to old one, there were wood see change through. "Ms. DeSouza gets with us chips, and if you fell they would stick in your arm. and tries to understand us, The slides are faster too. even though she's not from The old ones were metal, around here," Thalia said. "She's really my homie, and I and they could get hot." Despite th e s p eedy really like that. I didn't talk to slides, not e v erything my old principal so much." about the new school is In some areas, the staff and perfect. A petition is circu- students are a l ready m aklating among the students, ing progress. The school had urging the administration a goal of lowering behavior to serve whole pears in referrals during the second the cafeteria instead of the month by 40 percent. After diced variety soaked in students exceeded the goal by syrup. three percentage points, they There's also the matter were rewarded with a school of gum. At first it was al- dance. lowed, but then, Ellikaya Once gum and the pear said, it began appearing debate are addressed, the "under desks, on w a l ls, students may move on to in the milk cartons and parkour, an activity that coneven on the ceiling." She tributed to the middle school concedes "the school got a students being barred from little sticky," but, as Thalia the playground. "We were banned," Elsays, "gum is an addiction" and having it helps some likaya said. "We weren't supposed to do students focus. "We're going to fight for parkour, but we always did it," Ellikaya said. "This is a parkour," Josiah added. "We'll democracy." work on it." Continued from A1

cluding dreidel-shaped cookie cutters and ice cube trays.

The Washington Post

A7

Middle schools a ren't

— Reporter:541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com

typically a d e mocracy, and Principal Glenna DeSouza clarified that gum

is allowed on a t eacher-by-teacher basis. "It's something we need to wor k o u t," D e Souza

said. "It's a new school,

there's a lot w e need to

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"If we were voted offbecause and to provide service later into I and the actual fees haven't we made those decisions on the evening, ending at 10 p.m. been set, as the City Council is the surface water project that on the weekend. However, the likely to consider a raise before will provide drinking water agency told the council these or around that time. to the community for the next plans could be years away, as In other n ews, th e C i ty 100 years, it's something I'd do a stable funding source hasn't Council recognized the service again and still think is best for been identified. A property of Councilors Jodie Barram, the community," Ramsay said. tax could do the trick, but the Ramsay and Capell. Barram During th e m eeting, the agency doesn't believe it could decided not to seek re-election, councilapproved the issuance currently get voters to approve instead unsuccessfully running of up to $63 million in bonds to such ameasure. Nov. 4 for a seat on the De- coverfuture and recent costs The council also heard a preschutes County Commission. of the water project. Councilor sentation from Bend 2030 on its Casey Roats won B arram's Doug Knight and Mayor Jim affordable housing survey and vacant seat in a four-way race. Clinton, who have consistent- forum. Toincrease the supply Ramsay and Capell lost their ly opposed the water projects, of affordable housing, the orelections to challengers Barb didn't support the resolution. ganization recommended the Campbell and Nathan Boddie, For her send-off, Barram city streamline the approval respectively. played a slide show of images of accessory dwelling units, During the campaign sea- spanning her six years on the facilitate the development of son, Ramsay and Capell were council set to the tune of Mi- cottage-style developments and criticized for their support of chael Franti and Spearhead's allow for taller and denser dea project to replace a water "Hey Hey Hey." velopments, among other stratpipeline running from Bridge In other news, the council egies. The City Council also Creek and the installation of heard a presentation on the approved a 5 percent raise for a new water treatment plant. state of Cascade East Transit, City Manager Eric King. The The two projects will cost the which provides bus transit for council praised his handling of city around $70 million. During the region under the oversight the city, especially his leaderWednesday's meeting, both of the Central Oregon Intergov- ship duringthe recession. councilors defended their votes ernmental Council.Theagency — Reporter:541-633-2160, in support of the waterproject. hopes to offer additional routes tleeds®bendbulletin.com will not go into effect until July

Continued from A1 "It will allow us to have the

fairness and conservation encouragement so we can gather more data and make it an even

better system down the road." Councilor Scott Ramsay was the rate structure's lone oppo-

nent, arguing the city went "too far on the conservation side," saying businesses reliant on wateruse may suffer. The City Council debated how far to go in aligning the cost of water with use, debating what ratio of income should come from usage versus fixed, monthly fees. Initially, the councilors considered reducing fixedfees to account for 30

percent of the system's revenue from the current level of 53 percent. To avoid revenue instabili-

ty, the City Council upped that number to40 percent,meaning

that only 60 percent of the projected revenue would be vulnerable to fluctuations in use. The rate structure change

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AS TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

TODAY'S READ: ENERGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT

n ava'omunt, coa ives ie — an ta esit, somesa By JohnM.Glionna Los Ange(es Times

F RUITLAND, N. M . From her bedroom window, Cynthia Dixon watches the cloud of soot rise from the

Mexico — inhabit a realm that e nvironmentalists c al l th e

our customers."

'Water and power grab'

energy garbage dump of the American West.

In his book "Fire on the Pla-

teau," Charles Wilkinson, a

Tribal divisions

public land law scholar at the

coal mine near her sheep Nobody knows whether spread. Down the road, a the power plants are making hulking coal-fired electrical people sick, but their presplant spews a yellow plume ence continues to divide tribthat stains the horizon. al members. Some residents Many days, she finds a lay- blame particulates from Four er of black dust coating the Corners for high rates of asthinside of her trailer home. ma, pneumoniaand bronchiFarmers who have worked the

tis and bitterly criticize the

land for decades say fouled hundreds of Navajo who work air from the mine and nearby at the plant. Four Corners coal-fired pow-

T ribal activists want t h e

er plant has shriveled fruits and vegetables in the field.

Navajo leadership to move beyond coal and invest in clean-

And there are fewer eagles

er technologies such as solar

University of Colorado Law School, details how the shadow ofbig coal emerged here during the 1960s, when urban consumers across the Southwest sought cheap power without having to deal directly

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They found it on the Navajo's27,000-square-mile reservation covering parts of Utah, Arizona and Ne w M e x ico,

among "peopletoo few and

";P~

powerless to resist," Wilkin-

and jack rabbits, which once and wind power. But officials thrived on the Navajo Reser- insist the tribe needs Four vation, they add.

ment cut backroom deals with

Corners because it generates

In the last two years, the air, $40 million in annual taxes Dixon suspects, has killed 38 and royalties — a sizable porof her 56 sheep. She found the tion of the tribe's operating last two — a lamb and a ewe budget. — a few months ago. But it's

son wrote. The U.S. govern-

In recent years, Four Cor-

x'

.

Wally Skah] I Los Angeles Times

Navajo resident Joe Allen argues wIth a security guard from the FourCorners power plant while

the extraction of resources, he

discovering a security gate that now blocks access to the gravesite of his family In Fruitland, New Mexico. Residents In the area have been experiencing health problems as activists fIght two sover-

asserted.

not just her animals who are suffering: The Navajo elder oftengasps for breath from the soot, she says. Four Corners is one of the

ners has improved its air qual- eIgn nations —the U.S. Government andthe Navajo natIon — toimprove conditions.

nation's oldest coal-fired pow-

and is retrofitting the remain-

ity. In 2010, the EPA ordered

a cleanup; this year, Arizona Public Service closed three of the facility's five emit stacks

coal, oil and gas companies on behalf of tribal councils, which quickly formed to ease "It was a water and pow-

er grab of the highest order," Wilkinson said. "The Navajo were a sovereign nation in

damage. She wants to leave. gather petitions to draw at- cial to the Navajo economy be"But where can I g o?" she tention to high tribal sickness cause they provide 800 jobs in asks. rates. In 2006, Dine CARE an areawhere unemployment members teamed up with the oftentops 50percent.

name only. The U.S. government just told tribal leaders to

San Juan Citizens Alliance to file suit against the federal government to examine the

the reservation." Dixon said sheep ranchers

er plants. Owned and operat- ing two to cut emissions of ed on leased Navajo land by nitrogen oxide by at least 30 Activists step up Arizona Public Service, it sits percent, plant officials say. Tribal activist Sarah White near the San Juan GeneratBut activists want m ore: m otions toward Four C o r ing Station, another coal-fired They say there has never been ners. The 65-year-old, who has plant just off the reservation a study that directly examines asthma, is convinced that polhere in n o r thwestern New the health effects of Four Cor- lution from the plant is ruining Mexico. ners emissions. A 2010 study her health: "I can just imagine Together, the facilities are by the U.S. Geological Sur- what I'm breathing in." the nation's two largest plant vey found that coal and wood Her suspicions led her to emitters of nitrogen oxide, burning inside homes on the speak out on a reservation which can affect breathing reservation caused breathing she says was once known in high concentrations, ac- difficulties, but the study nev- not for air pollution but for its cording to a study by the Los er lookedatthe effectsofFour star-filled night skies and maAlamos National Laboratory. Corners particulates, study jestic stone edifice known as Scientists found the plants are officials acknowledge. Shiprock. at the threshold of the EnviTribal leaders regularly White joined a small but deronmental Protection Agen- monitor particulates from the termined Navajo group called cy's standards for clean air, plants, often asking residents Dine Citizens Against Ruinbut possible changes to the and schools to call tribal of- ing our Environment. Memstandards could soon put the fices with complaints. Windy bers have doggedly lobbied facilities over the legal limit. days are the worst. the tribal government to end As th e f a cilities r u mble Dixon, 59, uses a propane its economic dependence on

They recently extended the utility's lease at Four Corners

'sign here.' Most of the elec-

tricity was designed to leave

until 2041 and purchased the were driven from their land by mine near Dixon's ranch that the burgeoning development the Navajo mine and Four suppliescoal to Four Corners and graveyards were hast— moves they insist help guar- ily relocated in the frenzied Corners. This year, the U.S. Depart- antee the tribe's future. searchformore coal to feed direct health effects of both

ment of the Interior's Office

Stephen Etsitty, executive

of Surface Mining released a director of the tribe's Envidraft environmental impact ronmental Protection Agency, report saying improvements empathizes with residents. were being made at Four "I tell people their issues are Corners, and estimating the real," he said. "Four Corners chance of getting cancer near plays a role in the community's health, but there are other the plant as one in a million. Activists say a comprehen- factors too." sive government study of Four Such as plant salaries exCorners has yet to be done. ceeding $55,000 a year. "On "People think we should the reservation, that salary be happy about the closure of puts you squarely in the upper those three stacks, but we're middle class," he said. "That's not. It's like drinking 15 ounc- tough to give up." a round the c l ock t o l i g h t heater in her tiny trailer. She coal. They stand up at tribal es of Drano instead of 20," said David Hansen, vice preshomes in faraway Phoenix dreads the onset of winter, board meetings with pointed Mike Eisenfeld, New Mexico ident of fossil generation at and elsewhere, tens of thou- when the inversion layer holds questions, rallying residents to energy coordinator for the Arizona Public Service, called sands of Navajo — as well as power plant emissions clos- elect new leaders who are not San Juan Citizens Alliance. the plant's operation "good for the residents of such commu- er to the ground, where they beholden to coal interests. Navajo leaders insist the the Navajo Nation, good for nities as Farmington, New cloud the sun and do their Going door todoor,they plant and coal mine are cru- the environment andgood for

the power plants.

The year 2005 galvanized activists. That's when members of Dine, which means

"the people" in Navajo, helped defeat a tribal proposal to build a third coal-fired plant

known as Desert Rock. White and her daughter, Victoria Gutierrez, still drive

the reservation's back roads to convince Navajo plant workers that good salaries aren't worth their health. "One plant welder told me

that the money is good," Gutierrez said, "but he knows he'll die early from the pollution particles, which he said were like shimmering pieces of glass suspended in the air."

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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

BRIEFING Sheriff's deputies, sergeant honored Deschutes County Sheriff's personnel have received awards from the Oregon State Sheriffs' Association. Sgt. DekeDeMars, Deputy Daniel Graham and Deputy Grant Johnstone received a2014 Life Saving Award for rescuing two people from a canal after a car accident northeast of Bend in May. After DeMars rescued the passenger of the car from the canal, deputies found a retractable ladder on nearby property and extended it to the driver, who wasswept up in current for several hundred feet. Hewas then safely pulled out of the water by the deputies. The association presented Search andRescue Lt. Scott Shelton with the 2014Search and RescueDeputy of the Year Award. Shelton works for the Special Services Division, which is responsible for Search and Rescue, Forest Patrol, Off Highway I/ehicles and Emergency Services. He supervises 212 volunteers, 10 seasonal and six full-time staff. Deschutes County has carried out more than 200 search missions this year, according to the sheriff's office. Shelton also conducts security checks and makes recommendations for various county buildings through the "TakeCare, Be Aware" program, makes grant writing presentations for funding and sits on several boards.

De u i strictattorne sa s isInnocence Project trans antrecove is oin we launches By Claire Withycombe

"It's been truly a journey just watching you. You'vebeen a mentor to us a/I."

The Bulletin

A Deschutes County deputy district attorney's future

— Deschutes County District Attorneys Association President Casey Baxter, to Dan Reesor via Skype

is looking brighter, he said Wednesday evening. Dan Reesor, 40, of Bend,

has been fighting liver cancer and an inflammatory liver

cancer-fr ee,"Reesortoldthe group. He said he's having a "better than average" recov-

condition since January.

On Wednesday, he appeared via Skype as members of government employee unions and other supporters gathered at Dudley's Bookshop in Bend for a holiday party and fundraiser. "Everything, as far as the scans go, looks like I'm

ery from a liver transplant operation at UCLA on Oct. 24. Reesor fought to have the

transplant, his best chance of curing his condition, covered by county insurance. After he

appealed the rejected claim

twice, it was approved by Deschutes County Administra-

tor Tom Anderson on Oct. 3. Reesor and his wife, Jo

Mongan, thanked the party gathered Wednesday night

just watching you," Baxter said. "You've been a mentor to us all."

Baxter recalled when members of local government employees unions met

in September to hear Reesor and Monganspeak ata m eeting about Reesor's rejected claim. "All of us were speaking, in tears, wondering if we'd be able to get you an approval,"

and spoke with attendees,

Baxter said. Once the claim was ap-

including Deschutes County

proved, Reesor got on the

District Attorneys Association President Casey Baxter.

national transplant list and a

"It's been truly a journey

liver was soon available. SeeReesor/B6

in Central Oregon By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

In 2004, Lisa Roberts

pleaded guilty to first-degree manslaughter in the death of Jerri Williams,

whose body was found in Kelley Point Park in Portland in 2002.

But she wasn't guilty. A federal judge ruled 10 years later that Roberts'

defense attorney failed to adequately investigate cellphone evidence presented

by the prosecution. Federal public defenders

GRINNING GRADUATES

Steve Wax and Alison

Clark argued the case in U.S. District Court on behalf of Roberts. Wax

is now the legal director ofthe OregonInnocence Project, which investigates

asserti ons ofw rongful convictions and is an initiative of the Oregon

Justice Resource Center. The project will launch officially in Central Oregon tonight with speakers and a meet-and-greet. Wax, together with the

executive director of the Oregon Justice Resource

Center Bobbin Singh and Deschutes County District Attorney-elect John Hum-

mel will speak at 5:30 p.m. at the Central Oregon Social Justice Center in Bend.

Through her attorney, Roberts agreed to a plea agreement in 2004 after the

prosecutioncame forward with cellphone records that appeared to show Roberts

near the park. SeeInnocence/B6

Three booked after car chase Three suspects are in custody of the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office after a passenger reportedly fired a rifle at an OSPtrooper during a chase in astolen car, according to Oregon State Police. At about 9:20 a.m.

Monday, the sheriff's office located a black 2005 HondaCivic on U.S. Highway 26north-

ABOVE:OregonNational Guard Youth Challenge graduates laugh while listening to one of the speakers during their commencement ceremonyWednesday attheDeschutes County Fair 8 ExpoCenter in Redmond. RIGHT:Graduates march into the ExpoCenter at the beginning of the ceremony.

exactly constitutes

forestland?

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

By Ted Shorack

west of Madras that had

been reported stolen earlier that morning to the Warm Springs Police Department. When a sheriff's deputy attempted to stop the vehicle, it accelerated and fled. Officers from Warm Springs Police, Madras Police and OSP responded to assist. A state trooper led the pursuit outside the rural community of Gateway on several county roadways at speedsexceeding 70 mph. Apassenger then fired a rifle at the pursuing trooper, OSP said. The fleeing car lost control on icy roads in Gateway and crashed into a fence in front of a private residence. The three people in the car fled into nearby farm fields, according to OSP. Deputies andWarm Springs Police located

The Bulletin

A committee tasked

l) •-

Map

discussions about forest-

land classifications based on the landscape. Future

HIGH DESERT MUSEUM

discussions about the land

could include field trips

e newest ex I ition is a rea oot By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

In forests around the Northwest, scientists say the

barred owl is taking over

1

them into custody a short time later without

SeeLocal briefing/B3

of 640 acres from

Oh B6 th e images and had preliminary

the three and took

incident at a nearby property. The trooper and officers were uninjured during the incident. A Winchester.270 caliber rifle was located in the stolen car.

with classifying forestland in Deschutes County viewed aerial images for the first time Wednesday that distinguish topography and soil type. The group analyzed square sections

f,

timber and vegetation that could pose a fire hazard. Owners of forestland pay an assessment fee to the Oregon Department of Forestry for protection against wildfires.

"If you go to spotted owl habitat (in the woods) this is

the same can be said about a

often what you see," Goodell

High Desert Museum exhibit in Bend. A new barred owl arrived at the museum about three

sard. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife

process has not been conducted in Deschutes

Service listed the spotted owl as threatened in 1990. Debates

County since the 1970s. As

weeks ago and went on display about a week ago, said

about habitat protection, particularly of old growth timber

John Goodell, natural history

where the owls often roost,

curator at the museum. The yet-to-be named owl's new

followed.

ka and Dot, a pair of captive spotted owls who died in 2011 The new barred owl at the High Desert Museum in Bend rests on a branch Wednesday. In the Northwest, the barred owl has been taking over spotted owl turf.

Oregon defines forestland, in relation to wildfire threats, as any land with

territory that had belonged to the northern spotted owl. Now

haunt used to be home to Pol-

Andy rullis/The Bulletin

See video coverage on The Bulletin's website: bentibulletin.cem/barredewl

O

to better understand its characteristi cs.

and 2010. The exhibit still

features an old-growth setting but with a barred owl instead of spotted owls.

But the talk now focuses on the competition between

The classification

the population has grown along with development, lands once classified as

forest by the state forestry department may no longer meet the definition. Mean-

spotted and barred owls for

while, the landowners are still required to pay the

territory. Around the North-

fire patrol assessment.

west, the barred owl appears to moving into what had been

Other people may own forestland, but are not paying

spotted owl turf.

the fee. See Owl /B2

SeeForestland /B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

E VENT

ENDA R

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli felbendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvM/.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $12 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626.

TODAY CENTRALOREGON WRITERS GUILDREADERS SHOWCASE AND HOLIDAYPOTLUCK SOCIAL:Bring finger food to share; free; 6-7:45 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www. centraloregonwritersguild.com or 541-419-4741. HOLIDAYCOMMUNITY SINGA-LONG: Singing and aukulele workshop, led by Victor Johnson and Kerry Williams; free, $5 for ukulele workshop; 7 p.m.,5-6 p.m.ukulele workshop; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. "HUMBUG":A modern-day twist on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" about Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": A performance of the one-man, one-act play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $10 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m .;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": A performance of the one-man, one-act play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $12 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626.

SATURDAY

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin file photo

Eleanor Scrooge, played byAnnMarie Anderson, reacts after seeing a scene from her past with the spirit of the past, played by Jim

Mocabee, during rehearsal for "Humbug" at Cascades Theatre. "Humbug" runs today andFriday.

benefit High Desert Chamber Music programs; $85, reservations requested; 6 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www. highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. "SLINGSHOT":A screening of the documentary about the FIRST Robotics founder and inventor Dean Kamen, to benefit the Summit High Robotics team; $10, $5 for children, registration required; 7-9:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.tugg. com/events /12330 or541-322-3300. A CHRISTMASMEMORY:A dramatic reading of Truman Capote's"A Christmas Memory" FRIDAY with Bob Shaw; $18 plus fees; 7 SANTALAND ATTHEOLDMILL p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional CHRISTMASCONCERT:TheChurch cost for take-home photos, $5 of the Transfiguration Choir will donation for children's activities; perform holiday favorites, featuring 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 a silent auction and raffle to benefit SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; the choir; free; 7 p.m.; Episcopal 541-312-0131. Church of the Transfiguration, 68825 CHRIS LUQUETTE: The SeattleN. Brooks CampRoad, Sisters; basedAmericanaplayerperforms, www.episcopalchurchsisters.org or with Steve Blanchard; $20 suggested 541-549-7087. donation; 6 p.m.; HouseConcert, MARK SCHULTZCHRISTMAS 20135Tumalo Road,Tum alo; CONCERT:Featuring the Christian 541-306-0797. singer; $15plus feesin advance, HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC $20at the door, $35 for VIP tickets, GALA:Featuring a performance $12.50 each for groups of10 or more; 7 p.m.; Christian Life Center, by the Spotlight Chamber Players, dinner andasilentauction; proceeds 21720 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend;

www.clcbend.com or 541-389-8241. SLEIGH BALL: Holiday party featuring a raffle, casino games, live music and more;$15 inadvance and at the door, bring a newand unwrapped present for Toys for Tots; 7 p.m.; The RiverhouseConvention Center, 2850 NWRippling River Court, Bend; www.facebook.coml sleighball or 541-617-3215. TRADITIONSHOLIDAY CONCERT: Featuring jazz by the Patrick Lamb Bandaccompaniedbya holiday gospel choir; $35-$40 plus fees in advance, $10 for children18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; www. sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310. "HUMBUG":A modern-day twist on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" about Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": A performance of the one-man, one-act play based on aDavid

HOLLINSHEADHOMESTEAD OPEN HOUSEAND HISTORICAL TOUR:Take atour given by Sharron Rosengarth, who was born and lived in the house; free homemade treats and more; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Hollinshead Barn,1235 NEJones Road, Bend; www.bendparksandrec. org or 541-410-6891. CHRISTMASTREELANE: Visit Santa and shop for a Christmas tree, with complimentary face painting, hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 NESmith Rock Way, Terrebonne; www.ddranch.net, info©ddranch.net or 541-548-1432. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between

Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": A performance of the one-man, one-act play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $10 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m .;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. HILLSTOMP:The Portlandbluespunk duo performs; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 8-11:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.

541-312-2069.

SUNDAY

SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. "BOLSHOIBALLET:THE NUTCRACKER": Theclassicholiday ballet is broadcast from Russia; $18, $15 for seniors and children;12:55 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.

COMMUNITYCHRISTMAS: Breakfastand a traditional Christmas dinner, gifts, Santa Claus visit; free; 8 a.m.-11 a.m. breakfast, noon-3 p.m. Christmas dinner,1 p.m. Santa Claus arrives; Bend's Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.; www. bendscommunitycenter.org or

ATOWERCHRISTMAS: A showcase of traditional stories, dances and songs with a theme of "Holiday Cheer Through TheYears"; $12 plus fees, $8 for children12 and younger; 2 and 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

I

Ben 8 Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. LIVING NATIVITY:Live presentation of the Christmas story with actors and animals; free; 7-8:30 p.m.; Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 SW State Highway126; www.

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powellbuttechurch.com,pbcc©

integrity.com or 541-548-3066. "HUMBUG":A modern-day twist on the Christmas classic "A Christmas Carol" about Wall Street executive Eleanor Scrooge; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; Sedaris essay;$10plusfees in www.cascadestheatrical.org or advance; 7:30p.m.;VolcanicTheatre 541-389-0803. Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": A www.volcanictheatrepub.com or performance of the one-man, one-act 541-323-1881. play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; "THE SANTALANDDIARIES": A $12 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street performance of the one-man, one-act Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave.,

r Make an unforgettable Holiday Memoryl Take advantage of special tour and overnight packages with the Hilton Garden tnnt

Lf IIkl E II G E 4 V I II t 10 II I ll C .

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 7:20 a.m.Dec. 11, in the 3000 block of N.U.S. Highway 97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:11 p.m. Dec.13,inthe61500blockofS. U.S. Highway97. DUII —Sisiley SashaScott, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:13 a.m. Dec.15, in the 400 blockof NE Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:59 a.m. Dec.15, in the 2200 block of NW Vardon Court. Theft —Atheft was reported at10 a.m. Dec.15, in the 20100blockof Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:39 a.m. Dec. 15, in the200block of NE

Owl Continued from B1 "They are a little bigger, they are more aggressive, they use a smaller area," said Robin Bown, a U.S. Fish and

Sixth Street. was arrested on suspicion of driving Theft —A theft was reported at1:02 under the influence of intoxicants at p.m. Dec.15, in the 200 block of NE 7:08 p.m. Dec.13, in the area ofU.S. Revere Avenue. Highway 97 nearmilepost128. Theft —A theft was reported at1:46 DUII —Ryan FrankBilingsley, 34, p.m. Dec. 15, in the300 block of NE was arrested on suspicion of driving Hawthorne Avenue. under the influence of intoxicants at Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:16 9:06 p.m. Dec.13, in thearea of U.S. Highway 97and Robal Road. p.m. Dec. 15, in the 2300 block of NE Shadow Brook Place. DUII —Bradley Stephen Avooske, 53, Theft —A theft was reported at 4:22 was arrested on suspicion of driving p.m. Dec. 15, in the61500 block of S. under the influence of intoxicants U.S. Highway97. at1:23 p.m. Dec.14, in thearea of Theft —A theft was reported at 4:40 Highway 97and Pinebrook Boulevard. p.m. Dec.15, in the 900 blockof NW DUII —Timothy Lester Cottrell, 29, Wall Street. Burglary —A burglary and acts of was arrested on suspicion of driving criminal mischief were reported and under the influence of intoxicants at arrests were madeat 7:52 a.m. Dec. 9:39 p.m. Dec. 14, in thearea of U.S. 16, in the 20300 block of ReedLane. Highway 97 nearmilepost124. Theft —A theft was reported at1:46 p.m. Dec.15, in the 900 blockof SW BEND FIRE RUNS Pelton Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:52 p.m. Dec.15, in the 2700 block of NE Tuesday Boyd Acres Road. 7:17p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 60901 Brosterhous Road. OREGON STATE 10:44 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, POLICE 21295 Back Alley. DUII —Travis DuaneKingsford, 22,

Continues at The Goldsmith! ggp, 8 W % I . W i

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26 —Medical aid calls.

ilff"

"I think that it s great they have something they

can use to talk to people about the issues and the conversations." — Robin Bown, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist, on the High Desert Museum's new barred owl

Wildlife Service biologist in Portland, explaining why the barred owl could be crowd- became famous for successing out the spotted owL fully having chicks in capShe said she thought it is t ivity during t h eir t i m e a t a good idea to have a barred the museum. Goodell said he owl on display at the High would like to eventually have Desert Museum. a pair of barred owls in the "I think that it is great they exhibit. have something they can use Patterns in the feathers of to talk to people about the is- the owls led to the names for sues and the conversations," the two species. While both she said. have spots on their heads The barred owl at the mu- and wings, spotted owls have

Oo

photographers found a dead barred owl near the park on March 3, 2013, which was

probably the popular bird. A necropsydetermined the owl was likely sick before it was hit and killed by a car. The barred owl at the High Desert Museum joins a barn

owl, great horned owl, burrowing owl and screech owl already on display. The museseum is f ro m W a shington, spots on t h e ir u n d e rbelly, um is open daily from 10 a.m. where it had been in the care while barred owls have a se- to 4 p.m. but will be closed on of a w i ldlife rehabilitator, quence of bars. Christmas. Goodell said. Likely a f eA wild b arred owl d r ew During the winter season, male — raptors can be diffi- photographers, birdwatchers the museum costs $12 for cult to distinguish — the bird and curious people to Fare- adults, $10 for 65 and oldhatched late last winter or well Bend in early 2013 when er, $7for ages 5to12 andis early last spring and devel- the owl took roost near the free for age 4 and younger. opmental problems caused Bend park. From mid-Jan- F or more i n f ormation, g o i ts feathers no t t o gr o w uary into February the owl to h i g hdesertmuseum.org/ correctly. was regularly seen hunt- hours-and-rates. Polka and Dot, which lived ing for mice and other food — Reporter: 541-617-7812, about a quarter century each, around the park. A pair of ddarling@bendbulletin.com

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Some Exclusions Apply

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T HE 6 0 L D s M I T 111 NW O r e gon Ave. e n d , R 9 77 0 1 1 BLOCK FRO M P A R K I N G G A R A G E 541-647-2676

Mon.-Wed. 10am-6pm Thurs.-Fri. 10am - 7pm Sat. 11 am - 6 pm


THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

eena el'a mi S 0 I I I 1 a eer unin ca in By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

G RANTS P A SS

-

A

AROUND THE STATE Third arrested iu Portland school shooting —Portland police said a third suspect hasbeenarrested in their investigation of a shooting outside analternative Portland High School that injured four young people. The arrest came after a chase late Tuesday in Marion County, about 40 miles south of Portland. Police said thesuspect is 16 years old. Police said the shooting appears to berelated to gangactivity, and the Police Bureau's gangsquad is handling the investigation. One victim,16-year-old Taylor Michelle Zimmers, remains hospitalized in fair condition. Twoothers havebeendischarged. A fourth teenager was grazedandtreated at the scene Friday outside the north Portland school. The threesuspects arebeing held onwarrants for probation violations. Police said charges in theshooting are expected soon.

15-year-old who shot and killed his foster father and another

Eugene mayOr WOn't run fOrre-eleCtien — EugeneMayor

man at aremote Oregon cab-

Kitty Piercy said shewon't run for re-election after12 years in thejob. The (Eugene)Register-Guard reports Piercy is 72andwants to spend more time with her husband.She's beenworking full time for a decade. Her election asmayor in2004 markedthe beginning of a period of liberal dominance onthe City Council. She'sbeen re-elected twice, and her tenure will besecond longest among Eugenemayors. Piercy said she's proud of downtown revitalization, repavedstreets, a newsustainability commission, a local ordinance tocut carbonemissions, a policy of denser developmentandwhat shecalls "moving forward" through a difficult recession. TheRegister-Guard said ahalf-dozen people are considering running to succeedher,and morecandidates mayemerge.

in in 2012 never meant to kill

anyone and never should have been around loaded guns due to his lack of maturity after

34

years of abuse and other problems, a defense lawyer says. The boy made admissions Wednesday in Grant County Court in Canyon City to the juvenile equivalent of manslaughter. A judge ordered him into state custody until he turns 25, when he will be eligible for release, defense attorney Kathie Berger said.

*

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s. h

POliCe lOOk far pipe bemd tOSSer— Policewerestill looking s-

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,grs

The boy told authorities he

got scared and accidentally shot the men — foster father Michael Piete, of Baker City,

I

and Piete's unde, Kenneth Gilliland — during a hunting trip. Grant County Sheriff file photo via The Associated Press "Unfortunately, two peo- This undated photo provided by the Grant County Sheriff shows a cabin near Granite, where a ple died as a result of some 14-year-old boy shot and killed two others and accidentally shot and wounded himself during a huntdecisions that when you look

for a manwhothrew four pipe bombsout his car window as hefled from an officer Tuesday inPortland. Noneexploded, but officers called off the chase.Portland police said they're looking for 43-year-old Neal Allen Panschow. He was driving a silver 2002 HondaCivic two-door, Oregon license064 CPJ.An officer tried to pull him over on anarrest warrant from TillamookCounty for attempting to eludepolice. The Oregonian reports Panschowhas arecord of reckless driving and driving with a revoked orsuspendedlicense in recent years. Healso was convicted of theft in Yamhill County in1998, andcriminal mischief in Washington County in January 2000. — From wire reports

ing trip on Oct. 2, 2013. The boy made admissions Wednesday in Grant County Court in Canyon City

back on them, you are left just to the juvenile equivalent of manslaughter. shaking your head: 'What in the world were you thinking?'" Berger said. Piete had planned a hunting Then he went inside the cabGrant County District At- trip with his uncle and friends. in, where he got more scared torney Ryan Joslin did n ot Rather than place the teen with because people were yelling at immediately return a call for someone else while he was him. The boy fired wildly tocomment. gone, he took him along to do ward the upstairs loft, where Berger said the boy was chores as a sort of punishment, others in the party were sleepabused as a young child and Berger said. ing. A bullet passed through went into a series of foster Events at the cabin are un- a bookcase and hit Piete, who homes and juvenile care facili- dear, and the boy's statement was standing afterbeing awakties, where hedisplayed behav- to state police conflicts with ened by the gunfire. ioral problems. the evidence in some respects, The boy grabbed a rifle on He was sent to live with the Berger said. his way out the door, and while Piete and his wife despite a According to his statement, outside, fell and shot himself in lack of local treatment services the boy got hold of a load- the leg with the revolver. a vailable to h im. W hen h e ed .44 Magnum revolver. He Using the rifle as a crutch, he started high school — the first had heard there were wolves made hiswayback tothe cabin. public school he ever attend- around, and thinking he saw a One of the other men had drived on his own — he was soon pair of eyes in the darkness, he entothe littletownof Graniteto tossed out. fired, hitting Gilliland. call 911. Another taped the boy

OSPICE o f Redm o n d

to a chair until deputies arrived. e Was it reckless for h i m

to pick up guns'? Yes it was," Berger said. aWas it reckiess for him to shoot the guns? Very

reckless. 'When you look through the decisionsmade by professional people and adults who were supposed to be looking out for (the boy) due to his needs, it's just atragedy." A judge denied a request to have him tried as an adult after experts examined the boy and found he had the maturity

of a 9-year-old. State law bars anyone younger than 12 from being tried as an adult.

to elude a police officer, possession of a stolen vehicle, unlawful Continued from Bt possession of afirearm and The driver, Colleen Kalama, reckless endangering. Sutterlee 23, passenger Stuart Smith, age faces a probation violation and 39, both of WarmSprings, and charges of unauthorized use of a passenger Stefan Sutterlee, 24, motor vehicle and unlawful use of Madras, were lodged at the of a weapon, while Smith faces Jefferson County jail. charges of felon in possession of Kalama is scheduled to be a firearm and unauthorized use arraigned Friday onseveral of a motor vehicle. — Bulletin staff reports charges, including attempting

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f Oregonians learned anything from the state's missteps and blunders with Cover Oregon it should be two things: It's not easy to make changes in health care. And government should not hide what it is doing from the public. The state of Oregon could be making similar spectacular mistakes or significant changes with its other health care experiment — coordinated care organizations — and the public would not know. CCOs are Oregon's major effort at

well. It does monitor them. It does re-

health care transformation. They are

of its meetings public. That is not how most CCOs in Oregon operate, though. And the Central Oregon Health Council is under absolutely no requirement to continue to keep most of its meetings open. Remember, CCOs are spending public money. They do the public's business. They provide public health care. They make decisions about what

community organimtions that essentially take over providing care for Oregon Health Plan members in a region. Central Oregon's three counties have their own CCO. CCOs get a fixed budget from the statebased on how manypatients they serve. They strive to hit various targets that the state and the federal govern-

quire reports. Central Oregonians can actually count themselves lucky. The Central

Oregon Health Council is the local regulatory body that oversees Central Oregon's CCO. It has made almost all

menthave set. Thosetargets attempt to gets done to improve health and what capture how well care is being provid- doesnot. ed. The different CCOs across the state Oregon's public meetings laws are get to comeup withtheir ownplans for not sounforgivingthat medicalprovidhow to provide the care.

ers would have to tell all or reveal indi-

The hope is it will improve health carequality and access and also hold

vidual patient information. Oregon's laws have provisions enabling governingbodies to hold executive sessions to safeguard sensitive information.

down cost increases. The anticipated

savings for the state play an important role in Gov. John Kitzhaber's budget We have no reason to believe that plans. CCOs across Oregon are doing anyBut the public could very well be thing magnificently awful. Everything shut out when critical decisions are the state tells Oregonians is that CCOs made about the community's health. are wondrous examples of how to imThe rules that describe how CCOs prove health and save money. And must operate do not dedare that they that they should be expanded to cover have to follow Oregon's open meetings morepeople. laws. They should not be expanded withOf course, the state doesn't justhand out transparency.Secret government CCOs piles of money and wish them is notbetter government.

McMinnville casehad universal language ome situations require no translation. A person has just been killed. The suspect stands holding a large knife, facing three cops with guns drawn. Theytell himto "get on the ground" and to "drop the knife." Instead,he lowers his head, and a video shows he appears to move forward. The cops shoot and kill him. The police are now being criticized for failing to warn him in Spanish. His family and employer say he didn't speak English, The Oregonian reported, and his sister wonders why they didn't direct him in the language he understood. Several experts told the newspaper they shared her concern, that police must be sensitive to other cultures' different responses to law enforcement. The mid-November confrontation in McMinnville that killed 33-year-old suspect Juventino Bermudez-Arenas followed the stabbing death of a 20-year-old Linfield College student. Acrossthe nation, cops do make efforts to communicate effectively

7 %R " R B R

with those who don't speak English, but they face daunting challenges in crisis situations. How can they know what language the person understands? How can they know

enough of all the possible languages? Even if they train heavily in the most common secondlanguage for their region, there's no guarantee a suspect will understand. In the wake of Ferguson, Missouri, New York and Cleveland, officers are easy targets for criticism, fair and unfair. But whatever the details of the McMinnville tragedy, it's utterly unrealistic to think the officers should be able to intuit the language and cultureofaperson approaching them with a weapon. Police in a violent confrontation must make judgments in an instant, based on their training, and they can'tbe expected to guess what words willbe understood. In this case, there's a universal body language of drawn guns and shouted commands from uniformed off icersthatshould be dear to anyone.

M 1ViCkel'S WOrth No thankyou, PacifiCorp Consider donating stock

rent condos goes against everything that our local residents have voted to

If you are planning to make a contribution to a qualified charitable pensive to the taxpayers of Bend. organization and have appreciated Saving Mirror Pond is great, but it stock in your investment portfolio, still needs to be done at the lowest consider donating that appreciated

fund for our community. Currently some of our property is

expense to the taxpayer. At the De-

Pond as just another money-making opportunity. Once the property is

Even from 30,000 feet, the latest

Mirror Pond proposal looks ex-

stock to the charity. Donors who use

cember public meetings, the Bend this approach typically receive the Park & Recreation District reiterat- full value of the donated stock as a ed this is a long-term project span- deduction; the charity receives the ning 10 or more years, so let's put full dollar value of the stock and no this time frame to our advantage. capital gain taxes are owed — it's a Allowing PacifiCorp to gift the dam win-win for everyone! to Bend/BPRD puts the removal and Please consider donating appreciregulatorycompliance expenses on atedsharesofstock to one orm ore the taxpayer.

of our local charities this holiday

Gannet Fleming stated in its inspection report, commissioned by

season. It is a great way to support our local community and it's also a

BPRD, that dam removal and miti-

smart tax planning tool. Central Or-

parking lots. But that does not mean

that our community would want to sell it to developers who view Mirror sold to developers, our community

has lost the property along our river forever. Martha S. Bibb Bend

How will you endure watertorture? Regarding the report on CIA

torture of prisoners: Water torture egon charities provide a broad range is one of the most bestial tortures, of services that would benefit great- condemned by civilized nations

gation expense would be upwards of $15 million; $2 million for dam

removal and "stream channel res- ly from this type of donation. Check

toration and sediment removal are with your accountant or attorney to determined through a regulatory ensure these deductions are availprocess and could add as much as able for you. Happy Holidays! $13 million to overall project costs." Pete Sandgren, board president, Since time is on our side, we Bethlehem Inn should hold off on dredging Mirror Bend Pond, and wait for PacifiCorp to de-

Don't sell property along Mirror Pond

commission the dam. Once the dam

is decommissioned, state and federal regulations will drive PacifiCorp to remove and mitigate according I was shocked to learn at the last to regulatory guidelines and sched- meeting of the Mirror Pond commitules. As part of the river mitigation tee that our Bend Park 8 Recreation regulations, sediment would have to District plans to sell some of our be removedfrom Mirror Pond and property along Mirror Pond to dethis would be at PacifiCorp's ex- velopers. That sale money would ospense, not the taxpayers'. tensibly be used to dredge and keep The current Mirror Pond propos- the pond. al looks good, but we should not I am not sure that our commuaccept a gift from PacifiCorp which nity — equally divided as it is over would cost the taxpayer $15 million, save-the-pond or r eturn-to-a-river as well as subject the city of Bend to — would support any sale of park the burden of complying with state property to developers. Bend has and federal regulations to remove always voted to acquire and develthe dam and mitigate the area. op property for public, community Steve Berube use. Selling the property to be deBend veloped into commercial and high

throughout history. The Spanish Inquisition of the 16th century used water torture. The Nazi Gestapo used water tor-

ture.The Japanese Secret Police used water torture. Our CIA used water torture, and it was "enhanced

interrogation." The CIA says that in a few cases unauthorized procedures unfortunately were used.

Consider this quote from German Lutheran Pastor Martin Niemoller, who resisted the monstrous Nazi re-

gime. "First the Nazis came for the Jews, but I was not a Jew, so I did nothing. Then they came for the so-

cialists, but I was not a socialist, so I did nothing. Then they came for the reporters and other critics, but I was

not a reporter, so I did nothing. Now they are coming for me, and there is no one to stand up for me." When the CIA or other secret

police group decides you are an enemy, how will you endure "unfortunate" water torture?

Allan Smyth Prineville

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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to oneIssue, conta!n no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBullet!n. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

We need a better plan to protect Tumalo Creek By Paul Dewey 'Bunalo Creek is one of those places that makes living in Central Oregon special. From its magical headwaters springs, to the spectacular Tumalo Falls, to the steady waters flowing through Shevlin Park, the creek is a recreational gem of our community. Unfortunately, it has not

The city annually diverts substanIN MY VIEW keep the creek (and the fish, animals tial water from the Tumalo Headwaand plants that depend on it) healthy. ters Springs. This water would nor- mond and Sisters, have solely relied A Nov. 23 editorial in The Bullemally flow over Tumalo Falls but is on groundwater and other water us- tin asserted that the minimum ininstead diverted by a ditch to Bridge ers are taking less water from our stream flows that LandWatch seeks

those times of year when TID does not take water, any water left in the

Creek, from which Bend takes the water. If you think Tumalo Falls is al-

ready spectacular, imagine it with its natural flow.

