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Serving Central Oregon since190375
FRIDAY December 20, 2013
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Gifts for fgns SPORTS • C1
GO! MAGAZlNE
$C bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
Ray'sowneraimsto exit bankruptcyquickly
COVer OregOn — Thestate is back in touch with a technology vendor it previously spurned.B3
By Lauren Dake
in Portland representing
The Bulletin
C&K Market Inc., said the
goal is to emerge from bankrepresenting the parent ruptcy quickly. "Debtors and major credicompany of Ray's Food Place EUGENE — An attorney
Criminal minds —Didthey
said Thursday that C&K
tors are very concerned with
just never movepast the terrible twos?A3
Market Inc., which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, will emerge a "good company"
the professional fees and expenses of this case, and
that will continue to operate
to minimize the expenses
and pay its creditors.
is move the case forward as
Albert Kennedy, an attorney with Tonkon Torp LLP
fast as reasonably possible," Kennedy told U.S. Bank-
Shrinking doomorsHeight loss hitting home for a generation.O2
we do believe the best way
ruptcy Court Judge Frank Alley during a hearing on Thursday. Kennedy said he hopes to have a plan outlining how creditors will be paid by the end of January. The company filed for bankruptcy in November and announced the closing or sale of 16 stores, including those in Bend and Redmond.
Approximately 500 employ-
ees out of about 2,500 will likely lose their jobs. The company owns about 60 stores in Oregon and Northern California, called Ray's Food Place, Shop Smart Food Warehouse, C&K Market and Lo Bucks.
Kennedy told the judge "the transition into a Chapter
11 has actually gone very smoothly." SeeRay's/A5
U.S. SENATE
W en ma eB
Finance By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — Sen. Ron
Wyden, D-Ore., presided over what couldbe one ofhis last hearings as chairnun of the Senate Energyand Natural Resources Committee Thursday as the panel approved ahandful of publiclands and energybills, induding apilot program for
'Elf on theShelf' —creative ideas to bring a little holiday magic into your home.O1
a newtimber management re-
gimetobe testedin sixnational forestsin Eastern Oregon. On Wednesday, several me-
Odituary —RonnieBiggs,
of "Great Train Robbery" fame, dies a free man.BS
dia outlets reported the White House will nominate Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of
NSA surveillance — The
the powerful Senate Finance Committee, to serve as ambas-
national debate seems to be turning in favor of reining in the agency.A2
sador to China. Baucus' early
departure from the Senate — he had already announced he would not seek a seventh
And a Wed exclusive-
term in office and would retire at the end of 2014 — triggered
Charity that helps patients afford drugs is under scrutiny. baatibanatia.cam/axtras
immediate speculation that
Wyden would claim the Finance Committee's gavel. Wydenis thethird-rankmg
Democrat on the Finance Comm ittee, behind Baucus and Jay
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Under Seattle, an object. And a mystery
Rockefeller, D-Wva. Like Baucus, Rockefeller has announced he won't run for re-election in 2014, andhe seemsunlikelyto
give up his chairmanship of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee.
Under Senate rules, members may only chair one committee atatime.
Thisleavesthedooropen for Ryan Brennecke 1 The Bulletin
ship ofthe Finance Committee, shouldthe Senate confirm Baucus to the post in Beijing. SeeWyden/A5
John Hunt, left, and Sean Hargis recycle cans Thursday at the new BottleDrop Redemption Center in Bend during its first day of operation.
ByKirkJohnson New York Times News Service
The redemption center allows consumers to redeem their bottles
SEATTLE — A secret subterranean heart,
and cans in a staffed, 7,000-square-foot indoor facility seven days a
tinged with mystery and myth, beats beneath
week from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The center, located at 755 N.E. Second St.,
the streets in many of
the world's great cities. Tourists seek out the catacombs of Rome, the
sewers of Paris and the subway tunnels of New York.Some people believe a den of interstellar aliens lurks beneath Denver International Airport.
Now Seattle, at least for now, has joined that club. Something unknown, engineers say — and all the more intriguing to many residents for being unknown — has blocked the progress of the biggest-diameter tunnel-boring machine in use on the planet, a high-tech, largely automated wonder called
Wydento assume the chairrnan-
offers three ways to redeem Oregon deposit beverage containers: • Hand count:Staff will count up to 50 containers per person.
Oregon senators vote no on military bill
Beveragecontainer redemptioncenter Greenweed Ave Gree'Isy Ave..
• Self-serve:Automated machines will accept up to 350 containers CVI
per day. • EZdrop: Pre-labeled bags can be filled at home with deposit
I
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
containers and dropped off 24 hours a day.
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — For the third year in a row, Sen. Jeff
Merkley, D-Ore., voted against the National Defense Autho-
rization Act, saying he could not support the military fund-
AFFORDABLE CAREACT
ing bill without the inclusion
Health law relaxed for those losingcoverage
of a congressional check on extending America's military
high with a crew of 20, the cigar-shaped behemoth was grinding away underground on a 2-milelong, $3.1 billion highway tunnel under the city's
By Amy Goldstein
year, the Senatepassed the Na-
waterfront Dec. 6 when it
health-care law for millions of
surance industry and raised
encountered something in its path that managers
consumers whose individual insurance policies havebeen canceled, saying they can buy bare-bones plans or entirely avoid a requirement that
fairness questions about a law
most Americans have health
in abulletinfromthe Depart-
coverage.
ment of Healthand Human
Bertha. At five stories
still simply refer to as "the
object." The object's composition and provenance remain unknown almost two weeks afterfirst contact because, in a
state-of-the-art tunneling machine, as it turns out,
you can't exactly poke your head out the window and look. SeeSeattle/A4
The surprise announce-
The Washington Post
ment, days before the Dec. 23 WASHINGTON — The deadline forpeopleto choose Obama administration on plans that will begin Jan. Thursday night significantly 1, triggered an immediate relaxed the rules of the federal backlash from the health inintended to promote affordable and comprehensive cov-
erage on a widespreadbasis. The rule change was issued
TODAY'S WEATHER Snowearly High 39, Low37 Page B6
Services. It is the second major responsebythe Obamaadministration to apublic and political furor that erupted in
undertheAffordable Care Act, people who like their health plans could keep them. At a news conference in mid-November, an apologetic
the fall when several million people who bought their own Obama relented to the critiinsurancebeganto receive no- cism, announcing that the fedtices that theirpolicieswerebe- eral government would let ining canceled because they fell surancecompanies continue shortof newbenefit standards. for another year to offer indiThe cancellations prompted viduals and small businesses complaints that President
health plans that do not meet
BarackObamahad reneged on thenew requirements. an oft -repeatedpromise that, See Health law/A4
INDEX All Ages Business Calendar
D1-6 Classified E -f 6 Dear Abby D5 Obituaries B5 C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D5 Sports Cf -4 In GO! Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State Bf-6 N'/Movies D5, GO!
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 111, No. 354,
e2 pages, e sections
involvement in Afghanistan. In one of its final acts of the tional Defense Authorization Act late Thursday. The bill au-
thorizes $527billion in military spending for 2014, with an additional $80 billion for overseas operations in Afghanistan. The bill passed by a 84-15 margin, with both Oregon senators — Merkley and Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. — joining 12 Republicans and an independent in opposing the measure. See Bill/A4
Q
tt/trreuse recycled newsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
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eaesi in avoro imi s By Julie Pace The Associated Press
WASHINGTON —
In a
sharp and unexpected shift, the national debate over U.S. government
sur v e i l lance
NEW S R O O M FA X
seems to be turning in favor of reining in the National Security Agency's expansive spying powers at home and abroad. It's happened suddenly, over
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Dedt Ceiling —With its new budget deal, Congress has avoided one threat of another government shutdown. But unless Congress acts, the threat of a breach of the debt ceiling looms early next year, the Treasury Department warned in aletter to congressional leaders Thursday. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lewsaid the government might run out of cash to paythe country's bills by late February or early March.
a federal judge ruled that the NSA's bulk collection of tele-
Verizon to pudlishdata onrequests Verizon Communications Inc. says it will publish information on the number of requests for customer records it received from law enforcement agencies this year. The announcement Thursday from the country's largest cellphone carrier comes asdebateover data-gathering by the National Security Agency intensifies in Washington. TheNSA's collection of hundreds of millions of Americans' phone records under secret court order was revealed in June indocuments leaked byformer NSA contractor Edward Snowden. Verizon says it will publish its report online early next year and update it twice a year.
ry panel, which had access to significant amounts of classi-
RuSSian prlSOner —President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that Russia could soon free its most famous prisoner, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former chief executive of YukosOil, whosearrest and jailing 10 years agosignaled an authoritarian turn in the nation's modern history. The release of Khodorkovsky, onceRussia's richest man and anaspiring political rival, would be an unexpected and striking reversal for Putin. For adecade, he has shown no signs of sympathy, let alone mercy, asthe authorities dismantled Khodorkovsky's company and pursued criminal charges —evenas recently as this month — that seemedintended to keep him in prison for life.
fied information and counted as a member a former acting
NeW MeXiCO gay marriage — TheNewMexico SupremeCourt
— The Associated Press
phone records was unconstitu-
tional, and then a presidential advisorypanel recommended sweeping changes to the agency.Together,thedevelopments are ratcheting up the pressure
Fired general —The Air Force general who wasfired from command of U.S. land-based nuclear missile forces hadengaged in "inappropriate behavior" while on official business in Russia last summer, including heavy drinking, rudeness to his hosts andassociating with "suspect" women, according to an investigation report released Thursday. Theevents that led to the dismissal took place while Maj. Gen. Michael Careywas in Russia in July as head of aU.S.government delegation to a nuclear security training exercise. At the time, he was commander of the 20th Air Force, responsible for all 450 of the Air Force's Minuteman 3intercontinental ballistic missiles stationed in five U.S. states.
public criticism he faces, he
hears internal appeals from intelligence officials who insist the collection of phone
and Internet data is necessary to scale back the controversial to protect the U.S. from terror surveillance programs. attacks. Even R ussian P r esident But even that argument Vladimir Putin chimed in on has been undermined in the Thursday. He said U.S. sur- course of a n e x traordinary veillanceeffortsarenecessary week. Federal Judge Richard to fight terrorism and "not a Leon said in a ruling on Moncause for repentance," but he, day — its effect stayed, pendtoo, said they should be limit- ing appeal — that even if the ed by clear rules. phone data collection is constiObama is in no way ob- tutional, there is little evidence ligated to make substantial that it has prevented terror atchanges. And, countering the tacks. The intelligence advisoon President Barack Obama
director of the CIA, came to
unanimously affirmed Thursday the right of same-sex couples to marry. With the ruling, which takes effect immediately, NewMexico joined16 other states and theDistrict of Columbia in permitting same-sex marriage. Theright to marriage for same-sex couples, the justices ruled, is guaranteed under theequal-protections clause of the New Mexico Constitution, which wasamended in 1972 to include that "equality of rights under law shall not be denied onaccount of the sex of any person."
the same conclusion in its 300-
page report. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., a fierce critic of the NSA programs, concluded, "What
this says to the millions of Americans who have been
concerned that the government knows who they called and when they called and for how long, this says it wasn't essential f o r pre venting
Sen'tenCSS COmmu'ted —President Barack Obama,expanding his push to curtail severe penalties for drug offenses, onThursday commuted the sentences of eight federal inmates whohad beenconvicted of crack cocaine offenses. Eachinmate hasbeenimprisoned for at least15 years, and six weresentenced to life in prison. It was the first time that retroactive relief was provided to agroup of inmates who most likely would havereceived significantly shorter terms if they had beensentenced under current drug laws, sentencing rules and charging policies. Most of the eight would be released in 120 days.
attacks."
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MiniSter defrOCked —The Rev.Frank Schaefer was defrocked Thursday for refusing to abide bythe United Methodist Church's policies on homosexuality, writing another chapter in acasethat stirred a wider call for social change after he was put on trial for officiating hisson'sgaywedding.Schaefer,ofLebanon,Pa.,hadhopedthe church's Board of Ordained Ministers would allow him to keephis credentials, effectively letting him stand asvoice a for gay rights in a church deeply divided over its banagainst same-sex weddings and gaycl ergy.Butachurchspokesman saidtheboardwasonlyaskedto decide whether Schaefer hadaccepted ajury's order to uphold Methodist doctrine or surrender his ministerial credentials.
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SOuth Sudan COnfliCt —Fears of civil war in South Sudan grew Thursday, after South Sudan's military admitted losing control of a key town in the country's east to army mutineers. Thearmy lost Bor, the capital of Jonglei state, to a military faction associated with former Vice President Riek Machar, whohasbeenaccused by President Salva Kiir of launching a coup.Fighting continued in the region Thursday. Machar deniesanycoup attempt, claiming that Kiir is inciting ethnic tensions. Thecountry appeared to be sliding dangerously toward civil war, with a major faction in the army disloyal to the president, fighting outside the capital and heightened ethnic tensions. About 20,000 civilians have fled the violence for shelter in UN compounds.
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/
Sang Tan 1 The Associated Press
An injured person is wheeledout of a theater used as a makeshift treatment center after the ceiling at the nearby Apollo Theatre collapsed Thursday in London. More than 75peoplewere injured — sevenseriously, authorities said. The collapse at theApollo Theatre took place around 8:15 p.m. during a performance of "TheCurious Incident Of TheDog In TheNight-Time" at the height of the Christmas holiday season. Plaster and
Target data breach:LIPto 40M cards The Associated Press Target's data-security nightmare threatens to drive off hol-
iday shoppers during the company'sbusiest time of year. The nation's second-largest discounteracknowledged Thursday that data connected to
masonry from a section of the ceiling tumbled down, bringing parts of the theater's balconies downwith it onto the audience, police said. More than 700 peoplewere in the theater at the time, according to the London Fire Brigade. Officials said most of the injured were "walking wounded" with upper-body injuries, and that all are conscious and breathing.
Italian killer —Italian police on Thursday conducted a manhunt for a serial killer who wasallowed to leave aGenoa prison on atwoday, good-behavior pass to seehis elderly mother but failed to return. Bartolomeo Gagliano is armedand "dangerous," Genoapolice official Fausto Lamparelli said. Heurged peoplewhothink they might have spotted Gagliano to quickly call police. Thereare fears that the fugitive might have driven across the nearby border into France.
— The Associated Press
— From wire reports
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4
WARNER
about 40 million credit and debit
card accountswas stolen as part of abreach thatbegan overthe Thanksgiving weekend. The theft marks the sec-
ond-largest credit card breach in U.S. history, exceeded only by ascam thatbegan in 2005 involving retailer TJX Cos. and affected at least 45.7 million
card users.
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for RV. $200,000 CALL CANDY YOVV AT 541-410-3193. MLS:20I306BB4
Target's disclosure c ame a day after reports that the
company was investigating a
Photo reprints................... 541-383-0356 Obituaries.........................54f-617-7825 Back issues ......................541-385-5800
breach.
All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may beconverted to anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,PO.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706. The Bulletin retains ownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews orad illustrations.Theymay not be
its U.S. stores between Nov. 27 and Dec. 15 may have had their
reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.
the card were affected.
SUNNY AND OPEN
Customers who made purchases by swipingtheir cards at accounts exposed. The stolen data induded customer names, creditand debitcard numbers,
card expiration dates and the embedded codeon the magnet-
ic strip on back of the card, Target sald. There was no indication that
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the three- or four-digit security numbers visible on the back of
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FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Friday, Dec.20, the 354th day of 2013. Thereare11 days left in the year
HAPPENINGS South Sudan — TheU.N. plans to dispatch aircraft to evacuate abasethat'scome under threat of violence.A2 Killer —Italy's Chamber of Deputies will be briefed on the case of a serial killer who was allowed to leaveprison on a pass to see his elderly mother but never returned.A2
HISTORY Highlight:In1803, the Louisi-
ana Purchasewascompleted as ownership of the territory was formally transferred from France to the United States. In1790, the first successful cotton mill in the United States began operating at Pawtucket, R.l.
In1812, Germanauthors Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm published the first volume of the first edition of their collection
of folk stories, "Children's and Household Tales." In1860, South Carolina became the first state to secede from the Union asall169 delegates to a special convention in Charleston voted in favor of separation. In1864, Confederate forces evacuated Savannah,Ga.,as Union Gen.William T. Sherman continued his "March to the Sea." In1912,theplay"Peg O'My Heart," a "comedy of youth" by John Hartley Manners starring his wife, actress Laurette Taylor, opened onBroadway. In1945, the Office of Price Administration announced the end of tire rationing, effective Jan. 1, 1946. In1963,the Berlin Wall was opened for the first time to West Berliners, who were allowed one-day visits to relatives in the Eastern sector for the holidays. In1973, singer-songwriter Bobby Darin died in LosAngeles following open-heart surgery; he was37. In1987, more than 4,300 people were killed whenthe Dona Paz, a Philippine passenger ship, collided with the tanker Vector off Mindoro island. In1989, the United States launched Operation Just Cause, sending troops into Panama to topple the government of Gen.Manuel Noriega. In1998, NkemChukwu gave birth in Houston to five girls and two boys, 12daysafter giving birth to another child, a girl. (However, the tiniest of the octuplets died aweek later.) In1999, the Vermont Supreme Court ruled that homosexual couples wereentitled to the same benefits and protections as wedded couples of the opposite sex. Ten years age:Spain's prime minister, Jose Maria Aznar, paid a surprise visit to Spanish soldiers in Iraq. Friends and relatives of Michael Jackson descended on hisNeverland Ranch to show their support for the entertainer as hefought child molestation charges (Jackson was later acquitted). Five years ago: A Continental Airlines Boeing 737-500 taking off from Denver veeredoff the runway into a ravine, injuring 37 people .OlgaLepeshinskaya, the Bolshoi Ballet's prima ballerina for three decades during Soviet times, died in Moscow at age92. Oneyear age:The State Department acknowledged major weaknesses in security and errors in judgment exposed in a scathing independent report on the deadly Sept. 11,2012 assault on a U.S.diplomatic mission in Libya. TheNational Hockey Leagueannounced the cancellation of the 201213 regular-season schedule through Jan. 14.
BIRTHDAYS Producer Dick Wolf ("Law 8 Order") is 67. Rockmusician Alan Parsons is 65. Actress Jenny Agutter is 61. Singer David Cook ("American Idol") is 31. Actor Jonah Hill is 30. Singer JoJo is 23. — From wire reports
RESEARCH
SCIENCE
riminas: erri e os w o Lis s a erri e?
Three (biological) parents and ababy By Karen Weintraub
able. Research suggests that between 9 and 12 of every 100,000 people have a mito-
New York Times News Service
WEST B L O O M FIELD,
Mich. — Alana Saarinen sat at the piano, playing smoothly and with feeling. Behind her, plastic toys shared floor space with a book of plays she had
Researchers report that toddlers reflexively use physical aggression to get what they want, while violent criminals haven't evolved to do otherwise.
chondrial disease.
Scientists have been testing fertilization techniques that would permit a woman with
mitochondrial defects to have children who are genetically been writing. Her mother her own without passing on beamed. the abnormalities. In one of Alana i s a p p arently the techniques, the mother's
By David Dobbs New York Times News Service
To understand the violent
criminal, says Richard Tremblay, imagine a 2-year-old boy doing the things that make
a
n o r m al , we l l -adjust- nuclear genome is i nserted
ed 13-year-old. But there is something extraordinary about her — every cell in her body is different in a way that is nearly
the terrible twos terrible -
grabbing, kicking, pushing, punching, biting. Now imagine him doing all this with the body and resources of an 18-year-old.
into a donor egg, which is then fertilized with sperm from the father. In another, the genome
istransferred tothedonor egg after fertilization. In either case, the nuclear DNA hails from the mother and father, but the mitochondria and their DNA come from
unprecedented.
Alana was conceived with genetic material from
You have just pictured both
three parents: Sharon and
a perfectly normal toddler and a typical violent criminal as Tremblay,a developmental psychologist at University College Dublin in Ireland,
Paul Saarinen, who provided the egg and sperm,
a second woman. Research-
and a second woman who
contributed genes to Ala-
approved say there is no evidence ofharm and a clear
na's mitochondria, the tiny
benefit to a small number of
sees them — the toddler as a
power plants that fuel ev- women who could not otherery cell. wise have healthy biological The experimental tech- children. "This to me seems to clearly nique making this possible — a cytoplasmic transfer, fall on the side of ethical and
creature who reflexively uses physical aggression to get
lllustration by Tim Robinson/New York Times NewsService
ly violent individuals, Tremas the rare person who has blay says, who are responsinever learned to do otherwise. ble for most violent crime. In other words, dangerous (Thesenumbers are allfor criminals don't turn violent. boys and young men; girls' They just stay that way. physical aggression declines These findings have been in arcs similar to t hose of replicated in multiple large boys, but at sharply lower studies by several researchers levels.) The results were suron several continents. prising. At first glance, they "It's highly reliable," said seemed at odds with one of Brad Bushman, a psychology criminology's oldest tenets what he wants; the criminal
professor at Ohio State Uni-
— the age-crime curve, first
versity and an expert on child
graphed in 1831 by the Belgian statistician A dolphe Quetelet. Mining French crime records, Quetelet found that
violence, who noted that tod-
dlers use physical aggression even more than people in violent youth gangs do. "Thank God toddlers don't carry weapons." The son of a pro- "Thank GOd f essional football t p d d l e IS player, Tremblay played foo t ball himself and wa s W B BPOAS.
arrest rates soared
to 15 percent range.
To Tremblay, the findings suggest cause for optimism:
in Alana's case — was halt-
permissible," said Nita Fara-
that humans more r eadily
ed by the Food and Drug
hany, a professor of law, phi-
learn civility than they do cruelty.
Administration i n 2 0 0 1. losophy and genome sciences Now, despite u ncertain- and policy at Duke Universi-
We start as toddlers. We
ties about its safety, scien- ty. The technique is "not only tists in the United States promising, but morally prefer-
learn through conditioning, as we heed requests not to hit others but to use our words.
and the United Kingdom
We learn self-control. Beginning in our third year, we learn social strategies like bargaining and charm. Per-
Critics say it has not been
veloping brain to read situations and choose among these learned tactics and strategies. But what o f t h e r e lative
ty. "I don't see how that can be ethical."
2010 child development text-
DNA lies in the nucleus, each mitochondrion contains its own small set of 37
genes, inherited solely from
vices are crucial — starting
mothers.
"as close as possible to conception," as Tremblay put that the younger the children, elet's curve reflects not vio- it in one recent paper, and the more they whacked each lence, but the rate at which continuing through e arly other. With adolescents, phys- we "start arresting and con- childhood. ically aggressive acts can victing individuals who have Similarly, his research is be counted in incidents per been physically aggressive going further back in the life month; with toddlers, he said, toward others at least since span. He and some colleagues "you count the number per kindergarten." are planning to capture data hour." in mothers and newborns, So he trained his focus ear- book, the two sets of curves lier and earlier, and learned are not contradictory: Quet-
Reasonforoptimism?
The genes governing production o f m i t ochondria, both in the nucleus
and in the organelle itself, can be defective, and the
defects can be passed from mothers to their children. Mitochondrial
di s e ases
are rare, but they can be devastating and are incur-
and then to follow them for
Bad as it gets
In 2006, Tremblay and In most children, though, Nagin published a l arger this is as bad as it gets. The study tracking 10 groups of rate of violence peaks at 24 about 1,000 Canadians bemonths, d e clines s t eadily tween ages 2 and 11 for perithrough adolescence and ods of six years. The research plunges in early adulthood. echoed the 1999 study. A third But as Tremblay and Dan-
for Responsible Genetics, a
New York-based advocacy Mitochondria are min- group. ute organelles inside living cells, floating apart from the nucleus in the cytoplasm. They create energy for the cell's activities. r j g While most of the cell's
d ownward?
criminal r e cords Here, says Tremblay, "the enfascinated with its going back to the tire field is stumped." Bushman, 1 6th century B y regulated version Programs that p r ovide Psychology contrast, the Trem- comprehensive support, inof extreme physical Professor biay-Nagin find- cluding parent training, do aggression. After college he did social ings suggested that seem to help, though they are work in a p rison violent be h a vior difficult to deliver to the deepand saw firsthand how sel- peaked much earlier than the ly troubled families that need dom such programs changed teen years. them most. violent criminals. By the time But as Janette Benson and Child development experts the violent child gets big, it's M arshall Haith noted i n a increasingly say such seroften too late.
Other experts argue that the
adequately studied and science is far too experimental crosses the line into genetic to be used for a pregnancy, esengineering. pecially when a woman could "We're mixing the DNA opt for a donor egg or adopt. "What negative, debilitating o f two women in a s i n gle baby," said Sheldon implications are we offering Krimsky, a bioethicist and into the germ line? What are professor of urban and we saddling future generaenvironmental policy and tions with?" said Jeremy Gruplanning at Tufts Universi- ber, president of the Council
haps most vital, we use a de-
bend their ar c
able to leaving a woman with-
are urging legalization of out a choice for having her a more targeted version. own healthy genetic children."
in the midteens be- few who remain physically for e f alling in the aggressive? If it's possible to 20s. Hi s f a m o us spot this cohort as early as curve was later rep- kindergarten, why can't we licated in studies of
ers who want the techniques
of the children were peace-
two decades, to determine whether environment shapes the chemical wrappings of the children's genes, and thus perhaps their activi-
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ties, in ways that correlate to
behavior. When I remarked to Trem-
able throughout; about half blay, now 69, that this seemed used physicalaggression of- like an awfully long time to found in a pivotal 1999 study, ten as toddlers, but rarely as wait for answers, he laughed. a troublesome few do not fol- preadolescents; and about a Science is slow, he said, and low this pattern. sixth remained physically ag- behavior is hard to measure. The study tracked behav- gressive as 11-year-olds. This We may never completely ior in 1,037 mostly disadvan- last group matched groups in crack this nut. But we have to taged Quebec schoolboys other studies that ran in the 5 try. from kindergarten through age 18. The boys fell into four Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate distinct trajectories of physi• • • TheB u lle ' cal aggression. The most peaceable 20 percent, a "no problem" group, showed little physical aggresCllrlstmgg sion at any age; two larger Goose TollPlgmegt groups showed moderate and Resche4gtert IDolN LAK'E'5 60L~F CQU'R'SIE high rates of aggression as to Tkis sgt, ' ISTiiNIAS GIFTi CE'RTIFIICAT~E'5 preschoolers.In these three Dec.21st groups violence fell through • r i I CWCeP childhood and adolescence, o 0 and dropped to almost nothing when the boys reached
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iel Nagin, a criminologist at Carnegie Mellon University,
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Seeks Budget Committee Member Bend Park & Recreation District is seekingapplicants for two positions onthe Boardof Directors' Budget Committee. The appointmentswill be madeat the regular businessmeeting Tues.,Feb.18,2014.Toapply, email lindsey@bendparksandrec.org for applicant questionnaire.Submit questionnaire andresumeby Fri., Jan.24,2014to lindsey@bendparksandrec.org or by mail to 799SW ColumbiaSt.,Bend,OR97702.
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their 20s.
A fourth group, about 5 percent, peaked higher during toddlerhood and declined far more slowly. As they moved into l ate
adolescence and young adulthood, their aggression grew ever more dangerous, and it
tailed off late. At age 17 they were four times as physically aggressive as the moderate group and committed 14 times as many criminal infractions. It's these chronical-
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fGolfrorEveryone! " II
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
Health law
also gives one group the ability to buy coverage whenever they Continued from A1 want, rather than during annuThe decision, however, is up al open-enrollment periods. As to eachstate's insurance reg- a result, he said, more people ulator, and not all have gone might not buy insurance unless along. theyget sick. This second change, promptFederal health officials esed by a group of Democratic timated Thursday that, of all senators — most of whom face the people whose substandard tough re-election campaigns health plans have been cannext year — goes substantial- celed, less than half a million ly further in accommodating have not chosen new coverage. people upset about losing their But they acknowledged that policies. The latest rule will al- theywere not certain. low consumers with a canceled The insurance official sughealth plan to claim a "hard- gested that some people who ship exemption" if they think have chosen new health plans the plans sold through new fed- after receiving a cancellation eral and state marketplaces are notice might back out of their too expensive. new coverage to take advanThe ability to get an exemp- tage of th e a dministration's tion means that the adminis- sudden offer. tration is freeing these people Federal health officials, howfrom one of the centralfeatures
ever, predicted that relatively
of the law: a requirement that
few people would take advantage of the opportunity to avoid
most Americans have health
insurance as of Jan. 1 or risk the law's benefits requirement, a fine. The exemption gives reasoning that they have had them the choice of having no insurance in the past so would insurance or of buying skimpy probably want it in the future. "catastrophic" coverage. This "This is a common-sense means, in turn, that people clarification of the law," said who had old, meager insurance Joanne Peters, a spokeswoman have greater freedom under for the Department of Health the law than the many millions
and Human Services. "For the
of uninsured Americans who limited number of consumers now must obtain coverage. whose plans have been canUntil now, the law allowed celed and are seeking coveronly people younger than 30 age, this is one more option." to buy catastrophic coverage The administration's move if they couldn't afford a better
health plan. The exception was an effort to attract young adults who have been particularly prone to avoiding coverage in thepast. It is
is a swift response to about a dozen Democratic senators, all
Seattle
would then need time in a decompression chamber.
. 3li..
Continued from A1 "What we're focusing on now is creating conditions that will allow us to enter the chamber behind the cutter
And there is something of a John Henry's hammer theme to the tale of Seattle's object.
Bertha is blind as a mole in
/
front, with n o
f o rward-fac-
head and see what the situation is," Chris Dixon, the proj-
ing windows or cameras, so a kind of spacewalk through
ect manager at Seattle Tunnel Partners, th e c o nstruction
air-locked doors is required to get to the front of the machine
/
contractor, said in an interview this week. Dixon said
he felt fairly confident that the blockage will turn out to be nothing more or less romantic than a giant boulder, perhaps left over from the Washington State Department of Transportation via The New York Times News Service Ice Age glaciers that scoured A tunnel in Seattle dug out by the largest-diameter tunnel-boring and crushed this corner of the machine on the planet, called Bertha, hes been blocked by somecontinent 17,000 years ago. thing unknown, engineers say. But the unknown is a tan-
for inspection. And the removal or breaking up of the object is likely to be done with jackhammers or other old-fashioned tools that a tunnel-dig-
ging sandhog worker of generations past would recognize. If the object can't be broken
up below ground, there would need to be excavation from the street. In any event, Dix-
talizing subject. Some res-
on and other state managers Seattle rode a tide of illegal said, the machine's forward Seattle Public Library, who alcohol smuggled from Can- progress could be halted old Seattle, buried in the pell- said she held out hope for ada and people had reason for weeks — although they mell rush of city-building in something of 1890s Klond- to bury things, not wanting stressed that work is continuthe 1800s, when a mucky wa- ike Gold Rush vintage, when them found. ing on the ends of the tunnel "Bootlegger stuff," he said. and that it is too early to talk terfront wetland was filled in Seattlebecame the crazed to make room for commerce, and booming gateway city to Dixon said that efforts to about cost overruns or delays. could be Bertha's big trouble. the gold fields of Alaska and drain water and reduce pres- The tunnel is scheduled to be That theory is bolstered by Canada. sure at the drill head, with a open to traffic by late 2015. the fact that the blocked tunAt the d owntown store- series of bore holes pushed The tunnel is to run north nel section is also in the shal- front museum for the tunnel down in recent days, could and south along Elliott Bay lowest portion of the route, project, called Milepost 31, allow workers to get safe ac- from Century L i n k F i eld, with the top of the machine visitors are cracking Jimmy cess to the blocked site as home of football's Seahawks, only around 45 feet below Hoffa jokes or spouting the- early as Friday. But working to a point near the Space street grade. ories about buried train enat a t mospheric p r essures Needle on the north, allow"I'm going to believe it's a gines. Gabe Martin, a sales similar to what a diver would ing demolition of an elevatpiece of Seattle history un- clerkata curio shop near the experience, the team could ed roadway and improved til proven otherwise," said dig site, said he was intrigued stay down only for short peri- crosstown foot and bicycle Ann Ferguson, the curator of by the Prohibition era, when ods, he said, and each visitor access. idents said they believe, or want to believe, that a piece of
the Seattle Collection at the
facing difficult re-election attempts next year or from states that Obama lost in last year's
election, who contended that
u n d ear ho w m a n y the steps the president already
people facing canceled policies will choose no insurance, bare-bones coverage or a plan through the insurance exchanges that meet new federal
took did not go far enough to help people whose insurance
standards. But the p rospect
letter on Wednesday to Health
that healthy people with can-
and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, asking for her to allow people whose plans have been canceled to claim hardship exceptions and
celed insurance might opt out of the new health plans set off
immediate alarm among insurance industry leaders, who
already have been worried whether enough people who are inexpensive to cover will Slgll up.
has been canceled. A half-dozen of those sen-
ators, all Democrats, sent a
buy bare-bones, catastrophic
coverage."We have heard from many of our constituents who are upset by the cancellation of
"This latest rule change the healthplans," said the letter, could cause significant insta- whose signers include both of bility in the marketplace and Virginia's senators, Sens. Mark lead to further confusion and Warner and Tim Kaine. disruption f o r co n sumers," The six senators issued a said Karen Ignagni, president statement T h ursday n i g ht, of America's Health Insurance saying that they were "pleased Plans, the industry's main trade the administration appears group. to have responded to the conAnother health insurance cerns we've raised.... We will offici al,who spoke on the con-
closely monitor how the ad-
dition of anonymitybecause he ministration implements this lacked authorization to discuss option, and we remain comthe matter publicly, pointed out mitted to proposing responsible
SCADE COTTONS
that the hardship exemption
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solutions."
II '
Ih, t '
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Bill Continued from A1 In previous years, Merkley had objected to the lack of provisions dealing with the
of U.S. combat forces from Afghanistan.
. 4IS
•
Carl Levin, D-Mich., and his counterpart o n t h e H o u se
Recently,the Obama administration entered into a
new long-term agreement
the bill in its current form.
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In a p r epared statement,
White House press secretary Jay Carney said Thursday that while the bill didn't do
H ouse versions of th e b i l l ,
address all of the adminis-
Merkley said. "The House had voted overwhelmingly to say, Mr. President, you need to get authorization for that before you put us (for) another 10 years in that theater of war," he told The Bulletin on Thurs-
t ration's concerns, its p r o-
day. "Here, we have the situ-
consistent with our national security i n terests," Carney said. "The administration
everything the administration would l ike, the W h ite
House supported its passage.
*
~Artistry' in" Desi'gn"-
= '
- '."
-'
=-
"While the bil l d oes not
visions regarding foreign transfersof detainees held at the U.S. Naval Station,
Guantanamo Bay, C uba, will provide the administration additional flexibility to
transfer detainees abroad
E~
commends the Congress for its work to expand efforts to
tional authorization. They're not required to, and we don't
prevent sexual assault and significantly strengthen pro-
think they are going to (seek)
tections for victims as well
such authorization w i thout us forcing them to do so."
as extending important compensation and benefits for
Republicans have c r iti-
our service members, which
cized Senate Majority Leader
are important for recruit-
Harry Reid for not bringing the bill to the floor in time
ment, retention and morale of our Armed Forces."
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to allow for votes on amendm ents. I n stead, w i t h th e
•
Merkley said he shared
tatives approved the same idea, but the provision was stripped out during the conference committee efforts to reconcile the Senate and the
ation (where) citizens know we've been already at war for 12 years, and our government is not even going to seek addi-
•
" Select Sweatshiits
keep 8,000 to 12,000 troops, some ofthe same frustrations most of them American, in over the handling of the bill. "We s hould have a n Afghanistan through 2024. Earlier this year, Merkley amendment process of ideas tried to attach an amendment that are relevant to a bill on to the defense spending bill something like this. Instead that would require the ad- of spending days paralyzed, ministration to get Congress' we should spend days debatapproval before it could com- ing relevant issues and voting mit troops beyond the final up-and-down on t h em," he draw-down date of Dec. 31, said. 2014. That amendment did
•
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Senate has no choice but to
Armed Services Committee, Rep. Buck McKeon, R-Calif., urged their colleagues to pass
with Afghanistan that would
J
•
Senate poised to follow the
House's lead and break for the remainder of the year, the
take up the bill passed by the House last week exactly as-is. i ndefinite detention of c i t i Facing the prospect of not zens without their due pro- passing a defense authorizacess rights to a public and tion bill for the first time in speedy trial. He also wanted 52 years, Senate Armed Serthe funding bill to include a vices Committee Chairman deadline for the withdrawal
•
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FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Wyden
lation that Wyden has championed would lose momentum,
sources Committee Thursday would enable the restoration of
Continued fromA1 he said. 8.3 million acres of trees in six "If he becomes the main fi- national forests in Eastern and Before Thursday's hearing, Wyden declined to discuss the nance person, that's going to Central Oregon. possibility, reminding reporters have to be his focus," Moore The bill is the result of a that Baucus had yet to release SBld. historic agreement between an official statement. If Wyden steps down as the timber industry and enviB ut some f a miliar w i t h chairman of the Energy and ronmentalists, Wyden said. It Wyden's thinking suggested he Natural Resources Committee, is built upon three main eleislikelyto seize the opportunity the gavel will likely fall to Sen. ments: the increase of timber to occupy one of the most pow- Mary Landrieu, D-La., skip- harvests from national forests; erful seats in the Senate. ping over Sen. Tim Johnson, restoration conducted on a "While I can't say with 100 D-S.D., who also is retiring at landscape-scale plan; and propercent certainty that Ron the end of 2014 and appears tections for watersheds and oldWyden will take this job, I do unlikely to surrender his posi- growthtrees, he said. "Not only are these forests in know he's had two dreams in tion as chairman of the Senate life: One, to play in the NBA Banking Committee. danger, but so are the mills, that and two, to chair the Senate Under Landrieu, the Energy desperately need the wood proFinance Committee," said Jen- and Natural Resources Com- duced by those forests," Wyden nifer Hoelzer, Wyden's former mittee's focus would likely SBld. deputy chief of staff and com- shift to resources pumped out The advancement of the munications director. of the ground, like oil and nat- eastside agreement, which now The chairmanship of the ural gas, rather than those that moves to the full Senate, was Senate Finance Committee is grow from it, Moore said. praised by John Shelk, presmuch sought-after and rarely In a short analysis issued ident of P r ineville's Ochoco surrendered once assumed. T hursday, consulting f i r m Lumber Co. "Senator Wyden's eastside Since 2001, the committee has ClearView Energy Partners had only two chairs: Baucus speculated that a Landrieu forest bill represents a lifeline and Sen. Charles Grassley, chairwomanship, particular- for the struggling forest econoR-Iowa, depending on which ly with Sen. Lisa Murkowski, my of eastern Oregon and the party controlled the Senate. R-Alaska, as ranking member families and businesses that Baucus has presided uninter- could signal a more favorable rely on it," Shelk said in a prerupted since 2007. outlook for exports of liquid pared statement. "Through his In the post-earmark era, natural gas. efforts to find common ground "When itcomes to energy on how to improve our forests members of Congress can't funnel federal money directly policy, members of Congress and keep our mills operating, to their home states as easily, tend to vote for what's in the the Malheur National Forest so the odds that Wyden ends ground at home, and these has quiddybecome amodel for up with lots of infrastructure regional preferences often ex- what can be achieved under his named for him are much less tend to legislative priorities, bill." than Sen. Mark Hatfield's were
too," ClearView wrote. "As an
20 years ago, when the Oregon o utspoken proponent of o i l Republicanchaired thepower- and gas production, Senator ful Appropriations Committee, Landrieu could provide a very said Jim Moore, an assistant different perspective as the naprofessorof politics and gov- tion re-thinks its scarcity-based ernment and director of the energy policy in an age of Tom McCall Center for Policy adequacy, especially when it Innovation at Pacific University comes to energy exports." in Forest Grove. Similarly, as chairman of the "But the way he can get Or- Finance Committee, Wyden egon issues into the discussion could also influence energy are exactlythe same," Moore policy, the analysis noted. Wyden "has made itclear said. Chairmanship of the Finance Committee is "still cen- in recent weeks that he favors tral to the national economy an extension of expiring clean and the national government, energy tax programs if tax and it allows you to get the con- reform doesn't move quiddy cerns of your state onthe table." in 2014. A Wyden-led Finance Accepting the Finance chair- Committeewould reinforce our manship w o uld n e cessitate assessment in this afternoon's Wyden stepping down from note that retroactive extenders his position as chairman of the remain more likely than tax reEnergy and Natural Resources form in 2014." Committee. This could mean The pilot program approved that some of the forestry legis- by the Energy and Natural Re-
IN FOCUS:SHIFTING SOCIETY
Surveyshowsfewer detacheddads By Lindsey Tenner The Associated Press
CHICAGO — The detached
dad, turning up his nose at diapering and too busy to bathe, dress and play with his kids, is mostly a myth, a big government survey suggests. Most American fathers say they are heavily involved in hands-on parenting, the researchers found. The nationally representative survey shows fathers' involvement has increased slightly since the government first asked in 2002, coinciding with research since then that
Thinkstock
A survey of nearly 4,000 fathers aged15 to 44, interviewed between 2006 and 2010, showed that almost two-thirds helped with homework several times e week, end about half took their kids to end from activities that often.
bolsters the benefits of hands-
on fathering. The results are encourag- One caveat: They self-report- them at least several times ing and important "because ed their involvement, with- weekly. others have found the more in- out input from their partners Among dads living with volved dads are, the better the or others. kids aged 5-18: outcomes for their children," Key findings among fa• More than 9 out of 10 ate said researcher Jo Jones of thers living with children meals with them at least sevthe National Center for Health younger than 5: eral times weekly and talked • 9 in 10 bathed, diapered, with them about what hapStatistics, part of the Centers for Disease Control Preven- helped them use the toilet or pened during the kids' day tion. She co-authored the re-
port releasedtoday. The study involved nearly 4,000 fathers aged 15 to 44
get dressed at least several
that often.
• Almost 2 out of 3 helped times weekly. • Even higher numbers with h o m ework s e v eral played with them and ate times weekly.
who were interviewed in per- meals with them that often. • About half took their kids son between 2006 and 2010. • Almost 2 out of 3 read to to or from activities that often.
Tom Partin, president of the
American Forest Resource Council, a
t i m ber i n dustry
group, said he was disappointed with the bill, saying it makes "vague concepts like achieving 'ecological restoration' and 'naturalprocesses'a mandate for these forests."
"Senator Wyden's legislation adds multiple, complex layers of restrictions, process, exter-
nalreview, and countless new opportunities for litigation to
a federal forest management process that is already broken," Partin said in a prepared statement. "If enacted, the leg-
islation would further disconnect the economies and social
needs of Eastern Oregon's rural communities from the management of these National Forests." — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
Ray's
His concern was echoed by Kennedy, the attorney for Brad Copeland, an attorney C&K Market Inc., said after Continued from A1 who represents the landown- the hearing on Thursday that Sales in some of the stores ers of the Bend store's proper- although the intention is to have been somewhat high- ty, who said his client wants pay back all creditors, "there er than projected, Kennedy to ensure the b a nkruptcy is a limited pot" of money, so said.Store closure sales have process moves forward effi- his client shares in the goal to also met projections. ciently. With all the legal and keep costs low. Several attorneys repre- consulting fees, he was there C&K Market has assets senting a variety of creditors to make sure "fees don't get in the $10 million to $50 milwere in attendance during disproportionately high." lion range and liabilities bethe hearing on Thursday. D iscussed at t h e h e a r- tween $100 million and $500 Tom Orr, a Eugene-based at- ing on Thursday was hiring million. torney, who represents Varsi- Otterbourg, P.C., which is The family-owned comty Ice Cream Co., Inc., based based in New York, as lead pany was founded in 1956. It in Eureka, Calif., said he will co-counsel to represent the pointed to competition from be "filing a claim soon" and unsecured creditors' com- Wal-Mart Supercentersand is worried the expenses and mittee. Officials from the law Costco Wholesale Corp. fees C&K Market Inc. might firm told the judge on Thurs- stores as cutting into its profit incur in the bankruptcy pro- day that they would work margins. cess would inhibit the compa- efficiently, but concerns over — Reporter: 541-554-1162, ny from paying its creditors. their high rates were raised. Idake@bendbulletin.com
4-4ke Glk 4ill'his4vid-
Gal*r Q San4a Friday-Monday, December 20-23 SantaLand is open1lam-Spm Take a photo with the holiday's biggest celebrity...Santa! Pets welcome. Photography by Karen Cammack Photography.
C ~vol~s School groups and professional singers perform your holiday favorites throughout the season. December 20, 5-6pm, School of the Arts at The Bridge Handbells December 20, 6-7pm, High Desert Harmoneers December 21, 4:30-5:30pm, Peace Chords of Westside Village Magnet School
C evviege Rikes Saturday-Monday, December 21-23 Thursday-Tuesday, December 26-30 Carriage Rides are 2-5pm Complimentary carriage rides with Cowboy Carriage provided by the Old Mill District. Located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's. Tips and donations benefiting Kid's Center.
Olk IAII >i|'kvick S iR. Cnwhifi~~ • make everyone happy. Good at any of our shops, restaurants, galleries and movies. For sale at the Ticket Mill, Central Oregon Visitors Association, Bend Chamber of Commerce and
5~
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V isitBend.co m .
Fov e fall sckekrale visH. theoldmill.com/holiday-happenings/
Special Gvsn4, for Kiks December 30-31 and January 2-3 Art Classes, Story Time, Musical Petting Zoo, Build a Solar System and Hot Cocoa & Cider Tasting.
R
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R iverside re st a u r a nt s , t rails, shops and s h o w s . B end is he r e . theold m i l l .co m
I 5 4 1 . 3 12.0131
A6
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•
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SE Portland
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Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2013
www.bendbulletin.com/local
REDMOND SCHOOL BOARD
BRIEFING Man sentenced te 15 years A Jefferson County man consideredan "armed career criminal" has beensentenced to15 years in prison, according to anews release from theDepartment of Justice. Daniel Kennedy,27,of Madras, pleadedguilty in U.S. District Court in Eugene to burglaryand possessio nofmethamphetamine andfirearms. Chief JudgeAnnAiken sentenced Kennedyas an armed careercriminal, because hehadpreviously beenconvicted of 12 felonies in Oregon, including robbery, coercion anddelivery of methamphetamine. Kennedy andtwo accomplices brokeinto a home andstole guns and jewelry, according to court documents. Four stolen gunsand other stolen property were reportedly later seizedat Kennedy's home.Kennedy was onpost-prison supervision for four felonies whenarrested. He was sentencedto 180 months in prison, according to the news release.
Suspectsarrested InmethInquIry Three Madrasresidents werearrested in the parking lot behind the RedmondHome Depot following athreemonth investigation into asuspecte dmethamphetamine-trafficking operation bytheCentral Oregon DrugEnforcement Team. Roberto Delgado-Diaz, 37, JoseMuniz-Vargas, 22, andSantanaCovarrubias,47, aswell as a 9-year-old andan 11-year-old child were stopped bylawenforcement, according to a news releasefrom Deschutes CountySheriff's Lt. Kurt Koester. During thestop, a drug-detecting K-9was called onsceneto search the vehicle.Covarrubias and the twominors reportedly requested they beallowed to leave, and the trio walkedto the HomeDepot.Soon after, Delgado-Diazand Muniz-Vargasalso were releasedwith no action taken. Further investigation allegedly revealedthat prior to beingpulled over, Muniz-Vargasremoved approximately ahalfpound of methamphetamine from hisperson and placed it underthe sweatshirt of one ofthe children. Thechild is said to have subsequently hid the drugs in aplanter box at HomeDepot. Thesuspects stayed inthe area after being releasedto retrieve themethamphetamine andwere arrested by CODE officers. The threesuspects were arrested onsuspicion of themanufacture, possession anddistribution of methamphetamine, first-degreechild neglect, coercionandusing a minor in acontrolled substance offense. More Local Briefs, BS
Sheriff's captain appointed to position • Klemp's resignation promptednecessity for a newmember By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin
REDMOND — Vested interest. That's one reason De-
schutes County Sheriffs Capt. interested inbeing appointedto the Redmond School Board. Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
a ramp Thursday. Each car prevented the egg from breaking. The engineering project is a part of a newSTEM program the school is helping to pilot.
it was less about
his four children in Redmond
ornin a r
• Pertiand:With Cover Oregon's websitestill causing trouble, officials have started talks with newtechnology companies,B3
r i s ian ro ram
e ses By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
tudents and teachers at Morning Star Christian School in Bend are
S piloting a new curriculum designed to spark elementary schoolers' interest in engineering challenges.
"Asearly as second or third grade, kids will decide if they're good at math or science. So our goal is to give young students a very positive, hands-on, problem-solving approach to these subjects." — Susan Castillo, PLTW's vice president for the west
one of 43elementary schools in the nation piloting Project Lead the Way's Launch pro-
gram. PLTWis an Indianapolis-based nonprofit that has developed STEM — science,
technology, engineering and math — programs used in more than 5,000 middle and
Susan Castillo, PLTW's vice
president for the west, who was visiting Morning Star Christim on Thursdaytohear feedback on the pilot from teachers and students. "We findthat our students
in middle school are more likely to continue onto our en-
gineering andbiomedicalprograms in high school," Castillo
Morning Star Christian is
high schools. Launchbrings STEM to primary-school students in a series of modules
that progress in complexity from "structure and function" in kindergarten to "robotics
and animation" byfifthgrade.
"As early as second or third grade, kids will decide if they're good at math or science. So our goal is to give youngstudents averypositive, hands-on, problem-solving approach to these subjects," said
said. "If we can get students
intereste d andprepared for these subjects even earlier, I think they may develop a more positive relationship to the subjects, which will hopefully continue moving forward." SeeClasses/B5
schools and more
abouthis experience and skills.