The city currently uses about half by the city of Bend or Tumalo Irriga- the water it diverts around the falls, tion District, both of which have di- or 2 billion gallons per year, and been treated well historically, either

verted substantial amounts of water

returns the rest to 'Iinnalo Creek.

from the creek. Already, the creek is suffering

Under the city's proposed new system, Bend plans to increase its use

of Tumalo Creek water to about 3.6 2010 study by the Upper Deschutes billion gallons by 2015, 3.9 billion by Watershed Council found that the 2020 and 4.1 billion by 2025. That creek has not met Oregon water means 2 billion fewer gallons would quality standards for many years. flow through one of our region's most And the creek often doesn't meet the beautiful and popular areas, Shevlin minimum instream flow standards Park, each year. That's right — even as other cities set by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife for fish habitat. in Central Oregon, including Redfrom Bend's and TID's practices. A

creek by the city would stay in the creek. To show a true commitment to

rivers, Bend plans to use substantial-

to protect will not actually benefit the

Tumalo Creek, Bend could protect

ly more from Tumalo Creek. This is despite the creek's existing health problems. It's all part of Bend's "surface water improvement project," which will cost more than $60 million — paid for by high utility bills. LandWatch be-

creek. The editorial argues that TID

the water it's leaving in the creek by

lieves that there are safer, less expensive alternatives to taking more water

out of Tumalo Creek. For instance, Bend could

i m p lement effective

conservationmeasures or use more groundwater (which already provides over half of the city's water). Or Bend could use water from the creek only when minimum instream flows are met — basically ensuring that

there will always be enough water to

"leasing" it instream, so TID could in, effectively eliminating any gains. not take it. Fortunately, there's also That's not a correct assumption. no basis to assume TID would take could take whatever water Bend left

ODFW has requested that its mini-

any extra water, even if it could, or

mum instream flow standards be met wouldn't lease the water instream with this project, obviously believing itself, since it has gone on record as it would benefit the creek. wanting to leave more water in the One reason is that TID takes wa- creek. ter from the creek over 10 miles Hopefully, after the recent court downstream of the city's diversions. ruling, the new City Council will recThat means 10 miles in which flows ognize that it is up to them to protect would be increased, including Tum- Tumalo Creek. The public should be alo Falls and Shevlin Park; both are heard and the creek treated like the above TID's diversion. Also, TID's treasureitis. water rights are primarily limited — Paul Dewey lives in Bend to the irrigation season. Bend takes and is the executive director Tumalo Creek water year-round. At of Central Oregon LandWatch.


THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

LandclassificationinDeschutes County The Oregon Department of Forestry uses land classification to help determine whether land should be included in ODF's wildfire protection units. A committee is re-evaluating forestland in Deschutes County. (Class 1 is Timberland west of the Cascades.)

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES StePhen Lee Perryman Dorothy "Dot" Lee Blanchard, of Bend Sept. 26, 1926 - Dec. 14, 2014

Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Private services will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Dorothy Johnson

(Herron) Gulll, of Bend April 5, 1922 - Dec. 12, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org

Anna Scheuchzer Meyers, of Madras Jan. 30, 1911 - Dec. 12, 2014 Services: At her request, no services will be held. Contributionsmay be made to:

St. Charles Hospice,

Madras off ice.

Bernard F. Saalfeld,of Bend May 24, 1937 - Dec. 15, 2014 Arrangements:

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: Private services are to be held in Salem.

Joan Elizabeth Hale, of Bend Oct. 13, 1919 - Dec. 9, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: At Joan's request, no athering will be held. ontributions may be made to:

The Humane Societyof Central Oregon to honor her love of animals.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Richard C. Hottelet, 97:Jour-

nalist who covered the D-Day invasion and the Battle of the

Bulge for CBS and the last survivor of the"Murrow Boys," the

pioneeringradio newsmen who worked under Edward R. Murrow. Died Wednesday at his home in Wilton, Connecticut.

June 3, 1942- Dec. 12, 2014 Stephen Lee Perryman of Redmond, Oregon, passed away p e a cefully a t hi s home, with his family and friends by his si d e on D ecember 12, 2 0 14. He w as 72. An Ur n Committ al w i th military Steve Perrymanhonors will t ak e p l ac e S aturday, D ecember 2 0 , 20 1 4 , a t 1 1:00 a.m . a t Re d m o n d M emorial C e m e tery , l o c ated a t 3 5 4 5 S . C a n a l Blvd. in Redmond, OR. S teve was b or n J un e 3 , 1942, in Sacramento, California, to Leland "Bud" and E unice (Harughty) P er ry man. He graduated from N orth L a s V e g a s H i g h S chool i n 196 0 . A ft e r graduating, he enlisted in the US Navy, serving as a d ental t e c h n i cia n t hi r d class. He w a s h o n o r ably discharged in 1964. O n March 1 7 , 1 9 62, h e married Cynthia J ones in L as Vegas, NV. From th i s u nion came tw o s o ns. I n 1 965, Steve along with hi s wife and first child, Steve J r., m oved t o R e d m o n d , O R; where a s h o r t t i m e later, Grant was born. S teve and C i nd y o w n e d and o p e r ate d S t e p h en's Cleaning S e r vice f o r 1 5 e ars. A f t e r s e l l i n g t h e bu siness, h e w o r k e d f o r t he Redmond School D i strict, until retiring in 1999. S teve was a n a v i d o u t d oorsman a nd enj o y e d

camping,

f i s h in g and

hunting. H e a l s o e n j oyed w atching h i s ki d s an d

FEATURED OBITUARY

Dick Rich put whimsy into TV commercials By Paul Vitello

missed by his loving fam-

ily and friends. Memorial co n t r i b utions in Steve's memory may be m ade to Partners In C a r e H ospice, 2075 N E W y a t t Court, Bend, OR 97701. A utumn Fu n e r a l s of R edmond h a s b e e n e n trusted wit h t h e a r r a ngements, (541) 5 0 4 - 9485. www.autumnfunerals.net

• Class 3 — Grazing land Primarily suitable for grazing or o t her agricultural uses — ODF Forest Protection Unit Boundaries

• Historic fire perimeters

I

Redmond

was born Richard Lowell Aufrichtigin Brooklyn, New York,

New York Times News Service

Dick Rich, a copywriter and advertising executive

on Oct. 27, 1930, to Harriet and

Maxwell Aufrichtig — she a homemaker, he the owner of es of indigestion and outsize a wholesale dairy business. cigarettes into classic 1960s The family name was legally t elevision c ommercials f o r changed to Rich in 1942. Alka-Seltzer and Benson & Rich graduated from BrookHedges 100s, died on Nov. 11 in lyn Technical High School, Manhattan. He was 84. then studied at Syracuse UniThe cause was a heart at- versityfor two years before tack, said his daughter Kar- transferring to New Y ork who turned the disadvantag-

en Rich, who announced his

Bend

DESCHUTES COUNTY

University, where he earned a

death last week. bachelor's degree in 1952. Rich was a founding memBesides his daughter Karen, ber of Wells Rich Greene, one

Rich is survived by three other

of the small firms that helped daughters, Lesley Smith, Nina define the freewheeling spirit Rich and Rebecca Nott; a son, of television advertising in the 1960s. Within months of the firm's formation, in 1966, he createdtwo fastpaced, trend-

setting spots.

Christopher; a brother, Ken Rich was a copywriter at the Manhattan advertising firm

Both featured ordinary peo-

of Jack Tinker & Partners in

ple performing daily tasks. Both increased sales for their

1966 when he and two Tinker

colleagues, Stewart Greene clients. And both were fun- and Mary Wells Lawrence, ny enough to bear repeated resigned to form Wells Rich watching. Greene. Within two years, the The first, for Alka-Seltzer, firm was one of the top 15 ad was known by its voice-over agencies in the United States, refrain, " No M atter W h a t with annual billings of $59 Shape Your Stomach's In." It million, according to Advertiswas a montage of a vast vari- ing Age. ety of human midsections, and Besides his b est-known an ode to the frailty they all projects, he played a role in supposedly shared. Whether many of the firm's other camfit and trim or fat and jiggling, paigns, including commercials or a ballerina's, a hardhat's for Samsonite luggage, Braniff or a fallen boxer's pressed Airways, TWA, Royal Crown to the mat, the commercial soda and Gleem toothpaste. vowed, A l ka-Seltzer w ould

cial he wrote for the extra-long

He left to start his own one-

In 1984, Rich created one

Benson 8 Hedges 100 ciga- of the first television ad camrette. In a seriesoftwo-second paigns for personal computers, vignettes, smokers encoun-

MILES

Rich; seven grandchildren and his wife, Silvia.

make them all feel better when man advertising agency in "heartburn," "the flutters" or 1969, Dick Rich Inc., whose grandkids play sports. He that "stuffy feeling" struck. clients included Wendy's and w as also an a c t ive m e m Equally whimsical and visu- Bojangles' Famous Chicken 'n ber of th e R e dmond Jayally sardonic was the commer- Biscuits. cees and Elks. S teve is survived by h i s beloved wife o f 5 1 y e ars, Cynthia Per r y m a n of Redmond, OR ; son s, Stephen ( w i f e C h r i s t ina) Perryman, Jr., of Bend, OR a nd G r an t ( w i f e V i c k i e ) P erryman o f Red m o n d , O R. Ot he r s u r v i v or s i n c lude f iv e l o v i n g g r a n d c hildren an d t h r e e g r e at grandchildren. He was preceded in death by both parents; a brother, Tom Perryman and grands on B r a n do n P e r r y m a n . S teve w i l l b e gr ea t l y

• Class 2 — Timberland Primarily suitable for timber production and livestock grazing

for the Commodore 64.

tered the many ways in which He was by most accounts a longer cigarette might stand a pioneer of advertising that out — getting caught in eleva- rested on the great image rathtor doors or in other people's er than the great slogan; his beards;being lopped offby litmus test in formulating campretty women brushing by. paigns, he once said, was "WI"Oh, th e d i sadvantagesWIJ: Will It Work In Japan." of the new Benson & HedgHe was also, by his own es 100s," a gravelly baritone account, not modest. "Clients voice-over intoned. "They're a don't come to me for OK adverlot longer than king size — and tising," he said in an interview that takes some getting used with The New York Times in to." (Though it was well worth 1983. "They come to me for the trouble, he continued. Be- great, great advertising." cause the new 100-millimeter In her 2003 memoir, "A Big size cigarette was "four puffs Life," Lawrence, Rich's forlonger, maybe five puffs longer mer partner, said that hyper s elf-confidence was part o f than king size.") Since 1971, tobacco ads on Madison Avenue culture. It television and radio have been was captured, she wrote, in banned in the United States. one of Rich's favorite sayings: K nown a s Dic k Ri c h "If we were modest, we'd be throughout his adult life, Rich perfect."

0

15

Source: Oregon Department Of Forestry

Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

Forestland

mittee looked at the aerial

Continued from B1

setting t o

images with an i nfrared

The Deschutes County

Forestland C l assification C ommittee, w h ic h b e gan meeting Nov. 5, was formed to reassess the county and provide updated and accurate classifica-

tions for fire protection district boundaries. The committee is made up

b e t te r d i s t in-

guish vegetation and timber stands. Members of the committee were able

to comment and add input about individual units with-

in the large swaths of land. Some sections were designated as forestland based on

maps indicating the type of soil needed for tree growth,

of three county appointees but appeared to be without and three others from ODF, timber stands from the aeriO SU-Extension Ser v i c e al images. "It could be for any numand the Oregon State Fire Marshak The forestland in q ues-

ber o f r e a sons," K r i stin Dodd, ODF assistant district forester for the Central

tion is further defined by the state based on its pri- Oregon District, said in remary use. Timberland can sponse. "It could have been be either Class 1 or Class 2 a recent harvest." depending on whether it is Other sections that apeast orwest of the Cascade peared to be bare were from Mountains. It is used for fires known as "burn scars," timber production or graz- while others appeared to be ing livestock. lava fields. Grazing lands are considD odd, who sits o n t h e ered Class 3, a distinction committee, said the group outlining land p r imarily will "tweak" the classificaused for grazing and other tion maps based on converagricultural uses. sations during the meetings. Forestry Department fireA public hearing will be fighting resources are sent held before formal adoption to fight wildfires within the

of th e

c o m mittee's f ind-

department's protection dis- ings. Citizens who object tricts. The current rates for to the c l assifications can landowners within the De- suggest changes during the schutes County ODF protec- process. The project could tion districts are $1.62 per take up to two years before acre for timberland and $.69 implementation. per acre for grazing land. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, On Wednesday, the comtshorack@bendbulletin.com

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone,mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Deatllines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,andby9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.

— From wire reports

Barbara Yvonne Campbell November 13, 1936 — December 11, 2014 BarbaraYvonne CampbellofRedmond, Oregon, passed away peacefully with her family by her side on December 11, 2014 atHospice House in Bend, OR. She was 78. A celebration of Barbara's life will take place Saturday, December 20, 2014 at 4:00 PM at the Calvary Chapel of Redmond, located at 616 SW 9th Street in Redmond, OR. Barbara was born November 13, 1936 in Kingsport,

Tennessee, toEdward and Edna ('rhomas) Combs. On December 31, 1976, she married Edward Campbell in Long Beach, California. She enjoyed painting and knitting, but most of all spending time with her family.

Barbara issurvived by her loving husband, Edward Campbell; sons, Shelly Norwood, III and Wallace Norwood;daughters,D ebraSchmid and JenniferNorwood; and brothers, James Combs, Edward Combs and Mark Hardison.Other survivors include three grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren. Sheis preceded in death by both parents; a sister, Mary E. Kleffel and a grandchild, Michael Schmid. Memorial contributions in Barbara's memory may be madeto Partners In Care Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701. Autumn Funerals foRedmond kas beenentrusted with the arrangements, (541) 504-9485.www.aetemnfunerals.net

Betty was born November rz, r9zi in Oakland, CA and wentto be with the Lord December 9, zor4 at the age of 93 in Bend, Oregon. Shewasthe daughter of Floyd and Nellie Thomas. She was preceded in death by her husband of 73 years, William Harold Carmichael She is survived by her children: Charlene (and Bob) Pagett of Scotts Valley, CA; Bill (and Nancie) Carmichael of Camp Sherman, OR;andJim (and Carol) Carmichael of Bend, OR. She leaves ii grandchildren and zr greatgrandchildren. Betty lived many years in Scotts Valley, CA andworked as asocial worker for the county of Santa Cruz and as a bookkeeper for her husband's contracting business. As Mom, Grandma and Great-Grandma shewill be dearly missed by her family. Shewas amulti-talented lady, fabulous cook, she even won first prize one year atthe Santa Cruz County Fair Apple Pie Contest. She always lived her life faithfulto God and serving others.

THURSDAY DECEMBER 18TH FROM

Q:$0 - ' 7:30 P M

Everyone is welcome! Live Jazz Music by The Crescent Jazz Trio Featuring Artists: BARBARA SLATER PATRICIA CLARK JOREN TRAVELLER Complimentary Wine Tasting in the Great Room at Broken Top Club!

Make a night of it and stay for dinner! Join us Lr our Lounge or Award-Winning Restaurant!

She will be buried in Redmond, Oregon nextto her beloved husband. In lieu of flowers, donations may be madeto Assist « International, P. O.Box 66396,Scotts Valley, CA. 95066 Please visit the online registry for the family at www. niswonger-reynolds.com

s s'

••

z •• ~

! ll'

z ••

62000 Br oken Top D r i v e • 541-383-8200 www.brokentop.com


B6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided byACCHWeather, lnc. ©2014

I

i

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT i

HIGH 42' I f '

t, t ,

ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 43 28'

39 22'

83' in 1980 -13'in 1914

PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Record 0.81" in 1982 Month to date (normal) 0.8 4" (1.23") Year to date(normal) 9.4 5 " (10.39") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 8 7"

morning fog; otherwise, clouds and Lincoln limited sunshine today 54/47 with a stray rain or

snow shower.

d

J a n 4 Ja n 1 3

Touight's ulty: Capella, the brightest star of Auriga, the charioteer, is in the northeast at sunset and standsdirectly overhead around midnight.

37o

32o

A bit of snow andrain in the morning

A shower in the morning, then rain

SUNDAY

Mostly cloudy, a little rain; milder

I

0

The highertheAccuWealheraum tiy index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.

ROAD CONDITONS ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams I-84 at CabbageHill: Mostly cloudytoday; just

acouple of isolated rainandsnow showers. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Clouds,fog anda few rain andsnowshowers today; slowertravel. US 26 at Gov't Camp:Clouds,fog andfew rain andsnowshowers todaywill slow travel. US 26 at OchocoDivide: Mostly cloudytoday; areas of foganda few rain andsnowshowers. ORE 88 atWigamette Pass: Mostly cloudy today with fogandafew rain andsnowshowers. Slower travel at times. ORE138atDiamond Lake:Clouds,patchy fog and spotty rain andsnowshowers today.

SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort New snow Base AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.opening Dec.13 HoodooSkiArea: est. openingDec.19 Mt.Ashland:est.opening Dec.19 0 30-5 2 Mt. Bachelor M t. Hood Meadows 0 8-9 Mt. HoodSki Bowl: est. opening Dec.19 Timberline Lodge 0 6-8 Wglamette Pass:est. opening Dec.19 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 1 23-40 Vail, CO 1 30-3 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 12 30-4 2 Squaw Valley,CA 3 18-4 0 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 24-24 Sun Valley, ID 4 14-4 5 Source: OnTheSnow.com

Innocence

• 53/40

/38

• La ptne

'Baker G 41/31

tario 31

• Silver Lake 41/30 42/31 Chiloquin •

Chr i stmas alley

40

F rlday

• Burns Jun tion • 43/28 Rome 44/27 McDermi

43/30

Klamath

48/3

Fields• 43/29

• Lakeview

43/33

38/32

Yesterday Today

42/30

43/31

• Paisley

• Ashl nd F a l l s

42/31

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen

42/29

4 2 / 32

Nyssa

• Burns Juntura 42/29

Riley 38/27 38/27

41/30

Beaver Marsh

1 MedfO d •

Granitee 38/27

Valee 42/30

Ham ton

Fort Rock Cresce t • 41/29

Gra

55/

JosePh Grande • 44 35 union 28

• John eu • Prineville Day 9/26 43/32 • P a lina 4 2/3 1

Ros eburg

Rro ings Yesterday Today

41/

55/44

7/ Gold ach

4I/28 • • 40/28

/33 • Mitch 8 42/33

i

Yesterday

Meac am Lostl ne

dleton 40/3

4

' Re d Brothers Su iVere 42/31

Grove Oakridge

F riday

42/27

Yesterday Today Friday

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 50/45/Tr 55/44/r 52/43/sh La Grande 45/39/0.00 44/35/pc43/29/sh Portland 47/3 6/0.0152/44/c 51/43/sh 40/32/Tr 41/31/pc 38/25/r La Pine 40/29/0.00 42/30/c 40/28/c Prinevige 41/ 27/0.0043/32/c 40/27/c Brookings 53/48/0.21 55/48/c 53/49/sh Medford 5 3 /40/Tr 53/40/c 50/39/shRedmond 37 / 29/Tr 44/32/c 41/28/sn Bums 40/23/0.00 38/27/c 39/23/sn N ewport 52/4 3/0.00 54/46/r 5 3/46/sh Roseburg 52 / 41/0.06 55/44/c 51/43/sh Eugene 51/40/0.09 53/43/c 51/41/sh N o rth Bend 5 5 / 46/0.19 58/47/r 54/48/sh Salem 47/36/0.05 54/43/pc 51/42/sh Klamath Fags 42/32/0.02 43/33/c 42/29/r Ontario 42/31/Tr 42/31/pc 41/30/r Sisters 35/27/0.02 45/32/c 42/30/ sn Lakeview 41/28/0.00 38/32/c 40/30/c Pendleton 37/29/0.00 43/37/c 45/34/r The Dages 4 2 /38/Tr 46/38/c 48/37/sh

City Astoria Baker City

Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~ g e

~ gs

NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY(for the 48 contiguousstates) National high: 81 at Fort Lauderdale, FL National low: -a' at Langdon, ND Precipitation: 1.08" at Rockland ME

~ 'd

~ t ge

~ 208

~ 308

d d

s s sx d dddd. i

5

~ 50e

~ e oe ~ 7 0 8

Tfeu er uay

*

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*

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52/44

*

~ 8 0 8 ~ 90 8 ~ 1 0 0 8 ~ t t c a

Calge 37/23

,

%%53/45

~ 408

*

• Billings 40/28

*

's

Friday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 51/46/Tr Akron 35/33/0.06 Albany 42/35/0.22 Albuquerque 43/32/0.14 Anchorage 33/29/Tr Aganfa 50/37/0.00 Atlantic City 52/44/0.10 Austin 53/49/0.19 Baltimore 54/37/Tr Billings 33/1 9/0.00 Birmingham 46/32/0.00 Bismarck 20/11/Tr Boise 46/27/0.00 Boston 48/42/0.43 Bridgeport, CT 54/42/0.14 Buffalo 39/36/0.38 Burlington, VT 39/35/0.16 Caribou, ME 33/28/0.18 Charleston, SC 65/43/0.00 Charlotte 60/31/0.00 Chattanooga 50/41/0.00 Cheyenne 47/21/0.00 Chicago 29/24/0.00 Cincinnati 32/31/Tr Cleveland 35/33/0.05 ColoradoSprings 42/19/Tr Columbia, Mo 34/24/0.00 Columbia, SC 63/36/0.00 Columbus,GA 61/37/0.00 Columbus,OH 33/32/0.02 Concord, NH 43/32/0.67 Corpus Christi 76/60/0.17 Dallas 47/40/0.18 Dayton 32/31/0.01 Denver 40/19/0.00 Des Moines 30/15/Tr Detroit 39/30/Tr Duluth 20/10/Tr El Paso 62/35/0.00 15/-1/0.11 Fairbanks Fargo 20/2/0.00 Flagstaff 34/29/0.08 Grand Rapids 30/29/0.04 Green 6ay 27/24/0.01 Greensboro 57/37/0.00 Harrisburg 50/42/0.02 Harfford, CT 51/37/0.46 Helena 36/26/0.02 Honolulu 82/70/0.00 Houston 64/44/Tr Huntsville 47/39/0.00 indianapolis 27/25/0.01 Jackson, MS 57/33/0.00 Jacksonville 66/40/0.00

Hi/Lo/W 65/43/pc 33/28/c 39/28/pc 46/28/pc 27/22/s 59/39/pc 44/35/pc 71/55/r 43/30/pc 40/28/pc 54/35/pc 25/15/c 44/34/pc 45/31/pc 45/31/pc 35/26/sf 35/24/sf 29/21/sf 63/40/s 55/33/pc 48/31/pc 41/1 9/pc 31/23/c 35/26/c 33/28/c 42/1 9/pc 35/30/sn 60/36/s 63/42/pc 35/26/c 40/24/sf 77/64/1 60/45/r 34/24/c 43/20/pc 31/24/c 35/28/c 26/17/pc 59/34/r 10/1/s 23/16/c 38/16/sf 34/25/c 29/18/pc 51/32/pc 41/30/pc 44/29/pc 34/20/c 81/71/s 72/60/t 48/33/pc 31/23/c 56/44/c 66/40/pc

Hi/Lo/W 55/36/r 35/25/c 33/22/pc 46/26/s 29/23/s 60/45/c 45/32/s 60/43/r 43/27/pc 41/31/s 55/44/r 33/11/s 43/30/r 39/28/s 40/28/s 31/21/c 27/13/s 26/4/s 64/45/c 56/38/pc 50/39/c 41/23/s 33/26/c 38/29/c 33/26/c 45/21/pc 37/29/c 62/41/c 63/47/r 36/27/c 33/19/s 73/48/t 53/37/r 36/27/c 44/22/pc 36/29/c 35/26/pc 27/23/c 57/31/s 18/7/pc 31/21/c 42/19/s 33/26/pc 30/20/pc 51/34/pc 41/26/pc 37/26/s 35/23/pc 83/70/s 64/47/r 50/41/r 34/26/c 52/42/r 68/47/c

p 41/1

M ne 2 /17

*

* **

Amsterdam Athens

53/49/sh 62/48/pc 71/62/pc 64/48/pc 84/69/pc 40/21/s 72/60/c 54/50/c 66/48/r 47/40/pc 86/71/pc 78/56/pc 71/55/pc 37/23/c 81/70/s 57/40/r 49/37/r 47/44/r 76/63/c 64/55/pc 55/45/sh 63/47/pc 74/56/c 76/64/pc 58/47/s 58/50/c 58/34/s 83/75/r

51/43/r 60/47/pc 75/64/s 65/49/c 87/71/c 40/20/s 68/55/pc 54/39/r 66/49/sh 55/39/s 90/68/pc 78/53/s 69/55/c 39/26/pc 80/71/pc 46/41/pc 43/37/pc 51/43/s 77/63/1 60/56/r 52/45/pc 60/47/c 76/58/pc 77/64/pc 58/45/s 52/40/r 57/32/s

Friday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Juneau 38/31/0.02 34/29/sn 37/32/sh Kansas City 30/22/0.00 33/28/sn 35/28/c Lansing 30/29/0.05 33/26/c 33/25/pc Las Vegas 54/46/0.02 53/37/pc 55/37/pc Lexington 35/30/Tr 35/26/c 40/29/pc Lincoln 27/20/0.00 31/24/sn 37/25/c Little Rock 41/33/0.00 48/41/r 46/37/r Los Angeles 65/53/0.25 63/48/pc 65/50/pc Louisville 35/33/Tr 38/29/c 41/33/c Madison, iM 25/23/Tr 29/21/pc 31/23/pc Memphis 44/32/0.00 49/37/c 46/37/r Miami 80/58/0.00 78/60/s 77/65/s Milwaukee 27/26/Tr 31/24/pc 33/26/pc Minneapolis 20/9/Tr 25/17/pc 31/26/c Nashville 40/38/0.01 42/29/pc 44/36/c New Orleans 59/46/0.00 70/56/c 71/55/r New YorkCity 54/44/0.15 44/30/pc 40/30/s Newark, NJ 55/44/0.17 46/31/pc 42/27/s Norfolk, YA 59/39/0.00 46/33/pc 46/34/s OklahomaCity 39/36/0.27 47/38/sh 45/29/c Omaha 28/17/0.00 32/26/c 36/28/c Orlando 75/56/0.00 70/47/pc 72/54/pc Palm Spdings 60/50/0.12 65/45/pc 66/47/pc Peoria 30/21/0.00 30/22/c 34/26/c Philadelphia 53/39/0.01 44/33/pc 43/28/s Phoenix 61/51/0.07 63/45/pc 63/45/s Pittsburgh 37/36/0.02 33/28/c 35/26/c Portland, ME 42/37/0.72 42/27/sn 36/24/s Providence 52/40/0.31 45/29/pc 39/26/s Raleigh 60/39/0.00 52/33/pc 51/33/pc Rapid City 23/18/0.00 41/19/c 43/20/s Reno 49/31/0.00 46/31/pc 49/30/r Richmond 60/39/0.00 49/28/pc 48/29/pc Rochester, NY 44/34/0.02 35/27/sf 31/23/c Sacramento 57/49/0.94 57/50/c 57/49/r St. Louis 39/31/0.00 35/31/sn 38/30/c Salt Lake City 41/30/0.00 44/29/c 47/33/pc San Antonio 58/50/Tr 73/59/r 64/46/1 San Diego 66/55/0.52 64/51/pc 64/54/pc San Francisco 60/50/0.09 61/54/c 62/52/r San Jose 58/45/0.58 60/49/c 60/49/r Santa re 34/26/0.17 41/20/pc 42/19/s Savannah 67/44/0.00 65/41/s 68/49/c Seattle 48/43/0.07 53/45/c 51/43/sh Sioux Fags 20/-1/0.00 27/17/c 33/20/c Spokane 37/31/0.02 41/35/c 40/31/r Springfield, Mo 35/24/0.03 40/34/c 41/31/c Tampa 77/62/Tr 69/50/pc 71/57/pc Tucson 57/47/0.17 56/38/c 59/37/s Tulsa 37/31/0.36 44/38/sh 45/33/c Washington, DC 58/41/0.00 46/34/pc 47/32/pc Wichita 34/28/0.16 38/31/c 40/30/c Yakima 43/37/0.02 42/34/c 45/30/r Yuma 64/49/0.05 67/47/s 67/48/pc i

*

.

e

93/72/0.00 72/49/0.00 Montreal 34/27/0.00 Moscow 37/33/0.26 Nairobi 82/59/0.00 Nassau 77/68/0.00 New Delhi 64/48/0.00 Osaka 37/30/0.03 Oslo 22/16/0.10 Ottawa 33/30/0.28 Paris 54/41/0.84 Rio de Janeiro 82/67/0.00 Rome 61/46/0.00 Santiago 84/54/0.00 Sao Paulo 84/61/0.00 Sapporo 34/29/0.54 Seoul 21/11/0.00 Shanghai 44/25/0.00 Singapore 84/77/0.29 Stockholm 34/32/0.31 Sydney 71/66/Tr Taipei 54/50/0.00 Tel Aviv 71/46/0.00 Tokyo 42/36/0.00 Toronto 39/37/0.15 Vancouver 48/41/0.12 Yienna 45/36/0.04 Warsaw 39/37/0.00

84ns/lc

who wrote that a phone call that bounced off a cell tower

near the park did not demonstrate Roberts had been in the

93/69/s 74/44/pc 34/18/sn 34/28/sf 82/59/1 78/67/s 69/45/pc 40/29/sn 40/33/c 30/14/sf 55/49/c 89/74/pc 60/42/s 84/53/s 86/69/1 35/21/sn 27/16/s 48/41/pc 86/76/1 40/37/r 79/63/1 63/59/r 72/58/pc 47/38/s 35/23/sf 49/43/c 50/47/c 44/42/c

92/69/s 75/42/s 25/8/s 37/35/sn 80/58/t 78/68/s 70/44/pc 46/33/s 40/31/pc 22/5/s 53/41/r 88/74/pc 60/48/s 80/51/s 78/69/1 33/23/sf 38/25/c 52/35/c 86/77/r 41/31/s 74/62/s 67/57/r 69/56/c 48/44/s 32/1 8/pc 48/42/sh 57/44/s 52/37/c

"No prosecutor wants to convict someone who is

innocent. So to the extent that might happenWhen Wax and Clark submitted a writ of habeas corpus and mistakes do happen in our system — I think they presented new evidence frOm fOrenSiC teChnalogistS

I

Mecca Mexico City

Continued from B1

to Oregon's U.S. District Court,

Yesterday Today

City

fbed ' ~ ~ ~ ~ ~,

22/3

25/18

Today

52/37/0.31 /2 Boston 63/56/0.70 * uke /31 ufrslo Auckland 69/61/0.29 3 /2 w York Baghdad 64/46/0.00 s oi s /33 Che n Bangkok 82/72/0.00 * 31/24 41/1 lladelPhle Beijing 41/22/0.00 C iceg Coi m b /33 Beirut 68/57/0.00 n eecisco Ssft Lske ity ..3 /23 3 Omah * * • Den 44/29 * * Berlin 40/33/0.04 41/54 ington 6 43/2 * ** ** * * us lle 44 Las V ss Bogota 68/47/0.05 ae/29 53/3 Kansas Qty Si * „ Budapest 48/37/0.08 33/aa Buenos Ai r es 86/64/0.01 • ~vu * * * Cherlo Los Ao fes Cabo San Lucas 77/61/0.00 42/2 3 Cairo 70/52/0.00 Phom •L Anchorage Albuque ue ame,Ci • 4 41 • Ai • evvas Calgary 36/14/0.02 ~~ 27/2 4 o o 44/28 59/39 Cancun 79/63/0.00 uiu ieuhe 51 • Defls Juneau Dublin 52/48/0.64 ~~~O ui p s Edinburgh 50/41/0.26 34/29 Geneva 43/34/0.85 Houstoni i i ew Orlea ad Harare 78/61/0.66 72/5 /54 Hong Kong 61/48/0.00 Honolulu Chihuehue c ~ . t Istanbul 57/50/0.10 81/71 44/29 Iuiemi Jerusalem 61/44/0.00 Mo 7 8/ly- ' z . 70/5 Johannesburg 72/57/0.30 e Lima 74/66/0.00 Lisbon 59/55/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 55/41/0.24 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 55/36/0.00 Manila 82/74/0.04 Boih ** • 44/34

Mostly cloudy

TRAVEL WEATHER

• pmy

• Eugene

Bandon

4

• 43 33 Ca mPSh mau R9d I\ 42/32 •

52/44

58/48

2 p .m. 4 p .m.

~ T

33o

O rV R8I

High: 55 at North Bend Low: 19' atJoseph

0'

0/42

2/43

8

UV INDEX TODAY T

27o

• 43/ 7 • 46/38 Govee • HeP Pner nt • u pi C ondoll / 3 5 Cam '42

andy•

54/4

YESTERDAY

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

1 I~

31'

39/

54/46

Fri. advancing onshore 7: 3 6 a.m. this afternoonand Floren e 4: 2 9 p.m. continuing tonight. 54/48 4: 5 1 a.m. 2 : 5 9 p.m. OREGON EXTREMES Last

S w

10 a.m. Noon

46'

lington 43/38

he Daa

Sale

Newpo

WEST: Mostly cloudy Yach today with rain 54/47

SUN ANDMOON

D ec 21 Dec 28

37'

Portland 4

2/

Tigamo • 52/44 Mc innviu

CENTRAL:Patchy

Today 7:35 a.m. 4:28 p.m. 3:47 a.m. 2:17 p.m. First Fu ll

40'

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 43/35 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

ria

EAST: Cloudy to partly sunny andmostly dry Seasid today; patchymorning 54/46 fog. Rain andsnow Cannon will increase tonight. 54/47

TEMPERATURE Low

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

High

LOW

MONDAY "" 45'

Cloudy with a bit of snow and rain late

Mostly cloudy

I

FRIDAY

ome®

prosecutors should be a part of exonerating that person.... All law enforcement should pursue justice, not conviction ofinnocent people.

Enls 12/24

— District Attorney-elect John Hummel

park or in what direction she In 2012, the Oregon Supreme is focused on creating ties with was headed. DNA retesting Court issued an opinion on Central Oregon communities. "Our first step is to come out ordered by the judge in 2013 two cases concerning pretrial revealed male DNA on a pil- identification of criminals by to different parts of Oregon and lowcase found near Williams' witnesses. The court increased engage in a conversation about body. the burden of proof after eval- what we do ... and develop 10Roberts was freed May 28 uating the cases and scientific cal relationships and support and her case was dismissed research that doubt the reliabil- for this project," Singh said. "This is a statewide problem June 2. She's now in school on ity of witness identification. scholarship studying to be a Since the project's official and it's going to take statewide dental technician, Wax said launch in April, it has received SUPPOTt. "No prosecutor wants to conWednesday. mOre than 80 requeStS fOr irtSingh said Oregon is the last vestigation from p r isoners ViCt SOmeOne Who is innOCent," state in the U.S. to be covered throughout the state, Singh said D i strict A t t orney-elect by astate orregionalorgamza- sald. Hummel. "So to the extent that tion dedicated to investigating Those seeking assistance might happen — and mistakes daims of innocence. from the Oregon Innocence do happen in our system — I "We feel it is necessary to Project must fill out a 30-page thinkprosecutorsshould be a have a program that looks at questionnaire detailing the con- part of exonerating that person. causes of wrongful convictions vict's history. Law students help ... All law enforcement should and advocates for those who processthose questi onnaires pursue justice, not conviction of are innocent," said Singh."That and theprojectchooses which innocent people." type of advocacy is not always cases to take on, Singh said. All Singh and Wax said they built into the current system." of the work is pro bono. hope to reach out to local police In addition to reviewing casAccording to the National and sheriffs as well as prosecues, the organization will advo- Registry of Exonerations, there tors and defense attorneys. "We're here to work collabocate for legislative and policy are nine people in Oregon who reform, Singh and Wax said. have been exonerated — before ratively with all criminal justice Among the issues are forensic the Innocence Hoject came to stakeholders in Central Oreevidence,false confessions,bad the state. Wax and Singh be- gon," Singh said. eyewitness reporting and attor- lieve there maybe more. — Reporter.541-383-0376, ney misconduct, Singh said. Tonight, though, the group mbe@rndbulletirLcom

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two children, 4-year-old twins

Owen and Ella. According to Yaju Dharmarajah, the representative for the

local council of the Association

beforethe party that Reesor's struggle to have the operation covered caught his attention. "It just hit me, what they were doing," said Kollen. "It was a human issue ... it was

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"I said, 'Absolutely!"' Reesor, who has worked as a

doesn't kick in until January, so

District Attorney-elect John

Reesor and Mongan thanked

transition meetings with depu-

those gathered on Wednesday schutes County for seven years, profusely. "I can't say enough," Rehas been on unPaid administmtive leave from the office esor said. "Especially at the and foresees a few months of holidays."

ty district attorneys "one thing

"Dan would not be here but

that always comes up in our

conversations is you." "I want you to take as long as you need,"Hummel said. "You're our team,our family." Together, groups and indi-

for the community coming toand living expenses for himself gether," Mongan said. vidttals have raised more than and his family. Jared Kollen, the president of $4,000for Reesor andhis family, Reesor has been staying at the local union for security offi- accordingto Kollen and Baxter. his father's house near Los An- cers at Deer Ridge Correction— Reporter:541-383-0376, geles with Mongan and their al Institution in Madras, said cwfthynmbe@bendbulletfrLcom Meanwhile, he has medical

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unions and other groups have Hummel, who will take office stepped up tohelp. in January, told Reesor that in

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 College basketball, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4 NBA, C3 NHL, C6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

PREP BOYS BASKETBALL: BIG SCHOOL PREVIEW

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

UO'sEkpre-Olomu

Coaches

out for season Oregon cornerback Ifo Ekpre-Olomu severely injured a kneeduring practice Tuesdayand will miss the rest of the football season, according to multiple reports. The senior from Chino Hills, California, named a first-team All-American by The Associated Press on Tuesday, is one of the team's leading defenders. But the Duckswill be without him when they take onFlorida State in the RoseBowl national semifinal on New Year's Day. Starting in place of Ekpre-Olomu will likely be either senior cornerback Dior Mathis or redshirt freshmanChris Seisay, according to CSNNW.com. Ekpre-Olomu, who also was namedallPac-12, has beenprojected by many to bea first-round pick in next spring's NFLdraft. He has 63 tackles and two interceptions this season. Hehas started every game for Oregon (12-1) since becoming a full-time starter as a freshman in the middle of the 2011 season.

juggle long hours with sleep, exercise • There are several ways coachesdeal with stress;some healthy, othersnot

l~ ~r e

By Ryan Autullo and Kirk Bohls Cox Newspapers e

Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

Mountain View's Davis Holly, left, end Ments Haugen hope to help lead the Cougars to their fifth IMC title in the past six years.

When the North Texas concern on her face.

"She looked like somebody shot both of our dogs," McCarney said. "She told

me, 'You have four blocked arteries. They're 95 percent blocked.' " Surgery was not an option.

PREP FOOTBALL Cowdoysnamed 4A all-state

— Bulletin staff report

NBA

It was mandatory. And within 48 hours, McCarney was on

• Several squads hopeto bring Mountain View's decadeof dominanceto anend Inside

By Grant Lucas

• A breakdown of Class 5A schools,C4 • A roundup of Wednesday's prep sports action,C4

The Bulletin

Mountain View's dominance over

the past 10 years is nothing to scoff at. Six Intermountain Conference ti-

tles and two co-championships. Eight trips to the Class 5A boys basketball

nitely going to be tougher, a little deeper," says Reid. "With Ridgeview,

state tournament. Four trophies won at the final site.

Summit and Bend, and Redmond

All of that success has only broadened thetarget on the Cougars'

backs. And this season, Mountain View coach Craig Reid says, the road to yet another IMC title could

be one of the most arduous in recent memory. "I think this year's (IMC is) defi-

probably on the fringe, it's going to be more balanced. But I like our chances."

And despite their inexperience, what with only three returning players who logged significant varsity minutes last season, the Cougars couldbe regarded asearly favorites

Blazers pull away to deat Bucks Backup center Thomas Robinson scores 15 points and adds16 rebounds to lead Portland to a104-97 win over Milwaukee,C3

Apogee Stadium end zone each day helped.

ed to the varsity level," Reid says, "we

Did the 60-year-old McCarney take off the rest of the

are as deep and talented, potentially, as we've been in the 15 years I've

spring and summer to recover

been here."

and recharge for the next

That makes the challenge all the more daunting for the rest of the Summit coachJon Fraziersays,the Cougars will remain the team to

season? "I was back in the office in five days," he said almost apologetically. As a totally driven football

beat. Mountain View, according to

coach obsessed with doing the

Ridgeview coach Nathan Covill, re-

job right, McCarney remains more the rule than the excep-

IMC, and until they are dethroned,

mains the standard for the rest of the conference.

SeeCougars/C4

tion in his profession. Results from an Austin

participated, most coaches

BASEBALL

are burning the candle at both ends and everywhere in between:

Normalizedrelations between Cuba,U.S. could have'drastic' impact on MLB

The average age of the coaches who participated in the survey: 52.

As many as 22 of the 40 coachessaid they sleep fiveor fewer hours every night. SeeCoaches/C6

Coachinghadits

By Adam Kilgore The Washington Post

President Barack Obama's move to normalize relations between the United States

and Cuba will resonate through baseball. The trickle of dazzling talent that already flows

Mike Groll/The AssociatedPress

United States' pilot Elana Meyers Taylor and brakeman Cherrelle Garrett compete in the women's bobsled World Cup on Saturday in Lake Placid, New York.

from the baseball-crazed island could turn

words of one team official, "drastic." Even with a political blockade between

against Milwaukee.

stadium steps in North Texas'

ball team has ever won. "I think once we get kids acclimat-

American-Statesman survey of college head coaches across the country revealed that, at least among the 40 who

pact on the sport could be immense and, in the

Wednesday's game

an operating table undergoing quadruple heart bypass surgery. That he was in good health and had run the 140

hardware no Mountain View basket-

for the 5A state title — a piece of

into a geyser, a stream of available players that would force Major League Baseball to frame and police how teams acquire Cuban players. The political thaw would also eliminate the dangerous back channels of defection. The im-

Portland's Damian Lillard drives during

AUSTIN, Texas — Spring drills were over. The final intrasquad game in April 2013 was in the books, and Dan McCarney finally went in for a simple angiogram for chest pains as he had promised his wife. football coach awoke from the procedure, he saw a look of

— From staff Mire reports

After helping Crook County reach the state playoffs for the first time since1997, three Cowboys havereceived Class 4A all-state inSide football • Complete recognilistings tion. of the 4A Senior all-state punter teams,C4 Ricky Hernandezwas named to the first-team defense, while senior defensive linemanTrevor Rasmussen received second-team honors. Senior Zach Smith received honorable mention as a linebacker and a center. State-champion Gladstone swept the 4A top honors: senior running back Handsome Smith was voted the offensive player of the year, senior linebacker Zach Smith was named the defensive player of theyear, and JonJedrykowski was selected as the coach of the year. The 4A all-state teams were voted on by high school coaches throughout the state and were compiled byThe Oregonian newspaper; results were announced Wednesday.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Female bobsledders set to race menfor real

Cuba and the United States, players born in

By Tim Reynolds

Cuba haveshaped thegame. Chicago White Sox designated hitter Jose Abreu was last year's American League Rookie of the Year. Detroit Tigers outfielder Yoenis Cespedes has

The Associated Press

Katharin Dewey showed Elana

WINTER SPORTS Alberta, on Saturday, when they compete against men on bobsledding's top circuit, the World Cup tour. Meyers Taylor will drive a sled

fielder Rusney Castillo signed a $72.5 million contract with the Boston Red Sox. Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig received a

Meyers Taylor and Kaillie Humphries the possibilities, decades before either was born. Dewey started bobsledding in the mid-1930s, a woman competing against men before new safety

nickname — "The Wild Horse" — from no less

rules prevented that from happen-

of an authority than Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully.

ing. It probably was no coincidence that those rules were amended

"This is my passion," said Humphries, the two-time Olympic gold medalist in women's bobsledding,

soon after Dewey out-drove all-

where only two are in a sled. "It's

male sleds at Lake Placid, New York, for the national championship in 1940. Her torch is now passed. Meyers Taylor and Humphries will make history at Calgary,

what I love to do. I do this to be the

won the past two Home Run Derbies. Out-

A new burst of talent may arrive from Cu-

ba's highest level into the majors and the upper levels of the minor leagues in the United States. Scouts would flock to youth tournaments in an

attempt to discover teenage players with huge potential and sign them on the cheap. See Cuba /C6

for the U.S. with three men along

for the ride. Humphries will do the same for Canada.

best I can be. I don't do it to prove

anything to anybody." Still, that is exactly what will

happen this weekend. SeeBobsledders/C4

How10 coachesdeal with stress: Clint Bewen, Kansas:His wife plans his meals. Ren Caragher, SanJoseState: Does CrossFit as part of his workout routine. Norm Chew,Hawaii: Watches Dodgers baseball games to relax. SonnyDykes, California: Takes his daughters to school once a week. Mike Gundy,OklahomaState: Is still searching for a go-to outlet to combat stress. Darrell Hazell, Purdue:Admitted to having awful eating habitsliterally while hewaseating crackers for lunch. Dana Helgersen, WestVirginia: Admits to going through "extremes" both physical and mental, depending ontheoutcome ofa game. Curtis Johnson,Tulane: Listens to gospel music to relieve stress. Paul Rheads, lewaState: Says it is possible to win working eighthour days "if you havegreat, great players." Rick Steckstill, Middle Tennessee State:Has slept in his office only once, tossed andturned, and vowed never to do it again.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY Time TV /Radio Men's college, Cleveland State at Virginia 4 p. m . ES P NU Men's college, Connecticut vs. Duke 5 p.m. E S PN NBA, NewYorkat Chicago 5 p.m. TNT Men's college, Coastal Carolina vs. OleMiss 5 p.m . SEC Men's college, DePaul atOregonState 7 p.m. P ac-12, BASKETBALL

KICE-AM 940, KRCO-AM 690, FM 96.9

NBA, OklahomaCity at Golden State

7:30 p.m. T NT

MOTOR SPORTS

Race of Champions

4 p.m. NBCSN

VOLi.EYBALL

Women's NCAA semifinal, BYU vs. Texas Women's NCAA semifinal, Penn State vs. Stanford

4 p. m .

ES P N2

6:30 p.m. ESPN2

FRIDAY SOCCER A-League, Perth vs. Central Coast English, Manchester City vs Crystal Palace

2 :30 a.m. F S 2 4:45 a.m. NBCSN

FOOTBALL

Men's college, NAIAChampionship, Marian vs. Southern Oregon noon ESPNU Men's college, NCAADivision III Championship, Mount Union vs. Wisconsin-Whitewater 4 p.m. E SPNU Men's college, NCAAFCS, Sam Houston State at North Dakota State 5 p.m. E SPN2 BASKETBALL

High School, Simeon (III.) vs. St. Rita (III.) Men's college, St. Mary's at St. John's Men's college, Clemson atSouth Carolina NBA, Portland at SanAntonio

3:30 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. ESPN, CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM, KRC 0 690-AM,96.9-FM Men's college, Seattle at Minnesota 5 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, Colorado State at Denver 6 p.m. Root Men's college, Alabama A8 Mat Marquette 6 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Texas-PanAmerican at Creighton 6 p.m. FS2 Men's college, Eastern Washington at California 7 p.m. Pac-12 NBA, OklahomaCity at LosAngeles Lakers 7:30 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Arizona atTexas-El Paso 8 p.m. FS1 Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis notresponsible forlate changesmadebyTI/or radio stations.

ON DECK Today Boys basketball: Sistersvs. CentralLinnat Seaside HolidayClassic, 10:30a.m.; Madrasvs. Newport atSeasideHoliday Classic, 5:15 p.m.; CrookCountyvs. North Marionat NorthMarion HolidayTournament, 6;30p.m. Girls basketball: Sistersvs. CentralLinnat Seaside HolidayClassic,9 a.m.;Madrasvs. Newport atSeasideHolidayClassic,3:30p.mcRedmond vs. Sutherlin at NorthMarionHolidayTournament,6:30p.m.; CrookCountyvs. Banksat North MarionHolidayTournament, 3:30p.m. Swimming: Redm ond, Ridgeview,Summit, Sisters at CascadeSwimCenter, TBD;Madras at Sweet Home,4p.m.

Saturday Boys basketball: Bendat Corvaffis, 12:45p.m.; Mountain Viewat CrescentValley, 12:45 p.m.; Redmondat DallasHolidayTournament, TBD; Sisters,Madrasat Seaside Holiday Classic, TBD; CrookCountyat NorthMarion HolidayTournament,TBD;Culver, Gilchristat CulverTournament, TBD;Central Christianat Holiday HoopsClassic in Klamath Falls, TBD Girls basketball: Corvaffis atBend,12:45 p.ms CrescentValley at MountainView,12:45 p.m.; Redmond,CrookCountyat North MarionTournament, TBD;Centennial at Summit, 2 p.m.; Sisters,MadrasatSeaside Holiday Classic, TBD; Culver,Trinity Lutheran,Gilchrist at CulverTournament,TBD;Central Christianat HolidayHoops Classic inKlamathFalls, TBD Wrestling: Redmond,Ridgeview,Sisters, Madras at Adrian IrwinMemorial Tournament, 10a.m.; Crook Countyat RenoTournament of Cham pions, TBD

Men's college Pac-12 AH TimesPST

Wednesday'sGames

Stanford67,LoyolaMary58 Oregon79,CalState Northridge 56 Washington 86, Grambling State38

TRACK AND FIELD DuCkWinSBOWerman TrOPhy — Oregon track and field 800 meter NCAAChampion Laura Roesler wasawarded TheBowerman Trophyon Wednesday,presentedbytheU.S.Trackand Fieldand Cross Country CoachesAssociation. Roesler, who won 2014 NCAA titles in the 800 both indoors andoutdoors andwas amember of the collegiate record 4x400 relay teamwhich clinched the Ducks' fifthstraight indoor championship, beat out fellow finalists Sharika Nelvis (Arkansas State) andCourtney Okolo (Texas). The Fargo, North Dakota, native is the first woman inOregonhistory to win the awardand the third overall, joining Olympic medalists Ashton Eaton, of Bend, and Galen Rupp.Roesler is the first female from the Pac-12 towin the award as well as the first athlete of either gender to win with the 800 as their primary event.

BASEBALL ltIi'OS —TheSanDiego Padres acquired RRIfS SOllltI MIfOSS tO PO

outfielder Wil Myers from theTampaBayRays onWednesday, a person with knowledge of the dealsaid. Myers wasthe ALRookie of the Year in 2013,when hehit.293 with 13 homers with 53 RBls with TampaBay. But hewas limited to 87 games last season due to a right wrist injury, and hehit.222 with six homers and 35 RBls.There were multiple reports that Washington also wasinvolved in the deal, but the person would not confirm the Nationals' involvement to The Associated Press. SanDiego also receives catcher Ryan Hanigan and minor league pitchers JoseCastillo and Gerardo Reyes inthe trade, with catcher ReneRivera moving from the Padres toTampaBay.

MarinerS aCquire Outfielder Ruggiano fram CubS —The Seattle Mariners announced theyacquired Justin Ruggiano from the Chicago Cubs inexchangefor minor league reliever Matt Brazis. To make room for Ruggiano onthe 40-man roster, reliever Logan Bawcom hasbeendesignated for assignment. Ruggiano played in 81 games with the Cubslast season before surgery to repair a bonespur in his ankle endedhis season, hehit.281 with 12 doubles, a triple, six homers and 28RBI. Ruggiano said the ankle is100 percent and he will be able to report to spring training fully healthy.

FOOTBALL RePOrt: MiChigan OfferS Jim Hardaugh deal — IVllchlgan is apparently making aserious run at San Francisco 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh to fill its open coaching position. According to a report from the NFLNetwork's lan Rapoport, citing anonymous sources, Michigan offered Harbaugh $8million per year to coach theWolverines. That would bealmost $1 million more than the current highest-pai dcollegecoach,Alabama'sNickSaban,whomade$7160,187 in his most recent season, according to USA Today. Meanwhile, ESPN NFLInsiderAdam SchefterpostedonhisFacebookpage Wednesday that one person familiar with Harbaugh's thinking said he is "considering it.a Schefter also said that another person close to the hiring process saidait was not likely" Harbaugh would end upat Michigan. Harbaugh, the former Michigan quarterback, signed afiveyear, $25 million contract when he was hired by the 49ers in 2011. He took them to theSuper Bowlandtwo other NFCtitle games in his first three seasons. This year, though, the 49ers wereeliminated from playoff contention last weekend.

WiSCOnSinbringS Pitt'S ChrySt hame aS COaCh—Paul Chryst is coming home tocoachWisconsin. The school made it official on Wednesday, hiring Chryst away from Pittsburgh. The announcement endeddays of speculation following the surprising departure of GaryAndersen for Oregon State. Chryst is a former Wisconsin offensive coordinator and aMadison native. He leaves the Panthers after going 19-19 in threeseasons, returning to his hometown and almamater. The49-year-old Chryst had two prior stints as an assistant coach for the Badgers. Most notably, hewas part of the Wisconsin staff from 2005-11, helping the Badgers to five double-digit victory seasons andtwo RoseBowls.

Pelini riPPed Neb'S AD in laSt talk with PlayerS — Bo Pelini lambastedNebraskaathletic director ShawnEichorst in a profanity-filled talk during his final meeting with his players. TheOmaha World-Herald onWednesdayreported that it obtained anaudiotape of Pelini's address to theplayers on Dec. 2ata Lincoln high school. Pelini, who was firedonNov.30,wasintroducedasthenew headcoachat Youngstown State University in Ohio on Wednesday. TheWorld-Herald reported that Pelini usedtwo vulgarities for femalegenitalia in reference to Eichorst. Therewereother instances of profanity on theaudio. — From wire reports

ARD4/mI)

In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

Today'sGame DePaulat OregonState, 7p.m. Friday'sGames EasternWashington atCalifornia, 7p.m. ArizonaatUTEP,8 p.m. Saturday'sGames DelawareStateat Oregon, noon KentuckyatUCLA, 12:30p.m. LehighatArizonaSt., 6 p.m. OklahomaatWashington, 6p.m. Stanfordat BUY,8 p.m. Utah atUNLV, 8:30p.m. Sunday'sGames Oregon StateatQuinnipiac,10a.m. Southern Calat BostonCollege,1 p.m. SanJoseSt.atWashington St., 4p.m. Wednesday'sSummary

Oregon 79, CS Northridge 56 CS NORT HRIDGE(3-8) Elliott 3-70-06,Maxw ell 4-94-612, Hale-Edm erson 2 4 0 04, Drew1-8 2 25, Hicks6 137 1019, Webb0-50-00,Cid0-00-00,Eff erson1-32-34, Parks2-72-36. Totals 19-5617-24 56.

OREGO(7-3) N

Benjamin1-8 3-46, Cook0-53-4 3, Brooks5-8 2 212, Young 7140 018, Rorie4 70 0 9, Bell 25 0-1 4,Benson2-31-2 6, Heffer0-00-00, Noebel0-1 0-00,Friedman0-00-00,Abdul-Bassit3-60-08, Chandler 4-65-613, Jensen0-0 0-00, Piganelli 0-1 0-00. Totals 28-6414-1979. Halftime—Oregon 39-30. 3-Point Goals—CS Northridge1-7(Drew1-5, Efferson0-1, Elliott O-t), Oregon 9-22(Young4-7,Abdul-Bassit2-5,Benson 1-1, Rorie1-3,Benjamin1-4, Cook0-1, Noebel O-t). FouledOut—Elliott, Hale-Edmerson.Rebounds—CS Northridge36(Maxwell tt), Oregon 43 (Benjamin 10). Assists —CSNorthridge10 (Drew4), Oregon21 (Cook6). Total Fouls—CSNorthridge19, Oregon18. A—4,914.

Wednesday'sGames

TOP 25 No.12 OhioState97, NorthCarolina AAT55 No.16Washington86, Grambling State38 Cincinnati71,No.19SanDiego State62 No. 25MichiganState66, Eastern Michigan46 EAST DelawareSt.72, St. Francis(NY)64 Pittsburgh 65, Manhatan 56

St. Francis(Pa.) 67,Duquesne52

SOUTH ArkansasSt.69, Mississippi St. 55 Auburn80,Winthrop62 Campbel70, l SIU-Edwardsville 65 FloridaSt.93, NorthFlorida77 High Point106,Ferrum48 Jacksonville68,Gardner-Webb65 Louisiana-Lafayette115,Miffigan76 Memphis 83,SC-Upstate73 MurraySt. 94,Alcorn St.56 NC Central108,Barber-Scotia52 NC State83,Tennessee72 Old Dominion58,Georgia St. 54, OT UCF75, Detroit 70 UNCWilmington73,Liberty 70, OT W. Ke ntucky75,ChicagoSt.60 Wofford64,CharlestonSouthern58 MIDWEST Cent. Michigan 80, Northwestern 67 Cincinnati71,SanDiegoSt.62, OT GreenBay66, MoreheadSt.50 llinois 73,Hampton 55 l linois St.64,UT-Martin54 JamesMadison72,Ball St. 52 Kennesaw St.90, YoungstownSt.84 Loyola ofChicago83, AbileneChristian 44 Miami(Ohio)71,Longwood60 Michigan St. 66,E.Michigan46 Nebraska-Om aha92, N.Colorado82 Ohio St.97,NCA&T55 Saint Louis75,Texas-PanAmerican69 Toledo83,Robert Morris 57 SOUTHWE ST Ark.-PineBluff61, Houston56, OT Baylor66,NewMexico St. 55 NorthTexas78,Langston65 SMU 67,Rl.-chicago46 Stephe nF.Austin66,TexasSt.60 TexasTech101, SCState39 Tulsa74,Missouri St. 70 FARWEST Cal Poly60,Northeastern58 Denver83,TexasA&M-CC73 IncarnateWord 82, GrandCanyon80 NewMexico76,Cent. Arkansas55 Oregon79,CSNorthridge56 Pepperdine53,Howard 45 Stanford67,LoyolaMarymount 58 UNLV75, Portland73, OT Washington86,Grambling St.38

Women's College Tuesdav'sGames

TOP 25 No.1 SouthCarolina69, Hampton 49 No. 3Texas 76,McNeeseState59 Chatanooga 54, No.7Stanford 46 No.13 Duke 92, Oklahoma72 No. 21Mississippi State66,UL-Lafayette51 No. 25DePaul109, Loyola84

UL-Lafayette -1 1 6 0r/z New MexicoBowl

Nevada

Utep

UtahSt. 1 0Nz 10Nz 49

Las VegasBowl

Utah

4

Air Force

4 ' / z 5 8'/z Colorado St

FamousIdahoPotato8owl WMichigan -1

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Camellia Bowl S. Alabama PK 3 53t/z BowhngGreen

Monday Miami BeachBowl

M emphis P K Marshall 1 1

Friday Boys basketball: Bend at CrescentValley, 7p.m.; Mountain Viewat Corvaffis, 7 p.mcRedmond vs. Greshamat Dallas Holiday Tournament, 5 p.ms Summit atChurchill, 7 p.mcSisters, MadrasatSeaside HolidayClassic, TBD;Crook County at North Marion HolidayTournament, TBD; La Pine at Coquille, 6:30 p.m.; Culver vs. Gilchrist at CulverTournament, 6:30p.ms Central Christian atHolidayHoopsClassic in KlamathFalls, TBD Girls basketball: CrescentValleyat Bend,7 p.m.; Corvallis at MountainView, 7p.msRedmond, CrookCountyat NorthMarion Tournament, TBD; Ridgeview at TheDaffes, 7p.m.; Summit at Sheldon, 7 p.m.;Sisters, Madrasat Seaside Holiday Classic,TBD;LaPineat Coquiffe,5 pmcCulver vs. Gilchrist atCulverTournament, 6p.m.; Trinity Lutheranvs. CrookCountyJVat CulverTournament, 2p.m.; Central Christianat HolidayHoops Classic inKlamathFals, TBD Wrestling: Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit, CrookCounty, Madras, Sisters, La Pine,Culver,Gilchrist at Adrian Irwin MemorialTournam ent at Ridgeview,2:30p.ms CrookCountyat RenoTournament of Champions, TBD

BASKETBALL

SPORTS IN BRIEF

College Saturday New OrleansBowl

IN THE BLEACHERS

1

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10t/z

67

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Tuesday,Dec.23 Boca RatonBowl

Poinsetlia Bowl

SAN DIEGOST. 1Nz 2'/z 54'/z

Navy

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AN TimesPST

EaslernConference Atlantic Oivision GP W L OT Pls GFGA

Tampa Bay Montreal

33 20 10 3 43 110 87 32 20 10 2 42 87 80 32 17 7 8 42 9 2 8 0 31 19 9 3 4 1 109 87 32 16 13 3 35 81 83 2 9 13 8 8 3 4 6 6 7 5 31 13 12 6 32 82 86 32 13 17 2 28 62 100

Detroit Toronto

Boston Florida Ottawa Buffalo

Metropolitan Division

GP W L OT Pls GFGA P ittsburgh 3 0 2 0 6 4 4 4 9 8 7 1 N.Y.lslanders 31 21 10 0 42 99 89 N.Y.Rangers 29 15 10 4 34 89 79 Washington 30 14 10 6 3 4 86 81 C olumbus 30 1 3 15 2 2 8 7 2 95 New Jersey 33 11 16 6 2 8 74 96 Philadelphia 30 11 14 5 27 8 0 9 0 C arolina 3 0 8 19 3 1 9 6 2 8 7

WeslernConference Central Division

EAST

AmericanU.60, Manhatan 52 Quinnipiac74,Drexel50 Siena75,SacredHeart 65 Vermont 63,St. Francis(NY)61 Yale90,Wagner 65 Youngstown St. 73, Robert Morris 65,OT SOUTH Akron73,UCF64 Auburn62,SavannahSt.56 Chattanooga 54, Stanford46 Duke92,Oklahoma72 E. Kentucky62,AlabamaA&M56 FloridaGulfCoast91,Bethune-Cookman46 Georgi aTech77,AlabamaSt.53 MississippiSt.66,Louisiana-Lafayette51 N. Kentucky66,Cincinnati 52 NC State67, Liberty 64 Richmond 77,UNCWilmington67 SC-Upstate75,MoreheadSt. 69 SouthCarolina69, Hampton 49 SouthFlorida84, N. Colorado43 SouthernU. 80,FloridaA&M69 MIDWEST DePaul109,Loyolaof Chicago84 N. Illinois69,SIU-Edwardsville 47 SOUTHWES T Oakland61,TexasA&M-CC54 Texas76, McNeeseSt. 59 TexasSouthern92, Houston Baptist 80 FAR WEST Montana70,Seatle 64, OT Northwestern88, UNL V84 San Francisco60, NorthTexas42

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AH TimesPST AMERICANCONFERENCE

y-NewEngland Buffalo Miami N.Y.Jets y-Indianapolis Houston Tennesse e Jacksonvile

East W L T P ct PF PA 11 3 0 . 786442 280 8 6 0 . 5 71302 254 7 7 0 . 5 00327 301 3 11 0 .214 230 360 South W L T P c t PF PA 10 4 0 . 714424 317 7 7 0 . 5 00324 277 2 12 0 .143231 390 2 12 0 .143 211 376

North W L T 9 4 1 9 5 0 9 5 0

P ct PF PA . 6 79311 289 . 6 43389 339 . 6 43376 267 7 7 0 . 5 00276 300 West W L T P ct PF PA y-Denver 1 1 3 0 7 8 6407 303 K ansas Cit y 8 6 0 .57 1 322 254 S an Diego 8 6 0 .57 1 303 294 Oakland 2 12 0 .143213 381 NATIONALCONFERENCE

East

Dallas Philadelphia N.Y.Giants Washington NewOrleans Carolina Atlanta TampaBay

W L T P c t PF PA 10 4 0 . 714381 328 9 5 0 . 6 43416 347 5 9 0 . 3 57317 339 3 11 0 .214 257 370

South W L T P ct PF PA 6 8 0 . 4 29364 374 5 8 1 . 3 93288 358 5 9 0 . 3 57348 369 2 12 0 .143 254 367 North W L T P ct PF PA 10 10 6 5

4 0 4 0 8 0 9 0

West W L T x -Arizona 11 3 0 Seattle 10 4 0 S an Francisco 7 7 0 St. Louis 6 8 0 x-clinchedplayoff spot y-clinched division

.7 1 4281 238 . 7 14436 325 . 4 29277 297 . 3 57296 409

P ct PF PA .7 8 6287 244 . 714339 242 .5 0 0251 285 . 4 29291 297

Today'sGame Tennessee atJacksonvile, 5:25p.m. Saturday'sGames PhiladelphiaatWashington,1:30 p.m. SanDiegoatSanFrancisco,5:25p.m. Sunday'sGames Baltimoreat Houston,10 a.m. Detroit atChicago,10a.m. Atlantaat NewOrleans,10 a.m. Minnesotaat Miami, 10a.m. Clevelandat Carolina,10 a.m. Green BayatTampaBay,10a.m. KansasCityat Pittsburgh,10 am. NewEnglandatN.Y. Jets,10 a.m. N.Y.Giantsat St. Louis,1:05p.m. Buffalo atOakland,1:25 p.m. Indianapolisat Dallas,1:25p.m. Seattle atArizona,5:30 p.m. Monday'sGame Denverat Cincinnati, 5:30p.m. Injury reporl Today'sGame TENNESSEE TITANS atJACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — TITANS: OUT : RBDexter Mccluster

(knee).DOUBTFUL: TTaylor Lewan(ankle), QBZach Mettenbergerfrlght shoulder). QUE STIONABLE: LB ZaviarGooden(hamstring), T ByronStingily (ankle), TE DelanieWalker(knee), LB Kamerion Wimbley (hamstring), WRKendaffWright(hand). PROBABLE:5 DaimionStafford(concussion). JAGUARS: OUT: DE AndreBranch(groin). QUESTIONABLE: QBBlakeBortles (foot), DERyan Davis (hip pointer), SJoshEvans foot), DTRoyMiler ffl (knee), WRTommy Streeter abdomen).PROBABLE:WRMarqise Lee(elbow).

College 2014 ALL-PAC-12CONFERENCETEAM First TeamOffense QB,MarcusMariota, Jr., Oregon(3) RB,JavoriusAllen, Jr., USC RB,DevontaeBooker,Jr., UtahRB WR,NelsonAgholor, Jr., USC WR,JaelenStrong,Jr., ArizonaState TE, Pharaoh Brown,Jr., Oregon OL, JamiDougl l as,Sr.,ArizonaState

OL,JakeFisher, Sr., Oregon OL, HronissGrasu,Sr., Oregon(3) OL, Andrus Peat, Jr., Stanford OL,MaxTuerk, Jr., USC First TeamDefense DL, Henry Anderson,Sr., Stanford DL, Nate Orchard, Sr., Utah DL, Danny Shelton, Sr.,Washington DL, LeonardWiliams, Jr., USC(2) LB, Hau'oKi li kaha,Sr.,Washington LB,ShaqThompson,Jr.,Washington LB, Scooby Wright ffl, So.,Arizona DB,IshmaelAdams,So.,UCLA DB,Su'aCravens,So., USC DB, IfoEkpre-clomu, Sr., Oregon(3) DB, Dam ariousRandall, Sr.,ArizonaState DB,JordanRichards, Sr.,Stanford First Team Specialists PK, AndyPhilips, So.,Utah P, Tom Hackett, Jr., Utah(2) RS,KaelinClay,Sr., Utah AP/ST, ShaqThompson,Jr.,Washington

SecondTeamOffense

QB,BrettHundley,Jr., UCLA RB,D.J.Foster,Jr., ArizonaState

RB,RoyceFreeman,Fr., Oregon WR,VinceMayle, Sr., WashingtonState WR,NelsonSpruce,Jr., Colorado TE,AustinHooper, So., Stanford OL, JakeBrendel, Jr., UCLA OL,StevenGurrola, Sr., Arizona OL, NickKely, Jr., ArizonaState OL, KyleMurphy,Jr., Stanford OL,JeremiahPoutasi, Jr., Utah SecondTeamDefense DL, DeFo rest Buckner, Jr., Oregon DL, KennyClark, So.zUCLA DL, Ow amagbeOdigIhizuwa,Sr., UCLA DL, DylanWynn,Sr., OregonState LB, MyleJa s ck,So.,UCLA LB, EricKendricks, Sr.,UCLA LB, A.J.Tarpley, Sr., Stanford DB, ErickDargan,Sr.,Oregon DB,TroyHil, Sr.,Oregon DB,AnthonyJefferson,Sr., UCLA DB, FabianMoreau,Jr., UCLA DB,StevenNelson,Sr., OregonState SecondTeamSpecialists PK, Zane Gonzalez,So., ArizonaState P, Drew Riggleman,Jr., Arizona RS, Ty Montgomery, Sr.,Stanford AP/ST,CharlesNelson,Fr., Oregon JuJuSmith,Fr., USC

Chicago St. Louis Nashville Winnipeg Minnesota Dallas Colorado

GP W L OT Pls GF GA 32 22 9 1 4 5 100 64 3 1 21 8 2 4 4 9 4 7 2 3 0 20 8 2 4 2 8 1 5 9 32 16 10 6 38 78 75 3 0 16 12 2 3 4 8 6 7 8 30 12 13 5 29 87 103 30 10 13 7 27 78 9 8

Pacific Division

GP W L OT Pls GF GA 3 3 21 7 5 4 7 9 7 8 9 3 1 18 11 2 3 8 8 9 8 8 SanJose 3 2 17 11 4 3 8 9 0 8 2 Los Angeles 32 15 11 6 36 84 78 Calgary 33 17 14 2 36 97 90 Arizona 31 11 16 4 26 72 100 Edmonton 32 7 19 6 2 0 66 106

Anaheim Vancouver

Wednesday'sGames Ottawa 2, NewJersey0 Bosto3 n,Minnesota2,OT Dallas 2,Vancouver0 Today'sGames Florida atPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. ColoradoatPittsburgh,4 p.m. Torontoat Carolina, 4p.m. Washingtonat Columbus,4 p.m. AnaheimatMontreal, 4:30p.m. StLouisatLosAngeles730pm Edmonto natSanJose,7:30p.m. Friday's Games Tampa Bayat NewJersey, 4p.m. AnaheimatOttawa,4:30p.m. N.Y.IslandersatDetroit, 4:30p.m. BostonatWinnipeg, 5p.m. Dallas atCalgary,6p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BOSTONRED SOX — Acquired RHP Anthony VarvarofromAtlanta Bravesfor RHPAaronKurczand

cashconsiderations. SEATTLE MARINERS— AcquiredOFJustinRuggiano fromthe ChicagoCubsfor RHPMatt Brazis. Designated RHPLoganBawcomfor assignment. TORONT OBLUEJAYS—Agreedto termswith OF RyanKalishonaminorleaguecontract. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— Agreedto terms with RHP David Hernandezonaone-yearcontract. CHICAGO CUBS — Named Dave Keller minor RS=ReturnSpecialist league Latin America field coordinator; TomBeyers AP/STAII-Purpose/Spe cialTeamsPlayer (not akicker minor league assistant hitting coordinator;ReyFuenor returner) tes Latincoordinator-mental skills program;Darneff 2) Two-time first teamselection McDonaldmentalskills programcoordinator; Mike 3) Three-time first teamselection Catherpitching coachandLeoPerezassistant hitting coachfor lowa(PCL); GuiffermoMartinez assistant Offensive Player of the Year: MarcusMariota, hitting coach forTennessee(SL); Mark JohnsonmanQB,Oregon ager,DavidRosario pitchingcoachandChris Gutierrez Pat Tillman Defensive Player of the Year: assistanthitting coachfor MyrtleBeach(Carolina); Scooby Wright, LB,Arizona JimmyGonzalez manager, BrianLawrencepitching FreshmanOffensive Player of theYear: Royce coach,JesusFeliciano hitting coachandOsmin MeFreeman,RB,Oregon lenderassistanthittingcoachfor SouthBend(MWL); FreshmanDefensive Player of theYear: Ado- AndersonTavares pitching coach,RicardoMedina ree'Jackson,DB,USC hitting coach,Terrmel Sledgeassistant hitting coach Scholar-Athlete of the Year: TaylorKelly, QB, and MikeMcNulty trainerfor Eugene(NWL); Carmelo Arizona State Martinezmanager, RonVilone pitching coach,Oscar Coach ofthe Year: RichRodriguez,Arizona Bernard hitting coach, TyWright assistant hitting coachandToby Wiliams trainer for Mesa(Arizona); HONORABLEMENTION ArmandoGabinopitching coachandClaudio AlmonARIZONA:WRAustin Hil, SrcWRCaylebJones,So4 te hittingcoachfor theDominican Rookie team; and DB Jonathan McKnight, Sr.;DLDan Pettinato, Sr.; EduardoVilacis pitchingcoachfor the Venezuelan QB AnuSolomon, FrcDBJared Tevis, Sr.; RBNick rookieteam. Wilson,Fr. MIAMIMARLINS— Agreed to termsINF/OF MiARIZONASTATE: LBDJ Calhoun, Frc DBLloyd chaelMorseonatwo-year contract Carrington,Jr.; LB SalamoFiso, SosDLMarcus SANDIEG OPADRES—Agreedto termswlth RHP Hardison,Sr.; LBLaiuMoeakiola, So.;RBDemario BrandonMorrowona one-yearcontract. Designated Richard,FrcDBJordanSimone, JrcOLVi Teofilo, LHPJuanOramasforassignment. Jr4 OL ChristianWesterman,Jr. FOOTBALL CALIFORNIk TEStephenAnderson,JrsLBMichael National Football League Barton, So.; OLChris Borrayo,So.; DLAustin CHICAGOBEARS— SignedC/GTaylorBoggsto Clark,Sr.;QBJaredGof, So4RBDaniel Lasco,Jr.; the practice squad. AP/STBryceMcGovern, Sr. DENVERBRONCOS — SignedSJoshBushfrom COLORADO: DBGregHenderson,SrcQBSefoLiuthe practicsqu e ad.SignedGJonHalapioto thepracfau, So 4OLDaniel Munyer, SR.; PKWil Oliver,Sr.; tice squad. PDarraghO'Neil, SrcDLJoshTupou,Jr. GREEN BAYPACKERS— Signed SJeanFanor to OREGON:DLArik Armstead,Jrc WRByron Mar- the practice squad. shall, JrsOLHamaniStevens,SrcLBJoeWalker, MINNES OTAVIKINGS— SignedSAhmad Dixon. Jr. SignedGJordan Mccraytothe practicesquad. OREGONSTATE: LBMichael Doctor,Src QBSean NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — SignedTE Steve Mannion,SrcDBRyan Murphy, SrcRBTerron Maneri. PlacedDLDominique Easley on injuredreWard,Sr. serve.SignedQBGarrett Gilbertto thepractice squad. STANFORD: LBKevin Anderson, Srs DBAlex TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS — Released CB Carter, Jrc DBZachHoffpauir, Jrc LB Blake CrezdonButler. SignedDLLawrenceSidbury. Signed Martinez, Jr.; WRTy Montgomery,Sr.; David DB Varmah Sonieto thepractice squad. HOCKEY Parry,Sr. UCLA: OLCalebBenenoch,SocTEThomasDuarte, National HockeyLeague NHL —FinedNashvile F JamesNeal$2,000for So.; AP/ST Ryan Hofmeister, SrcWRJordan Payton, Jrc RB Paul Perkins, So.; OLAlex Redmond, violatingtheleague's revisedruleagainst diving and embel lishing. So.; OLScott Que ssenberry, SocEddie VanderBUFFALO SABRES—Sent CMikhail Grigorenko does,So.;JaleelWadood,Fr. ter(AHL). USC: DB Adoree' Jackson, FrcQBCody Kessler, Jr.; to Roches CALGARYFLAMES— SignedcoachBobHartley OL Toa Lobendahn,Fr.;LBHayesPullard,Sr.;OL VianeTalamaivao,Fr.; LBJ.R.Tavai, Sr.;TERandall to a multiyearcontract extension. CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS — ReassignedGScott Telfer,Sr. UTAH: DB BrianBlechen, SrcDLHunter Dimick, So.; Darling toRockford(AHL). FLORIDAPANTHERS — Reassigned D Shane DL LowelLotul l elei,Fr.; LBJared Norris, Jr.; DB O'BrientoSanAntonio (AHL). Eric Rowe, Sr. MONTREAL CANADIENS— AssignedFSvenAnWASHINGTON: BuddaBaker,Frc OLMicahHatchie, Sr.; DLAndrewHudson,Sr.; RSJohnRoss, So4OL drighetto toHamilton (AHL). NEWJERSEY DEVILS— Activated FPatrik Elias Colin Tanigawa,Sr.; LBJohnTimu,SrcPKCamerfrom injuredreserve. on Van Winkle, So. NEW YORKISLANDERS — PlacedRW Michael WASHINGTON STATE: LBJeremiahAllison, Jr.; DB DaquawnBrown,So4 OLJoeDahl, Jr.; QBConnor Grabneroninjured reserveto Dec. 13.ReturnedD GriffinReinharttoBridgeport (AHL). Haffiday,Sr. OLYMPICS U.S. ANTI-DOPING AGENCY— Suspendedtrack merica's Lin coachJonDrummondfor eight years. Hometeam inCAPS SOCCER NFL Major LeagueSoccer Favorite Open Current 0/U underdog SPORT INGKANSASCITY—SignedFDomDwyer Today to a contractextension. JAGUAR S 3 3 40'/ z Titans COLLEGE Saturday GEORGE MASON— AnnouncedseniorFErikCopes 49ERS 2 Nz 1 41 ' / z Chargers hasdecidedtoleavethe men'sbasketball program. Eagles B t/2 8 50t / 2 REDSKINS NORTHTEXAS— NamedChrisCoshdefensive Sunday coordinator. DOLPHINS Bt/z Bt/z 4 2t/z Vikings NORTHERNMICHIGAN — Suspended women' s Packers 10'/z 10 4 8 '/z BUCS basketbalcoach l TroyMattsonfour gamesafter hesaid Lions 7 7 46 BEARS WayneState"cheated"whenit signedtransfer student 6 6 55' / z SAINTS Falcons SharetaBrown. Patriots 10 1 0 47 t /z JETS PDTSBU RGH—Firedathletic director StevePed3 3 46' / z STEELE RS Chiefs erson.NamedRandyJuhl, vicechancelor forresearch PANTHE RS Browns conductandcompliance, interimathletic director and Ravens 3N 5 41t / z TEXANS Joe Rudolph,offensivecoordinator, interimfootball 5 '/z 5 43' / z RAMS Giants coach. 5 t/z 6 39t / z RAIDER Bills S SAMFOR D—PromotedTyler Shrout to full-time COWBO YS 3 3 551/2 Colts assistantbaseball coach.Named Luke MurtonyolunSeahawks 7 8 37 CARDS teer assistantbaseball coachandMat Burnsdirector Monday of basebaloperati l ons. 3 Nz 3'/z 4 8 Broncos BENGASL WISCO NSIN—NamedPaulChryst football coach.

I)


THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

MEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL

C3

NBA ROUNDUP

azersra o e a

uc s

The Associated Press OQ

PORTLAND — Thomas Robinson was

rewarded with a standing ovation during his very first NBA start.

Robinson had 15 points and 16 rebounds while starting in place of injured center Robin Lopez, sparking the Port-

Andy Nelson/The Register-Guard

Oregon guard Joseph Young knocks the ball from the hands of Cal State Northridge forward Steven Maxwell during the first

half of Wednesday night's game in Eugene.

ReserveleadsOregon over Northridge, 79-56 The Associated Press EUGENE Oregon unveiled its tallest player, 6-foot-10 center Michael Chandler, and he scored

and eight from Brooks, who kept his string alive as the only Duck to score in double f i gures in all 10 games. Ore g on, coming off a 77-

13 points off the bench to

7 0w i n over Illinois, had one

help lead the Ducks to a 79- of its best shooting games 56 victory over Cal State f rom 3-point range, going Northridge on 9 of 22 for 40.9 perWednesday night. cent. Young led the Chandler, a j uway at 4 of 7 from ~ nior college translong range to go fer from Northwest with eight rebounds Florida C o l lege, and four assists.

®

m issed t h e

fi r s t

IIX~~I Delawarestate k nee injury. H e at Qregpn scored nine straight Whea Nppn' points in the second Saturday half to give Oregon Ty pac 12 (7-3) a 71-46 lead. . Joseph Youngled Radla:KBND nine games of the season with a l e f t

'

1110 AM M

the Ducks with 18

points and Dillon

A fter th r ee times andfourlead

changes in the early going, the Ducks finally broke serve on th e M a t adors with their f avorite

weapon, using two 3s by Young and a nother by J a l i l A bdul

B a ssitt t o

take a 26-22 lead Stephan Hicks led the w i t h 5 minutes left before Matadors (3-8) with 1 9 in t ermission. points and b ecame hi s The D ucks, who came in school's career scoring lead- averaging 24 attempts per er with 1,644. game beyond the arc, were Oregon, the Pac-12 leader 7 of 14 by halftime. Oregon in rebounding, had a 43-36 closed out the half on a 22edge with Dwayne Benja- 10 run over the final 8 minmin grabbing 10 boards. utes for a 39-30 lead. Stephen Maxwell had a Cal St a t e N o r thridge double-double for Cal State opened an early 16-9 adNorthridge with 12 points v antage with Hicks scoring and 11 rebounds. nine points for its largest The victory started a sev- lead of the game. en-game home stand for the Ma t ador big men Devonte Ducks. Elliott and Tre Hale-EdmOregon easily p u l led e r son combined for only 10 away in the second half be- points and five rebounds behind Chandler's nine points fore they fouled out. Brooks added 12.

No. 16 Washington cruises to win over G ramblingSt. ROUNDUP

The Associated Press SEATTLE

-

land Trail Blazers to a 104-97 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks on Wednesday night. "I was a little nervous," said Robinson, averaging only 7.6 minutes going into the game. The third-year forward assessed his performance as just "OK," but fans at the Moda Center cheered wildly for him. Robinson became the third Blazers player to put up at least 15 points and 15 rebounds

L >i e

in his first start: The other two were Bill

Walton and Maurice Lucas. Robinson's outburst was welcome on a team that faces uncertainty in the ab-

sence of Lopez, who broke his hand Monday in the third quarter of a victory over San Antonio.

"I was just happy to see him get that opportunity because I know how hard he works and how positive he is, being that he hasn't played a lot this year," Portland guard Damian Lillard said. Lillard had 29 points and seven assists, and LaMarcus Aldridge added 23 points and tied his season high with 15 rebounds. Portland has won three straight

and eight of 10. Brandon Knight had 24 points for the

Bucks, who played their first game since Jabari Parker was hurt. The heralded rookie will miss the rest of the season af-

ter tearing the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee during the third quarter of Milwaukee's victory Monday over Phoenix.

Parker, the second overall pick in this year's NBA draft, will require surgery. The one-and-done star out of Duke averaged 12.3 points and 5.5 rebounds per game for the Bucks this season.

Don Ryan/The Associated Press

Milwaukee took another blow late in the first half when forward Giannis Antetokounmpo sprained his left ankle.

Portland guard Damian Lillard, middle, drives to the basket between Milwaukee's Zaza Pachulia, left, and Khris Middleton during the second half of Wednesday night's game in Portland. Lillard led the Blazers in scoring with 29 points as they defeated the Bucks104-97.