Nel son
Nelson was
appointedto serve out the remaining term of attorney Lisa Klemp, who was elected in May 2013and resigned in October. The term ends June 2015. Nelson has been in law
enforcementfor19years.He's currently serving as commander for the county jailbut has experience as a criminal detective, patrol officer and administrator of the sheriffs operations division. "Mr. Nelson has been in a
position where he's hadto take the heat," said Ron Munkres, a board member. "In his job he has to respond to the community, just like us, andhe's made it clear he understands you need to listen to other views."
Nelson, 43, currently runs the Redmond youth football
programand sitsonthe Shared Future Coalition and Pilot Butte Partnersboard ofdirectors.
Educated citizens withgood valuesareproductivemembers in the community, which
Bend Highgraduatesreturn to discusscollege
improves the quality oflife, attracting good residents and more businesses, he stated in
his application for the position. During his interview, Nelson told the board his experience
By Megan Kehoe
their old high school to talk to outgoing seniors about college. The college stu-
The Bulletin
Bad food, challenging classes and overbearing roommates. That about sums up what most high school seniors fear about their upcom-
ing college experience.ButThursday,a group of Bend High students had their worrieseased aftera visitfrom some of
their former classmates who have successfully made the transition to college. "I feel like people always say college is so hard," said Janey Farina, a 2012 Bend High graduate. "But I felt like the (International Baccalaureate) program was harder. Everyone at school talks about how hard the classes are, but I'm like, 'I've already done this. I did this for two
years in high school.'" Thursdaymorning,about50recent Bend High graduates visited classes at
specifically about how the diploma
with community members who've made bad choices gives
helped them in their current situations.
him insight that wouldbenefit
"I think the IB program can be incredibly demanding and overwhelming,"
dents, all of whom were back in Bend
for winter break, attend schools across the U.S., and brought some of their experiences back home to their former
Anderson, who acts as the school's IB
classmates. "I just hope (the seniors) get a more personalized view of college," Katie Taylor, a 2012 graduate of Bend High who now attends Middlebury College in
coordinator, said. "It's important for students to see that it can help them go a long way." school's rigorous course load,she's felt
community."
hear four former Bend High students
"The workload is crazy at Middle-
to it that I didn't know about." Students packed into Pandie Ander-
he said. "It's all intertwined
University, said that despite her new
son's classroom Thursday morning to
kind of abstract for me. There was a lot
"In most cases it's because of
a lack of strong family values or lack of education or both," — part of the bigger picture. We all want the same thing, effective schools and a good
Farina, who now attends Harvard
it's not as demanding as her Bend High classes. Not everyone on the panel agreed. Taylor said her experience has been more challenging.
Vermont, said. "Before I went, it was all
the school district.
share some tips about college life. As most of the students in the class were In-
bury," Taylor said. "Plus, the tests are
ternational Baccalaureate diploma can-
choice."
geared a lot more toward multiple
didates, the four college returnees spoke
SeeReturn/B2
Nelson willbe sworn in Jan. 9. The district's two other ap-
plicants were Johnny Corbin, a retired vocational teacher, and Jenny O'Keefe, a m otheroffive
children in Redmond schools who is pursuing a master's degree in education. — Reporter: 541-548-2186, lpugmire@bendbulletin/com
Students getopportunity to 'Shopwith a Cop' at local store By Shelby R. King The Bulletin
Deputy Joe Aldred followed 10-year-old Koltin Heald
family, like a board game. See video coverage "My favorite part is riding on The Bulletin's website: in the cop car," Koltin, a bendbulletin.cem/shepwithacep fourth-grader at Terrebonne Community School, said.
flage Crocs for Koltin's dad
child to Wal-Mart and help
The program is in its 13th year, and Deschutes County Sheriff's CpL Neil Mackey estimates community members and local
and a tall ceramic vase with three red silk roses and a
them choose presents for
businesses have donated
family members. Then they share a McDonald's lunch
m ore than $300,000 to fund the program over the years. This year, Shop with a Cop spent two days at the Bend Wal-Mart before moving to Redmond for the final day. Mackey said about 130 kids got to shop with a cop during
up and down the aisles of the Redmond Wal-Mart on
Thursday, pushing a cart Portland
But when the board chose
Nelson over two other applicants this week,
Morning Star Christian students watch as a student-built vehicle intended to protect the egg that's along for the ride is released on
Jefferson County Sheriff's
STATE NEWS
Shane Nelson said he was
eti •
that held a pair of camou-
pink sprig of flowers resembling an orchid for his mom. The two were looking for presents for Koltin's 11-yearold brother and his 4-yearold sister.
Heald and Aldred were paired in the 13th annual Shop with a Cop program,
in which law enforcement
personnel volunteer to pick up a student from school in a patrol car, transport the
while volunteers wrap the
presents before taking the child home. Students are allowed to
buy presents for each family member, one for themselves and one larger gift that can be enjoyed by the whole
the three-day event.
SeeShop/B2
Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Koltin Heald, 10, lowers a vase into a shopping cart while Christmas shopping with Jefferson County Sheriff's Deputy Joe Aldred
on Thursday in Redmond.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
WASHINGTON NEWS
oassessnee,s u a u es amoun 0 0 use By Gene Johnson
"If you can get a good
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Figuring out
idea about what those
how much marijuana people est, and most important, questions facing the bureaucrats who are setting up Washington state's new legal pot system. Underestimate
heavy users use, you can get a pretty good idea about the size of
, Zgf,
use has been one of the tricki-
Pi
— Beau Kilmer, study author
de m a n d,
and marijuana fans might stick with their black market dealers. Overestimate it, and
atively small segment of the market accounts for about 80 percent of all marijuana used,
the surplus legal production could wind up being diverted out of state or to kids.
Now, researchers working with the state's official pot
the market."
according toearlierresearch, Elaine Thompson /The Associated Press file photo
Vendors look over their display of glass bongs on the first day of
and there's still a lot to learn about those users, he said.
consultant think t hey h ave August's Hempfest in Seattle. A newstudy by the Rand Corp. sugtheir best look yet at canna- gests the market for marijuana in Washington state could be more bis consumption i n W a s h- than twice what officials estimated last year.
"If you can get a good idea about what those heavy users use, you can get a pretty good
ington — aided by a novel survey aimed at figuring out
idea about the size of the mar-
ward the higher number, and tire marijuana market in the they say the new study won't first year of legal recreational require any sudden changes to sales. Instead, they're looking the rollout of the state system. at having state-licensed grow"That's the ballpark of what ersproduce 80 metric tons of we're looking at with our marijuana, half for use as trasystem," said Brian Smith, a ditional dried buds and half spokesman for the state Li- for use in producing marijuaquor Control Board, the agen- na-infused products. RAND's study, "Before the cy charged with regulating marijuana in Washington. Grand Opening," aims to take
ket," he said. a snapshot of pot use on the The team determined an oneve of legal sales. It found that line survey was the best way half of the marijuana used in on a relatively tight deadline the state is consumed in the to get an idea of how much state's three most populous pot people use, despite limitacounties. King County, which tions, such as the self-selection includes Seattle, accounts for of participants in the survey about 30 percent, while Pierce and the possibility of insincere to the south and Snohomish to respondents - "scoundrels," the north account for about 11 the authors called them — trypercent each. ing to throw off the results. The study drew on nation- Ultimately, the authors develal, government-funded sur- oped ways to try to flag such veys, but the researchers also responses. conducted their own o nline The pot users were shown survey ofmarijuana users to pictures depicting a gram or address a gap in the national half-gram of marijuana next research: How much marijua- to a credit card and a coin na do people use when they for scale — an unusual idea use it, especially because pot aimed at improving the accuis often shared? One of the racy of their responses about primary n ational s urveys how much they use. Nearly on drug use stopped asking 64 percent of the 2,783 responpeople how many joints they dents from Washington state smoked nearly 20 years ago, reported using pot at least 21 noted RAND st u dy a u thor days per month, typically 1.3 Beau Kilmer. to 1.9 grams per day on each E specially important i s day that they used, the report figuring out how much pot is sard. smoked by consumers who A gram of marijuana ofuse it more than 21 days per ten sells for $10 to $12 in month, Kilmer said. That rel- Washington.
Shop
Lilienthal was shopping with Lisa Griggs, a civil tech-
Washington and Colorado of marijuana burn in a typ- legalized the possession of ical day. In a study released marijuana by adults over 21 Wednesday, a RAND Corp. last year, and both states are team figured that Washing- setting up systems of state-liton'sroughly 750,000 marijua- censed growers, processors how much the heaviest users
na users will have consumed between 135 and 225 metric
and retail stores where taxed
and more than twice what the state estimated before voters
ceed aslong as the stateskeep
pot will be available. Sales tons of the drug in 2013. are expected to begin Jan. 1 in The median figure they Colorado, while Washington came up w it h i s 17 5 m et- isn't expected to have stores ric tons. That's more than 6 open until late spring. The U.S. million ounces, enough for Justice Department is allowaround 340 million joints, ing the experiments to proapproved Washington's legal weed law last year.
pot away from the black market and children, and meet
other federal law enforcement But off icials h av e b e en priorities. aware since June that RAND's In Washington, officials are researchers were headed to- not hoping to capture the en-
Continued from B1 "There are always some kids that come on the radar at the last minute," Mackey said.
"The problem is always finding enough cops to take care of all the kids." This year, several deputies
from Jefferson County trav-
eled to Deschutes County to make sure there were enough volunteers to take all the kids
shopping, Mackey said. Deschutes County Sheriff's Lt. Deron McMaster, who has
participated in the program for seven years, said this is his favorite time of year be-
"When the holidays
come, it can be kind of a bummer for some kids. My family was by no means rich, but we always had a good Christmas. There were always presents under the tree, and there was always a good dinner. Some of these kids don't get
nician wit h
that."
with the Redmond Police De-
— Deschutes County Sheriff's Lt. Deron McMaster
cause he loves seeing the kids' faces light up while they shop for presents for family members. "When the holidays come, who have maybe had a bad it can be kind of a bummer experience with law enforcefor some kids," McMaster ment one way or another," said. "My family was by no McMaster said."Often these means rich, but we always students have heard family had a good Christmas. There members saying negative were always presents under things about cops." the tree, and there was alShelly Lilienthal, a 17-yearways a good dinner. Some of old junior at Redmond High these kids don't get that."
In addition to providing kids the opportunity to buy gifts for family members, the program also aims to bring students and law enforce-
School who has participated
in the program two years in a row, said it's changed her view of police officers. "I used to have an authority problem," she said. "This ment personnel together on opened my eyes, because I've a one-on-one basis in an at- been able to meet them and tempt to humanize officers. see they're just people doing "We try to engage students a job."
1045 PORTLAND, OR 97232 PHONE:971-673-0761 FAX:971-673-0762 EMAIL:boli.mail©state.or.us WEB:www.oregon.gov/boli
CONGRESS U.S. SENATE • SEN. JEFFMERKLEY,D-ORE. 107 RUSSELLSENATEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON,D.C.20510 PHONE:202-224-3753 WEB:http://merkley.senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNEAVE., SUITE 208 BEND, OR97701 PHONE:541-318-1298 • SEN. RON WYDEN, D-ORE. 223 DIRKSENSENATEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON,D.C.20510 PHONE:202-224-5244 WEB:http://wyden.senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE 107 BEND, OR97701 PHONE:541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSEOF REPRESENTATIVES •REP.GREG WALDEN, R-HOOD RIVER 2182 RAYBURNHOUSEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C.20515 PHONE:202-225-6730 WEB:http://walden.house.gov BENDOFFICE: 1051 N.W. BOND ST., SUITE 400 BEND, OR97701 PHONE:541-389-4408 FAX:541-389-4452
LEGISLATURE SENATE • SEN. TEDFERRIOLI, R-DISTRICT 30(JEFFERSON,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., 3-323 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1950 EMAIL:sen.tedferrioli@state. OI'.Us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ ferrioli •SEN.TIMKNOPP, R-DISTRICT27 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., 3-423 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1727 EMAIL:sen.timknopp©state. OI;Us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ knopp •SEN.DOUG WHITSETT, R-DISTRICT28 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., 3-303 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1728 EMAIL:sen.dougwhitsett©state. or.Us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ whitsett HOUSE OFREPRESENTATIVES • REP. JASON CONGER, R-DISTRICT54(PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-477 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1454 EMAIL:rep.jasonconger©state.
STATE OF OREGON •GOV.JOHN KITZHABER, D 180 STATECAPITOL, 900 COURTST. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-378-4582 FAX:503-378-6872 WEB:http://governor.oregon. gov • SECRETARY OFSTATEKATE BROWN, D 136 STATECAPITOL SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1616 FAX:503-986-1616 EMAIL:oregon.sos©state.or.us • TREASURER TEDWHEELER, D 159OREGON STATECAPITOL 900 COURTST. N.E. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-378-4329 EMAIL:oregon.treasurer©state.
OI'.Us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ conger • REP. JOHN HUFFMAN R-DISTRICT 59(PORTIONOF JEFFERSON) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-478 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1459 EMAIL:rep.johnhuffman@state. OI'.Us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ huffman •REP.MIKE MCLANE, R-DISTRICT 55 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-385 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1455 EMAIL:rep.mikemclane©state.
OI;Us
WEB:www.ost.state.or.us • ATTORNEY GENERALELLEN ROSENBLUM,D 1162 COURT ST. N.E. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-378-4400 FAX:503-378-40 I7 WEB:www.doj.state.or.us •LABOR COMMISSIONER BRAD AVAKIAN 800 N.E. OREGON ST.,SUITE
OI;Us
WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ mclane • REP. GENE WHISNANT, R-DISTRICT53(PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-471 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1453 EMAIL:rep.genewhisnant@state. OI'.Us
s •
t h e D e schutes
County S heriff's O f f ice. Griggs participated in both Bend events as well as the one in Redmond.
"It's great, watching these guys three days in a row," she said. "All three were so excit-
ed to take care of the other people in their family. They really understood the spirit of Christmas."
2813 CC
erett Ramsdell, 17, shopped with Officer Allen Speck partment. He purchased two electric razors, one for him and one for his dad. He had
Your checkbook at home. NO mOh8$ OUtOfyOur POCket.
a coffee pot for his mom and was still looking for presents for his two siblings. "My favorite part is being out of school," he said. T his is
Q Oup to 72 months
Down +
t h e f o u rt h y e ar
S peck participated in t h e Shop with a Cop program. He laughed when Ramsdell said he most enjoyed not having to go to school. "This is probably one of the best parts of the job," Speck said. "We do a lot of things that are positive for the community, but this is
013 GLIAutobahn
Leave
High school student Ev-
On selected models. On Approved Credit. Financing through VWCredit
one where we get to relax. It's
great seeing how the community continues to give to the program." — Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com
013 Touareg @>> Passat g
4 Iks~ae
Return
great to come back from a long keepin' on," Taylor said. "Get day of dass to a good meal." all your work done and don't Students were also interest- stress about it." ed to hear about their former The session provided some dassmates'living situation. encouragement for some stu-
Continued from B1 Taylor did say she felt the IB program prepared her for college. At Harvard, Farina has four dents in the dass. "We're always told that IB Perhaps what piqued the roommates with w hom she high school students' interest shares housing. She told stu- will help in college," Sam Rasthe most were the living ar- dents she gets along well with tovich, a Bend High senior, rangements and food situation all of her roommates. However, said. "But it was good hearing at each graduate's respective coming back home for winter it from them. It's troubling right college. Many students were break has had its advantages. now to be doing all this work, "I can actually sleep and but it's nice to know that it pays surprised by 2012 Bend High graduate Wes Brown's account there's real food in the fridge," off." "I don't feel as stressed about of food at his Oregon State Uni- Farina said. "It's awesome." versity fraternity. In terms of advice for the out- college now," Ethan Harlig, 16, "The food i s d elicious," going seniors, most of the grad- sald. Brown said. "We get a person- uates had the same message. — Reporter:541-383-0354, "Just work hard and keep on al chef at the fraternity, and it's mhehoe@bendbuffetin.corrt
Get ATaste For Food, Home Sr Garden Every7uesday In AT HOME TheBulletin
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On approved credit through Volkswagen Credit. Supplies limited. Photos for illustration only (2013 models shown). Offer ends I2ist/2013. ©2013 Volkswagen of America, Ino.
FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON COVER OREGON
AROUND THE STATE
ea ea ers Iscllssln ixes wi newcom anies
Wyden staffer appointed to OregonHouse—TheMultnomah County Board ofCommissioners hasselected Democrat Barbara Smith Warner of Portland for avacant seat in theOregon Houseof Representatives. Commissioners unanimously backedSmith Warner on Tuesday.Thecounty said SmithWarnertold commissioners she's a field representative for U.S.Sen. RonWyden. Shealso said she's involved in herchildren's school and herneighborhood association in Northeast Portland. Smith Warner is to replaceMichael Dembrow,who moved up to theSenate after Jackie Dingfelder resigned towork for Portland MayorCharlie Hales.
Man SuSpeCted in11 burglarieS —Medford policearrested By Gosia Wozniacka and Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
P ORTLAND —
With its
struggling health insurance exchange still not working,
Asenior informationtechnology official withOregon's troubled healthinsurance exchangeresignedThursday. Carolyn Lawsonstepped down aschief information officerofthe OregonHealth Authorityand theDepartment of HumanServices for"personal reasons,"theagencies' leaders wrote in amemo. Lawson oversawthedevelopment ofthetechnology behind theonlineenrollment system forCoverOregon, whichis a separate,semi-autonomousstateagency.
Oregon is back in touch with
a technology vendor it considered but spurned multiple times last year while sticking to an ambitious plan to build a complex, online portal from scratch. T hree months a f ter
the
failed launch of its online health-insurance e n rollment
system, the state's renewed Don Ryan /The Associated Press file photo discussions with outside ven- Instructor Tammy Maddalena, left, works with Jennifer Mimms as dors show its desperation to she and others work to process applications last month for Cover find a solution. Cover Oregon Oregon. As a result of the health exchange's online problems, the has had to rely exclusively on state has begun discussing solutions with technology vendors paper applications and had to that didn't have a hand in building the website. hiremore than 400 workers to processthem manually. A Cover Oregon spokesman IT that have contacted us with people, though not without confirmed that officials have what they feel are potential glitches. recently heard from E xeter
Group Inc., a Boston-based software company that says it's already built an exchange that can plug into the existing technology the state is using. With the primary information technology contractor, Oracle Corp., missing deadline after deadline, the state also hired a law firm to review its
contract with the company. Officials said they've withheld about $20 million in Oracle payments. "There are a lot of vendors in
a man accused ofcausing aspike in business burglaries. Lt. Mike Budreau said47-year-old Jerry McDonald is suspected of being responsible for11 burglaries that occurred betweenNov. 21andDec.6. McDonald wasarrested Dec. 7 ona warrant out of Montana andwas charged in theburglaries onWednesday,after detectives examined surveillance videoandinterviewed him. He'sbeencharged with burglary, attempted burglary, theft, criminal mischief andfailure to register as a sexoffender. Bail wasset at about $400,000.
ACgNerOregon olcial fesigns
Air quality closes Harrisdnrg schools — Harrisburg schools were closedThursday becauseof air-quality problems in the cafeteria at Harrisburg Elementary School. Theproblem is reportedly related to mold abatementefforts following the recent break of awater pipe.The school district said in apress releasethat the problem prevents it from offering food to students. POSSidle maChete Slaying —Linn County deputies are investigating an apparent murder-suicide involving aEugenewoman and her boyfriend. Undersheriff BruceRiley saidThursdaythat 34-year-old Jacqueline Marroquin died from injuries suffered from a machete attack, and her longtime boyfriend —51-year-old Rolando DePaz— hanged himself from a tree.Marroquin's relatives reported her missing Monday night,and Riley said thewoman's car wasfound the nextday in rural Harrisburg. Deputies discovered bloodand amachete, andfound the woman's body 50yards away. Detectives searching from theair said they spotted the boyfriend's bodyabout ahalf-mile from the car.
— Ftom wifereporls
sooner about the company's offering. It's not clear whether Oregon solutions," said Michael Cox, a In early 2011, Oregon respokesman for Cover Oregon. is considering the company's ceived $48 million from the "We'd be foolish not to listen to software as a potential quick- federal government to start them." fix solution. Cox declined to working on an exchange. The In a pitch made last year to say what role Exeter or other state had been preparing to Chief Information Officer Car- vendors might play. Matt Ca- modernize the internal comolyn Lawson, Exeter said its hir, Exeter's senior vice presi- puter systems for the Oregon OneGate product is built on an dent of global sales, declined to Health Authority and the DeOracle technology stack, which comment. partment of Human Services, the state is already using, and Emails obtained by The As- so theprojects were blended. ties Oracle products together sociated Press show the state Oracle was selected to provide into a working exchange. Ex- flirted with bringing Exeter the technology. eter designed the consumer on board at least three times At the end of that year, Expart of the exchanges in Ver- during 2012, including a push eter approached Lawson to mont and Hawaii, which are by legislators who were angry present its proposal for the up and running and enrolling to find out they hadn't been told whole project.
— From wire reports
/
Drop in and join us for some music, food, activities and The Christmas Story I J
December 22nd
2:00- 4:00pm 6A Franklin Ave. Bend, OR •
Guilty plea
Q
entered in multi-state
Q
•
•
•
•
authorities said was part of a white supremacist scheme. Corey Wyatt, 29, pleaded guilty on Wednesday to charges of being an accesso-
•
s
• I I •
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DOORBUSTER
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Jane Shoemaker said Wyatt and Pedersen knew each oth-
FRI 7AM-1PM O R SAT 7AM -1PM; CANNOT BE USED ON DOORBUSTERS ORDEALS OF THE DAY
er in prison. In July 2011, after
* ~Q ~
the Oregon coast, Pedersen
told Wyatt he needed a gun to commit robberiesand carry out a white supremacist revo-
lution, Shoemaker said. She said federal prosecu-
'/
12.99
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they were both released and went camping together on
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DOORBUSTER
charges of kidnapping, carjacking and murder. They are accused of killing a man on
appearance was his first in the case. Almost a dozen of his friends and family members, including his wife Kimberly, attended.
•
ALL JUNIORS' SWEATEPS Doo*uster 11.80-$16. Reg. 29.50-34.50, after 1pm: 19.99-21.99. From Pink Rose, Fang & more.
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ersen and helped Pedersen and his girlfriend, Holly Ann Grigsby, with a stolen vehicle. Wyatt could r eportedly face up to 15 years in prison
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JEANSDoorbuster 19.6M9.99. Reg. $49-69.50, after 1pm: 24.50-49.99. Statusdenim makers, our Style & Co. Denim, Charter Club. Misses.*Weblo 1100801. Women's prices slightlyhigher.
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firearm to David "Joey" Ped-
are awaiting trial on federal
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ry after the fact and unlawful
disposition of a firearm. Policesaid hetransferred a
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a three-state killing spree that
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The Associated Press
pleaded guilty in federal court to helping a couple charged in
.crosschurchbend.or
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crime case PORTLAND A mixed-martial a r t s f i g h ter
/
S
I $]O OFF WOW ALL SALE & CLEARANCE APPAREL AN D SEI E(:T
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tors were prepared to prove
Wyatt's wife, who is not a convicted felon, purchased a 9 mm Lugar pistol. Shoemaker said Corey Wyatt gave it to Pedersen, who used it in an attempted carjacking in Port-
land in September. A
fed e ra l
i ndi c t ment
against Pedersen and Grigsby accuses them of kidnapping and killing 19-year-old Cody Myers on the Oregon Coast and then traveling to Eureka, Calif., where they allegedly killed Reginald Alan Clark.
•s•s
m stss
Fine jewelry doorbusters are only at stores that carry fine jewelry. W REG. & ORIG. PRICESARE OFFERING PRICES AND SAVINGS MAYNOT BE BASED ON ACTUALSALES. S OME ORI6. PRICESNOT IN EFFECT DIJ RING THE PAST90 DAYS. ONE DAY SALE P RICES IN EFFECT 12/20 8< 12/21/2013. MERCHANDISE WILL BE ON SALE AT THESE &OTHER SALE PRICES THROUGH 1/4/14, EXCEPTAs NOTED. * Intermediate pricereductions may have been taken. 4 All caratweights(ct. t.w.) are approximate; variance may be.05 carat. ** May contain rosecut diamonds. Jewelryphotos may be enlarged or enhanced to show detail. F ine jewelry at select stores; log on to macys.com for locations. A Imostall gemstones have been treatedto enhancetheir beauty & require special care, log on to macys.com/gemstones or ask your sales professional. E xtra savings taken off of already-reduced prices; edoorbuster" prices reflect extra savings. D oorbusters & clearance items are available while supplies last. A dvertised merchandise may not be carried at your local M acy's & selection may vary bystore. P rices & merchandise may differat macys.com. Electric items & luggage showncarries mfrs'warranties; to see a mfr's warranty at no charge before purchasing, visit a store or write to: Ma cy's Warranty D ept., PO B ox 1026, M aryland H eights, MO 63043, attn: Consumer Warranties. *Enter the Web ID in the search box at IVIACYS.COIVIto order. N 3111327. OPEN A MACY'5 ACCOUNT FOR EXTRA 20% SAVINGS THE FIRST 2 DAYS, UP TO $100, WITH MORE REWARDS TO COME. Macy'scredit card is available subject to credit approval; new account savings valid the day your accountis opened and the next day; excludes services, selected licensed departments, gift cards, restaurants, gourmet food & wine. The newaccount savings are limited to a total of $100; application must qualify for immediate approval to receive extra savings; employees not eligible.
B4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
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I2sr4Is regon proposes to ban smoking in state parks, with
Jl
the goal of addressing "wellness issues," reducing forest fires and controlling litter. Although it's become fashionable for government to ban unhealthy activities — which dearly smoking is — we thinkthis move goes too far. The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department says the move is in service to Gov. John Kitzhaber's August 2012 executive order to restrict tobacco use in state parks and recreation areas. While the governor cited wellness and forest fires, the concern with litter comes from the parks department.Spokesman Chris Havel said the move would help control "plastic pollution" because people drop cigarette butts, which don't decompose,according to an Associated Press report. The proposal would affect 12 percent to 18 percent of park visitors, or 1.3 million people, according to parks department estimates. It would ban smoking from "trails, developed day use areas, waysides, park roadways and common areas of campgrounds." Smoking would still be permitted in "personal vehicies and camping units; designated campsites in developed overnight camping areas" and where approvedforAmericanIndianceremo-
nies, the department says. Officials expect a 'high level of compliance," with fines likely tobe $60 to $110. The concern about wellness is appropriate forindoor spaces where second-hand smoke endangers others. In the great outdoors, that risk is small and certainly doesn't justify this intrusion into a person's right to a legal activity. As for the risk of forest fires, we're talking about parks and trails, not wilderness areas. A more limited ban could address this concern if evidence can be offered that it's a significantproblem. Litter comes from various sources;must we ban food and drink because containers don't always land in the proper trash or recycling can'? Again, aweak argument. You'llbe able to express your opinion to the parks department when it holds a hearing at the Bend Park & Recreation District office in Bend at 7pm. on Jan. 14. Sending a wellness message has value, but government shouldn't get to make your decisions, whether it's smoking, high-fat ice cream or oversized sodabottles.
M 1Vickel's Worth ACA penalizes those
regon's health care circus that brought you the embarrassment and disaster of Cover Oregon isalready dreaming up the next round of reform. It's more can-do attitude from a state government that has proven it can'tdo. The next experiment to be inflicted on Oregonians is ramping up state control ofhealth care. The Oregon Health Policy Board has shipped off the plan to Gov. John Kitzhaber. Back in happier days, Kitzhaber told the board in June he wanted more ideas to lower costs, improve care and expand access to care. S pecifically, he wanted to f i nd ways to mitigate cost shifting, decrease health premiums and give health care more transparency and accountability. Those are things almost every Oregonianwants. The board's plan has three big recommendations. One is to require more public reporting of health care utilization, cost, quality and health equity. That information could create a better marketplace for consumers and givehealth care pro-
fessionals better tools to figure out what works. The second is to have the state governmentfl ex itsregulatory muscle to control costs. It is developing a "sustainable rate of growth" for health care costs. It would presumably also need the power to forbid or punish those who transgress as it already does with health insurance rates. And the third recommendation is toexpand and improve primary and chronic care. One example the board looked at is Rhode Island, which mandates thatinsurers spend more onprimary care.That comes at the expense of specialized care. These fresh reform novelties are a welcome roost for the state officials ashamed of Cover Oregon's failure. They blame the problems on somebody else. They tingle at another chance to improve health What couldpossibly go wrong? But just try singing that song to someone whose family will not have promised health insurance come Jan. 1. Oregonians need less hubris from their dreamy reformers.
Texas executes one.
Bill Sugnet when it appears that America is beBend My husband and I had a high-de- coming a major oil producer, to lobductible, relatively low m o nthly by for a change in the law currently How about underground premium plan through private in- requiring any exports of American surance. We saved over the years petroleum products to go through and set money aside to pay for med- the refining process here before Reviewing the t h r ee "possible icalexpenses. shipment. They want to export raw plans"for the campus, I see two Then the ACA w iped out our American crude, straightaway; no eights (parking) on each. I've heard plan. The private insurance com- "value added." theremay be as many as 5,000 stu"Value added" is great policy. It's dents on the campus. The supportpany presented a new plan not much better than the original with my hope that U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, ing, administrators, service persona monthly increase of 200 percent. as head of the energy committee, nel, professors and visitors will add This premium is unaffordable on stands against this request. several hundred more people on-site.
parkingforcampus?
retirement income, unless we dip
State dreamers conjure
more bealtb plan fixes
Journal reported that Exxon Mobil wants to use this moment in time,
who plannedandsaved
All Americans will benefit from
I don't understand how the limited
into savings every month. lower energy prices and a possi- parking areas will be able to accomWill the ACA and resulting con- ble resurgence in manufacturing. modate the thousand or more cars sequences slowly bankrupt citizens Good manufacturing jobs are gen- coming to the campus every day. who have worked hard, saved mon- erally "family wage" — exactly Some of the plans inciude filling ey and planned for the future? what the U.S. needs. the pumice mine hole: this could We talked with a private agent If only "value added" was re- add several million dollars to the trained to answer questions and quired on raw Oregon logs, cut and cost. Was any consideration given fax paperwork to the Cover Ore- slated for export. to building an underground parkgon exchange.After a month, our Wayne Mayo ing garage in this hole and putting paperwork remains "in the sysScappoose a building on top or converting it to tem somewhere," but this is all we green space'? know. I suspect our enrollment has Gentry Wade been sidelined to help those consid- decision was incorrect sunriver
Court's business-friendly
ered more at risk. Meanwhile, our
insurance company reoffered the original plan, and we hope it is still affordable.
I question the accuracy of your recent editorial t i tled, "Ban on
speech in quixotic quest to save democracy." You suggest that the unlimited funding of political campaigns by corporationsis a free speech
If we ran our household in the
same inconsistent and flippant manner as the federal and state
governments do business,there would be trouble. Cover Oregon matter. I submit that it was a busimight come through before the ness-friendly decision by the Sudeadline to notify our insurance preme Court and an incorrect one. company of intent to stay, but I Corporations were created by doubt it. Ironically, the medical, legislation, not the Constitution. out-of-pocket emergency we should They have always been subject have saved for all these years was to limitations, such as campaign the ACA. financing laws. The enormous fiMarianne Pearson nancial power of artificial orgaBend nizations (corporations, including unions) should not be allowed to overwhelm the voting power of individuals. in the U.S.
Require oil refining On Dec. 12, The Wall
Donate bloodthe gift of life This Christmas, you might consider giving the gift of life. Better yet, start a habit of giving the gift of life. I am talking about donating a pint of blood every eight weeks. The Red Cross says that everypint donated saves up to three lives, 24
lives per gallon. Over a lifetime, one can easily donate 25 gallons starting at 20 years old — 600 lives in a life-
time. There have been times in my life that being a major blood donor was the most contributing factor to
self esteem in an otherwise bleak period of life. This opportunity is available to the majority of people. It
is time to just do it. Gordon Shaw
As it has been said, we will know S treet that corporations are people when
Bend
Letters policy
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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain 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 TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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Kids with disabilities face challenges — big and small t heart conditions and other anomaurday that was just that, a cele- lies— no surprisewhen you learn bration of a life ended too soon. It that missing or malformed genes and wasn't the sort of event that left ev- chromosomes have a broad range of eryone sobbing, and for me, at least, impacts on the body. And what haptears shed were for the young wom- pens with one child will not necesan's parents. sarily happen to the next. Kids with major disabilities too ofYet for many families, the raw fear ten die young. of physical and or intellectual probIn fact, kids with what are clini- lems that their children might face cally termed perinatal conditions or fades pretty quickly. The big issues attended a celebration of life Sat-
congenital anomalies account for
tend to be identified early on, I think,
the single largest group of deaths in and while dealing with them is never children from birth to age 19 — more easy, the challenges may not always than 25percent. Only about 8 percent be unexpected. Too, humans crave of deaths in the same age group can routine, and even crisis can begin to be traced to car accidents. feel routine after a time. Parents of kids with disabilities Many smaller challenges are not can be painfully aware of the poten- life threatening or do not have a matial problems their children face. jor impact on a child's daily life. Some genetic intellectual disabilWe saw that with my daughter ities, among them Down and Wil- Mary, who has Williams Syndrome. liams syndromes, can come with She had lazy eye as a young child
JANET
STEVENS
IIIak and a variety of small problems that
made us the darlings of several specialists around town. The amblyopia required a daily eye patch; the rest of the difficulties required watching but not much in the way of treatment. Once parents gain that sense of fa-
miliarity or routine, something else happens, if my experience is typical. We realize we want for our kids just
what you want for yours. After Mary was diagnosed, I can remember being asked by a psychiatrist just what my expectations for her had been before. I told him I didn't have any, but that simply wasn't true.
I expected she'd go to college, have er when a child doesn't look or act a career, perhaps marry and have just like everyone else. For a parent, children of her own. discovering that can be heartbreakLife hasn't turned out that way, yet ing. Worse, almost, is discovering so far it's been pretty darned wonder- years later that your child was very ful. I may not have a daughter who aware ofher friendless status atsome is completely independent; I do have time in her life. one who is funny and clever in her Parents of kids with disabilities own way, who relishes jokes, even want to change that. We know that bad ones and who wants me to be our kids may seem different; at the happy. same time, we know that underneath But something else has happened the odd posture or visible tic lives a as well. person just like any other, worthy of We all, whether our children have love, respect and, yes, friendship. disabilities or not, want them to have The motherof the young woman friends. It isn't an expectation, really. whose life we celebrated mentioned It's just the way life is. But for some her desire, that her daughter have kids with disabilities, friendship can friends, was fulfilled. I'm glad. be hard to find unless they're lucky, as Mary has been, to have friends on I just hope every kid with a disabilthe job or in another small group. ity has the same chance. Making friends can be difficult — Janet Stevens is deputy editor even for "normal" kids. It's far toughof The Bulletin.
FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN 6 5
Classes
BITUARIES James "Jim" Edward Benish, of Sunriver Oct. 11, 1943 - Dec. 14, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Recitation of the Rosary will begin at 2:30 PM followed by a Memorial Mass at3:00 PM, today, Friday December 20, 2013, at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Sunriver. Contributionsmay be made
velop their own paintbrush designs, choosing from a
ormer u itive in reat train eist iesa reeman By Henry Chu
Christmases later brings to
a close a long-running saga
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org
LONDON — He vowed to live a few more months out
that has fascinated and re-
Services are pending and will be announced at at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
The Humane Societyof Central Oregon, www.hsco.org or Ducks Unlimited, www.ducks.org.
William "Bill" M. Francis, of Redmond Jan. 16, 1939 - Dec. 12, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services will be held in Idaho at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Hospice of Redmond 732 SW 23rd Street Redmond, OR 97756 www.hospiceofredmond.org
Ida Hortense BoyCe Jeee17, 1917- Dec. 16, 2013 Ida Hortense was born on a cattle r a nc h i n A l m o , Idaho, one of 10 children. S he a t t e n de d Br i g h a m Y oung University and ob t ained a teaching certificate. She t aught i n Idaho 4 Falls, Idaho, where she m et an d married Ida 6oyce Richard Lyle Boyce. I n 1941, they m o ved t o P ortland, Oregon, for Ly l e t o w o r k i n sh i p yar d s . They resided i n P o r t l and till 1 9 6 4 , w h en t hey m oved to L aCen t e r , W ashington, w h er e L y l e w as a bl e t o r e a l i z e h i s dream of raising horses. T hey m o ved t o B e n d i n 1 985, where L yl e d i e d i n 1988. I d a H o r t ense th en moved to St.George, Utah, but returned to Bend, and was here several years before she died. I da Hortense w orked i n the Portland Public School s ystem, r et irin g i n 1 9 7 8 . She taught m o stly e i ghth g rade at James John a n d C hief J o seph s c h ools i n North Portland. S he is survived b y f o u r c hildren, K a t h r y n He m ingway, Tim B o y ce, Jerry B oyce and Sue An n P u a loa. She had seven gr andc hildren , ei gh t gr ea t r andchildren, an d m a n y ind nieces and n ephews w ho c a red f o r h e r . S h e also leaves behind Kharma and L o b r i n ski , h e r be loved cat and dog. S ervices will b e h e l d a t the K n o t t Ro ad L D S C hapel a t 1 : 0 0 p . m . , o n Friday, D ec e m be r 20, 2013.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:
Gen. Jesus Gutierrez Rebollo, 79: A Mexican drug czar was arrested and convicted
for aiding a powerful drug cartel. Died Thursday in Mexico City. John Cornforth Jr., 96: Winner of a Nobel Prize in sci-
pelled England for half a cenof spite. He hung on for four tury, sparking heated debate more years in a last great over the competing demands cackle at the establishment of justice and mercy, and that spent decades trying to whether Biggs was an unreget him behind bars to atone pentant felon who was party for one of the most sensation- to a violent crime or merely al crimes in British history. a lovable rogue who loved to Ronnie Biggs, who helped party. commit the"Great Train Rob-
about the spectacular heist,
afee.
which was once dubbed the
But Biggs also gave am-
"crime of the century." His death was announced
munition to his critics with statements like one he made in a 1997 interview.
Wednesday on his official Twitter feed. He died some-
time during the previous night at a nursing home outside London where he had
"I don't regret the fact that
I was involved in the train
robbery. As a matter of fact, I'm quite pleased with the
spent several years battling various illnesses. Biggs was a household
idea I was involved, because
name in Britain for 50 years,
His role in the robbery was almost an afterthought. The
a convicted criminal who
it's given me a little place in history," Biggs said.
heist's mastermind, Bruce who lived large — and at Reynolds, an antiques dealer large — on the sun-drenched who went bythe nickname "Napoleon," invited Biggs to beaches of Brazil and who finally gave himself up, in join late in the process of putthoroughly British fashion, to ting together a daring plan to a tabloid newspaper in 2001. ambush the Glasgow-to-LonActing on a desire to set foot don mail train. in his native land one last By then, Ronald Arthur time, Biggs flew back to En- Biggs, who was born Aug. 8, gland amid a media clamor 1929, in Surrey, south of Lonand surrendered to authori- don, was a carpenter looking ties, who immediately locked for some easy money. On his himup. 34th birthday, in 1963, Biggs In August 2009, the British and 14 other masked thieves government relented from forced the mail train to stop its unyielding stance and re- by turning a track signal to leased Biggs from custody, red and swarming aboard concluding that — at age 79 under cover of darkness. and nearly incapacitated in They beat the driver sensehis hospital bed — he no lon- less with an iron bar; the ger posed a threat to society. man never fully recovered Frail but unbowed, Biggs from his head injuries. Then joked that he would try to they made off with 120 maillast until Christmas "to spite bags stuffed with unmarked those who want me dead." currency amounting to 2.6 His death nearly f ive million pounds — well in excess of $65 million today. The gang divvied up the loot in a farmhouse, which they paid some people to had broken out of p r ison,
Obituary
policy
Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-6177825.
burn down afterward. But
the arson did not go off as planned, leaving behind enoughevidence forauthorities to track them down. For the British, caught in
the grip of imperial decline, the robbery was a national sensation, the "crime of the
century." Authorities arrested and convicted morethan a doz-
en people, including Biggs, in connection with the heist. But most of the stolen money
wasneverrecovered. Barely 15 months into his 30-year sentence at Wandsworth Prison in L o ndon,
Biggs managed to escape in July 1965 by scaling a 30-foot wall with a rope ladder. He fled in a furniture van and
Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the secondday after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.
eventuallywashed up in Australia, spending much of his
Phone: 541-617-7825
Wednesday 12/25............ Thursday 12/26................
ence and one of the experts
on the way living creatures create important chemical compounds. Died Saturday in
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020
share of the stolen cash along
the way on plastic surgery to alter his appearance.
ing feathers, sponges and cotton balls. They also had
•
ReaI E state LLC
•
to build a "beanstalk" ca-
pable of holding up an egg, and a popsicle-stick house able to withstand wind. Sec-
ond-graders were focused on insulation, tasked with
designing a cooler to preserve an ice pop. "My favorite part of Project Lead The Way was test-
ing a car we designed to protect an egg inside from breaking," said Piper Brannin, 9, a fourth-grader. Piper's mother, Heidi Brannin, said her daughter had "really enjoyed the chance to build and test her own designs." "I'm a scientist, and I think the earlier a student, especially a female student,
is exposed to science and math, the less scary those
subjects will appear," Brannin said. The school's administrator, Joe Bales, said the P LTW c u r r iculum h a s helped teachers more thor-
oughly engage their youngest students. "As
educators, w e 're
always looking to teach critical thinking, and with P LTW's h a n ds-on a p -
T
proach, students are able to have fun in ciass while also learning," Bales said. Liz Beaty, Morning Star C hristian's l ea d P L T W teacher, traveled to India-
napolis in October for training. Back in Bend, Beaty helped her colleagues prepare for teaching Launch modules.
y~
"We've hadPLTW at the
middle-school level, so people knew what to expect," she said. "But at the elementary level, it's amazing
C'h
t
to see how much kids are
engaged. You have 5-yearolds who behaviorally act their age, but during the modules, they start working well together and become excited to work o n t h eir
projects."
PLTW's Launch curricu-
lum will become available to all schools in the 2014-15
schoolyear. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from St
Forest maintenance plan finalized The DeschutesNationalForest has finalized plans tostart logging, mowingandburning woods just west of Bendstarting this winter. The WestBendProject will cover 25,696acres in the Bend-Ft. RockRanger District of the forest, including thePhil's Trail system, Virginia Meissner nordic trails and aportion of the Deschutes RiverTrail. TheU.S. Forest Service will post information about temporary trail closures at trailheadsduring the project, which is expectedto
However you honor the season, may you be with those you love most.
last into fall 2014.
The final planhadnomajor changes from draft plans released inApril andJuly. Deschutes National Forest Supervisor JohnAllen signed the final planWednesday.He and other forest officials say the project will improvethe health of the forest west of Bend while reducing the likelihood of wildfire. — Bulletin staffreports
Find It All Online bendbullefin.com
A2 4
2013 Christmas Holiday Deadlines PAID OBITUARIES Wednesday 12/25.............. Thursday 12/26..................
DEATH NOTICES
DEADLINE ..... Tuesday 12/24 10 a.m. ..... Tuesday 12/24 10 a.m. DEADLINE
•y
~ •
....... Tuesday 12/24 11:30 a.m. ....... Tuesday 12/24 11:30 a.m.
Fax: 541-322-7254
Bend, OR 97708 — From wire reports
him-
bery" of 1963, fulfilled a wish self as the latter, cultivating by dying a free man after a an image as a catch-me-iflife greatly spent on the lam you-can figure who lived a in notoriously colorM and playboy's life on the beaches conspicuous fashion. Ever of Rio de Janeiro, merrily the publicity hound, Biggs, thumbing his nose at the au84,couldscarcely havetim ed thorities across the Atlantic his passing better — just while marketing himself as hours before the BBC was to a tourist attraction to visitors broadcast a new miniseries he'd regale with stories — for
Email: obits@bendbullelin. com
Australia.
H e certainly saw
l~ <t
thegarnergrouptl
variety of materials, includ-
Los Angeles Times
Sept. 18, 1955- Dec. 8, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services:
F,i - Llg
dergartners have had to de-
to:
Robert John Cathcart, Jr., of La Pine
)+
=
Continued from 61 As part of Launch, kin-
FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES
: :P~)g ~
I'
The Bulletin Obituary Dept. 541-617-7825
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B6
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWeather Central, LP ©2013.