Antetokounmpo grimaced in pain under the basket while his teammates surrounded him, but after several tense mo-

ments he walked unassisted off the floor

After Robinson's putback tied the game HILLS, Mich. — Chandler Parsons scored

a season-high 32 points and Monta Ellis added 25 as Dallas beat Detroit. The second-year forward from Greece put the Blazers ahead 82-79 with 7:11 left. Jazz 105, Heat 87: MIAMI — Gordon was averaging 12.2 points and 5.9 re- Portland extended the lead to as many as Hayward scored 29 points, Enes Kanter bounds going into the game. 13 points down the stretch. added 18 and Utah overcame 42 points "It's tough to see those guys go down Late in the game, the Bucks resorted to from Dwyane Wade to beat Miami. but you've still got to come together as a fouling Robinson often. He made five of Suns 111, Hornets 106: CHARLOTTE, team and play as hard as you can with the 15 attempts from the free throw line. N.C. — Reserve guard Isaiah Thomas and straight to the locker room.

at 77, Nicolas Batum hit a 3-pointer and Joel Freeland added a short jumper to

"I'll go home, see what I messed up, and scored 23points,Goran Dragic had 20 guys you have left," Bucks center Larry Sanders said. "We were still fighting and come back and be better," Robinson said. and Phoenix snapped a six-game losgrinding out there." Also on Wednesday: ing streak with a victory over struggling Khris Middleton started the second

half in Antetokounmpo's place and finished with 17 points.

Grizzlies 117, Spurs 116: SAN ANTONIO — Marc Gasol scored 26 points, in-

Charlotte. Celtics 109, Magic 92: BOSTON — Racluding a banked-in 3-pointer as regula- jon Rondo had 13 points, 15 assists and

Knight had 10 points in the first quarter tion expired, and Memphis outlasted San seven rebounds to lead balanced scoring as the Bucks took a 25-18 lead. Antetok- Antonio in triple overtime after blowing a that carried Boston past Orlando. ounmpo made a pair of free throws that 23-point lead. Clippers 102, Pacers 100: LOS ANGEgave Milwaukee a 39-29 lead — its biggest Hawks127, Cavaliers 98: CLEVELAND LES — Blake Griffin had 31 points and of the game — but the Blazers rallied to tie — ShelvinMack scored a career-high 24 16 rebounds, DeAndre Jordan added 23 it at 41 after Robinson's late basket. Port- points and Atlanta routed Cleveland for rebounds and 15 points, and the Los Anlandpulled in front on apair of free throws its 11th victory in 12 games. geles Clippers beat Indiana. from Aldridge to lead 43-41 at the break. Raptors 105, Nets 89: TORONTORockets 115, Nuggets 111: DENVERWesley Matthews hit a 9-foot jumper Kyle Lowry had 20 points and 12 assists, James Harden scored 41 points, including to give the Blazers a 55-51 lead midway Jonas Valanciunas added 16 points and 10 eight in overtime, and Houston beat Denthrough the third quarter, but the Bucks rebounds, and Toronto used a big fourth ver after Arron Afflalo tied the game on kept upthe pressure and led 70-68 going quarter to beat Brooklyn. a buzzer-beating 3-pointer at the end of into the final period. Mavericks 117, Pistons 106: AUBURN regulation.

Shawn

Kemp Jr. scored 13 of his 21 points in the first half,

The 6-foot-10 Kemp and 6-11 Upshaw had too much

size for the Tigers to stay points and No. 16 Washing- competitive. W a s h ington ton raced past Grambling led 17-3, 35-6 and 40-8 at State 86-38 on Wednesday various points of the first night. h alf. With 4:16 left in t h e W ashington (9-0) e x - first half, Washington altended its best start since ready had more dunks (7) beginning the 2005-06 sea- than Grambling had points son 11-0, leading 45-13 at (6). The Huskies had 14 ashalftime and by as many as sists on their 17 first-half 51 in the second half. The field goals. Huskies will get arguably The Huskies outreboundtheir toughest non-confer- ed Grambling52-27 and had ence test on Saturday when 50 points in the paint. the face No. 15 Oklahoma in Also on Wednesday: Las Vegas. Kemp and his teammates Pac-12 dominated the undersized Stanford 67, Loyola MaryAndrew Andrews added 16

Tigers on the interior. Kemp

mount 58: STANFORD, Ca-

made 6 of 9 shots in the first half, four coming on dunks. Robert Upshaw added 15 points and grabbed a career-high 15 rebounds.

lif. — Chasson Randle scored a season-high 31 points and Stefan Nastic added 15

points to help Stanford down Loyola Marymount.

A'Torri Shine led the Ti-

gers (2-7) with 12 points. Top 25 Grambling was outscored No. 12 Ohio St. 97, North 157-81 in a Pacific North-

west swing against Oregon

Carolina A&T 55: COLUMBUS, Ohio — D'Angelo Rus-

Nigel Williams-Goss finished with nine points, six

sell scored 21 points and Marc Loving had 15, leading Ohio State to a victory over

rebounds and 11 assists for

North Carolina A&T.

Washington. Grambling became the

Cincinnati 71, No. 19 San Diego State 62: CINCIN-

State and Washington.

fourth t ea m

t h i s s e ason NATI — Farad Cobb hit a Washington has held under 3-pointer that put Cincinnati 60 points. The Huskies ac- in control in overtime, and complished that only three the Bearcats pulled away to a times last season. victory over San Diego State

Grambling had droughts of six and seven minutes in the first half without scor-

ing. The Tigers got a basket in the lane and a deep

3-pointer from Shine in the final 90 seconds of the half to reach double figures. Only three players scored for Grambling in the first half.

after letting a late lead slip away in regulation. No. 25 Michigan State 66,

Eastern Michigan 46: EAST

LANSING, Mich. — Bryn Forbes scored 14 points and

Travis Trice added 13, and Michigan State denied Eastern Michigan its second straight upset win over an instate foe.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings

Summaries

All TimesPST

Easlern Conference

d-ToronIo d-Washington Atlanta d-Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Miami Brooklyn Boston Orlando Indiana Charlotte Detroit NewYork Philadelphia

W L 20 6 18 6 18 7 15 9 14 10 13 13 12 14 10 14 9 14 10 18 8 18

6 5 5 2

Blazers104, Bucks97 Pct GB 769

750 t 720 1'/r 625 4 583 5 500 7 462 8 417 9 391 9'/~ 357 11 308 12 t g 240 13'/z 21 192 15 22 185 15a 22 083 17

Western Conference W L 21 3 21 4 19 5 20 6 18 1 19 8 17 9 12 12 13 14 12 13 11 14 Denver 10 15 LA. Lakers 8 17 Utah 7 19 Minnesota 5 19 d-divisionleader

d-Golden State d-Memphis Houston d-Portland LA. Clippers Dallas SanAntonio NewOrleans Phoenix Oklahoma City Sacramen to

Wednesday'sGames

Phoenix01, Charlotte106 Atlanta127,Cleveland98 Utah105,Miami87 Dallas117,Detroit106 Boston109,Orlando92 Toronto105,Brooklyn89 Memphis117,SanAntonio116,30T Portland104,Milwaukee97 LA. Clippers102,Indiana100

Houstonu5,Denverut,OT Today'sGames New YorkatChicago,5p.m. NewOrleansatHouston,5:30p.m. MilwaukeeatSacramento, 7p.m. Oklahoma City at GoldenState, 7:30p.m. Friday's Games Charlotteat Philadelphia,4 p.m. Utah atOrlando,4p.m. Washington at Miami,4:30 p.m. TorontoatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Minnesota at Boston, 4:30p.m. BrooklynatCleveland,4:30 p.m. Chicago at Memphis,5 p.m. PortlandatSanAntonio, 5p.m. LA. ClippersatDenver,6 p.m. Oklahoma City at LA. Lakers, 7:30p.m.

Pct GB

875 840 '/z 792 2 769 2 720 3'/r 704 31/2

654 5 500 9

MILWAUKEE (97)

Dudley 1-5 1-2 3,Antetokounmpo4-7 2-2 10, Sanders4-41-39, Knight10-192-224,Mayo4-12 4-612, Pachulia1-33-4 5,Middleton5-123-317, O'Bryant1-10-02, Marshall2-60-05, Bayless5-8 0-0 10, Wolters0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-77 16-22 97.

PORTLAND (104) Batum3-111-1 8,Aldridge10-193-423, Robinson 5-85-1515, Lilard 10-185-6 29,Matthews5-8 0-0 u, Blake1-50-0 3, Kaman 3-120-0 6, Crabbe 0-0 0-0 0,Freeland3-40-1 6, McCollum 1-21-2 3. Totals 41-8715-29104. Milwaukee 25 16 29 27 — 97 Portland 18 25 25 36 —104 3-Point Goal— s Milwaukee 7-19 (Middleton 4-6, Knight2-6, Marshall 1-2,BaylessO-t, Dudley 0-2, Mayo0-2j, Portland7-23(Lillard 4-1, Blake 1-4, Matthews1-4, Batum1-6, Aldridge 0-1, McCollum0-1j. FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Milwaukee 40(Pachulia 8j, Portland 66 (Robinson 16). Assists —Milwaukee 16 (Dudley 5), Portland 25 (Lillard 7). TotalFouls—Milwaukee25, Portland tg. Flagrant Fouls—Sanders. A —19,495 09,980j.

481 9'/z 480 9'/r

Grizzlies117, Spurs116 (3 OT)

440 tga 400 u'/r

MEMPHIS(117) Pondexter2-60-0 4,Randolph9-193-421,Gasol 10-165-626,Conley5-19 2-214, Lee6-130014, Carter 6-131-218, Koufos8-10 0-016, Udrih 0-4 0-0 0, Leuer1-40-0 2, Calathes1-30-0 z Totals 48-107 11-14117. SANANTONIO(116) Anderson1-31-13,Duncan9-225-1523, Bonner 0-1 0-0 0, Joseph 4-10 0-0 8, Green9-17 0-0 25, Ginobili 7-203-721, Diaw5-154-417, Splitter 2-6 0-0 4, Belinelli 6-110-015, Daye0-0 0-00. Totals 43-10513-27116. Memphis 34 18 21 1910 9 6 — 117 SanAntonio 19 26 23 2410 9 5 — 116

320 13'/~ 269 15 208 16

Raptors105, Nets 89 BROOKLYN (89) Jo.Johnson 8-17 0-3 17,Teletovic 5-100-0 14, Plumlee9-13 5-11 23,Anderson1-7 1-2 4, D.Williams 5-150-1 11,Jack2-6 0-0 4, Jordan1-3 4-5 6,Jeff erson3-40-07,Bogdanovic1-50-03,Davies 0-1 0-00,Morris0-00-00, Brown0-00-00. Totals 35-81 10-22 89. TORONTO (105) Ross3-101-1 9, AJohnson5-83-6 13, Valanciunas6-74416, Fields3-40-06, Lowry7-134420, Patterson5-100-013, LWiliams4-100-010, Hansbrough0-30-0 0, Vasquez6-11 0-013, Ja.Johnson 2-41-4 5,Stiemsma0-00-00,Caboclo0-00-00. Totals 41-8013-19105. Brooklyn 30 22 21 16 — 89 Toronto 22 31 23 29 — 105

Jazz105, Heat 87

Hawks127, Cavaliers 98

UTAH(105) Hayward 9-13 7-7 29,Favors3-85-7 11,Kanter 7-123-418,Burks3-74-412, Burke3-100-09, Exum 4-50-010,Hood2-30-06, Booker2-40-04, Gobert 2-22-26, Ingles0-20-00.Totals35-6621-24105. MIAMI (87) Deng3-62-28,Andersen3-60-06,Hamilton1-3 0-02, Wade12-19 16-2142, Cole0-41-21, Chalmers3134 511,Haslem1-41-33, Napier04020, Williams 2-7 0-05, Ennis2-4 5-59. Totals 27-70

ATLANTA (127) Carroll 5-90-0 13,Milsap T-u 0-014, Horford 10-140-020, Korver1-31-1 4,Schroder4-62-210, Scott 5-73-415, Sefolosha1-30-0 3,Antic 4-6 2-3 11,Mack7-84-424,Bazemore3-71-29,Muscala 2-2 0-0 4,Jenkins0-0 0-00. Totals 49-76 13-16 127. CLEVELAND (98) James 8-165-721, Love4-103-313, Varejao2-4 0-04, Marion2-5 2-26, Irving4-91-19, Thompson 3-31-2 7, Dellavedova 2-7 0-0 6, Waiters9-18 2-2 21, Harris1-20-2 3, Jones2-5 0-06, Price0-3 0-0 0, Amundson 0-02-2Z Totals 37-8216-21 98. Atlanta 26 39 30 32 — 127 Cleveland 34 26 15 23 — 98

29-4087.

utan

Miami

33 22 22 28 — 105 16 25 18 28 — 87

Mavericks117, Pistons106 DALLAS (117)

Parsons 10-178-9 32, Nowitzki 5-10 6-6 18,

Chandle5-9 r 6-916, Ellis I1-202-4 25,Nelson 0-4 0-0 0, Aminu1-31-23, Harris 2-42-2 8,Wright4-5 2-3 10,Jefferson020-00, Barea1-20-03, Crowdre 1-30-0 Z Totals40-79 27-35117. DETROIT (106) Singler3-6 0-09, J.Smith 3-4 1-27,Drummond 9-16 1-6 19,Caldwell-Pope5-15 1-1 14,Jennings 5-142-213, Monroe1-5 2-2 4,Meeks2-8 4-49, Butler 3-90-0 8,Augustin4-7 0-010, Jerebko5-5 2-2 13.Totals 40-8913-19106. Dallas 32 21 30 34 — 117 Detroit 30 21 22 33 — 106

Celtics109, Magic 92 ORLANDO (92)

Harris 5-9 7-817, Frye4-92-2 13, Vucevic 9-19 0-0 18, Fournie6-14 r 1-2 13,Oladipo3-12 0-0 7, B.Gordo n 2-70-0 4,Payton3-5 0-0 6,O'Quinn4-6 3-311, Harkless 1-30-03, Nicholson0-10-00. Totals 37-8513-15 92. BOSTON (109) JGreen 6-1423 16, Sullinger71300 16, Zeller 4-5 2-210, Bradley2-60-0 4, Rondo6-120-013, Olynyk6-81-315, Wallace0-00-00, Bass6-106-6 18, Turner 3-42-2 8, Pressey4-81-2 9. Totals 448014-18109. Orlando 28 25 20 19 — 92 Boston 29 27 22 31 — 109

Suns111, Hornets106 PHOENIX (111) Tucker1-32-24,Mark.Morris6-100-013, Len5-6 0-010, apragic8-173-3 20,Bledsoe5-15 4-415, Plumlee1-2002, MarcMorris45008, Thoma s7-13 6-1023,Green6-111-2 16.Totals 43-8216-21 111. CHARLOTTE (106) Kidd-Gilchrist3-80-36,Zeller2-43-47,Jefferson 13-222-228,Stephenson3-81-1 7,Walker9-205-6 21, Williams1-41-2 4, Henderson 2-2 0-0 4, Neal 5-13 0-013,Roberts2-54-410, Biyombo0-0 0-00. Totals 40-8616-22106. Phoenix 27 27 29 28 — 111 Charlotle 31 30 26 19 — 106

Clippers102, Pacers100 INDIANA (100) S.Hill 2-8 4-410,West8-151-2 17,Hibbert3-10 1-2 7,Wa tson3-96-712, Stuckey6-120-212, Miles 6-143-517,Allen6-0 0-012, Sloan1-3 1-1 3,Scola 5-7 0-010, Rudez 0-10-0 0. Totals 40-90 16-23 100. L.A. CLIPPERS (102) Barnes1-31-2 3,Griffin 0-27 9-1331,Jordan4-8 7-1515, Paul7-145-620, Redick4-105-716, Crawford 4-7 1-210,Farmar2-50-0 5, Davis1-3 0-02, Dougl as-Roberts0-10-00.Totals34-7828-45102. Indiana 27 24 21 28 — 100 LA. Clippers 30 2 2 26 24 — 102

Rockets115, Nuggets111 (OT) HOUSTON (115) Ariza4-152-313, Motiejunas7-131-318, Howard 7-16 10-1524, Beverley3-9 6-6 12,Harden0-21 18-2141,Black1-30-02, Canaan0-20-00, Johnson 2-6 0-0 5,Dorsey0-0 0-0 0. Totals 35-85 37-48 115.

DENVER(111) Chandler8-172-223,Faried5-121-2 11,Mozgov 0-31-21, Lawson 4-124-412, Afflalo 7-175-622, Hickson4-80-08, Arthur5-131-212, Nurkic3-60-0 6, Gallinari4-84-516, Robinson0-3 0-00, Gee0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-9918-23111. Houston 25 30 20 24 16 — 115 Denver 29 31 18 21 12— 111

Leaders ThroughWednesday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden,HOU 24 189 214 646 26.9 James,CLE 23 208 133 584 25.4 Bryant,LAL 25 214 166 631 25.2 Davis,NOR 23 221 124 566 24.6 Curry,GO L 24 197 98 564 23.5 Anthony,NYK 24 211 103 562 23.4 Griffin, LAC 25 220 123 570 2z8 Wade,MIA 19 167 84 428 2z5 Aldridge,PO R 25 219 104 556 2z2


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

Bobsledders Continued from C1 Neither Meyers Taylor nor Humphries is expected to win any four-person race this season. That is not an indictment of their skill;

they are considered the best two women's drivers

in the world, strong, speedy, explosive and powerful, the perfect mix f o r b o bsled-

ding. But since both will be driving the No. 3 sleds for their respective countries,

they will not have the best equipment or pushers. They will get leftovers. "The biggest thing is just proving that women can drive four-man sleds," Meyers Taylor said. "It's baffling to me that it's not just assumed. We're driv-

ing a sled. We do that. I don't know why it's such a

big deal." She knows exactly why it is a big deal. This is the first season in which bobsled's international governing body has defined what was called four-man bobsledding as gender neutral. Officially, the sport is still classified as four-man, though some are now calling it four-person indeference to Meyers Taylor and Humphries being part of the tour.

Rules allowing the coed sled were changed this fall, so it was a mad scramble

for Humphries and Meyers Taylor — the top two drivers, respectively, in both the women's World

Cup standings and in the women's race at the Sochi

Olympics last winter just to qualify for World Cup. To be certified for the

top series, they needed to compete in five races on three tracks in a two-year

span. So they raced in Utah,

Canada and France, piling up tons of air miles and hotel nights before their

season really began. It was exhausting, to the point where both skipped the four-person portion of last weekend's World Cup bobsled opener at Lake Placid

because they did not want to take any unnecessary risks.

"We made the right decision," Meyers Taylor said. Saturday will be a test

for both. The women's race immediately precedes the four-person race in

C al-

gary, meaning they will be driving down the track four times in the span of a

couple of hours. "It'll be intense," Humphries said. They will be the only two women in the four-person sleds on the World Cup

tour this season. Both fig-

PREP ROUNDUP

Prep doysbasketdall at a glance A look at the Class 5AIntermountain Conference for the upcoming season: BEND Head coach:Scott Baker (second season) 2013-14 record:17-9 overall, 7-2 IMC (second); lost in consolation round of Class 5Astate tournament Outlook: Lastseason,theLavaBearswonmoregamesthan in any season since theywonthe IMCcrown in 2011. Bendlost seven players from last season's team to graduation. But with allleague players J.J. Spitler and JacobParsons amongthe varsity returnees, Bakersays his squadwill rely on hustle, teamwork and drive to continue its upward trend andperhaps return to the final site this season. Ofcourse, depth is quite an asset asthe Bears look to shake a1-2 start to the 2014-15campaign. "They know it's a different team," Bakersays of his players. "They've taken that on. They realize last year that wehad sevenseniors. (But) everybody's stepping up. They're not dwelling on what weused to have but are focused onwhat we have now." MOUNTAINVIEW Head coach:Craig Reid (15th season) 2013-14 record:19-4 overall, 8-1 IMC (first); lost in first round of Class 5A state playoffs Outlook:The Cougars havewonfour straight since a season-opening lossandboastall-leagueguardsMentsHaugenand Davis Holly in the backcourt. While Reidcalls his squad "a work in progress" — the Cougars return just three players who logged significant varsity minutes last season — Mountain View's scoring depth could set up theCougars for yet another IMCtitle and perhaps a deepplayoff run. "The nice thing is we havea lot of scoring options," Reid says. "That's going to beoneof our advantages is we're going to have alot of variety of offensive weapons." REDMOND Head coach:Jon Corbett (fourth season) 2013-14 record:4-18 overall, 0-9 IMC (fourth) Outlook:After missing out on the postseason for the first time since 2008, the Panthers welcomeback11 players from last year's roster, including all-league point guard BrandonBenson and post CodyWinters. Despite the high number of returning players, Corbett says Redmond is still young, as thePanthers boast just two seniors. Redmond, which is1-4 in the early going, is still maturing, the Panthers coachsays, andstill developing confidence. But, Corbett adds, "we're getting there." Headds: "We havesome kidswhocanshootit,andwehaveasolid backup point guard. Wehavea lot of good depth. It's just a matter of putting those pieces together." RIDGEVIEW Head coach:Nathan Covill (third season) 2013-14 record:11-13overall, 2-1 SD1 (first); lost in Class 4A play-in round Outlook:After spending their first two years at the 4A level, the Ravens transition to the 5AIntermountain Conference with a core group of five players who havebeenaround the program since its inception, including guard GeorgeMendazona andwing Tanner O'Neal. Behind those five, Ridgeview hasjumped to a 7-1 start and has its eyesset on a league title. But, Covill says, the Ravens will need more players to contribute in order to accomplish that goal. "To havethose five is a luxury, especially since they've been in the program for two years, now going on three," hesays. "Even though we're putting somenewthings in, they kind of know what to expect from myself and myassistant coach and the expectations we haveevery day to get better. (But) we're going to need more than five to go asfar as wewant to go." SUMMIT Head coach:Jon Frazier (fourth season) 2013-14 record:11-13overall, 3-6 IMC (third); lost in Class 5A play-in round Outlook:For this year's Storm, Frazier says, "the sky's the limit." Summit is young (Max Michalski, an all-IMC honorable mention player last season, is the lonesenior), but the Storm are experienced. Backare starters Kyle Cornett and CamMcCormick, giving Summit three returning starters from last season's squad. With what Frazier dubs as a"solid eight-man rotation," the Storm, off to a 4-1 start, aim for a fourth state playoff appearanceandlust the program's second state tournament appearance — arealistic possibility in Frazier's mind. "Wehave areally good combination that should put us in aposition to be really successful this season," he says. "Their confidence andtheir competitive fire is really high. I think they're in a position where they're ready to go compete."

Big third quarter lifts Ravens Boys basketball Bulletin staff report REDMOND — After falling behind by nine Oakridge 74, Gilchrist 42: GILCHRISTpoints in the first quarter, Ridgeview raced in the third period.

which fell to 3-3 on the season.

Tanner O'Neal scored all 15 of his points in the third quarter for the Ravens (7-1), and Gar- Girls basketball rett Albrecht added ll points in the period en

from her f i rst f o ur-man trip convinced that the big-

ger sled was easier to drive. M ore women p lan t o

try driving the bigger sled next y ear. E v entually, there is hope for four-wom-

an teams and an all-new discipline. That is a long way off. The challenge for Meyers Taylor and Humphries this year is mostly going to be provided by physics. Neither woman is as heavy or as strong the top male

drivers, which means their sleds simply will not have the same power generated

by most all-male teams. "It's going to be interesting," said USA-1 pilot Steven Holcomb, a former world and Olympic champion. "They're at a slight disadvantage be c ause they'll be lighter and it's going to be a challenge. But if they want to race, they're more names toadd to my list, more butts to kick."

He said that last sentence with a mischievous

grin. But he was also serious, and the ladies — who

have been welcomed by the top drivers on the circuit, though Humphries was turned down by some brakemen she approached

Cougars

PREP SCOREBOARD

the conference for a fourth straight season. As difficult

Mountain View has proven to be the cream of the IMC crop. Until someone dethrones

to be part of her team-

as theleague season isexpect-

the Cougars, Frazier says,

would have it no other way. " There's going to b e banter, there's going to be jokes," Humphries said.

ed to be, he observes, it only primes league members for

"When Elana and I start

beating people, it's going to change again. They're not going to like that, but I really don't care." Sounds like something K atharin D e wey have said.

w ould

the postseason.

"It really helps. It's going to help everybody," Reid says.

"they're certainly th e t eam

thatyou're goingto be wanting to knock off." The other four Intermountain

Con f erence

members have targeted Moun-

"The teams out of our confer-

tain View. And all are ready to

ence this year that are able to get on to that state level will

reign as league champs. They are ready to power deep into the playoffs — courtesy of the

be better prepared because

you're going to have to bring it every night. That makes you better.... The better your

scappoose;LeviRider,sr., wR,North Bend; cameron Everett,sr., TE,SouthUmpqua;Matt Bennett, lr., c,scappoose;codywright,jr.,OL,Mazama;Jordan McDevitt, sr.,OL,southumpqua; Deion Fields, lr., OL, Gladstone;AidenLittau, lr., QL,cascade;chris Prescott, sr., OL JunctionCity; TreyEcker, sr., K,

113 —TannerBoatman, Red, pins Quintin McCo,y Sum,4;39,120—Austin Doescher, Red,wins byforfeit126 —AustinRystedt, Red,pins ThomasBrown, Sum,1:19. 132— Hayden Love, Sum,pins Brady Daniels,Red,3:48.138— Grant Leiphart, Sum,def. Woodward, Red, 3-1.145 —Patrick Leiphart, Rldgevlew 93, TheDallos 52 Dayton Sum, det JordanChristiansen, Red,6-1. 152M itch Wi lett, Red,pinsAndreOrtolanDeSouza, Sum, The Dalles I52) —cobyconlee14, wilson10, Noonan 8, Byers 8, Douthit 6, Walker 3, :24.160 —HunterSmith, Red,winsbyforfeit. 170 —JacobThompson,Sum,techfal overJustin Curry, Esiquio 2,Flores1.Totals 22 5-1452. Ridgeview (93) —GeorgeMendazona19, Red,16-1.182 —BrennanYates, Red, pins Dustim 1:56. 195 — NoahYunker, Sum,pins Albrecht16, 0'Neal15, C.Mansele12, Alvarez Follett, Sum, unkerParrish, Red,2:50. 220—Mario Nonato, Red, 0 , yTa lor7,penhollow7,Edmondson3,Hamp- B pins Josh WittINer, Sum,1:05. 285—JacobBrachler, ton aTotals387-12 93. TheDalles 21 8 9 1 4 — 52 Red,pinsJohnMurphy,Sum,5:43. Ridgeview 1 22 5 42 14 — 93 Three-point goals — TheDalles: Wilson 2, Football conlee ;Ridgeview:Mendazona5,Alvarez3, Class 4A Taylor,C.Manselle.

Boys basketball Class 5A Nonconterence

Nonconference

Oakrldge 74, Gilchrist 42 Oakridge(74) —RexGardner19,G.Snyder17, Ball16, J.Snyder14, Moe4, Powell 2, Bowen z Totals 2811-21 74. Gilchrist (42) —HunterNelson 20, Blood 15, Alexander 4, Jensen2, Lowell 1. Totals17 4-8 42. oakridge 17 19 18 20 — 74 Gilchrist 10 15 8 9 — 42 Three-pointgoals —Oakridge:J. Snyder4, Gardner3; Gilchrist: Nelson4.

Girls basketball Nonconterence

Oakrldge 41, Gilchrist 29 oakridge I41) —JasmineBates12, Kyla Flack12, A.Kilingbeck10,Wilson4, Humphrey 3. Totals 167-1241. Gilchrist (29) —SierraShuey12, Blum 8, Bemabe 4, Krohnke3, Berling 2.Totals11 7-14 29. oakridge 11 1 4 7 9 — 41 Gilchrist 2 12 6 9 — 29 Three-point goals — Oakridge: Humphre y, Flack;Gilchrist:none.

Philomath.

Second-team defense—BrandonTron,sr., DL, Mazama;Justus St Clair,sr., DL Philomath;Trevor Rasmuss en,sr.,DL,CrookCounty;TrevorDuff y,sr., rjL, south umpqua;Tanner pence, sr., rjL, south umpqua;spencercrawford, sr., LB,cascade; Jose Reyes,sr., LB,Ontario; LeviRider,sr., LB,North Bend; CalvinPollard,sr., LB,Seaside; JohnnyTardif, sr., LB, scappoose;Robby Backus, sr., LB,scappoose; Eric Prom,sr., DB,Gladstone; LukeLucero, ir., DB,North Bend;BenGadbois, sr.,rjB, scappoose;JakeFord, sr., DB, Scappo ose; JacksonVetrus, sr., DB,Cascade; Erik Johnson,sr., p,southumpqua. Honorable mentionoffense —TreyEcker, sr., QB,philomath; BenTurner,sr., RB,ontario; camMolan, ir.,WR,Cascade; PayjonDobbs, sr., WR , Molalla; HunterJutte,sr.,WR,Sweet Home; TyMahaffey, sr., WR, Phoenix;BrycenMitten, sr., TE,Sweet Home; Buddy Finder,sr.,TE,Elmira; zachsmith, sr.,c, crook County;RayDolahite, sr., C, Elmira; HunterCopley, jr., OL Banks;ZaneWardwell, sr., OL Elmira; Matt Engholm,sr., OL,Elmira; NickEberhardt, sr., K,Banks. Honorablementiondefense—ColtenWheeler, sr., DL,scappose; Twister Mccomas, lr., DL Banks;MalachiGonzalez,lr., DL,Cascade;NatBarrell, sr., DL,NorthMarion; AlexJohnston, sr., DLJunction city; AustinJones,sr., DL Baker; DonnyMcclean, lr., LB,Banks;zachsmith, sr., LB,crookcounty; TreyEcker,sr., rjB, philomath;BryonBrown, sr., DB, JunctionCity; Keaton Bachman, sr., DB,Baker; Frank Masalosalolr,., DB,Phoenix; Robert Gilies, sr., DB,La Grande;Carterwallace,lr., P,Astoria.

All-uate teams Offensive player of the year — Hand some Smith,sr.,Gladstone Defensive player of the year —ZachSmith, sr., Gladstone Coach OIthe year —JonJedrykowski, Gladstone First-team offense — cameronLucero, sr., QB,NorthBend;HandsomeSmith, sr., RB,Gladstone; JoeyLancaster, sr., RB,Mazama; DrewMatthews, sr., WR,NorthBend;JacobWendelschafer, sr., WR,Scappoose;JonCran,sr., TE,IIazama; Austin Krieger, sr., c, Gladstone;colton Anderson, sr., QLGladstone; Joe Rutheford,ir., OL, NorthBend; Devin Ray,sr., OL, Scappoo se;Hunter Zivney,sr., OL,Gladstone;lan Bream,lr., K,NorthBend. First-team defense — Dylan Wallace,sr., DL, Gladstone;ZaneWardwell, sr., DL, Elmira;Joe Rutheford,ir., DL NorthBend;Devin Ray,sr., DL, Scappoose;AlecJoe-eurns, sr., DL,Mazama; Zach Smith,sr.,LB,Gladstone;DylanBigsby, sr., LB,Banks; Eddie Medina,sr.,LB,Mazama;LanceGrigsby,sr.,LB, Marshfield; JackLehman, sr., LB,Philomath;Drew Matthews,sr., DB,NorthBend; Hunter Jutte, sr., DB, SweetHome;Handsome Smith, sr., DB,Gladstone; JoeyLancaster,sr.,DB,Mazama;RickyHernandez,sr., P, CrookCounty. Secondteam olfense— JoeyKrupsky,sr.,QB, Scappoose;BryonBrown, sr., RB,Junction City; Garrett Coffey,jr., RB,Cascade; David Krupsky,sr., WR ,

Pure. &rrod.6 Co.

aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond

John Day Burns Lakeview

Wrestling Class 5A Special Oistrict1 Redmond48, summn29 106 —BennettKatter,Sum,wins byforfeit.

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conference is, the better it pre-

pares you for the postseason." Continued from C1 Frazier agrees, adding that "When you think of the IMC in thefour postseason games and you think of 5A schools his Summit teams have played in our area," says Covill, "you the Storm have been fully think of Mountain View." prepared. It is a p r ogram others "I think the IMC is as strong emulate. as any of the leagues that we "Obviously Mountain View see around thestate," Frazier has been a top-tier team not says. "The teams that come only in Central Oregon but out of the IM C are always in the 5A class for a number ready to go." "I think our league is going of years," says Covill, noting how the Ravens have adopt- to be one of the best in 5A, ed a similar mindset. "When from top t o b o ttom," Bend you think of a program that, High coach Scott Baker says, you kind of want to say, 'Hey, noting how last season's run I'd like to be like that' or 'I'd through league play provided like to be as consistently win- the Lava Bears with plenty of ning and competitive as them,' confidence asthey headed to (that) is obviously something the state tournament. you can look at." The same can be said at But, he continues, "I think Ridgeview, which was a part the biggest thing that we're of the Intermountain Hybrid trying to get across to our in the new school's first two kids, and I hear some of the years before joining the IMC kids saying it, is that we need this season. Even if the Ravens to make sure people say the were not a full-fledged memsame thing about us.... And I ber of the league, Covill says, think we have a chance to es- playing against IMC teams in tablish ourselves in the league the hybrid schedule "obviously in terms of where we stand helped us." "Playing in that conference and what kinds of things we're trying to get across." toughened us up and showed Reid is well aware that the us where we needed to be to be competition level within the competitive, to be a potential IMC has risen, that his Cou- playoff-caliber team," Covill gars will have their hands says. full if they are to finish atop

Oakridge 41, Gilchrist 29: GILCHRIST — Si-

route to 16 for the game. George Mendazona erra Shuey posted 12 points and 12 rebounds, totaled 19 points and eight assists against just but the Grizzlies dropped to 2-4 on the seaone turnover, Carson Manselle had 12 points son with a nonleague loss to Oakridge. Casand five assists, Albrecht hauled in eight re- sandra Blum had eight points and four steals bounds, and Brett Blundell logged six steals. for Gilchrist, and Molly Bernabe added four Also on Wednesday: points and six rebounds.

ure it will make their skills

even sharper, and Meyers Taylor said she came away

Despite 20 points from Hunter Nelson, the

to a 93-52 nonleague boys basketball win on Grizzlies fell in a nonleague contest. Jacob Wednesday night, outscoring The Dalles 42-9 Blood chipped in with 15 points for Gilchrist,

IMC. — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.

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C6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

Coaches

in psychology, says stress and lack of sleep can impair deciContInued from C1 sion-making ability. "When you don't sleep Many of them put in excessive hours, including as many enough, that erodes some as a staggering 18 hours a day of the capacity you have for in the case of Hawaii coach calming yourself down," said Norm Chow, who checks in Markman, who runs a proat work as early as 4 in the gram to work with businessmorning and sometimes does not leave until 10 at n ight.

men and othersin leadership

co Mendenhall, who completed a marathon last summer,

carves out two hours a day to read and exercise. Texas campus at 4 or 5 a.m. to organize his thoughts. Navy's Niumatalolo challenges graduate assistants to tennis. N orthwestern's Pat

Statesman that they work up

work. Six coaches do not work out

risen because of the exorbitant

coach said it is impossible, or

have to voice their opinions.

at least very difficult, to suc- According to USA Today, 51 ceed by working eight-hour of 128 FBS coaches make at days. least $2 million this year. In 2006, there were 10 $2 million

Finding outlets

coaches.

How coaches handle Sun-

days varies greatly. Five coaches who responded start their Sundays at 7 a.m. or ear-

"It's self-imposed, and obviously you want to win and

exams. Chow, whose children are

the stands does."

Unable to shut off his brain, grown and whose wife lives Navy's Ken Niumatalolo, 49, in Los Angeles, is among says he struggles to fall asleep. "You're constantly thinking four coaches who admitted to sometimes sleeping overnight of things at night," said Niuin their office. West Virginia's matalolo, who will take Navy Dana Holgorsen, who is not to a bowl game for the sevmarried, does it two or three enth time in his eight seasons. "How can you r e cruit betnights a week. "You're wanting to do well ter?What are some red-zone for these young people," said things we can do better? Our Chow, 68. "There's so much in- facilities aren't good enough. formation. Football overdoes What sports drinks should the information." we be drinking? There's a

The Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn. — Loui Eriksson's goal 1:30 into overtime gave Boston a 3-2 win over Minnesota on Wednesday night, only the

Fitzgerald works out six days a week, including on Saturdays, when he figures he covers several miles pacing the sideline at games. Washington

second victory for the Bruins in eight games

State's Mike Leach walks 7

fenseman MarcoScandella,scored early for the Bruins along with Patrice Bergeron.

miles round-trip to and from atall. Most coaches try to incor-

and the fourth loss for the Wild in the past slx.

Carl Soderberg, who set up the winner with a cross-crease pass in front of Wild deJason Pominville tied the game in the third

period, and Kyle Brodziak also had a goal for the Wild, but Niklas Backstrom was beaten in the net for the second straight night. He

as they can into their week.

stopped 22 shots. NiklasSvedberg made 35 saves for the

porate as much family time O klahoma's Bob Stoops -

Bruins in just his second start in 11 games.

whose physically fit father, a high school coach, had about

He relieved Tuukka Rask, who lost in a shootout on Tuesday at Nashville.

2 percent body fat but died of a massive heart attack on the

maining in regulation. A failed clear of the

want to b e s u ccessful, no sideline at a game — impledoubt, knowing that the world mented family dinners in his

lier, and seven do not arrive at watches everything you do the office until 1 p.m. or later, now," McCarney said. "Who usually after church. are we kidding? Not everyNo coach admitted to smok- body thinks he can be a banking, but three use chewing er or a Realtor or a doctor or a tobacco or snuff. Thirty said lawyer, but everybody thinks they do receive yearly physical they can coach. Everybody in

Bruins needOTto overtake Wild

coach Charlie Strong routinely runs 5 miles around Texas'

roles. "You'll get a little more Paul Chryst, who was recent- emotional and irritable, and ly hired as head coach at Wis- frankly, you don't think as consinafter three seasons at clearly. You're prone to makPittsburgh, is right behind ing more mistakes, which Chow, punching out after a 17- feeds on itself." hour day. McCarney believes the At least 20 coaches told the stress level in coaching has to 15 hours a day at least one salaries coaches are now getday a week. Nearly every ting and the vast outlets fans

NHL ROUNDUP

staff' s regular schedules. So did Spurrier. At South Carolina, coaches' wives and chil-

dren congregate at the football complex for a dinner, and Spurriersaid the presence of

nine of his 12 grandchildren in the Columbia area also is a good salvefor frustrations.

"We'll have the football secretaries and trainers," Spurrier said. "It's a pretty good crowd." Strong tries to make all of his daughters' volleyball games. At BYU, Mendenhall takes off Sundays and spends them with his family.

Pominville scored off his foot with 8:21 rerebound of Ryan Suter's shot gave Suter the The Bruins activated center David Krej-

-

that was active around the net with Seth Griffith and Milan Lucic.

Soderberg scored early in the first period on his own rebound of an initial attempt

blocked by Justin Fontaine, but the Wild an-

spread across the island

Of course, winning remains the biggest antidote to stress.

covered in the logos of majorleague teams, same

As Spurrier pointed out, there

as the patchwork of dia-

really was not much stress during his dozen years at

monds clustered around

Florida.

"Not only were we winning, we'd win big nine of 12 games every year," he said. "So many games,we clobbered theother guy. It'd be the fourth quarter. W e'd empty the bench, everybody would be laughing and giggling, and everybody got to play. We've even played our

barracks-style dormitories strewn over the Dominican

Republic. On the da y

P r esident

Obama announced his intention to end th e 5 3-

year standoff, the league still waited for the situa-

Carolina), every game is close

nature.

and down to the wire." Paul Rhoads just w i shes

"Major League Baseball is closely monitoring

more games were that close;

the W h it e

his Iowa State team limped in at 2-10 this season. The

nouncement regarding Cuban-American relations," the league said in a statement. "While there are not

return next season and told

the Statesman he would be

on ice next to his bed.

good for "two to four more

velopment near the football

complex at noon but found that is the time most of his Spurrier joked that he slept players wanted to stop by his a solid seven hours two nights office. after South Carolina's regHe has joined his wife,

The breakfast of champions years, depending on how it for Alabama's Nick Saban? goes."

ular-season finale, the f i rst

Continued from C1 Within a f e w y e ars, baseball academies may

scout team. Now (with South

er six or so Dews throughout the day. He even kept a bottle

creme pies. Colorado's Mike MacIntyre pounds energy shakes. Ar-

Cuba

tion to develop. Multiple high-ranking team officials declinedcomment, underscoring the topic's sensitive

47-year-old appears to have a good grasp on priorities, although he said he has "never had a workout regimen." He used to walk in a housing de-

Two Little Debbie oatmeal

Columbia — Kari Lehtonen made 27 saves for his second shutout this season and the 29th

Fitzgerald FaceTimes with

time with their families.

Virginia's Mike London, a for-

Jersey. Stars 2, Canucks 0:VANCOUVER, British

of his career as Dallas defeated Vancouver possession in traffic near the boards and sent to extend the Canucks' losing streak to five a shot over Svedberg's right shoulder. games.

want to be identified said he

leaves work at 5 p.m. most mer Richmond police officer days. And South Carolina's who once had a gun pointed Steve Spurrier, 69, gets his job at his face by a man who had done in economic fashion but robbed a store. Had the gun also dispelled a popular myth gone off as the robber intendand said he does not play golf ed, London said, he would during the season. probably be dead. Compara"If it's overly stressful, I tively, calling a play in a thirdshouldn't be doing it," Spur- and-7 situation is relaxing. "When I say relative presrier told the Statesman. "And we had two straight overtime sure, it is just that," said Longames this year." don, 54. "One is a finality; the Most coaches have their other you get to live to see anoutlets — and their snacksother day." to help them through the day. Wisconsin's Chryst p ours Trying to slow down down any number of MounBy and large, coaches willtain Dews, but he also chews ingly put up with the demands tobacco. of their job. "You know why?" Spurrier Bill Blankenship, who was let go this month after four posed. "The pay's too good. seasons at Tulsa, started his Nobody wants to retire and mornings with a 1-liter bottle give that up." of Diet Mountain Dew, and the That includes Spurrier, who 57-year-old would have anoth- at 69 said recently he would

ris scored two goals as Ottawa blanked New

swered 27 seconds later when Brodziak took

head coach from a non-Pow- you." er Five school who did not Stress is all relative, says

plethora of things that eat at

puck during the fIrst period of Wednesday's

ci, who had a team-high 69 points last sea- game In St. Paul, Minnesota. son, off the injured list. The announcement during warmups drew a cheer from the smattering of Bruins fans in attendance. Also on Wednesday: Krejci had missed 17 of 19 games because Senators 2, Devils 0: NEWARK, N.J. of a lower-body injury. He skated on a line Craig Anderson made 34 saves, and Kyle Tur-

his children twice a day, wishing them good morning and good night. He locks up the Wildcats' football facility at 5 p.m. on Thursdays so his coaches can have real face

At the other extreme, one

Ann Heisenfelt/The Associated Press

puck back for a pass that ping-ponged over to Minnesota left wIng JasonZucker (16) checks his teammate. Boston Bruins defenseman Kevan Miller off the

Vickie, in a new diet that ex-

H o use's an-

sufficient details to make a realistic evaluation, we will

continue to track this significant issue, and we will keep our clubs informed if this different direction may impact the manner in which they conduct busi-

ness on issues related to Cuba." The changes could come fast, because baseball prepared for this day. One Latin American scouting director, who has worked with Cuban baseball players since 1990, said he already has plans for the

time he had slept that much cludes most gluten foods and son sneaks an occasional Kit- in about six weeks. He said sweets like cookies and pies, Kat, but he generally eschews a doctor has prescribed him although he still craves an sweets for tuna or trail mix. medication to help him sleep occasional hoagie sandwich. Coffee consumption ranged and "help my mind slow He has shed about 20 pounds from the 21 coaches who re- down" during the season. since March. frain from it to Temple's Matt Likewise, McCarney said Rhoads credits his new Rhule, who downs seven or he has been taking a single offensive coordinator, Mark eight cups a day. Tylenol PM before bedtime for Mangino, with a philosophy logistics of how to scout The year before his quadru- years. He said he never takes conducive to handling stress. players on the island and "He's always said they can ple heart bypass surgery, Mc- naps and cannot sleep on the optimal place to build Carney had suffered a stroke planes. fire us, but they can't kill us an academy."Iknow what I as he was eating a sandwich. In 2006, then first-year Col- or take away our children," would do," he said. "I would The entire left side of his body orado coach Dan H awkins Rhoads said of Mangino, the just have to get approval went numb. Fortunately, he re- responded to a t h r ee-over- former Kansas head coach. from ownership." coveredfully and has watched time loss to Baylor by living in "And (former Pittsburgh head Latin A merican t alent his health. He reduced his his office the next three days. coach) Dave Wannstedt hanalready saturates the sport, intake of Cokes — he used to Colorado, winless in its first dled it well. His philosophy on and the potential for a syspour them down religiously six games, went out that week defense was, 'You can't stop tem in which teams can — to aboutone a month. He and clobbered Texas Tech. everything.' So he'd get out of openly acquire talent from has always loved vegetables. Markman said c oaches the office and say he was gonCuba will only bolster the Only one other coach,Tem- would be wise to take small na go break a sweat." region's influence. The Dople's Rhule, who has high breaks, listen to their favorite And how does Rhoads genminican Republic, with a blood pressure, admitted to a music, get a massage or just erally cope with stress? population of roughly 10.4 "I'm one of those idiots stress-related health issue. practice some deep-breathing million, accounted for 9.7 McCarney worked for Ur- exercises. "They don't have to who works more," he said, percent of the players on ban Meyer at Florida before play three hours of golf." laughing. major league opening-day healthconcerns forced Meyer Working out regularly and to quit after the 2010 season. eating responsibly are the "It was one of t h e m ost most popular stress relievers amazing runs in the history for coaches, although almost of college football," McCar- all of them admit they snack MEAIDOW LAIKIES60L~F lgRSII ney said of the Gators' 30-2 — many of them on healthy CHRISTMAS GIFT CERY'IFICATES mark that covered parts of items like nuts and fruit — and three seasons. "Did he have do not get enough sleep. E3 ZceIln~ aP IIG iQi dark circles and look tired? On average, coaches pracOOI7 o No question, but none of us tice what they preach when it F saw that he might quit. When comes to fitness. Urban came into a staff meetOf those surveyed, 27 work ing and said he was stepping out four times or more a week, down, we were shocked." including Clemson's Dabo Swinney, who plays pickup kansas State's Blake Ander-

rosters, according to MLB fig- throws more 100-mile-perures. The talent pool in Cuba, hour fastballs than any pitcher the scouting director said, is alive. Outfielder Jorge Soler "on the same plane" as the is at the core of the Chicago Dominican Republic. The Cubs' rebuilding efforts. country has a population of But as more players defectroughly 11.3 million. Within ed, the stories of how they a decade or so, baseball could arrived turned grimmer. For see a demographic turnover of years, Cuban baseball players its talent pool of 10 percent or morphed into a dark cottage more. industry, a black market unto "It would be a huge boon themselves, their talent invitfor the U.S.," the Latin Amer- ing danger as it created opporican scouting director said. "It tunity. Smuggling and secrecy would be another island that's haveimperile d defectors'safefertile. Then it gets confusing." ty, robbed them of money and Major League Baseball chiseled at their dignity. would need to determine what Shadowy figures rubbed up set of rules it implements for against the baseball apparateams acquiring Cuban play- tus—priortohis arrivalinthe ers. The league would hope for United States, Puig famously Cuban officials to allow it to spent weeks in Mexico under use the same set of rules that the watch of men associatapply in other Latin American ed with the Los Zetas drug countries: players over age cartel. In 1999, pitcher Danys 23 would be considered free Baez snuck out of the Pan Am agents, and signing bonuses Games in Winnipeg without for players under 23 would be telling his family, friends or subject to spending limits per teammates, fearful of conseteam. quences. "You can't tell anyBut the Cuban government, one," he said. as raised by Ben Badler of For years, the Cold War chill Baseball America, may pro- between the U.S. and Cuba vide complications. Cuba left some of the most talentcould put in place a system ed players in the world alone in which MLB teams bid for and vulnerable to exploitation. the right to sign top Cuban Now there is a real chance players, similar to the post- doors will o pen. Lourdes ing system used by Japan's Gourriel, one of the top playtop league, except the money ers still in Cuba, may now play would flow to the government in the majors without sacrificas opposed to a private league. ing his safety. His father, also Cuban baseball already has named Lourdes, and his older made a lasting impact on the brother Yulieski never had the major leagues. Of the 186 play- chance. After W ednesday's ers born in Cuba to reach the announcement, those kinds majors, 25 appeared lastsea- of missed opportunities may son. Their achievements creat- soon disappear. ed a Cuban golden age. Livan Hernandez lifted the Florida Marlins to th e 1997 World Series and t hrew th e f i r st pitch upon baseball's return

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C7 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

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....... Close: 2,01 2.69 Change: 40.15 (2.0%)

Economists project that a 1,960 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS measure ofthe U.S. economy's future health rose at a slower rate 2,100 " last month. 2,050 " The Conference Board's index of leading indicators, due out 2,000 " today, is designed to anticipate economic conditions three to six 1,950" months out. It is derived from data 1,900 " that, for the most part, have already been reported separately. : 1,850 J : Forecasts call for the index to J A increase 0.3 percent in November. That's below the 0.9 percent gain StocksRecap the previous month. NYSE NASD Leading indicators

+

GOLD

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I)6

17,520"

40

$1,194.30

18,000 "

Sstp 500

Thursday, December te, 2014

10 YR TNOTE 2.14%

18,000"

"

"

16,500"

"

seasonally adjusted percent change 1 2%

"

"

0.9

0.7 0.6

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17389.30 17069.16 17356.87 +288.00 DOW Trans. 8836.88 8580.81 8813.99 +73.47 DOW Util. 602.97 591.73 602.30 +11.03 NYSE Comp. 1061 4.57 10411.53 10603.51 +21 3.49 NASDAQ 4651.90 4550.70 4644.31 +96.48 S&P 500 201 6.75 1973.77 2012.89 +40.15 S&P 400 1421.81 1390.16 1421.03 +31.84 Wilshire 5000 21190.39 20703.09 21158.58 +455.49 Russell 2000 1174.84 1141.34 1174.84 +35.46

NAME

Weyerhaeuser

Nike reports fiscal secondquarter financial results today. The athletic clothing and footwear maker is expected to post growth in earnings and revenue for the quarter. Nike's earnings should provide insight into how demand for its wares is shaping up this holiday shopping season. Financial analysts will have their eye on the company's orders scheduled for delivery, which have been rising this year. NKE $94.50 $100 $76.44 80

Operating EPS

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.1.69% +4.71% $.0.84% L +19.10% $.1.87% L L L +22.78% $.2.05% V + 1.95% $.2.12% L +11.20% $.2.04% L +8 .90% $.2.29% V + 5.85% $.2.20% V + 7.37% $.3.11% L L +0.96%

':::" FedExshares slide Shares of FedEx fell 3.7 percent Wednesday after the maintenance costs to subside starting in the fourth fiscal package delivery company failed to meet second-quarter quarter. earnings expectations. Overall, FedEx earned $616 million, or $2.14 per The company missed Wall Street share, in its fiscal second quarter. That is up from forecasts even though its second-quarter $500 million, or $1.57, in last year's quarter, when earnings jumped 23 percent. FedEx said a FedEx also missed analyst expectations as jump in plane maintenance costs blunted customers continued to shift toward cheaper $ gains the company reaped from managing ground-shipping options and away from overnight costs, lowering its pension expense and air. )»$ growing its export package revenue. The Analysts expected FedEx to earn $2.22 per company expects the increase in aircraft share, according to Zacks Investment Research. Wednesday's close: $167.78

FedEx(FDX) $123 ~

Dividend: $1.12 Div. yield: 1.2%

Source: FactSet

~

~

~

164

*annualized

AmdFocus

Source: Factaet AP

iShR2K

Fidelity LevCoSI d VALUE

FLVCX

B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers NAME

L AST

C H G %C H G

AuspexP n 50.14 + 25.05 + 9 9 .8 Volcano 1 7.84 + 6 .3 5 +5 5 .3 ocC DigRiver 2 4.08 + 7 . 2 2 +4 2 .8 $$ SwftEng

4 .07

NuverraE 7 .47 Xencor 1 5.55 HerzfldCrb 8 .78 SanchezEn 9 .15 EngyXXI 3 .23 AtaraBio n 3 0.12

+1 . 0 9 +1 . 8 1 + 3 .55 +1 . 9 7 +2 . 0 0 +.63 + 5 .77

+3 6 . 6 +3 2 .0 co +2 9 .6 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ +2 8 . 9 e Fund target represents weighted +2 8 . 0 Q +24 . 2 average of stock holdings +2 3 .7 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings

Losers NAME

LAST

Novogen h 3.15 K BS Fash 4 . 2 5 DrxRsaBear 31.70 PUVixST rs 24.86 C SVixSht 2.7 6

CHG %CHG -2.23 -41.4 -1.70 -28.6 -11.94 -27.4 -6.49 -20.7 -.68 -19.8

Foreign Markets

CATEGORY Mid-Cap Value MORNINGSTAR

RATING™ * **o o ASSETS $3,977 million EXP RATIO 0.79%

MANAGER Thomas Soviero SINCE 2003-07-01 RETURNS3-MO -6.8

YTD +1.9 LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +5.4 Paris 4,111.91 + 18.71 + A 6 3-YR ANNL +22.6 London 6,336.48 +4.65 + . 07 5-YR-ANNL +15.0 -19.46 -.20 Frankfurt 9,544.43 Hong Kong22,585.84 -84.66 -.37 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 41,004.44 +779.36 +1.94 LyondellBasell Industries NV Milan 18,569.03 -1 01.02 -.54 Tokyo 16,81 9.73 +64.41 + . 38 Service Corp International Inc Stockholm 1,405.35 -8.23 -.58 Comcast Corp Class A Sydney 5,140.60 +9.60 + . 19 Ford Motor Co Zurich 8,775.88 -19.25 -.22 General Motors Co

NAME

$17.2$~

180

D $28.75

Vol.:53.6m (5.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$8.85 b

S

0 N 52-week range

$12$.17~

D $ 1$$ $ 1

PE: 60.0 Vol.:8.7m (4.4x avg.) P E: 22.9 Yield:... Mkt.Cap:$47.52 b Yield: 0.5%

XL Close:$33.66 V-1.35 or -3.9% The insurance and reinsurance company confirmed that it is in preliminary discussions for a potential buyout of Catlin Group. $40

Ruby Tuesday RT Close:$6.79V-1.33 or -16.4% The chain restaurant operator reported same-store-sales and guest counts for its fiscal second-quarter below its prior guidance. $10

35 S

0 N 52-week range

$27.7$~

D $$ $.$$

S

0 N 52-week range

$5.14~

D $ $.57

Vol.:9.6m (4.6x avg.) PE:2 8 . 1 Vol.:1.9m (3.2x avg.) P E: .. . Mkt. Cap:$8.69 b Yie l d : 1.9% Mkt.Cap:$420.46 m Y i eld: ...

Volcano

VOLC Close:$17.84L6.35 or 55.3% The medical device maker is being bought by Royal Philips for $1.2 billion, with the deal expected to close in the first quarter. $20

Auspex Pharma.

ASPX Close:$50.14L25.05 or 99.8% The biotechnology company reported positive results from a late-stage study of its potential Huntington's disease treatment. $60 40

15

10

20

S

0

N

D

F MAM

52-week range $$.$$~

J J A S O N

52-week range $24.$2

Vol.:90.1m (39.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$920.6m

P E :.. Yield:..

Digital River

DRIV Close: $24.08%7.22or 42.8% The online commerce technology company reported that it has extended a digital distribution agreement with Microsoft. $30

$147$ ~

$ 52. $2

Vol.:5.6m (31.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.38 b

P E: . . . Yield: ...

Cerus

CERS Close:$5.86L1.08 or 22.6% The biomedical products company said the Food and Drug Administration approved its Intercept system for plasma screening.

$6 5

20 0 N 52-week range

D $2 $.$$

Vol.:5.8m (7.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$767.7 m

PE: . . Yield:..

S

0 N 52-week range

$$.4$~ Vol.:7.2m (6.0x avg.)

D

$$.$0 P E: .. . Yield : ...

Mkt. Cap:$458.66 m

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.14 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill

. 0 2 .0 2 . 1 0 .1 1 -0.01 L

5 2-wk T-bill

.21

.19

2-year T-note . 6 2 .56 5-year T-note 1.61 1.52 10-year T-note 2.14 2.06 30-year T-bond 2.73 2.69

BONDS

+0 . 0 2 ~

L L L

L L L

+ 0 .06 L +0.09 L +0.08 w +0.04 V

L T T V

L .32 W 1.50 w 2.83 w 3.87

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 25 . 85 +.28+7.2 +10.3 +15.0+11.9 A A A CaplncBuA m 59.76 +.57 +5.4 +8.6 +11.6 +8.9 A 8 A CpWldGrlA m 45.51 +.50 +2.7 +6.6 +16.3 +9.2 8 8 C EurPacGrA m 47.21 +.24 -3.8 0 . 0 +12.2 +5.98 8 C FnlnvA m 54. 4 4 +.97+6.6 +10.9 +19.2+13.4 D C C GrthAmA x 41 .74 -3.34 NA N A NA NA E E E IncAmerA m 21.54 +.26 +6.7 +9.8 +13.2+11.0 8 8 A InvCoAmA m 40.88 +.73 +10.4 +14.9 +20.4+13.3 8 8 D NewPerspA m38.87 +.47 +1.4 +5.4 +16.8+10.6 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m42.33 +.77 +8.8 +12.9 +18.6+14.6 8 C A Dodge &Cox Income 13.88 -.82 +5.2 +5 .0 + 4.6 +5.0 C A 8 IntlStk 42.34 +.40 -1.6 +3.1 +15.8 +7.9 A A A Stock 179.86+3.82 +7.5 +12.4 +23.8+15.2 C A A Fidelity Contra 96.20 + 2.81+7.6 +11.3 +19.8+15.1 C C 8 ContraK 96.1 2 + 2.80+7.7 +11.5 +19.9+15.2 C C B LowPriStk d 49.11 +.68 +5.2 + 8 .4 +19.7+15.6 D C B Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 71.72+1.44+11.0 +15.3 +20.7+15.3 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.37 +.84+1.0 +3.5 +10.0+8.6 D A A IncomeA m 2. 3 4 +.84+1.5 + 3 .7 +10.5 +9.1 D A A Oakmark Intl I 24.69 +.13 -6.2 -2.0 +17.5 +9.7 C A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 53 +.40+8.4 +12.6 +16.9+12.8 C E D RisDivB m 17 . 28 +.35+7.5 +11.7 +15.9+11.8 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 16 +.35+7.6 +11.8 +16.0+12.0 D E E SmMidValA m47.29+1.84 +7.3 +11.3 +18.7+13.0 8 D D SmMidValB m39.80 +.88 +6.6 +10.5 +17.7+12.1 C D E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.82 + .59 +4.9 + 8 .5 +18.2+13.1 E C C GrowStk 50.6 3 + .96+6.1 +10.1 +21.6+16.0 D A A HealthSci 67.4 0+1.54+30.8 +36.9 +39.8+28.3 8 A A Newlncome 9. 5 7 - .81+ 5.5 + 5 .2 + 3.1 +4.3 8 C C Vanguard 500Adml x 185.53 +2.70 +11.0 +15.3 +20.7+15.3 A 8 A 500lnv x 185 .53 +2.74 +10.9 +15.2 +20.6+15.2 A 8 8 CapOp 5 3.96 +.91 +16.8 +20.6 +26.6+16.3 A A A Eqlnc x 3 0.57 -.69 +5.5 +9.5 +17.4+14.9 D D A IntlStkldxAdm 25.82 +.25 -5.6 -1.7 +9.7 NA C D StratgcEq x 31 .33-1.87 +5.6 +9.2 +22.2+17.5 C A A TgtRe2020 28 . 63+.27 +5.6 +8.0 +11.9 +9.6 A A A Tgtet2025 16. 6 2 +.19 +5.5 +8.3 +13.0+10.2 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10 . 90-.83 +5.8 +5.3 +2.6 +4.1 8 D D Totlntl 15.43 +.14 -5.7 -1.8 +9.6 +4.5 C D D TotStlAdm 50 . 6+1.87 4 +9.9 +14.1 +20.8+15.6 8 8 A TotStldx 5 0.61 +1.87 +9.8 +14.0 +20.6+15.5 C 8 A USGro x 2 9.3 3-1.83 +2.9 +7.2 +19.3+13.6 E C D Welltn 40.33 +.40 +8.2 +11.1 +14.3+11.1 A A A

PCT 10.35 3.86 3.76 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 2.63 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.56 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.

Commodities

FUELS

The price of crude oil was up by more than $3 per barrel at one point during trading, but it gave up a big chunk of that gain late in the day.

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

Foreign Exchange The dollar jumped against other major currencies, continuing its strong climb that began in the summer. The dollar rose against the euro,

Japanese yen and British pound, among others.

h5Q HS

METALS

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

.06 .09 .13

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 2.58 2.54+0.04 W W

Dividend: $0.80 Div. yield: 0.5%

Fidelity Leveraged Company FAMILY looks for companies with MarhetSummary American Funds high debt levels, but that are Most Active positioned to reduce their debt NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG level, it's an unusual strategy for a S&P500ETF 2324734 201.79 +3.88 stock fund. 38.05 +.32 17.26 +.54 31.09 -3.54 7.02 + .30 6.70 + .42 24.66 +.17 101.80 +1.82 7.64 + .06 116.89 +3.50

FDX

Bond BuyerMuni Idx 4.27 4.26 +0.01 w w P rice change: YT D 3-y r " Price-earnings ratio:21 BarclaysUSAggregate 2.21 2.23 -0.02 w w (Based on past 12 month results) PRIME FED Barclays USHighYield 7.30 7.13+0.17 L L FDX 16.7% 25.5 RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.70 3.70 .. . w w AP YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.84 1.80 +0.04 w w 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3.09 3.09 ... w w 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds

52-WEEK RANGE

based on past 12 month results

1090564 892069 838673 789399 775708 772081 747129 723249 661618

0 N 52-week range

$1$.$1 ~ DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are not included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid ic preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximatecash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last t2 months.

Price-earnings ratio: 29

BkofAm 8 iPVixST PetrbrsA Petrobras GenElec PwShs QQQ TalismE g

S

L +52. 7 +5 5 .9 1 609 15 0 . 5 0 L +21.9 +25 .6 53 5 1 1 1. 2 7 L +10. 9 +1 0 .5 89207 16 0 . 20 V -71.4 -69.2 192 d d 0 .88f v -8.4 -5.6 6697 18 3.64f T -5.0 -7.4 91 +1. 0 +4 .2 491 17 0.64f L +14.6 +23 .2 5 3 9 2 7 0. 6 0f L +17. 1 +1 7 .5 2 379 29 1 . 4 2 W -15.9 -11.9 92 86 L +7.5 $.1 2 .1 9 2 2 2 3 0. 4 0 L +38.1 +41 .1 11446 15 0 . 6 4 L + 39.6 $. 4 9.1 30491 17 0 .96f L +0.1 +0.7 1 3 701 13 0 . 2 6 L + 58. 0 +5 5 .2 3 378 19 0 .74f V +16 0 +15 4 18 8 4 2 9 L -12.4 -9.7 2304 dd V -25.9 -24.3 87 0 1 4 0 .73f L -10.6 -11.3 569 1 8 0. 2 0 +22.3 +25.6 33435 18 1.24 L +20. 2 +2 3 .2 5 520 32 1 .12f L + 22.6 +25 .8 1 1 51 2 0 1. 3 2 L +14.2 +15 .7 15 4 2 2 1. 8 6f L +14.9 +21 .2 3 8 65 1 9 0 .88a L $.1 6 7.7 +160.9 4 2 2 4 0 L -11.0 - 5.4 1236 4 0 1 . 76 W -13.2 -10.8 1331 18 0 . 12 L +19.2 +21 .1 1 7 47 3 0.92 W -31.6 - 22.6 367 7 7 0 . 75 L +37.5 +39 .8 72 2 2 9 2. 2 0 L +1.0 +3.3 171 13 1. 3 0f L +2.6 +4.9 49 4 0 3 0 1 . 28f L +212 .8 + 203.8 3022 c c -10.8 -7.2 1615 23 0 . 6 0 L +8.7 +11 . 9 7 1 65 1 4 0 . 9 8 -4.6 -5.3 66 4 1 4 0 .59f L +18. 5 +2 3 .1 19450 13 1 . 40 L +10. 9 +1 6. 8 5 115 2 6 1 . 16

FedEx

Close:$167.787-6.48 or -3.7 4 The shipping services company reported worse-than-expected second-quarter financial results and reaffirmed its full-year guidance. $200 160

S

2Q '13 2 Q '14

iShEMkts

20

XL Group

59.97 56. 0 3 +. 3 5 +0.6 L L 35.98 34.3 5 +. 9 7 + 2 .9 L L 18.03 17. 2 6 +. 5 4 +3.2 L L 10 2 .20 26 . 57 + . 80 +3.1 L L 144. 5 7 12 5.06 + .81 +0.7 L w 5.82 4.97 +.1 8 + 3.8 L L 0.3 6 27.77 +.88+3.3 L L L 45.51 45 .12 +1.79 +4.1 L L 46.8 2 13 9.33 +2.02 $.1.5 L W 17.97 13. 8 1 +. 5 1 + 3.8 L L 37.42 32.3 7 +. 8 6 $ .2.7 L L 39.65 38.65 +1.33 +3.6 L L 37.90 36.2 4 +. 6 8 $ .1.9 ~ L 14.70 13.4 3 +. 3 2 + 2 .4 L L 62.65 62. 4 6 +. 9 6 +1.6 L L 919 6 37 ... ... L V 18.96 16. 2 1 +. 6 7 +4.3 L L 36.0 5 22. 65 + . 9 2 +4.2 L V 24.31 21. 5 3 + . 7 5 +3.6 L L 0.0 5 45.74 +.58+1.3 V W V 99.76 94. 5 0 + 1.29+1.4 V W 77.20 75 .77 + . 93 +1 .2 L L 48.54 48.9 2 + 1.28 $.2.7 L L 71.15 68.8 0 + 1.28 +1.9 L L 8.12 6 .80 + .20 $ .3.0 V W 46.99 41.4 0 +. 3 9 +1 .0 L L 275. 0 9 23 3.70 +4.13 +1.8 L L 36.03 34.7 4 +. 1 3 +0 .4 L V 33.3 2 22 . 35 + . 31+1.4 L W 25 6 .16252.33 +6.67 + 2.7 L L 70.35 66. 8 9 + 1.38+2.1 L L 84.20 80.4 4 + 1.31 +1.6 V L 26.66 26 .09 +1.09 +4.3 L L 9.6 5 17.07 +.43+2.6 L W L 45.52 43. 9 2 +. 8 2 +1.9 L L WAF D 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 22 .22 +.51+ 2.3 L L L W F C 4 3 .49 ~ 55.35 53. 7 9 + 1.02+1.9 L L W Y 2 7 .48 ~ 36.70 35. 0 1 + . 2 7 +0.8 V L

WashingtonFedl Wells Fargo & Co

Fitter results?

D

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

Alaska Air Group A LK 34.81 ~ J J A S 0 N Avista Corp A VA 27.36 ~ 2014 Bank of America B AC 14. 37 ~ Source: Factae Barrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 e — Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Eye on Rite Aid Cascade Bancorp C A C B 4 . 11 ~ COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 Strong revenue growth has helped ColumbiaBnkg Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — e lift Rite Aid's earnings Costco Wholesale CO S T 109.50 ~ 1 this year. Wall Street predicts the nation's Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 28.03 ~ third-largest drugstore chain will Hewlett Packard HPQ 2 6 . 65 — 0 deliver improved earnings and Intel Corp I NTC 23.50 ~ revenue again today when it Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ reports financial results for its Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ third quarter. Investors will be Lattice Semi LSCC 530 ~ listening for an update on how LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ sales of generic drugs are faring. MDU Resources MDU 21 . 33 e — Generics are cheaper versions of Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.25 ~ brand-name drugs and are less Microsoft Corp MSFT 34.63 ~ 5 profitable. Nike Inc 8 N KE 69.85 ~ Nordstrom Inc JWN 54.90 — e /® = Nwst Nat Gas N WN 40.05 ~ PaccarInc P CAR 53.59 ~ Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 215.09 ~ ,„. . M A~ Safeway Inc S WY 26.69 ~ Schnnzer Steel SCHN 2 1.41 o — Sherwin Wms SHW 170.63 — 0 StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ StarbucksCp S BUX 67.93 ~ Triquint Semi TQNT 7.75 — o Umppua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.94 ~ 1 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~

MGM

Close: $18.01V-0.84 or -4.5% The casino operator and six contractors avoided a trial after reaching a settlement deal in a breach-of-contract lawsuit. $24 22

NorthwestStocks

flat

0.0

MGM Resorts N

0.3

-.0162

.

0

est.

0.4

"

DOW

Vol. (in mil.) 4,867 2,199 Pvs. Volume 4,745 2,193 Advanced 2823 2210 Declined 3 59 5 4 2 New Highs 62 52 New Lows 106 99

1.2

0.8

S

1.2324+

Major stock indexes ended higher Wednesday, rebounding after a three-day slide. Investors welcomed comments by the Federal Reserve, which indicated it was moving closer to raising interest rates from record-low levels because the U.S. economy and job market are becoming stronger. The central bank also promised to take a "patient" approach in doing so, however. The 10 sectors in the Standard & Poor's 500 index rose, led by energy stocks, which got a boost as the price of oil recouped some of its recent losses. Russia remained in focus on concerns about the impact of the recent slide in the ruble.

"

17,000"

' + +.54

StoryStocks

Close: 17,356.67 Change: 288.00 (1.7%)

"

.

17,500"

$56.47

Dow Jones Industrials "

17,040" ""' 10 DAYS "

"

+.17

$15.89

CLOSE PVS. 56.47 55.93 1.58 1.60 2.01 1.96 3.70 3.62 1.57 1.54

CLOSE PVS. 1194.30 1193.90 15.89 15.72 1199.50 1196.50 2.89 2.88 779.25 784.00

W 3 .66

w w L w w

5. 1 1 2. 4 2 5.64 4.6 5 1 . 74 3.23

%CH. %YTD +0.97 -42.6 -2.82 -17.6 +2.47 -34.7 +2.29 -1 2.5 +1.64 -43.8 %CH. %YTD -0.6 +0.03 +1.12 -1 7.8 +0.25 -1 2.5 +0.35 -1 6.1 - 0.61 + 8 . 6

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.56 1.59 -1.60 +1 6.3 Coffee (Ib) 1.71 1.77 -3.31 +54.3 -3.3 Corn (bu) 4.08 4.06 +0.55 Cotton (Ib) 0.61 0.60 +1.46 -28.3 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 336.10 333.50 +0.78 -6.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.49 1.48 + 0.74 + 9 . 3 Soybeans (bu) 10.27 10.24 +0.34 -21.8 Wheat(bu) 6.49 6.23 + 4.05 + 7 . 2 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5560 -.0166 -1.07% 1.6266 Canadian Dollar 1.1 653 +.0017 +.15% 1.0613 USD per Euro 1.2324 -.0162 -1.31% 1.3767 JapaneseYen 118.61 +1.40 +1.18% 102.67 Mexican Peso 14. 6186 -.0958 -.66% 12.9653 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9340 +.0281 +.71% 3.5073 Norwegian Krone 7 . 4405 -.0225 -.30% 6.1152 South African Rand 11.6356 -.0348 -.30% 10.3462 Swedish Krona 7.6 8 7 2 + .0621 +.81% 6.5583 Swiss Franc .9744 +.0125 +1.28% . 8850 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2317 +.0138 +1.12% 1.1239 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1964 +.0053 +.09% 6.0713 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7562 +.0023 +.03% 7.7526 Indian Rupee 63.380 -.565 -.89% 61.820 Singapore Dollar 1.3106 +.0054 +.41% 1.2578 South KoreanWon 1102.14 +20.35 +1.85% 1053.71 Taiwan Dollar 31.30 + . 0 3 + .10% 2 9 .67


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

BRIEFING Dish addsMetflix to set-top doxes Dish is making iteasier to watch videofrom an online rival, Netflix. The satellite TV company saidWednes-

scram etoco ewit ea O l a s I l n

day that it is adding

the Nefflixapp to its latest set-top boxes, its second-generation Hopper devices released in February 2013.Dish wouldn't say howmany customers havethat box. Customers with older boxeswould need a replacement to use the feature. Dishcustomers also must subscribe to Nefflix's $9-a-month service on their own. TiVo also makes a device that combines regular TVchannelswith online videoservices, but Netflix said Dish isthe first U.S. payTV provider to add theappto its own set-top box. Netflix has similar deals with cable companies overseas. The development comes aspayTV providers such asDishface challengeskeepingcustomers asthey increasingly view videoonline — such asthrough Netflix. The movecould keep consumers usingDish's set-top box insteadof switching to astandalone streamingdevice such as Rokuor Apple TV to watch Nefflix. — The Associated Press

PERMITS City of Bend • Dana Pantuso Living Trust, 20223 Merriewood Lane, $200,258 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20720 NE Sierra Drive, $206,699 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20724 NE Sierra Drive $206,699 • Stonegate Development LLC, 60418Hedgewood Lane, $329,364 • Stonegate Development LLC, 60414Hedgewood Lane, $265,762 • Makena CustomHomes Inc., 2873 NWPerlette Lane, $542,401 • Hidden Hills Bend LLC, 61077 SERuby PeakLane, $233,082 • Land Group LLC,2139 NE Third St., $100,000 • Alan Petrich, 1644 NW Fifth St., $268,651 • Kevin McKenny, 929 SW Silver Lake Blvd., $206,798 • 360 Bond LLC,360SW Bond St., $113,750 • FC Fund LLC,618 SE Gleneden Place,$154,398 • Signature Homebuilders LLC, 61398 SWSunbrook Drive, $238,885 • Hale-Campbell Properties LLC, 20782 SEHollis Lane, $229,724

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Meeting the Wholesale Market Demand: Agriculturalbusiness workshop: Determine changes neededfor direct and wholesale market development; $10/farm; registeronline or call 541-447-6228; 6-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College Redmond Technology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; www. agbiz.eventbrite.com. JAN. 5 Discover a Career in Real Estate:Jim Mazziotti answers questions before beginning a career in real estate;free, RSVP by email;6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite 100; 541-4808835 or soarwithexit© gmail.com. JAN. 6 • Brewing Certificate Information Session: Learn about the Central Oregon Community Collegeexam-preparation courseto earn the Institute of Brewing 8 Distilling General Certificate in Brewing; free, registration requested; 5:30-6:30

s Ome es sin mari uana case By Joseph Ditzler

Osborne said in the record-

ing. "It has been three long, A federal judge in Illinois stressful years dealing with sentenced Anthony Wade Os- this federal indictment. An borne, owner of Green Leaf incredible amount of people's Gardening Center in Bend, lives have been affected by to 30 months in prison last this, and me and my family week for conspiracy to disare happy to get this behind The Bulletin

tribute marijuana in a 3-year-

old case that stretched from Oregon to North Carolina. Osborne, 35, who main-

tained his innocence in an interview with The Bulletin

Street. He was indicted in

guilty in U.S. District Court

July 2012 on the conspiracy charge. Federal, regional and

U.S. District Judge Joe

Billy McDade recommended that Osborne, in custody serve his sentence "in a federal work camp as close to

his family in Bend, Oregon,

Federal prosecutors in Illi-

as possible," and that he

nois obtained indictments

take part in substance abuse treatment. Osborne must spend two years on probation following his release, according to McDade's sentencing

against Osborne and two others, John Jay Busche and

order Dec. 11. McDade also

airplane and 78 pounds of

weather doesn't blindside its planes and trucks-

ordered Osborne to forfeit three vehicles, $1,466 and four firearms seized during

marijuana inside. Hamilton was arrestedatthe same

more than 650 and 100,000,

the investigation.

warrant affidavits. Osborne

FedEx employees, including Marcell G. Haythorne, center, move packages on the busiest day of the year inside the sorting and shipping hub at Los Angeles International Airport on Monday.

Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Inside

FedEx Corp.'s sorting facility, mechanical arms whir within a labyrinth of buzz-

ing blue and yellow machinery. Cardboard boxes drop onto a conveyor belt with a thud, zipping down the line to be sorted before making

the National Retail Feder-

ation said, signaling that Web sales were once again a driving force during the holiday season. The Postal Service's peak

itto shoppers'doorsteps for the holidays. day coincides with FedEx's, The well-oiled sorting ma- with more than 640 million chine at the Los Angeles In- cards, letters and packages ternational Airport houses processed, compared with workers diligently prepar607 million on last year's ing parcels for the busiest peak day. From Thanksday in FedEx's history. giving to Christmas Eve, "This is Super Bowl seathe Postal Service expects son for FedEx," said FedEx to ship 12.7 billion letters, spokeswoman Shea Leorcards and packages. deanu. "We like to say that UPS predicts it will move this time of year, Santa's more than 34 million parcels elves wear purple." its busiest day, Dec. 22FedEx projections pegged that's double the number of the number of packages an average day — and about flowing through its system 585 million parcels this Monday at 22.6 million, up month alone. from 22 million parcels on Deliveries hit a snag the busiest day in December across couriers last holiday 2013. The record-breaking season, when a confluence day came on the heels of of bad weather and last-minFedEx's busiest week of the ute online shopping overyear, Dec. 7 to 13, which saw whelmed couriers throughabout 83 million packages out the country. Some moving through the compa- shoppers placed orders as ny's global network. late as Dec. 23 for delivery And FedEx wasn't alone; both United Parcel Service Inc. and the U.S. Postal

Service braced themselves for a whirlwind of mail

by Christmas Day. But mail

companies bore the brunt of customer complaints. This year, FedEx ramped up its efforts to prevent a

replay of the delivery headaches. The shipping giant hired some 50,000 seasonal

employees to help with this year's rush, up from 40,000 a year earlier. FedEx employs 15 meteorologists so inclement

respectively. The company also cau-

since November on a viola-

tion of his pretrial release,

Osborne, in a recorded statement provided Tuesday

time, according to search owned a share in the plane, according to affidavits by law

their packages. The deadline is Dec. 23 for last-min-

tion rather than face trial.

North Carolina. Busche and

ute shoppers using the company's express service. "Mother Nature is always

a wild card, so we encourage people to ship early," Leordeanu said.

The courier projects it will ship more than 290 million packages from Thanksgiving to Christmas Eve, an 8.8 percent increase from 2013.

At the sorting hub Sunday afternoon, FedEx's "elves" filled towering aluminum containers, placing boxes filled with items as varied as griddles and golf clubs in T-shaped stacks. Among

He questioned the credibility of witnesses that law

marijuana was bound for Hamilton both pleaded guilty to possession of marrIuana

enforcement agents planned to bring against him. He

with intent to distribute. They

said the ease with which the

Jan. 15 in Peoria. A U.S. magistrate in Illi-

government creates a case for conspiracy amounts to an injustice. "My experience is that agents will acquire information from criminals trying to cut deals for lighter sentenc-

are scheduled for sentencing noisordered Osborne jailed Nov. 19 after Bend police arrested him for allegedly threatening Bend police officers and a child protective services worker from the Or-

es, or even no charges at all, and protect them as confi-

egon Department of Human Services, according to online

dential, in some cases even

federalcourt records.

hide information that may discredit their informant,"

— Reporter: 541-617-7815, j ditzler@bendbulletin.com

them was Ilyas Bholat,

who's seen each holiday shipping season grow firsthand. "I've worked here for 25

years," he said. "This is what you call work ethic."

Study: U.S.wealth gap is the widest in 30years New Yorh Times News Service

While those at the

The wealthy are getting wealthier. As for everyone else, no such luck.

top have managed to recoup much of the economic downturn,

By Jenny Anderson and Andrew Roth

the ruble, which a senior

on Tuesday, when it swung

Areport released Wednesday by the Pew Research

official said was "extremely

wildly to about 80 rubles to

Center found that the wealth

New Yorh Times News Service

undervalued." the dollar after opening the We will sell "as much as we dayat64. "It's already been a roller

coaster," said Luis Costa, Citigroup's head of strategy for

gap between the country's top 20 percent earners and the rest of America had stretched to its widest point in at least three

wealth lost during the middle-income

families have not made any gains.

decades.

Central and Eastern Europe,

Last year, the median net

the Middle East and Africa.

worth of upper-income families reached $639,400, nearly

bility," said Valerie Wilson, an

seven times as much of those

Policy Institute, a left-of-center researchgroup in Washington,

Costa said the market welcomed news that there would

be a meeting Wednesday of the central bank, the Foreign Ministry and important Rus-

sian companies.

in the middle, and nearly 70 times the level of those at the bottom of the income ladder.

There has been growing attention to the issue of income

CommunityCollege, Bend campus; Boyle Ed Center Room 154; 541-383-7270. JAN. 10 • Oregon Alcohol Server Training:Oregon Liquor Control Commission Alcohol Server permit; workbook provided. Must be 18 years of age; $39; registration required; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Cascade Culinary lnstitute, 2555 NW Campus Village Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • Sound Business 8 Financial Planning: Businessplanning for agribusinesses; $10/farm, registeronline or call 541447-6228; 9-11:30 a.m.; Central Oregon Community CollegeRedmond Technology Education

agents intercepted Busche in Peoria with a twin-engine

enforcement offi cers. Authorities alleged the

Russia pledgesto sell foreign currency

p.m.; COCCChandler Lab, 1040 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo©cocc.eduor www. cocc.edu/cont inuinged/ GCB. •SCOREfree business counseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferences withlocal entrepreneurs; checkin at the library deskon the secondfloor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. JAN. 8 • ManagingDay-to-Day Performance:Identify performance gaps for improved productivity; part ofCOCC'sLeadership series;$95; 8 a.m.noon;Central Oregon

Leon Hamilton, after federal

through the garden store manager, said he gave in to the likely prospect of convic-

tioned the public not to wait until the last minute to ship

By Patricia Cohen

LONDON — Trading in the Russian ruble was volatile need to," Alexei Moiseev, the Wednesday, rallying briefly deputy finance minister, told on news that the Finance journalists, the Interfax news Ministrywas readyto sell agencyreported. some ofitsforeign currency Separately, Interfax said reserves, and then weakening that the Finance Ministry had again. alreadybegun selling currenThe ministry said Wednes- cy reserves. day that it was prepared to The ruble was at 68.25 to sell as much as $7 billion of the dollar in midmorning those reserves to support trading. It closed at 67.50

state law enforcement offi-

cers alleged Osborne grew marijuana in California and moved it Oregon to prepare for sale elsewhere, according tofederalcourtrecords.

Barbara Davidson/Los Angeles Times

before the holidays, partly the result of the unrelenting growth in online shopping. Nearly 127 million shoppers browsed online for bargains on Cyber Monday alone,

State business records list Osborne as the owner of the gardening center, which remains open on SE Ninth

in September 2013, pleaded in Peoria, Illinois, in August.

By Sarah Parvini

us and move forward with our lives."

Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; www. agbiz.eventbrite.com. • Grand Opening Weekend:HaydenHomes new community grand opening weekend; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Hayden Homesat Westerly, 63261 Newhall Place, Bend; 541-316-4966, westerly@ hayden-homes.com or www.hayden-homes.com. JAN. 13 • Real estate broker license prep course: Preparation to qualify for the Oregon Real Estate Broker'sLicense Exam; $600, registration required by Jan. 6; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo©cocc.edu. JAN. 16

• WordPress — Beginning I: Learn to build abusiness website with Wordpress; $99, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo©cocc.eduor www. cocc.edu/cont inuinged. JAN. 17 • QuickBooks Pro 2014 — Beginning I:Learn to set up accounts, create invoices, recordsales and enterpayments. Includes textbook; $89, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270,ceinfo© cocc.edu orwww.cocc. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletiii.com/bizral

inequality, particularly the plight of those earningthe federal minimum wage of $7.25 an hour or dose to it.