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INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
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CONDITIONS
FRONTS
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HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
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BEND ALMANAC
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Mercur y....725am......405pm. HigNlow..............32f23 24hourse nding4pm*.. 001" Venus......928am......647pm. Remrdhigh........59in194i Monthtodate..........181" Mars......1233 a m.....1232 pm. Remrd low......... -5 in1984 Average monthtodate... 139" Jupiter......s:40 p.m......8:57 a.m. Average high..............39 Year todate............ 6.39" Satum......413 a m...... 214 p m. Average low............... 22 Average year to dale.... 10 55" Uranus....1222 pm.....1251 a m. Barometiicpressureat4 pm3014 Record24hours...074in1929
Sunrise ioday...... 7:37 a.m. MOOnphaSeS Pzm Last New Fi rst Fu l l Sunrisetomorrow .. 7:37a.m. Sunsettumorrow... 4:30 p.m. Moonnse today.... 8.02 p.m. Mlnset mday.... 9:28 a.m. Dec. 25 Jan. 1 Jan. 7 Jan. 15
*Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX ~ SKI REPORT
OREGON CITIES
Yesterday F riday S aturdayThe higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotals through4 p.m. for solar at noon. Astoria ........ 42f26/0.00.....49/43/r.....47/44/sh Baker City 30/19/trace....28/22/sn..... 34/25/rs Brookings 49/32/0.00....53/44/sh.....54/42/sh Burns.......... .32/9/0.00.... 31/24/rs......38/22/c Eugene 35/28/0.04.....44/39/r.....46/34/sh Xlamath Falls ...33/1 9/0.00..... 35/31/r.....40/21/pc Lakeview....... 28/21/0.00..... 33/31 lr.....40/1 9/pc La Pine........ 30/21/0.00.... 37/32/rs.....40/21/pc Medford 44/25/0.00.....42/36/r.....45/29/sh Newport 43/30/0.00..... 50/45/r.....49/42/sh North Bend.....45/30/0.00..... 50/43/r.....52/42/sh Ontario 34/1 7/0.02 ....27/24/sn.....34/25/sn Pendleton 33/22/trace.... 39/38/rs.....47/31/pc Portland 37f28/0.06.....44/41/r.....46/40/sh Prineville 30f22/0.00.... 39/35/rs.... A4/31/pc Redmond 32/23/0.04.... 39/36/rs.... A5/28/pc Roseburg 38/30/0.17.....40/40/r.....44/36/sh Salem 38/28/0.05.....44/40/r.....48/38/sh Sisters......... 33/23/0.00.... 3536/rs.....42/27/pc The Dages 43/29/0.00.... 39/38/rs.....47/36/pc
0
LDW MEDIUM HIGH 4
6
8
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Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m.yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 28 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland....... . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report
Snow levelandroadconditions rePresenting condi tionsat5P.m. yesterday.Key:TT.= Traction Tires.
ijmbe~drne 00 warner canyon........ . . . . . .0.0...no report Pass Conditions Wi gamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0 .0... no report 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 atCabbage Hig.......... Carry chains orT.Tires AsPen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-28 Hwg 20 at Santiam pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California...... 1 .... ..25-30 Hwy. 26 at GovemmentCamp.. Carry chains or T.Tires Hm; 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Care chains or TTires Squaw Valley, California....... . 1 ... . ..19-21 Hwy.58atwigameue Pass.... CarrychainsorT.Tires SunValleY, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .15-22 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy.242 atMcXenzie Pass........d osed forseason For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.trip«he«k.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatberPcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-pariial clouds,c-clouds, hhaze, shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sfsnowRumessnsnow, i ice,rsrainanowmix,w wind,f fog, drdrizzle,tr trace
* * 4 4 y *** * * 4 4 4 '** * * *
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Showers T-storms Rain F lurries S now I c e
Yesterday Friday Saturday Yestenlay Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday City Hi/Lo/Pcp HJ/Lo/W HJ/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp HiltoAN HJ/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hilto/W Hyi/Lo/YY City Hi/Lo/Pcp HJ/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W AbileneTX......71/54/000 .. 52/4ypc...57/35r Grand Rapids....39/3M.OO.33/27/sn...34/29/r RapidCiiy........28/3/0.30... 23/1Nc... 31/7/c Savannah.......68/32/000.. 73/54/pc. 75/61Ipc Akron ......... A4/31/0.00 ..47/40/sb...51/451 GreenBay.......27/12/000.. 24/14/sn. 27/21/sn Reuo...........39/32N.02 ..35/26/pc. 45/24/pc Seattle......... 41/32/trace... 44/41lr. 46I43/sb Albany..........37/25000...43/36/c...45/37/r Greensboro......62/280.00..63/50/pc. 68I59/pc Ricbmoud.......63/29N.OO .65/50/pc. 71/58/pc Sioux FaBs,,, ..,,,25/6IO.OO,,,.11/3/c .. 22/Npc Albuquerque.....56/31$00 ..5532/pc.. 45/27/c Harrisburg.......25/1 9N00... 45/37/c. 53/45sh Rochester, NY... A2/28N.OO..41/32/sb...3529/r Spokane....... 31/19/trace..30/23/su .. 32/26/c Anihoiage......1 6/15018 ..25/24sn. 31/22/sn HanforztCT.....47/240.00... 42/35/c.. A6/39/r Sacramen to......61/38N.OO... 554ys .. 63/4Ns Spri ngfi eld,MO ..58/44N.OO..46/32/sb.4432/sb Atlanta .........63/33/0.00 ..65/56/pc...69/60/t Heleaa...........14/6N 00.. 27/15/sn. 33/16/sn St. Louis.........61/4M 00 ..51/34/sb.39/36/sb Tampa.. ........76/48N 00..80/65/pc..84/7Ns AtlanticCity.....53/20$.00 .. 55/46/pc.. 58I53/c Honolulu........82/67N09..BN7Npc. 8571lpc Salt Lake City....35/28N.89 ..32/23/pc.. 35/22/c Tucson..........70/48NIN.. 57/40/sb. 55/4Npc Austin..........77/53$.00 ..7560/pc...73/4i/t Houston ........75/450.03 78/68/pc...7555/t .. SanAntanio.....77/61/000..76/63/pc...73/47/t Tulsa...........63/53N.OO .3$32/pc...42/31lr Baltimore.......58/22/0 00..59/44/pc .. 61/56/c Huntsville.......62/32/000... 63/58/t...71/62/1 SanDiego.......6555/025... 61/52/s.. 62/51ls Washington,DC.61/31N.OO.62/47/pc .. 6457/c Billings ..........22/3N 09... 28/19/c.29/15/sn Indianapolis.....4!/340.00 ..51/39/sb...47/42/r San francism....59/47N.OO...58/45/s.. 65455 Wicbiia.........61/49N.OO ..32/26/pc...34/23/i Biimingham.....64I35/0.00... 64/59/1...72/68/t Jackson, MS.....68/37N.OO... 76/65/t...77/59/t SanJose........58/42N00... 5539/s .. 62/41Is Yakima........ ANl5N.OO .. 37/35rs. 44/29/pc Bismarck.........1N1N.25... 11/-1/c ..11/-15c JacksunvO le......72f33NOO..75/55pc. 80/63/pc Sarm fe........5529/OJN ..43RS/pc.. 38I20/c Yuma...........69/4!/il.00 ..64/46/sh.. 66/48/s Boise...........32/19/000 30/27/sn. .. 35/25su Juneau..........27/19N.37..29/25/sn. 34/31/su INTERNATIONAL Boston..........43/27/000...45/40/c...49/43/r Kansas City......56/47/0.00... 29/24i...3422/i Bridgeport,CT....42/250.00...4440/c .. 5545/c lansing.........38/29/0.00.. 3425/sn...34/29/r Amsterdam......48I37N27... 43/37/c. 43/41Isb Mecca.. ........84/650.00...8465/5..86/65/s Buffalo ........ AO/26$.00..41/33/sh.. 39/32/r LasYzgas.......6543N.OO ..55/39/pc. 57/41lpc Aibens..........51/39N.OO City......75/4YO.OO..71/53/pc.. 70/4vs .57/37/pc .. 51/42/s Mexico Burlingtan, YT....37/26/0.01..39/20/sn. 29/26/sn Lexington.......6M6NOO... 5555/c...63/61/t Auckl and........7561N.OO..6559/pc.69/55/sb Montreal........32/16I0.07 ..19/19/su. 19/1Nsn Caribou, ME......18/8/0.02...18/Nsn. 17/11/sn Linmln..........35/23N.OO . 23/15/pc.. 33/13/c Baghdad........59/44/0.00... 59/45/s .. 5542/s Moscow........3428N.OO...24/21/c.. 28Q4/c Charleston, SC...66/32/0.00.. 73/54pc. 70/64/pc Little Rock.......63/45/000... 73/58/t...72/49/t Baughyk........81/63N.00... 85/62/s .. 86I69/s Nairabi 75 /57N 00 72/54/sb 75/56/pc Charlotte........63/31$00..63/50/pc.6558/pc LosAngeles......59/540.04... 62/48/s .. 65/SNs Beiiiug..........34/12N.OO ... 34/23/s.35/23/pc Nassau. ... . ....77/72N 00..7572/pc.79/74/pc Chattanooga.....61/29/0.00... 62/55/c...69/58/t Louisville........63/42/0 00 .. 61/53/56...62/61Ir Beiiut..........6454N.OO...60/52/s.. 655Ns NewDelhi.......72/52N00...73/54/s. 73/53/pc Cheyenne.......41/ION00..36/24/pc. 35/17/pc Madison, Wl.....34/18$.00... 28/20fi .. 3N23/c Berlin...........41/34N.OO .39/32/sb .. 3985/c Osaka..........5545/0.01 ..47/40/sb. 4536/sb Chicago.........39/338.00..343Nsn.35/34/sn Memphis........60460.00... 72/61/t...72/55/1 Boguia.........6552/0.90 ..59/52/sb...6551/t Oslo............39/34/011 ..35/31/su. 36/34/sb Cincinnati.......56/27N.OO . 54/55sh...57/54/r Miami..........79/60N.OO . 81/73/pc .. 83/73/s Budapest........30/27N.OO...3431lc .. 3425s Ottawa.........32/16/0.06... 21/9/su ..18/14/sf Cleveland.......47/30N.OO .43/35/sh...42/39/r Milwaukee......34/25N.OO . 32/28/sn .. 33/29/c Buenos Aires.....88/68/0.02... 89/67/s .. 91/IO/s Paiis............5536NAO...3533/c. 42/39/sb Culorado Springs.57/35$00 ..40/24/pc. 43/20/pc Minneapolis.....28/17/000....12/8/c... 21/7/c CaboSanWcas ..90/61/0 00... 82/57/c .. 72/555 Rio deJaneiro....82fl3N 00..80/INpc...79/70/t ColumbiaMO , ...58/42/0.00.. 36/29lrs...37/29/i Nashvile........64/35/000... 65/59/t...73/61lt Cairo...........64/46/0.00..65/4ypc .. 68/49/s Rome...........57/32N.OO...59/48/r ..5545s ColumbiaSC....64/28N00 , ..69/5Npc. 74/61lpc NewOrleans.....74/52N.OO... 75/67/t...78/65/t Calgary......... 154JNj3... 12/7/sf .. 10/9/sf Saniiago........84/55/0.00... 89/65/s .. 89/59/s Columbus, 6A....66/31/0.00..67/57/pc...73/62/t NewYork.......45/30N.OO... 51/44/c.. 54/48/c Caniun.........82/75N.OO...82/76/t. 83/75pc Saopaulo.......77/64N.iN ..74/65/sh...75/65/t Columbus, OH....50/30/000 .. 51/47/sb...53/53/r Newark,NJ..... A4/23N.OO... 51/42/c. 54/47/sb Dublin..........39/34/0.05.. 51/45/sb.46/37/sb Sapporo........32/32/0 00... 32/19/c. 3N23/pc Conmrd, NH.....39/21N 00...40/27/c..353Nrs Norlalk,YA......61/29/0.00.. 67/51Ipc. 73/59/pc Edinburgh...... A3/36/0.00 ..47/43/sb. 42/35/sb Seoul.......... 30/Jjl000 ..29/20/pc .. 29/22/s Corpus Cbrisi....80/62/000.. 73/67/pc. 7455/pc Oklahoma City...75540.00 ..39/33/pc...41/30/i Geneva. ........46/32N.74..42/35/sb.38/34/pc Sbaugb ai........43/34N.OO...44/32/s.3535/pc Dallas ftYfanh...72/54000..62/49/pc...61 l42li Omaha.........34/25/000 ..22/14/pc.. 32/13/c Harare..........75/64N.OO .6555sb...75/56/t Singapore.......84/73/2.95 .. 83/77/sb. 87/76/sb Dayiun ........ AB/34000 ..51/45/sh...52/51Ir Orlando.........76/46$.00 82/64/pc .. .. 83/65/s HongKoug......59/48N.OO..6548/pc.59/51lpc Stockholm.......41/39/0 00..3683/pc. 41I39/sb Dmwr..........44/28IO00 ..39/27/pc. 41RS/pc PalmSpri ngs.....65/49N.OO...67/455..68/47/s istaubul.........50/43N.OO ... 45/38/s.. 49/41ls Sydney..........81/68/000..92/72/pc100/67/pc DesMoines......39/278.00... 25/17/i .. 3517/c Peoria..........43/32/0.00..37/25sn...3432/i Jerusalem.......57/43/0.00... 56/43/s .. 56/43/s Taipei...........57/55/000.. 57/53/sb. 5654sb Detroit......... AO/26/0.00 .. 38/30/sn. 35/32/su Pbtadelpbia.....4527I000..53/43/pc.. 59/52/c Jabannesburg....69/55/0.1 5.. 7555/sb...79/58lt Tel Aviv.........6$43/0.00... 65/49/s.. 65/51Is Duluth...........14/2/0.00....13/3/c .. 17/7/su Phoeni x.........72/50/0.00..60/45sb.6545pc Lima...........77/66IO.O..76/ O 65/pc .. 75/65/c Tokyo.......... A539/0.00..49/39/sh. 49/35/pc El Paso..........70/39/000 61/39/sh. .. 53/35/pc Pittsburgh.......5N30/0.00 ..48/44sb...5453/1 Lisbon..........61/4M.OO ..55/39/pc .. 55/45/c Tororuo.........3527/0.00... 37/23/r..28/28/sf Fairbanks........ 3/ 10$ 00 ..-2/16/pc...1/ 7/su Purgaud,ME.....36/21/0.00 .. 41/28/rs..36/27/rs Loudon.........48I36/0.62..47/44/pc. 51/43/sb Vancouver.......36/27/0.00...36/35r ..41/36/c Fary)............ I/4j/003.... 7/ 3/c ..1 N1Nc Providzace......45/25N.O O...46/39/c...50/43lr Madrid.........52/41N.93... 46/27/5 .. 47/38/c Vienua..........27/27NOO...33/31lc. 35I28/pc Flagstaff....... AO/28/001...37/22/c.38/17/pc Raleigh.........62/350.00..66/53/pc. 71/60/pc Manih..........84/79N.OO .8575/pc. NJ/74lsb Warsaw.........32/27N.OO . 34/32/sb .. 33/29/c
PL
•P
green Holdings Inc., owns just With judgments and liens piltwo of the planes on display at ing up against various Ever-
(Yamfzill Valley) News-Register
MCMINNVILLE — The air
the museum, according to the
green for-profit subsidiaries, he
museum developed by Ever- FAA. But they are among the acknowledged, some of those green International Aviation choicest, and both have been planes could be sold. However, founder Del Smith may be in listed with brokers — one of 12 he downplayed the impact. "I think the total is less than wake of the apparent collapse passenger liners, a meticulous- 20 percent of the collection — if of Smith's network of for-profit ly restored 1928 plane listed they took them alL ATTdI don't opemtions. at $1.75 million, and a Grum- think they'd all be at risk," for some painful losses in the
still-airworthy Ford Tri-motor
Though the museum's land man TBM-3 torpedo bomber, a and buildings are owned and World War II military craft listoperated through the nonprofit ed for $250,000. Michael King Smith FoundaHowever, the aviation mution, named after the 83-year- seLjm's centerpiece, Howard old founder's late son, up to 20 Hughes' iconicSpruceGoose, is percent of its 140-odd exhib- safe. Itis ownedbythe museum, its are owned by financially according to Executive Director troubled for-profit elements of Larry Wood. his aviation empire. Foremost Wood said Evergreen Vinamong them is Evergreen Vin- tage AircraA owns several of tage ~ , lis ted by the Fed-theolderplanesinthemuseum's eral Aviation Adtmnitration as inventory, induding fighters owner of 15 planes currently on display at the museum
Another subsidiary, Ever-
Partly cloudy
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Aviation museum sco ection eso tocover e ts By Nicole Montesano
I '
DRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
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I FiVe BIBMOIIIayS allII latS OfPriZeSIOWIN! I I
Wood said, explaining that new owners might choose to donate a craft back to the museum for the tax write off. He is an admirer of the older
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WINYOU R CHOICE OFA PULYS TATIOII 3 ORAN
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XBOX 360
wlNQNEQFTwo@50 GIFTGARDs
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P.'Ij
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safe. "You don't want to lose an artifact if you can avoid it, but
many of the things that are in War II, as well as some repli- the museum are on loan from cas of the earliest planes flown. somebody anyway," Wood said. and bombers dating to World
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NBA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NH L , C3 College basketball, C3 Prep sports, C4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2013
CYCLING
i i eas ort es orts overin our i e
Mountain dike event set for Bend Bend and Mt. Bachelor ski area will host the USA Cycling Mountain Bike Cross-Country and Enduro National Championships in 2015 and 2016, according to a press release from Visit Bend. "Bend has proven time and again to bea spectacular venuefor USA Cycling national championshi pevents," a Thursday press release from USACycling stated. "The newtrails at Mount Bachelor will provide exciting racing for competitors and spectators alike." Bend has hosted USA Cycling's amateur road, cyclocross, and marathon mountain bike national championships in recent years. The exploding enduro mountain bike discipline is set to replace Super D at the USACycling national championships in 2015, USACycling announced onThursday. Enduro is a type of mountain bike racing in which downhill sections are timed, and uphill and cross-country sections are included but not timed. The discipline tests riders' technical bike-handling skills but also includes endurance and climbing. "Bend's long-term partnership with USA Cycling has beenextremely positive for our community," Visit Bend chief executive officer Doug LaPlacasaidina press release.
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
• Books, movieand s other formsof media canmake good presents orstocking stuffersfor friendsandfamily By Beau Eastes
10$ (ig~ig] ggg
longtime sports writer for Sports Illustrated, Rushin retells the story of orga-
The Bulletin
Buying holiday presents for sports fans can be as maddening as watching Tony Romo in the final minutes of a close game. Which team does he like? Has she seen this'? Should I throw the ball to the Packers instead of trying to run out the
clock'? Fortunately, we've got you covered.
nized baseball through the inanimate
BEFORE THEY
g)C6
and even jockstraps sheds a whole new
light on baseball through the ages. Available in hardback ($25) and on e-readers ($12.99). • eYou Herd Me!: I'll Say It, If No-
boys fans, best of luck to you.) Here are last-minute suggestions while in Portland — he was a KGW TV that those of us in The Bulletin's sports
sports anchor and did radio for KFXX
department hope to see under our Christmas trees:
— Cowherd, now one of ESPN's most popular radio and TV personalities,
l 'iljli @ 'c cccc
riffs on a variety of topics in this collec-
Books
tion of essays/rants. He compares Major League Baseball to the Republican Beau Eastes i The Bulletin Baseball as Told Through Bobble- Party, laughs at Tiger Woods' claim of "You Herd Me!: I'll Say It, If Nobody Else Will," by Colin Cowherd, "100 Things Oreheads, Cracker Jacks, Jockstraps, Eye sexual addiction, and lambastes the ar- gon FansShould Know and Do Before They Die,"by Rob Moseley and Chris Hansen Black, and 375 Other Strange and Un- rogance of college basketball coaches. and "The 34-Ton Bat, The Story of Baseball," by Steve Rushin are just a few books forgettable Objects" by Steve Rushin: A See Gift /C2 recommended byThe Bulletin sports staff for this holiday season. •
"The 34-Ton Bat: The Story of
PREP GIRLSBASKETBALL
Brothers rom Mountain View si ntopayD-I c
Bulletin staff report COLLEGEFOOTBALL Cody and Jacob Hollister, "As student-athletes, they twin brothers from Bend, appear to be returning to play will be able to maximize NCAA Division I football. our out-of-season program
''g / I!%ft
— Bulletin staff report
BOXING Youth tournament Saturday inBend The Deschutes County Rocks boxing club will host the Oregon State Silver Gloves Championships on Saturday at Bend's Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave. The tournament is a qualifier for the Silver Gloves Northwest Regional Championships, scheduled for Jan. 3-5 in Ontario. At the regionals, state champions in eachage and weight division from Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming and Montana will compete to advance to the Silver Gloves Nationals inIndependence,Mo.,in February. Seven boxers with the Deschutes County Rocks are scheduled to compete in the state tournament this Saturday, led by defending regional champion Victor Bernabe, a12-year-old who is currently ranked seventh in the nation in the 80-pound weight
Miller at 541-678-2286. — Bulletin staff report
in addition to having the
out receiver for Mountain View High School's 2011 Class 5A state championship team, signed a National Let-
coach Bret Bielema of his
ter of Intent to play for the
qualifiers out of high school, which was very important to our staff moving forward." In his senior season at Mountain View, Cody Hollis-
Hollister, the quarterback on that Mountain View state
' 4hsPN
title squad — he has since changed positions and is a tight end — faxed in his
ability to take part in spring practice," said Arkansas two junior-college transfers, including Cody Hollister. "Both of them were full
ter caught 64 passes for 1,038
yards and 15 touchdownsmost from his brother Jacob, NLI to the University of who passed for 1,860 yards Wyoming. and 32 touchdowns against Both players will be able to just three interceptions. enroll in classes in January. SeeBrothers /C4
c
Are we playingthe Super Bowl or 'HungerGames?' JIM
LITKE or all the dire predictions making the rounds, you w o u ld think they were playing "The Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Mountain View's Sarah Bailey (11) drives the ball past two West Salem defender during the first half of Thursday night's game against West Salem in Bend.
NFL COMMENTARY would work." Keep in mind that Dawson is a kicker. And to be
fair, scratchhalfadozen other players and NFL own-
F
ers — who have the final say
Hunger Games" at MetLife
ions about the wisdom of
Stadium on Feb. 2 instead of the Super Bowl. "Cold or snowy is one thing," San Francisco 49er Phil Dawson said, "but if it's
playing the season's biggest
a blizzard it could be bad.
happy to get in out of the cold and stay there. SeeSuper Bowl/C3
... That would make things crazy. I'm not sure how that
on Super Bowl sites — and you will get differing opingame in the elements. Plenty
grew up playing or watching the game that way and still love to; others were only too
ccc,
Izes
GENTER
f
By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
Steve Riper knew his team
would not be able to continue
NBA
its hot shooting after the first quarter. As the Mountain
Spurs take victory over Warriors
View coach noted: that's just reality. The other safe assumption, Riper pointed out, was that
A last-second shot lifts San Antonio overGolden State,C3
The University of Arkansas announced Thursday that Cody Hollister, a stand-
Razorbacks. Also this week, Jacob
d>vlslon.
Silver Gloves is for boxers ages 8 to15. Doors open at the Midtown at 4 p.m., and bouts start at 5 p.m. Cost for spectators is $10 at the door. Children ages 7 andyounger will be admitted free. Concessions and raffles will be available at the tournament. For more information, call Deschutes County Rocks coach Richard
<"~ l< otl,
SHOOIOHHOW OIOO
objects that are so synonymous with the game. The history of bats, caps,
body Else Will" by Colin Cowherd: A Washington native who worked for a
(Bulletin sports readers, that is. Cow-
u g cc c
Inside
"They got their bus legs out • A complete roundup of Thursday of them a little bit and gained night prep sports,C4 their composure a little bit," Riper said. "We told our girls, 'It's a game of runs. You're Both hypotheses proved true Thursday night, when not going to win it in the first the Class 5A Cougars' 20-12 quarter.' " first-quarter lead was flipped The Titans opened the secinto a 36-31halftime deficit. ond with an 11-2 run to jump Mountain View never led
again, eventually falling its "bus legs" by the second 65-55 to the visiting 6A Tiquarter after a nearly 140-mile tans in nonconference girls West Salem would shake off drlve.
basketbalL
Mel Evans I The Assoclated Press
ahead 23-22 — their first lead since 2-0 — and extended the string to 18-4 to take a 30-24
The Empire State building can bs seen in the distance as
advantage.
removal andmelting machinery andoutlined emergency weather scenarlos andcontingency plansfor the Super Bowl in February.
SeeCougars/C4
workers removesnow from parking lots at MetLife stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., Wednesday. Officials demonstrated snow
C2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY FOOTBALL
Men's college, NCAA Division III, Mount Union vs. Wisconsin-Whitewater Men's college, NCAA Division I, semifinal, New Hampshire at North Dakota State SOCCER English Premier LeagueSoccer, Liverpool FC vsCardiff City FC
Time
TV/Radio
4 p.m.
ESPNU
5 p.m.
ESPN2
4:45 a.m.
N B CSN
BASKETBALL
NBA, Houston at Indiana Men's college, SMUat Wyoming NBA,MinnesotaatLosAngelesLakers OLYMPICS U.S. Olympic Trials, Women's Ice Hockey, Canada vs. United States GOLF Men, Royal Trophy, DayTwo
5 p.m. 6 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 5 p.m.
ESPN
Root ESPN
NBCSN
7 p.m.
Golf
SATURDAY SOCCER English Premier League, Manchester United vsWest HamUnited FIFA ClubWorld Cup, third Place, CA Mineir ovsGuangzhou EvergrandeFC FIFA ClubWorld Cup, Final, FC Bayern MunichvsRajaCasablanca A-League Soccer, Wellington Phoenix vs. SydneyFC
Time 7 a.m.
TV/Radio NBCSN
Las yegasBowl FresnoState(11-1) vs. SouthernCal (9-4), 12:30 p .m. (AB C ) Today FamousIdahoPotato Bowl Boysbasketball: Madrasvs. Central Linnat Seaside At Boise, Idaho HolidayClassic,5:15p.m.; Sistersvs.Seasideat SeasideHolidayClassic, 1:30p.m.; La Pinevs. Buffalo (8-4)vs. SanDiego State(7-5), 2:30 p.m. (ESPN) Elma (Wash.)at SeasideHoliday Classic, 8:30 New OrleansBowl p.m.; Ridgeview atRedmond,7p.m.;Mountain View atChurchill, 7 p.m.; Culverat CulverTour- Tulane(7-5) vs. Louisiana-Lafayette (8-4), 6 p.m. nament,2p.m.; Mitchell atGilchrist, 6:30p.m. (ESPN) Girls baskelbaH:WestSalemat Summit, 7 p.m.; Monday, Dec.23 Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl Sisters vs.Madrasat SeasideHolidayClassic, 3;30 p.m.;LaPinevs.EstacadaatSeasideHoliday At St. Petersburg, Fla. Class ic,noon;RidgeviewatRedmond,5:30p.m.; Ohio (7-5)vs.East Carolina(9-3),11 a.m.(ESPN) Culver atCulverTournament, 2 p.m.; Trinity LuTuesday, Dec.24 theran vs. Craneat CraneChristmasTournament, Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu 6p.m.;Mitchell atGilchrist, 5p.m. Wrestling: Bend,Redm ond, Summit, Ridgeview, OregonState (6-6) vs. BoiseState(8-4), 5 p.m. Sisters,Madras,LaPineat Al Invite atRidgeview, (ESPN) 4p.m.;CrookCountyat Weisbrodt Duals in Lebanon,11:30a.m. Betting line Saturday BoysbaskelbaH:Sisters, Madras,LaPineat Seaside Invite,TBD;Culverat CulverTournament,11a.m.; Echo atCentral Christian,3:30p.m. Girls baskelbaH: Bendat Springfield,3 p.m.;Sisters, Madras, LaPineat SeasideInvite, TBD;Culver at Culver Tournam ent, 11a.m.; Trinity Lutheranat CraneChristmasTournament, TBD;Echoat Central Christian, 2p.m. Wrestling: Bend,Redm ond, Summit, Ridgeview, Sisters,Madras,LaPineat Al Invite atRidgeview, 10 a.m.;Culverat Central LinnTournament, TBD; Crook Countyat Weisbrodt Duals in Lebanon, 11:30a.m.
8:20 a.m. Fox Sports 2
FOOTBALL
11:20 a.m. Fox Sports 2
NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
AH TimesPST
10 p.m. Fox Sports 2
AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T P ct PF PA 10 4 0 .714369 311 8 6 0 . 5 71310 296
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Georgetown at Kansas 9 a.m. ESPN Men's college, Belmont at Kentucky 9 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, EastCarolina at N.C.State 9 a.m. Root Men's college, OrangeBowl Classic, Florida State vs. Massachusetts 11 a.m. Root Men's college, 11 a.m. Fox Sports 1 Youngstown State at St. John's Women's college, Gonzaga atWashington State 11:30 a.m. P a c-12 Men's college, Governor's Holiday Classic, HamptonatJamesMadison noon NBCSN Men's college,Gonzagavs.KansasState 12:30 p.m. E SPN2 Men's college, Michigan State atTexas 1 p.m. CBS Men's college, Rider at Villanova 1 p.m. Fox Sports 1 Women's college, Tennesseeat Stanford 1:30 p.m. Pa c -12 Men's college, OrangeBowlClassic, Florida vs. FresnoState 1:30 p.m. Root Men's college, Davidson at North Carolina 2 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, lllinois at Missouri 2:30 p.m. ES P N2 Men's college, Governor's Holiday Classic, Virginia Commonwealth vs. Virginia Tech 2:30 p.m. N B CSN Men's college, Louisville at Florida International 3 p.m. Fox Sports 1 Men's college, TexasTechat Arizona State 3:30 p.m. Pa c -12 Men's college, Big 12-SEC Challenge, Oklahoma vs.TexasA&M 4 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, GothamClassic, Notre Damevs. OhioState 4:30 p.m. ES P N2 Men's college, UTEP at Washington State 5:30 p.m. Pa c -12 Men's college, Brooklyn Holiday Invitational Michigan vs Stanford 5:30 p.m. Fox Sports 1 Men's college, NewMexico at Marquette 6 p.m. ESPNU NBA, NewOrleans at Portland 7p.m. Blazer Network, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Men's college, BYU at Oregon 7:30 p.m. Men's college, Colorado vs. OklahomaState 8:30 p.m.
Pa c -12 ES P N2
FOOTBALL
College, NCAADivision II, Lenoir-Rhyne vs. Northwest Missouri State 9 a.m. College, NewMexico Bowl, Colorado State vs. Washington State 11 a.m. College, NCAADivision I, Second Semifinal, Towson at Eastern Washington 1 1 a.m. College, LasVegasBowl, Fresno State vs. USC 12:30 p.m. College, Famous IdahoPotato Bowl, Buffalo vs. SanDiegoState 2 :30 p.m. College, NewOrleans Bowl, Louisiana-Lafayette vs. Tulane 6 p.m.
ESPN2 ESPN
ESP N U
6 8 0 . 4 29246 367 5 9 0 . 357300 354
y-Indianapolis
Tennesse e Jacksonvile Houston
South W L T P ct PF PA
9 5 0 . 6 43338 319 5 9 0 . 357326 355 4 10 0 .286 221 399 2 12 0 .143 253 375
Norlh W L T 9 5 0 8 6 0 6 8 0
P ct PF PA . 643354 274 . 5 71296 277 . 429321 332 4 10 0 .286 288 362
West W L T P ct PF PA x -Denver 1 1 3 0 .7 86535 372 x-Kansas Ciiy 11 3 0 . 7 86399 255 S an Diego 7 7 0 .5 0 0343 311 O akland 4 10 0 .2 86295 393 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T P ct PF PA Philadelphia 8 6 0 . 5 71364 349 Dallas 7 7 0 . 500393 385 N.Y.Giants 5 9 0 . 3 57251 357 Washington 3 11 0 .214 305 434 South
NewOrleans Carolina TampaBay Atlanta
W L T 10 4 0 10 4 0 4 10 0 4 10 0
Norlh
W L 8 6 7 6 7 7 4 9
P c t PF PA .714359 270 .714328 208 .286 258 324 .286 309 388
T 0 1 0 1
West W L T x -Seattle 12 2 0 SanFrancisco 10 4 0 Arizona 9 5 0 S t. Louis 6 8 0 x-clinched playoffspot y-clinched division
P c t PF PA . 5 71406 391 . 536353 362 . 500362 339 . 3 21363 425
P ct PF PA .8 5 7380 205 . 714349 228 . 643342 291 .42 9 316 324
Sunday'sGames TampaBayat St. Louis,10a.m. IndianapolisatKansas City,10 a.m. Denverat Houston,10 a.m. Miami atBuffalo,10 a.m. NewOrleansatCarolina,10 a.m. Dallas atWashington, 10a.m. 0leveland atN.Y.Jets, 10a.m. Minnesota atCincinnati,10 a.m. Tennessee at Jacksonvile,10 a.m. Arizonaat Seattle, 1:05p.m. N.Y.Giantsat Detroit,1:05 p.m. OaklandatSanDiego, 1:25p.m. PittsburghatGreen Bay,1:25 p.m. NewEnglandatBaltimore,1:25 p.m. Chicago at Philadelphia, 5:30p.m. Monday'sGame AtlantaatSanFrancisco,5:40 p.m.
College
ABC
Bowl Glance
AH TimesPST
ESP N ESPN
Friday, Jan. 3 Cotton Bowl
ON DECK
Saturday, Dec.21 New MexicoBowl At Albuquerque WashingtonState(6-6) vs. ColoradoState(7-6), 11 a.m.(ES PN)
Missouri
1
1
5
2.5
OklahomaSt
OrangeBowl
OhioSt
Clemson
Sunday,Jan. 6 Go DaddyBowl 8.5 8.5 Monday,Jan. 6 BCSChampionship 8.5
F lorida St. 8. 5
Aubu r n
BASKETBALL Men's College
NFL
Thursday'sGames (Home teamsin CAPS) EAST Opening Current Underdog Duke80, UCLA63 Sunday a Salle80,Wagner 54 Dolphins 3 3 BILLS L Francis(NY)65, Lafayette 62 PANTHE RS 3 3 Saints St. Stony Brook76, Loyola (Md.) 69 Cowboys 3 3 REDSKIN S RAMS 5.5 5.5 Buccane ers Auburn66,Clemson64SOUTH EAGLE S 3.5 3 Bears ampbellsville101,WVUTech83 JETS 1.5 2 Browns C Centre85, ThomasMore64 CHIEFS 6.5 7 Colts EastCarolina103,VMI94 BENGA LS 7.5 7 Vikings Elon126,Cent.Pennsylvania 78 Broncos 10.5 11 TEXANS Faulkner 62,Xavier(NO)53 Titans 5 5.5 JAGUAR S Georgia58,Gardner-Webb49 SEAHA WKS 10 10 . 5 Cardinals Jackson St.73, Louisiana-Lafayette70 LIONS 9 9 Giants Lee72,ValdostaSt. 59 CHARG ERS 10 10 Raiders Lipsc omb88,AustinPeay83 PACKE RS NL NL Steelers Miami68,SavannahSt. 51 RAVENS 2.5 2.5 Patriots MississippiSt.66,FloridaGulf Coast 53 Monday Morehead St.120, SouthDakota83 49ERS 13 13 Falcons SC-Upstate 74, SouthCarolina68 SouthFlorida73,Florida A&M70 College S pring Hill 81, Tenn.Temple 76 Saturday, Dec.21 Tennessee Tech112,Hilsdale Baptist 56 New MexicoBowl Washington St 3.5 4 Colo rado StBeloit 75,Knox69 MIDWEST Las VegasBowl oe74,BethanyLutheran63 Usc 6 6.5 Fre sno StC Dayton 96, lona84 FamousIdahoPotato Bowl 80,MartinLuther56 SanDiegoSt 2.5 (B) 1 Buffalo Dordt f linois St.64, TennesseeSt. 58 New OrleansBowl alamazoo 90,Marygrove86 Tulane PK 2 UL-Lafayette K SW Minnesota St. 83,Wis.-La Crosse57 Viterbo71,Waldorf 67 Monday, Dec.23 Wis.-Parkside93,IndianaDabney65 Beef O'Brady'sBowl WrightSt.70, E.Illinois 43 E . Carolina 12.5 13 . 5 Ohio SOUTHWES T Arkansas102, UT-Martin 56 Tuesday, Dec.24 TCU98,Grambling St.75 Hawaii Bowl 84, Northwestern St. 74 Oregon St 2. 5 3 Boise St UTEP FARWEST Arizona69,SouthernU. 43 Thursday, Dec.26 LongBeachSt.72, Southern Cal71 Little CaesarsPizzaBowl aintMary's(Cal)59, AmericanU.44 Bowling Green 5.5 5 Pittsburgh S Seattle70,Norfolk St.67 Poinsettia Bowl U C SantaBarbara57,Troy54 N. Illinois 1. 5 1 UtahSt Utah69,TexasSt. 50 UtahSt. 68,W.Illinois 52 Friday, Dec. 27 Military Bowl 25. 2
Texas Bowl Minnesota 4. 5 4.5 Fight HungerBowl Washington 3 3
Maryland
Metropolitan Division PlsGF GA 5 3 117 80 3 9 107 102 36 86 97 3 5 79 94 3 4 79 95 3 4 83 87 3 2 91 100 2 5 85 121 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA 3 7 25 7 5 5 5 138 102 3 4 23 7 4 5 0 119 81 3 4 23 10 1 47 100 80 3 7 20 12 5 4 5 86 88 3 4 17 12 5 3 9 99 102 3 5 16 16 3 35 80 99
Chicago St. Louis Colorado Minnesota Dallas Nashville Winnipeg
3 6 15 16 5
3 5 95 106
Pacific Division GP W L OT PlsGF GA Anaheim 3 6 2 4 7 5 53 116 91 L os Angeles 36 24 8 4 5 2 101 69 SanJose 3 5 2 1 8 6 4 8 113 88 V ancouver 37 20 11 6 4 6 101 90 P hoenix 34 1 8 1 0 6 4 2 106 105 C algary 35 1 3 1 6 6 3 2 88 111 E dmonton 37 1 1 23 3 2 5 95 127 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss.
Favorite
Marshall
3 7 18 16 3 39 101 106 3 7 14 17 6 34 103 122 3 6 14 17 5 3 3 85 112 3 5 9 23 3 2 1 63 100
GP W L OT P ittsburgh 3 7 2 6 10 1 W ashington 34 18 13 3 Hous t on P hiladelphia 35 16 15 4 C arolina 3 4 1 4 13 7 N .Y. Rangers 35 16 17 2 N ewJersey 35 14 15 6 Ark ansas StC olumbus 35 1 4 17 4 N .Y. Islanders 35 9 19 7
Saturday, Jan. 4 CompassBowl Vanderbilt 3 2.5
Ball St
Toronto Ottawa Florida Buffalo
Tbursday'sGames
Toronto 2Phoenix1 SO Buff alo4,Boston2 Philadelphia5, Columbus4 Pittsburgh5, Minnesota2 Florida 4,Ottawa2 Detroit 3,Calgary2, OT TampaBay4,Nashville2 St. Louis5, Montreal1 Dallas 4,Vancouver1 Colorado4, Edmonton2 Los Angele4, s SanJose1
Today'sGames AnaheimatNewJersey,4 p.m. N.Y.IslandersatN.Y.Rangers,4 p.m. Washington at Carolina, 4 p.m. Vancouverat Chicago, 5p.m. FloridaatWinnipeg, 5p.m. Saturday'sGames Calgaryat Pittsburgh,10a.m. Phoenixat Otawa,11a.m. ColoradoatLosAngeles,1 p.m. NewJerseyat Washington, 4p.m. PhiladelphiaatColumbus, 4p.m. Montrealat Nashvile,4 p.m. Buff aloatBoston,4p.m. Detroit atToronto,4p.m. CarolinaatTampaBay 4 p.m. AnaheimatN.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. St. Louisat Edmonton, 7p.m. Dalla satSanJose,7:30p.m.
DEALS Transactions
Women's College
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague Syracuse CHICAGO WHITESOX— Agreed to termswith EAST RHPRonaldBelisario onaone-yearcontract. FairleighDickinson71 Byu NJIT84, CLEVEL ANDINDIANS — Agreed to termswith Syracuse 80, Niagara44 RHPJohnAxford onaone-yearcontract. Designated T empl e 83, H o w a rd 58 Saturday, Dec.28 RHPTreyHaleyfor assignment. Yale66,St.Peter's 35 Pinstripe Bowl NEWYORKYANKEES—Agreedto termswith OF SOUTH NotreDame 16 15 . 5 Rut gers Duke80,Albany(NY) 51 Carlos Beltranon athree-year contract. Designated Belk Bowl R HP Brett Marshallfor assrgnment. acksonvilleSt.73, SCState63 N. Carolina 2. 5 3 Cinci nnati JLiberty OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Acquired OFCorey 64, UN C W il m i n gton 55 Russell Athletic Bowl BrownfromWashington forcashconsiderations. 63,AlcornSt.50 Louisville 3 3.5 Miam i-Fla Louisiana-Lafayette National Baseball Hall of FameandMuseum Marshal71, l Wofford56 Buffalo Wild WingsBowl NBHFM— AnnouncedThomasTullwaselectedto St.77,Southern NO67 Kansas St 3 3.5 Mich igan McNeese the board of directors. NC Central73,W.Carolina 69 FOOTBALL Oklahoma St. 63,MichiganSt.57 Monday, Dec.30 National Football League Savannah St. 72,Charleston Southern 63 Armed ForcesBowl CHICAGO B E AR S — SignedSSeanCattouseto MIDWEST Navy 6 6.5 Mid Tenn St the practice squad. B owlin g Gr e e n 8 6 , U Ma s s 4 6 Music City Bowl KANSASCITYCHIEFS— SignedDTJerreff Powe. of Chicago56,Dartmouth52 Mississippi 2.5 3 Geo r gia TechLoyola RelesaedWRChadHall. MissouriSt.67,Missouri53 Alamo Bowl S EATTLE SE AH A WKS — S i g n e d WR Br y a n Wallle78,W.Illinois 70 Oregon 13 14 Texas SIU-Edwardsvi ters from the practicesquad. ReleasedLBMikeTaylor South Dak o t a 76, St . M ary (N eb. ) 48 Holiday Bowl from thepracticesquad.SignedDTMichael Brooks, SOUTHWES T Arizona St 13.5 14 Tex as TechStephen DT Dew ayne Cherrington andWRArceto Clark to the F.Austin 72, HendersonSt.56 practicesquad. TexasA8M-CC71,TexasSouthern69 Tuesday, Dec.31 HOCKEY FARWEST AdvocareV100Bowl National HockeyLeague Creighton 70, O r egon St . 62 Arizona 7 7 Bos ton CollegeCS Bakersfield81, Houston Baptist 61 CALGARYFLAMES— SignedDKeeganKanzigto Sun Bowl athree-yearcontract. S Northridge64, N.Arizona52 Ucla 7 7 Virg i nia TechC CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Recaled G Jason DePaul77,Pittsburgh63 Liberly Bowl LaBarbera fromRockford (AHL). ReassignedGKent S. Utah 75, N. Col o rado 63 MississippiSt 7 7 Rice SaintMary's(Cal)71,Southern Cal55 Simpson(AHL). Chick-fil-A Bowl EDMONTONOILERS— TradedFLinusOmarkto DiegoSt.75, Miami(Ohio) 64 Texas A&M 1 2.5 1 2 .5 Duke San the BuffaloSabres for aconditional sixth-rounddraft Seattle72,LoyolaMarymount70 pick. UNLV63,Clemson54 Wednesday,Jan. 1 LOSANGELESKINGS—ActivatedFColin Fraser. UtahSt. 80,UCSantaBarbara70 Gator Bowl ReassignedFLindenVeyto Manchester (AHL). 81, Louisiana-Monroe77 Georgia 9 9 Nebraska Washington NEWYOR K RANGERS — Recalled FJ.T. Miler Heart of Dallas Bowl from Harfford(AHL). AssignedFArronAshamandD N. Texas 6.5 6.5 Unlv DylanMcllrathtoHarfford. HOCKEY Capital OneBowl PHOENIX COYOTES—RecalledDRostislavKlesla Wisconsin 2.5 1 S Carolina fromPortland(AHL). NHL OutbackBowl WINNIPEG JETS—Agreedto terms with FScott Lsu 7.5 7.5 lowa NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Kosmachuk onathree-yearentry levelcontract. AH Times PST Rose Bowl COLLEGE Stanford 1.5 5 MichiganSt ALABAMA —SuspendedLBXzavier Dicksonand Fiesta Bowl EasternConference TB AlvinKamarafromplayinginthe Sugar Bowl. Baylor 17.5 17 C. Florida Atlantic Division ARKAN SAS STATE— Named Blake Anderson GP W L OT Pts GF GA footballcoach. Thursday, Jan. 2 B oston 35 23 1 0 2 4 8 9 6 7 4 BOISESTATE— Named Marcel Yates defensive SugarBowl TampaBay 35 21 11 3 4 5 97 84 coordinator andMike SanfordJr.offensivecoordinator. Alabama 1 4.5 1 5 . 5 Oklahoma M ontreal 3 7 2 1 13 3 45 92 81 CENTRALARKANSAS— NamedSteveCampbell Detroit 37 16 1 2 9 4 1 9 4 101 footballcoach. Tbursday'sGames
GOLF
Men, Royal Trophy, Final Day
7 p.m.
Golf
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible forlatechangesmadebyTVorradiostations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Gift
Movies
Continued from C1
brainchild of ESPN personality Bill Sim-
• "ESPN 30 for 30 Collector's Set": The
Fans of Cowherd's radio show will
mons, the"30 for 30 Series" is 30 docu-
have heard some of the arguments he puts forth, but in print they are better re-
mentaries by 30 different directors telling stories that took place during ESPN's first
searched and often more convincing.
30 years irf business. Sure, some films are
Available in hardback ($26.00) and on better than others, but several would have e-readers ($10.99). been Oscar contenders if not for the Acad-
BASKETBALL
emy Awards' bizarre selection rules. "The
"100 Things Oregon Fans Should 'Drvo Escobars," which examines the inKnow & Do Before They Die" by Rob tertwined lives and deaths of Columbian Moseley and Chris Hansen: Moseley, the drug lord Pablo Escobar and Columbian editor-in-chief of the UO's athletic web- soccer star Anders Escobar — they were site www.GoDucks.com, and Hansen, a not related — is alone worth the price of longtime Eugene Register-Guard sports the entire set. writer, have roots in Bend, as they both Available on Blu-ray ($61.99), DVD were former intern sports reporters at ($20.49) and iTunes ($80.73).
ers spent a year following team members from this depressed Rust Belt town where poverty is seemingly everywhere. This is every bit as gritty and gut-wrenching to watch as "Hoops Dreams" was 20 years ago. Available on Blu-ray ($25.99), DVD ($14.99), iTunes ($12.99) and Googie Play ($9.99). For more information, go to www. medorafilm.com.
•
FraCture likely to Sideline Bryant Six weekS —KobeBryant is expected to missabout six weekswith an injured left knee. The Lakers said Thursdaythat anMRIshowed Bryant has afracture of the lateral tibial plateau of his knee.The team said Bryant had hyperextended the knee inTuesday night's gameat Memphis. Theinjury is the latest setback for the Lakersstar, who hadonly returned to the court on Dec. 8 after nearly eight months awaybecauseof a torn Achilles tendon.
The Bulletin. They chronicle the most
"McConkey": This documentary memorable moments in University of Oregon football history — "Kenny Whea- on Shane McConkey, a freeskiing pio•
WINTER SPORTS White thrOugh Safely to finalS, tOP-30 finiSh —Shaun White qualified for slopestyle finals at theU.S.Grand Prix onThursday, guaranteeing himself the top-30 finish heneededto be eligible for the Sochi Olympics. Lessthan aweekafter hurting his left ankle during a halfpipe contest, White tried aconservative first run, then addedan extra revolution to his last jump onhis secondtrip down themountain. He scored 85.66 points to finish third in his heatandearn aplace in the 16-man final Sunday.White skipped thehalfpipe contest this week to be sure hewashealthy enough for slopestyle — theevent where hestill needed thetop-30 finish in this World Cupcontest, which is a minimum international requirement for anypotential Olympian.
Figure Skating ChamPBoitano SayS he'S gay —Olympic figure skating champion Brian Boitano cameout Thursday, two days after he wasnamed to the U.S. delegation for Sochi along with openly gay athletes Billie JeanKing andCaitlin Cahow. The1988 gold medalist had always kept his personal life private, saying in astatement that"being gay is just one part of who I am." But President Barack Obama's decision to include openly gayathletes in the delegation for the opening and closing ceremonies —and not sendhigh-ranking officials — was widely seen as a message to Russia about its treatment of gays and lesbians. — Fromwirereports
ton's gonna score!" — and add a few
neer who liked to combine BASE jump-
bucket-list items for Ducks fans. Also fun for locals are the chapters on former UO playersand current CentralOregon residents Dan Fouts (Sisters) and Gary Zimmerman (Bend). Available in paperback ($14.95) and on e-readers ($11.99).
ing with skiing, screened at this year's BendFilm Festival and I still cannot get
it out of my head. McConkey continually pushed the limits of skiing until doing so ultimately cost him his life. Heartbreaking interviews with friends and family,
Online only • MLB At Bat: All right, this present
probably works only if you are buying for a baseball junkie, but it might be my favorite gift on the list. The MLB At Bat
app allows you to listen to every Major League Baseball game of the 2014 season with your choice of home or away announcers. Last summer I spent hours listening to Denny Matthews broadcast Kansas City Royais games early in the evening before switching over to the West Coast game of my choice later in the night. This app is worth the price$2.99 per month or $19.99 for the whole season — just to listen to Vin Scully call Dodgers games.
as well as a vast amount of home video Available t h r ough t t vww.mib.com, of McConkey himself, will move you iTunes, Googie Play and other app mar"The Best American Sports Writ- whether you have a season pass at Mt. ketpiaces for $2.99 a month or $19.99 for ing 2013" edited by J.R. Moehringer: A Bachelor or prefer your snow in plastic the entire season. collection of the best and most expertly globes. crafted sports stories from 2012, this anAvailable in a DVD and Blu-ray collec• Topps Wall Art: A gift made for evthology was designed for the reader who tors' box ($30), iTunes ($12.99) and Google ery man cave in America, these posters tears through Sports Illustrated in one Play ($9.99), and screening at Bend's Tow- — they come as large as 23 inches by 31 sitting. While SI is well-represented, the er Theatre ($10) on Dec. 28. For more in- inches — are exactreplicas of your faTBASW series always does a stellar job formation, got to www.mcconkeymovie. vorite Topps baseball cards from 1968 of finding outstanding stories from plac- com. to 1990. Not all players are availablees outside the typical sports landscape. Buddy Biancalana yes, Bo Jackson no" Medora": Another film t hat w a s but there is more than enough inventory Articles from Men's Journal, GQ, The •
•
Believer, and The New Yorker aii appear
shown at this year's BendFilm Festival, Medora tells the story of the Medora Hor-
in this year's book. Available in paperback ($14.95) and on nets, maybe the worst boys basketball e-readers ($14.95). team in hoops-crazed Indiana. Filmmak-
to make any child of the 1960s, '70s or
'80s happy. Available at www.topps.com. Prices start at $64.99.
FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
NHL ROUNDUP
Rookies lead l(ings over Sharks
ca ro over ou ern
0 -BI1 e
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL ROUNDUP
The Associated Press T UCSON, Ar i z.
The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Martin Jones made 31 saves in his seventh consecutive win to be-
gin his NHL career, and fellow rookie Tyler Toffoli had a goal and an assist in the Los Angeles Kings' 4-1 victory over the San Jose Sharks on Thursday
night. Dwight King and Jeff Carter also had a goal and an assist apiece for the Kings, who ran over their California rivals for their eighth win in nine games to cap a 15-2-4 stretch since Nov.2. Jones' shutout streak ended
at 133 minutes, 26 seconds, but Patrick Marleau's goal with 2:10 to play was just the
sixth Jones has allowed in his club-record 7-0 start.
Kings c aptain D u s tin Brown was ejected for a knee-on-knee hit on Tomas Hertl late in the first period.
San Jose's rookie goal-scorer didn't return to the game.
Jones has been spectacular since his NHL debut on Dec. 3, keeping the Kings on a roll
C3
John Miller /The Associated Press
without injured starter Jona-
Arizona's Aaron Gordon (11) maneuvers for a shot against the
than Quick. Jones didn't give up a goal in his first eight periods at Staples Center, shutting out the New York Islanders
defense of Southern University's Calvin Godfrey during the second half of Thursday night's game in Tucson, Ariz. Arizona won 69-43.
— T he
signs were there for a letdown. the right direction," JohnArizona was coming off son said. "Kaleb is a big body arguably its biggest win of down low that takes up a lot the season. The Wildcats of space in terms of reboundwere playing without 7-foot ing and limiting second shots. center Kaleb Tarczewski, and He's really our rim protector." in the midst of finals for their Southern (3-8) had played coursework. tough road games against MarIt wasn't always pretty, but quette and Florida, and fought they shook off the distractions back against the nation's No. and pulled away for another 1 team after a miserable first vlctory. half. The Jaguars weren't able Aaron Gordon scored 21 to dig out of that big hole, going points, Nick Johnson added 5 for 21 from 3-point range and 17 and Arizona opened its sec- 4 of 15 on free throws. ond week at No. 1 with a 69-43 Malcolm Miller and Calvin rout over Southern on Thurs- Godfrey had 11 points apiece day night. for Southern. "I'm happy for the win from "Playing under the pressure the perspective of this was a of coming to a No. 1-ranked hard week for our team," Aruniversity and against athizona coach Sean Miller said. letes like Ar izona has wi ll Coming off a c omeback hopefully help us in our conroad win over Michigan on ference," Southern coach RoSaturday, Arizona (12-0) raced man Banks said. "We won't
NEW YORK — Jabari Parker
out to a 15-point first-half lead
15 turnovers. Texas State shot
see that much talent, so I think
had 23 points and 10 rebounds, and Duke used a patient offensive attack to beat UCLA
at Madison Square Garden. The Blue Devils (9-2) poked and prodded UCLA's 2-3 zone from the perimeter, making 11 3-pointers in a season-high 32 attempts from beyond the arc. Parker went 4 for 8 from
long range while going over 20 points for the ninth time in his
11 college games. Utah 69, Texas State 50: SALT LAKE CITY — Bran-
don Taylor scored 18 points and Jordan Loveridge had 14 points and 10 rebounds to lead Utah to a v ictory over Texas State. Delon W r ight
added 13 points for the Utes (10-1), who held the Bobcats to just 38.3 percent shooting
(18-of-47) and forced a total of
despite having to shift players it will make us better scorers just 18.2 percent (2-of-11) on to new positions with Tarcze- and help us be more efficient 3-pointers. wski out. Th e second half offensively." Long Beach State 7 2, wasn't quite as smooth and the Arizona moved to the top of Southern California 71: LONG Wildcats went 22 of 37 on free The Associated Press poll last BEACH, Calif. — Mike Caffey throws, but turned it over just week for the first time since scored22 points and made the eight times and played well at 2003 and immediately faced winning layup with 16 secthe defensive end to start 12-0 two difficult tests. onds left, giving Long Beach in non-conference action for The Wildcats passed both, State a victory over Southern the second straight season. racing past New Mexico State California that snapped the Brandon Ashley had 11 after stumbling early against 49ers' nine-game skid. Byron points and 10 rebounds for Ar- the Aggies' quirky defenses, Wesley's jumper missed at the izona, which outscored South- then rallying from an 11-point buzzer for the Trojans, who ern 34-12 in the paint despite deficit to beat Michigan. erased a 16-point deficit in the Tarczewski's absence. Also on Thursday: second half only to fall to 0-2 "Overall,we're headed in No. 8 Duke 80, UCLA 63: on the road.
and Edmonton before Mar-
leau's late goal. Already the first goalie
NBA SCOREBOARD
NBA ROUNDUP
since the 1938-39 NHL season
to record three shutouts in his first six starts, Jones is one
victory shy of Bob Froese's NHL record 8-0 start. Jones
even earned an assist in the second period on a goal by Toffoli.