But while income and wealth are related (the more

you make, the more you can save and invest), the wealth gap zeroes in on a different aspect of financial well-being: how much money and other assets you have accumulated

over time, including the value of your home and car plus any investments in stocks, bonds

and the like. Think of it as "a measure of the family 'nest egg,'" as Pew calls it — a hoard that can sustain a household during an emergency, like the loss of a job, and in the long run can see someonethrough retirement. The wealth gap "exposes varying degrees of vulnera-

economist at the Economic adding that it also was passed

down through the generations. While those at the top have

m anagedtorecoup much of the wealth lost duringthe economic downturn, middle-in-

come families have not made any gains. Pew, which used data from the FederalReserve, defined

m iddle income as $44,000 a year for a family of four, while a yearly income of $132,000 for the same-size family pushed a household into the upper ranks. About 1 in 5 families

qualifies for that higher status, while 46 percent occupy the middle range. The median household net worth last year for those in

the middle was $96,500, only slightly above the $94,300 mark it hit in 1983 (after being adjusted for inflation). A poor household actually had a higher median net worth 30 years

ago ($11,400 in 1983) than it counted last year ($9,300).


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 •

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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,RabbitsendSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Ferriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

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a

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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,Huntingend 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

A v e .

I caution when pur-I products or • I chasing services from out of I

Dining Chairs (8) & Table Moving, just 6 months old. Purchased at Haven Homes for $10K; asking $5,000. 541-419-8860

8 the area. Sending 8 • cash, checks, or •

I credit i n f ormationI may be subjected to

I FRAUD. For moreI

Probably don't want to miss! Viking Quilt Des igner w it h la r ge amount of extras and i ncludes 10 ele c tronic stitch c ards. Lovely price of $795 Golf Shoe cleaning kit in tin box. used once, firm. 541-549-1947 $10 541-419-6408 241

Bicycles & information about an c Accessories advertiser, you may C 8 call t he Ore g on8 ' State Atto r ney 'Childrens bikes, girls 20", $60. Boys 16", I General's O f f i ce Consumer Protec- • $40. 541-382-9211 t ion ho t l in e at I i 1-877-877-9392.

I

I

I

> TheBulletin > Serving Centref Oregonsince l903

NEW Cleveland Irons! 4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in plastic,$350! 951-454-2561 (/n Redmond)

r-„-...-„,;a I Largest 3-Day I

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 or'

~ee eke ee! Ad must include price of

el e t e oi geoo

GUN & KNIFE SHOW I December 19-20-21 Portland Expo Center Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, Sun.10-4 1-5 exit ¹306B

Admission $10

I 1 - 800-659-3440 I I CollectorsWest.com~ Remington1100 semi- auto 12 ga., 3" shells. Purchased in 1980s. Present condition is like new. Asking $750. 541-410-4066

~ Marin Argenta 2010 or less, or multiple road bike. Never rid212 items whosetotal Womens Taylor Made den. Shimano 105 Dining tableplus 6 does not exceed Antiques & Burner Bubble clubs, thru-out. 6061 alum. chairs, ncustom $500. full set woods, irons Collectibles n n triplebutted Hydro made, 82 x43 x29 with bag & pull cart, Edge Road main end grain walnut and A Dept. 56 D ickens' frame l ike n e w . $35 0 . Call Classifieds at R uger M77 M ar k I I w/c a rbon 541-593-7107 541-385-5809 alder. $1550. Village, 8 pieces at seatstay and E4 stainless 22-250 rifle www.bendbulletln.com 541-312-2393 $50 ea. + accesso- anti-flex chain-stay. with 6-18x44 Vortex 246 ries. 541-382-3456 n6'1n CrossFire II scope with Fits 5'8 $750 Guns, Hunting Hardy Perfect fly reel, 350 rnd of ammo. All ($825 if you want PD 3-3/8' R/H, extra spool, & Fishing are exc. cond. $975. 5 700 B l ac k S h i $350 cash 541-322-6281 541-821-1046 mano 105 pedals) 1969 Browning A-5 12ga. Iver Johnson 357 Mag 541-480-2483 Standard, auto, extra bbl. SA revolver w/holster, 249 $900 cash 541-322-6281 $280. 541-383-3117 Art, Jewelry Exceptional c r a ftsGood classified adstell KelTec P11 9mm semi& Furs manship signed by Antique Barber Chair 206 206 the essential facts in an auto w/2 mags, $280. builder. All solid oak complete with headinteresting Manner. Write 541-383-3117 Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies medium colored stain rest & strops! Swivels, from the readers view not desk that looks as el- reclines. Built in 1901, scope, Vari-XIII, the seller's. Convert the Leupold SHIH-TZU, male, $400 egant from the back in good condition con- Men's Enhanced Alumi3.5x10 Gold Ring duplex, u rebred, 3yr s o l d , as it does from the facts into benefits. Show sidering age. Perfect num Alloy-constructed $299 firm. 541-389-0049 rained. 541-589-4948 front. Lumbar supgift - excellent TV Crossroads Sport 2012, the reader howthe item will Mossberg 20ga pump, blossomhut©gmail.com ported chair included. chair for the man who help them in some way. S/N ENI14764,has Mod. 500C, exlnt, $250. Paid $4400 a sking has everything!$2700 This never been used or ridSiamese kittens, Seal- $650 cash. More info Above artwork, Ruger 243 Mark II w/3x9 Interesting trades den. Wheel & rear readvertising tlp point, 8 wks, 1 M, 1 F, Redfield wide a n gle created in 1975 in Chihuahua puppy, considered. available. flectors, removable front brought to you by $25 ea. 541-977-7019 scope, exlnt, $550. S&W Bangkok, Thailand, micro-mini, tiniest 541-406-1 626 541-408-5227 basket, special order 202 is fatricated from lit9mm Mod. SW9VE, exlnt, Chihuahua, $450. comfort seat, Planet Bike The Bulletin erally thousands upon Want to Buy or Rent ternng CentralOregonttnce fgtg 541-977-0035 $250. 541-977-5358 Full bed frame & headeco-rack, unisex bar, Antiques wanted: Tools, thousands of wax board, excellent cond, 4 Shimano non-slip gear Chihuahua furniture, pre-'80s John system. particles, and can WANTEDwood dress- Christmas $200. 541-977-7479 Was $940; sell300 Weatherby puppies, price negoDeere toys, pre-'40s B/W only be described as ers; dead washer/ tiable. 541-233-9079 ing for $775 cash, firm. magnum Mark V unimaginable art! beer cans. dryers. 541-420-5640 G ENERATE SOM E photography, 1-231-360-5105 German made, with 541-389-1578 Pamung is 44" x 32". EXCITEMENT in your Leupold 3x9x50 Siberian Huskies, cute Asking $2,500cash 203 Takara bikes, mens & scope. hybrids. Reserve your neighborhood! Plan a 231-360-5105 (Bend) garage sale and don't womens, ridden once, Holiday Bazaar Christmas puppy now! 3 $1600 obo. $75/ea. 541-382-9211 • New, never fired M's, 3 F's, ready 12/20. forget to advertise in 541-480-9430 & Craft Shows classified! Weatherby Van$500. 541-280-0457 Where can you find a 541-385-5809. 242 guardS2, synthetic CASH!! Dachshundsminilonghelping hand? stock, cal 30-06. $550. Exercise Equipment For Guns, Ammo 8 haired AKC. $500 & up Sealy King mattress set, Beveled mirror 28 nt • New, never fired From contractors to Reloading Supplies. 541-598-7417 like new, in plastic, $500. x31nw, scroll work. Treadmill, Proform XP Howa,wood stock, cal 541-408-6900. I WILL WRAP 541-213-1363 yard care, it's all here Donate deposit bottles/ .300 Win Mag. $725 $125. 541-419-6408 Crosswalk 580. New YOUR cans to local all vol., Look at: in The Bulletin's Must pass back$600, asking $300 non-profit rescue, for PRESENTS! ground check. Please Bendhomes.com "Call A Service SOFA - dark brown obo. 541-382-9211 feral cat spay/neuter. St. Bernard puppies, l eather, call 541.389.3694, Call 541-408-5909 Hita c h i for Complete Listings of Professional" Directory 1st shots, deworming, leave message. T railer a t Jak e ' s Treadmill - Weslo Ca- Area Real Estate for Sale l i k e n ew, D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; dewclaws removed, brand, 205 Must See! dence 5.9, exc. cond., $300; and matching Petco (near Wal-Mart) $450. 541-771-0956 long stride. New $685; Items for Free chair and ottoman in Redmond; or doselling for $400 obo. Dining Table like n e w, $200. nate M-F a t S m ith 541-647-1444 541-280-0892 (with 2 leaves) Free large screen TV, 10 YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE To 2,000,000 1515 NE 2nd 8 chairs with burEXPOSURESFOR ONLYtzSO! yr old Panasonic w/ HDMI Sign, 243 Bend; or CRAFT in ports. 541-548-7653 gundy upholstered 0 e Ctn ~e d I ~ Nr ~ R r eflre~ N ne r el k en Tumalo. Can pick up Ski Equipment seats, hutch and Weekof December 15, 2014 Phillips Magnavox TV, large amts, 389-8420. buffet, built in 18n screen, exc. cond. www.craftcats.org Yorkie AKC 8 wks, tiny 1927, a beautiful 760-486-6860 cell. Baby D o l l fa c e s, set! Seats 10-12. shots, etc. hlth/guar. Serving CentralOregon since 1903 Paid $4500; $1500-$2900 503-351TURN THE PAGE asking$1800 obo. 541-385-5809 7234, 541-647-2257 South Korean For More Ads 541-548-2797 Apothecary chest Yorkie pups AKC baby 200 pairs of X-CounThe Bulletin typical of what was try & Downhill skis, Doxie-Poos! AKC mom, dolls! Shots, potty trained, Advertise your carl used decades ago to health guar., ready now! many leading brands, AKC dad, hybrid best of Add A Picture! 206 sell herbs and medici$600 & up. 541-777-7743 (Atomic, K2, Head, forboth breeds! 8 wks. M's DIVORCE $155. C o mplete p repanals. This piece is be- Reach thousands of readers! eign imports, etc.) with Pets & Supplies $350; 1 F, $425. They Call 541-385-5809 lieved to have been Check out the sell fast! 541-977-7773 bindings, in great conproduced in 1940sn or The Bulletin Classiffeds dition, some like new. ration. Includes c hildren, custody, classifieds online later. 35nW x 9.5 The Bulletin recomwww.bendbulletln.com The Bulletin reserves Children's & adult sizes. deep x 42" high. mends extra caution the right to publish all Cheaper than a 1-day support, property and bills division. Updated daily Asking$2500 cash when purc h asads from The Bulletin rental!$22/pair. Call 231-360-5105(Bend) ing products or serYorkies, AKC 8 wks, 2 newspaper onto The for information/location. vices from out of the males 1 fem., shots, etc. Bulletin Internet web541<08-1626 area. Sending cash, French Bulldog AKC $900-51100. Prineville, site. 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. checks, or credit in541-447-4034 / 280-2952 245 pups 4 Xmas $3000 & f ormation may be The Bulletin up. 2 Female/1Male Golf Equipment Serving Central Oregon sincetgttg subjected to fraud. w ww.paralegalalte r n at i v e s . c o m For more informa- 541-233-3534 CHECK YOUR AD tion about an adver- German She p herd Puppies; 5 - M ales, tiser, you may call 1-Female; AKC. More the O r egon State South Korean Info Visit www.fordanAttorney General's Blanket Chest Yorkshire-Doxie cross Office C o n sumer dporscha.com typical of storing SMALL happiness Protection hotline at blankets for frigid German Shepherds F, $400. Cell, 1-877-877-9392. nights. Dimensions on the first day it runs www.sherman-ranch.us package n Three Chinese Men 541-389-2517 are 31n long x 14.5 to make sure it is cor$1900+. 541-281-6829 produced in solid The Bulletin wide x 22" high. rect. nSpellcheckn and gerving Centrel Ongonsince tggg teak. Dimensions: 210 POODLE or POMAPOO Asking$800 cash. human errors do ocn high x 6.5 n wide. 15 puppies, toy. Adorable! Furniture & Appliances 1-231-360-5105 cur. If this happens to Figures were 541-475-3889 or (Bend) Adopt a rescued cat or your ad, please conproduced in 541-325-6212 kitten! Altered, vaccitact us ASAP so that Thailand in 1978. A1 Washere&Dryers nated, ID chip, tested, QueenslandHeelers corrections and any Just bought a new boat? $200 for $150 ea. Full warmore! CRAFT, 65480 Standard 8 Mini, $150 adjustments can be Sell your old one in the all 3 statues, cash. ranty. Free Del. Also & up. 541-280-1537 made to your ad. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, wanted, used W/D's classifieds! Ask about our 1-231-360-5105 541-385-5809 1-5. 541 - 389-8420www.rightwayranch.wor Super Seller rates! 541-260-7355 (/n Bend) www.craftcats.org dpress.com The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

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02 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014• THE BULLETIN

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CAUTION: Ads published in FINANCEANDBUSINESS EMPLOYMENT "Employment O p - 410 - Private Instruction 507- Real Estate Contracts portunities" include 421 - Schools andTraining 514 - Insurance employee and inde528- Loans andMortgages 325 pendent positions. 454- Looking lor Employment Ads fo r p o sitions 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 543- Stocks andBonds Hay, Grain & Feed that require a fee or 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 558- Business Investments upfront investment 1st Quality, 2nd cutting 486 - IndependentPositions 573 - BusinessOpportunities must be stated. With grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. any independentjob 476 646 Call 541-549-3831 opportunity, please Employment Houses for Homes for Sale Patterson Ranch, Sisters i nvestigate tho r Opportunities Rent General oughly. Use extra Quality orchard mixed NOTICE c aution when a p grass hay, $190-$235 PUBLISHER'S All real estate adverplying for jobs on- Retail Manager ton, small bales. Deliv. NOTICE tised here in is subline and never pro- Local retail store seekavail.541-280-7781 ing hardworking indiAll real estate adver- ject to th e F ederal vide personal inforbetwn Bend/Redmond vidual with excellent tising in this newspa- Fair Housing A c t, mation to any source Wheat Straw For Sale. people skills & manper is subject to the which makes it illegal you may not have also weaner pigs. agement experience. F air H o using A c t to advertise any prefresearched and 541-546-6171 Send resume to: Box which makes it illegal erence, limitation or deemed to be repu20574839, c/o The to a d vertise "any discrimination based table. Use extreme Looking for your c aution when r e - Bulletin, PO Box 6020, preference, limitation on race, color, reliPlace a photo inyourprivate party ad or disc r imination gion, sex, handicap, PRIVATE PARTY RATES next employee? s ponding to A N Y foronly$15.00par week. online employment based on race, color, familial status or naStarting at 3 lines Place a Bulletin religion, sex, handi- tional origin, or intenad from out-of-state. The Bulletin help wanted ad *IJNDER '500in total merchandise OVER '500 intotal merchandise We suggest you call cap, familial status, tion to make any such today and marital status or na- preferences, l i mitathe State of Oregon 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 caution when purreach over Consumer Hotline chasing products or I tional origin, or an in- tions or discrimination. 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 60,000 readers tention to make any We will not knowingly at 1-503-378-4320 services from out of each week. *llllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 such pre f erence, accept any advertisFor Equal Opportu- I the area. Sending Your classified ad 26 days .................................................$61.50 limitation or discrimi- ing for r eal e state nity Laws c ontact Garage Sale Special c ash, checks, o r will also nation." Familial sta- which is in violation of Oregon Bureau of I credit i n f ormation 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (call for commercial line ad rates) appear on Labor 8 I n d ustry, I may be subjected to tus includes children this law. All persons bendbuHetin.com under the age of 18 are hereby informed Civil Rights Division, FRAUD. which currently living with parents or that all dwellings ad971-673- 0764. I For more i nformaI A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: receives over cus t odians, are available ' tion about an adver- ' legal The Bulletin I tiser, you may call pregnant women, and vertised 1.5 million page on an equal opportuBend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Servine Central Oreeen sinceteta views every people securing cus- nity basis. The Bullethe Oregon State BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) 541-385-5809 tody of children under tin Classified month at no Attorney General's REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well extra cost. Office C o nsumer s 18. This newspaper Protection hotline at l will not knowingly acBulletin Add your web address as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin cept any advertising Redmond Homes to your ad and read- I 1-877-877-9392. Classifieds bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at for real estate which is ers onThe Bulletin's Get Results! in violation of the law. gThe Bulleting web site, www.bendany time. is located at: Call 541-385-5809 O ur r e aders a r e Looking for your next bulletin.com, will be or place your ad emp/oyee? 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. hereby informed that able to click through on-line at all dwellings adver- Place a Bulletin help Looking for your next Bend, Oregon 97702 automatically to your bendbuHetin.com tised in this newspa- wanted ad today and website. employee? reach over 60,000 per are available on Place a Bulletin help 341 an equal opportunity readers each week. PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Customer Service wanted ad today and Your classified ad basis. To complain of reach over 60,000 is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Horses & Equipment Full-time for hardworkd iscrimination ca l l will also appear on to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these ing individual with readers each week. bendbulletin.com HUD t o l l-free at Your classified ad newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party 2 awesome Shetland good people, comwhich currently re1-800-877-0246. The will also appear on Pony weanling colts. puter and phone skills. Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. ceives over toll f ree t e lephone Great 4-H project for exp. Must be able to interbendbulletin.com 1.5 million page number for the hearyouth. They will steal act well with customwhich currently 249 260 265 270 views every month ing im p aired is our hearts. Can deliver ers & co-workers. receives over 1.5 at no extra cost. Art, Jewelry Misc. Items • Building Materials Lost & Found 1-800-927-9275. o r Christmas. $ 1 50 Send resume to: Box million page views Bulletin Classifieds each 541-788-1649 & Furs every month at 20574835, c/o The Advertise your car! Get Results! BUYING & SE LLING Found 12/16, 4 pieces Bulletin, PO Box 6020, no extra cost. Add A Picture! • Cambria Quartz Call 385-5809 or All gold jewelry, silver of a master lock that n Bulletin Classifieds Reach thousands of readers! Bend OR 97708 nBellingham, and gold coins, bars, place your ad on-line looked like it came off • ., I O , Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 GiVe Some 55 nx36", nearly rountfsi wedding sets, at a commercial trailer. Call 385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds 1-1/2 n thick, never class rings, sterling silbendbulletin.com Found between 10 Food Service SPARKLE or place installed, $300 or ver, coin collect, vin675 a.m. & noon on Ob-Cooks to everyone on your ad on-line at tage watches, dental best offer. sidan Rd, about 200 Emeritus at Cougar RV Parking your list! 5th wheel 3-horse bendbulletin.com gold. Bill Fl e ming, Springs, Senior Livyards east of Ward Silverado 2001 541-382-9419. • Bronze 8 Crystal @S I LPA D A ' Rd. 541-410-0519.or ing, 1942 SW CanFull hookup RV s i te Homes with AcreageI 29'x8' trailer. Deluxe fitr///trttirrrfa rt' 2-tier, 6-arm chan541-306-4490 to claim yon Drive, Redmond avail. through April Peaceful Country Livshowman/semi living delier, 22" across, Now hiring Cooks, 2 RmZIKI 30th, $325 + e l ec. ing - Beautiful custom quarters, lots of exSterling Silver $300 or best offer. Found a Kindle Fire, years e x perience Central Oregon KOA home, approx. 3253 tras. Beautiful condi® l3mtlzm 541-923-7491 Jewelry Samsung Galaxy S4 working In a kitchen. 541-546-3046 tion. $21,900. OBO sq. ft. on 4.5 acres M ust be a te a m Mini, and a book at Collection 541-420-3277 with .5 acre irrigation. Eagle Crest. player, reliable and What are you Private well, pond, and so much more! Dairy Barn l i ghted REDMOND Habitat 541-306-8079 able to pass a crimiCall a Pro looking for? close in, private and RESTORE Christmas V i l lage. nal bac k ground s ecluded with t o o Gifts starting as low Whether you need a check. F u l l t i me $20 5 41-419-6408 Building Supply Resale You'll find it in many extras to menQuality at hours, Ben e fits, fence fixed, hedges $660 , 400. How to avoid scam LOW PRICES 526 The Bulletin Classifieds tions. prime work hours, REMEMBER: If you trimmed or a house MLS201304783 Call and fraud attempts 1242 S. Hwy 97 Wage DOE Loans & Mortgages have lost an animal, C arolyn Emic k , 541-548-1406 u'Be aware of internabuilt, you'll find don't forget to check 541-419-0717 Open to the public. 541-385-5809 tional fraud. Deal loWARNING professional help in The Humane Society Duke Warner Realty cally whenever posThe Bulletin recomHealth Care Bend The Bulletin's "Call a 541-382-8262 266 sible. mends you use cauEmeritus at Cougar 541-382-3537 V Watch for buyers Service Professional" • Heating & Stoves tion when you proLook at: Springs, Senior LivRedmond who offer more than Directory vide personal ing, 1942 SW Can541-923-0882 Bendhomes.com your asking price and information to compaNOTICE TO yon Drive, Redmond Madras 541-385-5809 for Complete Listings of who ask to have ADVERTISER nies offering loans or Now hiring smiling 541-475-6889 Area Real Estate for Sale money wired or credit especially Since September 29, Prineville faces to join o ur To shopONLINE Gelded Quarter Horse, handed back to them. 1991, advertising for those asking for adteam of R e sident 541-447-7178 15 hands, 7-yrs old, contact Polly Fake cashier checks vance loan fees or used woodstoves has $1 500. Broke, t ame, Assistants, Medicadirectly at or Craft Cats and money orders Lots been limited to modcompanies from out of entle, 5 4 1 -589-4948 t ion A i de s an d 541-389-8420. are common. state. If you have els which have been harneyhayfield©gmail.com C ooks. M u s t b e pollyschoenhoff s/Never 736 give out per19999 Badger Roadcertified by the Orconcerns or ques260 ©gmail.com One gently used single caring, a team Rare, large 8 lovely tions, we suggest you Multiplexes for Sale sonal financial inforegon Department of player, reliable and pony cart with 53" Estate Sales 7405 sq ft lot close to mation. Environmental Qualconsult your attorney able to pass a crimiCall for information shafts, $450. 2 Head town & Old Mill, ready YTrust your instincts ity (DEQ) and the fedbac k ground or call CONSUMER Duplex in Bend's Old and a FREE catalog stalls and harness set nal to build your dream eral E n v ironmental Garrison HOTLINE, Mill District. Ad ¹2182 and be wary of check. Wage DOE up for Shetland pony home! No thru traffic, 1-877-877-9392. TEAM Birtola Garmyn someone using an Protection A g e ncy Moving Sale 541-749-0494 but can be adjusted directly to west/adjaHigh Desert Realty escrow service or (EPA) as having met by Farmhouse for a mini horse. $100. BANK TURNED YOU MANUFACTURING cent is a huge privacy 541-312-9449 Items shipped agent to pick up your smoke emission stanEstate Sales Phone eve n ings, DOWN? Private party berm w/large trees & dards. A cer t ified 3752 SW Volcano www.BendOregon directly to you! merchandise. 54'I -443-4301. will loan on real esscrub brush. $74,500. RealEstate.com w oodstove may b e Place, Redmond tate equity. Credit, no Bulletin identified by its certifiMLS¹201405024 Serving Cenrrel Oregon since 190S (take I/yickiup/ Ladies rabbit fur jacket, The problem good equity Call The Bulletin At Garage Sales Laura Hilton, Broker, beige, med. size 10-12, Ketler Ping Pong table cation label, which is Reservoir Dr. offSW is all you need. Call 541-385-5809 ABR, GRI, EA, permanently attached Canal, follow signs to $25. 541-389-0059 Oregon Land Mort- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail S.T.A.R. gd cond, extras $150 to the stove. The Bul- Cascade View Estates) Garage Sales gage 541-388-4200. 541-306-1800 New Pandora bracelet cash 541-550-7651 letin will not knowSwing Shift Fri.-Sat., 9am-4pm At: www.bendbulletin.com Garage Sales John L. Scott with 10 charms, $360. Lawn Crypt for two at ingly accept advertis- Housefull of beautiful Planer Supervisor LOCALMONEyiWe buy 745 Real Estate, Bend Larry, 541-385-4797 ing for the sale of contemporaryfurniture! secured trustdeeds 8 Deschutes Memorial Find them johnlscottbend.com Beds, washer/dryer, Hampton Lumber Mills note,some hard money Homes for Sale Gardens near the Pond. uncertified 253 in woodstoves. couches, tables, desks, seeks a h igh quality loans. Call Pat Kellev $1500. 541-771-4800 541-382-3099 ext.19. Team Leader for the TV, Stereo & Video fridge, Hankook studded 26 acres with Timber - 4 The Bulletin Mahogany table-top wine Randle, WA operations. Acreages tires, decor and b edroom, 2 ba t h , 267 rack, 12-btl capacity, exc Classifieds so muchmore! Must possess strong Have an item to 2464 sq ft home with Fu e l & Wood Wineguard/carry-out cond, $80. 541-639-5112 • For moreinfo, pix leadership skills with a HARD TO FIND 5 acre 4-car garage. sell quick? 541 -385-5809 minimum of two years auto portable and descriptions, visit flat buildable corner $415,000. New Samsung S5 with experience in crew sufarmhouseestatesales.com If it's under lot located in Lake satellite antenna MLS201208278 3 extras, $360. WHEN BUYING ervision. Lumber manuadapts to either DiP ark Estates w i t h Call Duke Warner '500you can place it in Larry, 541-385-4797 FIREWOOD... acturing background is mature l a n dscape. recTV or Dish sysReinhart Moving Realty Dayville at preferred. tem. $500 or best The Bulletin IVILS¹ 201 4 06959 To avoid fraud, 541-987-2363 Sale Excellent work environoffer. 541-549-4834 The Bulletin $135,500 by Farmhouse Classifieds for: ment and benefits. SalPam Lester, Principal recommends payFind exactly what Estate Sales ary based on experience Broker, Century 21 ment for Firewood 19620 Tumalo Rim Ct and qualifications. s10 3 ilnes 7 days y o u are looking for in the Gold Country Realty, 255 only upon delivery in Bend CLASSIFIEDS s16 -3 Iines, 14 days Inc. 541-504-1338 Computers and inspection. Fri.-Sat., 9am-4pm Please send resume to: Olhaunsen regula• A cord is 128 cu. ft. Hampton Lumber Mills (Private Party ads only) 4' x 4' x 8' T HE B ULLETIN r e - tion size pool table P.O. Box 189/ HR Dept. Entirehousehold! quires computer adin very good shape • Receipts should 421 Grandfather clock, table Randle, WA 98377 vertisers with multiple with cues, balls, include name, Schools & Training www.Ham tonAffiliates.com & chairs, washer/dryer ad schedules or those misc. accessories. phone, price and fridge, beautiful Yamaha Bxi9nlh selling multiple sys$1000. kind of wood Hampton Lumber Mills M500 piano, wood pelTITR Truck School tems/ software, to dis541-389-1272 or purchased. is an Equal Opportunity lets, Havelind china, REDMOND CAlttiPUS close the name of the 541-480-4695 • Firewood ads Employer. Limoges, crystal, Lenox, Our Grads Get Jobs! C all 54 /-385-580 9 business or the term MUST include All qualified applicants Wedgwood, Spode and 1-888-438-2235 to r o m ot e o u r service "dealer" in their ads. Wanted- paying cash will receive consideration species & cost per too much lolist! WWW.HTR.BDU for employment without Private party advertis- for Hi-fi audio 8 stucord to better serve regard to race, color, reli470 ers are defined as dio equip. Mclntosh, our customers. For more info, pix Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care gion, sex, national origin, those who sell one JBL, Marantzl Dyand descriptions, visit Domestic & protected veteran status, computer. farmhouseestatesales.com NOTICE: Oregon state The Bulletin naco, Heathkit, SanIn-Home Positions or disability. SenrrnttCentrei Oregonstnce taa • Roommate Wanted law requires anyone sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 257 who con t racts forNOTICE: Oregon Land266 Call 541-261-1808 Nanny Wanted for Plumber Journeymen Musical Instruments Nice sober living apt, no construction work to scape Contractors Law Sales Northeast Bend Jan. 2015 Needertfor new conAll year Dependable 671) requires all WHEN YOU SEE THIS pets. Background check. be licensed with the (ORS Looking for a PT nanny struction. Start immedi- $400+ Firewood: Seasoned; businesses that adConstruction Contracutil. 541-647-8954 for 3 kids. D r iving, ately! Good pay/benefits pe r form Lodgepole, split, del, tors Board (CCB). An vertise t o cooking and cleaning. Call Gary, 541-410-1655 B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 ** FREE ** active license Landscape ConstrucPay based on experiMarePiXatBendblletijLCO m or 2 cords for $365. Garage Sale Kit means the contractor tion which includes: Vacation Rentals On a classified ad ence. Please text or People Look for Information deck s , Call fo r m u lti-cord Place an ad in The is bonded & insured. p lanting, 1948 Wurlitzer piano, & Exchanges call J e a n V at arbors, go to discounts! About Products and Bulletin for your gaVerify the contractor's fences, all wood, no plastic. www.bendbulletin.com 541-420-3484. (541)948-2806 if more Services EveryDaythrough rage sale and reCCB l i c ense at water-features, and inTuned in Nov., looks info. Bac k ground The Bulletin Classifieds :) Ocean fronthouse stallation, repair of irto view additional www.hirealicensedceive a Garage Sale like new, with bench rigation systems to be checks performed. photos of the item. beach walk from town, contractor.com Tarped, seasoned Kit FREE! $700 541-382-3837 th e 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, or call 503-378-4621. l icensed w it h wood, split & delivINCLUDES: fireplace, BBQ. $95 The Bulletin recom- Landscape ContracGeneral Baldwinnupright apt. size ered, $160 cord (La • 4 KIT Get your tors Board. This 4-digit Garage Sale Signs r'iano 46"H, mends checking with The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturper night, 3 night Min. H, w/ matching Pine) 541-876-7426 • $2.00 Off Coupon To business Gift? 208-369-3144 the CCB prior to con- number is to be inI ench, great cond, $400. day night shift and other shifts as needed. We Use Toward Your tracting with anyone. cluded in all adver541-382-1867 currently have openings all nights of the week. Next Ad 632 Some other t rades tisements which indiPlne & Junlper Spllt Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts • 10 Tips For "Garage AROlNQ NG req u ire addi- cate the business has start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Apt JMultiplex General also Grand Piano Sale Success!" tional licenses and a bond,insurance and end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All poBeautiful American PROMPT DELIVERY workers compensacertifications. with an ad in sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. CHECK YOUR AD 541-389-9663 made (1926) tion for their employStarting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a Kurtzmann parlor The Bulletin's PICK UP YOUR ees. For your protecminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts GARAGE SALE KIT at grand piano for tion call 503-378-5909 "Call A Service Debris Removal are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of 269 1777 SW Chandler sale. 5'5", maor use our website: Professional" loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackAve., Bend, OR 97702 www.lcblstate.or.us to hogany case, Gardening Supplie Storm clean-up and ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup matching bench, reDirectory check license status snow plowing. (or can cut • & E q uipment and other tasks. For qualifying employees we The Bulletin cently serviced and on the first day it runs trees up for firewood for before contracting with Sernny Cenrrei Oregonsince t903 offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, the business. Persons tuned. Family to make sure it is cor- you). Prompt & reasonshort-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Wineguard/carry-out doing lan d scape owned since origiBarkTurfSoil.com rect. nSpellcheckn and able. 541-876-7426 vacation and sick time. Drug test is required maintenance do not nal purchase. auto portable human errors do oc292 prior to employment. require an L CB satellite antenna $1200 or OBO. cur. If this happens to PROMPT DELIVERY Sales Other Areas JUNK BE GONE cense. 541-306-6770. adapts to either Diyour ad, please con541-389-9663 Please submit a completed application attenrecTV or Dish systact us ASAP so that I Haul Away FREE tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available For Salvage. Also tem. $500 or best NOTICE corrections and any at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan260 offer. 541-549-4834 Remember to remove adjustments can be Cleanups & Cleanouts Painting/Wall Covering dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be your Garage Sale signs Mel, 541-389-8107 Misc. Items For newspaper made to your ad. obtained upon request by contacting Kevin (nails, staples, etc.) 541-385-5809 delivery, call the ALL AMERICAN 261 Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). after your Sale event Buying Diamonds Circulation Dept. at PAINTING No phone calls please. Only completed appli- The Bulletin Classified Medical Equipment is over! THANKS! Handyman 541-385-5800 /Gofd for Cash Interior and Exterior cations will be considered for this position. No Senior ApartmentFrom The Bulletin To place an ad, call Saxon's Fine Jewelers Family-owned resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reElite Traveler red elecand your local utility Independent Living I DO THAT! 541-385-5809 541-389-6655 Residential & Commercial quired prior to employment. EOE. ALL-INCLUSIVE Home/Rental repairs 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts tric scooter, fine concompanies. or email dition, little used, bas- classiriedtt ttendbulletin.com with 3 meals daily Small jobs to remodels BUYING 5-vear warranties The Bulletin Month-to-month lease, Honest, guaranteed Lionel/American Flyer ket &charger included The Bulletin HOLIDAY SPECIAL! Serviny Central Oretten sinceSta Serriny Cenrrel Oregon sinceteor The Bulletin work. CCB¹151573 trains, accessories. $300. 541-312-2741 check it out! Call 541-337-6149 Sereire Central Oreaon sinceela 541-408-2191. www.bendbunetin.com Call 541-233-9914 Dennis 541-317-9768 or 541-771-9474. CCB ¹193960

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DEC 18, 2014

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

DAILY BRIDGE CLUBThursday, December 18,2014

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD W'll Shortz

Christmas cards

ACROSS 1Getdown to business 5 Plum or peach 10Straddling 140thers, in Latin 1SExercise in brevity 16Literally, with 19-Across, a Western state capital 17 Literally, with 20-Across, ski resort purchases 18Swalloweda loss 19See 16-Across 20 See 17-Across 22 Prickly plants 24 Ideology 26 Rotten 27 Captain Morgan competitor 30 Reacted to, as fireworks 34 Scintilla 35 Literally, with 39-Across, head doctor

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

Unlucky Louie — a c o nfirmed proponent of Murphy's Law — says that on the day you mail your last Christmas card, you will receive one from someone you forgot to put on your list. Louie was today's declarer at six hearts. When West led the queen of clubs, Louie had to worry about a club loser as well as a trump loser. He took his ace of clubs, led a trump to dummy's ace and returned a trump to his jack. West produced the queen and cashed a club. "Whatever can go wrong ..." Louie sighed. How would you play six hearts?

your partner responds one spade and the opening bidder rebids two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: If the opening bidder had passed at his second turn, you would pass; a raise to two spades would show somewhat more values than you hold. But in competition, you can stretch a bit to show a good fit for partner and a sound minimum. Bid two spades. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH

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Louie staked his slam on a finesse WEST EAST but can do better. He can start by 4976 49 J852 t aking the A-K o f t r umps. If t h e 'v) Q82 997 queen fell, he would be home. 0654 0 1 097 When both defenders play low, 4Q J104 4 K86 5 Louie tries the three top spades. If a defender had J-x-x, Louie could get SOUTH 43A4 two club discards. When East-West (vi K J63 play low, Louie still has one chance left. He starts the diamonds, and OKJ82 when both defenders follow to three AA73 rounds, dummy's losing club goes on South We s t Nor t h East Louie's fourth diamond. 1 NT Pa s s 2 4 Pass 2Q Pass 5Q Pass DAILY QUESTION 60 A ll Pa s s

A G G I E S

S E R A P H S

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.

DV A I RA NG I R T A

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S P E E E D OU E C R E D A C O I R D A L M Y A

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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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12/18/14


THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18 2014 05

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

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Ads published in the CHECKYOUR AD "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishHD Softtail Deuce 2002, , • eae -= ing, drift, canoe, broken back forces svv-~ RENTALS 682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage sale, only 200 mi. on house and sail boats. 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 603 - Rental Alternatives For all other types of new motor from Har693- Office/Retail Space for Rent Heartland P r owler 604 - Storage Rentals Winnebago 22' ley, new trans case watercraft, please go Fleetwood D i scovery 2012, 29PRKS, 33', on the first day it runs to Class 875. 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 605- RoommateWanted REALESTATE 2002 - $28,500 and p arts, s p o ke like new, 2 slides-liv- to make sure it isn cor541-385-5809 options 3 slide outs, wheels, new brakes, Chevy 454, heavy 616- Want ToRent 705 - Real Estate Services i ng area & la r ge rect. nSpellcheck and satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, duty chassis, new n early all o f b i k e 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 713 - Real Estate Wanted human errors do occloset. Large enough etc., 32,000 m iles. brand new. Has proof batteries & tires, cab Servin Central Ore on since 1903 630- Rooms for Rent 719 -Real Estate Trades to live in but easy to cur. If this happens to Wintered in h e ated & roof A/C, tow hitch of all work done. Reyour ad, please contow~ 15' power aw631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 726- Timeshares for Sale Bayliner 185 2006 shop. $79,995 obo. w /brake, 21k m i ., movable windshield, tact us ASAP so that ning, power hitch & 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 730 - NewListings more! 541-280-3251 T-bags, black and all open bow. 2nd owner 541-447-8664 corrections and any stabilizers, full s i ze — low engine hrs. chromed out with a 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 732- Commercial Properties for Sale queen bed, l a rge adjustments can be willy skeleton theme — fuel injected V6 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 738 - MultiplexesforSale BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS made to your ad. shower, porcelain sink on all caps and cov- — Radio 8 Tower. 541-385-5809 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale Search the area's most & toilet. Great family boat ers. Lots o f w o rk, comprehensive listing of $26,500. 541-999-2571 The Bulletin Classified 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 744- Open Houses Priced to sell. heart and love went classified advertising... 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 745- Homes for Sale $11,590. into all aspects. All real estate to automotive, 541-548-0345. done at professional 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 746-Northwest Bend Homes merchandise to sporting Fleetwood Southshops, call for info. 648- Houses for RentGeneral 747 - Southwest BendHomes 875 goods. Bulletin Classifieds wind 1991, 33', 454 Must sell quickly due 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 748-Northeast Bend Homes appear every day in the GMC. Owner died; yrs Watercraft to m e d ical bi l l s, print or on line. 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 749- Southeast BendHomes of storage. Loaded $8250. Call Jack at with factory options. ds published in nWa Call 541-385-5809 Keystone Everest 5th 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 750- RedmondHomes 541-279-9538. TwinAC &2TVs, tercraft" include: Kay www.bendbulletin.com KeystoneLaredo 31' Wheel, 2004 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 753 - Sisters Homes electric steps & corModel 323P - 3 slides, aks, rafts and motor Rlf 2006 w ith 1 2 ' 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes ner jacks, tow pkg, KAWASAKI rear island-kitchen, Ized The Bulletin personal slide-out. Sleeps 6, Snving Canaal Oregon since1903 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 756- Jefferson County Homes KLX125, 2003, outside shower, great fireplace, 2 TV's, watercrafts. Fo queen walk-around tire tread.$15,500. good condition. CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 757- Crook CountyHomes "boats" please se bed w/storage underJim, 541 %408-1828 $925. Class 870. neath. Tub 8 shower. w/surround sound, A/C, 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 762- Homes with Acreage 541-593-8748 2 swivel rockers. TV. custom bed, ceiling fan, 541-385-5809 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 763- Recreational HomesandProperty Air cond. Gas stove & W/D ready, many extras. 663- Houses for Rent Madras 764- Farms andRanches New awning & tires. refrigerator/freezer. Yamaha V-Star, 250cc Serving Central Oregon since1903 Excellent condition. 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 771 - Lots Microwave. Awning. 2011 motorcycle, new $18,900.More pics Ready to makememories! Outside sho w er. 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 773 - Acreages 880 custom seat for rider, Top-selling Winnebago Slide-through s t oravailable. 541-923-6408 675 - RVParking 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes vinyl coating on tank, Motorhomes 31J, original owners, non- a ge. E a s y Lif t . 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 2 helmets included. smokers, garaged, only $29,000 new; AskFreightliner 1994 Laredo 30' 2009 Gets 60mpg, and has 18,800 miles, auto-level- ing $13,600 Custom 775 860 ing jacks, (2) slides, up3,278 miles. 541-447-4805 Motorhome graded queen bed, bunk Manufactured/ Motorcycles & Accessories Asking $4700, firm. :9. Will haul small SUV beds, micro, (3) TVs, Call Dan 541-550-0171 Mobile Homes sleeps 10! Lots of storor toys, and pull a Looking for your trailer! Powered by age, maintained, very 870 Harley Davidson List YourHome next employee? clean!Only $67,995!Ex8.3 Cummins with 6 883 Sportster Boats & Accessories JandMHomes.com a Bulletin help 2007 Winnebago speed Allison auto tended warranty and/or fi- Place overall length is 35' We Have Buyers 1998, 20,200 miles, wanted ad today and nancing avail to qualified Outlook Class "C" has 2 slides, Arctic trans, 2nd owner. 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, Get Top Dollar exc.cond., reach over 60,000 31', solar panel, buyers!541-388-7179 Very nice! $53,000. package, A/C, table Financing Available. like new, 135hp I/O, low readers each week. $3,500. catalytic heater, & chairs, satellite, 541-350-4077 541-548-5511 time, Bimini top, many 881 Your classified ad 541-548-2872. excellent condition, Arctic pkg., power extras, Karavan trailer will also appear on Travel Trailers 850 awning, in excellent more extras. New Dream Special with swing neck, current bendbulletin.com condition! More pix 3 bdrm, 2 bath Asking $55K. Snowmobiles registrations. $7000. which currently reat bendbulletin.com $50,900 finished Ph. 541-447-9268 541-350-2336 ceives over 1.5 milon your site. $22,500 lion page views evJ and)VI Homes 541-419-3301 ery month at no 541-548-5511 extra cost. Bulletin HOLIDAY RAMBLER NEW Marlette Special Classifieds Get ReVACATIONER 2003 2007 Jayco Jay Flight 1404 sq.ft., 4/12 roof, sults! Call 385-5809 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, 29 FBS with slide out & a rch s hingles, d b l 4-place enclosed Inter- Harley Fat Boy 2002 or place your ad workhorse, Allison 1000 awning - Turn-key ready dormer, 9 lite door, state snowmobile trailer 14k orig. miles.. Exon-line at 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Allegro 32' 2007, like 5 speed trans., 39K, to use, less than 50 toglamour bath, appli- w/ Rocky Mountainpkg, cellent cond. Vance & bendbulletin.com Wakeboard Boat new, only 12,600 miles. NEW TIRES, 2 slides, tal days used by current ance pkg, $69,900 $8500. 541-379-3530 Hines exhaust, 5 I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Onan 5.5w gen., ABS owner. Never smoked in, MONTANA 3585 2008, finished on site spoke HD rims, wind tons of extras, low hrs. transmission, dual ex- brakes, steel cage cock- no indoor pets, excellent exc. cond., 3 slides, PRICE GUARANTEED vest, 12a rise handle 882 Full wakeboard tower, haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- pit, washer/dryer, fire- cond., very clean. Lots of king bed, Irg LR, 860 TILL MARCH bars, detachable luglight bars, Polk audio eling system, 5kw gen, lace, mw/conv. oven, Fifth Wheels bonus features; many Arctic insulation, all gage rack w/ back JandMHomes.com iiotorcycles & Accessories speakers throughout, ree standing dinette, power mirrors w/defrost, have never been used. options - reduced by rest, hwy pegs & many completely wired for 2 slide-outs with aw- was $121,060 new; now, 541-548-5511 Asking $18,000. C a l l $3500 to $31,500. chrome accents. Must amps/subwoofers, unnings, rear c a mera, $35,900. 541-536-1 008 Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r Winter Clearance 541-420-3250 see to appreciate! derwater lights, fish traiier hitch, driver door more info / more photos. 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, $10,500. /n CRRarea finder, 2 batteries cus- w/power window, cruise, 1601 sq.ft., call 530-957-1865 tom black paint job. exhaust brake, central RETAIL Dutchman Denali $1 2,500541-815-2523 vac, satellite sys. Asking $85,609 32' 2011 travel $67,500. 503-781-8812 Alpenlite 28 ft. SALE trailer. 2 slides Ev1987, New stove, $77,599 Finished erything goes, all Harlev Davidson fridge. Good furHDFatBo 1996 On Your Site. kitchen ware, linens 2001 FXSTD, twin RV PACKAGE-2006 nace, AC. Stereo, Snowbird Special! J & M Homes etc. Hitch, sway cam 88, fuel injected, Monaco Monarch, 31', DVD player. Queen Open Road 36' 2005 54'I -548-5511 Vance 8 Hines short bars, water & sewer Ford V10, 28,900 miles, bed WITH bedding. model is like new hoses. List price shot exhaust, Stage I auto-level, 2 slides, 20 ft. awning. FIND IT! w/3 slides!! King with Vance & Hines $34,500 - asking queen bed & hide-a-bed Good shape. $4500 bed, hide-a-bed, SUY 17' fuel management sofa, 4k gen, conv mi$26,800 Loaded. 541-977-5587 glass shower, 10 gal. 2007 Bennington Beaver Marquis, SELL ITlg system, custom parts, crowave, 2 TV's, tow Must see to appreciwater heater, 10 extra seat. Completely Pontoon Boat 1993 package,$66,000. ate. Redmond, OR. The Bulletin Classifieds cu.ft. fridge, central Rebuilt/Customized 2275 GL, 150hp $10,500 OBO. 40-ft, Brunswick OPTION - 2003 Jeep 541-604-5993 vac, satellite dish, Call Today 2012/2013 Award Honda VTEC, less Wranglertow car, 84K floor plan. Many Want to impress the Need to get an ad 27" TV /stereo sys541-516-8684 Winner than 110 hours, miles, hard 8 soft top, 5 extras, well mainrelatives? Remodel tem, front power levShowroom Condition original owner, lots speed manual $11,000 in ASAP? tained, fire supFour Winds 2008 eling jacks & scisMany Extras your home with the of extras; Tennes541-815-6319 pression behind 18' travel trailer sor stabilizer jacks, Low Miles. see tandem axle help of a professional refrig, Stow Master 16' awning. 2005 Find It in Fax it to 541-322-7253 Need help fixing stuff? used very little trailer. Excellent $75,000 from The Bulletin's 5000 tow bar, model is like new! The Bulletin Cfassfgeds! condition, $23,500 Call A Service Professional 541-548-4807 $8500. "Call A Service $21,995. $25,995 The Bulletin Classifieds find the help you need. 503-646-1804 541-385-5809 541-719-1217 541-419-0566 541-383-3503 Professional" Directory www.bendbulletin.com •

The Bulletin

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Time to declutter? Need some extra cash? Need some extra space the garage?

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

To receive yourFREECLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SWChandler Ave. (on Bends west side) *OIIerallowsfor 3linesoI textonly. Excludesall service,hay,wood,pets/animals, plants,tickets,weapons,rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Mustbeanindividual itemunder$200.00andprice oIindividual itemmust beincludedinthead. Ask yourBulletin SalesRepresentativeaboutspecial pricing,longerrunschedulesandadditional features. Limii1 adperitemper 30daysIo besold.


06 THURSDAY DECEMBER 18 2014 • THE BULLETIN I

• 8 ~ I

• •

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 935

975

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

I

Chevy Cruze2014 •

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

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

885

932

933

Canopies 8 Campers

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Skamper 1990 8-ft popup cabover camper, immaculate, many extras, 3-burner stove, heater w/thermostat, hot water heater, oversized pressure water s y stem„ Fantastic Fan, lots of storage, sleeps 4, $3750. 541-617-0211

MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 2 0 10 Im -

maculate, custom wheels and new 20" tires. 2nd set MBZ wheels with snowflake tires. Full new car ext. warranty March 2017. 59,500 miles. Fully loaded incl. DVD and NAV. $34,500. 541-815-3049

Subaru Legacy 3.0R Lrrruted 2008,

1000

1000

1000

(exp. 12/21/1 4)

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

$21,979 or $259/rn.,

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE

property described herein. (b) Determining all adverse claims, if any, of Defendant(s), and all persons claiming under Defendant(s); (c) Declaring Plaintiff in fee simple of the real property described herein, and entitled to possession thereof, free of a ny e state, t i t le claim, lien or interest of Defendant(s) or those claiming under Defendant(s) in quieting title to t he p remises t o Plaintiff (d) Enjoining Defendant(s) and those claiming under Defendant(s) from asserung any estate, title, claim, lien or interest in the premises or any portion thereof. GLENN, REEDER & GASSNER, LLP DONALD V. REEDER, OSB ¹810196 Of Attorneys fo r P l aintiff GLENN, REEDER & GASSNER, LLP 205 SE 5th Street, Madras, OR 97741 (541)475-2272; Fax (541) 475-3944 E-mail: gsr.dvr@gmail.com Date of first publication: Nov. 27, 2014

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY

Gas Saver! Auto. Only 14k miles Vin¹277341

$73,977

Vin ¹207281 Stock ¹82547

$3600 down, 84 mo., STATE OF 4 49% APR o n a p OREGON proved credit. License FOR THE COUNTY and title i ncluded in

ROBBERSON ~

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OF DESCHUTES

payment.

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 12/31/14

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s u a aau aaARUomaa.otm

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Mercedes GLK350

2010 - Gorgeous,

1965 Mustang Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

New body style crew cab 4X4, Vin¹A21126 $20,998 ROBBERSON ~

$26,977. ROBBER N LINCOLII ~

mmm a

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 12/31/14

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205.Price good thru 12/31/1 4

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it 935 online at: Sport Utility Vehicles www.bendbulletin.com

organized u n d er Oregon R e v ised Statutes C h apter 5 45, Plaintiff, v s .

The unknown heirs a nd devisees o f CHARLES BOYD, deceased, and the unknown heirs and devisees of ALEXANDER BOYD, dec eased, Def e nd ants. Case N o .

FORD F150 2011

AWD. Vin¹310777

NORTH UNIT IRRIGATION DISTRICT, an Irrigation District

Chrysler 200 LX 2012, (exp. 12/21/1 4) VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014

SubaruOutback Limited 2014, (exp. 12/21/1 4) VIN ¹219928 Stock ¹82924

$13,979 or $195/mo.,

$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p 1 4CV0750 SU M proved credit. License MONS BY PUBLIand title included in $27,979 or $339/rn., CATION. payment. $3900 down 84 mo 4 .49% APR o n a p - TO: THE UNKNOWN S UBA R U . proved credit. License HEIRS AND DEVItitle included in SEES OF 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. and payment. CHARLES BOYD, 877-266-3821

®

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Dlr ¹0354

SueaaLL 8UBARUomaa.coM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Deceased; and THE UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF ALEXANDER

If you have any interest in t h e s e ized property d e s cribed below, you must claim that interest or you will automatically lose that interest. If you do not file a claim for the property, the property may be forfeited even if you are not convicted of any crime. To claim an interest, you must file a written claim with the forfeiture counsel named below, The w r itten claim must be signed by you, sworn to under penalty of perjury before a notary public, and state: (a) Your true name; (b) The address at which you will a c cept f u t ure m ailings from t h e court and f orfeiture counsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture co u nsel n amed below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: D a i na Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 N E T h ird Street, Prineville, OR

BOYD, Deceased. THE NAME O F Toyota Camry LE 2007 I NT HE STATE O F 73,200 miles, newer OREGON: You are Chrysler Pacifica tires, includes key541-385-5809 hereby required to less start after factory, appear and 2005, defend (exp. 12/21/1 4) 4 studless snow tires Mercedes 380SL 1982 the complaint filed Mercury Mariner Vin ¹315989 not on rims. $9300. Roadster, black on black, against you in the Stock ¹44375A 541-771-0005 or soft & hard top, excellent above-entitled BMW X335i 2010 541-389-3550 $12,979 or $169/mo., condition, always gac ause w ithin 3 0 cond., 65K miles $2500 down, 72 mo., raged. 155 K m i les, Exlnt days from the date w/100K mile transfer4 .49% APR o n a p - Good classified ads tell $11,500. 541-549-6407 1/3 interestin able warranty. Very of first publication of proved credit. License the essential facts in an clean; loaded coid this summons on Columbia400, and title included in interesting Manner.Write weather pkg, premium you; and if you fail Financing available. payment. 2009 AWD, same from the readers view not Tick, Tock pkg & technology pkg. to appear and de$125,000 vehicle as the Esthe seller's. Convert the Keyless access, sun® s u a aau facts into benefits. Show fend, the plaintiff will Tick, Tock... cape, in great (located @ Bend) roof, navigation, satelto the court for LEGAL NOTICE 541-288-3333 shape! Vin¹J13074 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. the reader how the item will apply lite radio, extra snow ...don't let time get the relief demanded NOTICE IS 877-266-3821 Onl $13,977 tires. (Car top carrier help them insomeway. in the complaint. H EREBY GI V E N away. Hire a Dlr ¹0354 not included.)$22,500. This NOTICE TO DEFENthat t h e un d e rROBBERSON 541-915-9170 advertising tip professional out DANT: READ signed has b e en Amm • a llcoLN ~ mmma brought to you by THESE P A P ERS appointed personal 97754. of The Bulletin's CAREFULLY. r epresentative. A l l of reasons for 541-312-3986 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! "Call A Service The Bulletin You must "appear" in persons ha v i ng Notice Forfeiture: The propDlr ¹0205. Price servingcenlrat o~n mce ma t his case o r t h e claims against the erty described below Professional" good thru 12/31/14 1/3 interest in wellDoor-to-door selling with other side will win estate are required was seized for forfeiequipped IFR Beech BoDirectory today! fast results! It's the easiest PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, a utomatically. T o to p resent t hem, ture because it: (1) nanza A36, new 10-550/ 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, way in the world to sell. "appear" you must with vouchers atConstitutes the proprop, located KBDN. new tires+ mounted file with the court a tached, to the unceeds of the violation $65,000. 541-419-9510 The Bulletin Classified studded snow tires, legal paper called a dersigned personal of, solicitation to viowww. N4972M.com $7250. 541-433-2026 "motion" or r epresentative a t late, attempt to vio541485-5809 HANGAR FOR SALE. Toyota Corolla 2013, "answer." The "mo1345 NW Wall St late, or conspiracy to 30x40 end unit T (exp. 12/21/1 4) tion" or "answer" Ste 101, Bend, OR violates, the criminal SubaruLegacy hanger in Prineville. Vin ¹053527 LLBean 2006, must be given to the 97701, within four laws of the State of Oldsmobile CUSTOM Dry walled, insulated, Stock ¹83072 court clerk or adm onths after t h e Oregon regarding the (exp. 12/21/1 4) and painted. $23,500. CRUISER WAGON 1991 $15,979 or $199 rn., Vin ¹203053. ministrator within 30 date of first publicamanufacture, distribu1 owner, 8 seatbelts, Tom, 541.788.5546 $2000 down, 84 mo., days of the date of tion of this notice, or tion, or possession of Stock ¹82770 118K mi, 350EFI V8, 4 .49% APR o n a p - first Hangar for saleat publ i cation the claims may be controlled substances auto, $3000 $17,979 or $199/rn., Dodge Avenger 2013, proved credit. License Chevrolet Trailblazer $3500 down 84 mo. at specified he r e in barred. All persons Redmond Airport - not 541-385-6168 or (ORS Chapter475); (exp. 12/21/14) and title i ncluded in 2008 4x4 4 .49% APR o n a p a T Hangar - $38,000. along with the rewhose rights may and/or (2) Was used Norm06@msn.com Vin ¹535474 payment. 541-420-0626 Automatic, 6-cylinder, proved credit. License be affected by the or intended for use in Stock ¹83015 quired filing fee. It and title i ncluded in VW 1977, red, n ew tilt wheel, power winmust be in proper p roceedings m a y committing or f acili$13,979 or $195/mo., payment. paint, fresh m otor. dows, power brakes, obtain ad d i tional tating the violation of, $2000 down, 72 mo., 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. form and have proof $7500. 541-536-1141 air conditioning, keySuaaau 4 .49% APR o n a p of service on t he information from the solicitation to violate, 877-266-3821 aaARUomaa.ooll less entry, 69K miles. proved credit. License records of the court, attempt to violate, or plaintiff's a t torney Dlr ¹0354 Excellent condition; 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. and title i ncluded in or, if t h e p l aintiff the personal repreconspiracy to violate 877-266-3821 payment. tires have 90% tread. does not have an s entative, o r th e the criminal laws of Dlr¹0354 Say "goodbuy" $11,995. a ttorney, proof of lawyers for the perthe State of Oregon Save money. Learn Call 541-598-5111 service on the plainsonal r e presentaregarding the manuto that unused to fly or build hours PI Toyota FJ Cruiser 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. tiff. If you have any tive, DeKalb & Asfacture, distribution or with your own airCheck out the item by placing it in 2012, 4WD, w/trac877-266-3821 sociates, 1345 NW questions, you possession of conc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o VW CONV. 1 9 78 classifieds online tion control, alloy Dlr ¹0354 Wall St St e 1 0 1, trolled su b stances The Bulletin Classifieds should see an attorCommander, 4 seat, $8999 -1600cc, fuel www.bendbulletirLcom wheels, mud & snow ney immediately. If Bend, OR 9 7701. (ORS Chapter 475). injected, classic 1978 150 HP, low time, t ires, tow p kg. + Updated daily you need help in Dated and first pubL 3 full panel. $21,000 Volkswaqen Convertbreak, back 541-385-580 9 finding an attorney, lished on DecemIN THE MATTER OF: ible. Cobalt blue with Chevy Suburban 1991, trailer obo. Contact Paul at up camera, r o of you may contact the ber 18, 2014. Leslie a black convertible ood cond inside/ out. rack, ABS breaks + 541-447-5184. Oregon State Bar's Gail Starr, Personal (1) One 1998 BMW top, cream colored 1500. 541-647-1444 independent system, Lawyer Re f e rral Representative. 323, Oregon License interior & black dash. blue tooth connecService online at Plate No. 660GXW, TURN THE PAGE This little beauty runs FordEscape tion, hands free cell www.oregonstateVIN and looks great and LEGAL NOTICE For More Ads phone c a p ability, Nearly perfect! Must bar.org, or by callWBABJ7327WEA166 turns heads wherever Notice of Preliminary The Bulletin compass, o u tside see! vin¹ 142671 it goes. Mi: 131,902. ing (503) 684-3763 24, Case No Determination for temp, inclinometer, Phone 541-504-8399 (in the Portland met- Water Right Transfer 14-00230025 seized $11,977 VOLVO XC90 2007 916 32K m i. , p r i stine ropolitan area), or August 14, 2014 from T-11672 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, condition, $29,900. ROBBERSON toll-free elsewhere Alton Sisson Trucks & power everything, 933 541-549-1736 or mmam in Oregon at (800) T-11672 filed by SunHeavy Equipment LEGAL NOTICE grey on grey, leather 541-647-0081. ~ ~ 2009 Hybrid Limited, Pickups 452-7636. river Water LLC, PO PUBLIC AUCTION to heated lumbar seats, SUMMARY AWD, great tires. 541-312-3986 STATEBox 3699, Sunriver, be h el d S a turday, 3rd row seat, moonVIN¹ A17570 Dlr ¹0205. Price MENT OF THE OBOR 97707, proposes January 3, 2015 at roof, new tires, alToyota Sienna 2005 $23,977 good thru 12/31/14 J ECT O F C O Madditional points of ways garaged, all 1:30 P.M., at Jamison PLAINT: The appropriation and a maintenance up to Street Self Storage, ROBBERSON Complaint is to quiet place of use change date, excellent cond. 63177 Jamison St., LINcoLN ~ m aaaa 'ncolg jgK$0 title to real property under Cer t ificates B end O R A STEAL AT $13,900. 977 0 1 . to N ORTH U N IT 541-223-2218 88801 an d 8 8 802. M.F. 230 DIESEL (Unit A-030 541-312-3986 IRRIGATION DISThe rights allow the CASE 200 GAS 2005 Diesel 4x4 Hutchens), (Unit Dlr ¹0205. Price TRICT. Said r e al use of 3.4 cfs from a FORD 2N GAS A-033, Garcia) Chev Crewcab dugood thru 12/31/14 WHEN YOU SEE THIS property i s Runs great! dewell in Sec 32, T19S, BEND 541-382-8038 ally, Allison tranny, Bargain Corral Price LEGAL NOTICE s cribed a s D e s - R11E, WM for tow pkg., brake con$6,977 chutes County, Orquasi-municipal use in TO INTERESTED troller, cloth split AWD Sedan. Vin¹264100 PERSONS Tax Lot Map orePixatBendbjletin.cow egon, Sects. 29, 30, 31, 32, Bargain Corral Price M front bench seat, No. On a classified ad 33, and in Sects. 5, Joseph A. DiRosa has only 66k miles. ROBBERSON $12,977 171221DC00900, go to and 6, T20S, R11E, been appointed PerVery good condition, Vin¹615069 LINcoLN ~ amaa a P roperty I D N o . www.bendbulletin.com WM. The a pplicant sonal Representative Original owner, 193449, and more to view additional proposes additional of the estate of CarROBBERSON $34,000 541-312-3986 Ford Escape Peterbilt 359 p otable photos of the item. particularly depoints of appropria- men Joseph DiRosa, or best offer. Dlr ¹0205. Pricing mmam water truck, 1 990, Limited 2010, scribed in the Com~ ~ tion in Sec. 32, T19S, deceased by the Cir541-408-7826 3200 gal. tank, 5hp (exp. 12/21/1 4) good thru 12/31/14 plaint to Quiet Title Just too many R11E,WM and Sects. cuit Court, State of 541-312-3986 pump, 4-3" h oses, Vin ¹B21115 filed in Deschutes 5, and 8, T20S, R11E, Oregon, Deschutes Dlr ¹0205. Pricing camlocks, $ 25,000. collectibles? Stock ¹83028A 940 County, O r egon, WM, and to change C ounty, Case N o . good thru 12/31/14 541-820-3724 C A L LW $17,979 or $199/rn., Circuit Court Case Vans the place of use to be 14PB0133. All per$3500 down, 84 mo., Sell them in No. 14C V -0750. within th e TODAYA s e r vice sons having claims Just bought a new boat? 4 .49% APR o n a p SEMI-DRY VAN Chevy Pickup 1978, The known h eirs The Bulletin Classifieds boundaries of Sunri- against the estate are Sell your old one in the proved credit. License 53' long x102" wide, required to p resent and devisees of Allong bed, 4x4, frame ver Water LLC. The and title i ncluded in classifieds! Ask about our good tires, no dings, them, with vouchers up restoration. 500 exander Boyd Water Resources DeSuper Seller rates! oavment. 541-385-5809 $8500. and/or Charles Boyd Cadillac en g i ne, 541-385-5809 partment proposes to attached, to the Per541-719-1217 fresh R4 transmish ave each c o n approve the transfer, sonal Representative veyed title to North sion w/overdrive, low 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. b ased on t h e r e - at 250 NW Franklin Looking for your mi., no rust, custom Unit Irrigation DisChrysler Town & quirements of O RS Avenue, Suite 402, 877-266-3821 931 next employee? trict. The object of interior and carpet, Chapter 540 and OAR Bend, Oregon 97701, Country LXI 1997, Dlr ¹0354 Place a Bulletin help Automotive Parts, within four m onths n ew wheels a n d the Complaint is to beautiful inside & 690-380-5000. wanted ad today and after the date of DeService & Accessories tires, You must see quiet title of any unout, one owner, nonHONDA ELEMENT reach over 60,000 cember 4, 2014, the it! $25,000 invested. k nown heirs a nd smoker, loaded with Any person may file, 2004 very good Scion XB 2013, readers each week. devisees of Alex(4) 285-75R16 studded $12,000 OBO. options! 197,892 mi. jointly or severally, a first publication of this (exp. 12/21/1 4) condition, rigged for Your classified ad or ander and/or tires w/6-lug alum. wheels, 541-536-3889 Service rec o rds protest or s tanding notice, or the claims RV towing, new Vin ¹034131 will also appear on may be barred. AddiCharles Boyd 80% tread, fit Chev pick- 541-420-6215. statement within 30 available. $4 , 950. Stock ¹83065 Michelins, 115,811 bendbulletin.com thereby vesting fee up, $350. 541-923-2112 Call Mike, (541) 815- $15,979 or $199/mo., days after the l ast tional information may miles, $7500. which currently retitle of s ai d r e al date of n e wspaper be obtained from the 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 541-548-6181 $2000 down, 84 mo., (4) Hankook studded ceives over 1.5 milproperty in N o rth publication of this no- records of the court, 4 .49% APR o n a p tires on rims, like new, lion page views Unit Irrigation Distice, 12/25/2014. Call the Personal Repreproved credit. License 225/70R-16, $250. 975 every month at sentative, or the lawtrict. DEMAND FOR and title i ncluded in ( 503) 986-0807 t o 541-306-0346 Jee Libert 2012 no extra cost. BulleAutomobiles RELIEF payment. obtain additional in- yer for the Personal tin Classifieds 932 (a) Requiring the unformation or a protest Representative, PatriGet Results! Call SuaWau k nown heirs a nd form. If no protests cia Heatherman. Antique & Buick LaCrosse aaARUomaHo.caa 385-5809 or place Chevy Si / verado devisees of Charles are filed, the Depart2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Classic Autos 1500 20 1 4 , L T , your ad on-line at The Bulletin Boyd and/or Alexment will issue a final 877-266-3821 bendbul/etin.com 4 WD, crew c a b , ander Boyd to set To Subscribe call order consistent with Dlr ¹0354 short box, 5.3L, new forth their claims, if the preliminary deter- 541-385-5800 or go to Limited Edition. Feb. 28, 2014. Not any, as to the real mlnatlon. PRAYING FOR The Bulletin's www.bendbulletin.com Take care of driven since June "Call A Service 2014. Gar a ged. SNOW! Vin¹149708 your investments 2006 - Great runner, 19.977 Loaded, brown tan Professional" Directory must see. with the help from cloth interior, 4900 ROBBERSON is all about meeting ~ E P U R LI C VIN ¹159299 A Private Collection m i., $34,9 9 0 . The Bulletin's a ieoa r ~ ~~ yourneeds. $7,977. 541-480-5634 1956 Ford pickup IIICÃFICEI "Call A Service 1932 DeSoto 2dr gythrp © gmail.com 541-312-3986 ROBBERSON Call on one of the 1930 Ford A Coupe Professional" Directory I M P CSRT~ ~ Dlr ¹0205.Price good LINCOLII ~ mmm a professionals today! 1929 Ford A Coupe thru 12/31/1 4 1923 Ford T Run. 541-312-3986 I The Bulletin recoml All good to excellent. An important premise upon which the principle of Dlr ¹0205. Price mends extra caution t Inside heated shop JEEP WRANGLER good thru 12/31/14 democracy is based is thatinformation about when p u r chasing ~ BEND 541-382-8038 f products or services government activities must be accessible in order Buick LeSabres, from out of the area. Chevy Silverado 2002 132k $3999; for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. ending c ash , 2012 4x4 Crew Cab 2005 179I< $4999. SubaruImpreza 2012, f S checks, or credit inq Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to 39K miles, 541-419-5060 (exp. 12/21/1 4) formation may be I White Diamond paint, VIN ¹016008 citizens who want to know more about government WANTED: Buick (or com[ subject toFRAUD. Tonneau cover, leather 2009 hard top Stock ¹82921 parable 4 dr sedan) with more informaactivities. heated seats, running 18,000 miles. auto$17,999 or $199/mo., f For under 80K miles, for untion about an adverboards, tow-ready, matic, AC, tilt & $3500 down, 84 mo., der $8500. 541-408-1828 4 .49% APR o n a p - tiser, you may call Chevelle Malibu new tires (only 200 cruise, power winRead your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin 1966 proved credit. License I the Oregon Statel miles on them), like Buick Rendezvous dows, power steerclassifieds or go towvvvv.bendbullefin.com and Attorney General's c Complete and title i ncluded in new inside and out! ing, power locks, al2005, V6, 144K Office C o nsumer I restoration, loy wheels and click on "Classi%ed Adsa $28,900. miles, clean inside 8 payment. f Protection hotline at $32,900. 541-350-0775 running boards, S UBA R U out, white over black, 1-877-877-9392. Or go to www.publicnticeoregon.com. garaged. gray interior, good 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dodge 1990 full size, (509) 521-0713 $22,500. tires, $4900. 1/2 ton 4x2, $1500. 877-266-3821 (in Bend, OR) 541-419-5980 Senring Central Oregon since1903 541-536-1141 541-408-1828 Dlr ¹0354 908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Nutrition, E2 Fitness, E3 Money, E4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

s,rr

White rice

93

Serving size: 30 grams Glycemic load:23

89

Serving size: 150 grams Glycemic load:43

Glycemic index:111 Serving size: 150 grams Glycemic load:33

on menta

Glycemic index:

Glycemic index:

Baked russet potato

A retreat

Cornttakes

*

funding By Michael Ollove

Saltines

Glycemic index: 74 Serving size: 25 grams Glycemic load: 12

Whole wheat hread

Glycemic index:89 Serving size:

Stateline.org

onder brea

WASHINGTON-

Glycemic index: 73 Serving size: 30 grams Glycemic load: 10

Fewer states increased their spending on mental health programs this year compared MONEY wi t h lastyear, when a spate of horrific shootings by

Glycemicload:9 .„vt, ~8

assailants with histories of

mental illness prompted a greater focus on the shortcomings of the country's mental health system. Some states slashed

High (70 and higher)

GLYCEMIC INDEX

their mental health budgets

significantly this year. At the same time, however, a number of states adopted

Low (55 and lower

mental health measures in 2014 that won plaudits from behavioral health

advocates. A survey of state spend-

ing published last week by the NationalAlliance on

Yam

Glycemic index: 54 Serving size: 150 grams Glycemic load:20

Quinoa Glycemic index:

Brownrice

Oranye juiIge

53

Glycemic index:

Serving size: , 150 grams Glycemic load:13

Serving size: 250 mL Glycemic load: 12

Glycemic index: 50 Serving size: 150 grams Glycemic load: 16

50

Mental Illness found that 29 states plus the District of

Columbia increased their spending on mental health in fiscal year 2015. A year earlier, 37 states plus D.C. increased their mental

Apple

health budgets.

Glycemic index:

See Mental health /E4

39

Carrots

Serving size: 120 grams Glycemic load: 6

a

Canned tomato juice

Glycemic index:38 Serving size: 125 mL Glycemic load: 4

heat tortilla

Glycemic index: 30 Serving size: 50 grams Glycemic load: 8

Glycemic index: 35 Serving size: 80 grams Glycemic load: 2

Astbma, exercise can coexist

1Il EI.

By Mike Plunkett The Washington Post

Asthma: It's that first

breath that always seems the worst. The chest tightens and

1S

the airways

FITNESS spasm. A cough, a wheeze and an attack. Especially when it's exacerbated by the cold of

winter, asthma is a discomfort for some and a medical issue for many. Almost 19 million Amer-

ican adults have adult-onset asthma, a chronic lung disease that inflames and narrows the airways. About

By Tara Bannow eThe Bulletin

90 percentofthem — and

Harvard University health newsletter this month touted the

about 10 percent of the general population — periodi-

benefits of eating foods with a low gylcemic index in order to

tion called exercise-induced

cally suffer a related condibronchoconstriction, in

control weight by staying fuller longer.

which someone exercising suddenly struggles tobe able to breathe, with little or

Glycemic index — generally measured on a 1 to 100 scale, fuller longer. although some foods are higher — represents the amount A h a n dful of dietilians interviewed on the subject, howevof time it takes for a food to digest and for the sugars to be er, said the glycemic index isn't something they routinely talk released into the bloodstream. High-glycemic foods about with their clients, even those who have diaberelease glucose quicklyinto theblood, creating anin- NU T RITION te s. The reason? It's too complicated. Throwingmore sulin boost that causes the blood sugar to plummet numbers at people who already are counting calowithin a couple hours. Low-glycemic foods are preferable ries or other components of their diet — especially if they're because the glucose in them flows slowly into the blood- managing a health condition — simply gets to be too much. stream, releasing insulin gradually and keeping a person See Glycemic /E2

Breast cancer prevention drug

gives lasting protection, studyfinds By Melissa Healy Los Angeles Times

Taking the cancer drug tamoxifen for five years

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MEDICINE inwomen at high risk for the diseaseby closeto 30 percent, researchers have found.

And the medication's protective effects against breast cancer appear to last, unabated,

for as long as 16 years after a woman stops taking it, a new study says.

The long-awaited International Breast Cancer Intervention Study-I found that tamoxifen was even more

effective in preventing breast cancer in women who did not take hormone-replacement

medications. Women who took tamoxifen and did not take concurrent replacement

hormones had a 38 percent decline in breast cancer diagnoses of any genetic variety over roughly 16 years of follow-up. And new diagnoses of estrogen-sensitive breast

cancers — the most common kind — dropped by 45 percent

This may be good news for the estimated 15 percent of

among these women. That means that for every 22 women who took tamoxifen for five years, there would

women between the ages of

be one fewer diagnosis of estrogen-sensitive breast cancer over a 20-year period. In an editorial published alongside the IBIS study, Rowan

Chlebowski, a leading breast cancer researcher at Los Angeles BioMedical Research Institute, called that a "very

favorable number."

35 and 75 who have a roughly 20 percent lifetime risk of developing breast cancer (double the average woman's risk). While public attention has focused on prophylactic mastectomies, medications such

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E2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

N

TjoN

Lirin t e o i a season, it a s to e a smart coo ie By Gabriella Boston

'save up' for the holiday cock-

Special To The Washington Post

tail party, but it's better to eat

It's that time of year again w hen everywhere we t u r n ,

we're offered creamy eggnog, savory charcuterie and sweet, melt-in-your-mouth apple pie with whipped cream. Sounds amazingto some, but to others, the onslaught of hol-

iday cocktail parties, extended family visits and office holiday buffets creates anxieties about

weight gain that far override any seasonal merriment. How to bring back the joy? Nutrition and fitness experts

offer this advice: Enjoy the seasonal offerings mindfully, stay active and hydrate — but don't count calories! Here is an occasion-specific breakdown:

The cxktail party Unlike a sit-down or buf-

fet dinner, the holiday cocktail party often features only bite-size treats along with an

abundance of alcoholic drinks — from straight-up reds to creamy nogs and toddies. In other words, don't arrive on an empty stomach, says Anne Mauney, a Washington registered dietitian.

"People have a tendency to

nate alcohol and nonalcoholic ance inthe meal: protein, whole can load up on the veggies. A drinks such as sparkling wa- grains, fresh fruit and veggies healthful dressingcan easilybe normally during the day and ter," she says. to go along with the mostly fat- made with lemon, olive oil, Dinot go to the party starving," and processed-carb-laden holi- jon mustard and vinegar. Mauney says, adding that The holiday buffet dayfood. The aftermath it's hard to "slow down and Unlike a cocktail party, the eat mindfully when you are holiday buffet is a fine time to The familyvisit Winter — including the holstarving." show up hungry, Scritchfield When it comes to extended idays — is a time when many Mauney suggests prepping says. visits, food can lead not only to people put on one or two for the cocktail party during But before digging in, take ill bellies, but also to ill feelings, pounds. The reasons are pretty the day with a big salad that a look at the entire spread and Scritchfield says. obvious: We eat higher-calorie "I have clients who feel the foods and move less. includes a generous helping of choose what you really wantprotein (for example, chicken not based on calorie counts but socialpressures to eat when But don't tr y t o c o unteror fish) because the appetizers, on the foods that give you the they visit their parents," she act this with crazy diets and sweets and alcoholic drinks most satisfaction on that mind- says. "But you have to set po- deanses, says Scritchfield, will be full of processed carbs ful-eating spectrum (texture, lite boundaries: 'Thank you. It adding that most people lose and fats. flavor, color, smell). So yes, that looks good, but I am really not the one to two pounds in the Mindful eating includes no- might mean bacon-wrapped hungry. Maybe later?' You have six to eight weeks that follow ticing the smells, flavors, tex- shrimp or pigs in a blanket. to say no without creating food the holidays. "At least 95 per"Ratherthan asking, 'What's fights." turesand colorsofthe food as cent of those who diet gain the well as eating more slowly. the healthiest for me?' ask, Mauney says one way to weight back. Diets don't work," Along with more enjoyment 'What looks the best to me?'" approach the p redicament Scritchfield says. of the food, mindful eating has Scritchfield says. " A lot o f may be to get involved in the The message should be overbeen associated with a better the food is seasonal and only cooking process. "Offer to help all health and fitness: practicability to self-regulate, says comes around once a year, so out in the kitchen and make a ing healthful lifestyle strateD.C. registered dietitian Rebec- enjoyit." dish you can contribute to the gies such as regular exercise, ca Scritchfield. Enjoy it, yes, but eat it slow- spread and something you can preparing your own food and And overdrink? ly to give your body a chance enjoy," Mauney says. drinking more water, she says. "I say enjoy your drink or to communicate when it's full, If it's bre~ a n d the host to m ove drinks, but as we all know, al- Mauney says. "And don't feel is preparing sausage and pan- Don'tforget cohol lowers your inhibitions like you have to finish your cakes, you can cut up a fresh With the added caloric inand affects your judgment." plate," she says. "Food should fruit salad or side dish, she take overthe holidays, you may J udgment about a l o t o f bring us pleasure, not guilt and suggests. want to tryto include some addthings — induding what you anxiety." And for dinner or l unch, ed caloric output — also known areputtinginyour mouth. Instead of counting calories, maybe you roast vegetables as physical exercise, says Gabe "A good strategy is to alter- they suggest finding some bal- or make a salad so that you Free, a personal trainer at Atlas

Fitness in Washington.

"Try to add more everyday activity, like walking, taking the stairs, parking farther away and maybe joininga gym," Free says. But what will really make

a difference, he says, is to add strength training or cardio in the form of circuit training (especially if the weather is too dreadful fora run).Ifyou're already familiar with weightlifting or have access to a trainer, Free suggests working toward heavy weights and lower rep counts (five to six). The heavy lifting will build musde — also referredto as lean body mass

— which increases metabolism. "At the end of the day, it's calories in and calories out

when it comes to weight management," Free says. "But there

are other benefits, too, and just adding a little more daily activity has positive effects on blood

sugar regulation and overall health."

Plarr Well, Retire Well

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Glycemic Continued from E1

"It's just one more thing to

shaky and woozy when their blood sugars plummet just a few hours later. At that point, there's a tendency to want to

balance," said Susan Yesav- recover quickly by grabbing a high-glycemic snack that will age, a diabetes educator at Johns Hopkins Bayview Med- replenish blood sugar within ical Center in Baltimore. "So if minutes. "You kind of crave someyou just focus on fresh foods, whole foods, it makes the se- thing that's going to satisfy lections ... healthier, and also you quickly and raise your easier to make." blood glucose, and so then it's The underlying message a vicious cycle," said Lori Bribehind the glycemic index zee, a registered dietitian and is an important one, howev- owner of Central Oregon Nuer: Eat whole, unprocessed, trition Consultants. plant-based foods. They tend For people with diabetes or to be high in fiber, a type of severe hypoglycemia — low carbohydrate that can't be blood sugar — that quick fix broken down and instead is essential to avoid passing passes through the body, out, but it's i mportant that helping regulate blood sugar people don't overcorrect and along the way. Low-glycemic bring their blood sugar too foods, such as whole grains, high, said Yesavage, of Johns beans, fruits and vegetables, Hopkins. "What I do stress with any tend to be high in fiber. "Really, at the end of the person with diabetes is that day, it's a high-fiber diet," when you're fixing low blood said Lori Zanini, a registered sugar, this is not for enjoydietitian in Los Angeles and ment," she said. "You need to spokeswoman for the Acade- get the blood sugar up rapidly my of Nutrition and Dietetics. into a normal range but you Harvard's newsletter pro- also need to keep it there. So vides an important reminder we're not saying reach for of the importance of choosing sugar as a normal staple." foods high in fiber and low in The American Diabetes refined sugars when it comes Association defines low-glyto energy regulation and cemic foods as those with a weight loss. glycemic index of 55 or lower, For those struggling with such as chickpeas (10), peatheir weight, eating high-gly- nuts (7) or grapefruit (25). cemic foods can fuel a cycliMedium-glycemic i n dexcal eating pattern that pre- es are those between 56 and vents them f ro m s hedding 69, and high-glycemic foods pounds. That's because they are those 70 and up, such as might choose high-glycemic a baked russet potato (111), foods for breakfast — say, white rice (89) or Gatorade (78). a bowl of Cornflakes and Glycemic load is a measure some cranberry juice cock- of a food's glycemic index tail — an d t hen feel tired, combined with its carbohy-

drate content, which can also

glycerides or blood pressure,

affect blood glucose.

or insulin resistance among

A research team a t t h e 163 overweight, non-diabetic H arvard-affiliated Bos t o n adults. The researchers did

Children's Hospital studied

find, however, that low-glycemic diets increased blood suglow-glycemic diet to keep ex- ar levels by 2.5 milligrams per tra pounds off. In 2012, they deciliter while fasting. compared the low-glycemic In the study, the researchdiet to low-fat and low-carb ers stipulated they w eren't diets and found that although studying glycemic index's efthe low-carb diet resulted in fect on weight loss, and noted more caloriesburned, the that past research has found low-glycemic diet b u rned both positive impacts in this more calories than the low-fat area as well as no impacts. If you're considering a diet and didn't have the negative side effects of the other low-glycemic diet, Zanini cautwo diets, including lower tions not to forget about porlevels of good cholesterol and tion size. increased levels of the stress The way foods are prepared hormone cortisol. can impact their glycemic inIn 2013, Harvard research- dex, too, she said. For examers performed imaging tests ple, a semi-green banana will on participants' brains four have a lower glycemic index hours after they had con- than one that's become ripe sumed high- and low-glyce- and almost brown. Likewise, mic meals. Those who had pasta that's cooked firmer will eaten the high-glycemic meals have a lower glycemic index showed higher blood sugar than pasta that's cooked unlevels, increased hunger and til it's mushy. And the more heightened senses of cravings processed a food is, the highand reward in regions of the er glycemic index it will have, brain that are stimulated be- Zanini said. "That's just kind of a comfore a meal. The H arvard n ewsletter, mon sense thing, the more called Harvard W omen's something is processed, then

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

E3

FrmEss

ot san By Meirav Devash New York Times News Service

Walk toward th e g raffiti wall, turn left at the l l -foot

m r atsmeetint enameo eat

hoodie floating in a transparent cube. The term "health goth" was

coined in 2013 by Mike Grabpentagram, pass the polished arek, of Portland. He is onegimp suit (watch your head, half of the R&B duo Magic there is a leather-harnessed bi- Fades. He and two friends — a cycle suspended from the ceil- bandmate, Jeremy Scott, and ing) and descend the steps into Chris Cantino, a video artist the basement. — began to play around online The room i s c omplete- with the concept. They posted ly dark, and it is difficult to images on the Web of athletic glimpse much, save for 34 brand logos altered in a gothic bodies that are rising and fall- style as well as photographs ing in unison, slick with sweat. that could be described as In the front, there is a stage, punk-meets-Pilates. the background of which is ilSeeing that their images luminated by two large video were being appreciated and screens playing a video of the shared online, the three men Nine Inch Nails singer Trent started the Health Goth FaceReznor wearing a l eather book community page.The blindfold and swinging from Health Goth page has garshackles. Standing on the nered more than 18,000 likes. stage is the heavily tattooed The idea of health goth was master of ceremonies, Michael then championed as a fitness Macneal. He thrusts his right trend by Johnny Love (his real arm upward. The beat of the nameis John Dal Santo), a Chimusic drops. The crowd yells, cagodiscjockey and electron"Hell, yeah!" ic dance music producer also This isn't a fetish night, a

known as Deathface. In 2012,

goth club or a festival celebrating electronic body music. It is an indoor-cycling exercise class at the newly opened Monster Cycle studio in New

he adopted a healthier lifestyle

York City, and it represents

the marriage of two subcultures that might otherwise never commingle: goths and gym rats. Welcome to the world of "health goth." Health goth began as an Internet meme, whereby three friends began to post online images showing fitness gear in unusual settings: for instance, a ghostly white Nike

Asthma

and lost 20 pounds. "After I

from New York City. "Lots of

us work in night life. At our age, with our lifestyles, we're not going to make it unless we take care of our bodies." O'Day, 42, has dreadlocks, many tattoos and self-identi-

fies as a goth and a witch. She is also a longtime fitness devotee and used to feel out of place

at the gym.