Antti Niemi stopped 28 shots on a miserable night for the
Sharks, who have lost six of eight while falling off the pace set by their two Southern Cal-
ifornia rivals, who have two of the NHL's four best records. The home team has won 15
straight games between San Jose and Los Angeles, including all seven in the Kings' second-round playoff series victory last spring. Brown and Hertl collided
late in the scoreless first period, with Brown making a cut at the Sharks' blue line before
their right knees connected. Also on Thursday: Flyers 5, Blue Jackets 4: PHILADELPHIA —
C l aude
Giroux scored the tying and winning goals in the final minutes of the third period,
rallying Philadelphia past Columbus. Sabres 4, Bruins 2: BUFFALO, NY. — Drew Stafford
scored the winning goal in the third period, and Ryan Miller made 34 saves in Buffalo's victory over Boston. Penguins 5, Wild 2: PITTSB URGH —
Short-handedSpursoutlast Warriors a 12-4 run, tying the game on Klay ThompThe Associated Press OAKLAND, Calif. — Tiago Splitter tipped son's 3-pointer with 8:37 remaining. Curry in a rebound with 2.1 seconds left, lifting the gave Golden State the lead moments later short-handed San Antonio Spurs to a 104- with another from long range. 102 victory over the Golden State Warriors The teams traded scores for several minon Thursday night. utes until San Antonio slowly began to pull Stephen Curry hit a tying 3-pointer on the away. Splitter hit two free throws, and Leonprevious possession for the Warriors. After ard followed with a difficult runner to give two misses by teammates, Splitter elevated the Spurs a 100-97 lead with 2:52 to play. around the rim to tap in the winning score.
After the Warriors closed within one, Bo-
San Antoniogave Tim Duncan and Manu ris Diaw blocked Curry's layup and Mills Ginobili the night off to rest, and Tony Park- jumped out of bounds to save the rebound. er sat out for the second straight game with Golden State stopped San Antonio again, a bruised right shin. but Thompson missed a jumper on the other The Spurs still managed to get the road end — and Lee's tip rimmed out. win, using big nights from Marco Belinelli, Diaw followed with a dunk to put San Kawhi Leonard and Patty Mills to hand the Antonio up three. Then Andre Iguodala corWarriors another devastating defeat in a re- ralled Curry's missed jumper, and handed it match of last season's Western Conference back to Curry, who made a 3-pointer at the semifinals. top of the arc to even the score at 102-all with Belinelli scored 28 points against his for- 28.7 seconds left. m er team, Leonard had 21 points and 10 reIn a wild scrum on San Antonio's final bounds and Mills added 20 points and five possession, Belinelli missed a jumper, then assists in one of San Antonio's most impres- Diaw's tip bounced out. Splitter was unsive wins this season. It was a season high in guarded in front of the rim, tipping the ball points for all three players. in for the go-ahead basket. David Lee had 32 points and 13 rebounds In another game on Thursday: for the Warriors, who trailed by eight after Thunder 107, Bulls 95: O K L A HOMA threesloppyquarters.Curryscored30points CITY — Kevin Durant scored 32 points and tied his career high with 15 assists. and Oklahoma City beat Chicago for its The Warriors allowed a season-high 31 eighth straight win. Russell Westbrook points off 24 turnovers. San Antonio gave up had 20 points and reserve Reggie Jackson 19 points on 19 turnovers. added 18 to help the Thunder improve to The Warriors started the final quarter on
13-0 at Chesapeake Arena.
Standings All TimesPST
EasternConference d-Indiana d-Miami Atlanta d-Boston Detroit Charlotte Washington
Toronto Cleveland Chicago Brooklyn NewYork Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee
W L 20 5 19 6 14 12 12 15 13 14 12 14
u
9 9 9 9 8 8 7 5
13 14 15 16 16 17 18 19 20
Western Conference
d-Oklahoma City Portland d-San Antonio d-LA. Clippers Houston Dallas Phoenix Denver GoldenState Minnesota LA. Lakers NewOrleans Memphis Sacramen to Utah d-divisionleader
W L 21 4 22 5 21 5 18 9 17 9 15 10 14 10 14 10 14 13 13 13 12 13
Pct GB 800 760 1
538 6'/z 444 9 481 8 462 8'/z 458 8'/z 391 10 375 10'/~ 360 11 360 11 320 12 308 12'/2 269 13'/z 200 15
Pct GB 840 815 808 '/z 667 4
654 4'/z 600 6 583 6'/2 583 6'/z 519 8 500 8'/z 480 9 u 13 458 9'/z 10 15 400 11 7 17 292 13'I~ 7 21 250 15'/z
Thursday'sGames
Oklahoma City107, Chicago95 SanAntoni0104,GoldenState102
Today'sGam es BrooklynatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. MilwaukeeatCleyeland, 4:30 p.m. SacramentoatMiami430pm Utah at Atlanta,4:30 p.m. CharlotteatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Houstonat Indiana,5p.m. TorontoatDalas, 5:30p.m. PhoenixatDenver,6 p.m. Minnes otaatLA.Lakers,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames
Memphisat NewYork, 9a.m. Washington at Boston,10a.m. Sacramento at Orlando 4p.m. Houstonat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Utah atCharlotte, 4:30p.m. Clevelandat Chicago, 5p.m. PhiladelphiaatMilwaukee,5;30 p.m. Oklahoma City atSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Dallasat Phoenix, 6p.m. NewOrleansat Portland, 7p.m. LA. LakersatGoldenState, 7:30p.m. DenveratLA. Clippers,7:30p.m.
Summaries Thursday'sGames
Thunder 107, Bulls 95 CHICAGO (95) Dunleavy4-12 0-0 11,Boozer2-7 6-8 10,Noah 8-17 7-823,Augustin 5-102-215, Butler 0-23-r 3, Snell 4-150-010,Gibson5 96-816, Teague0 23 4 3,Mohammed1-32-24,Murphy0-00-00.Totals 29-7729-39 95. OKLAHOMA CITY (107) Durant 13-202-2 32, Ibaka 2-4 0-0 5, Perkins 0-0 0-0 0, Westbrook7-12 6-7 20,Sefolosha4-11 1-210, Collison4-61-1 9, Adams1-4 2-24, Lamb 3-11 0-0 7,Jackson8-12 0-018, Fisher0-3 0-00, Jones0-00-00, Roberson1-I 0-0 z Totals 43-84 12-14 107. Chicago 24 28 20 23 — 95 OklahomaCit y 3 5 2 0 29 23 — 107
Spurs 104, Warriors 102 SAN ANTO NIO(104) Leonard8-144-721, Diaw4-91-2 9, Baynes1-5 0-02, Mills 8-172-320,Da.Green4-140-011, Belinelli 10-164-428, Splitter 1-72-34,Joseph2-3 0-0 5, Bonner 0-10-00, DeColo0-10-00, Ayres2-20-0 4. Totals 40-8913-19104. GOLDEN STATE(102) Iguodala3-40-0 6, Lee13-22 6-732, Bogut3-3 2-2 8, Curry12-280-0 30, Thompson6-180-013, Barnes0-3 0-0 0, Speights2-3 2-2 6, DrGreen1-4 0-02, Douglas1-30-03,Bazemore1-20-oz Totals 42-90 10-11102. San Antonio 18 3 5 29 22 — 104 Golden State 23 2 8 23 28 — 102
Ch r i s K u n i t z
scored his 19th goal, Sidney Crosby had two assists, and
Pittsburgh jumped out to a four-goal lead before beating Minnesota en route to its sea-
son-high sixth straight victory. Maple Leafs 2, Coyotes 1: T ORONTO —
J a me s v a n
Riemsdyk and Joffrey Lupul scored in the shootout to lift
Continued from C1 But the players and owners all agree with something Indianapolis Colts lineman Cory Redding said recently about trading a few uncomfortable hours outside for a shot at the title. "Snow, wind, freezing rain, it doesn't matter,"
Toronto over Phoenix.
Lightning 4, Predators 2: TAMPA, Fla. — Anders Lindback made 28 saves and won
in his first game against his former team, Alex Killorn had a goal and an assist, and Tam-
pa Bay beat Nashville. Panthers 4, Senators 2: O TTAWA, Ontario —
Super Bowl
Tom
Redding said. "It just makes the confetti feel that much better." The guys who employ them feel just as strongly, even though all but one or two of the 32 owners will be ensconced in sky boxes that night instead of down on the field. But another handful or so will be
paying even closer attention than usual, and not just to the game, but to the weeklong buildup. Like co-hosts John Mara of the Giants and Woody
Gilbert and Tomas Kopecky scored in the final three min-
Johnson of the Jets, those owners have franchises with outdoor stadiums in cold-weather towns. And
utes, and Florida topped Ottawa for its fifth straight win.
if this Super Bowl makes it big in New York, then
Red Wings 3, Flames 2: DETROIT — Daniel Alfredsson
scored two goals, including a power-play score at 1:03 of overtime, and Detroit earned a
win over Calgary. Blues 5, Canadiens 1: ST. LOUIS — A l exander Steen
the reasoning goes that the big game can make it anywhere. Foxborough, Philadelphia, Washington, Nashville, Chicago, Kansas City, Denver — take your pick. Owners at those sites, and several others, have
broached the subject before and especially lately, though none has been required thus far to put any money or resources where his mouth is — and will not until the bidding process for the 2019 Super Bowl
scored twice and Jaroslav Halak made 25 saves against his
begins late next summer.
former team to lead St. Louis to a win over Montreal.
set for Glendale, Ariz. (2015); Santa Clara, Calif. (2016, the 50th Superpalooza); and Houston (2017).
Stars 4, Canucks 1: DALL AS —
J a mi e B en n a n d
Colton Sceviour scored goals 15 seconds apart in the first period, leading Dallas to a victory over Vancouver. Avalanche 4, Oilers 2: DENVER — Maxime Talbot broke
a second-period tie with a short-handed goal, and Semyon Varlamov stopped 27 shots,
leading Colorado to a win over Edmonton.
After New York, the next three Super Bowls are The 2018 field has already been narrowed to Indi-
anapolis, Minneapolis and perennial favorite New Orleans. All three finalists have — or in the case of Minneapolis, will have — a domed stadium. That
winner will be announced in May. By then, serious ownership contenders for 2019 will have begun raising cash from civic, business and community groups and will have helped form bid committees. It is no small commitment. After winning the 2014 game, in a vote taken at the 2010
NFL owners meetings, the host New York-New Jersey committee raised $70 million to cover the cost of staging the event. Their final bill will have to cov-
er everything from erecting a 60-foot-tall toboggan the snow off the field," Denver owner Pat Bowlen slide in Times Square to a series of contingency said, "and we'll play the game.... The championship plans on clearing snow and delivering upward of game shouldbe played around the league. Every80,000 fans to MetLife Stadium on game day. body should have an opportunity to have it." "This is where it all started. Right here," New Other than coming up with the cash and an organizational plan, the bar for entering the Super Bowl England owner Robert Kraft said, referring to the lottery is low. region where football first took hold in the United A bid city must have 29,000 hotel rooms within an States. "We would love one day to hold it here if it's a hour's drive of the stadium (sorry, Green Bay) and good experience there." "I will, yes," Philadelphia owner Jeff Lurie said be able to seat upward of 68,000 fans on game day. It also has to provide two NFL-caliber practice facil- back in March about entering a bid. "I will, if it's a ities for the teams, buildings large enough to house success. New York will help us." a media center and the "NFL Experience" — essenMeanwhile, in Chicago, hewing to its reputation tially a weeklong fan convention — and a range of as a deal-making town, the mayor has been lobsponsor and corporate hospitality gatherings. Even bying on behalf of the Bears behind closed doors. towns where the field gets chewed up during the Rahm Emanuel made his case to Commissioner season can confidently bid, since NFL spokesman Roger Goodell last June in a conversation "about Brian McCarthy said the league has arranged to several things that would allow Chicago and the bring in an entirely new playing surface for the big NFL to expand their already wonderful relationship," according to a mayoral spokesman. game in the past. "At the end of the day, the considerations are the Whether any of those cities, or more stealthy consame as they would be for a game in a warm climate tenders like Tennessee, Carolina and Seattle, make or indoors," McCarthy added. "What did the prod- it into the final mix remains to be seen. In the 47 Suuct on the field look like? Did the logistics work to per Bowlsspread across 15 differentvenues so far, the benefit of everybody? How was the fan experi- no hosting team has ever made it to the big game. ence'? How did it come across on TV'? How were the But two came close: the then-Los Angeles Rams lost sponsors treated? the 1979 game played just down the road at the Rose "This is the pinnacle of our game. It's the one Bowl in Pasadena; five years later, the 49ers ventured stage that everybody is looking at." just 30 miles from home to play at Stanford Stadium. For handicapping purposes, Washington Based strictly on the numbers, the cold-weather Redskins owner Daniel Snyder put down the first franchise most likely to break that curse would be marker among his cold-weather counterparts the Patriots. Using the 32-degree benchmark, New during a break in those 2010 meetings. Just before England is an NFL-best 23-6 (a winning percentage he and fellow owners agreed to waive the so-called of 79 percent) in such games. "50-degree rule" to pave the way for a successful Among teams with at least 10 games in those New York-New Jersey bid — previously, hosting cit- conditions, its closest pursuer is Philadelphia (10-4), iesrequired an average temperature of50 degrees followed by Cincinnati (11-5), Green Bay (28-13-1) or higher during the week of the game — Snyder and Chicago (14-7). Five teams — St. Louis, Arizoemerged from a midmorning session and said, "I na, San Francisco, New Orleans and Detroit — have think Washington should get one, no matter what. It not won even once in the cold over that same span. is the nation's capitaL" Not that any or all of them would not welcome the More than three years later, Snyder is part of a chance to try their luck in 2019. "If they have it in Alaska, if that's where they growing chorus of like-minded owners. But until they assess the final product in New York, all those want toplay the Super Bowl,"Buff alo coach Doug pledges of support are only conditional. Marrone said, "I want to get my team there. That's "Everybody says, 'What if it snows?' We'll take how I look at it."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
Cougars Continued from C1 W est S a l e m' s lea d swelled to 58-46 midway
through the fourth quarter, and R iper c a lled a timeout.
"We just said, 'Look, if you're going to make a run, you better do it now,'" Riper said. "We don't have a choice. The
clock is not our friend. These kids will respond. They'll go hard and play their guts out.... You just never know what's going to happen." The Cougars did respond, scoring s even straight points to cut the
gap to 58-53. But Mountain View would not get any closer, and West Sa-
i ra
e a s i s ersover ew 0 PREP ROUNDUP
Bulletin staff report
and 10 rebounds in the loss. The Outlaws play Sea-
SEASIDE — With her team trailing 26-12 at the
side today at 1:30 p.m. in the consolation round of the
half on Thursday afternoon, Sisters coach Julianne fourth quarter when Gilchrist took control, outscor- tourney. Horner challenged the Outlaws. She implored them ing Culver's JV squad 9-2. "I pretty much told them to Gilchrist 55, Culver JV 28: GILCHRIST — Trinton to step into the pressure of Newport's defense and stay calm," Grizzlies coach Lorena Ochoa said. "The Koch scored a game-high 17points and Hunter Nelson turn the tide. girls on the other team were getting feisty so I told added 16 as the Grizzlies (3-0) easily handled Culver's In the second half, Sisters did just that. them told my girls to settle down." Sierra Shuey led junior varsity. With the victory, Gilchrist improved to After outscoring Newport 17-8 in the third quarter to the Grizzlies (0-2) with eight points and was 2 for 2 4-1 on the season. get within five points heading into the fourth, the Out- from the free-throw line. SWIMMING laws polished off the comeback with a 13-point final BOYS BASKETBALL Bend boys, girls win dual meet: REDMONDperiod to seal a 42-40 girls basketball win at the SeaBend 70, Woodburn 40: Fiveplayers scored in dou- Bend High's boys and girls teams each won three side Holiday Classic. ble figures forthe Lava Bears, who put the game out of duals at the Redmond Multi-Dual Meet at the Cas"It's a big ego-boost," Horner said of the victory. reach by outscoring the Bulldogs 25-14 in the second cade Aquatic Center. The Lava Bears boys — who "They've been playing well. ... For us to be able to pull quarter en route to a 41-21 halftime lead. Jaylin Robin- topped Sisters, Ridgeview and Redmond — were led out and really show that we have the tenacity and the sonledtheBears,wh oimproved to2-3 on the season, by Nathan Brown, who posted individual wins in the ability to do that, it's definitely a confidence booster." with 13 points, five rebounds and six assists. Steffan 100-meter butterfly and 200 freestyle. Brown also Boston Moore paced Sisters (1-3) with 10 points, Kearsleyscored 12 points and grabbed six rebounds swam on the Lava Bears' winning 400-meter relay Savannah Spearadded nine, and Jacobie Petterson in his first game of theyear for Bend and Connor Scott team and their 200 freestyle relay squad that took contributed eight points to help the Outlaws snap a added 12 of his own. Bryan Holliday and Jacob Par- second. Jennifer Robeson paced the Bend High girls three-game skid and post their first win of the season.
lem converted its f r ee
Sisters takeson Madras today at3:30p.m .
throws down the stretch to seal the win.
In other Thursday action: GIRLS BASKETBALL Bend 57, Pendleton 43: The host Lava Bears took
sons contributed 10 points apiece. The Lava Bears (3-
with an individual victory in the 100 butterfly and a
2) made 29 field goals to Woodburn's 13. Madras 61, Newport 58 (OT):SEASIDE — Devon
runner-upeff ortin the 100backstroke.She also participated on the Bears' 200 and 400 freestyle relay
Wolfe's 12-foot jumper rimmed out at the end of regu-
teams that both placed first. Sisters' Mary Stewart
"During th e f o u rth, we got the crowd going,
lation, forcing an extra period for the Seaside Holiday also had a strong meet as she won the 200 individual control early and fended off the Buckaroos in the Classic matchup. In overtime, the White Buffaloes (3-2) medley and 50 freestyle.
and we felt like we were
third quarter en route to the Class 5A nonconference
getting there," said the
with five rebounds, three
win. Lisa Sylvester scored 14points to pace Bend(3-2), for the win. Jered Pichette, who was a perfect 10 for 10 Bend 31, Ridgeview 30: REDMOND — The Lava which led 15-7 after one quarter and 25-18 at halftime. from the foul line, finished with 28 points to pace Ma- Bears won a thriller as Nico Spring (145 pounds) and Pendleton closed within two points in the third peri- dras, while Wolfe added 10points and Austin Rauschen- Noah Haines (152) delivered a pair of wins in the final od, but the Bears dominated the fourth quarter and burg chipped in eight. The Buffs continue tournament two matches of the night to clinch the Intermountain won going away. "We had a really good start and a playtoday, when they take on Central Linn at 5:15p.m. Hybrid dual. Trailing 30-25, Spring posted a 3-1 vicgood finish," said Bend coach Todd Ervin. "Our goal South Salem 70, Summit 53: The Storm came out tory over the Ravens' Walter Harris at 145 pounds to is to put together four good quarters, so we'd like to strong a~ 6A S o uth Salem. By the end of the half make the team score 30-28 heading into the final consee a little more consistency." Ervin added that he the score was tied 25-25. But Summit lost momentum test of the evening. Haines won the dual with a 9-3 dewas pleased with his team's scoring balance: Jessica in the second half after South Salem scored 30 in the cision against Ridgeview's Calixto Paniauga, putting McClay and Marissa Hayes tallied nine points apiece, third quarter and another 25 in the fourth, outscoring the Bears over the top, 31-30. "What's so special about Brydie Burnham and Delaney Crook added seven the Storm 55-28."Iwasreally encouraged,"coach Jon Noah is he stays very focused through adversity," Bend
assists and two steals.
each, and Kendall Kramer scored six. The Lava Bears
Frazier said, "especially that first half. That third quar-
coach Luke Larwin said about Haines, who trailed
Suppah finished with 13 points for Madras, and Cire-
with five assists. "It was a solid four quarter game,"
for the Adrian Irwin Invitational.
Cougars' Emma Platner. "But we fouled so much
that they were getting to the line (to attempt) two shots, every time. It made
it really hard to keep up with them."
Platner posted a gamehigh 20 points to go along R yann Van
Der Z w iep
chipped in 12 points and two boards for the Cougars (1-3) and Sarah Bailey finished with n i ne points, four rebounds and three steals. Madison Hopper paced the Titans (1-2) with 14 points, six steals and six boards, while Emilee Silbernagel and D e laney Henery contributed with 13 points apiece. Jessi-
ca Bowman added nine points and nine rebounds. Platner got M o u ntain
View rolling in the first quarter, knocking down back-to-back 3-pointers and dishing out a pair of
built a lead and hit 9 of 11 free throws before holding on
WRESTLING
make up anearlier nonconference postponement at ter unfortunatelytheygot on a run." NickMoyer ledthe 2-0 early in the match. "The other kid got the first Springfield on Saturday. Storm (2-3) with 17 points, followed by Chris Reeves, takedown and it didn't faze him." Michael Hageman Madras 54, Astoria 37: SEASIDE — Despite ear- who totaled 16points with two 3-pointers. also came up with a hug win for the Bears, pinning ly foul trouble, the White Buffaloes snapped a twoLa Pine 71, Seaside 68: SEASIDE — Taylor Brown the Ravens' Phelan Lund with 1 second left in their game losing skid after outscoring Astoria 30-17 in the was on fire. After coming off the bench in the third 220-poundmatch.Freshman ChrisWi lderrecorded an second half at the Seaside Holiday Classic. Mariah quarter with his team tiedup with the Seagulls, Brown impressive win for Ridgeview, besting Bend senior KaStacona paced the Buffs (3-2) with 21points, 12 steals sunk four 3-pointers. Sam Wieber led the Hawks (5-2) sey Beuschlein 8-6in overtime in the 132-pound match. and eight assists against just two turnovers. Leah with a total of 21 points on 8-of-14 shooting to go along Both teams are back at Ridgeview today and Saturday lle Frank chipped in 10 points. The White Buffaloes Kent Wieber said. "And we played great all four quarMountain View 39, Redmond 37: REDMONDcontinue tournament play this afternoon, when they ters." La Pine takes on Elma (Wash.) tonight at 8:30 The Cougars used four pins, two wins by forfeit and take on Sisters at 3:30 p.m. p.m. at the Seaside tournament. a 9-8 decision by Hayden Kingrey at 126 to turn away Seaside 35, La Pine 25: SEASIDE — Holli Glenn Elma (Wash.) 39, Sisters 38: SEASIDE — The Out- the host Panthers. Uriahs Smith (220 pounds), Kapoured in 11 points, Ashley Pierce had eight, but the laws lost on a buzzer beater as an Elma player drib- leb Winebarger (145), Tracy Pitcher (152) and Kevin Hawks (3-4) could not climb out of a 19-14 halftime bled the length of the court in 3.6 seconds with his Wright all won by fall for Mountain View. Redmond, hole en route to the loss at the Seaside Holiday Clas- team down 38-37 and hit a floater in the lane as time which has just one senior in its lineup, was led by sic. La Pine returns to tournament play today at noon expired to knock off Sisters in the first round of the Austin Rysedt's pin at 132 pounds and Jacob Pickeragainst Estacada. Seaside Holiday Classic. Hays Moore and Connor ing's win by fall with 7 seconds left in the match at Gilchrist 25, Culver JV 19: CULVER — The GrizSchaab each had 11 points for Sisters, which fell to 170 pounds. Both teams are at this weekend's Adrian zlies and Bulldogs were neck and neck until the 0-5 on the season. Justin Harrer added seven points Irwin Invitational at Ridgeview.
assists to help the Cou-
gars build grab a 12-4 lead. "The mindset (going into the game) was protect our house, pretty much," Platner said.
"Come out strong at the beginning. I hit a couple shots — they didn't know
I was the shooter yet. We picked up our d efense and had a really good firstquarter." B ut West S a lem a n swered with that 11-2 run
to open the second quarter to grab the lead and never trailed again. "There were s o me wasted opportunities that are coming from our inexperience of kids playing at the varsity level,"
bendbulletin.com Girls basketball Nonconlerence WestSalem65, Mountain View55 WestSalem (65) —MadisonHopper14,Silbemagel13, Henery13, Gunesch 10, Bowman 9, Foster 5,Olson1.Totals 20 24-34. MountainviewI55) — Em maPlatner20, van DerZwiep12,Bailey9, J.Goetz4, H.Goetz4,Breckel 3, Pfaff 2, Warren1. Totals1619-22 55. WestSalem 12 2 4 14 15 — 65 MountaI nvlew 20 11 8 16 — 55 Three-pointgoals— WestSalem:Foster; Mountain View:Platner4. Class5A Nonconierence Bend 57,Pendleton43 Pendleton (43) — Charm ayne Robinson 14, Williams13,Bodmer9, Lindsey4, Lehnert 3. Totals 18 7-10 43.
Bend (57) —LisaSylvester14, McClay9, Hayes 9, 6urnham 7, Crook7, Kramer6, Evert 2, Parker2, Wheeler tTotals2113-1857. Pendleton 7 11 14 11 — 43 Bend 15 10 12 20 — 57
said Riper, whose team
Three-poingoal t s—pendleton: none;Bend: crookz
committed 23 turnovers on the night. "That's the biggest thing right there." The Titans clamped
Seaside HolidayClassic Madras 54,Astoria 37 Astoria(37) — Marina Oman13, Dem ander 9, Hunt 8,Mickle4, Englund2, Israel1. Totals 12 11-1637. Madras I54) —Mariah stacona21, suppah13, Frank10,Esquivel6, Wolfe 2,J. Adams2.Totals 22 3-11 54. Astoria 14 6 12 5 — 3 7 Madras 14 10 19 11 — 54 Three-pointgoals— Astoria:Oman, Hunt; Madras: Stacona 3,Suppah 3,Esquivel.
down on Platner after the
senior put up eight points in the first quarter, limiting her to 12 points the
rest of the way, including a scoreless third period. "Really, they guarded me super, super tight," Platner said. "We just weren't hitting shots and
getting to that free-throw line that we like to get to." The Cougars were dealt
a 12-point hole to climb out from, and despite scoring seven straight p oints, M o untain would not recover.
V iew
"You kind of expend a lot of energy," Riper said. "You get to a point where you're working your butt off, but you're not getting a lot out of it. You're kind of done. W he n
t h e y 're
getting two foul shots every time, that's tough (to come back from)." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbuiletin.com.
Brothers
Seaside HolidayClassic Sislers42, Newporl40 Sisters(42) — BostonMoore10, Spear9, Petterson 8, Henson6, Mann4, Arruda3, Knoop2. Totals18 3-1142. Newporl(40) —JasmineWagner10, Solano8, Thompson 7,Kurmins-Hahn6,Losier5,Schones2, Henderson 2. Totals 183-5 40. Sisters 6 6 17 13 — 42 Newporl 1 3 13 8 6 — 4 0 Three-poingoal t s — Sisters:Moore2; Newp ort: Wagner. SeasideHolidayClassic Seaside35, LaPine25 La Pine(25) —Holli Glenn11,Pierce8, Boen4, K. MickelZtotals11 0-3 25. Seaside(35) —MaddiUtti12, Lewis9,Kawasoe 5, Dundas 4, Westerholm3, Miler 2.Totals 134-8 35. 9 5 5 6 — 25 La Pine Seaside 7 12 7 9 — 3 5 Three-pointgoals— LaPine:Glenn3; Seaside: Utti, Lewis,Kawasoe. Class1A Nonconference Gilchrist25, CulverJV19 Gilchrist(25) —SierraShuey10,Blum6,Lowell 4, Bean 3,Berling Z Totals10 5-7 25. Culver JV (19) —NetaysiaHobson6(rest not available).Totals 92-219. Gilchrisl 8 5 4 8 — 25 Culver 7 4 6 2 — 19 Three-pointgoals— Gilchrist: none;CulverJV:not
available.
200freestyle —1, NathanBrown, B, 2:18.49. 2, BenGriswold,B,2:24.80. 3, AlexanderCyrus, S, 2:55.78. 4,TrevorStanden,S,3:04.20. 200 individualmedley —1, Justin Gilette, B, 2:33.0z 2, Jaden Boehme, B, 2:45.2z 3, Jonathan Luz, S,3;22,06. 50freestyle —1, TrevorBarry, S,28.26. 2, Cole Moore,B, 28.39. 3, Austin Snyder-Jewsbury,
2:56.71.
200 individual medley —1, MaryStewa rt, S, 2;41.06. 2,HaleyHoughton, RV,2:44.42. 3, Alex Winslow, B,3:00.40. ClassSA 50freestyle —1, MaryStewart, S, 29.79. 2, Nonconference Chyna Fish, 6, 30.0. 3, EmilyChristen,S, 3z11. Bend 70,Woodburn40 100 butterfly — 1, Jennifer Robeson, 8, Woodburn(40)—Espinoza10,Ruiz7, Martinez 1:09.2z 2,RachelHaney,Rv,1:11.40. 3, Annazerg6, Ortiz 2, Silva 2,Guererro2, Vasquez. Totals 13 6, 29.60. er, 6, 1:24.73. 100 buNerlly — 1,NathanBrown, B,1:06.50. 10-21 40. 100 freestyle — 1, RebeccaMurphy,B, Offenhauser, B,1:08.5z 3, GarrettRoss, BendI70) —Jaylin Robinson13,Scott12, Kear- 2, christian 1:10.55. 2,AddieBenson,B, 1:15.14. 3, Elizabeth sley12, Parsons10,Holliday10, Spitler 5,Beaumar- 1;15.55. 100freestyle —1, Austin Snyder-Jews bury, Moss,R,1:15.40. chais 2,Harm eson2,Warinner2, Johnson2.Totals B, 1:03.26. 2, Brennan Miler, S, 1:05.26. 3, Bretty 400 freestyle — 1, HaleyHough ton, RV, 29 9-13 70. Kelly, RV,1:05.53. Woodburn 7 14 8 11 — 40 5:12.12. 2, Julia North, B, 5:19.52. 3, Madeleine 400freestyle —1,Garrett Ross,6, 4:5Z20. Bend 16 25 17 11 — 70 B,5:28. 77. 200 freestyle relay — 1, Sisters A (lan Busby, Three-poingoal t s—Woodburn: Espinoza2, Ruiz2; 200freestyle relay —1, BendA (Jennifer B aldessari , Keenan O H ' ern, Tre vor Barry, Brenna n Bend:Robinson2,Spitler. Robeson,AlexWinslow,AnnaZerger, Julia North), Miller), 1:52.93. 2, BendA, 1:52.98. 3, BendB, 2:Oz64. 2,sistersA, 2:04.21. 3, RidgeviewA, 1:59.24. SouthSalem70, Summit 53 100 backstroke —1, Christian Offenhauser, 2:07.59. South Salem(70) —SethErickson19, Fohn18, 100 backstroke —1, Rachel Haney,RV, 1:11.78. 2,BrennanMiler, S, 1:1z60. 3, Jaden Hann16,Matthews9, Wurgler 4, Marlz4. Totals 26 6, BoehmeB 1:13.36. 1:09.47. 2, JenniferRobeson,B, I:12.93. 3, Alex 12-1970. 100breaststroke—1, Brett Kelly,RV,1:19.46. Winslow,B,1:18.5z Summit (53) —NickMoyer17, Reev es 16, Matt Austin, B, 1:24.46. 3, lan Baldessari, S, 100 breaststroke — 1, CaseeLantz, RV, Mullen 7,Cherry5, Derman2, Michalski 2, Garcia2, 2, 1:34.24. I:28.24. 2, JuliaNorth, B,1:31.79. 3, BethLeavitt, Hurley ZTotals 207-13 53. 400 freestyle relay — 1, Bend A (Nat h an SouthSalem 12 1 3 30 25 — 70 6rown, JordanSheller, Austin Snyder-Jewsbury, Rv, 1:43.51. Summit 15 10 13 15 — 53 400freestyle relay —1, BendA (Jennifer Three-pointgoals— SouthSalem: Fohn3, Hann2, ChristianOffenhauser),4:16.94.2, BendB,4:41.41. Robeson ,MadeleineBusby,Rebeca Murphy,Julia Erickson;summit: Reevesz North), 4:4z85. 2,BendB,5:19.55. 3, RedmondA, Girls Team scores—Sisters101, Ridgeview73;Sis- 7:04.81. Seaside HolidayClassic ters109, Redmond65;Ridgeview 79,Redmond73; Madras61, Newport58 Sisters74; Bend168,Ridgeview69; Bend Madras (61) —JeredPichette 28,Wolfe 10, Bend177, ond45. Rauschenburg8, Holiday 8, Sullivan 5, Rehwinkel2. 195, Redm Topthree tinishers Totals 2014-1861. 200 medleyrelay —1, RidgeviewA (Rachel Newport (58) —Carter McEn tee15, Richcreek Haney, Casee La HaleyHoughton, BethLeavitt), 12, Rawles11,Hyduchak6, White 4, Thurber-Blaser 2:2z19. 2,Bendntz, A,2:30.11. 3, RedmondA,2:45.07. 3, Botello 3,Bearden2, Dammeier ZTotals 237-10 200freestyle —1, ChynaFish, B,2:28.28. 2, 58. at JelfersonCounty MadeleineBusby,B, 2:33.6z 3, chiara lovino, B, Madras 10 20 14 5 12 — 61 Rod SrGm Club Newporl 15 12 12 10 9 — 58 Three-pointgoals— Madras:Pichette 2, RauschenSaturday, Dec. 21, 2013 burg 2, Iolliday2, Wolfe; Newport: Rawles3, Rich10am -until...??? creek,Botelo.
Boys basketball
CHRISTMRS TllRKEY SHOOT IN MRDRRS
SeasideHolidayClassic La Pine71, Seaside68 La Pine (71) —Samuel Wieber, 21,Smith 17, Brown13,Tumplenty8, Taylor 5, Ramirez4, Johnson 3. Totals279-1471. Seaside I68) —AaronTadei 24,Januick15, Richardson10,Farmer6, Flowers6, Wallace 4, Riser 3. Totals 2510-19 68. La Pine 17 12 23 19 — 71 Seaside 10 19 18 21 — 68 Three-poingoal t s— La Pine:Brown4, Turnsplenty 2, Wieber,Taylor,Johnson, Smith; Seaside: Tadei 4, Januik3, Farmer.
Swimming
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RedmondMult-Dual Meet CascadeSwim Center,Redmond BOYS Teamscores—Sisters123,Ridgeview39;Sisters131,Ridgeview34;Ridgeview54, Redmond 44; Bend164,Sisters85; Bend176, Ridgeview34; Bend 183, Redm ond30. Topthree tinishers 200 medleyrelay —1, BendA (Cole Moore, Garrett Ross, Austin Snyder-Jewsbury, Jordan Sheller), 2:06.14. 2,SistersA, 2:11.17. 3, BendB, 2:16.76.
the program, but Bohl is still guiding the Bison in the FCS Continued from C1 terback to the team's starting playoffs. "One thing that's really The Hollister twins both tight end. He had 10 catches walked on at th e U niversi- for 94 yards and a touchdown exciting for me is (that) Wyty of Nevada in Reno in 2012 in 12 games this season. oming doesn't have a lot of "I signed yesterday," Jacob tight ends, and w atching and redshirted as freshmen. At the semester break they Hollister said Thursday, con- Bohl's offense, he uses a lot transferred to Arizona West- firming his commitment to of tight ends," Jacob Hollisern College, where Cody be- Wyoming. "It's been a stress- ter said. "I'm excited to show came a first-team all-Arizona Community College Athletic
Find It All Online
PREP SCOREBOARD
~ Clift4"iver'I ~ QuaIantee
positions at A r i zona West-
ern, converting from a quar-
ful couple of weeks with the
what I can do."
whole coaching situation." Conference selection after Wyoming firedhead coach leading the team with 69 re- Dave Christensen on Dec. 1.
A Wyoming athletic department official reached Thurs-
ceptions for 934 yards and
The Cowboys hired N orth
five touchdowns. Jacob Hollister changed
Dakota State coach Craig
signing of Jacob Hollister, as the coaching transition is still taking place.
Bohl on Dec. 8 to take over
d ay could not confirm t h e
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C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2013
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NASDAQ ~
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O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
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Friday, December 20, 2013
1 soo "
Retailers will have their fingers crossed today and through the final weekend before Christmas. Holiday sales got off to a slow start this year. Many shoppers are holding out for better deals or simply determined not to spend as much. The National Retail Federation estimates spending in November and December will rise 3.9 percent to $602.1 billion, but that's likely to come along with bigger discounts, which cut into retailers' profits.
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HIGH LOW CLOSE 16194.72 16121.54 16179.08 DOW Trans. 721 0.82 7176.63 7206.46 DOW Util. 486.09 478.87 483.74 NYSE Comp. 10158.20 10102.64 10151.52 NASDAQ 4063.70 4045.41 4058.14 S&P 500 181 0.88 1801.35 1809.60 S&P 400 1312.44 1303.17 1304.34 Wilshire 5000 19261.44 19164.21 19236.11 Russell 2000 1133.70 1124.92 1125.45
DOW
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CHG. %CHG. WK +11.11 $.0.07% L -0.71 -0.01% L -3.17 -0.65% L -2.68 -0.03% L -11.92 -0.29% L -1.05 -0 06% L -10.47 -0.80% L -25.33 -0.13% L -7.90 -0.73% L
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MO L L T T L L T L L
D
QTR YTD +23.47% L +35.80% T + 6.76% L +20.23% +34.40% L +26.88% L +27.82% L +28.28% L +32.51%
NorthwestStocks 52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L NAME TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV L +63. 8 +6 0 .3 75 7 1 2 0. 8 0 Alaska Air Group A LK 42.63 ~ 78.53 7 0. 5 7 -.14 -0.2 T T L +15.4 +20 . 2 369 18 1 . 22 Avista Corp A VA 23.52 ~ 29.26 2 7. 8 3 -.20 -0.7 L L Bank ofAmerica BAC 10 . 64 — o 15.98 15 .75 + . 06 +0.4 L L L +35. 7 +3 8 .4 91570 21 0 . 04 Barrett Business BBS I 3 5 .80 — o 90.70 86 .36 + . 0 7 +0.1 L L L +126 . 7 + 133.9 2 4 35 0. 7 2 f Beyond the pharmacy Boeing Co BA 7 2 .68 ~ 142. 0 0 13 5.17 -.32 -0.2 L L L + 79. 4 +8 2 .0 3 121 24 2 .92f Investors will be looking at C ascade Bancorp C ACB 4 .85 o — 7.18 5.8 8 -.25 -4.7 T T T -18.8 -6.8 4 3 5 Walgreen's latest earnings to see T L +49. 4 +5 7 .1 22 1 2 3 0 . 44f ColumbiaBnkg COL B 17.05 ~ 2 7.9 5 26.81 -.27 -1.0 L how drugstore sales are faring. Columbia Sportswear COLM 47.72 — o 73.50 73 .85 -.34 - 0.5 L L L +36.9 +3 8 .0 13 4 2 6 1. 0 0f The nation's largest drugstore Costco Wholesale CO ST 96.51 ~ 126.1 2 11 7.99 -.51 -0.4 L T L +19. 5 +1 9 .9 2 323 25 1 . 2 4 chain has made a priority of Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 6.15 ~ 18.70 1 4. 9 2 -.60 -3.9 T T L +1 3 0.2 +135.5 8 8 cc improving sales of products FLIR Systems F LIR 20.23 ~ 33.82 2 8. 6 7 -.10 -0.3 T T T +28. 5 +3 6 .5 58 2 1 9 0. 3 6 outside the scope of its pharmaHewlett Packard HPQ 13 . 60 — o 28.70 28 .84 + . 5 3 +1.9 L L L +96.8 +93 .2 15801 10 0 . 5 8 cies. The company said earlier this Home Federal Bncp ID HOME 10.84 ~ 1 6.03 14.95 -.14 -0.9 T T L +20. 3 +2 8 .9 25 88 0 2. 4 month that increased promotions Intel Corp I NTC 20.10 ~ 25.98 2 5. 1 4 -.01 . . . L T L +21.9 +24 .3 30991 14 0 . 9 0 helped draw more customers and Keycorp K EY 8 .16 ~ 13.31 13. 2 7 ... ... L L L +57. 6 +5 8 .1 6 586 15 0 . 2 2 Kroger Co K R 2 5 .20 ~ 43.85 3 9. 6 7 -.41 -1.0 T T T + 52.5 +5 2 .1 3 3 27 1 3 0 . 66f boost sales in November. T L +34 . 6 + 4 1.0 1549 77 Lattice Semi LSCC 3.77 ~ 5.77 5.37 -.10 -1.8 T Walgreen reports fiscal LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 22.55 1 7.8 5 -.20 -1.1 L L L -7.6 -1.8 3259 11 first-quarter results today. L +38. 8 +3 9 .2 55 0 4 5 0 . 71f MDU Resources MDU 20 . 73 ~ 30.97 2 9. 4 9 -.10 -0.3 L T Mentor Graphics MEN T 13.21 — o 23.88 23 .41 -.42 -1.8 L L L +37.5 +45 .4 7 5 6 2 6 0. 1 8 Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.28 ~ 38.98 3 6. 2 5 -.33 -0.9 T T L +35. 7 +3 6 .2 33208 14 1 . 1 2 L L +51.7 +60 .6 4 8 00 2 7 0 . 96f Nike Inc 8 N KE 48.40 ~ 80.26 7 8.2 6 -.29 -0.4 L NordstromInc J WN 50.94 ~ 63.72 6 0. 2 4 -.10 -0.2 L T L +12. 6 +1 7 .4 82 8 1 6 1. 2 0 L L Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 ~ 46.55 4 2. 6 2 -.08 -0.2 L -3.6 -0.5 15 7 2 0 1 .84f PaccarInc PCAR 43.67 ~ 60.00 5 7. 2 9 -.44 -0.8 L L L +26. 7 +3 2 .1 98 0 1 9 0 . 80a Planar Systms P LNR 1.30 ~ 2.75 2 .50 +.0 1 + 0 .4 L L L +74.8 +84 .4 32 dd P i Ptt Plum Creek P CL 42.66 ~ 54.62 4 6. 0 6 -.11 -0.2 L L T +3.8 +8.1 11 5 5 2 9 1. 7 6 3n$e$IO.IZ L +39.3 +40 . 6 533 24 0 . 12 Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ 270. 0 0 26 3.89 -.89 -0.3 L L L +81. 4 +8 4 .5 1 958 18 0 . 8 0 Safeway Inc S WY 17.08 ~ 36.90 3 2. 8 2 -.06 -0.2 T T Schnitzer Steel S CHN 2 3 .07 ~ 32.99 30. 1 3 +. 5 5 +1.9 L T L -0.7 - 2.9 26 8 d d 0 . 75 tatesbaee $$a Sherwin Wms SHW 148.50 ~ 195. 3 2 18 0.15 + . 23 + 0.1 L T T +17. 1 +1 9 .5 4 3 9 2 5 2. 0 0 mr m~ StancorpFncl SFG 35.18 — o 65.30 64.63 -.02 . . . L L L +76.2 +81 .3 14 9 1 4 1. 1 0f StarbucksCp SBUX 52.39 ~ 82.50 7 7. 1 5 -.53 -0.7 L T L +43.9 +44 .6 5 5 85 3 4 1 . 04f Triquint Semi TQNT 4.31 ~ 8.98 7.93 -.32 - 3.9 T L T +64. 2 +7 0.5 2 682 d d UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 11.43— o 18.86 18 .60 -.18 -1.0 L L L +57.8 +5 8 .0 1 198 20 0 .60a L L + 25.4 +25 .8 7 9 81 1 3 0.92 US Bancorp USB 31.40 — O 40.15 40 .04 -.08 -0.2 L WashingtonFedl WAF D 15.69 — o 23.80 23 .23 -.23 -1.0 L L L +37.7 +4 5 .8 33 2 1 6 0 . 40f WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 3.25 — o 45.06 45 .02 + . 0 9 +0.2 L L L +31.7 +31 .8 17245 12 1 . 2 0 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 3 1. 2 7 -.12 -0.4 L L L +12.4 +1 3 .8 4 508 27 0 . 8 8
Wall Street expects CarMax's earnings and revenue improved in the third quarter. The car dealership chain, due to deliver its latest quarterly report card today, has benefited this year from rising sales amid overall strong demand for used cars. Meanwhile, it's been taking steps to trim expenses while also making plansto open more than a dozen dealerships next year.
DividendFootnotes:3 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distributicn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 8 clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
Oracle beats the Streetl:.""; ;""
Oracle shares rose sharply Thursday, a day after posted an adjusted profit of 69 cents per share. the business software company reported quarterly Revenue rose 2 percent to $9.28 billion from $9.09 earnings that beat Wall Street expectations. Even so, billion. Oracle said that net income edged Analysts, on average, expected a down slightly, hurt by flat revenue profit of 67 cents per share on $9.18 from new software licenses and billion in revenue, according to cloud software subscriptions. FactSet. The company earned $2.55 billion, Revenue from new software or 56 cents per share, compared with licenses and cloud software subscrip$2.58 billion, or 53 cents per share, tions was flat at $2.38 billion, but rose in the same quarter a year ago. 1 percent excluding the effects of Excludingcharges, the company currency exchange rates. 52-WEEK RANGE $30~ ~ ~ ~ 37
Total return: 1 - YR: 0% AP
AmdFocus
Morningstar says that fund manager Jim Morrow has raised Marhetsummary this fund's yield to 3.4 percent, Most Active which is modestly higher than its NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG large-cap value fund peers. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP
181.49 -.21 15.75 +.06 15.30 -.35 55.05 -.52 3.43 -.04 40.54 -.76 5.17 -.59 5.52 +.54 36.60 +2.00 27.32 +.13
S&P500ETF 1155503 BkofAm 915698 FordM 835291 Facebook 834318 SiriusXM 695291 iShEMkts 672372 RiteAid 672045 AriadP 650798 Oracle 613831 GenElec 494835
Fidelity Eglnc
FEQIX
VALUE
B L EN D GR OWTH
LAST 4.15 4.01 2.75 2.49 4.28 3.10 5.80 5.05 4.04 7.29
AmericanFunds
Fidelity
CHG %CHG +1.60 + 62.7 +1.04 + 35.0 +.63 + 2 9.7
Losers L AST 2.31 10.95 Edenor 5.70 MethesEng 3.34 Winnbgo 27.32
FAMILY
Dodge &Cox
Gainers
NAME NwstBio wt SwedLC22
65
+.46
+.78 +.53 +.95 +.79 +.54 +.97
Oracle
ORCL Close:$36.60 L2.00 or 5.8% The business software maker said second-quarter profit edged lower, but still topped Wall Street expectations and revenue rose. $38 36 34
608
N 0 52-week range
$58.91 ~
D
$73.50
8
N 0 52-week range
$29.86~
«C 53
+ 2 2 .7
+ 2 2.3 443 + 2 0.6 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 9.6 + 1 8.5 OeFund target represents weighted + 1 5.4 average of stock holdings + 1 5.3 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings
CATEGORY Large Value
C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * N N N -.58 -20.1 -2.05 -15.8 ASSETS $7,378 million -1.00 -14.9 EXP RATIO 0.68% -.54 -13.9 MANAGER James Morrow -4.32 -13.7 SINCE 2011-10-31 RETURNS3-MO +3.2 Foreign Markets YTD +24.9 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +23.9 Paris 4,177.03 +67.52 +1.64 3-YR ANNL +12.5 London 6,584.70 +92.62 +1.43 5-YR-ANNL +16.4 Frankfurt 9,335.74 +1 53.99 +1.68 Hong Kong22,888.75 -255.07 -1.10 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 42,198.32 +118.45 + . 28 JPMorgan Chase &Co Milan 18,453.99 +322.50 +1.78 Tokyo 15,859.22 +271.42 +1.74 Wells Fargo & Co Stockholm 1,300.89 +25.77 +2.02 Chevron Corp Sydney 5,202.20 +1 06.10 +2.08 Johnson & Johnson Zurich 8,028.27 +1 47.01 +1.87 General Electric Co
Annua l dividend:$0.48 P ric e -earnings ratio Div. yield: 1.3% (trailing 12 months):16
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA x 24.81 - . 1 0+19.7 +19.2 +12.8+14.5 A A A CaplncBuA x 57.38 -.52 +12.6 +12.5 +9.4+11.6 C A C CpWldGrlA m 44.27 +.83 +21.9 +21.8 +10.8+14.5 C 8 O EurPacGrA m 48.27 -.81 +17.1 +17.3 +7.1 +13.5 8 8 8 FnlnvA m 50. 7 8 +.84+28.5 +27.9 +14.4+17.9 C C 8 GrthAmA m 42.82 +.86+30.7 +30.2 +14.9+18.0 C 8 C IncAmerA m 20.47 +.81+16.3 +16.0 +11.5+14.7 8 A A InvCoAmA m 38.58 +.83 +29.5 +28.8 +14.1 +16.1 8 C O NewPerspA m38.68 +.89 +23.7 +23.6 +11.9+17.0 8 8 8 WAMutlnvA m39.71 +.82 +29.1 +28.1 +16.1+16.4 C A 8 Income x 13. 6 5 .. . + 0 .6 + 0 .9 + 4.6 +7.8 A 8 B IntlStk x 41.8 3 - . 57+22.8 +23.1 +8.4+16.6 A A A Stock x Contra
164. 7 3 - . 83+37.1 +36.2 +17.4+19.4 A A A 94.19 - . 1 0+31.4 +30.8 +15.3+18.6 8 8 C
GrowCo 116 . 78 -.19+34.0 +32.8 +16.9+22.5 B A A LowPriStk d 48.33 -.87+31.2 +31.0 +16.4+21.7 C A B Fideli Spartan 500 l dxAdvtg 64.88 -.82+29.5 +28.7 +15.7+17.8 C 8 B FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 41 .. . + 12.1 +12.1 +9.5+16.1 A A A IncomeA m 2. 3 9 ... + 12.8 +12.8 +10.2+16.7 A A A FrankTemp-Templeton GIBondAdv 13.81 -.85+1.8 +2.4 +5.4 +9.2 A A A Oakmark Intl Ix 25 .55 -.66 +25.6 +26.0 +12.2+20.8 A A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 27 -.82+24.5+23.8 +13.0+14.6 E D E RisDivB m RisDivC m SmMidValAm SmMidValBm
PIMCO T Rowe Price
Vanguard
TotRetA m Eqtylnc GrowStk HealthSci 500Adml 500lnv
CapOp Eqlnc StratgcEq TgtRe2020 Tgtet2025 TotBdAdml Totlntl x TotStlAdm x TotStldx x USGro Welltn
17 . 25 - .82+ 23.3 17 . 14 -.82+23.5 43.30 -.85+34.5 36.50 -.84+33.4
+22.7 +12.0+13.6 E E E +22.9 +12.2+13.8 E E E +34.3 +11.3+19.4 B E D +33.2+10.4+18.4 B E E 10 . 72 -.84 -2.1 -1.8 +4.0 +6.7 D C C 32.21 +.81 +27.3 +26.3 +14.6+16.9 D C B 51.45 +.83 +36.2 +36.1 +17.3+21.9 A A A 56.29 -.11 +47.4 +45.7 +29.1+27.6 B A A 167.61 -.87 +29.5 +28.7 +15.7+17.9 C 8 8 167.56 -.88 +29.3 +28.5 +15.6+17.7 C 8 8 45.18 -.86 +39.6 +38.2 +15.8+21,0 A 6 A 29.14 -.82 +27.4 +26.1 +17.3+17,1 D A B 29.59 -.14 +37.9 +37.8 +18.5+22.4 A A A 27.19 -.84 +14.1 +14 0 +9 3+12 8 A A C 15.78 -.82 +16.1 +16.0 +9.9+13.6 8 A C 10.60 -.81 -1.9 -1.6 +3.4 +4.4 D D E 16.26 -.15 +11.7 +12.3 +4.9+12 1 E E C 45.60 -.30 +30.4 +29.8 +15.8+18 8 8 8 A 45.58 -.30 +30.2 +29.5 +15.6+18.6 8 8 A 27.97 .. . +32.1 +31.4 +16.0+18.9 8 A C 39.19 +.81 +18.0 +17.4 +11.7+13,7 8 A 8
PCT 3.53 2.83 2.76 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.44 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.42 redemption fee.Source: Morningstac
D
$36.96
Vol.:7.9m (1.6x avg.) PE: 1 6.7 Vol.:62.5m (3.2x avg.) PE: 1 5 .9 Mkt. Cap:$39.28 b Y i e ld:2.8% Mkt. Cap:$166.8b Yie l d: 1.3% RAD Darden Restaurants DRI Close:$5.17T-0.59 or -10.2% Close:$51.02 T-1.90 or -3.6% The drugstore chain cut its per-share Red Lobster may be put up for sale earnings guidance for the year to be- and the restaurant operator is sustween 17 cents and 23 cents despite pending the opening of new Olive sales growth. Garden locations. $7 $55
Rite Aid
50 8
0 N 52-week range
$1.13~
S
D
$6 .15
0 N 52-week range
$44.11 ~
D $ 55.25
PE: 1 5 .7 Vol.:14.8m (7.0x avg.) PE: 1 8.1 Yield:... Mkt.Cap:$6.66 b Yield: 4.3%
Vol.:69.4m (2.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.74 b
KB Home
KBH Facebook FB Close: $16.47T-1.08 or -6.2% Close:$55.05T-0.52 or -0.9% Sharp increases in sales for the The social network will sell 70 million homebuilder in the south and central shares, including more than 41 milL.S. were offset somewhat by sluglion shares owned by chairman and gishness in the West. CEO Mark Zuckerberg. $20 $60 18
50
16
8
N 0 52-week range
$44.93~
D
$25.14
8
N 0 52-week range
$22.67~
D $ 55.89
Vol.: 9.1m (2.1x avg.) PE: 82.4 Vol.:89.6m (1.2x avg.) PE: 134.3 Mkt. Cap:$1.38 b Yie l d: 0.6% Mkt. Cap:$103.17 b Yield : ...
Accenture
ACN Close:$79.51 %3.89 or 5.1% First-quarter profits rose as the managementconsulting company logged some notable growth from new bookings and revenue rose. $80
Alimera Sciences
ALIM Close: $4.15L1.60 or 62.7% No more trials will be required before regulators decide on whether to approve the biopharmaceutical's eye disease treatment.
$6 4
75
8
0 N 52-week range
Vol.:10.9m (3.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$60.05 b
S
D
0 N 52-week range
$84 .23 $1.55~ PE: 1 7.3 Vol.:4.3m (22.2x avg.) Yie l d: 2.3%
D
$5.69 P E: . . . Yield : ...
Mkt. Cap:$131.19 m
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU
HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.93 percent Thursday. 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 6 .0 6 . 0 8 .0 9 -0.01 T
52-wk T-bill
.13
.13
...
~
2-year T-note . 3 7 .34 + 0 .03 L 5-year T-note 1 .64 1 .54 + 0.10 L 10-year T-note 2.93 2.89 +0.04 L 30-year T-bond 3.91 3.91
BONDS
T L
L L L
L L L L
L .28 L .77 L 1.80 L 2 9. 9
.05 .10 .15
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.70 3.70 . . . L L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.13 5.12 +0.01 L L Barclays USAggregate 2.41 2.39 +0.02 L L PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.71 5.70 +0.01 L L 5-YR*: 17% 10-YR*: 11% M a r ket value: $166.8 billion 3-YR*: 6% RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.63 4.63 .. . T T Total returns through Dec.18 *Annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.81 1.74 +0.07 LL 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.20 3.19 +0.01 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualFunds
Oracle (ORCL) Thursday's close:$36.60
AlimeraSci pSivida Medgen wt Nll Hldg ZionB wt18 Astrotch h EuroTech OxygnB rs USEC rs AK Steel
TGT
Close:$62.15 V-1.40 or -2.2% The retailer warned that 40 million credit and debit cards may have been aff ected by a data breach early this holiday season. $70
$65.29~
Profit driver
NAME
StoryStocks
Target
14,400 J '
0
+' . 9 7 '"" ' / -.osoo 1.3657
$98.77
Major stock indexes posted an uneven finish Thursday. The market cooled after heating up the previous day in response to the Federal Reserve's decision to begin tapering its economic stimulus program next month. The Fed will cut its bond purchases to $75 billion a month from $85 billion now. The Standard & Poor's 500 index and Nasdaq compositeeach ended the day lower, while the Dow Jones industrial average closed higher. The stocks of power companies fell the most of the 10 industry sectors that make up the S&P 500. Investors buy utility stocks because they pay big dividends. As bond yields rise, those stocks become less attractive.
"
"
16,000"
1,760
NYSE NASD I
"
16,400"
Vol. (in mil.) 3,428 1,764 Pvs. Volume 4,234 2,139 Advanced 1 308 9 6 4 Declined 1796 1601 New Highs 1 66 1 3 8 New Lows 88 24
v
Close: 16,179.08 Change: 11.11 (0.1%) 15,680" ""' 10 DAYS "
1,840
1,680 "
' """'" /
-.87
$19.14
Dow jones industrials
..... Close:1,809.60 Change: -1.05 (-0.1%)
Last-minute spree?
4 1 10
L T L T
L T
2.58 4.12 1.80 6.07 3.80 1.03 2.7 8
Commodities
FUELS
Oil prices rose Thursday as stockpiles declined and traders saw new indications that demand is rising in the U.S. Metals fell, with gold posting the biggest decline. Crops were mixed.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Foreign Exchange
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6372 -.0056 -.34% 1.6258 Canadian Dollar 1.0 661 +.0006 +.06% . 9 875 USD per Euro 1.3657 -.0100 -.73% 1.3247 JapaneseYen 104.16 + . 6 0 + .58% 8 4 . 42 Mexican Peso 13. 0 104 +.1211 +.93% 12.7655 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5141 +.0088 +.25% 3.7535 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1522 +.0447 +.73% 5.5613 South African Rand 10.4126 +.1383 +1.33% 8.4922 Swedish Krona 6.6 0 2 3 + .0678 +1.03% 6.5495 Swiss Franc .8983 +.0104 +1.16% . 9121 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1292 +.0035 +.31% . 9 530 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.0714 -.0004 -.01% 6.2313 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7537 +.0010 +.01% 7.7501 Indian Rupee 62.160 +.060 +.1 0% 54.558 Singapore Dollar 1.2669 +.0089 +.70% 1.2184 South KoreanWon 1061.05 +8.46 +.80% 1072.83 Taiwan Dollar 30.00 + . 30 +1.00% 2 9.03
The dollar was mostly ahead versus the euro and other currencies as traders digested Wednesday's decision by the Federal Reserve to begin reducing its economic stimulus
program.
55Q QD
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 98.77 97.80 1.91 1.81 3.03 3.01 4.46 4.25 2.74 2.70
CLOSE PVS. 1195.00 1236.10 19.14 20.01 1318.40 1342.70 3.34 3.36 695.30 698.40
%CH. %YTD + 0.99 + 7 . 6 +0.44 -1 2.8 +0.73 -0.4 +4.92 +33.1 +1.59 -2.6 %CH. %YTD -3.32 -28.7 -4.35 -36.6 -1.81 -14.3 -0.61 -8.3 -0.44 -1.1
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.32 1.31 + 0.65 + 1 . 5 Coffee (Ib) 1.16 1.15 -1.87 -1 9.3 Corn (bu) 4.31 4.25 +1.29 -38.4 Cotton (Ib) 0.83 0.83 +0.40 +1 0.9 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 374.00 371.80 + 0.59 + 0 . 0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.42 1.42 -0.18 +22.1 Soybeans (bu) 13.27 13.24 +0.23 -6.5 Wheat(bu) 6.11 6.13 -0.33 -21.5 1YR.
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2013
Central Oregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA FuelPrice Finder (aaa.opisnet.com): REGULARUNLEADED • SpaceAge, 20635 GrandviewDrive, Bend.............$3.16 • Ron's Oil,62980 Highway 97, Bend..... $3.21 • Chevron, 61160 S.Highway97, Bend............ $3.28 • Chevron,1745 N.E. Third St., Bend... $3.30 • Chevron,1095 S.E. Division St., Bend. $3.30 • Gordy's Truck Stop,
u ene eaerinerese in arrera By Joseph Ditzler
consummated."
The Bulletin
Carrera Motors General
Eugene-based Kendall Auto Group, which has two dozen dealerships in four states, is prepared to purchase Carrera Motors in Bend, if it can win manufac-
turer approval, the Kendall president said Wednesday. "We've discussed
things with Carrera," said Dave Blewett, Kendall president, "But no sale is
Manager Dan Horton said many others are interested in buying the dealership; he declined comment on the Kendall bid. Horton is also listed as one of Carrera's three owners
in Oregon DMV records, along with P. Thomas Anderson and Robina Johnson. Located at 1045 S.E. Third St., Carrera sells Audis, BMWs, Porsches and Volk-
swagens. It also owns a deal-
"We ran a used-car opera-
ership in Medford. Kendall, a family-owned business, owns eight dealerships in Eugene and others
tion there through 2007, and then we scaled back when
in Idaho, Montana and Alaska, Blewett said. It deals in
several makes, foreign and domestic, including Acura, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Honda,
Scion and Toyota. The company owns property in Bend,
the economy scaled back,"
he said. Kendall needs approval from the makers of Carrera's
brands to buy the dealership, Blewett said. The process of vetting Kendall is in only the beginning stages.
where itsold cars forseveral
"They want to make sure that the people that are
years, he said.
coming in and buying the
SEVEN PEAKS VENTURES
ers and make sure we have adequate capital. They want to vet the capabilities of the new owners," Blewett said. eYou don't have a deal until
they approve you." Blewett said the sale, if it
goes through, could close by February. — Reporter: 541-617-7815; jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Mortgage
17045 Whitney Road, La
Pine............ $3.26 • Texaco,178 S.W. Fourth St., Madras$3.30 • Chevron, 1210 S.W.Highway97, Madras......... $3.30 • Safeway, 80 N.E.Cedar St., Madras... $3.34 • Chevron,
company reaches a 22B settlement
398 N.W. Third St.,
Prineville....... $3.32 • Fred MeyerFuel Center, 944 S.W. Ninth St.,
Redmond ....... $3.23 • Chevron,2005S. Highway97,Redmond...$3.26 • Texaco Food Mart,
By Nathaniel Popper
uIM
New York Times News Service
>- vgCShr
539 N.W. Sixth St., Red-
A $2.2 billion agreement is settling accusations against a large but little known
mond........... $3.28 • Chevron, 1501 S.W. HighlandAve., Redmond.......... $3.30 • Chevron,1001 Railway, Sisters...... $3.32 DIESEL • Ron's Oil,62980 Highway 97, Bend..... $3.79 • Texaco, 178S.W.Fourth St., Madras........$3.90 • Safeway, 80 N.E.Cedar St., Madras... $3.96 The Bulletin
franchise will represent them well. They want to interview the president and sharehold-
player in the mortgage industry that escaped last
year's sweeping mortgage settlement. Ocwen Financial Corp.,
which has ridden its specialty in servicing subprime loans to become the
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Veteran Silicon Valley venture capitalist Dino Vendetti has formed Seven Peaks Ventures, an investment fund based in Bend.
fourth-largest mortgage servicer in the country, was accused of improperly handling the loans of homeowners after the financial crisis. The agreement with the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and 49 states
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Oregon Alcohol Server Permit Training: Meetsthe Oregon LiquorControl Commission minimum requirementsto obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1p.m.; Round TablePizza,1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 orwww. happyhourtraining.com. DEC. 30 • Oregon Alcohol Server Permit Training: Meetsthe Oregon LiquorControl Commission minimum requirementsto obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1p.m.; Round TablePizza,1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 orwww. happyhourtraining.com. JAN. 7 • Introduction to Finding Funders: Free workshop for nonprofits seeking ways to find funding; 9-11 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541312-7089 or jennyp© deschuteslibrary.org JAN. 8 • Oregon Alcohol Server Permit Training: Meetsthe Oregon LiquorControl Commission minimum requirementsto obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.-1p.m.; Round TablePizza,1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 orwww. happyhourtraining.com. • Business Start-up Class: Learn how to
reach yourcustomers,
where to find funding, how much you need to start and legalities involved; registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600N.W.CollegeW ay, Bend; 541-383-7290. JAN. 9 • Managing Day to Day Performance: Identify ways to improve productivity in the workplace; registration
iicon a e veteran oun s venture ca ita n in en
covers similar ground as a $25 billion settlement made last year with larger banks.
By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
After spending the last four years working with entrepreneurs in Oregon and hearing complaints of their need for funding, Dino Ven-
$100,000, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing — invested in its first company, Bend tech startup Droplr, in September
is different. It allows individual
oversight of the bureau,
members toinvest separately
which began in 2011. Ocwen has prided itself
from the fund, he said.
"When I make acommitment to invest in a given com-
ment this week, Vendetti said, but wouldn't release the
private startups, andthey're probably, most likely going to
ablymore capitalthat could
Peaks Ventures, a $15 million Bend-based venture capital fund. "The conclusionIcame to is the density of entrepre-
company's name. Josh Bryan, Droplr found-
need more than one round of
neurs and quality startup
its idiosyncrasies. "Dino shares our vision for doingthis company in Bend, has deep experience with scalable software startups and
fund from apersonal level," hesaid. Beyond money, he said, companies fundedby Seven Peaks gethis expertise and a bridge to Silicon Valley.
companies has vastly outpaced the capital formation activity in the state," said
Vendetti, the general partner and founder. "There's a lack of capital, particularly at the
early-stage levels. So as a result I saw a huge opportunity to launch a Silicon-Valley
caliber, professionally-managed, early-stage venture fund."
The fund — which has a minimum investment of
has an understanding of the modern startup industry and
brought access to his Silicon
funding. So we reserve capital for those ongoing rounds of funding." After working for Qualcomm, TRW and other communications companies, Vendetti jumped into a venture
capital career, joining Seattle-based Vulcan Ventures,
Bay Partners and Formative Ventures, both in Menlo Park,
Valleynetwork — all of which has proved to be aphenomenal advantage for us," Bryan wrote in an email. Vendetti, a former Silicon
volved with the Bend Venture
Valley resident who now lives
Conference.
in Bend, expects Seven Peaks
While otherinvestment funds have launched in Ore-
Ventures will invest in approximately 20 tech-related com-
allowed it to slip through the cracks of the different regulatory agencies. The company, which is publicly traded, now falls under the
from $50,000to $500,000, he said, depending on what the company needs.
and closed a second invest-
er and CEO, said Vendetti
because its nonbank status
panies. Investments will range
"This is not a one-time investment," he said. "These are
detti decided to form Seven
Ocwen was not included
in the larger settlement,
Calif. He co-founded the Bend
business accelerator FoundersPad and has also been in-
gon, Vendetti said Seven Peaks
pany, there could be sustaincome from the investors in the
''When I invest in the com-
pany, the company doesn't just get the capital, theyget me and myeffort andmyenergy, my venture partners that are part of Seven Peaks in Silicon
Valleythatwillhelp get them connectedtotheir ecosystem," he said. "They get high qualitymentoringthat willhelp thembuild amore successful business." —Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
as a specialist at the tricky
work of servicing mortgages, something the banks have struggled to do well. But the agreement announced Thursday, which still requires court approval, made it clear that Ocwen
has had many of the same problems as those banks.
"We believe that Ocwen violated federal consumer financial laws at every stage of the mortgage servicing process," Richard Cordray, the director of the bureau,
said in a conference call Thursday. The settlement covers sev-
eral types of activities from 2009 to 2012 by Ocwen and two other companies it re-
cently acquired Litton Loan Servicing and Homeward Residential Holdings.
Nike's second-quarter profit tops estimates onnew products' help Matt Townsend
higher-priced shoes boosted sales.
ny said Thursday in a statement.
Bloomberg News
Net income in the three months
Chief Executive Officer Mark
NEW YORK — Nike Inc., the
world's largest sporting-goods company, posted second-quarter profit that topped analysts' estimates as
required; $95; 8 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600N.W.CollegeW ay, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Project management certification: Course for experiencedproject managers looking to becomecertified and thoseseeking certification asassociates in project management;
sponsored bythe Project Management Institute, Willamette Valley Chapter; registration required by Dec. 31; $885 for chapter members, $985for nonmembers; 8:30a.m.-3:30 p.m.; WaterReclaimation Facility, 22395 McGrath Road, Bend;busch@ teleport.com orwww. pmiwv.org.
through November rose 40 percent to $537 million, or 59 cents a share, from $384 million, or 42 cents, a year earlier, the Beaverton-based compa-
JAN.10 • CCB license test preparation course: Approved bythe Oregon Construction Contractors Board;fee includes required current edition of theOregon Contractor's Reference Manual; registration required; $305; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community
Parker has been introducing premium products that sell for higher prices, such as $160 Flyknit running shoes and $225 Hypervenom soccer
College, 2600N.W. classes, Mondaysand CollegeWay, Bend;541Wednesdaysthrough 383-7290 or ccb@cocc. Jan. 27; registration edu. required; $169;6-8 p.m.; JAN.11 COCC- Crook County • CCB license test Open Campus,510S.E. preparation course: (See Lynn Blvd., Prineville; above.) 541-383-7270. JAN.13 • iOS App Development 1-Foundation Skills: • For the complete calendar, Learn to create your first pick up Sunday'sBulletin or iOS app;first of three visit bendbugetin.com/hizcal
cleats, while bolstering the company's online business. Nike's gross margin, the percentage of sales left aftersubtractingthecostofgoods sold, expanded 1.4 percentage points to 43.9 percent.
DISPATCHES • Threshold Journey, a newnonprofit organization, has formed in Sisters. The organization, founded bypastors and spiritual leaders Jack Erskine andhis wife, Christy Close Erskine, will focus on helping people through grief with retreats andsessions held in various Central Oregon locations. Threshold Journey will hold its first retreat Saturday. Tolearn more, call Christy Close Erskine at541-7287988, email at christy©thresholdjourney.com or visit www.thresholdjourney.com.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-PILls, D2-3
Parents & Kids, D4 Pets, D4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2013
O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages
SPOTLIGHT
Train Man comes to iidrary Michael Lavrich, akathe Train Man, is making a return trip to the Downtown Bend Public Library with his extensive collection of toy trains and track. Lavrich invites children of all agesto attend the demonstration and welcomes questions. He will visit the library on the following dates: • Today from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. and2-6 p.m. • Saturday and Sunday from noon-5 p.m. • Monday from 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 2-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. The trains are representative of trains from the1920s and'30s and aremade by American Flyer, Lionel, Dorfan and Ives. Contact: 541-6177050.
• 10 creative ways for Santa's Little Helper to play By Aisha Sultane St. Louis Post-Dispatch
he Elf is on the loose. As early as the day after Thanksgiving and up until the night before Christmas, a mischievous elf keeps a watchful eye on children's behavior to report to the jolly ol' guy with The List. It's a recent holiday tradition launched by author
Story times, art ciassesandmore
Carol Aebersold who wrote a children's book
After Christmas is over, SantaLand at the
about her family's tradition.
Old Mill District will
transform into a space for children that will hostseveralevents during the weekof Dec. 30 to Jan.3. The Deschutes Public Library system has teamedwith the Old Mill District to of-
fer story times. Story times will be at11 a.m. Dec. 30-31 andJan. 2-3.
The library also helped purchase new books for the SantaLand space, which children are welcome to readwhile waiting for Santa. The intention is to create a reading collection that will be available each year in the SantaLand space. Thespace will also host art classes, a musical instrument "petting zoo" and a solar system class. The artclasses, provided by theArt Station in Bend, will be at10 a.m. Dec. 30-31 and Jan. 2-3. Children are encouraged to arrive a few minutes early. The subjects will include pop-ups, 3-D dragons, pastel collage, cardboard creatures and much more. Parents can drop children off. The musical instrument"petting zoo" is provided by theCascade School of Music. Children can explore instruments including violins, drums, guitars and flutes. It will be held from 2:30-4 p.m. Dec. 30 andJan. 2-3. The OregonObservatory at Sunriver will lead a solar system class for kids age7-12. Children can paint and put together a solar system to take home. Weather permitting, children will also be able to view the moon or Jupiter using a telescope. Classes will be heldat4p.m. Dec.30 and Jan. 2-3. A $5 donation per child is requested for all of the events. Located close to SantaLand, Savory Spice Shop will serve free cups of hot cocoa and apple cider from 10 to11:30 a.m. and3 to 4 p.m. Dec. 30-31 and Jan. 2-3. — Alandra Johnson, The Bulletin
Once the family goes to bed each night, the elf flies back to the North Pole to make a daily report to Santa. He's found in a new spot each morning and can'tbe touched forfearof losing his magic. Some say the elf is creepy with his everpresent gaze, while others are delighted by his antics. Every day, the scene of the elven crime changes. It's easy to go Pinterest-
Chuck Berman i Chicago Tribune
that someone in the house
'E f' he psdiscip ine kids
overboard with this modern-day
was questioning the spirit of
holiday tradition. But kept in its
Christmas. He sent an elf to
proper perspective, the Elf on the
keep an eye on things and
, ::'• Holiday character accompanying red elf toy
Shelf — or the new Mensch on
remind them to keep the spirit of
.::'popularamong
a Bench for Jewish families-
Christmas in their hearts.
, :'parents, despite ,:''experts' concerns
can be a way to bring back that
holiday spark.
"We did it for over three weeks," she said. It was hard to
Alison Hoette, 38, of Clayton, Mo., noticed last year that the eldest of her three children,
come up with ideas for that long,
she added. One day, they used a helium
Charlie, 8, had started questioning balloon, tied strings and made Santa.
a basket of a Solo cup and
"We weren't ready to give it up
suspended him in there. "I loved seeing the kids getting
yet," she said. Enter Nick the Elf. He arrived on their front porch gift-wrapped
By Vlkkl Ortlz Healy Chicago Tkibune
CHICAGO — For Kelly
Santa wrote that he had heard
SeeElf Ideas /D4
"Almost all my girl-
James-Enger, who estimates that her children, Ryan, 8, and Haley, 3, argue 10 percent less in December thanks to Michael's monitoring. But some parenting experts and book-sellers ques-
dren is a year-round job. But lately, the Downers Grove, Ill., mother has enjoyed a little help from a wide-eyed elf named Michael. "I say, rYou two need to
stop fighting, or Michael's going to go to the North Pole and tell Santa,'" said
James-Enger, one of many parents who have adopted on the Shelf," a popular children's book that pro-
house."
ideas on Facebook and Pinterest.
battles between her two chil-
of the situation," she said. "It did
North Pole.
elf, then help the doll "magically" appear in a new spot each morning, and often share elaborate hiding spot
friends have one," said
the tradition of "The Elf
help keep the spirit of holidays in
leased in 2005. Parents ask their children to name the
James-Enger, breaking up
so excited and such a kick out
and bearing a note from the
have sold since it was re-
motes the idea that Santa
sends elves to watch kids and report good — or bad — behavior. An estimated 6 million copies of the book and its
tion the December discipline
tactic and its popularity. "I don't think that's a very
good strategy," said Margret Nickels, clinical psychologist and director of the Erikson Institute Center for Children
and Families in Chicago.
"It's the parents who want to
be in charge as the authority in the house. Not the elf or Santa Claus."
SeeExperts/D3
Holidays are time to keep watch for elder abuse By Mac McLean
National Center on Elder Abuse released a list of warning signs visiA national group dedicated to tors should keep in mind. "The holidays are a time when preventing elder abuse and self-neglect is asking people to keep tabs people are either going to visit on their elderly friends, family someone in their home or bringing members and neighbors when they them to their home," the center's stop by to visit this holiday season. co-director Mary Twomey said, Citing statistics showing one explaining why its fitting to have out of every 10 older American is a a discussion about elder abuse. The Bulletin
victim of abuse or self-neglect, the
"We're asking them to keep their
Related
eyes and ears open." 'Dvomey said some signs of elder abuse and self-neglect are readily visible (see "Warning signs," Page D3). For instance, if an older person
self-neglect, can be solved by en- • Elder rolling the person in a program abuse like Meals on Wheels, encourag- warning ing him or her to get lunch through signs,D3 a senior nutrition program like at
seems to have lost weight, and if
Bend's Community Center, or by
These problems, which indicate
their refrigerator is empty or full asking if he or she would like to tag of rotting food, he or she may be along during your next trip to the struggling to afford food or to go to grocery store. the grocery store. SeeAbuse /D3
D2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
-PI,US
Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
oomerss rin as ime oes
ACTIVITIES CALENDAR
TODAY BEND KNIT-UP: $2; 10 a.m.-noon; Rosie Bareis Community Campus, 1010 N.W. 14th St.; 541-728-0050. THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;GoldenAgeClub,40 S.E Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4p.m.;Golden AgeClub,40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
MOMDAY
BACHELORBEAUTS SQUARE DANCECLUB: 7-10 p.m.; Pine Forest Grange, 63214 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-306-4897.
THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Double deckpinochle;noon-3 p.m.;Golden Age Club, 40 S.E Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. CRIBBAGECLUB: Newcomers welcome; 6-8:30 p.m.;Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-317-9022. SCOTTISH COUNTRYDANCE CLASSES: Noexperience or partner necessary; $5, first class free; 7-9 p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, 549 N.W. Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-923-7531.
SUNDAY
THURSDAY
BINGO: 12:30 p.m.; American LegionPostNo.44,704 S.W .Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
SATURDAY
• We get shorter due to the space between our vertebrae collapsing aswe get older By Jlm Kershner
So there are a few things
The (Spolzane, Wash.)
that a boomer can do to minimize height loss. Keeping to a normal, healthy weight is one. Gravity is merciless enough on its own — don't give it any
S pohesman-Review
I was trying on my suit to make sure I hadn't out-
grown it, when my wife looked me over and noticed — my suit had outgrown me. Actually, her exact words were, "It looks like you're wearing a clown suit."
extra impetus with an extra
50pounds. Staying fit will also keep height loss to a
I had to admit: The suit
looked large and baggy. So I went down to Jos.
A. Bank men's clothing store. The manager, Doug Wester, got out his tape measure and gave me the
exercise'?
"I tell my patients to shoot
for 150 minutes of exercise
a week — walking, jogging, biking," Shepard said. "That's
dtagnosts.
It's not too late to
do the'impossible' By Marla Jo Fisher
ing a writer, as evidenced by
The Orange County Register
the fact that you're reading this right now. And, believe
One of the problems with birthdays is that it becomes
me, these days especially, I progressively more difficult don't make much money but to find famous people who my job is pretty darn sweet. hadn't amounted to much yet The reason I succeeded when they were your age. was emphatically not because And every time you turn on
I'm more talented than other
the TV, there's another pesky people. Believe me, I'm not. child prodigy on the news to I just had tremendous deterremind you that, not only are mination to succeed, and the you falling short, but your kids willingness to learn and take are, too. criticism. And that doesn't go Neither of m y c h i ldren away with age. played a Mozart violin conMy grandfather owned an certo at age 4. OK, I admit auto repair garage all his life. it, they never played Mozart He sold it when he retired and in any fashion, even on the added a room onto his house kazoo. They never even lis- to have a little business that he'd always enjoyed — restortened to Mozart, at least not voluntarily. ing antique guns. I suppose every parent has To everyone's surprise, felt that sharp stab of envy Grandpa ended up making when a friend — or even more money from his little gun worse, an enemy — boasts shop than he ever made fixing about how their child just got cars, because he did it with a perfect score on the SAT, passion, and low overhead. or won a national contest, or even was potty trained at 12
kept going until his late 80s.
He even beat cancer and
months.
I'm convinced it was because
he was doing something he you feel that you are not living loved every day. up to your own expectations Occasionally, middle-aged for how you thought your life women tell me wistfully that would turn out. they wished they'd had chilBut it's even worse when
No matter how rich and fa-
mous you are, there's a good chance you thought you'd be evenricherand more famous by now. Or if you're rich and famous enough, you hate your thighs or you're a closet alcoholicor your spouse is cheating on you. Let me tell you something though: It's never too late to
dren before it was too late.
Hello. I adopted my two kids when I was 46 years old, due to the fact that I had spent all
those years being busy changing careers. As the
c a rtoon says, "I
can't believe I forgot to have children." Yes, it was bloody hard chasing two little kids around when I was already starting to
make your life better. When people sit around and feel a little creaky in the joints. moan that they're too old to
But what was the alterna-
I have shrunk. Since I bought that suit seven years ago, I'm an inch shorter and almost a
the equivalent of a 30-minute
suit size smaller. I ended
mula to determine if you are
One of my favorite authors,
day and do it again." There are also a few other strategies people can use to
minimize height loss. Many people take calcium and vitamin D supplements for bone
Doctors and anatomists h ave long k n ow n t h a t
these strategies, a little bit of height shrinkage is inevitable, conceded Shepard. Losing a lot of height in a short time could indicate a serious medical condition, requiring medical attention. But losing an inch or two in the long run? It's
strength, although the benefits are a matter of debate. Yet even if we follow all of
people tend to lose height as they grow older. This begins at about age 40, although it progresses so gradually that most of us don't notice it until our 50s and 60s. That means it's hitting
natural, and, for most of us,
unavoidable. Wester, a boomer himself,
home, right now, to just about the entire baby boom
has seen the phenomenon not
just in his customers, but also in himself.
generation. Wester knows
this phenomenon better
"I just went to the doc-
than most. "In a lot of cases, I will
tor the other day, and I have always been 5-6,"
get gentlemen in h ere who think they are, for in-
he said. "Well, I'm not 5-6
anymore."
stance, a 44 regular," he said. "But when I go to fit them, they're a 44 short. ... t's usually because their
body is collapsing." Ouch. Isn't "collapsing" too strong of a word? To find out, I called Rick Shepard, a family medicine doctor at Group Health's South Hill Medical Center in Spokane. He explained that your height is largely determined by the length of your spine. Because of normal wear, the spine gradually begins to — not exactly collapse — but to
compress, as we age. Shepard explained that the spine is made up of 24 vertebrae, separated by 23 "pillows or cushions called discs." "Over time, that pillow
have interiors "more like
print today.
an hour, and get up the next
Shrinking Baby Boomer." Gravity was doing its inexorable work of bringing us all back down to earth.
Peter Roget wa s r e t ired column. That would violate and considered a little weird our privacy. Kids are messy
one of his lists and is still in
"fit": "You can walk 3 miles in
might call, "The Incredible
gets a little bit flat, just like the pillow on your bed," Shepard said. Also, "you settle a little bit," Shepard said. By that, he means the actual vertebrae bones, which
and problematic, and make you cry. They are also the source of nearly all the joy in my life today. And the reason I get out of bed and start working every morning. And, hey, they're finally old
walk, five days a week. And that's not unreasonable." Sheparduses a simple for-
up buying a new, smaller suit. As I sub s equently learned, I have merely been going through a natural aging process that we
change, I can't help rolling my tive? Sitting around making eyes. doilies? Since I'm not married, C olonel Sanders was 6 5 adopting kids gave me an inand had just gone through stant family. bankruptcy when he opened Sometimes, it's been helL I h is f i r s t K e n t ucky F r i e d don't put everything that goes Chicken. on in our household into my and creepy, what with all the word lists he kept making obsessively. That is until age 73, when he published his Roget's Thesaurus, which used every
I could find no stud-
lllustration by MollyQuinn/The Spokesman-Review
guarantee that they exist. AfShepard said that most peo-
ple lose up to an inch and a half over their lifetimes. Studies suggest that some people loseas much as two or three inches. The spine is not the only
problem. People naturally have spaces between their hip joints and knee joints, filled with cartilage. Over time, that cartilage thins out, like a worn-out "ball joint in a car,"
Shepard said. So, you can lose height not just in the torso, but also in the
leg. Which explains why the pant legs of my suit trousers were also a bit too long.
Meanwhile, nonstructural forces are also at work, includ-
ing "a loss of overall muscle tone" as people age, Shepard
more compact. This com-
pressing and settling may amount to only a fraction
and inactivity." Osteoporosis — a loss of
of an inch for each set of
bone strength — can also cause women to stand less tall.
discs and vertebrae. Yet when you multiply by 23 or 24, you've dropped a suit size.
ter40 yearsofbeing acertain People can lose inches not height, I suddenly discovered only vertically, but also hori- that my driver's licensezontally, from their shoulder along with my entire self-image — is wrong. and chestmeasurements. "When people age, they This can seem particularly slow down and they lose mus- tough on men like Wester and cle mass through slowing myself, who grew up fighting, down," Shepard said. tooth and claw, for all of the The result? You might end inches we could get. And now up shorter and scrawnier. we find ourselves losing yardOf course, many people age — literally — in our 60s. Is have the opposite problem, this fair? getting fatter as they age. Our only consolation is that This, as it turns out, might all of our fellow baby boommake them even shorter. Ex- ers — even the tall ones — are tra weight puts extra pres- shrinking right along with us. sure on the bones and discs, Meanwhile, everyone under causing them t o c o mpress 40 will inevitably discover even more. what many boomers already "It's the law of gravity," know: The top shelf has, for Shepard said. "It'll pull you some mysterious reason, bedown. come an inch higher.
said.
"People can begin to slouch and lose a little body posture," he said. "They don't stand as straight, from deconditioning
Styrofoam,"can become
ies on the psychological effect of height-loss. Yet from my experience, I can
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet • • Classifjeds
•
'
•
And men are not off the hook,
either — "men can get osteoporosis, too," Shepard said.
Laura Ingalls Wilder, did not publish her first book until age enough to do some real chores 64 and kept writing her "Little
around here.
House on the Prairie" series
Whether or not you have kids or like what you're doing
until she was 76.
Finding joy I wasn't quite that old, but I quit a lucrative job in the ent ertainment industry i n m y 30s to become a newspaper
with your life, I just want to
tell you that you have so much more controlover your circumstances than you think.
And it's never too late to get
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out there and do it.
I'm thinking about Nelson reporter — a fairly strange thing to do — making $300 Mandela right now, because a week. Because I'd always
longed to write, and everything else seemed like failure by comparison. It was hard. I had to buy all my clothes at the Salvation Army. I lived on Top Ramen
I'm writing this just after he dled.
Think about him. Imprisoned for 27 years. Then he
became not only the president of a country that formerly wouldn't even let him vote, but
and frozen burritos. I had to
also a leader venerated around
work 12 hours a day with a bunch of young kids fresh out of college who didn't even know who Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young was. I had an editorwho screamed at me for my lack of knowledge un-
the world. "There is no passion to be
til the veins popped out on his
neck. But I did succeed in becom-
m i n imum.
Regular exercise preserves muscle mass, keeps bones stronger and helps you to maintain good posture. How regular is r egular
found playing small — in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living," he said. And, "It always seems impossible until it's done."
Try to do one thing that's impossible for yourself today.
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SEPIES TICKET $75 I $40 STUDENTS INDIVIDUAL SHOWS ADVANCE $20/$30* / DOOR $25/$35* STUDENTS $10 ALL SNOWS WWW.SISTERSFOLKFESnVALORG I 541.549.4979 ICKETS ALSO AT: PAULINA SPRINGS EIOOKS (SISTERS 8 REDMOND) *
$41.330.0420 Lefh of Whofe Foods O' Xear Coetco ia Bend
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THESTARVIEW FOUNDATION
A B B A A Y I he Ilu Iletm
5 0-P L U S
Abuse
embarrassed about the sit-
Warning signs ofelder adnse
Continued from D1 But to the untrained eye,
some signsof elder abuse aren't easy to spot. For instance, 7womey says
if a person is getting a lot of junk mail — p a r ticularly from s w eepstakes compa-
nies — then he or she could have fallen victim to a scam or some other type of finan-
cial exploitation. She said scammers oftensellor share mailing lists with each other
and maytake advantage ofa person who has already fallen prey. "If a person has a lot of mail, that's a pretty big warning sign," she said. 7womey says other signs of financial exploitation i n clude
FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
uation, Twomey said. Fam-
ily members or friends can call their local area agency on aging or adult protective servicesoffice ifthey've determined an elderly friend or family member is in need of help. Finally, 7womey suggests people plan to spend some
The National Center for Elder Abuse isasking people whovisit their older family members, friends or neighbors this holiday season to look out for the following warning signs that could suggest self-neglect (when people living aloneare unable to take adequate care of themselves), or elder abuse being committed by others. • Abundance of mail and/or SELF-NEGLECT NEGLECTORABUSE HOW TO HELP • Senior appears confused • Presence of "new best friend" phone solicitations for money People who suspectan older Central Oregon resident is a • Senior is no longer able to han- who is willing to care for the se- • Seniorseemsafraid ofcaregiver nior for little or no cost victim of elder abuse orself-nedle meal preparation, • Senior has unexplained bruisglect can call the Central Oregon bathing, bill paying, etc. • Recent changes in banking or es, cuts, etc. spending patterns • Senior seems depressed • Senior has bed sores (pressure Council on Aging at 541-6785483 or the Adult Protective • Senior is drinking too much or • Older person is isolated from sores from lying in oneplacefor Services' screening hotline at friends and family too long) is abusing drugs 541-693-2707. • Caregiver has problems with • Senior appears dirty, un• Senior is falling frequently dernourished, dehydrated, • Senior appears undernourished, drugs, alcohol, anger and/or emotional instability over- or under-medicated, or is dehydrated, Under-medicatedor • Caregiver is financially depen- not receiving neededcarefor is notgetting care for problems dent on the older person problems with eyesight, hearing, with eyesight, hearing, dental problems, incontinence,etc. • Family pet seems neglected or dental issues, incontinence. abused
extra time with their loved
ones this holiday — maybe by extending the visit through the end of the week or into
the next one — if they suspect something is wrong. It may take a few days to convince
an elderly person he or she needs help and arrange the proper services to fit his or her needs. "It's better to go and stay
r e cent
changes in spending patterns Twomey said it's importor the presence of a "new best ant to confront the elderly friend" who is willing to care person immediately if one forthem forfree. of these issues pops up. Ask
leading questions that require some thought, such as "What did you have for lunch yesterday?" instead of
"Are you getting enough to eat?" General questions can be blown off with a simple "yes" or "no." Elderly peo-
for a few extra days than to make a return trip," Twomey
ple who are having problems taking care of them-
sard.
selves or may be the victims
— Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
of abuse may be in denial or
From mystery topolitics, AARPrecommends books that makegreat gifts By Allen Fellow
For the political junkie
AARP Media
Political animals of any stripe will delight in open-
terscotch pudding, tapioca) to more ambitious fare (dulce de Is there a better holiday gift leche, banana upside-down than a good book? cake). Her cookbook lives up The recipient will still be to its subtitle: "Luscious and turning its pages long after Unforgettable Puddings, Parthe lights and tinsel have been faits, Pudding Cakes, Pies, taken down, savoring the sto- and Pops." And we haven't ry it tells — and thinking fond- even mentioned the toppings! ly of the giver. Like Santa, we've been Fortheunreconsbucledrocker making a list, and now we've Rock fans are guaranteed to checked it twice to make sure
eat up the arrestingly intimate
it contains gift-book ideas for every personality you may be shopping for this holiday season — and into the New Year.
portraitsthatleap fromthepages of photographer Lynn Goldsmith's "Rock and Roll Stories."
your own kitchen — or under the tree of your favorite foodie.
(There's a young Bruce Springsteen on the cover.) There's a candid close-up of Andy Warholand Mick Jagger, tete-a-tete in 1977; there's Keith Richards, cradling his Stratocaster (and wearing a T-shirt owned by singer Rachel Sweet); and on yet another page is an injured Patti Smith, being loaded into an
G oodman, the owner ofhip-
ambulance aftera fall from a
ster mecca Puddin' by Clio in the East Village, offers "foolproofrecipes" for everything from beloved standards (but-
Tampa stage that broke sev-
For your favorite foodie Nothing says "home for the holidays" more than homemade chocolat e pudding, and Clio Goodman's "Puddin'" lets you bring the hottest new dessert shop in New York City into
eral neck vertebrae. From her stretcher, Smith urged: "Lynn,
take pictures."
From squabbling Republicans and the self-sabotaging Mitt Romney to "mustachioed
message mavens" who strugpresents. gled to keep their hot-temOption 1: pered boss from c oming We get an unvarnished look across in debates as "nasty inside the soul of JFK in "The Obama," no one departs this Letters of John F. Kennedy," stage unscathed. ing either of these books as
in which "one of the most gift-
ers Grove, managers refused
about thinking somebody's in the house. If that happens, you maybe don't want to use the toy." In keeping with the story, Aebersold noted that the elves
to sell the book for several
don't watch children while
Continued from D1 At Anderson's Bookshops in Naperville, Ill., and Down-
vorce, kidney disease, two
ies," edited by titan-of-the-field canceled shows. Otto Penzler.
Touting his anthology as "the most complete collection of Yuletide whodunits ever assembled," Penzler i nvites
store now carries "The Elf on
the Shelf," which retails for $29.95, but employees won't recommend it, said Becky An-
derson, co-owner of the independentbookshops. "From our standpoint, we think it's a little creepy," Anderson said. "We think there are otherways to createa fam-
kids really look forward to every year."
ry went to print after Carol
And that's just what it is for Chuck Berman i Chicago Tribune
Ryan and Haley Enger, who
sic teacher f r o m A t l a nta, Ryan Enger, 8, holds up his 3-yeer-old sister Haley, to show her lamented that she felt useless where he found Michael the Elf in a Christmas stocking in Downers after her children grew up Grove, III. and moved out.
take turns talking to Michael about their activities, their hol-
run out of bed each morning she decorates the Christmas to discover Elfie making snow tree with their underwear or angels out of powdered sugar rappels from the dining room on the counter, taking bubble chandelier. "It's adding to the season," ed that her mother share the baths in miniature marshmalChristmas tradition their fam- lows and toilet-papering the Fick said. "Your house is decoily had enjoyed for years, said Christmas tree. rated, and you're baking cook"I do it because my kids ies and going to parties. It's Aebersold, who co-wrote the book with Bell and is promot- love it," Jamie Hering said. just part of the fun." ing the second book under the "But at the same time, it's a trademark. love-hate relationship be- Balancing discipline, fun According to the tale, the elf cause thereare times you forWhile Nickels, who assessobserves children's behavior get" to help the elf find a new es and counsels children and all day and returns to Santa hiding place. families, sees the appeal of while they sleep. To mainHering said her children the trend, she cautions partain the magic, children must do seem to take note of their ents that they should strive to never touch the elf. Parents behavior, knowing there's an developconsistent,year-round help the elves find new spots elf on watch. But she tries to parenting strategies. "It is so much better for the to surprise the children each use Elfie's magic to teach her morning. children altruistic lessons, she parents to be the disciplinariToday, Aebersold, 65, said sald. an rather than have this elf im"If Elfie says, 'Let's donate pose an atmosphere of being she is amazed at the merchandise her story has inspired, some toys you don't need,' watched," she said. "To me, the including coloring books and there's a little bit of a mystery risk of the elf is that parents clothing. The kits are sold in to it," she said. think that this is a legitimate, s tores nationwide, and t h e Rebecca Fick,38, of Monthealthy way to teach discipline 50-employeecompany behind gomery, 11L, said that when to their children, which it is them contracts with several her twodaughters are acting not." major retailers. out of line, a quick mention of Janice Kowalski, a child "It blows my mind, but I feel their elf, Frosty Ginger, gets psychiatrist at Linden Oaks so good knowing that I am ac- results. Hospital in Naperville, said " Unfortunately, i t ' s o n l y s ome children might b e tually leaving a legacy for my grandchildren," she said. "And here for a month," Fick said. spooked by the idea of an elf I am in awe of the creativity of "It does help a bit — it gives us watching them. That hapsome of these moms and dads some leverage." pened to her daughters when who have come up withthe But the real reason Fick wel- she introduced the tradition things for the elf to do." comes the elf in her home is to — at their request — years see the joy on her daughters' ago. Love-hate relationship "They were scared that first faces when they walk downIn Grayslake, 11L, the Her- stairs in the morning. Like year we got him. I think they ing family's elf, Elfie, has ap- many fellow elves, Frosty Gin- wouldn't want to g o d ownpeared just after Thanksgiv- ger has assumed a mischie- stairs," Kowalski said. "You ing for the past three years. vous personality, delighting definitely just have to be aware The three Hering children Fick's daughters with the way that they might get anxious
ppdOO y4
•
He walked from H olland
to Istanbul in 1934 (and later wrote three books about it), fell in love with a Romanian
countess, and abducted a German general from Crete in WWII.
No wonder Welsh historian and travel writer Jan Morris
calls this book a "magnificent biography (of) one of the very best of men." — Allan Fallow writes about books for AARP Media.
Himtm~
The Bulletin Will be CIOSed On
Wednesday, December 25 Retail & Classified Display Advertising Deadlines PUBLICATION ....... ......................................D EADLINE
Thursday 12/26......................................... Monday, 12/23 - 8 am Friday 12/27 .............................................. Monday, 12/23 - 8 am Friday GOI Magazine 12/27 ........................ Friday, 12/20 - 5 pm
CLASSIFIED LINE AD DEADLINES Wednesday, 12/25 - Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24 - Noon
Thursday, 12/26 - Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24 - Noon
Classifieds • 541-385-5809 HolidayHours:ChristmasEve12/24- 7:30 amto 3pm • Closedon12/25
of like Easter morning every morning in December."
The BulletinCirculationTelephoneService HolidayHours(541-385-5800): ChristmasEve12/24:6:00 am-3 pm • 12/25:6:30 am-10:30 am
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er is in for when he opens your gift of "Patrick Leigh Fermor" by Artemis Cooper. Fermor's life (1915-2011 ) overflowed with travel, romance and derring-do.