"I got stares," she said. "I

under control with medication

think peoplewere surprised because I didn't look like

n

lk

someone who 'should' be at

the gym." There was an "us vs. them" mentality, she added. "If they went to the gym, we didn't want anything to do with it."

That edge has receded as the Internet has creating overYana Paskova/The New York Times

Ammo O'Day, s personal trainer and esoteric life coach from Brooklyn, New York, who is part of a micro-trend called "health goth," trains Cassandra McLennon in her home in Jersey City, New Jersey.

O'Day and her services are one of manyrepresentations, fueled by social media, of the marriage of

gym. Healthgoths wait 'til they get home to flex so they

zoned with jimmied logos of sportswear brands such as

form," Love said.

Nike and Adidas. The Nike

form, may he suggest one of the pieces he has started to sell

swoosh is displayed with the word "DEAD." Th e s ilhouetted image from Nike of a

lapping circles among numerous subcultures.

Purveyors of health goth strive to maintain a balance that will entice all and alienate none. Macneal, who with two

two subcultures that might otherwise never commingle: goths snd gym rats.

turned30,a friend asked me, 'Do you want to be Deathface can see how big t heir l ats or Fatface'?'" he said. have gotten." (The article ran He opted for the former, with the headline "Deathface posting grainy fitness videos Wants YOU To Stop Eating and pictures on Tumblr and Carbs.") Instagram and hashtagging Love ultimately started his them ¹healthgoth. Others be- own Facebookpage — "healthgan to adopt the hashtag as goth" as opposed to Grabawell. Speaking to Vice last rek's "health goth" — as well July about a record, "Cry for as a website, healthgoth.com. Black Dawn," he laid out what (There is no love lost between he called Ten Commandments Love and Grabarek and his of Healthgoth — including friends. Each faction feels enrules like: "Don't check your- titled to credit for the concept.) Love's website is emblaself out in the mirror at the

when she began running six Continued from E1 years ago. But three years ago, It's u nderstandable t h at her symptoms flared up in a adults with these conditions major way. "I could barely run a minute — and there are more all the time, due partly to poor air anymore. A lap was hard," Selquality and other environmen- man said. "But my awesome tal factors — may find some

said Ammo O'Day, a personal trainer and esoteric life coach

But if you must wear a union his website? Items include

partners owns the Monster Cycle studio in New York, says he toes the line carefully, splicing pop tunes (Jessie J and David Guetta) into his playlist amid the more techno-infused sounds from Gesaffelstein and

a black sports bra with an upside-down swoosh and the Chvrches. "Some people say 'I love message, "I just can't." It costs corporate worship," Love said. $25. that you guys are into a darkNike could not be reached for The market for health goth er aesthetic.' But one person comment. took root amid a demographic called us phony because he His goal is to encourage that previously had not shown expected some kind of domgood health among fans of the a lot of interest in fitness, some inatrix cycle class," he said. "Look, we're as edgy, dark, dark arts and electronic mu- trainers say. "Many goths have spent and sexy as a cycling class sic. "Active participation and improving yourself is more years drinking, staying out can be. If we go any farther, important than wearing a uni- all night and smoking cloves," it's no longer a fitness studio." midair Michael Jordan is shown upside-down. "I hate

nose, which helps humidify

says that eating a low-salt diet, fatty fish such as salmon and

age attitude and perspective. their asthma, they should see While asthma is a disease, it's their physicians," Tuck said.

the air so the airways won't

tuna, as well as fruits and veg-

not a life sentence to minimal

"You shouldn't say, 'I'm not 20

dry out. Wearing a mouth covering or some type of scarf also helps. In addition, the Mayo Clinic

etables high in vitamin C, may activity. "I think because of the subhelp with symptoms. The most effective way to tlety of the symptoms, any manage asthma is to man- questions people have about

anymore' and give up. That

er, try to breathe through the

may be true, but you deserve

to have good lung health. Go and be evaluated."

allergist at Rockville Asthma

types of fitness to be an arduous endeavor that ultimately

and Allergy encouraged me to exercis e and run. My doctor won't be worth the effort. said to do it long-term; helps But experts say that knowl- expand mylung capacity." edge of both conditions is imSo she kept running. And proving and, in consultation slowly but surely, she was able with physicians, it is possible to train for October's Marine for suff erers to exercise and Corps Marathon. "The trainmaintain an active lifestyle. ing went great. I could run 16 "Ten percent of Olympic ath- to 21 miles with no problem," letes have asthma, so asthma Selman said. Even when a bacwon't stop individuals from

terial infection called cellulitis

high functionality," said Albert

appeared on her leg just 10 days before the race, she didn't Health System's pulmonary give up. She ran — a little slowand critical care medicine sec- er than she'd hoped, but she tion in Delaware and senior finished. medical adviser for the AmerS elman wants to run t h e ican Lung Association. "With MCM again, this time as part medication, they can go a long of a charity campaign, working way." with kids who have disabilities. In fact, exercise can have Thanks to Selman's allergists, beneficial effects on people her asthma is controlled, with with asthma symptoms. "Ex- low doses of medication and alercise and staying fit is recom- lergy shots once a month. "I think when you have mended with asthma, whether Rizzo, chief of Christiana Care

it is adult-onset or exercise-in-

health issues, you need to be

duced," said Lisa Gilmore, for- sensitive to your own biofeedmer director of the National back. Know your limits, when Capital Asthma Coalition and you can push and when you webmaster of the Washington can say, 'Ummm, not today.'" information resource DCAsth-

ma.org. "Asthma is very controllable, if you're following the asthma guidelines and taking medication asneeded." Those guidelines, which come from the National Asthma Control Initiative, include

using inhaled corticosteroids, assessing the severity of your asthma to determine what types of treatment are needed, developing and using a written asthma action plan, making regular follow-up appointments with your physician and trying to control environmental triggers. Some triggers are easy to control, such as smoking, while others — for e xample, dust and mold i n

work spaces — mightbe a little tougher to manage. Though asthma, especially in children, sometimes seems

Selman said. "It's the best gift to give yourself: to take care of

yourself." An important tool in man-

aging these types of asthma is recognizing the specific triggers that set off coughing, wheezing or trouble breathing. Rizzo said that for those with exercise-induced br o n cho-

constriction, "if you know your initial potential triggers when you go about exercise and know how to manage them, that's all you need to do." Even if there's uncertainty

about whether struggles with breathing are related to asthma or another respiratory is-

sue, going to a physician and getting a referral to an allergist

Liz Levesque, 00 St. CharlesAdvancedIllnem Management St. CharleSAdvanCedllneSSManagement iS PleaSedto WelCOmeLiZLeVeSque, Do, to our team of ProV!derS. Board certified in hospice andpalliative care, Dr. Levesque attended TouroUniVerSity fOr mediCal SChOOI and Wake Forest University for her family medicine residency.Recently mOVingfrOmPOrtland to Bend, Dr. LeVeSque and her huSband areeXCited to raiSetheir yOung daughter in Central OregOnand diSCOVer neWhiking trailS With their dog. Being a Part of the AdvanCedllneSSManagement team, Dr. LeveSque iS hOnOredto haVemeaningful COnneCtiOnSand COnVerSatiOnSWith PatientS andfamilieS who are dealing with SeriOuSilneSS. The gOal of PalliatiVeCare iSto imPrOVequality of life at any Stage of aSeriOuS illness, and can beprovided together with curative treatment. To learn mOreabOutPalliative Care at St. CharleS, please call541-706-5880.

are important.

Rizzo suggests having a good account of the family history ready for the appoint-

to disappear on its own, it gen- ment. Physicians will want to erally cannot be cured. But know whether allergies run it can be effectively treated, in the family and whether the with knowledge and careful patient struggled with asthma management. or other respiratory issuesasa "For adult asthmatics, it child. doesn't tend to get better, but it Rizzo and Tuck also recdoesn't have to get worse," said

ommended a "pre-treatment"

Janna Tuck, a Missouri allergist and spokeswoman for the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. Jill Selman, a high school teacher in Montgomery County, Maryland, has her asthma

strategy before exercising: Use a quick relief inhaler about 10 to 15 minutes before working out, then do a 10-to-15-minute

gradual warm-up before strenuous activity.

If you're out in cold weath-

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E4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

MoNEY

W mostwon'ts o a ain or eat insurance By Margot Sanger-Katz

follows their favorite show

procrastination — lead people

New York Times News Service

come into play with health insurance. But inertia is even

opt for default options in „yS to many settings. But selecting

You may have noticed when you last subscribed to a maga- stronger when it comes to zine that the company put you insurance than many other on an automatic renewal plan. m arkets, because people find Instead of sending you a letter shopping for a health plan when your subscription was to be so confusing and unabout to lapse and asking you pleasant. There are also real to take steps to renew, most trade-offs in changing health now keep your credit card on insurance — a better premium file and keep extending your may come at the cost of your subscription unless you take favorite doctor, for example. steps to stop it. For many consumers, sticking In general, people have a with what they have may just bias toward the status quobe easier than doing all that and a bit of laziness. That's work and taking on the risks why similar auto-renewal pol- of switching. icies are showing up all over My colleagueAbby Goodthe place, in public radio mem- nough reported on the experiberships, say, and gym mem- ences of insurance customers berships (and for subscrip- in Phoenix. Steve Norton, a tions to The New York Times). 51-year-old m a n rec o verFor most businesses, it pays if ing from a stroke, told her he the default option is that you wouldn't be shopping for a remain their customer. new plan this year. "If it's working, why try to Auto-renewals are also a key feature of the Affordable fix it'?" he asked. Care Act's insurance marketThere are currently about places. People who want to 6.7 million people with federcome to a website and review al or state marketplace health their options every year have plans, according to govern-

health insurance is the type of

transaction that makes people particularly reluctant to shop again. There's evidence that

infrequent transactions, like a plan you only change once a year, lead to less shopping around. People are most likely to avoid changes when there are costs, like, say, changing doctors. And people are more prone to avoid decisions about

I

Ci:~

complex transactions.

@

"You're more likely to stick with the choice you've already made if you're not sure you're going to benefit from switching," said Benjamin Handel,

/I

an assistantprofessor of eco-

Nick Cote/The New York Times

Steve Norton is partially paralyzed after a severe stroke. Last year, Norton found health insurance coverage for $485 per month at an exchange and is keeping the plan despite a hike to $501 per month.

you want a lower premium.

derpay and face a big surprise

But even people who are

bill at tax time.

concerned about things other But despite all this, there's been encouraged to do so. But, ment estimates. As of Dec. 5, than premiums have reasons good reason to think that very just in case they don't, most only 720,000 people in the 37 to shop. As Charles Ornstein, few Obamacare customers people will simply be kept in states using the federal enroll- Ryann Grochowski and Lena who picked a plan for 2014 retheir existing plan or shifted ment website have returned to Groeger reported in The Up- ally will come back. "People don't go back and to one that's similar if they the site to select a 2015 plan. shot, many plans being sold take no action. The auto-reThere are a lot of reasons under the same name are choose again," said Robert newals happened Monday for returning to shop for a plan undergoing changes to their Town, an associate professor any customer in the federal pays. For one, there are some deductibles, co-payments and of health care management marketplace who didn't ac- good bargains for returning other features. Customers who at Wharton. "And that's why tively pick a plan, and will be- customers in many markets. auto-renew will miss a chance they end up in a bad plan." come final if they don't act by In a recent report, the Obama to review those changes. Town has looked most closeFeb. 15. administration estimated that There are also possible tax ly at the evidence from the Evidence suggests that m ore than 70percent of re- consequences. By law, the Medicare prescri ption drug most people will go the default turning customers will be able subsidies many people are program, known as Part D. route, despite the pleas of gov- to find a cheaper plan in the receiving to help them pay Like the Affordable Care Act, ernment officials and multiple same categoryas the onethey their premiums need to be re- Medicare Part D uses an onanalyses suggesting that peo- currently have. The Upshot's calculated every year. But the line marketplace where priple who shop around will get interactive map, which looks federal government won't be vate plans compete on price better deals. at the most popular plan from recalculating those subsidies and features. People can The same forces that lead 2014, gives a good visual sum- for people who auto-renew. switch plans every year if they people to stick with an expen- mary of the trend: In nearly That means that some people want; if not, they will default sive cellphone plan or to watch every market in the country, it will end up overpaying for in- into a renewal option. Fewer the television program that pays to shop for a new plan if surance, while others will un- than 10percent of customers

nomics at the University of California, Berkeley, who has studied inertia in employer health plans. Handel's research found t hat

w o rkers

were losing as much as $2,000 a year by staying in their inswitch every year — and stud- surance plans. It's possible that Obamacare ies have shown that many end up in a plan that isn't a good will be different, and more match for their needs, even if people will be motivated to it was at first, because either

shop. Its customers tend to

the plan, or the person's health have low incomes, and the precare needs, changed over time. miums for the plans are highIn focus groups, Medi- er than those of the Medicare care Part D c ustomers told drug benefit, meaning that researchers that they were price increases may send more aware of the open enrollment

customers back to the market.

periods and the wide variety But there'salso reason toworof choices because of a flood of ry that people will be disinmarketing materials. But they clined to shop again this year, still experienced a high degree if only because they had a parof "stickiness," or reluctance ticularly bad experience with to shop around, according to the federal exchange website a brief published by the Kaiser last year. Family Foundation.

"Choosing plans is an unp leasant task they tr y t o avoid," the study said. Economists who study con-

sumer behavior say that familiar forces — inattention and

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NAMI warned that the momentum to improve state mental health services, which was

especially powerful after the December 2012 Sandy Hook

massacre in Connecticut, has slowed. The group is concerned that last year's increases were just a blip, and that states are returning to the pattern of the

periodbetween 2009 and 2012, when total state spending on mental health fell by $4.35 billion. In fiscal year 2009, total mental health spending by all states was $1.55 trillion.

In many states, spending on mental health still hasn't returned to prerecession levels.

But state budgets don't paint a complete picture of mental

two years as it weathered falling revenue from declining oil prices. Nebraska, Louisiana and North Carolina also

health services in each state. they are Medicaid expansion Access is measured by such

states. Maine, third on the list,

indicatorsas the presence of barriers to treatment, such as lack of insurance, copays, coinsurance, denialsofcoverage and insufficient numbers

is not an expansion state. Conversely, Washington (48th), Nevada (49th) and Arizona (5lst), all expanded Medicaid

of mental health providers.

Overall, the report says that 42.5 million Americans suffer

The survey was conducted m ade during the recessi on before the full effects of health with additional reductions in insurance expansion under fiscal years 2014 and 2015. Obamacare had taken effect. Still, 29 states plus D.C. did Massachusetts, V e r mont, increase mental health spend- M aine, North D a k ota a n d ing. Virginia spent an addi- Delaware topped the list while tional $54.9 million to increase the bottom five were Arizona, the number of psychiatric Mississippi, Nevada, Washbeds and strengthen commu- ington and Louisiana. nity mental health programs There is a high, but not and telepsychiatry. Missouri perfect, correlation between approved an initial $14 million states' rankings and whether for the construction of a new maximum security psychiatric hospital projected to cost a total of $211 million. New Hampshire and New Jersey put more money into commufollowed mental health cuts

under ACA. from some sort of mental ill-

ness, 19.7 million have a substance abuse problem and 8.8 million report that they have

seriously considered suicide. The MHA report also ranks the mental health of young peopleacross the states.Vermont, North Dakota and Wisconsin top the list. Nevada,

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL

QUEsTION: Should I wear my D e ntures at

Night? ANswER: This question can have a controversial answer depending on when you first received your dentures. Dentistry can change over the years and those of you who have had dentures for 30 plus years may have been told to leave your dentures in at night. Studies within the last 30 years, suggest that leaving your dentures Faith Pinkerton in at night can produce a negative outcome for Licensed long term oral health. Denturist Periodontal studies show that any appliance that covers tissues in your mouth should be removed on a daily basis to allow the tissues to breathe and be bathed in saliva. Failure to allow the tissues of the basal seat to rest and breathe may be a contributing factor in the development of serious oral lesions. It may also increase the opportunity for microbial infections such as candidiasis. The more you wear your denture, the more pressure there is on the bone and soft tissues of the palate. One sign that commonly indicates, loss of bone from the jaw is loosening of dentures that require you to use paste. Leaving your dentures out for a period of time will take the pressure off those areas and hopefully reduce bone loss over time. As always check with your Oral Health Care Provider for continued periodic oral examinations. We p r ovide, free consultations, and we are more than happy to answer any questions or concerns you may have regarding your denture needs. H>sHDRSERT

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QUESTION:Why a colonoscopy?

QvESTION: For years my 9 year old has complained of tummy aches and

ANswER: Colon cancer is t he s econd leading cause of cancer death in both

has hadeczema on and off.Recently a night time cough and congestion developed and our pediatrician says

men and women in the United States today. A colonoscopy is the primary p reventative t o o l

its asthma and that we should start using inhalers. Is there anything that

u s e d b y d oc t o r s

to detect colon cancer, and is highly VanAmburg, recommended because this is one cancer

M.D., FACS th at screening not only detects but helps

prevent colon cancer. Colon cancer is a fast growing cancer and early detection inhibits this deadly cancer from becoming untreatable. A lighted camera called a colonoscope, is used to visually examine the p atient's colon an d r e ctum. During a colonoscopy, removal of c ancerous and

non-cancerous polyps, diagnosis of diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease, biopsies of tissue and repair of abnormalities such as gastrointestinal

bleeding are also performed. If you are 50 or older,contact your primary care physician and ask to be referred to our office.

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E5


E6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2014

MEDICINE

accinecom icationsma si ni a i icut useason By Jonel Aleccia

last year. Because the vac-

the first choice for kids ages 2 strains, such as the new H3N2

The Seattle Times

cine hasn't changed, the same results may occur this year,

dropped to just above 40 per- Because it takes about four cent. Shifrin said he worries months to manufacture a flu SEATTLE — Nancy Drathat might prompt some peo- vaccine, it's too late to make a gun wanted to ward off flu this health officials said. ple to skip the shots this year change, Frieden added. So far Then CDC officials recently — and in the future. this year, about 150 million year, so shegotherfam il y vaccinated early, a shot for herself announced that the 2014-2015 The flu season has just start- doses offlu vaccine have been and doses of the FluMist nasal vaccine is a poor match for ed, health records show. released. spray for her two boys, ages 9 about half of the H3N2 viruses About 94 percent of more The problem with FluMist is and 11. that appear to be the dominant than 13,000 samples tested different. Scientists still don't "I trust the experts, I guess, strain already spreading this so far by the CDC are the know why the vaccine failed and my pediatricians have al- season. dominant H3N2 subtype of almost completely to protect "Flu is unpredictable, but ways recommended it," said flu, about 6 percent are the B against the H1NI swine flu Dragun, 42, who works at the what we've seen thus far is strain and almost none were strain last year, particularly in University of Washington. concerning," CD C D i r ector the H1N1 swine flu, which the youngest patients. "This was very surprising," But Dragun said she's dis- Dr. Tom Frieden told news descended from the 2009 panturbed at new evidence show- reporters. demic strain, according to new said Mike Jackson, a scientific ing this year's vaccine — both This could be a worse-than- flu figures released last week. investigator at Group Health the FluMist spray and the normal year for flu, Frieden But more than half of the H3 Research Institute i n S eatseasonal shots — likely won't added, because seasons in subtypes — or58percent ofthe tle, one of five sites across the protect very well against tar- which H3 v i ruses dominate samples — are a new H3 strain country that routinely conduct geted flu viruses. In the case typically cause more illness- that has "drifted," or changed vaccine-effectiveness checks of FluMist, there are problems es and deaths than seasons in from the type targeted by this for the CDC. "It's really quite with effectiveness in two of the which Hl viruses are common. year's flu vaccine. As a result, different from the way t h is three or four flu strains it's forCDC officials also warned the vaccine likely offers poor specific vaccine performed in mulated to hit. doctors about the problem, protection against that strain, the last couple years." "I'm starting to wonder urging them — and consumers Frieden said. In fact, CDC officials were if I should have done that," — to seek antiviral drugs such That subtype first showed so confident about the nasal Dragun said. "It's a little bit as Tamiflu and Relenza at the up in March overseas, but it spray, which uses a live but nerve-wracking, for sure." first sign of flu, especially for wasn't seen in large numbers weakened virus, that in June At the start of what may be a people particularly vulnerable in the U.S. until September. they recommended that it be bad flu season, health officials to infection. are scrambling to reassure The antiviral drugs don't the public that even though stop flu, but they may shorten this year's vaccine has prob- the intensity and duration of lems, it's still the best way to the illness, experts said. prevent potentially deadly flu The flu-vaccine problems

to 8 for the 2014-2015 season.

infections.

"The flu is a very wily and cagey virus," said Dr. Don Shifrin, a Bellevue, Washington, pediatrician. "Every year we try to play whack-a-mole with the flu virus. Some years we do better than others, but we're still in the game."

virus. There's almost no H1N1

News about problems with the vaccines is surprising and concerning for parents such as Dragun. "As a mother, my first prior-

circulating this year, so it's still a good choice, Bresee said. If kids alreadyhave received FluMist this year, they're considered fully vaccinated, CDC ity is to protect my kids, but I officials said. It's not recomdon't want to put anything ad- mended that they get a shot ditional into them if it's not go- too, noted Dr. Doug Opel, a ing to protect them," she said.

pediatrician and bioethicist at

Health experts say they hope parents take a wider

Seattle Children's. No parent or grandparent view, that vaccines still offer should forgo flu vaccine for important defense against flu, themselves or their kids bewhich has been linked to the cause of the reported probdeaths of five children nation- lems, Opel said. "Remember, each year, inally already this season. "What I would tell parents fluenza causes more hospital— and what I would tell my

izations and deaths in the U.S.

wife, who asked the question — is that the vaccines may

than any other vaccine-preventable disease," he said.

Despite her concerns about they have some effectiveness," vaccine effectiveness, Dragun saidDr.JoeBresee,thechiefof decided that she's glad she and epidemiology and prevention her boys are vaccinated. "I guess I come down on that in the CDC's flu branch. There's some evidence that side," she said. "It's better to FluMist may actually protect have some protection than no better against so-called drifted protection." have lower effectiveness, but

are bad news for health officials, who recommend that

everyone older than 6 months get shots or sprays. About 42 percent of adults and less than 60 percent of kids and teens got inoculated for flu last year, according to the CDC. In a good year, flu vaccine is

A report released in Novem- about 50 to 70 percent effective ber bythe federalCenters for at preventing illness, experts Disease Control and Preven- estimate. In a bad year, more tion found that FluMist offered

of those inoculated get sick

"no measurableeffectiveness" anyway. In 2007-2008, when against one virus, the H1NI therewas a mismatch between swine flu, among children vaccine and virus, efficacy

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E7

As a atient, me stu ent earns im ortant esson By Cherie Fathye Special To The Washington Post

"We detach ourselves from reality as we memorize a constellation of symptoms and treatments presented from a podium or a textbook. l have been guilty of occasionally forgetting that what l am studying may be a patient's worst nightmare."

e had just finished our endocrine unit when I noticed a lump in my neck. Perhaps school had made me more vigilant, or perhaps I merely fell into the realm of hypochondriac medical student, but I couldn't ignore this lump.

— Cherie Fathy, medical student

I set up an appointment with my doctor, fully expecting a diagnosis of what's sometimes called medical student neuroticism. Instead, she agreed

I wish I could say that my ex-

that it was a peculiar lump, and though she believed that it would ultimately

periencelastyear has revolu- in real life. In a textbook, the tionized how I speak with sick workup of a patient's illness

about illness to dealing with it

patients, that I always know

looks swift an d

sequential.

prove to be nothing, she was ordering some tests just to be conservative and

exactly what to say or when to In reality, it can take weeks

careful. I approached the tests as an educational experience, something that

say it. But I don't. My brush with cancer has,

diologist's note until I landed

interactions with patients. I try never to assume that just

Courtesy Cherie Fathy

ic appearance and even constructed mnemonics to commit the signs of the disease to memory. I quickly learned that

a reality for me. W ho's to

on thyroid cancer left out quite

say I wouldn't acquire a rare complication such as chronic swelling and tenderness of my salivary glads or the rumored increased risk of a secondary

a bit of detail, and now those

blood cancer from radiation

details were personal. When I sat in front of my surgical oncologist for the first time, I had just experi-

exposure'? What if I lose my voice because of the surgery?

the 10-minute lecture we had

upon the words "biopsy rec- enced one of the most radical ommended." I guess I hadn't shifts in my life. He told me

As a medical community, we

ask patients to take on risks in order to heal, but we should never forget how overwhelm-

realized just how much I had

that my treatment would in-

compartmentalized the experience until I read those words over and over again. With my face red from crying (and embarrassment over my public display of emotion), I quickly gathered my things and ran

clude removing my thyroid glandand any affected lymph nodes, and this would be followed by a radioactive iodine

Medical student Cherie Fathy's brush with cancer "humbled" her in her interactions with

S everal

mo n t h s

hav e

ing it is to hear those risks or to play those odds.

passed since I was lying under

Finding courage

the rest of that day furiously checking and rechecking my

jor transition from textbook

learners to active participants in patient care, from learning

that CT scanner. I had spent

treatment. The radiation was

for my next exam to wonder-

The day after Christmas a

ing, "How do I even begin to balance school with doctor's of symptoms and treatments appointments, surgery and presented from a podium or radiation, and how do I stay a textbook. I have been guilty strong for my family memof occasionally forgetting that bers, while internally processwhat I am studying may be a ing this diagnosis?" patient's worst nightmare. My type of thyroid cancer As students on the wards, has around a 95 percent longwe see mere snapshots of our term survival r a te. K n owpatients' illnesses. We are ing that did little to quell the

year ago, I was scheduled for a whole-body tumor scan. It

there as patients receive a di-

about a half-hour. If they found anything i r regular or concerning, they would set up the machine for more imaging. I gave a quick wink to my dad, who was sitting beside me, hoping to reassure him (and myself) that all would be fine. As the machine rumbled, a pixelated image of my body

tach ourselves from reality as we memorize a constellation

emotional haze that set over

agnosis in the clinic or a treat- me. Ironically, I still rememment in the hospital. What we ber the first time I heard this don't see is a patient at home number. Our professor held deciding whether that lump up a thyroid specimen and is even worth checking on or pointed to the cancer, stating, "If you ever get a cancer, this a mother dreading when to tell her children what she has, is the one you want." At the or how to even begin telling time, I found that tremendous. them. Almost everyone lives! Now, A full two months after my I struggled to find solace in initial doctor's visit, time that

those words.

was filled with scans and You see, patients will play biopsies, I received a phone odds and measure risk in call that confirmed my worst

very different ways than we

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I've returned to my life as a medical student, spending my surgery and two weeks most of my days with patients after finishing my radioactive facing diagnoses that range iodine therapy; I was ready from a simple cold to terminal to be done with this chapter cancer. I've also had the honor of my life. As I braced myself of scrubbing into and assisting against the cold metal table, with thyroid cancer surgerthe radiology tech explained ies to see how they are done.

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kling of lights caught my attention. As parts of my body lit

fear. I had thyroid cancer. The may expect them to as phynews shattered my sense of in- s icians. In my m i nd, I w a s vincibility that, as a 20-some-

uncertainty can be debilitat-

because I know the medical ing. Despite knowing the infacts, I understand how a pa- credibly high percentage of patients. tient is going to interpret them. people who survive thyroid Especially with a disease such cancer, I still experienced all as thyroid cancer, in which the fear, anger and dread that trol I thought I had over this there is a high survivorship, can accompany any illness. tumor, this saga, dissipated there is a fine line between re- Because, ultimately, learning with that statement. I didn't assuring patients about their about a disease is incredibly have the strength to look at prognosis and unintentional- different from living it. my father before the second ly minimizing their concerns go-round. I just shut my eyes about a cancer diagnosis. and dreamed aboutanything. As medical students, we Anything but cancer. undergo this rapid and ma-

Perhaps one of the most iso- medical records to find the lating experiences came from results of the scan. Eventualin the form of a pill that di- the number of times I heard ly, I retreated from my efforts, "at least it's thyroid cancer" realizing that t h ere w asn't rected radiation to my thyroid home. Do I tell my father? Do cells, destroying any that may or "it's so treatable" from my much I could do even if I had I tell my friends? It could still have spreadto other parts of classmates and professors. those results. It wasn't until I be nothing. my body. The only stipulation And yes, even during my received a letter from my phyI just wanted it to be nothing. was to stay away from others short time on the wards, I had sician a couple of days later for at least a week while I was seen patients undertake much stating that the scan had been Detachment radioactive. bigger battles against can- fine and detailing plans to reThe first two years of medcer or other illnesses, but any assess in a year that I started ical school, th e p r eclinical A balancing act illness can be a trial of a pa- to feel as though I could begin In that moment, my fears tient's will, courage or sense to put this story behind me. years, students are taught about disease in the abstract, transformed from prepping of safety. That was a powerful feeling. as testable material. We de-

a pathology is noted to when a patient receives an actual diagnosis. And that time of

however, humbled me in my

would make for a good story. And then one day as I was studying in the library, I found I was having a hard time focusing on anything but the lump. I felt an overwhelming need to check the results of the ultrasound that had been done, so I shakily typed in my password to access the test results; I scanned the ra-

or months from the first time

already the one person out of

up, I prayed under my breath that the cancer hadn't spread. I shut my eyes and avoided the

thing, I had taken for granted. 10 who did not have a benign Almost 63,000people willbe thyroid nodule. That I was the diagnosed with thyroid cancer one person out of 10 made me in 2014, according to the ¹ look at almost every situation tional Cancer Institute. As a through a lens of "what ifs."

screen until I heard the tech

student, I had seen its gross pa-

incredibly vulnerable at that

I constantly feared that any

thology, studied its microscop- raresideeffectwould become

re-enter the room. "We think we're going to go ahead with the second set of imaging." I felt gutted and moment. Any sense of con-

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ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Petition to cancelshowmakes Duggars'stronger' TV SPOTLIGHT

month, voters in Fayetteville,

c ulture, particularly on t h e Christian conservative side of

Arkansas, overturned the ordiBy Abby Ohlheiser

things; few conservative AmerFaced with increased scru- ican evangelicals are actually tiny for their advocacy against Quiverfull, but there's a theoLGBT rights, the Duggars logical and political resonance. seem to be hoping for the sort And it's that wholesomeness of backfire that elevated the that the family's supporters are ( "Duck Dynasty" gang from emphasizing. reality show family to perseLifeSiteNews.com edicuted conservative heroes. The tor-in-chief John-Henry WestRobertsons of "Duck Dynasty" en said in a statement to The fame ended up keeping their W ashington Post t h a t h i s highly rated A&E show after readers were "eager to come a member of the family said to the Duggars' aid to show some controversialon-the-re- how much they appreciate cord things about race rela- the Duggars' openness to life ,".' i+W r tions and LGBT individuals in and love.... Their message of April L. Brown /The Associated Press America. hope and joy resonates with After falling under heavy scrutiny over remarks said bythe Duggar Since then, Phil Robertson families." family of "19 Kids and Counting," Jim Bob Duggar hss said the has published a book containAs more of the Duggar clan controversy has given his family a bigger platform to share their ing his "philosophy" on life grows up, it seems likely that values. and been asked on talk shows the family will have more opto weigh in on, among other portunities to speak to its spethings, the Islamic State. cific political and religious beFacebook fans last week." have a legal right to enter priAlthough they have, until liefs, particularly some of the He added, "God is expand- vateareas that are reserved for recently, stayed somewhat more controversial ones. Last ing our borders through the women and girls." quiet on the political front, season, for instance, the show national media." Change.org petition author the Duggars have long been featuredthe courtships and The speech went largely un- Jim Wissick wrote that the something of popular culture marriages of multiple Duggar noticed until this week, when statement "reek(s) of ignorance ambassadors for the small, girls, who wrote a book under"Quiverfull" lining the theological foundaentertainment sites induding and fear mongering." The or- conservative E! Online caught wind of the dinance banned housing, em- Christian movement to which tions for their relationships. remarks, which were printed ployment and public accom- they belong.The movement And the Duggars' oldest son, in the newsletter of the Missou- modation discrimination in urges its followers to have as Josh Duggar, works in Washri Baptist Convention. the town on the basis of gender many children as God will give ington for the Family Research The c u rrent c o ntroversy identity or sexual orientation. them, and to raise them within Council, a Christian conserover the family seems to date The ordinance passed, but the conservative evangelical vative advocacy organization back to August, when Michelle Michelle Duggar, Jim Bob's Christian belief system of their that "does not consider hoDuggarcampaigned againsta wife, lobbied intensely on be- family by, among other things, mosexuality, bi-sexuality and municipal anti-discrimination half of a repeal effort against homeschooling. transgenderism as acceptable ordinance in Arkansas with a the anti-discrimination ordiThe appealof whatmanysee alternative lifestyles or sexual robocall that claimed the mea- nance — which she and its as their "wholesome," throw- 'preferences.'" sure would allow "males with opponentsreferred to as the back-style life often reaches The organization's website past child predator convictions "transgender bathroom bill," beyond their small movement calls LGBT orientations "unthat daim they are female to CNS reported. Earlier this and into m ore m ainstream healthy" and"destructive." nance in a special election.

The Washington Post

A petition urging TLC to cancel "19 Kids and Count-

ing" over the political views of the Duggar family "won't succeed," according to family patriarch Jim Bob Duggar. In fact, he said recently, all of the attention around the effort is

working in the family's favor, givingthe Duggars even more exposure. The petition, which currently has more than 180,000 signatures, began as a response to the family's recent comments against LGBT rights. It gained traction quiddy and drew a lot of attention to some of the family's recent activism.

But Jim Bob Duggar probably has good reason not to be worried about the petition: The

effort to raise awareness about the family's political views prompted its conservative supporters to launch a counter campaign,urgingTLC to keep the show. A "Defend the Dug-

gars" petition on LifeSiteNews currently has almost 210,000

signatures — more than the petition telling TLC to scrap the popular series. In a speech to the Booster Banquet at H annibal-LaGrange University late last month, Duggar said: "Our show is the No. 1 show on TLC.

We love everybody. It's a small group creating this fuss. All it has done is give us more exposure. We've gained 50,000

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ICeeping in touc via open a option

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

Dear Abby:I am writing this in response to "Un-Grandparent in Ohio" (Aug. 25), whose pregnant teenage daughter has decided to place her baby for adoption. My daughter and son-in-law adopted their newborn daughter

in an open adoption. Each summer the adoption agency sponsors a p i cnic that is attended by birth an d

DFP,R

ABBY

a doptive

parents, grandparents and other family membersand, of course, the adopted child.

During the rest of the year, our daughter sends the birth mother photos and letters, going through the same agency. I can only imagine the sadness Un-Grandparent is feeling. I hope her daughter has chosen an adoption agency like this one so she will be able to share in her grandchild's life. — Grateful Adoptive Grandmother

Dear Grateful:I welcomed feedback from readers about that letter and, as always, they provided Un-Grandparent with thoughtful advice. Read on:

Dear Abby:I am a grandmother

is right, he will meet his biological guardianship work over the years family. My hope is that Un-Grandand an attorney. I have done a lot of and would like the grandmother to

express a very quiet side. You might be holding back some feelings. Learn to express them in a way that others can hear. You will have spurts of creativity that actually might leave others in awe. How you choose to apply this talent could

vary from person toperson. If youare

single, you will apply this gift to your love life. This could Btsrs showthe ging be a very exciting of dsyyos 8 hsve ye ar, but know ** * * * D ynamic thatyou probably ** * * p osltlve will need to make ** * Average som e choices. If ** So-so you are attached, apply someof * Difficult this energy to you relationship. As a result, you both will enjoy each other more. SCORPIOunnerves you, as he orshe seems capable of seeing right through you.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You might find others to be unusually intense and demanding right now. Outcomes of difficult situations tend to have better results if you are able to relate to each party individually. You could gain a fresh perspective from these talks. Tonight: Happyto head home.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * You might discover that an older relative or boss is on the warpath. Know when to duck, for your own sake. You seem to be gaining tremendous insight into someone else's behavior and motives. Tonight: Defer to others, and you will have a better time.

parent can trust the adoptive par-

know that in many cases similar ents to be the right ones and that to hers, it is the grandmother who they will do the right thing for the adopts the baby. This is often the

best solution for everyone — especially the baby.

child. — Chritstine on the West Coast

adoptions by family

Dear Abby:I was neither willing nor emotionally able to raise my 13-year-old daughter's child.

members. It could be

There was an open adoption, with

Most states favor

a wonderful ending/ beginning for all concerned if that could happen in this case.

a family that had five children of their own, but neither my daughter nor I took the opportunity to get to

know this child or his new family. My p a rents (the b aby's with my daughter, who was not great-grandparents) made the in a mental or financial position effort to keep in touch and were to keep the child. I was in the de- welcomed with open arms. My — Grandma Claire

Dear Abby:I went through this

l ivery room for the birth of a l l

parents brought ALL the children

my grandchildren, but in order to distance myself from this child,

Christmas gifts, and my mother wrote to them often, visiting when I allowed the adoptive mom to go they had a chance. into the delivery instead, because So, if this is an open adoption, it was important for her to bond there is still the possibility for you with the baby. It was easier, in a

to have as much contact as every-

sense, to distance myself from this child because of my daughter's

one is comfortable with. There is

circumstances.

I think about my grandson all the time, and I get pictures from

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, DEC. 18, 2014:Thisyearyou

the adoptive family. When the time

no such thing as too much love! — Kathryn in Texas — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

your holiday shopping.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

leavemessages.Beopen to theideaof readjusting your schedule because of an important person or situation. Someone might reveal some important news by accident! Tonight: Get errands done.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * * U se your high energy and imagination to tear through your to-do list, and perhaps try to come up with a gift idea for a special someone. Try to read between the lines, as it will reveal much more of what is going on around you. Tonight: Yourwish is someone's command.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * * You might be heading down two ** * * * You easily could be provoked different paths. One seems very clear to by a loved one. Try not to get upset. Look others, yet the other involves an inner at it as if this person is going through a dialogue of sorts. You'll want to be more phase. This, too, will pass. Listen to a direct, but perhaps you're not ready yet. friend's concerns, as he or she might be Test the waters first. Avoid being congoing through a difficult time. Tonight: trolling! Tonight: Do only what feels right. Get into the holiday spirit!

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * You might be unusually concernedaboutsomeone'smood. Atthe sametime,you could beexhausted by everything that is occurring. If you detach, you'll get a strong insight into what motivates this person. Stay grounded, and you will be a lot happier. Tonight: Be around people.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You are likely to say what you want, especially in a situation where you have held backyour feelings. Use whatever self-discipline you have, as you could say something you later regret. Stay out of problems, if possible. Tonight: Keep discussions light and easy.

GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * I f you expect some uproar to occur, you probably won't be disappointed. You could change your response to others, and you might be get some mixed signals. Make a point of staying level-

headedwhensomeoneresponds positively. Tonight: Where the action is.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You have a tendency to waffle when you don'tseeeye to eye witha higher-up. Try not to swallow any anger. A surprise could occur suddenly, which could force you to regroup. Tonight: Don't stay up too late, even if a friend tries to convince you otherwise.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20)

** * * * You have the ability to be totally LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) emotional, empathetic and detached** * * You might be unusually passive sometimes all at once. With your unique and/or insecure. Don't let these feelings sensitivities, try to stay centered and don't push too hard. Your possessive side interfere with the holiday spirit. UnderGEMINI (May 21-June 20) stand that sometimes people don't exemerges with a loved one. Tonight: Let ** * * You could have a lot of ground to press their feelings in a way that is mean- your mind relax to great music. cover. Make a list, follow up on calls and ingful to certain people. Tonight: Wrap up © King Features Syndicate

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Sp.m. on TCM, Movie:"A

ChristmasCarol" — Many people consider this1938 version their favorite screen adaptation of the Charles Dickens classic. Count June Lockhart among them.Lockhartmade her film debut at age12 as one of the children of Bob and Emily Cratchit, played by her

real-life parents, Gene and

Kathleen Lockhart. Reginald Owen stars as Christmas-hating curmudgeon Ebenezer Scrooge. Two other versions of the Dickens yarn, the 1970 musical "Scrooge" with Albert Finney and 1935's lesser-known "Scrooge" with Seymour Hicks in the title role, immediately follow. 8 p.m. on 5, 8, "The Biggest Loser" —Hawaii awaits the six contestants still in the competition, as indicated by the title of the new episode "Kauai, Part1." They surely get to see the sights on the island, but according to the traditions of this series

... which meansthey remain very involved in the contest as they sample a state park and go kayaking. The result will yield something very nice for the winner, who will get a private helicopter tour. Alison Sweeney is the host. 8 p.m. on10, "Bones" —Two back-to-back encores begin with one directed by series regular David Boreanaz, "Big in the Philippines." The demise of a troubled country-music performer (guest star Charlie

Worsham) leavesBrennan (Emily Deschanel) and the team puzzled. Then, a college swimming coach's death fuels another mystery in "The Drama in the Queen," which also finds

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TV TODAY • MoreTV listingsinside Sports

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 Gg! Magazine

9 p.m. on 5, 8, "PeopleMagazine Awards" —Namea celebrity category and it's probably represented in these new awards, presented from the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, California. Sexiest Woman ... Funniest Person ... Biggest Phenomenon ... they're all included as the honors bestowed by People Magazine recap major personalities of the year that has been 2014. Maroon 5 and 5 Seconds of Summer are scheduled to perform. Jennifer Aniston, Michael Keaton and Jennifer Lopez also are slated to appear. o zap2it

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