Fa.-,',
discipline and it's more about the excitement of finding him," James-Enger said. "It's kind
•
raphy is subtitled "An Adventure" — and that's just what your favorite armchair travel-
'Nb~ y e u a Sageand Atemy,
teeS
iday wish lists and other news. James-Enger is enjoying the magic while it lasts. "To me, it's truly less about
•
You know you've led an exciting life when your biog-
The Bulletin
<~~egu~
and fun and something the
ily tradition." "The Elf on the Shelf" sto-
For the armchair traveler
HOLIDAY DEADLINES
they're sleeping. That's when they return to the North Pole to give Santa a daily report, she said. Aebersold said she avoids viewing online parodies of her book. "It upsets me when people use it really as a kind of, 'Elf is going to get you and watch you,'" she said. "I would just like it to be more pleasant
yearsbut relented after customers'repeatedrequests.The
Then one day, one of her adult twin daughters, Chanda Bell, saw a familiar elf doll perched on Aebersold's kitchen shelf. She suggest-
Book of C hristmas Myster-
ed writers ever to occupy the For the mystery lover the reader to "have yourself White House" warns Eleanor Way too many choices will a crooked little Christmas" Roosevelt, "I am certain that confront you in a year when with these tales of "festive felyou are the victim of misin- e very t h r iller w r i ter f r o m onies, unscrupulous Santas formation" for bad-mouthing Heather Graham and Marcia and misdemeanors under the his father, Joseph. Poignantly, Clark to Lawrence Block and mistletoe." the 36th president also prom- Mary Higgins Clark brought Contributors include Agises a wartime girlfriend, "If out new novels. atha Christie, E d M c Bain, anything happens to me I have Option 1: Sara Paretsky and more than this knowledge that if I had Buy a book written by all 50 other legends. lived to be a hundred I could four of them — plus 16 of their For the wannabe comedian onlyhave improved the quan- closest writer-friends! "Inherit tity of my life, not the quality." The new the Is there one in your family? Dead" is billed as "One chillOption 2: Does he haunt your holiday In "Double Down: Game ing mystery, 20 thrilling writ- gatherings? Change 2012," Mark Halperin ers," with each author conK eep him quiet — f o r and John Heilemann use their tributing a chapter to this tale a while, at any rate — by insider access to explain why of an Upper East Side social- gift-wrapping him a copy of President Obama chose to in- ite and her missing wayward "I'm Not Gonna Lie (And 0thterpret his second electoral daughter. er Lies You Tell When You victory as an even more powOption 2: Turn 50)" by stand-up comic erful mandate than his first. If this mosaic approach and talk-show host George
Experts
Aebersold, a retired mu-
intrigues you but you want Lopez. something more seasonal, His 40s were "a touch-andpick up a copy of "The Big go decade," says Lopez: di-
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Convenientlylocated with easy access to Bend's north end amenities, these energy-efficient homes offer exceptional value and livability. WINNER
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
PARENTS EeKIDS
Email information for the Family Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylifeibendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
5. Punk the children
Elf Ideas
FAMILY CALENDAR Carriage, located between Ben & ask questions; free; 10 a.m.-1 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds p.m., 2-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.; at benefit the KIDS Center; weather Downtown Bend Public Library, THE TRAIN MAN:Watch Michael dependent; donationsaccepted; 601 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www. Lavrich's extensive collection of toy 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 deschuteslibrary.org/calendar; trains running on a track and ask 541-617-7050. S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; questions; free; 10 a.m.-1 p.m. and 541-312-0131. SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL 2-6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public "A TOWER CHRISTMAS,HOME DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Library, 601 N.W.Wall St., Bend; Santa, children's activities, Tree www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar; FOR THEHOLIDAYS":An original production featuring holiday stories, of Joy and more; free, additional 541-617-7050. cost for take-home photos, $5 dances and songs; $12 for adults, SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL $8 for children12 and younger, plus donation for children's activities; DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 children's activities, Tree of Joy N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; and more; free, additional cost for 541-312-0131. or www.towertheatre.org. take-home photos, $5 donation for SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE: CARRIAGERIDES IN THE children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in Ballroom dancing for all ages; $5; SantaLand, 330 S.W. Powerhouse 7-9 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 the Cowboy Carriage, located Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. between Ben 8 Jerry's and S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388CASCADE BRASSQUINTET: Enjoy 1133 or www.bendseniorcenter.org. Francesca's; proceeds benefit an hour of holiday music as part of the KIDS Center; weather Redmond's Third Friday Art Stroll; dependent; donations accepted; free and open to the public; 4:30 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 SUNDAY p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050 541-312-0131. COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS: or www.deschuteslibrary.org. Breakfast and a traditional OBSIDIANMIDDLE SCHOOL Christmas dinner, gifts, Santa PROGRAMBENEFIT: Featuring Claus visit; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m., TUESDAY live music and a raffle; proceeds 1 p.m. Santa Claus visit; Bend's benefit the after school program at THE COMMUNITYCHRISTMAS Community Center, 1036 N.E. the Community Learning Center at EVE SERVICE:Hosted by Bob Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. OMS; free, donations accepted; 6-8 bendscommunitycenter.org. Shaw, with carols, family fun, p.m.; Green Plow Coffee Roasters, a choir performance, Avenue H THE TRAIN MAN: Watch Michael 436 S.W. SixthSt.,Redmond; and more; $6 plusfees;3 p.m.,5 Lavrich's extensive collection of 541-923-4900. p.m., 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 toy trains running on a track and N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317ask questions; free; noon-5 p.m.; 0700 or www.towertheatre.org. at Downtown Bend Public Library, SATURDAY 601 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar; THE TRAIN MAN:Watch Michael 541-617-7050. THURSDAY Lavrich's extensive collection of SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL toy trains running on a track and SCIENCEPARTY, DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, ask questions; free; noon-5 p.m.; ELECTRICITY!:Learn children'sactivities, Tree of Joy at Downtown Bend Public Library, entertaining information about and more; free, additional cost for 601 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www. electricity; $3 for members, take-home photos, $5 donation for deschuteslibrary.org/calendar; $5 for nonmembers; 11 children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; 541-617-7050. a.m.; High Desert Museum, SantaLand, 330 S.W. Powerhouse 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts SANTA ATNOLANTOWN CENTER: highdesertmuseum.org. and crafts, collectibles, antiques, Take a photo with Santa, enjoy a children's activities, music and cookie and meet some furry friends; SCIENCEPARTY, more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal ELECTRICITY!:Learn p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 entertaining information about Center; free, donations accepted; S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. electricity; $3 for members, noon-4 p.m.; Nolan Town Center, $5 for nonmembers; 1:30 CHRISTMASTREELANE:Visit 2116 Highland Avenue, Redmond; p.m.; High Desert Museum, Santa and shop for a Christmas tree, 541-923-0882. 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, with complimentary face painting, CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. hay rides, pony rides, petting zoo MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy highdesertmuseum.org. and more; free admission; 11 a.m.-3 Carriage, located between Ben 8 CARRIAGERIDES IN THE p.m.; DD Ranch,3836 N.E Smith Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds Rock Way, Terrebonne; 541-548OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in benefit the KIDS Center; weather the Cowboy Carriage, located 1432 or www.ddranch.net. dependent; donationsaccepted; between Ben 8 Jerry's and SANTA ATNOLANTOWNCENTER: 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 Francesca's; proceedsbenefit Take a photo with Santa, enjoy a S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; the KIDS Center; weather cookie and meet some furry friends; 541-312-0131. dependent; donations accepted; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal "A TOWER CHRISTMAS,HOME 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 Center; free, donations accepted; FOR THEHOLIDAYS":An original S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Nolan Town Center, production featuring holiday stories, 541-312-0131. 2116 Highland Avenue, Redmond; dances and songs; $12 for adults, 541-923-0882. $8 for children12 and younger, plus SANTALANDATTHE OLDMILL fees; 3 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 DISTRICT:Take aphoto with Santa, or www.towertheatre.org. children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; MONDAY SantaLand, 330 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. THE TRAIN MAN:Watch Michael CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD Lavrich's extensive collection of MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy toy trains running on a track and
TODAY
PETS
• Discover a r e d -colored
Contlnued from D1 nose in the morning with note W e scoured allforms ofso- to look in mirror. cial media to find the most cre• Find the elf writing a ative approaches to the Elf or the Mensch.
These ideas might inspire parents to d o
s omething a
n aughty l i s t
starting names.
w i t h l e t t e rs
w i t h ch i l dren's
• Catch him i n
t he s ock
little less stressful than shop- drawer, putting mismatched ping among crowds, a little pairs together, with every pair more fun than cleaning before of socks mismatched. entertaining. Keep in mind: The goal is food follies to make a little (or big) per- 6. Cook up son smile. The Elf or Mensch • He might be chilling in a are meant to help foster that tub of marshmallows filled in sense of childhood holiday the sink to look like a bubble magic. bath or in a bowl of marshmallows in the kitchen. 1. Createa vignette • Find him sneaking in the with othercharacters pantry in the cookies with a • GI Joes, Army Men or trail of crumbs on his face. "Star Wars" figures can be used to tie the elf around an in-
door tree, like a hostage. • Barbies can be posed in a YMCA dance sequence with an elf. • The elf might be found playing cards or board games with stuffed animals, having tea with dolls or hanging out with Barbie in a boat, spa or dollhouse.
2. Makemischief around the house
• Use a roasted marshmal-
low and a tooth pick in front of a candle to have him making s'mores.
7. Model good behavior • Pose him surrounded by a big stack of books, reading. • Find him wrapping gifts under the tree.
• Have him doing chores: Folding doll clothes, doing dollhouse laundry, setting up doll dishes, washing dishes.
CALENDAR
EVENTS BEND SPAYANDNEUTER PROJECTWALK-IN PREVENTIVEWELLNESS CLINIC:Vaccines, microchips, toenail trims and deworming available;10 a.m.-1:45 p.m. Saturday; Bend Spay & Neuter Project, 910 S.E. Wilson Ave. Suite B-1, Bend; 541-617-1010 or www.bendsnip.org. SANTA CLAUSISCOMING TO TOWN:Photosand cookies with Santa, and furry friends from BrightSide Animal Center; donations accepted for animal center; 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday,
noon-4 p.m.Sunday;Nolan
Town Center, area of Rimrock Way and Highland Avenue, Redmond. HOLIDAYOPENSHELTER: visit the animals and enjoy refreshments; adoption fee for all cats 8 months and older is reduced to $5 for the rest of December; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday; Humane Society of Central Oregon, 61170 S.E. 27th St., Bend.; 541-382-3537 or
www.hsco.org.
ADOPT ME
• Rest him on picture frames
and draw silly faces on picture glass, using erasable marker,
8. Embrace the outdoors
• He can be rock climbing •He might be found hang- with pieces of putty on the ing from art work or wrapping wall. an entire toilet shut. • Have him fishing with gold • He could be p r o pped fish crackers and homemade against a wall, erasable cray- rod and string. of course.
on or marker in hand, with
writing on the walls.
3.Leave aw atchfulmessage from Santa • Spell out "Be good" in green and red M&Ms next to him.
• Leave a message with toothpaste on the sink with
him holding the paste or on a toothbrush. • Pose him with crayons, paper and a personalized drawing left behind.
4. Hatch some pranks • Catch him TP'ing the tree. •Find him hanging on the stocking holders with undies leftin place ofsocks. • Surround the elf with toys
that have been taken apart, Legos unassembled.
• Fill cookie s heets wi th
powdered sugar or flour and have your elf make snow angels in it. Submitted photo
9.Encourage family game night • He can be playing Yahtzee, Monopoly or other board games. • Sit him in an "Angry Birds" catapult, on a dart board, play-
ing at a pool table. • Have him holding the Wii remote in front of TV.
10. Celebrate the m eaningofthe season • He can be reading the Bible or Torah. • Your elf could be placing baby Jesus in nativity scene. • He could light a menorah.
Brother kittens seek holiday hometogether Meet Ross andJoey,two 10-week-old domestic shorthair kittens. The lovable black and white brothers havebonded at the shelter. Theshelter (and Santa) would bedelighted to have them go to thesame home this holiday season. If you would like to visit Ross, Joey or anyother pet available for adoption at the HumaneSociety of the Ochocos, call 541-447-7178 or visit www.humanesociety ochocos.com.
STORY TIMES and library youth events • For the week of Dec.20-26. Story timesarefree unless otherwise noted. •j•
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2690 N.E U.S. Highway20, Bend;541-318-7242 • ONCE UPON ASTORYTIME: All ages; 11 a.m. Friday. I
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19530 Amber MeadowDrive, Bend; 541-388-1188 • Story times resumeinJanuary.
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175 S.W.MeadowLakesDrive, Prineville; 541-447-7978 • Story times resumein Janualy. r •
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601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7097 • TRAIN MAN: All ages;10a.m. to1 p.m. and 2to 6 p.m. Friday; noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday;10a.m.to1p.m.,2to5 p.m.and6to8 p.m.Monday.
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62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3760 • WINTER STORIES: All ages; Holiday stories and crafts; 2 p.m. Saturday. 59800S.U.S.Highway97,Bend;www.highdesertmuseum.org;541-382-4754 • Unless noted, eventsincluded withadmission ($12adults, $10ages 65and older, $7ages 5-12, fieeages 4and younger) • BACKPACK EXPLORERS:Ages 3-4; explore museum's animal habitat, share stories and songs;10 to11 a.m. Thursday; $15perchild nonmembers, $10 per child members. • TOTALLYTOUCHABLE TALES:Ages2-5;storytelling aboutanimalsand peopleofthe HighDesert;10:30a.m. Tuesday. I
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"A Few of My Fav te Things"
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241 S.W.Seventh St., Madras; 541-475-3351 • Story times resumein January. •
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16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 • Story times resumein January. I
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827 S.W.Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1054 • FAMILY BLOCK PARTY: Lego Universe; All ages; 1:30 p.m. Saturday. •
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110 N. CedarSt.; 541-312-1070 • Story times resumeinJanuary. •
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56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080 • Story times resumeinJanuary.
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103 NW Oregon Avenue Bend, 0 541.306.3176Open Every Day www.redchairgallerybend.com
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FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE ck ENTERTAINMENT
Christmasmemorieswith 'Lucy' TV SPOTLIGHT
By Lynn Elber The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — Lucille Ball's classic antics are colorized in an "I Love Lucy" holi-
"I Love LucyChristmasSpecial"
day special airing on CBS. But daughter Lucie Arnaz's vivid family Christmas memories don't require any embellish-
Desi Arnaz Jr., reveled in it. "It was the only t ime of
ment to shine.
Arnaz says her parents, CBS via The Associated Press
Lucille Ball, center, dressed as Santa Clausin a colorized "I Love Lucy Christmas Special" airing tonight.
Ball and Desi Arnaz, made the most of th e h oliday at their Beverly Hills home in the 1950s. Arnaz and her brother,
sitcom to a new generation of
Violence: Yes,andcharacters die, the way real dinosaurs died.
Language:Dino poopanddino poopjokes. Sex:Flirting, jokes about "head-butting season."
Drugs:None. Parents' advisory:Packed with information about dinosaurs and dino behavior, kids old enough to read will get more out of it — suitable for 7 and older.
"TYLER PERRY'S A MADEA CHRISTMAS" Rating:PG-13for sexual references, crude humor and language. What it's about:Madea goes to Alabama where she heals a broken relationship or two, teaches children "The Nativitease Story" and sets a racist straight. The kidattractor factor: Madea,
one angry cussing blackwoman. Goodlessons/bad lessons:"A lie.
viewers.
The hourlong program includes colorized versions of a Christmas special and was a lotof stress because of one inwhich Lucy memorahow hard they worked, and bly stomps grapes for wine their marriage wasn't doing in Italy. A newly released the year when there wasn't stress," said Arnaz. "There
well. But Christmas was al-
DVD includes those and a
ways a good time." Arnaz, 62, fondly recalls
third episode, "Lucy Goes to
This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13 are included, along with R-rated films that may have entertainment or educational valuefor older children with parental guidance. Rating:PG for creature action and peril, and mild rude humor. What it's about:Dinosaurs talk, joke, migrate, fightand die in the late Cretaceous period. The kid attractor factor:Dinosaurs, doing what dinosaurs did, joking around about it as they do. Goodlessons/bad lessons:"Don't die in vain."
set of "I Love Lucy," and hopes the "I Love Lucy Christmas Special" wil l i n t roduce the
8 tonight, CBS
PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES "WALKING WITHDINOSAURS"
watching her parents on the
The longer you let it live, the harder it is to kill." Violence: A punch isthrown, bullying. Language: Mild Madea profanity. Sex:Viagra jokes and the like. Drugs:White lightning is displayed,
not consumed.
Parents' advisory: The least edgy Madea movie, this one is OKfor ages10 and older.
"ANCHDRMAN 2: THE LEGENDCONTINUES" Rating: PG-13 for crude and sexual
content, drug use,languageand
comic violence. What it's about:Those1970s blow-dried TV news dopes invent cable news andits obsession with
Scotland."
s
iiyi Ie tt
Jeans, butshe'salso nervous, as
1',I s,
Paramount Pictures
From left, Paul Rudd(Brian Fantana), Will Ferrell (Ron Burgundy), David Koechner (Champ Kind) and Steve Carell (Brick Tamland) star in "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues." See the full review
in today's GO! Magazine. groin, etc.
celebritiesand carchases in this ditzy sequel. The kid attractor factor:Will Ferrell 8 Co., cutting up and cracking wise and pushing that PG-13 envelope.
Language:Salty'70s style swearing. Ssx:Discussed, grappled with comically. Drugs:Joked about, used (to comic effect). Parents'advisory: Chances are, they've seen the video of the first film. Not exactly suitable for younger kids, but OK for12 and older.
Goodlessons/bad lessons:News is supposed to be telling "people what they need to know," not "giving them what they want to hear." Violence:Slapstick knees to the
Wife deservesbreakfrom baby,too Dear Abby: I have been married to my wife for a year and a
her having to deal with it. — Ontario, Canada, reader
half, and we have an infant child.
Dear Reader: You should not
Regal OldMill Stadium16 &IMAX,680S.W. PowerhouseDrive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 12:40,3:45,7,1010 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGENDCONTINUES (PG-13)11:30 a.m., 12:50,2:20,3:35,510,6:20,8:05,9:10 • THEBOOKTHIEF(PG-I3)I235,350,715,1020 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 11:1Oa.m.,210,4:55,7:50 • FROZEN (PG)10:35 a.m., 115,4:10,6:50,9:35 • FROZEN3-D(PG)10:55a.m.,1:35,4:25 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATIONOFSMAUG (PG-13)10:30 a.m., 12:30,2,4,6,7:30,9:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OFSMAljG HIGH FRAME RATE3-0(PG-13)1,4:30,8 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATIONOFSMAUG IMAX3-D (PG13) 11a.m.,2:30,6:30,10 • THE HUNGER GAMES:CATCHINGFIRE(PG-13) 11:20a.m., 3:30,6:45,9:55 • NEBRASKA(R)12:55,3:40,615,9:05 • OUTOFTHEFURNACE(R) 7:05,9:50 • SAVINGMR.BANKS(PG-13) 10:40a.m.,1:30,4:40,7:35, 10:25 • TYLERPERRY'SAMADEACHRISTMAS (PG-13)10:45a.m., 1:10,4:15,6:rI5, 915 • WALKING WITHDINOSAURS(PG) 1:45,7:20, 9:40 • WALKING WITHDINOSAURS3-D (PG)11:25a.m.,5 • High Frame Ratemoies recordand playvisualsat trr/ce the tateorhigherthannormal. • Accessibility devicesaieavailableforsomemovies.
• 7heremaybeanadditionalfee for3-Oand INmovles. • Movietimesaresutt/ecttochangearter presslima I
— and when I do, they come here.
Dear Hollday Blues:What your wife did was inconsiderate. You are a couple, and she should have discussed her plan with you before issuing any invitations to see if you were in agreement. If your home
with her friends or family. It could
If they stay any longer than 30 min- do wonders for your relationship. utes, it causes a problem and my If you can agree on this, it could wife again won't talk to me for the save your marriage. If you can't, rest of the night. then the two of you should get I have tried to compromise, but counseling. Marriage isn't supshe feels as though anytime I spend posed to put people in isolation away from her and the baby is a — and that's what it appears your no-no. Am I wrong to want to play wife is trying to accomplish with sports and see my guy friends? I you. have tried talking to her about this, Dear Abby:For the past 10 years, but she thinks any compromise is the holiday season has brought basically me doing what I want and with it arguments between my wife
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, DEC. 20, 2013:This yearyou open
YOURHOROSCOPE
doors and let go of the status quo. Your By Jacqueline Bigar life takes on a newvibrance that you love, and others notice. If you are single, you attract potential suitors with ease; CANCER (June21-July 22) however, it forces you to sort through ** * * Your creativity will emerge. your feelings. You will have to decide what Rethink the rest of your purchases, and you want from a relationship as well. If make adjustments while you can. Get you are attached, into the spirit of Christmas, and let go of Stars showthe kind the two of you your gift-giving concerns. Focus on your of day yoo'll have enjoy traveling values; usethem to gaina new perspec**** * Dy. ** * * Positive together. Schedule tive. Tonight: Treat a friend to drinks and at least one trip or munchies. adventuretogether this year. LEO is a LEO (July23-Aug. 22) source of endless ** * * You attract people who have a similar energy. A friend might shake up laughter and fun. the status quo. Enjoy the excitement, but ARIES (March21-April19) avoid being controlling — it won't help. ** * * Others will note that they ran Make adjustments for this person. Tointo an unstoppable force when they get night: The world is your oyster. Finish up a glimpse of you and your attitude today. your errands. Remain confident, but don't hesitate VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) to walk away from complications that ** * Much information comes in that are of no interest to you. Tonight: Be you need to consider. In order to free up spontaneous. some time, you will want to rearrange TAURUS (April 20-May20) your schedule. A loved one could be diffi** * Listen to your instincts, and accult when he or she discovers that plans knowledgethem aswell.How you handle might need to be adjusted. Tonight: Head a situation could change unexpectedly. home. Be with family. Make peace. Plans involving a holiday happening might LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) be tossed out at the last minute, which will throw several people off. Tonight: Do ** * * * Y our friends, associates and family might become childlike at the what you must first. thought of Christmas. You will want to GEMINI (May 21-Juns 20) ** * * Use your high energy to complete visit with many people before the actual holiday. Start now. You might be quite what must be done before the holidays. pleased at the amount of holiday cheer The whirlwind of festivities will start this coming weekend. Try to free up one area around you. Tonight: Get together with friends. of your life. Tonight: Get together with friends; perhaps you will decide to start SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21) swapping gifts. ** * Pressure comes in once more from
arrangements for the holidays without discussing them with me first. This year, she told her mom
we would host Thanksgiving and that I would have to tell my family we wouldn't be coming to them.
My wife's sisters are not close to their in-laws. Am I wrong to think she should have discussed the mat-
ter with me before deciding unilaterally what we're doing for the holidays? Our kids need to see ALL
their grandparents on Thanksgiving and Christmas. Oh — our parents live only seven minutes from
each other. — Holiday Blues in Wisconsin
is too small to accommodate both
sets of in-laws at the same time, a compromise would be to alternate holidays with each set so no family feels excluded. — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
a boss or someone else you need to answer to. You might want to avoid an issue, but any attempt to ward off a dis-
cussion could beseenas manipulation. Face the inevitable, and get past this problem. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * * Make plans to seeChristmas a pageant during the weekend. Break out of your routine and enjoy some music or dancing. If you can, take off for a day and get involved in some kind of winter sport. Tonight: Make sure you've mailed all your
packagesbeforeyou meeta friend. CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * A loved one or special friend might approach you and offer much more of what you want and desire. The two of you often disengage from stress when you're together. Catch up on each other's news. Tonight: Continue the theme of deferring. Let someone else choose.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Schedule some time with friends andloved ones.Someone mightgo outon a limb for you. Be gracious, and avoid taking him or her for granted. This individual not only loves you, but he or she will do whatever it takes to make your life easier. Tonight: Make merry.
I
I I
© King Features Syndicate
9p.m.on10, Movie:"Happiness Is a Warm Blanket, Charlie Brown" — This animated "Peanuts" special finds the gang trying to help Linus breakaway from his childhood security blanket. The stakes are high as Linus learns his grandmother is coming to visit, and he must decide whether or not to dispose of his most cher-
ished possession.
summer, MickJaggerandcompany played for more than100,000 fans in two shows at London's Hyde Park. This newspecial showcases highlights from those
concerts, featuringperformances of the Stones' greatest hits and
aspecialappearancebyformer
guitarist Mick Taylor — who, coincidentally, made his debut with the band at its original Hyde Park show in1969. 10 p.m. on 6, "BlueBloods"Investigating a childhood friend
(guest starTomCavanagh) with possible mob ties puts Danny's (Donnie Wahlberg) loyalty to the test. Frank (TomSelleck) wonders if a recent court ruling about the "stop and frisk" policy is behind
an increase in the crimerate. © Zap2it
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EVERGREEN' H OM E L O A N S Sisters MovieHouse,720 DesperadoCourt,541-549-8800 • ANCHORMAN2: THELEGENDCONTINUES(PG-13)4:45, 7:30 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13)6:30 • FROZEN (PG)415 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATIONOFSMAljG (PG-13) 3:45,7 • SAVINGMR.BANKS(PG-13) 4:30,7:15
OregonB ranchucesseML3213-10 © 2013EvergreenHomeloans isarsgisltred trade~ sameofE vevaat Moreyso urceMortgageCompanr'. e
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MadrasCinema5,1101SW.U.S. Highway97,541-475-3505 • ANCHORMAN2: THELEGENDCONTINUES(PG-13)2,430, 7:10,9:40 • FROZEN (PG)Noon, 2:25,4:50,7:20,9:40 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATIONOFSMAljG (PG-13) Noon, 6:30 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATIONOFSMAUG3-D (PG-13) 3: l0,9:45 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE(PG-13)1,4,7,9:55 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS (PG)12:35,2:40,4:45,6:50,9
BEST TIRE IALIIE PRONIIE
•
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E„L,E VAT,„I O,N
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * People seem to show up and want to have a quality conversation with you. You are aware of how much is on your plate, so make it a point to honor your limitations and say "no" if need be. A meeting provides a lot of food for thought. Tonight: Head home early.
Larissa (FreemaAgyeman) has told her this is her last shot at getting into Interview magazine. A piece of news drives awedge between MouseandWest (Ellen Wong, RJ Brown), andanother revelation from Sebastian's (Austin Butler) father (Terry Serpico) could change his relationship with Carrie.
9 p.m.onSHD, "The Rolling Stones:Sweet Summer Sun Hyde Park2013" —This past
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
for some reason, my wife makes
8 p.m. on10, "Bones" —Brennan's (Emily Deschanel) newfound interest in basketball and teamwork has her calling upon five "squinterns" to take another look at some remains ruled unidentifiable. They manage to identify someone who died in the 9/11 attacks, but it's unclear whether he was a victim or a perpetrator. ries" —Carrie (AnnaSophia Robb) is thrilled to get an interviewwiththe CEO of Bongo
e
I work while my wife stays home. become a couch potato or become My problem is she doesn't like me isolated from your friends because playing sports and hanging out you are married and a parent. And with friends. neither should your wife. She may I h ave t r i e d t o resent the time you make c oncessions s pend with y o u r and cut down playfriends because she's DEAR ing sports to once a stuck at home taking ABBY week. (I used to play care of the baby. two or t h ree times You are her only a week.) On game adult company, and night, when I get home she gives in a way she may be jealous that me the silent treatment. She used to you're enjoying freedom that she come to my games but won't now, can't. even though she has girlfriends Your wife should not be doing all who attend them. the parenting. One day or evening As for hanging out with my a week YOU should take care of friends, I barely see them anymore the baby while SHE takes a break
8 p.m. on 29, "SharkTank" — A doubleheader opens withthis 2012 episode featuring a Marine seeking an investment in his energy and nutritional supplement, which was designed and tested by active-duty service members. They also hear from awoman with an online bridal boutique, a sea captain with a wine-tasting cruise business and two menwith a necktie rental service.
8 p.m. on(CW), "TheCarrie Dia-
iIj;' ,-
and me. We both get along with our in-laws and do many things with both sides of our families. But
TV TODAY
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today's 0 GD! Magazine
•
• Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at bendbulletin.com/movles
Elevation Capital Strategies 775 SW BonnetWay Suite 120 Bend Main: 541-728-03zl www.elevationcapital.biz
D6 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
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POODLE pups AKC toy, tiny teacup, cuddly people dogs. 541-475-3889
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SAVEI Ask (PNDC) tured him, but his leg & Furs About SAME DAY Inhad atrophied & we The Bulletin reserves 280 stallation! CALL Now! hope we can save it. the right to publish all Misc. Items We're a small rescue ads from The Bulletin 1-800-308-1563 & the bill was a big hit newspaper onto The (PNDC) 208 208 Buyrng Dramends SHOW for us riqht now. A Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies Bulletin Internet web/Gold for Cash sponsorship for Will site. I December 20-21-22 255 Saxon's Fine Jewelers would be a blessing. Portland Expo Computers Adopt a rescued kitten Donate deposit bottles/ A foster home for him 541-389-6655 Center The Bulletin or cat! Fixed, shots, cans to local all vol., would be great while Serving Central Oregon sinceSggs Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, T HE B ULLETIN r e BUYING 14-kt white gold ID chip, tested, more! non-profit rescue, for he recovers, or better Sun.10-4 quires computer ad- Lionel/American Flyer ladies wedding band Rescue at 65480 78th feral cat spay/ neuter. yet, a forever home. 240 1-5 exit ¹306B trains, accessories. vertisers with multiple St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ Cans for Cats trailer 541-598-5488, 3 8 9with a bright polish Crafts & Hobbies Admission $10 541-408-2191. ad schedules or those finish, 1.66 carat Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. at Bend Petco; or do- 8420. CRAFT, Box I 18 00-659-3440 selling multiple sys- BUYING & SE LLING www.craftcats.org nate M-F a t S mith 6441, Bend 9 7708, diamond Hearts and tems/ software, to dis- All gold jewelry, silver arrows, round cut, Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or www.craftcats.org 3rd Hollday Fair 202 Aussie/Heeler mix, close the name of the and gold coins, bars, at CRAFT, Tumalo. Sl -1 Clarity, F color. coming to Sisters, at shots 8 dewormed, Want to Buy or Rent business or the term rouncfsr wedding sets, Appraised at Call for Ig. quantity Yorkie male, 6 months, Outlaw Station $150. 541-977-4686 "dealer" in their ads. class rings, sterling silGREAT personality! $15,000. Very pickup, 541-389-8420. IHShoppingenter CASH for dressers, Private party advertis- ver, coin collect, vin$500. Can deliver unique piece. close to Ray's Food Guns, Hunting A USSIE MINI p u p ss www.craftcats.org Call 541-792-0375 ers are defined as tage watches, dental Asking $9500. Place, Hwy 20. blue merle & black tri. English Bulldog female & Fishing 541 420 5640 those who sell one gold. Bill 541-281-7815 Opening 11/29 thru Fl e ming, $350.541-408-5325 puppy, 3s/g mos old, 210 computer. 541-382-9419. 12/22, Mon.-Thur. $2000. 541-382-9334 Ammo/Accessories: 200 Wanted: Longmire or Aussies, Mini, AKC Red/ Furniture & Appliances 10-4, Fri. Sat. Sun. rds .223/.556, $70. 100 enchantabull.com coveralls, 42S Hell on Wheels 10-5.Vendors Blue merle, Black Tris, 2 TURN THE PAGE Carhart rds 9mm, $35. NEW AR insulated red lining, as 1st season dvd. litters. 541-788-7799 or wanted! Please call N2 30-rd mag pull, $10; For More Ads A1 Washers8 Dryers new $60. In LaPine 541-419-6408 541-598-5314. 541-595-6967 N3, $15; 10-rd, $15. $150 ea. Full war971-340-0065. The Bulletin 541-306-0166 ranty. Free Del. Also Aussie-Tzu male pups. 203 Computer complete wanted, used W/D's Will be ready with 1st AGATE HUNTERS CASH!! Holiday Bazaar 257 setup includes desk. 541-280-7355 shot & worming on ponshers • Saws For Guns, Ammo & Oil painting by German Shepherd $75. 541-306-6903 Jan. 3. $ 350 each. & Craft Shows s• • Reloading Supplies Musical Instruments noted NY artist Julie pups, parents on site. Bedframe,beautiful Kelly 541-604-0716 or 541-408-6900. nx18n Repafr & Supplles Heffernan, 22 Downsizin ! LOTS of Taking deposits. 541-489-3237 3rd Holiday Fair Electric Organ, splen- Christmas decor, CalttingeoliUrass, s g s framed, $500. inside 541-280-2118 Coming to Sisters at did sound, great cond, 8 2064 1 - 5 0 8 - 2 2 5 0 IOI'IIIS THIS 541-548-0675 & out, including collecOutlaw Station Shop- Border Collie/Black Lab $175. 541-382-5123 German Wirehaired tions. 541-388-9270 male. Free to good Pointer pups, AKC, 5 F, FREEZER: GE upright ping Center close to cross, Check out the Ray'9 Food Place, RANCH home, Jack, 22 cu.ft., $425. classifieds online $800. 541-454-2132 DO YOU HAVE 541-419-2502 541-948-9191 Hwy 20. Open11/29 wunrirbendbulletin.com SOMETHING TO Jack Russell Puppies, thru 12/22, Illlon. CAT FOR ADOPTION- born Nov. 17, avail mid- G ENERATE S O M E SELL Updated daily Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. free - I a m moving Jan. 2 fems, 1 male, EXCITEMENT in your FOR $500 OR Sun., 10-6. around a lot and want $550 ea. 541-576-4999 neighborhood! Plan a LESS? 241 Vendors wanted! her to have a good or 541-536-4115 Non-commercial Bicycles 8 garage sale and don't 541-595-6967 home! Very cute and advertisers may to advertise in Accessories sweet, 9yo, shorthair KITTENS at PetSmart forget place an ad classified! 11-4 Sat. 12/1 4, & 208 s payed calico. A l with our 541-385-5809. "QUICK CASH ways uses litter box, Sun. if any left, thru Pets & Supplies local rescue. Appx. 15 Loveseat, new, brown d oes not j ump o n SPECIAL" counters. Have had avail. Adopt now & 1 week3lines 12 5'x3'2n exc. cond. we'll hold up to 2 wks. The Bulletin recomher since kitten. She oi' $300.541-504-0707 mends extra caution is fine with other ani- 389-8420, 598-5488. ~ee eke ee! when purc h as- mals, not m i schie- www.craftcats.org Ad must NEED TO CANCEL 2005 Maverick ML7e ing products or servous. Great compan- Labrador puppies, AKC, include price of YOUR AD? M ountain Bike, 1 5 vices from out of the ion! 21 5 - 964-3051 o chocolate, $250. The Bulletin ~l e ee oi Seoo frame (small). Full area. Sending cash, Elizabeth or less, or multiple 541-977-6844 Classifieds has an suspension, Maverick checks, or credit in"After Hours"Line items whose total s hock, SRAM X O Labradors AKCformation may be does not exceed Call 541-383-2371 drivetrain & shifters, 9 Chocolates & yellows, subjected to fraud. $500. 24 hrs. to cancel speed rear cassette, shots, wormed, health/ For more informayour ad! 34-11, Avid Juicy disc hip guar. 541-536-5385 tion about an adverCall Classifieds at www.welcomelabs.com R olltop desk with 7 brakes. Well taken 541-385-5809 tiser, you may call Retail & Classified Display c are o f . $950 . www.bendbulletln.com the O r egon State medium oak, 541-788-6227. puppies, tiny, Labradors AKC puppies, drawers, Attorney General'9 Chihuahua $250. 541-548-4051 2 yellow females left! Advertising Deadlines Office C o n sumer 1st shots/dewormed, OFA hips 8 elbows certiDPMS Panther AR10 242 $250. 541-977-0035 fied. Both parents on site. Protection hotline at PUBLICATION ...... .......................................DEADLINE 308 W in., s c ope, Exercise Equipment 1-877-877-9392. Chihuahua puppy, ador- Great field & familv dogs. bi-pod, $1500. Thursday 12/26......................................... Monday, 12/23 - 8 am male, born 8/23, $300. 541-390-7484 541-419-7001 The Bulletin able Friday 12/27 .............................................. Monday, 12/23 - 8 am OBO. Llewellin Setter & Walker $100 Servrng Central Oregon sinceSggs Call The Bulletin At 541-410-8888 Friday GO! Magazine 12/27 ........................ Friday, 12/20 - 5 pm Hound pups, make great 541-385-5809 Christmas gifts! 4 males, HANCOCK & Chi-Pom male puppy, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS $125;3females, I MOORE SOFA $250. Silver y orkie O$150. Ready to go! At: www.bendbulletin.com CLASSIFIED LINE AD DEADLINES Search the area's most Salmon/Coral chec ross m al e o l d er 541-447-1323 comprehensive listing of puppy $150. CASH nille fabric with diaLife Fit R91 Guns, reloading equipWednesday, 12/25 - Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24 - Noon classified advertising... 541-546-7909. Newfoundland Pups. 6 mond pattern. TradiRecumbent Bikement, ammo, brass, real estate to automotive, tional styling with wks old 2 black boys. Absolutely like new Thursday, 12/26 - Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24 - Noon knives & other sporting merchandise to sporting loose pillow back, $1100, w/ $400 dewith new batterygoods. 541-576-4213 goods. Bulletin Classifieds p osit to hold. Jil l down-wrapped seat Classifieds • 541-385-5809 operates perfectly! appear every day in the 541-279-6344 cushions, roll arms, Leather rifle scabbard/ Clean, always Holiday Hours: Chri stmasEve12/24- 7:30amto 3 pm • Closedon12/25 print or on line. skirt, two matching J housed inside home. case, top quality, $150. Pomeranian puppy p illows and a r m 541-548-3408 Call 541-385-5809 $2100 new; 4 10-week-old male, covers. L i k e new www.bendbulletin.com Dachshund mini pieselling for $975. The BulletinCirculationTelephoneService HolidayHours (541-385-5800j: black and silver. condition. $1 000. Great Christmas gift! Rifle scabbard, George bald male, $450. Call What a sweet heart! Lawrence leather, exlnt, ChristmasEve12/24: 6:00am- 3 pm • 12/25: 6:30am-10:30 am 541-526-1332 541-647-2227 The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon sinceSglg 541-508-0386 for info. $275. 541-480-3160 $100. 541-548-3408
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HOLIDAY DEADLINES
The Bulletin %4'dAek ~ u
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The Bulletin will be closed on Wednesday, December 25
E2 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronly$1 5.00par week.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 intotal merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
icall for commercial line ad rates)
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*llllust state prices in ad
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Horses & Equipment
Employment Opportunities
2006 Thuro-Bilt 3H
slant Shilo, great c ondition. $ 5 900 obo. 541-317-0988.
A BIT LESS TACK 20% OFF sale on selected items. 2500 sq. ft. of gently used English & Western saddles, show clothing, bridles, saddle pads, Home Deco. Gift Certificates. 165 NE Greenwood Ave Bend 541-323-3262
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com s s
421
Schools & Training
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 260
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Misc. Items
Misc. Items
265
• Building Materials
270
Lost & Found
Large steel s t orage The Bulletin Offers MADRAS Habitat container $195 obo. Free Private Party Ads RESTORE 541-390-2813. • 3 lines - 3 days Building Supply Resale REMEMBER: If you Private Party Only Quality at have lost an animal, Lawrence Welk sing- •• Total items adverLOW PRICES don't forget to check along music b ook, tised of must equal $200 84 SW K St. The Humane Society $25. 541-382-5123 541-475-9722 or Less Bend Organ sheet music & FOR DETAILS or to Open to the public. 541-382-3537 LPs, some greats! $180 PLACE AN AD, Redmond Prineville Habitat all or part. 541-382-5123 Call 541-365-5809 541-923-0882 ReStore Fax 541-365-5802 Portable entertainment pnne ille Building Supply Resale est -447-rt 78; projector, brand new, V ictorian S t yle d o l l 1427 NW Murphy Ct. $80. 541-382-5123 er Creit Cats 541-447-6934 house, fur n ished. est-eee-8420. Open to the public. Red Fox f u r j a cket, $350. 541-322-0682 beautiful, worn just 3x, REWARD! Lost Canon 266 $200. 541-419-1051 Wanted- paying cash camera Rebel T3i with for Hi-fi audio & stu- • Heating 8 Stoves lenses in big black *REDUCE Y OUR dio equip. Mclntosh, bag at Mt. Bachelor CABLE BILL! Get an JBL, Marantz, D yNOTICE TO bus park/ride, Bend. All-Digital Sa t e llite naco, Heathkit, SanADVERTISER system installed for sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Since September 29, Has pics of 8 2-yr. cooking. FREE and program- Call 541-261-1808 1991, advertising for dad, horses, shots! m ing s t a rting a t used woodstoves has Irreplacable 541-633-6094 Look at: $ 24.99/mo. FRE E been limited to modHD/DVR upgrade for Bendhomes.com els which have been 260 new callers, SO CALL for Complete Listings of certified by the OrNOW (877)366-4508. Area Real Estate for Sale egon Department of Estate Sales (PNDC) Environmental QualWomen's career clothing, ity (DEQ) and the fed- Look What I Found! USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! (like new);gt/sN shoes, Ithr eral E n v ironmentalYou'll find a little bit of everything in handbags. 541-312-2951 Protection A g e ncy Door-to-door selling with The Bulletin's daily (EPA) as having met 263 fast results! It's the easiest smoke emission stan- garage and yard sale way in the world to sell. Tools dards. A cer t ified section. From clothes to collectibles, from w oodstove may b e housewares to hardidentified by its certifiThe Bulletin Classified Newin box, ware, classified is cation label, which is 541-385-5809 or nearly new permanently attached always the first stop for cost-conscious Tools: to the stove. The BulSew machine, Emdeko Craftsman n consumers. And if • 10 Stationary letin will not knowolder portable elec, gd you're planning your radial arm saw, ingly accept advertiscond, $25. 541-815-0164 own garage or yard Model ff315.220100, ing for the sale of sale, look to the clas$375. uncertified n sifieds to bring in the • 10 Stationary table woodstoves. buyers. You won't find saw w/guide rails, 267 a better place Meet singles right nowl model ff315.228590, for bargains! $325. • Fu e l & Wood No paid o perators, n • 6-1/8 Jointer Call Classifieds: just real people like 541-385-5809 or you. Browse greet- planer "Professional" WHEN BUYING email ings, exchange mes- model ff351.227240, classified©bendbuttetin.com $250 obo. sages and connect FIREWOOD... Call 541-504-6413 live. Try it free. Call 266 To avoid fraud, daytime hours. now: 877-955-5505. The Bulletin Sales Northeast Bend (PNDC) recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery ** FREE ** and inspection. Garage Sale Kit • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Place an ad in The 4' x 4' x 8' Bulletin for your ga• Receipts should rage sale and reinclude name, ceive a Garage Sale Call 54 I -385-5809 phone, price and Kit FREE! to ro m o te o u r s ervice kind of wood purchased. KIT INCLUDES: • Firewood ads • 4 Garage Sale Signs Handyman Adult Care MUST include • $2.00 Off Coupon To species 8 cost per Uae Toward Your Life Tree Personal I DO THAT! cord to better serve Next Ad Service LLCHome/Rental repairs • 10 Tips For "Garage our customers. Senior Concierge Service Small jobs to remodels Sale Success!" • Errands• Home Mgmt. Honest, guaranteed • Organizing 541-389-2591 The Bulletin work. CCB¹151573 Just bought a new boat? Dennis 541-317-9768 PICK UP YOUR Sell your old one in the GARAGE SALE KIT at classifieds! Ask about our ERIC REEVE HANDY 1 cord dry, split Juniper, 1777 SW Chandler $200/cord. Multi-cord Super Seller rates! SERVICES. Home 8 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 discounts, & tia cords 541-385-5809 Commercial Repairs, available. Immediate Carpentry-Painting, delivery! Bulletin 541-408-6193 The Serrtne Central Oregon sincete03 Building/Contracting Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On -time All year Dependable NOTICE: Oregon state promise. Senior Firewood: Seasoned; law requires anyone Discount. Work guarSpl i t, D el. who con t racts for anteed. 541-389-3361 Cedar, Bend: 1 for $185 or 2 construction work to or 541-771-4463 for $350. Lodgepole be licensed with the Bonded 8 Insured 1 for $205 or 2 for Construction ContracCCB¹181595 $385. 541-420-3484. tors Board (CCB). An active license Repairs, Remod Seasoned Tamarack means the contractor Home Tile, Carpentry split & delivered. is bonded & insured. els, work, M ainte $220. 541-977-2040 Verify the contractor's Finish CCB¹168910 CCB l i c ense at nance. 325 269 Phil, 541-279-0846. www.hirealicensedHay, Grain & Feed ardening Supplie contractor.com or call 503-378-4621. Landscaping/Yard Care & Equipment First quality Orchard/TimThe Bulletin recomothy/Blue Grass mixed mends checking with NOTICE: Oregon Landhay, no rain, barn stored, the CCB prior to con- scape Contractors Law BarkTurfSoil.com $250/ton. Patterson Ranch tracting with anyone. (ORS 671) requires all Sisters, 541-549-3831 Some other t rades businesses that ad- PROMPT DELIVERY also req u ire addi- vertise t o pe r form 541-389-9663 tional licenses and Landscape ConstrucLooking for your certifications. tion which includes: next employee? Need help fixing stuff? l anting, deck s , Place a Bulletin Debris Removal Call A Service Professional ences, arbors, help wanted ad find the help you need. water-features, and intoday and JUNK BE GONE stallation, repair of ir- www.bendbulletin.com reach over rigation systems to be I Haul Away FREE 60,000 readers l icensed w it h th e For Salvage. Also For newspaper each week. Landscape ContracCleanups & Cleanouts delivery, call the Your classified ad tors Board. This 4-digit Mel, 541-369-8107 Circulation Dept. at will also number is to be in541-385-5800 appear on cluded in all adverDomestic Services To place an ad, call tisements which indibendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 cate the business has which currently A ssisting Seniors a t or email bond, insurance and classifiedstcendbulletin.com receives over Home. Light house a compensa1.5 million page keeping & other ser workers tion for their employviews every v ices. L icensed 8 ees. For your protec- The Bulletin month at no Bonded. BBB Certi tion call 503-378-5909 fied. 503-756-3544 extra cost. or use our website: 270 Bulletin www.lcb.state.or.us to Drywall Classifieds Lo s t & Found check license status • Get Results! before contracting with WALLS R US the business. Persons Lost: Men's prescrip- Call 541-385-5809 Hang tape, texture, doing lan d scape tion glasses 12/14 or place your ad scraping old ceilings, maintenance do not possibly on north end on-line at & paint. 25 yrs. exp. r equire an LC B l i - o f Bond o r W a l l bendbuHetin.com Call Bob, 760-333-4011 cense. 541-388-2596 •
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Oregon Medical Training PCS Phlebotomy classes begin Jan. 6, 2014. Registration now open:
CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p porfunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra c aution when a p plying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws c ontact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division,
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking forEmployment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions 476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
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ore onmedicaltrainin .com 541-343-3100
Pressman
Experienced press operator Our Smith River, CA. production plant is seeking an experienced Goss community press operator. We have 8 units that have been well maintained and added to during the past several years including rebuilt quarter folder. We have CTP operation with Kodak equipment as well. We are Western Communications, inc. a family owned company that has 7 newspapers in California and Oregon. Our company provides a great culture and work environment. This plant prints 2 of our publications plus a limited amount of commercial printing, which we hope to grow. This is a 4-day, 32-hour shift that requires hands on community press experience and ideal candidate will be willing to assist in other areas outside the pressroom such as prepress and mailroom as needed. Smith River is centrally located between Crescent City, CA, one of our papers that prints every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday a.m. with approximately 5,000 circulation, and Brookings, OR. Our Brookings publication is also approximately 5,000 circulation that prints on Wednesday andSaturday a.m. Both Crescent City and Brookings provide excellent quality of life to raise a family. If this sounds like you, we would like to hear from you. Please send resume with references and salary requirements to: David Delonge, Qu a lit y Con t ro l Sup e rvisor ( ddelongeOtriplicate.com), PO B o x 2 7 7 , Crescent City, CA 95531.
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregonsince i90S
Prepress Systems Analyst The Bulletin is seeking a Prepress Systems Analyst. This person works with staff members in day-to-day production of The Bulletin's products, and with Commercial Print customers, to ensure efficient prepress processing and successful runs on press. This position requires knowledge of computer hardware, software and operating systems, as well as in-depth experience with litho plate production and offset printing. The right candidate will have an understanding and background in graphic arts workflow, and a thorough knowledge of prepress layout software. This is a hands-on position, involving work with Commercial Print customers during job planning, production, and with troubleshooting as required. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal opportunity employer. Send a resume with qualifications, skills, experience and past employment history fo:
The Bulletin
1777 SW Chandler Ave. PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020
Attention: James Baisinger by Friday, January 2, 2014. CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE Immediate opening in the Circulation department for an entry level Customer Service Representative. Looking for someone to assist our subscribers and delivery carriers with subscription transactions, account questions and delivery concerns.
Essential: P o s i tive a tti t ude, s tro n g service/team orientation, and problem solving skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, performance-based customer call center environment and have accurate typing, phone skills and computer entry experience. Most work is done via telephone so strong communication skills and the ability to multi task is a must.
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
Employment Opportunities
Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory
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:> Qfy J~;QJjjI~d.: Can be found on these pages:
Chip Truck Drivers Currently hiring three drivers - local and regional line haul - for our growing Madras division. You will need CDL with doubles endorsement and a good driving record. We hope you will consider joining the Chambers Madras team - celebrating our 50th Year in 2014! Call 541-546-6489 or
SALES PERSON
Healthcare Behavioral Health Utilization Care Management Specialist PacificSource has 2 o penings for B e havioral Health Utilization Care Mgmt Specialists to promote high quality, c ost-effective o u t comes by helping selected m e mber populations achieve effective utilization of behavioral h e a lth services. Qualified candidates will have a min. of 3 years of post-graduate clinical behavioral health experience (mental health and chemical dependency).
Local floor covering store has immediate need for F-T salesperson. • Must possess computer knowledge; have sales 8 design experience • Knowledge of carpet, vinyl, tile, hardwood 8 natural stone. • Responsible for showroom coverage, management of individual accounts for clients working on remodel and/or new construction. Material selections, estimates, sales agreements, ordering product, i n stallation work orders and invoicing. Actively pursue new accounts and rospects. ages based on experience. Email resume and cover letter to: wall 970©hotmail.com Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an HEALTH PLANS interesting Manner.Write For more informa- from the readers view - not tion on these posithe seller's. Convert the tions and to comfacts into benefits. Show plete th e on l ine the reader howthe item will application, please help them insomeway. visit us o n line at This http://www.pacificadvertising tip source.com/careers. brought toyou by EOE
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PacificSource
The Bulletin
541-419-1125.
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InformationSystem SupportSpecialist H igh Desert ESD i s hiring an Information System Support Spec ialist w i t hi n ou r Technology Department. 4 0 hrs / wk, l Mon.-Fri., 230 days/year. No less l than $16.67/hr. Paid • leave, full benefits. I For details & application: www.hdesd.org
Get your business
aROWING with an ad in The Bulletin's
"Call A Service Professional" Directory
Plumber, Journeymen Needed for new con-
products or I I chasing services from out of l the area. Sendingl c ash, checks, o r credit i n f ormationl may be subjected to FRAUD. l more informaI For tion about an adver- l l tiser, you may call l the Oregon State l Attorney General'sl s Office C o n s umer s
struction. Start immediately! Good pay/benefits l Protection hotline atl Call Gary, 541-410-1655 I 1-877-877-9392.
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Pressroom
Night Supervisor
Need to get an The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon, is seeking a night time press superviad in ASAP? sor. We are part of Western Communications, You can place it Inc. which is a small, family owned group cononline at: sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon and two in California. Our ideal candidate will www.bendbulletin.com manage a small crew of three and must be able to l e arn o u r e q uipment/processes 541-385-5809 quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for our 3t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ Trucking leadership experience preferred. In addition to Owner Operators our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nu4-Axle Chip Trucks merous commercial print clients as well. We Currently hiring two offer a competitive wage and opportunity for owner operators - local advancement. and regional line haul. If you provide dependability combined with a Based out of Madras, positive attitude, are able to manage people OR. We hope you will and schedulesand are a team player,we consider joining the would like to hear from you. If you seek a Chambers Madras team stable work environment that provides a great - celebrating our 50th place to live and raise a family, let us hear Year in 2014! from you. 541-546-6489 or Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at 541-419-1125. anelson@wescom a ers.com wit h your complete resume, references and salary hisLooking for your next tory/requirements. No phone calls please. employee? Drug test is required prior to employment. Place a Bulletin help EOE. wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad General will also appear on CROOK COUNTY bendbulletin.com EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES which currently receives over 1.5 Crook County Assessor's Office million page views Appraiser or Trainee every month at $32,618- $38,509 DOE no extra cost. Full time w/benefits Bulletin Classifieds Closes: January10,2014at 5:00 p.m. Get Results! Call 385-5809 Position assists primarily in routine residential or place appraisals and may include routine appraisals your ad on-line at of urban, rural, industrial or commercial propbendbulletin.com erties for tax assessment purposes. Position requires being registered with the State of Oregon as a property appraiser, OR have the Garage Sales ability to become registered after entering Garage Sales into a training program. Applications and full job d e scription c a n be fou n d at Garage Sales www.co.crook.or.us . Find them Please apply at the Crook County Treasurer's/Tax Office in 200 NE 2 Sf. The Bulletin Prineville, OR 97754 541-447-6554 Classifieds EOE
541-385-5809
Work shift hours are Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Must be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, weekends or early morning hours might occasionally be required. Pre-employment drug testing required.
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Please send resume to: ahusted©bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
Serrrng Cenrrel Oregon since tees
EOE/Drug free workplace
The Bulletin Serving Centra( Oregon since 1903
Advertising Account Executive Rewarding new business development
The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full-time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of media sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate. The position includes a competitive compensation package, and rewards an aggressive, customer-focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential.
Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay Brandt, Advertising Director 'brandt@bendbulletin.com or drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shortz
C L U B F riday, m Dece ber 20,2013
A second look
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"How did that Cy get to be such a cynic?" Rose asked me. "I think he's been upset since he found out about Santa Claus," I shrugged. A m aturing p l ayer m ust r e examine myths he learned as a beginner. In today's deal North-South got to a good slam. West led the king of clubs, and South took dummy's ace andcashed the A-K of trumps. When West d i scarded, South c ouldn't afford t o d r a w al l t h e trumps; if he then lost a spade trick, the defense would cash clubs. So South took the ace of spades and led a spade to ... dummy's king. East ruffed, and South went down two. "'Eight ever, nine never' let me down," South said.
left, opens three spades. Your partner doubles, and the next player passes. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner has asked you to act at the level of four, hence he has a strong hand, and you should have a game or slam. A bid of 3NT might work (partner surely owns heart strength). I'd bid five clubs. If h ehas4,A K 6 5 , A Q 8 4 , A J 1 0 6 , he'll be apt to try six clubs. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 4 K J106 4 2 (v) K J98
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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By David J. Kahn (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
12/20/13
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DECEMBER 20 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755 Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
N avion R V 200 8 , Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, Snowmobiles 24,000 miles, pristine cond., quality through1994 Arctic Cat 580 out, rear slide-out w/ EXT, in good d e luxe Reach thousands of readers! queen bed, condition, $1000. captain swivel f ront Call 541-385-5809 Located in La Pine. The Bulletin Classifieds seats, diesel generator, Call 541-406-6149. awning, no pets/ smoking. 478,500 o b o . 860 Ready to deal! FinancMotorcycles & Accessories ing avail. 850
Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front 8 rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388
541-382-2430
For Sale 1990 5th Wheel Transporter Low miles, EFI 460,
4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500. Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293
1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
What are you looking for? You'll find it in
Dramatic Price Reduction Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, The Bulletin Classifieds Keystone Challenger w/55' wide x 17' high bi2013 Harley 2004 CH34TLB04 34' fold dr. Natural gas heat, Providence2005 Davidson Dyna Fully loaded, 35,000 fully S/C, w/d hookups, offc, bathroom. Adjacent Wide Glide, black, 541-385-5809 new 18' Dometic aw- to Frontage Rd; great miles, 350 Cat, Very only 200 miles, ning, 4 new tires, new visibility for aviation busiclean, non-smoker, brand new, all stock, Kubota 7000w marine ness. 541-948-2126 or 3 slides, side-by-side plus after-market email tjetjockifiq.com diesel generator, 3 refrigerator with ice exhaust. Has winter slides, exc. cond. in- Piper Archer 1 9 80, maker, Washer/Dryer, cover, helmet. s ide & out. 27" TV Flat screen TV's, In based in Madras, alSelling for what I dvd/cd/am/fm entertain ways hangared since motion satellite. owe on it: $15,500. center. Call for more $95,000 new. New annual, auto Call anytime, Orbit 21' 2007, used details. Only used 4 541-480-2019 541-554-0384 pilot, IFR, one piece only 8 times, A/C, times total in last 5t/s windshield. Fastest ArSerein Central Ore on since 1903 oven, tub shower, years.. No pets, no cher around. 1750 tomicro, load leveler smoking. High retail tal t i me. $ 6 8,500. 875 Harley Davidson 2009 hitch, awning, dual $27,700. Will sell for Super Glide Custom, 648 Watercraft batteries, sleeps 4-5, $24,000 including slid- 541-475-6947, ask for Stage 1 Screaming Rob Berg. EXCELLENT CONing hitch that fits in Houses for • Redmond Homes • RIMjjjjIHI Eagle performance, ds published in eWa DITION. All accesyour truck. Call 8 a.m. Rent General too many options to tercraft" include: Kay sories are included. to 10 p.m. for appt to list, $8900. Rexair 28-ft Looking for your next aks, rafts and motor see. 541-330-5527. $14,511 OBO. 541-388-8939 PUBLISHER'S motorhome, 1991emp/oyee? ized personal 541-382-9441 ~'r NOTICE Ideal for camping or Place a Bulletin help watercrafts. Fo All real estate adver- wanted ad today and hunting, it has 45K . fifl "boats" please se tising in this newspamiles, a 460 gas enei- il reach over 60,000 Class 870. Save money. Learn I per is subject to the readers each week. gine, new tires, au541-385-5809 to fly or build hours F air H o using A c t tomatic levelers, Your classified ad with your own air528 which makes it illegal Onan generator, will also appear on c raft. 196 8 A e r o Sprinter, 35' 2008 Loans & Mortgages to a d vertise "any Seresng Central Oregon since t903 king-size bed, awMonaco Lakota 2004 bendbulletin.com Commander, 4 seat, Rear living, large 5th Wheel preference, limitation ning. Nice condition which currently re150 HP, low time, refrigerator, walk-in WARNING or disc r imination Harley Davidson 34 ft.; 3 slides; imSell or trade? $8700. ceives over Take care of full panel. $23,000 shower, queen bed, maculate c ondition; The Bulletin recombased on race, color, 2011 Classic Lim541-815-9939 1.5 million page obo. Contact Paul at lots of storage inside your investments mends you use cau- religion, sex, handilarge screen TV w/ ited, LOADED, 9500 views every month 541-447-5184. & out, new tires, entertainment center; tion when you procap, familial status, miles, custom paint at no extra cost. with the help from electric jack, vide personal marital status or na"Broken Glass" by reclining chairs; cenBulletin Classifieds excellent condition, The Bulletin's ter kitchen; air; queen information to compa- tional origin, or an inNicholas Del Drago, Get Results! only used 3 times. nies offering loans or tention to make any bed; complete hitch new condition, "Call A Service Call 385-5809 or Call to see! and new fabric cover. credit, especially such pre f erence, heated handgrips, ad on-line 541-318-6919 Professional" Directory those asking for adlimitation or discrimi- place your $16,000 OBO. auto cruise control. at vance loan fees or nation." Familial staTIFFINPHAETON QSH (541) 548-5886 $32,000 in bike, bendbuHetin.com companies from out of tus includes children 880 2007 with 4 slides, CAT only $20,000 obo. Superhawkstate. If you have under the age of 18 541-318-6049 350hp diesel engine, Motorhomes 757 Only 1 Share concerns or quesliving with parents or $125 900 30 900 miles Available tions, we suggest you legal cus t odians,Crook County Homes new Mtchehn tires, great Economical flying consult your attorney pregnant women, and cond! Dishwasher, w/d, iLr ~~ s e fi a Tick, Tock in your own or call CONSUMER people securing cus- Super Clean Prineville central vac, roof satellite, ~li IFR equipped HOTLINE, tody of children under Starter. $1 5 8,000. Tick, Tock... aluminum wheels, 2 full Tango 29.6' 2007, MONTANA 3585 2008, Cessna n 172/180 HP for 1-877-877-9392. 18. This newspaper 1620 sq.ft., on a large slide-thru basement trays Rear living, walkexc. cond., 3 slides, only $13,500! New will not knowingly ac- 3/4 acre lot on city ...don't let time get & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towaround queen bed, king bed, Irg LR, BANK TURNED YOU cept any advertising services. All updated Garmin Touchscreen bar and Even-Brake inCOACHMAN Arctic insulation, all central air, awning, away. Hire a DOWN? Private party for real estate which is to the "T" and ready to avionics center stack! cluded. Freelander 2008 options $35,000 obo. 1 large slide, will loan on real es- in violation of the law. move in. Have to call professional out Exceptionally clean! 32' Class C, M-3150 Call 541-977-4150 541-420-3250 $12,000. tate equity. Credit, no O ur r e aders a r e on this one. Just hit Hangared at BDN. Pristine just 23,390 of The Bulletin's 541-280-2547 or problem, good equity hereby informed that the market. Call 541-728-0773 miles! Efficient coach Tioga 24' Class C "Call A Service 541-815-4121 is all you need. Call all dwellings adverScott McLean, has Ford V10 Motorhome 916 Oregon Land Mort- tised in this newspaPrincipal Broker Professional" w/Banks pwr pkg, Bought new in 2000, gage 541-388-4200. Trucks & 14' slide, ducted furn/ per are available on 541-406-6906 currently under 20K Directory today! Realty Executives AC, flat screen TV, Heavy Equipment an equal opportunity miles, excellent Just too many 16' awning. No pets/ basis. To complain of shape, new tires, OPEN ROAD 36' smkg. 1 ownercollectibles? d iscrimination ca l l professionaly winter2005 - $25,500 a must see! $52,500. HUD t o l l-free at Homes with Acreage ized every year, cutKing bed, hide-a-bed 541-548-4969 1-600-877-0246. The off switch to battery, Sell them in WEEKEND WARRIOR sofa, 3 slides, glass plus new RV battertoll f ree t e lephone Toy hauler/travel trailer. shower, 10 gal. waThe Bulletin Classifieds number for the hearies. Oven, hot water 24' with 21' interior. 4I ter heater, 10 cu.ft. heater & air condiing im p aired is Harley Davidson SportSleeps 6. Self-confridge, central vac, Peterbilt 359 p otable tioning have never 1-600-927-9275. ster 2 0 01 , 1 2 0 0cc, water truck, 1 990, 541 -385-5809 tained. Systems/ s atellite dish, 2 7 " been used! 9,257 miles, $4995. Call 3200 gal. tank, 5hp appearance in good TV/stereo syst., front $24,000 obo. Serious 658 Michael, 541-310-9057 p ump, 4 - 3 e hoses, Cut your S T UDENT condition. Smoke-free. front power leveling inquiries, please. 18989 Couch Market Rd. camlocks, $ 25,000. Houses for Rent LOAN payments in Stored in Terrebonne. Tow with t/a-ton. Strong jacks and s cissor 541-820-3724 Tumalo Equestrian Fleetwood D i scovery HALF or more Even if Redmond HDFatBo 1996 suspension; can haul stabilizer jacks, 16' 541-548-5174 Facihty! 40' 2003, diesel moLate or in Default. Get awning. Like new! ATVs snowmobiles, 929 14.56ac, 144x72 indoor torhome w/all Relief FAST. Much Spacious 1800 sq.ft., 3 even a small car! Great 541-419-0566 arena w/15 stalls& Automotive Wanted options-3 slide outs, Want to impress the LOWER p ayments. bdrm, 2 bath home w/ guest quarters + 5 stall price - $8900. satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Call Student Hotline 2 car garage located relatives? Remodel Call 541-593-6266 barn, 3.476 sf home, DONATE YOUR CARetc. 32,000 m iles. Find It in 855-747-7784 in S W Re d mond. indoor pool, fenced FAST FREE TOWWintered in h eated your home with the (PNDC) Large living room and 7.22 irr, awesome mtn The Bulletin Classifieds! Looking for your ING. 24 hr. Response utility room. Fridge shop. $84,900 O.B.O. help of a professional views. $699,900. Completely next employee? 541-385-5809 Tax D e duction. LOCAL NONEyiWebuy incl. $1200 mo. + sec. 54'I -447-8664 from The Bulletin's Call Peter at Rebuilt/Customized Place a Bulletin help UNITED BR E AST secured trust deeds & dep. 615-400-8915 "Call A Service 541-419-5391 2012/2013 Award wanted ad today and CANCER FOUNDAnote,some hard money ,GsoilleoeGital.ce Have an item to Winner Professional" Directory reach over 60,000 loans. Call Pat Kellev TION. Providing Free 693 , II • Showroom Condition readers each week. 541-382-3099 ext.18. sell quick? • RM ammograms & Office/Retail Space Many Extras Your classified ad Breast Cancer Info. If it's under Low Miles. 573 will also appear on for Rent 888-592-7581. S'1 7,000 bendbulletin.com '500you can place it in Business Opportunities (PNDC) Burns, OR. 447 acres, which currently re541-548-4807 Recreation by Design 500 sq. ft. upstairs The Bulletin Ranch FSBO 931 ceives over 1.5 mil- 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. A Classified ad is an office on NE side of $385,000 lion page views evTop living room, 2 bdrm, Classifieds for: Automotive Parts, EASY W A Y TO town, private bath, all 541-589-1630. Info at has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, Service & Accessories ery month at no REACH over 3 million util. paid. $500 month www.elkridgecabin.co yyinnebago Aspect extra cost. Bulletin entertainment center, Pacific Northwestern- plus $500 d eposit. '10- 3 lines, 7 days 2009- 32', 3 slidem/447AcRanch.html fireplace, W/D, Classifieds Get Reers. $5 4 0/25-word 541-480-4744 outs, Leather inteFirestone studded tires, '16 3 lines, 14 days garden tub/shower, in 4 sults! Call 385-5809 c lassified ad i n 2 9 rior, Power s eat, 205/75-14, 80% tread, great condition. $36,000 or place your ad (Private Party ads only) daily newspapers for locks, windows, Lots or best offer. Call Peter, $175. 541-410-3425 • on-line at 3-days. Call the PaAluminum wheels. Befl IMyjLII 307-221-2422, e Avalanche Extreme studbendbulletin.com cific Northwest Daily Triumph Da ytona 17 Flat Screen, SHEVLIN RIDGE ded tires on rims, 215/60~e © QS Connection (916) 2004, 15K m i l e s, Surround s o u nd, AILL DELIVER 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apR16, used 1 seas, gd cond 288-6019 or e m a il perfect bike, needs 882 camera, Queen bed, proved plans. More nothing. $200. 541-604-0963 elizabethOcnpa.com Vin Foam mattress, AwThe Bulletin's details and photos on Fifth Wheels for more info (PNDC) ning, Generator, InBULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS craigslist. $159,900. ¹201536. "Call A Service verter, Auto Jacks, $4995 541-389-8614 Search the area's most Extreme Value AdverProfessional" Directory Gulfstream S u nDreamCar Air leveling, Moon comprehensive listing of tising! 29 Daily newsis all about meeting sport 30' Class A roof, no smoking or Auto Sales classified advertising... papers $540/25-word 1988 new f r idge, p ets. L ik e 1801 Division, Bend n ew, your needs. real estate to automotive, classified 3-d a ys. DreamCarsBend.com TV, solar panel, new $74,900 merchandise to sporting Homes for Sale Reach 3 million PaMobile Homes Call on one of the 541-678-0240 refrigerator, wheel541-480-6900 goods. Bulletin Classifieds cific Northwesterners. Dlr 3665 chair l ift. 4 0 00W Arctic Fox 2003 Cold professionals today! appear every day in the For more information 1994 Marlette 2 bdrm, 1 NOTICE g enerator, G ood Weather Illlodel 34 58, print or on line. call (916) 288-6019 or All real estate adver- bath, excellent shape, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt condition! $12,500 • fI' FIND IT! email: Call 541-385-5809 tised here in is sub- new furnace & air condiobo 541-447-5504 cond. 3 elec slides, solar e no n -smoker. elizabeth@cnpa.com ject to th e Federaltioninq, BUY ITl www.bendbulletin.com panel, 10 gal water htr, for the Pacific North- F air Housing A c t , $14,000. 541-526-5920 SELL Iyli 14' awning, (2) 10-gal The Bulletin west Daily Connec- which makes it illegal FACTORY SPECIAL The Bulletin Classifieds propane tanks, 2 batts, SernngCentral Oregonvnce Ste tion. (PNDC) to advertise any prefNew Home, 3 bdrm, Winnebago 0 Suncruiser34' catalytic htr in addition to Pirelli Scorpion snow & erence, limitation or $46,500 finished 2004, 35K, loaded, too central heating/AC, genice tires, 295/45-R20 on discrimination based on your site. much to list, ext'd warr. tly used, MANV features! Oz Italian racing rims, on race, color, reliJ andM Homes thru 2014, $49,900 Den- Must see to appreciate! used 1 season, fits Jeep $19,000. By owner (no ion, sex, handicap, 541-548-5511 nis, 541-589-3243 Grand Cherokee. $2500. dealer calls, please). Call jamilial status or naKOUNTRY AIRE 908 LOT MODEL Jerry 541-480-9005 ortext541-325-1956. 1994 37.5' motortional origin, or intenSay egoodbuy" LIQUIDATION Aircraft, Parts tion to make any such home, with awning, CHECKYOUR AD to that unused and one slide-out, Les Schwab Mud & preferences, l i mita- Prices Slashed Huge Victory TC 2002, & Service Savings! 10 Year Snow blackwall tions or discrimination. Only 47k miles runs great, many item by placing it in conditional warranty. Murano We will not knowingly and good condition. accessories, new The Bulletin Classifieds P245/50/R-20 102T accept any advertis- Finished on your site. $25,000. tires, under 40K ONLY 2 LEFT! Observe G02, used 605 ing for real estate 541-548-0318 miles, well kept. 1 winter. Pd $1200. Redmond, Oregon which is in violation of (photo aboveis ol a Roommate Wanted 541-385-5809 Will take reasonable 541-548-5511 $5000. on the first day it runs similar model& not the this law. All persons to make sure it is coroffer. 541-306-4915 JandMHomes.com 541-771-0665 actual vehiclej are hereby informed Seeking roommate in 881 rect. eSpellchecke and 1/3 interest in Columbia my age range (over 40). that all dwellings adRent/Own human errors do ocTruck tire chains, fit vertised are available 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Travel Trailers 400, $1 50,000 (located Call 541-312-3085. 865 cur. If this happens to © Bend.) Also: Sunri245/85-16 up to on an equal opportu- $2500 down, $750 mo. ATVs your ad, please con- ver hangar available for 295/50-20, like new in nity basis. The Bulle- OAC. J and M Homes Fleetwood Wilderness 632 tact us ASAP so that sale at $155K, or lease, case, $55. 541-777-7895 N.W. Edition 26' 2002, 541-548-5511 Apt./Nlultiplex General tin Classified corrections and any iN $400/mo. 1 slide, sleeps 6, 932 adjustments can be 541-948-2963 queen bed, couch, CHECKyOUR AD made to your ad. Antique & Open House Every Fri. & Sat. stove/oven, tub/ NATIONAL DOLPHIN 10am-2Hpm 541-385-5809 Classic Autos 37' 1997, loaded! 1 shower, front elec. 716 NE Vail, Bend slide, Corian surfaces, jack, waste tank heat- The Bulletin Classified floors (kitchen), ers, s tabilizers, 2 Honda TRX 350 FE wood Pahlisch Homes fridge, convection prop. t a nks, no 5'rtttf'r Need to get an ad 2006, 4 wheel drive, 2-dr n microwave, Vizio TV & smoking/pets, winterelectric start, electric roof satellite, on the first day it runs walk-in i zed, g oo d c o n d. in ASAP? New Master-Planned 1/3 interest i n w e ll1921 Model T s hift, n ew tire s , shower, new queen bed. $8500 to make sure it ise corOBO equipped IFR Beech Bo'a gg Townhome Delivery Truck e $2500, 541-980-8006. rect. Spellcheck and White leather hide-a- 541-447-3425 nanza A36, new 10-550/ Restored & Runs Development in Fax it to 541-322-7263 human errors do ocbed & chair, all records, s a rop, located KBDN. Midtown! 870 $9000. cur. If this happens to no pets or s moking. 65,000. 541-419-9510 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-389-8963 Boats & Accessories $28,450. your ad, please conJust bought a new boat'? tact us ASAP so that Call 541-771-4800 Sell your old one in the •3 Bdrm townhomes starting at $245,000. corrections and any classifieds! Ask about our • Two units move-in ready. adjustments can be Super Seller rates! •Price includes custom level finishes with full made to your ad. 541N85-5809 landscaping, slab quartz countertops and 541-385-5809 Keystone Laredo 31' efficient construction. The Bulletin Classified •energy RV 20 06 with 1 2' Location supports the active Bend lifestyle slide-out. Sleeps 6, with easy access to parks, trails, river and Sunchaser Pontoon Buick Skylark 1972 634 queen walk-around downtown. boat - $19,895 Fleetwood Prowler Matchless! 17K original bed w/storage underApt./Multiplex NE Bend 32' - 2001 20' 2006 Smokercraft Head SOuth miles! Sunburst yellow/ neath. Tub & shower. cruise, S-8521. 2006 for the winter! 2 slides, ducted Directionsfrom Hwy 97/Parkway: Head East white vinyl/Sandalwood. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Call for Specials! on NE Revere Ave. for 1/2 mile, turn left onto 75hp. Mercury. Full 1997 Tropical by heat & air, great 15 factory options includAir cond. Gas stove & e Limited numbers avail. 1/5th interest in 1973 camping e n closure. National RV.35-ft, condition, snowbird NE 8th St. for.3 miles, take 3rd left on NE Vail ing A/C. Sloan docurefrigerator/freezer. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Cessna 150 LLC Pop u p ch a nging Chevy Vortec enLane. ready, Many upmentation." Quality reMicrowave. Awning. W/D hookups, patios 150hp conversion, low paint. COMPLETELY oriroom/porta-potty, BBQ, grade options, figine, new awnings, Outside sho w er. or decks. time on air frame and swim ladder, all gear. nancing available! inal interior & trunk area Call Brian Ladd, PrincipalBroker everything works, Slide through storengine, hangared in PRISTINE). Engine comMOUNTAINGLEN, Trailer, 2006 E a sy- excellent condition, 541-408-3912 $14,500 obo. a ge, E a s y Li f t . 541-383-9313 Bend. Excellent per- partment is VERY MUCH loader gal v anized. 1 owner, non-smokffbrian@bendproperfysource.com $29,000 new; Professionally formance& afford- original. No r ust, no P urchased new, a l l ers, $15,000 OBO. Call Dick, www.8fhStreefCoftages.com Asking $18,600 managed by Norris & records. 541-706-9977, able flying! $6,000. leaks, evervthina works! Cascade Sotheby'sInternational Realty 541-408-7705 541-4g47-4805 541-480-1687. cell 503-807-1973. 541-410-6007 Stevens, Inc. $19,900. 541-3Z3-1898 21' Sun Tracker Sig. series Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp, live well, fish fndr, new int, extras, exc cond, $7900. 541-508-0679 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
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E6 FRIDAY DECEMBER 20 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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Looking for your next employee?
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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
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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
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Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand 1966 Ford F250 Chevy Tahoe 2001 5.3L V8, leather, dual quad tunnel ram 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, P/S, straight body, with 450 Holleys. T-10 air, heated seats, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, runs good. $2000. fully loaded, 120K mi. 541-410-8749 $7500 obo Weld Prostar wheels, 541-460-0494 extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669. Chevy 1986, long bed, four spd., 350 V8 reWhere can you find a built, custom paint, helping hand? great t i r e s and wheels, new t a g s, From contractors to $5000 obo. Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, yard care, it's all here 541-389-3026 auto, high miles, runs in The Bulletin's good. $1700. "Call A Service 541-633-6662 Professional" Directory
BMW M-Roadster, 2000, w/hardtop. $19,500 57,200 miles, Titanium silver. Not many M-Roadsters available. (See Craigslist posting id ¹4155624940 for additional details.) Serious inquiries only. 541-480-5348
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Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought to you by
The Bulletin Serung CentralOregon rnre lgte
Buick LaCrosse CXS 2005, loaded, new battery/tires, perfect $8495 541 475 6794
Chevy pick-up truck
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1954, all there, started
restore, you finish!
Ford Supercab 1992, brown/tan color with m atching full s i z e (photo forillustration only) c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 Nissan Pathfinder SE over drive, 135K mi., 1997, V6, auto, 4WD, full bench rear seat, roof rack, moon roof, slide rear w i ndow, running boards, alloy bucket seats, power wheels. Vin¹136692 seats w/lumbar, pw, $4,988 Ford Model A 1930 receiver & trailer Coupe, good condition, HD © s uauuauuolnuuu.uou a a au brakes, good tires. $14,000. 541-588-6084 Good cond i tion.2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $4900. 541-389-5341 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 (photo forillustration only) (photn for iiiustrstion only) (photo for iiiustrstion only) readers each week. H onda F i t Spo r t Subaru impreza WRX Toyota yaris Sedan Your classified ad Hatchback 2009, 4 2003 6 speed, X50 Limited 2008 4 Cyl. 2010, 4 Cyl., 1.5 Liter, will also appear on Turbo, 2.5 liter, 5 spd, auto, Cyl., VTEC, 1.5 Liter, added power pkg., FWD, bendbulletin.com a uto, F WD , re a r 530 HP! Under 10k AWD, moon roof, rear Vin¹066953 which currently respoiler, alloy wheels, miles, Arctic silver, spoiler, pre m i um $8,888 ceives over 1.5 milVin¹040086 gray leather interior, wheels, Vin¹508150 lion page views ® s u aAau $13,988 new quality tires, $15,888 every month at battery, Bose 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. no extra cost. Bulle© s u aAau and S UBA R l l premium sound steauaaauotnuuro oou tin Classifieds 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. reo, moon/sunroof, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Get Results! Call Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 car and seat covers. 385-5809 or place 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Many extras. GaDlr ¹0354 your ad on-line at raged, perfect conTURN THE PAGE bendbuiiefin.com dition $5 9,700. For More Ads Subaru STi 2010, 541-322-9647 16.5K, rack, mats, cust The Bulletin snow whls, stored, oneNeed to get an owner, $29,000, 541.410.6904 ad in ASAP? Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with You can place it Jaguar XJS 1990, V-12 co n vertible, hardtop. 50K miles, Call The Bulletin At online at: factory Porsche auto, I m peccable new 544 -385-5809 motor 6 mos ago with www.bendbulletin.com cond., 56,600 mi., 18 mo factory warPlace Your Ad Or E-Mail black w/ tan leather ranty remaining. Volkswagen At: www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 interior, tan top, A/C, $37,500. Touareg 2004 cruise, PS, PB, air 541-322-6928 Meticulously mainbag, Pirelli t i res, tained. Very clean s ame owner 1 3 Toyota Ceiica inside and out. V6. I The Bulletin recoml years. $14 , 500. Convertible 1993 Recently serviced- l mends extra cautionl Call Jeff 60 point inspection • when p u r chasing • 541-410-0671 sheet.$7200 I products or services Call 541-480-0097 from out of the area Check out the I s ending c ash , classifieds onhne checks, or credit in- s www.bendbuffetin.com (photo for illustration only) G T 2200 4 c yl, 5 formation may be I Subaru impreza OufUpdated daily Tick, Tock I subject toFRAUD. back Sport Wagon speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o n vertible For more informaLexus RX330, 2006, low 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 liter, around Tick, Tock... I tion about an adverthis price mileaqe, good c o nd, a uto, A W D , re a r range, in new t i res, tiser, you may call spoiler, roof rack, al$16,0()0. 650-302-7072 ...don't let time get I the Oregon StateI loy wheels, wheels, clutch, timaway. Hire a ing belt, plugs, etc. s Attorney General's s Garage Sales Vin¹824283 t Office C o n sumer I 111K mi., remarkprofessional out $16,888 able cond. i nside I Protection hotline at of The Bulletin's Garage Sales ® s u a aau and out. Fun car to 1-877-877-9392. "Call A Service d rive, Must S E E ! Garage Sales 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $5995. R edmond. Professional" 877-266-3821 Serrring Central Oregonsince tgte 541-504-1993 Find them Dlr ¹0354 Directory today! in The Bulletin Classifieds
$6800. 541-480-3646
Buick Regal S Custom 1994, 6 1,752 mi., exc. cond., V6, 3.1 L, fuel injected, 4 dr., FWD, exc. all season tires, new battery and alternator, very clean, exc. a/c and heater, pb, pw and s t eering. $4000. 541-419-5575
I
The Bulletin
541-385-5809
Price Reduced! Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
Door-tc-docr selling with Cadillac El Dorado Lexus RX350 2011 1994Total Cream Puff! AWD, black, 35,500 engine, power every- fast results! It's the easiest way in the world tc sell. Body, paint, trunk as mi., ¹011525 $34,995 thing, new paint, 54K showroom, blue orig. miles, runs great, leather, $1700 wheels exc. cond.in/out.$7500 The Bulletin Classified (phuto for illustration only) obo. 541-480-3179 541-385-5809 Nissan Pathfinder SE w/snow tires although 2005, V6, auto, 4WD, car has not been wet in 541-598-3750 8 years. On trip to roof rack, moon roof, Boise Call a Pro www.aaaoregonauto avg. 28.5 mpg., t ow pk g . , all o y source.com Whether you need a $4800. 541-593-4016. wheels. Vin¹722634 fence fixed, hedges $12,988 CHECK YOUR AD trimmed or a house Please check your ad built, you'll find 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. on the first day it runs FORD XLT 1992 professional help in 877-266-3821 to make sure it is cor3/4 ton 4x4 Dlr ¹0354 rect. Sometimes inThe Bulletin's "Call a matching canopy, s tructions over t h e Lincoln LS 2001 4door 30k original miles, Service Professional" phone are misunder- sport sedan, plus set possible trade for Directory of snow tires. $6000. stood and an error classic car, pickup, cs 541-317-0324. can occur in your ad. 541-385-5809 motorcycle, RV If this happens to your $13,500. ad, please contact us In La Pine, call the first day your ad 928-581-9190 (photo forillustration only) Toyota RAI/O Sport appears and we will happy to fix it as 2007, 4 Cyl., 2.4 Liter, be auto, 4WD, tow pkg., s oon as w e c a n . Deadlines are: Week- Lincoln Zephyr 2006, V6, alloy wheels, r oof GMC Ysfon 1971, Only days 12:00 noon for 29,000 miles, silver, It rack, Vin¹066992 I nternational Fla t $19,700! Original low next day, Sat. 11:00 stone leather seats, good $15,988 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 mile, exceptional, 3rd for Sunday; Sat. cond, priced to s ell, ton dually, 4 spd. ® s u a ARU. a.m. owner. 951-699-7171 12:00 for Monday. If $9700. 541-549-2500 trans., great MPG, we can assist you, Ii could be exc. wood 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. please call us: 877-266-3821 hauler, runs great, I Ne e d fo sell a 541-385-5809 Dlr ¹0354 new brakes, $1950. Vehicle? The Bulletin Classified Call The Bulletin 541-419-5480. and place an ad Get your today! GMC Sierra 1977 short business Ask about our bed, exlnt o r iginal "Wheel Deal"! d cond., runs & drives I f o r private party great. V8, new paint a ROW I N G advertisers and tires. $4750 obo. Corvette 1979 541-504-1050 with an ad in (photo foriffustrstion only) L82- 4 speed. fl Toyota Tacoma XfraThe Bulletin's 85,000 miles cab Pickup 2000, 4 Garaged since new. "Call A Service Cyl., 2.7 liter, auto, I've owned it 25 Professional" 4WD, tow pkg., alloy years. Never damwheels, be d l i ner. Directory aged or abused. Vin¹648820 $12,900. Jeep CJS 1979, $10,988 Dave, 541-350-4077 975 Original owner, 87k s u a a au miles, only 3k on new © Automobiles (photo forillustration only) 258 long block. Clutch 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Nissan Aifima Hybrid package, Warn hubs. 877-266-3821 2009, 4 Cyl., 2.5 Liter, Excellent runner, very Dlr ¹0354 auto, FWD, leather, dependable. Northrear spoiler, a l loy man 6E/s' plow, Warn 935 wheels, Vin¹102916 6000¹ winch. $7900 Sport Utility Vehicles $12,988 CORVETTE COUPE or best reasonable Glasstop 2010 ® s u a aau offer. Corvette Coupe Acura MDX 2010 AWD Grand Sport -4 LT 541-549-6970 or 1996, 350 auto, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. technology pkg, 56k loaded, clear bra 541-815-8105. 135k, non-ethanol 877-266-3821 miles. ¹527133 hood & fenders. fuel/synthetic oil, Dlr ¹0354 People Lookfor Information New Michelin Super garaged/covered. Sports, G.S. floor About Products and Bose Premium Gold mats, 17,000 miles, Services EveryDaythrough Porsche 911 system. Orig. owner Crystal red. Carrera 993 cou e manual. Stock! TheBulletin Classiffeds 541-598-3750 $42,000. $10,500 OBO. www.aaaoregonauto.com 503-358-1164. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781
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Find exactly what Plymouth B a r racuda you are looking for in the 1966, original car! 300 BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K CLASSIFIEDS hp, 360 V8, center- miles, premium pack(photo for illustration only) lines, 541-593-2597 Ford Fusion SE2012, 4 age, heated lumbar Cyl., 2.5 Liter, auto, supported seats, panFWD, power seats, oramic mo o nroof, alloy wheels, Bluetooth, ski bag, XeVin¹418211 non headlights, tan & $15,888 black leather interior, n ew front & re a r Acura Legend, 1992, S UBA R U brakes O 76K miles, black on black, chrome VW Bug Sedan, 1969, wheels, new tires, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. fully restored, 2 owners, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. beautiful cond! $2250. 877-266-3821 with 73,000 total miles, 541-388-4360 541-549-6589 $10,000. 541-382-5127 Dlr ¹0354
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1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-
viced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
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them, with proper said T r ust D e e d. LEGAL NOTICE v ouchers, wi t h i n The Pines M o bile W herefore, no t i ce four (4) months afHome Park give no- hereby is given that, ter the date of first the undersigned tice t ha t p e r sonal publication of t his w i l l on property (the "Prop- Trustee notice, to the erty" described below 4/11/2014 at the hour Co-Successor is abandoned. The of 01:00 PM, StanTrustees in care of property will be sold dard of Time, as esHUGHES, R O TE, by private bidding. tablished by Section BROUHARD 8 Sealed bids will not be 187.110, Oregon ReTHORPE, LLP, Ataccepted. The Prop- vised Statues, at the torneys at Law, 612 erty is described as a front entrance to the NW Fifth S t reet, 2001 Skyline Green- Deschutes C o u nty Grants Pass, O rbrier, 3b2b, 27x44. Courthouse, 1164 NW egon 97526, orsuch Bond St., Bend, OR LEGAL NOTICE Plate ¹254201, Vin be 97701 County of Des¹21910262NAB. The IN T H E CI R CUIT claims ma y tenants that owned chutes, sell at public COURT O F THE barred. All persons whose rights may STATE OF OREGON the home were Gil- auction to the highest FOR D E SCHUTES be affected by the berto and B eatrice bidder for cash the Ramirez. The home is interest in the s aid COUNTY. I n the p roceedings m a y obtain ad d itional l ocated a t 610 0 0 described real propMatter of the Estate of George Milton Smith, information from the Brosterhous R o ad, erty which the Grantor Space ¹15, Bend, Or- had or had power to Deceased. Case No. a ttorney fo r th e 13 PB 0128. NOTICE Co-Successor egon 97702. Bids will convey at the time of be taken up to De- the execution by him TO IN T E RESTED Trustees. Frank C. of th e s a i d T r ust PERSONS. NOTICE Rote, III, OSB No. cember 23, 2013 at IS HEREBY GIVEN 8 93898, 612 N W 9:00AM. To inspect Deed, together with Fifth Street, Grants the property contact any interest which the that the undersigned Harvey Beriant Re- Grantor or his suchave been appointed Pass, OR 97526. cessors in interest acco-personal r e pregional Manager at LEGAL NOTICE 61000 B r osterhous quired after the exsentatives. All p e rsons having claims NOTICE TO INTER- Road, Bend Oregon ecution of said Trust 97702. Phone Deed, to satisfy the against the estate are ESTED PERSONS foregoing obligations ¹541-382-8558. required to p resent Judy Sechrist h as been appointed perthereby secured and them, with vouchers sonal representative t he costs and e x attached, to the unof the Estate of Mary penses of sale, indersigned c o - perJust too many cluding a reasonable sonal representatives Josephine Sevestre, charge by the at: Linda Knight, 1009 Deceased, by the Circollectibles? T rustee. Notice i s Willowdale Avenue, cuit Court, State of further given that any Medford, OR 97501 Oregon, Deschutes Sell them in person named in Secand David W eath- County, under case number 1 3 PB0144. The Bulletin Classifieds tion 86.753 of Oregon erred, 4128 S. BelleAll persons having a Revised Statutes has grove Lane, Spokane, claim against the esthe right to have the WA 99223 within four 541-385-5809 foreclosure proceedmonths after the date tate must present the ing dismissed and the of first publication of c laim w i t hi n fo u r Trust Deed reinstated t his notice, o r t h e months of th e f i rst by payment to t he claims may be barred. publication of this noLEGAL NOTICE All persons whose tice to Sherron Urban, TS No Beneficiary of the enAttorney at Law, PO tire amount then due r ights may b e a f OR08000024-13-1 fected by t h e p r o- Box 1135, Bend, OR APN 140634 TO No (other than such por9 7709-1135, Att n : ceeding may obtain 8202726 TRUSTEE'S tion of said principal additional information Judy Sechrist, or they N OTICE OF S A LE as would not then be may be barred. Addi- Reference is made to due had no default from the records of the c ourt o r the tional information may that c e rtain T r u st occurred), t o gether cost s , co-personal r e pre- be obtained from the Deed made by, Bev- w ith t he sentatives. Date and c ourt records, t h e erly Arline Highfill as Trustee's or attorney's personal representa- G rantor to first published DeFirs t fees and curing any cember 6, 2013. Linda tive or the following- American Title Ins Co. other default c o mnamed attorney for B. Knight, Co-Peras Trustee, in favor of plained of in the Nosonal representative the personal repre- Seattle Mor t gage tice of Default by tenthe and David W eath- sentative. Date of first Company as Benefi- dering erred, C o -Personal publication: Decem- ciary and recorded on performance required ber 6, 2013. SHER- 02/1 8/1 998 in Book under the obligation or Representative. R ON URBAN, A T CO-PERSONAL 480, on Page 2373 of Trust Deed, at a ny T ORNEY AT L A W , REPRESENTATIVES: official records in the time prior to five days PO Box 1135, BEND, O ffice of t h e R e - before the date last Linda Knight, 1009 OR 9770 9 1135, Willowdale Avenue, corder of Deschutes set for sale. In conMedford, OR 97501, 541-617-1918, sher- C ounty, Ore g o n struing this notice, the (541) 848-7653 and ronu Ibendcable.com to-wit: APN: 140634 masculine gender inDavid W e a therred, LOT 10 IN BLOCK 7 cludes the feminine 4218 S. B ellegrove Where can you find a OF FOREST VIEW, and the neuter, the singular includes pluLane, Spokane, WA DESCHUTES helping hand? 99223, (509) From contractors to COUNTY, OREGON. ral, the word "Grantor" 448-5123. A T TORCommonly known as: includes any succesNEY FOR CO-PER- yard care, it's all here 52900 Sunrise Boule- sor in interest to the SONAL REPRESENin The Bulletin's vard, La Pine, OR Grantor as well as any TATIVES: Charles N. 97739 Both the Ben- other persons owing "Call A Service Fadeley, CHARLES eficiary a n d the a n o bligation, t h e FADELEY, P.C., At- Professional" Directory Trustee have elected performance of which torney at Law, Post to sell the said real is secured by said Office Box 1408, SisLEGAL NOTICE property to satisfy the Trust Deed, the words ters, OR 97759, (541) NOTICE TO INTER- obligations secured by "Trustee" and uBen549-0125, ESTED P ERSONS. said Trust Deed and eficiary" includes their respective s u ccesfadeIbendbroadNOTICE IS HEREBY notice has been resors in interest, if any. band.com (e-mail) GIVEN that the uncorded pursuant to dersigned has been Section 86.735(3) of Dated: 12/5/2013 First appointed P ersonal Oregon Revised Stat- American Title InsurLEGAL NOTICE Representative of the utes. The default for ance Company By: In the Matter of the E state of R i c k A . which the foreclosure CINDY ENGEL, AUTrust Estate of THE Kobbe, Deceased, by is m ad e is the THORIZED SIGNOR By: Authorized SigSHELLY M I L L ER the Deschutes County G rantor's failure t o REVOCABLE LIVCircuit Court of the p ay: failed to p a y natory First American I NG TRUST a n d State of Oregon pro- taxes which became Title Insurance ComS HELLY SCHI bate number due Principal Balance pany c/o TRUSTEE 17100 FANO MILLER, De13PB0148. All p e r- of $137,057.84 Inter- CORPS ceased. N O TICE sons having claims est due $3,040.75 By GILLETTE AVENUE IRVINE, CA 9 2 6 14 TO I N TERESTED against the Estate are this reason of said P ERSONS. N O required to present default the B enefi- 949-252-8300 SALE TICE IS H EREBY them, with vouchers ciary has declared all INFORMATION CAN GIVEN that SCOTT within four (4) months obligations secured by BE OBTAINED ON LINE AT www.prioriJ OSEPH G O U L - after the date of first said Trust Deed imDEN and IRA JAY publication of this no- m ediately due a n d t yposting.com F O R HAINES have been tice t o t h e u n der- payable, said sums AUTOMATED SALES appointed Co-Sucsigned or the claims being the following, INFORMATION cessor Trustees in may be barred. All t o-wit: The sum o f PLEASE CALL: Priorthe ab o ve-refer- persons whose rights $137,057.84 together ity Posting and Pubat at e nced Trust. A l l may be affectedby with interest thereon lishing persons ha v i ng the proceedings may at t h e ra t e of 714-573-1965 T H IS claims against the obtain additional in0.00000% per annum COMMUNICATION Estate o f S h e lly f ormation from t h e from May 25, 2013 MAY BE FROM A S chifano Mill e r records of the court, until paid; plus all acand/or th e T r u st the undersigned or crued late c harges Estate of The Shelly the attorneys for the thereon; a n d all Miller R e v ocable undersigned. DATE Trusteels fees, fore- People Look for Information Living Trust Agreeand first published: closure costs and any About Products and ment datedDecemDecember 13, 2013. sums advanced by ber 19, 2008 are rePriscilla Kobbe, Per- the Beneficiary pursu- Services EveryDaythrough The BvlletinClassiifeds quired to p resent sonal Representative ant to the terms of LEGAL NOTICE Foreclosure Notice Brosterhous Storage, 61380 Brosterh ous Rd., B e nd 9 7702. Notice o f foreclosure sale on Saturday Dec. 28 at 9:00 AM to satisfy lien against the following unit: Brian Bergerson ¹160
." ~R-WEE P~ t U(D( TO CENTRAL O..EGQN E EVERY FRI AY
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20, 2013 -,.-'~,.
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PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE
C ONTAC T
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EDITOR
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
in ez
Cover design by Aithea Borck, photo by Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin
Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377 bsalmonObendbulletin.com
REPORTERS Beau Eastes, 541-383-0305 beastes@bendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasperObendbulletin.com Megan Kehoe, 541-383-0354 mkehoe@bendbulletin.com Karen Koppel, 541-383-0351 kkoppel@bendbulletin.com Jenny Wasson, 541-383-0350 jwasson@bendbulletin.com
DESIGNER
OUT OF TOWN • 22
• A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classes listing
• Portland welcomes "Evita" • A guide to out of town events
CALENDAR • 16
MOVIES • 25
• A week full of Central Oregon events
MUSIC • 3
Althea Borck, 541-383-0331 aborckObendbulletin.com
SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life LLS. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
• COVER STORY: The year in music • Feedback thinks back on 2013 • Best local albums of the year • Best non-local albums of the year • The year's best concerts
GOING OUT • 11 • Music is happening in Central Oregon! • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more
ADVERTISING
RESTAURANTS • 18 • A review of Little Bite Cafe in Bend • News from the local dining scene
• "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues," "American Hustle,""Saving Mr. Banks" and "Walking with Dinosaurs" open in Central Oregon • "The Lone Ranger,""Elysium,""Ain't Them BodiesSaints," "The Family," sKick-Ass 2," "One Direction: This is Us," "Percy Jackson: Seaof Monsters" and "Prisoners" are out on Blu-ray and DVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon ccfrttrl' f
541 -382-1811
Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. e
PLANNING AHEAD • 15
e tn
ARTS • 12
DRINKS • 20
• Holiday revue at the Tower Theatre • Last chance for "Santaland Diaries" • Baker City gallery seeks artists • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits
• The scoop on Sunriver growler-fill station/tasting room • News on the beer scene
r
American Red Cross Oregon Mountain River Chapter
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F ire H u r t s . Re d C r o s s H e l p s . Everyday the Fire Department is prepared to respond to devastating house fires. Once the fire is out, Red Cross is there. Red Cross provides emergency food, clothing, shelter, and comfort. Help your neighbors in Central Oregon by supporting the Fire Hurts, Red Cross Helps campaign.
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Donate at your Erikson's Thriftway or go online: www.redcross.org/firehurtscentraloregon
The Bulletin
Donate today and Service Master will match your donation.
ServiceinsrER Ctean
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 3
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
e
I
By Ben Salmone The Bulletin elcome, friends, to GO! Magazine's annual re-
W
to. And 2. I'm not sure, in the age of streaming music,
away, as well. It, too, was a ton of work, and had be-
view of the year in music. that people really want to download .zip files of MP3s come unwieldy. Like "Near/Far," I think it has simply If you've been here before, you might notice anymore. So, as much as I loved the finished product in run its course for now.
that things look a bit different. Most notably, after six
past years, "Near/Far" is on hiatus, at best. We may do
In their place: A longer essay from me on the state of
years, our downloadable "Near/Far" compilation of something similar in the future, so stay tuned. the year's best music by both local and global artists Second, our annual scrapbook of the local scene is not happening, for two main reasons: 1. It's a lot of through the eyes of those closest to it — a gathering of work and I don't have the time to devote to it that I used Top 5 lists called "What Others Thought" — has gone
the local scene, and my favorite concerts of 2013, plus the usual overview of the year's best recorded music.
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It's all spread out over the next seven pages, so give it
a look. I hope you find it informative and interesting.
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the year in music
PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
• 2013 had its ups and downs, but the year ends with an unsettled feel for local livemusic 've been covering Central Oregon's music scene since FEEDBACKBY 2006, and doing one of these "year in review" type BEN SALMON of things since '07 or '08, I'd say. (I could check the archive of GO! Magazines near my desk, but I'm quite lazy.) live music in Bend. And if you look back at them,
Let me take a minute to be per-
I'd bet you'd find your ol' local mu- fectly clear: My negative feelings sic writer painting a very positive are not a reflection of disappointpicture of the scene from year to ment in or lack of appreciation year. Some years, that positivity for the venues that are out there revealed itself naturally; some- booking shows right now, or the times I might've had to apply an people booking them, or the muextra coat of paint. sicians playing them. You see, I not only cover muThey are great, and I'm in fasic in Central Oregon, I'm also vor of everything they're doing. supportive of live music (and the I appreciate the funk parties and arts in general) and I live here, so the DJs at Dojo. I think the exI want this place to have a great panding lineup of eclectic folk at Courtesy Matthew Grimes at G-Rhymes Imaging music scene. The Belfry is a great thing. I love Local funk band Elektrapod plays to a full Pakit Liquidators during the 2013 Bend Roots Revival. The local-music And for the past seven or so that jazz is finding an audience festival landed at Pakit after organizers spent all summer cleaning up the vast home-improvement supply yard. years, it has, for the most part. at The Oxford Hotel and GreenI always tell people from else- wood Playhouse. I wish the folks where: "There's a lot more hap- trying to put on shows at Pakit I adore the Tower Theatre's ate that music is such an inte- big show at Les Schwab Amphipening there than you'd expect in Liquidators luck as they wade consistently diverse offerings, gral part of the programming at theater or M i dtown B allroom, a town this size." through red tape. I really, really McMenamins' steady presence, Bend's endless supply of festivals or a busy Sisters Folk Festival But in late 2013, I can't shake hope that thing becomes a cultur- and the punk-rock leanings of and the Deschutes County Fair. weekend. Big T's in Redmond. I appreci- And youcan'tbeatthe buzz ofa the worrisome feeling I have for al hub for Bend. Continued next page
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
the year in music
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 5
LOTS OFLOOKING BACK AT THE YEAR IN MUSIC ON THESEPAGES, HUH? Well, you can neverhavetoo much! Visit The Bulletin's music blog, Frequency, over the coming weeks for more of 2013's best, worst and whatever else. Join the conversation at:
O~ BENOBULLETIN.COM/FREQUENCY KIFACEBOOK.COM/FREQUENCYBLOG < TWITTER.COM/FREQUENCYBLOG 2014 Sisters Folk Festival Early Bird Tickets '95
From previous page And I'm certainly not slagging the current crop of bands and mu-
sicians who live here. I actually believe that we're in a particularly
Get them while they last! i'
interesting, fertile time right now as
,n
far as local artists go. But I f e e l l i k e s omething's missing. The past year was one of ups and downs on the local music scene. The
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home at Pakit, then endured some of the nastiest weather I've seen here during its maiden weekend. The Schwab kicked off its season with amazing shows by Built to Spill and Sigur Ros, but the rest of
its summer programming — "More shows!" ... "Where's the country music'?" ... "Michael Franti again?!"
— seemed to disappoint a lot of folks. (Los Lobos and Los Lonely Boys canceling in September didn't help.)
Joe Kline /The Bulletin file photo
The line blurs between crowd and band as The Rural Demons perform during thefinalshow atThe Horned Hand. The Bend music venue closed in June. I
ue being placed on art. Not enough Pub has been a bright spot, trying to live music that pushes envelopes od Man, E-40 and Tyler the Creator, pick up some of the slack. and prods eardrums. Here's what I think my big conthough arumored Kanye West apI have a tendency to overreact, pearance in February turned out to cern is: It's hard out there right now both positively and negatively, to be silly talk, and maybe a scam. Or- for a rock 'n' roll band to plug in and situations like this. I'm quick to deganic funk-hop band Beats Antique play loud, especially late into the clare the sky falling or to identify filled the Midtown, but dubstep star night. There are some places where an anomalous cool thing as a great Excision canceled his show. The it can happen, but they are dwin- hope for the future. I know this, and second half of the year brought in dling, thanks to a number of factors, it's entirely possible that's what's three of Christian music's biggest including concerns about noise- happening here. acts: Amy Grant, Third Day and averse neighbors, lack of support But the end of the year is a time Switchfoot. But over the summer, a from the public and the changing for thinking back and reflecting and analyzing and assessing the planned concert series at Century focus of local venues. Center stalled out after a couple of And some of us like to see a rock things we care about, and I care 'n' roll band plug in and play loud about Central Oregon's live music shows. scene. And then there are the venues late into the night. That's my personal taste, but I I don't necessarily think the sky that have closed: Liquid Lounge, The Sound Garden, and most dis- think it's indicative of larger prob- is falling. I just worry that all the couragingly, The Horned Hand. lems in Bend: Too many obstacles to efforts over the years to give our The u nderground p u nk/metal putting on shows. Not enough small little town a big sky are being erodshows at a First Street warehouse to mid-sized places for small or mid- ed. And this time, I just don't have ran afoul of the man and came to sized touring bands to play. Too enough paint to cover up the cracks an end, at least for now. Players Bar many folks who are happy seeing that I see. — Reporter: 541-383-0377, and Silver Moon overhauled their the same act every weekend as long interiors and shifted their musical as there's no cover. Not enough valbsalmon@bendbulletin.com Bend continued to attract big hiphop names like Aesop Rock, Meth-
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JANUARY 3 DIYGuitar Fest 11 RedMolly 13 Paul McCartney: "Rockshow" 18 Blues Harmonica Blowout 21 Bend 2030 22-30 Bend Guitar Blast
FEBRUARY 1 Tokens8 Diamonds 4 TaoDrummers 5 Toad the Wet Sprocket NEIY! 7 "Warriors Don't Cry" 14 High Desert Chamber Music 16 CarlosNunez JNTADDED! T
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In past years, the landscape of locally recorded music hasbeendominated by folk, hip-hop and other styles. This year, it's rock 'n' roll's turn. There areexceptions below (three rap re cords in particular), butthis listismade up mostiyotditterentstrainsotrock: biuesy classic, rootsy modernand punk CentralOregon: Pluggedinasatways.
AMSTERDAM, "AVARICE" In music, it's easy to beprolific. It's harder to be proficient. And to be both is a special thing. Over thepast few years, Amsterdamaka Bend resident Gabevan Eikeren — has becomeone of Central Oregon's most reliable (recorded) artists; he released two albums in 2013, "Avarice" and "Aurora," both packedwith woozy after-party beats and the assertive MC's open-book rhymesandsturdy flow. "Avarice" makes this list on the strength of Hippie Sabotage's consistently excellent, hypnagogic beats, but don't sleep on"Aurora," especially the buzzy, off-kilter song "Here &Now."
HOBBS THEBAND, "HOBBS THEBAND" The Sisters-based trio Hobbs theBandhas earned a reputation as one of the region's most combustible live acts, thanks to its airtight rhythm section and its namesake,HobbsMagaret, a swaggering frontman with the guitar skills to back it up. But wowing crowds with technical wizardry and recording a great record are two very different things. For the latter, you needsongs, and Hobbs' debut is proof that the group hasplenty of skyscraping, psychedelic bluesrock in its tank. Muscular and melodic, "Hobbs" swings in away that's missing from far too many recordings thesedays.
TRAVISEHRENSTROM, "REMAIN A MYSTERY"
DRIFTWOODINSOMNIA,"BLUSHING CROWS"
It took six years, but we finally got more music out of talented songwriter Travis Ehrenstrom, who last released arecord as astudent at Sisters High School. Not surprisingly, "Mystery" is a massive step forward for the artist, both in terms of songcraft and production. Its 10 tracks revolve aroundEhrenstrom's easy way with melody, but they're stuffed with other sounds: keyboards, guitar squalls, ethereal vocals, studio chicanery. It's all tastefully done, however, always in service of Ehrenstrom's sauntering folk-pop-rock, and neveran obstacle to enjoying songs that are oh-so easily enjoyed.
It's been acouple years since local-legendary hip-hop crew Person People splintered, andeachtime one of its members releases asolid solo album, it fuels the theory that we're better off with them apart. Kevin Prather, akaDriftwood Insomnia, was PP's sly leader, apoet with serious skills who youwished would spend asmuch time rapping as hedid hyping his buds. On"Crows," your wish is granted, as Prather drops breathless rhymesover tracks that sound harvested from some vintage, melancholic carousel. "Adventure the Song," his survey of PP's early days, may bethe local song of the year.
ISLES, "VIRACOCH A" The men of Isles delight in creating mystery: Their Facebookpage isaparadeoffaded photosand shadowy scenes.Theirgigschedule frequently features unconventional venues. Andthey call their sound "ether-rock," an apt description for their combo of carbonated instrumental pop andcelestial aspirations. Isles is a stranger in Central Oregon's musical landscape, wherepost-rock is beers after a climbing sesh atSmith, not sweeping psychedelic epics inspired by Explosions in the Sky.Just as well. The songs on "Viracocha" are airy and ambitious, and not bound byearthly concerns.
JAY TABLET, "TABLIFE" For years, JayTablet hasbeen oneof thebusiest bees in Bend's hip-hop bouquet, a rapper andproducer as savvy about getting his music out there as hewas about getting it down on paper or tape. More recently, however,Tab's output is starting to catch up with him. "Tablife" is long — 21tracks — but it's a bracing listen thanks, more thanever before, to its maker's strong beats. For the most part, these aretrademark Tabtracks: bouncy, melodic, slightly melancholy, like a nightclub after last call. They're perfect little soundtracks for his smirky, smoky rhymesabout living the Tablife.
LARRY ANDHIS FLASK, "BY THE LAMPLIGHT" Everyone lovesLarry.Andwhyshouldn'tthey?Thesehometown boys have alreadyachieved great things out there in the real world — European tours! NewYork Times praise! — andthey've done it the right way: By playing their butts off, getting better and being good to people. They're great kids. Except guesswhat? They're not kids anymore. "Lamplight" finds the Flaskmaturing; you canhear it in the improved playing andthe morevaried songwriting. But most of all, you can hear it in tunes like "GoneFromYou," a gorgeous, mournful number the showcasesthe group's growing range.
WILDERNESS,"HOMEWARD FROM THE BATTLE" Listening to a collection of good songs is awonderful way to spend some time. But whenyou find yourself lost in a little musical world that lives between the play button and the final fade-out, that's when you know you're on to something special. "Homeward," the first album from the new(ish) local bandWilderness, is the kind of record you can sink into, a sort of aural terrarium blossoming with soulful folk-rock, barbed guitars, burbling keyboards andenough stray noise to reduce visibility without obscuring songwriter Jared Nelson Smith's earworm melodies. Stay inside for as long asyou can.
BROKENDOWN GUITARS,"PASSPORTS" Over the past fewyears, BrokenDown Guitars has becomeone of Central Oregon's most in-demand bandsbecausewhat they do well is makemusic that makespeople feel good. Where other bands zoom in on aparticular niche genre or chasetrends to their detriment, the three menand two women in Broken Down Guitars focus on making solid, straightforward classic rock for the modern age. Boogie-down blues, time-tested roots-rock, booming vocals straight out of the gospel tradition — it's all here, andall packaged seamlessly for maximum good times. Youlike good times, right?
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BEN WATTS,"TALL TALES FROM NOTHING LAND" The Bandcampprofile of BenWatts — Bend resident and member of the local bandQuiet Culture — spills over with music, as if it's a sketchbook for a verdant creative mind. Which it probably is. Nowhere is that concept more clear than on"Tall Tales," a16-track sonic patchwork by aguy raised onthe alternative rock of the past two decades. Watts' two most prominent touchstones areNirvana (at their rawest) and Elliott Smith (at his quietest); you canhear them throughout the album. I always say: If you're going to let your influences shine, pick good onesand do it well. Watts does both.
the year in music
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
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e've been over the past six months. An hearing exploratory exercise in altabout rock 'n' roll. the vinyl revival Thinkatock PARANOME, "RISE" for years now, and SOUNDCLOUD.COM/ in 2013, the comePARANOME back of the cassette A sleek, skittering tape blossomed into headrush of variereal, live trend. That said, gated electro-cudit's still an increasingly digdle-pop from longital world out there, and lots time local DJChris of local music can only beheard Lohrey. with the click of a mouse.Hereare some highlights. THE RTL PROJECT, "THE RTL PROJECT" COLLOTHEN,"REQUITAL EP." ZONKEDOUT.BANDCAMP.COM NULOGICNETLABEL.COM Jay Tablet andReedThomas LawGlitchy, blippy electro-mood music from the adventurous guitarist in rence's cool, catchy acoustic hip-pop Mosley Wotta andWarmGadget. collab, 10 years in the making. AKWANAUT, "PROCESSION" GOODBYEDYNA, "THE HIGHDESERT SESSIONS" AKWANAUT.BANDCAMP.COM REVERBNATION.COM/ Playful pop meets neo-classical music that sounds like the soundtrack GOODBYEDYNA 20 songs released byAndy Jacobs to a tiny, trippy futureworld.
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n a music scene like Central Oregon's, most musicians are balancing their band's practices and gigs with real life: day jobs, family obligations, extracurricular activities, finances. As a result, recording musicwriting songs, booking studio time, overdubs, mastering, artwork, etc. — tends to find itself forever on the back burner. So let's take aminute and celebrate a bunch of bandsthat are among the region's busiest live acts,
t
but also found the time to birth solid
albums in 2013. • Big T's house bandthe High Desert Hooligans spit out its "Soooo.... About Last Night..." EP, aboozy, pop-punk burner. • The gentle, harmony-happy Prairie Rockets released their gentle, harmony-happy self-titled album. • Franchot Tone —back in Bend after a couple yearsaway —documented his carefree, hella hooky
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Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo
Ska band Necktie Killer released its album "Heavy & Horny" in 2013.
"Passports." • And 2011 Last BandStanding champ Necktie Killer released its long-awaited alt-ska debut "Heavy & Horny." Kudos, all, for your patience, perseverance, productivity and, perhaps, lack of sleep. Praise be to coffee!
sound on "Thanks ForThis." • Feral blues band Blackflowers Blacksun put out not one, but two albums: "Cursed" and "Bury MeDeep in Hell," a tribute to L.A. punkactThe Gun Club. •2012 LastBandStandingchamp Broken DownGuitars released its long-awaited roots-rock travelogue
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ingles. EPs.Theysaybrevity is the soul of music. Wait, no onesays that. But in 2013,maybe they should. Here are ahandful of short releases this year: • When they're singing and playing their pretty, poppy Americana music, Tim andVanessa Dalrymple are known as The Gambler 8 TheThief. Their five-song "Orchard Tree" EP isextremely easy onthe ears. • Local synth-rock band All You All started the year off right with its fine "Bait and Exchange" two-song single, which showcased the trio's maturing songwriting and
'
•BURNIN'MOONLIGHT,
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command of dynamics. • The excellently named technical death metal band Existential Depression has a two-song EPout that grinds and growls for 12 solid minutes. • Just days ago, Sicilian, head of the local electronic group Thumbprint Collective, released an EP of glitch-pop goodness on theThumbprint Bandcamp site. • It's only one track long, but don't be fooled: Third Seven's new live and improvised album "Surrender" is 40 minutes of experimental cello music!
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OIFTCARDS AVAILADLE!
"GOOD WOOD"
•CLOUDY MIND BLUES FACTORY, "CHOCOLATETHUNDER"
• GARY FULKERSON, "THISMUST BE FALLING"
• LORE UPRISE, "TORTOISE IN FLIGHT"
• HARLEY BOURBON, "OLD EMPTY BOTTLE"
• QUIETCULTURE,"BASEMENTS"
• DOCRYAN, "THE TEXASBLUESROADSHOW"
•GRIT & GRIZZLE, "GRIT &GRIZZLE"
• HALO HAVEN, "ANOTHERCHAPTER"
• ERGO REX, "BREATHE IN THEROAR"
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the year in music
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
2013 will go down asone of the great years for recorded music. Metal bands boomed, singer-songwriters soared, pop-rock acts delivered the hooks, andthat doesn't even cover big-name releases from the likes of My BloodyValentine, Justin Timberlake andDaft Punk, each of whom put out good records this year. But not as good asthe ones below!
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KURT VILE, "WAKIN ON APRETTY DAZE" (Matador) There are three basic components of making agreat record: Write good songs. Play themwell. Capture those performances in a pleasing way. Andthen there's a concept more nebulous: Create a vibe. On his best albumyet, Kurt Vile — Philly's post-everything guitar hero — can checkoff all of the aboveitems, especially the last (and most elusive). "Daze" is ahazy, unhurried meander through aworld where guitars smearand sparkle effortlessly while Vile slurs melodic, medium-cool maxims for settling Xers. "To befrank, I'm fried," he sings in the title(ish) track, "but I don't mind." Samehere, man.
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PUSHA T, "MY NAME IS MY NAME"(Def Jam) Since his fraternal coke-rap duoClipse went onhiatus afew years ago, Pusha Thaswandered through a wilderness of half-baked mixtapes. But onhis major-label debut, hefinds his wayhomewith an assist from Kanye West, whose(current) minimalist production aesthetic permeates "MyName."With Kanyedialed in anda roster of all-star co-producers onboard, King Pushsimply does what hedoes best: rap about thedrug gamewith scary intensity, singular focus and so much slang, footnotes would behelpful. Pusha's perma-sneer plus Kanye's dark-pop geniusadds upto the best hip-hop record of 2013.
JASON ISBELL, "SOUTHEASTERN"(Southeastern) Jason Isbell isn't the first talented songwriter to kick anaddiction and make aterrific record, and he won't be the last. But while the narrative around "Southeastern" is as common as it is charming, the songs on Isbell's folksy, sometimes stark fourth album are like unique, finely crafted treasures. Their beauty is in the details: sweeping up thehair of a friend dying of cancer, a barfight where fists cut through smokeand ashiner is treated with a steak. The mode of delivery, mostly, is Isbell's voice andacoustic guitar; simple arrangements that spotlight stunning songs.
KVELERTAK, "MEIR"(Roadrunner) It was an incredible year for heavy metal, packedwith triumphant comebacks (Sabbath, Carcass, Gorguts), killer up-and-comers (Windhand, SubRosa)and genre-flouting mega-breakthroughs (Deafheaven). But putting Kvelertak's rollicking sophomore album "Meir" near the top of your year-end list is a vote for pure, throat-shredding fun. Trueheadbangers might object to classifying the Norwegian black'n' roll band asmetal, but what else do you call music as mighty and muscular and unabashedly melodic as the stuff on "Meir"? Besides awesome, I mean.
VERONICA FALLS, "WAITING FOR SOMETHING TO HAPPEN" (Slumberland) Veronica Falls' 2011 debut albumwas adelightful slice of melancholy indie-pop that jangled in all the right ways. Somemight liken its followup to treading water, but give the London quartet credit for sticking to its strengths: "Waiting" is endlessly hooky, with boy-girl harmonies shipped in from asweet dream and universal lyrical themes: "Driving late at night, I let you listen to the music you like. Then I'll drop you home," goesthe chorus to "Teenage," oneof 2013's best songs. "Driving late at night, everything's alright."
CATE LEBON, "MUG MUSEUM" (Turnstile) Welsh singer-songwriter Cate LeBonhas beenon fire of late; both her 2009 debut albumand last year's "Cyrk" were well-received. Now, we have"Mug Museum," a compact, relentlessly catchy collection of unconventional pop music. Le Bon'svoice gets attention because sheshares aunique vocal timbre with famed German/ Velvet Underground singer Nico. Evenmoreimpressive is Le Bon's interest in taking familiar pop forms and reshaping them into something new andfresh, and her sense for melody is deliciously odd, but never off-putting. "Mug Museum" is anelegant listen.
MIKAL CRONIN, "MCH"(Merge) There is, perhaps, no one onthe planet with more pop-rock promise in their fingertips than Mikal Cronin. That's clear on this, his second solo album, where strummy, sweet 'n' sour songs pour vibrantly from the speakers andpogo into your brain, where they'll bounce around forever but neverwear out their welcome. Juxtaposed with this sunny sound aretales of Millennial angst — "I'm not ready for the moment." and "Do I need to knowwhat I'm waiting for?" — that sound not-quite-convincing coming from aguy with so much natural ability. Maybe Mikal Cronin is humanafter all.
MAZES, "ORES & MINERALS"(FatCat) This English band's 2011debut was apile of '90s-inspired fuzzrock, butyou could hear the buoyant charm of an indie-pop band fighting to escape. Mazes' followup, "Ores 8 Minerals," fully delivers on that potential, featuring 11 tracks of near-perfect pop-rock set to steady, motorik rhythms andspiked with serpentine guitar riffs and irresistible boy-girl vocals. There arestill identifiable influences — several songs sound like early MergeRecords bands (Butterglory, Verbena) aping Neu! — but"Ores" opens Mazes upto a world of possibilities on its next effort, and that's exciting.
WILLIAM TYLER, "IMPOSSIBLETRUTH" (Merge) Among the surge of solo guitar players criss-crossing the country right now playing songs descendedfrom John Fahey's American primitive style, one stands out as apotential breakout star: William Tyler, a six-stringed savant with an uncommoncombination of supernatural talent andaesthetic ambition. You can hearthose qualities colliding all over "Truth," a rich landscape of reverberant guitars, unexpected instrumental embellishments andmemorable melodies that unfold more with each listen. It's a work of warm, faded beauty from a master (wordless) storyteller.
HAIN MERGIA &HIS CLASSICAL INSTRUMENT, "SHEMONMUANAYE"(AwesomeTapes From Africa) It might be cheating to put a reissue of a1985 album on a2013 list, but hey: If you can find someonewho waslistening to this in the mid-'80s, let me know. I'll be waiting forever, and myhold music will be this amazing work by master accordionist/keyboardist Hailu Mergia, who wanted to merge his country's signature sounds with modern musical machines. Theresult is a mesmerizing mix of Ethiopian melodies and rubbery, psychedelic funk, jazz andblues, synthesized andset to pillowy, primitive electronic beats. Sublime.
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More Good Stuff! ASHLEY MONROE, "LIKE AROSE" (Warner Bros.) In any other year, Ashley Monroewould be country music's clear breakout female star after the twang-pop perfection of her first widely available album "Like ARose." But in 2013, she's just part of an easytrend story along with the poppier Kacey Musgravesandthe twangier Brandy Clark. All three released tremendous albums this year, but Monroe deserves top honors for her uncommoncombo of easygoing charm andauthentic country, and her interest in exploring the entire emotional spectrum in two- to four-minute forays.
KACEY MUSGRAVES,"SAME TRAILER, DIFFERENT PARK"
HISSGOLDEN MESSENGER, "HAW" SON VOLT, "HONKY TONK"
More Good Stuff! RUN THEJEWELS, "RUN THE JEWELS" (Fool'sGold ) Hip-hop's coolest odd couple —Southern rap teddy bear Killer Mike and hip BigApple indie-beatmaker El-P —proved their union could be fruitful last year, when eachput out a terrific solo record. This year, they're back to brag oneachother (and themselves) as Run The Jewels. Theproject's self-titled debut is a torrent of imposing beats and brash, ferocious raps about race, gender, politics, and what's it's like to be"overly f-king awesome." They would know.
PROBLEM & IAMSU!,"MILLION DOLLAR AFRO"
DAWN RICHARD,"GOLDENHEART" VIC MENSA, "INNATAPE" EARL SWEATSHIRT,"DORIS" CHESTER WATSON,"PHANTOM"
More Good Stuff! CROCODILES, "CRIMES OFPASSION" (Frenchkiss) With four full-length albums in five years, Crocodiles' BrandonWelchezand Charles Rowell have beenprolific purveyors of psychedelic pop-rock. But give themcredit for more than just pumping out the tunes: Crocodiles is getting better. Thearc from 2009's Jesus & Mary Chain pastiche "Summer of Hate" to this year's poppier "Crimes of Passion" finds the band getting more focused andmoretuneful. The shimmering melodies on songs like "SheSlips Me Up" are some ofthe prettiest musical moments of the year.
JACCO GARDNER, "CABINET VAADAT CHARIGIM,"THE OF CURIOSITIES" WORLD ISWELL LOST" FREE ENERGY,"LOVE SIGN" CHVRCHES,"THEBONESOF
TONY MOLINA,"DISSED
WHATYOUBELIEVE"
AND DISMISSED" HAIM, "DAYSARE GONE"
GAP DREAM, "SHINEYOUR LIGHT"
More Good Stuff! STARA RZEKA, "CIEN CHMURYNADUKRYTYM POLEM" (Instant Classic) Pronounce it? How 'bout I just tell you about it? Stara Rzeka is the vehicle of Polish experimental/punk/metal-scene veteran JakubZiolek, who told The Quietus in August: "I like sounds to bemassive and extreme." Mission accomplished. On"Cien Chmury," Ziolek runs the musical gamut, from ambient drones to gently plucked folk to roaring black metal and everything in between. Amazingly, he constructs this wall of sound with plenty of places for beautiful melody to peekthrough. It's a thrilling, mind-bending journey.
DAWN OF MIDI, "DYSNOMIA"
FOOD PYRAMID, "ECSTASY & REFRESHMENT" CAVE, "THREACE"
UMBERTO,"CONFRONTATIONS" EXPO '70/PLANKTON WAT SPLIT LP
More Good Stuff! WINDHAND,"SOMA" (Relapse) This loose genrecategory is so packed with great stuff, I could write endlessly about any of the records to the right. But "Soma" is where myears put in the most time in 2013, no doubt hopelessly addicted to this fast-rising Virginia band's viscous fusion of thunderous doom-metal sludge andsyrupy-sweet slo-mo vocals that recall the most melodic '90s altrock. When thedevastating crunch of "Orchard" kicks in, you should just go aheadand give up. The blitzkrieg on your brain hasbegun.
FIDLAR, "FIDULR" CHELSEALIGHT MOVING, DEAFHEAVEN,"SUNBATHER" "CHELSEALIGHT MOVING" EARTHLESS,"FORTHEAGES" INTER ARMA, "SKY BURIAL"
FOLULKLOID,"H" POWER TRIP, "MANIFESTDECIMATION"
GHOST B.C., "INFESTISSUMAM" ANCUENTS, "HEART OFOAK"
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AUG. 19AT CRUX FERMENTATION PROJECT 4 4Nestled between a steephill that rises to the Bend Parkwayand Crux's well-lit patio, the ambling local bandWilderness celebrated the release of its debut album 'Homeward Fromthe Battle' and showcasedwhy it's one of Central Oregon's buzziest newacts. The group's combo of guitars, keys and vocal harmonies fit together like awell-worn puzzle, and on this night Jared Smith's excellent roots-pop tunes wereframed bythe blurred lights of passing semi-trucks aboveanddressed up with a horn section that wore huge grins whenever theyweren't playing. It was that kind of night."
Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo
The Icelandic post-rock band Sigur Ros performs at Bend's Les Schwab Amphitheater in May.
MAY 26 ATLES SCHWAB AMPHITHEATER g gSigur Ros was astudy in dynamics, stretching songs to five, seven, 10minutes and beyond, and using that time to grow whispered ambient sounds into a massivewall of noise, including small horn and string sections, various keyboards, kitchen-sink percussion and (Jon) Birgisson's bowed guitar and helium-pitched voice. Picking favorites from this near-endless buffet of beauty
is difficult, but I loved the heavenly arpeggios of 'Hoppipolla' and the triumphant march of 'Olsen Olsen.' And 'Svefng-Englar' at sunset ranks asone of myall-time favorite Schwab moments. After dark, I dug howthe set shifted from sweet to strident in the second half of 'Festival,' and from strident to sinister for a newsong called 'Brennesteinn' that booms and buzzes like nothing else in theband's catalog. And it was hard to keep myjaw off the grass during the closer, 'Popplagio,'when a dazzling light show lit the song's crescendo."
Ben Salmon /The Bulletin file photo
Local surf-punk trio The Kronk Men performs at Pakit Liquidators during the 2013 Bend Roots Revival.
SEPT.28 AT PAKIT LIQUIDATORS FOR BEND ROOTS REVIVAL JULY 27 AT TOWERTHEATRE 5 4Whenthe band pulled back a bit on both tempo and volume, it entered myfavorite stretch of the night, a subdued set in the middle of the show. It started with 'Hoping Machine,' one of Farrar's contributions to last year's excellent 'New Multitudes' album, which featured newly pennedsongs paired with unused Woody Guthrie lyrics. The droning chorus ... matches perfectly with Farrar's voice. Then came 'Wild Side,' probably the best song from Son Volt's new album 'HonkyTonk,' a sort of tribute to the Bakersfield Sound that features lots of graceful pedal steel guitar. Here, (Mark) Spencer showedwhy he's one of the most in-demand players on the instrument, deftly adding his distinctive swoops andswells to the song's slo-mo shuffle. Next was 'Barstow,'which has ahonky tonk feel, though it isn't from 'Honky Tonk.' And thencameanawesome surprise: 'Grindstone,'an old ... Uncle Tupelo song that made my feet tap and myface smile. Later, in the road-weary song 'NoTurning Back,' Farrar changed the lyrics 'Elko, NuevoLaredo' to 'Bend, Oregon,'
( (The Kronk Men(were) great. There's not aton to say:Threedudes, guitar/ bass/drums, rocking out instrumental surf-punk style. Loud,heavy,jagged but tight. Controlled chaos.Onceknown asCentral Oregon's noisiest scuzzpunk band, (they've) evolved into ano-frills beast of a band,andthey're fun to watch. I wassitting next to aguy who didn't know their name. Heasked mewho they wereandtold methey were awesome; later, I raninto him outside telling other folks howgreat this band wasthat he'djust seen. AKronk MenKonvert!"
Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo
Son Volt's Jay Farrar sings onthe stage of the Tower Theatre in Bend in late July.
drawn out for miles by his familiar drawl. For the famously quiet frontman, this counted as anoverthe-top show of personality, I thought."
MAY 25 ATLES SCHWAB AMPHITHEATER (((The band) ran through agreatest-hits set, at least inmy mind. Wegot the best stuff from across the catalog: the kraut-jangle of 'Going Against Your Mind,' a sprawling 'Kicked It In the Sun,' the rubbery lope of mypersonal favorite, 'Else.' Wegot three older slices of perfect pop in 'Big Dipper,"Stab' and 'Joyride.' Wegot a solo Martsch version of 'Twin Falls' while the drummer ran off to do something. Maybeadjust his trucker hat. I was also remindedthat'Carry the Zero'is truly one ofthegreatest rock songs everwritten."
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at H bendbulletin.comlevents.
• MUSIC IS HAPPENING! We've dedicated the first eight pages ofGO!Magazine to looking back at the music of 2013, but there's still stuff happening this week. Aquick roundup: •Tonight, Oregon hard rock fave Floater will make up itscanceled Bend show from acoupleweeksago. Tickets to that one will be honored; if you don't have one, see below for prices andvisit www.random presents.com for ticket outlets. Jones Roadopens. • On Saturday night at The Astro Lounge, Seattle hard rock 'n' soul bandDownNorth (pictured at left) will return to town. Thesecats do authentic, old-school funk andsoul the right way, andfrontman Anthony Briscoe comeswith a killer voice E and enough swagger to cross-country trip on the
TODAY HILSTAND COFFEY: Chamber-folk;6 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. OBSIDIANMIDDLE SCHOOL PROGRAM BENEFIT:Featuring live music and a raffle; proceeds benefit the after school program at the Community Learning Center at OMS; free, donations accepted; 6-8 p.m.; Green Plow Coffee Roasters, 436 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-923-4900. RAND BERKE: Americana and rock; 6 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. HILSTAND COFFEY: Chamber-folk;6:30 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. JAZCRU:Jazz;7-9 p.m.;RiverRim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; 7-10 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. PATTHOMAS:Country; 7-10 p.m.; Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 7:30 p.m.; Kelly D's, 1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. THE RIVERPIGS: Rock;7:30 p.m .; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731.
LIVE COMEDY SHOW: Marc Yaffee; $10; 8 p.m.; The Summit Saloon 8 Stage,125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-749-2440
or www.bendcomedy.com. LUCKAND LAINA:8 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. THE MOSTESTWINTER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION:Celebrate the shortest day of the year with live music; free; 8-11 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. EMERALD CITY: Blues; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. FLOATER:The Portland rock band performs, with Jones Road; tickets from Dec. 6 postponed show will be honored; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.
randompresents.com.
HOUSEWIVES' DELIGHT: with DJ's Paranome, Sweet and Rada; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541706-9091 or www.dojobend.com. SLICK SIDEDOWN:Jazz and funk; 9-11 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend;541-389-2558. UGLY CHRISTMAS SWEATERPARTY: Featuring Mosley Wotta, Third Seven and Tony Smiley; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331.
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
• •
TheBu l letin
HOUSEWIVES' DELIGHT: Featuring DJ's Paranome, Swettand Rada;10 p.m.; Dojo,852 N.W .BrooksSt.,Bend; 541-706-9091.
SATURDAY PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 6 p.m.; Wild Rose, 150 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-382-0441. CASEY PARNELL:Rock and pop; 7 p.m.; portello winecafe, 2754 N.W. Crossing Drive, Bend; 541-385-1777. HOLIDAYBREWGRASS JAMBOREE: An evening with The Bluegrass All-Stars; proceeds benefit the local Kiwanis
Food Bank;donation of cannedor
nonperishable food items accepted; 7-11:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; 7-10 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. PAT THOMAS:Country; 7-10 p.m.; Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. THE RIVERPIGS:Rock;7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. BAD SANTAPARTY: Hosted by DJ Jack; 8 p.m.2:30 a.m.;Seven Nightclub,1033 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-760-9412. EMERALDCITY: Blues; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres
swagger wagon. Prepare to feel DownNorth in your heart, mind and feet. • It's party weekend atTheBelfry in Sisters. Tonight is local jam-pop bandTheMostest's winter solstice celebration, with guests like Brent andHobbs.Then on Saturday, the annual Holiday Brewgrass Jamboree, which means lots of pickin' and grinnin' in the spirit of the season. Players include GregBotsford, The JZ Band, theBendUkeGroup, Brian Brazier, Wild Rye andthe BondStreet Bluegrass AII-Stars, and proceeds will go to TheLyons Relief Fund. • Silver Moon Brewing is hosting an ugly sweater party tonight with music by MosleyWotta andThird Seven, plus drink specials and other fun stuff. Proceeds will be donated to theBethlehem Inn.
Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. BRODIE STEWARTBAND:The California country band performs; $5 plus fees; 9 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-3251886 or www.maverickscountrybar. com. SNOWBURN 2013: WINTER CELEBRATION:Featuring Hogwash and DJ CARD1; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091. DOWN NORTH:The Seattle, Wash.based funk band performs; $5; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www. astroloungebend.com.
— Ben Salmon
THURSDAY JESC MILLER: Bluegrass,punkand folk; 5-7p.m.;The Lot,745 N.W .Columbia St., Bend; 541-610-4969. PAUL EDDY:Twang pop; 6-8 p.m.; Rat Hole Brew Pub, 384 S.W. Upper Terrace Drive, Bend; 541-389-2739. G-BOTSAND THE JOURNEYMEN: Rock, soul, funk; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
mcmenamins.com.
JOANNALEESOUSA: Soul and pop; 7-9 p.m.;Dojo,852 N.W. BrooksSt.,Bend; 541-706-9091. LIVE COMEDYSHOW: Don Frost, SUNDAY featuring Alex Rios; $10; 7 p.m.; Kayo's HILSTAND COFFEY: Chamber-folk;7-9 Dinner House and Lounge, 415 N.E. p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe, Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520 or www. 1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; bendcomedy.com. 541-728-0703. OPEN MIC:8 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; MOMDAY 541-383-0889. The Portland folkOPEN MIC:8 p.m .,signupsat7:30 p.m .; PETER RODOCKER: pop singer-songwriter performs, with The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Lamp;$5;8 p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub, Bend; 541-388-0116. 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. TUESDAY LADIESNIGHT WITH MC MYSTIC:9 MERRY CHRISTMASEVE! p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116.
WEDNESDAY MERRY CHRISTMAS!
• SUBMITAN EVENT by em ail ingevents© bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Include date, venue, time and cost.
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet I II
•
• •
-
• • Cl™assifteds ww.bendbulletin.com
PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
Thinkstock
• The Tower Theatre hosts aChristmasrevuefeaturing music, danceandstories
addressing you as Virginia. The Tower Singers — Megan
By David Jasper
Cranor, Heather Tennant-Salvesen, Ben Larson and Nathan Snyder — "will be the common thread
The Bulletin
through the show, and the closest thing to an emcee," Nowak said. "They'regoing to come out and do who had partnered before on productions including the \ The sh o w i s set for 7 p.m. medleys and welcome us back from musical "The Spitfire Grill" Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday intermission." '~, (see "If you go"). And yes, Christmas production planned for as well as the variety show The Spotlight Singers — including "Bend Follies." Virginia, it pretty much has Jason Stein, Mollie Tennant, Jimena the days leading up to the holiday. "We were sitting with Ray Tennant som e thing for everyone, un- Shephard and Scott Carroll — will Last year, local theater group Cascades Theatrical Company had talking ... and I said, 'Hey, less your name happens to serve as Victorian carolers and will presented a version of "A Christmas we could probably bring you a vari- be Ebenezer Scrooge or Grinch, in also do a few songs throughout. Carol" at the Tower, but given CTC's ety-style Christmas show,'" recalled which case I really should not be Continued next page
A
while back, Ray Solley, ex-
recent financial troubles and reorga- Nowak. "And he said, 'Done! Sold!' "And I was like, 'Ohhh, OK. I realnization, the show would not go on
ecutive director of the Tower Theatre Foundation, mentioned to Michael Nowak and Brad Ruder thatthe Tower Theatre had no
in 2013. Enter Nowak and Ruder,
ly shouldn't have said that, maybe,'"
Nowak joked. "But, no, obviously, I love doing it."
Ifyougo What:"ATower Christmas: Homefor the Holidays" variety show When:7 p.m. Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday Where:Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall
St., Bend Cost:$12, $8 for children 12 andyounger, plus fees Contact:541-3170700 or www .towertheatre.org
arts
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
2more chancesto see
'Santaland Diaries'
Tonight and Saturday are officially your last chances to catch actor Derek Sitter in "The Santaland Diaries" at Volcanic Theatre Pub in Bend. Sitter stars as the irascible Crum-
holiday comedy aBad Santa," star-
2015. The center seeks high-quality ring Billy Bob Thornton. Volcanic Theatre Pub is located established artists from the Eastern at 70 S.W. Century Drive (next to Oregon region and larger Pacific GoodLife Brewing Co.). "We strive to show a broad and Admission is $10 for the play, or $15 for the play and film. Advance diverse range of visual art styles tickets are available at www.bend
called his time working as a Macy's elf. Joe Mantello later adapted the piece into a one-man show, to which
bendbulletin.com
and mediums, representing artists
pet the elf, a character originally ticket.com. made famous in an essay by humorContact: ist David Sedaris, in which he re-
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13
in large and small group shows and
ww wv o lcanictheatre solo shows," organizers say. Subpub.com or 541-323-1881. missions must be postmarked by
March 3. For detailed information on appli-
Baker City gallery issues call to artists
cation procedures, visit www.cross-
Sitter has added Powerpoint slides. Doors open at 6:30 p.m., with the Crossroads Carnegie Art Center play starting at 7:30. Both nights in- in Baker City seeks proposals for clude a 9 p.m. screening of the dark featured artists in its gallery during
roads-arts.org and click on "forms" at the bottom of the page, or contact 541-523-5369. — David Jasper
Cl~inese Resfaurant 8.Lounge SzechuanIlunan •Canfonese Cuisine '1es OFF Lulloh of $6.50 or more s1 ~ OFF Dinner of $9.95 or more Cannot be combined with specials, Chefrecommended,wontonsoup,orange chicken,blackpepperbeef
Dine In, Take Out ~ 541-389-9888 61247S.Hwy 97 •Bend •Nextto BendW almart www.reddragonchineserestaurant.com
SPI 6 IIIME Fok TIIE II9LI94YS 0E62I-22 $8 hl2 To.'NERTHEATRE.OR6
From previous page Central Oregon School of Ballet will present "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy" and Academie de Ballet Classique will contribute "Dance
of the Snow Princesses," both from "The Nutcracker."
Locally famous weatherman Bob Shaw will read "The Night Before
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Christmas" fireside surrounded by
about 20 lucky kids who, upon entry to the Tower, will receive a "golden ticket" that lets them on the stage.
A young girl will read the letter that sparked the famed 1897 newspaper editorial response that's become known as aYes, Virginia, there
is a Santa Claus," read by none other
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"The final song of the evening will be 'A Holly Jolly Christmas,' for which the audience will be asked to
participate. The show is not only appropriate for all ages, but all ages are encouraged to attend. "And then there will be a special visitor at the end. He's dressed in red
and has a big white beard," Nowak said, alluding to, I
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fears about putting on a Christmas
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variety show were unfounded.
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"It's been — I don't want to say 'easy' — but it's been easier to put together than the 'Follies' or 'Spit-
Tue.- Sat. 11am-5pm • Sun. 12am-4pm
fire Grill,' really. Just because it's
Sunritrer Business Park • Next to Mountain Jug South of the5unritrer roundabout
56805 Venture Lane • Sunriver
more straight-up music, stories and
dance," Nowak said. "We were really lucky to get a great group of talent for this show." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletirt com
Submitted photo
Coupon required. Cannot combine with other offers. Exp. 1/15/14
Santa, right, and Mrs. Claus will be among the entertainers at "A Tower Christmas: Home for the Holidays," a holiday variety show at the Tower Theatre in Bend.
Get ATaste Eor Eood. Home & Garden Every Tuesday In AT HOME TheBulletm
THE '"'
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arts
PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE
com or 541-388-0155. LA MAGIEBAKERY 8[CAFE: Featuring landscape watercolors by Patricia W. Porter; through December; 945 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-241-7884. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or 541-330-0840. MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY:"Four Seasons," featuring oil paintings by Troy Collins and Bart Walker; through December; 869 N.W.Wall St., Bend; www.mockingbirdgallery.com or 541-388-2107. MOSAIC MEDICAL:Featuring mixed-media collage paintings by Rosalyn Kliot; 910 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 101, Madras; 541-475-7800. MUSEUM ATWARMSPRINGS: Featuring the annual tribal member art exhibit with a variety of art, bead work, weavings and silver jewelry; through Jan. 5; 2189 U.S. Highway 26, Warm Springs; www.
834 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; ARTADVENTUREGALLERY: 541-549-0251. "Water and Wood" featuring i/ SISTERSGALLERY 8[FRAME watercolors bySharon Beanand SHOP:Featuring landscape woodworking by John Scheideman; photography by Gary Albertson; 252 through December; 185 S.E. Fifth W. Hood Ave.; www.garyalbertson. St., Madras: 541-475-7701. com or 541-549-9552. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring the artwork of 30 local Featuring paintings of horses by artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building Kimry Jelen in the community 19; www.artistsgallerysunriver.com room and "Rusting Nostalgic," or 541-593-4382. photography by Lynn Woodward, THE ART OFALFREDA. DOLEZAL: in the computer room; through Featuring oil paintings by the December;110 N. Cedar St.; Austrian artist; Eagle Crest 541-312-1070. Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, ST. CHARLES BEND:Featuring Redmond; 434-989-3510 or www. "Interpretations: Working in a alfreddolezal.com. series," and feature works by the High Desert Art League; through ATELIER 6000:Featuring "Darkness Into Light," an exhibit Dec. 31; 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321. exploring mythology, ritual and astronomy associated with the ST. CHARLESREDMOND: winter solstice; through January; Featuring paintings by cowboy 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite artist Faye Taylor; through Dec. 120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 31; 1253 N.W. Canal Blvd.; 541-330-8759. museumatwarmsprings.org or 541-548-8131. 541-553-3331. BEND CITYHALL:"Reflections SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC on Mirror Pond — Past, Present, Submitted photo ONE STREETDOWNCAFE: LIBRARY:"Jewels of Nature," Future," featuring multimedia "The Crossing," by Troy Collins, wlll show at Mockingbird Gallery Featuring "A Little Bit of Christmas" featuring the work of photographer artwork; through early March; 710 by L. Carol Picknell; through in Bend through December. Michael Jensen and jewelry artist N.W. Wall St.; 541-388-5505 or December; 124 S.W.Seventh St., Teresa Bowerman; through January; rchristie©bendoregon.gov. Redmond; 541-647-2341. 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. hanging media; through March 3; 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points THE OXFORD HOTEL: Featuring SUNRIVERLODGE BETTY GRAY 541-719-1295. 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-9846. fine art prints by Ann Bullwinkel; of View," a continually changing GALLERY:Featuring collage works FRANKLIN CROSSING:"Beyond JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN exhibit of photographs by Diane through Dec. 28; 10 N.W. Minnesota and mixed media by Marjorie Wood the Demos: Oregon Artists Who WAREHOUSE:Featuring works Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. Reed, Ric Ergenbrightand John Hamlin in the upper gallery and oil Teach," the Oregon Art Education by Jil lHaney-Neal;Tuesdaysand Vito; 1024 N.W. Bond St., Bend; landscapes byJoanne Donacaand PATAGONIA OBEND:Featuring 541-382-8004. Association's eighth annual Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., photography by Mike Putnam; Janice Druian in the lower gallery; exhibition; through Dec. 29; Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery. 1000 N.W. Wall St., Suite 140; through Jan. 5; 17600 Center Drive; CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: 550 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; com or 541-617-6078. 541-382-9398. 541-382-6694. Featuring pottery by Kenneth 541-383-7511. Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; JOHN PAULDESIGNS: Featuring TBD AGENCY GALLERY: "Snow PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or GHIGLIERI GALLERY: Featuring custom jewelry and signature series a spotlight on Russian art; through Wild," featuring an eclectic mix of 541-549-0366. original Western-themed and with unique pieces; 1006 N.W. Bond December; 869 N.W.Wall St., Bend; artwork with a wilderness theme from local and regional artists; African-inspired paintings and St., Bend;www.johnpauldesigns. www.paulscottfineart.com or CIRCLE OF FRIENDS ART8( 541-330-6000. through December; 1000 N.W.Wall sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 com or 541-318-5645. ACADEMY:Featuring mixed media, St., Bend; 858-668-8999. W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art- JUDI'S furniture, jewelry and more; 19889 ART GALLERY: Featuring PRONGHORN CLUBHOUSE: lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. Eighth St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE: Featuring the "48th Annual works by Judi Meusborn Transparent Watercolor Traveling Featuring woodwork by lan Herdell THE GREATFRAME UP:Featuring Williamson; 336 N.E. Hemlock St., DON TERRAARTWORKS: and Laura Childers; through prints and framed artworks by Suite13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. Exhibition" by the Watercolor Featuring more than 200 artists; December; 835 N.W. Bond St., Society of Oregon; through Jan. 27; Jennifer Lakes; through December; 222 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541KAREN BANDYDESIGNJEWELER: 549-1299 or www.donterra.com. 61535 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; "Field Guide" exhibition and custom 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend; Bend; 541-312-2001 or www. 541-693-5300. townshendstea.com. 541-383-2676. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLIC jewelry by Karen Bandy; through RED CHAIR GALLERY: "A Few TUMALOART CO.: "Winter Salon," LIBRARY:Featuring "Gratitude," HOP N BEANPIZZERIA: Featuring December; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., featuring small fine artworks by of My Favorite Things," featuring landscapeart by Larry Goodman; Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy. a themed exhibit in various wallgallery artists; through December; gallery artists; through December; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 103 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; www.redchairgallerybend.com or 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com the art of 541-306-3176. or 541-385-9144. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO "Winter Exhibition 2013," works by AND GALLERY:Featuring glass [•~ Featvring eclectic art from local twoand three-dimensional art, photography, painting, metal Austrian artist, Alfred Dolezal artists from Central Oregon, through sculptur eand more;222 W .Hood - much more than a painting! Dec. 27; "A Tapestry of Wilderness St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www. Eagle Crest Resort and Landscape," photography by vistabonitaglass.com. [ ~ . Village Square Cory O'Neill in the silent reading ) f~I ~ WERNER HOME STUDIO5 7525 Falcon Crest Drive room, through January; 827 S.W. GALLERY:Featuring painting, suite 100 Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. sculpture and more by Jerry Werner Redmond, Oregon SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND and other regional artists; 65665 434-989-3510 GALLERY:Featuring mixed media 93rd St., Bend; call 541-815-9800 www.alfreddolezal.com by Ron Raasch; through January; for directions.
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
planning ahea Talks 5 classes MAGIC LIGHTS PHOTOGRAPHY:Learn how to take dusk and night photos during the Christmas season ending at a brewery; $25 suggesteddonation;4-7 p.m. Saturday; Cascade Center of Photography, 390 S.W. Columbia St., Suite 110, Bend; 541-2412266 or www.ccophoto.com. SOCIALSERVICES:Deschutes County Homeless Outreach Case Manager Sarah Kelly will be available to answer questions
and provide resources; free;2-4 t'g ha~%
p.m. Monday; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. BENEFIT PILATESCLASS: A Pilates mat class to benefit Family Kitchen; free, donations accepted; 9:15 a.m. Tuesday; Peach Pilates, 760 N.W.York Drive, Bend; 541-678-4642 or
www.peachpilates.com.
Submitted photo
Matt Brown will perform Jan.1 at McMenamins Old St. Francis School in Bend.
benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donationsaccepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben 8 Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. DEC. 27-28 — JAZZ AT THEOXFORD: The Oregon Piano Summit, with two piano and Gordon Lee, Randy Porter, Ben Darwish and Darrell Grant; $45 plus fees; 8 p.m. Dec. 27, 5 p.m. and 8:15 p.m. Dec. 28; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. DEC. 27 — TROPICANTE: The lowa-
AND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. DEC. 28 — LAST SATURDAY: Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food and drinks and a patio and fire pit; free; 6-10 p.m.; The Old Ironworks Arts District, 50 S.E. Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/lastsat. DEC. 28 — BILLWADHAMSBAND: The former Animotion front man and his band perform; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. DEC.28—HOPELESSJACK8tTHE HANDSOME DEVIL: The Portland bluespunk band performs, with Don Quixote and Blackflowers Blacksun; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. DEC. 30 — "THECROODS":A screening of the 2013animated comedy
based Latin dancebandperforms; free;
(PG); free; 1p.m.; RodriguezAnnex,
9 p.m.; Blue Pine Kitchen and Bar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend; 541-389-2558 or www.bluepinebar.com. DEC. 28 — BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET
Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld.org. DEC. 30 — "PETERGABRIEL, NEW BLOODLIVE IN LONDON2011": A
DEC. 27- JAN. 2 DEC. 27-JAN. 2 — SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum. OI'g.
DEC.27-30 — CARRIAGE RIDES IN THE OLDMILL DISTRICT: Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben
& Jerry's andFrancesca's; proceeds
screening of a film combining animation and on-screen graphics with Gabriel's
voice and a46-piece orchestra; $12 general admission, $48clubpass, plus fees; 7 p.m.,doorsopen at6 p.m.;Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. DEC. 31 — NEWYEAR'S DANCE PARTY:Eugene's The Sugar Beets perform; $18 plus fees in advance, $23 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. DEC. 31 — REDSOLOCUPNEW YEAR'S EVEPARTY: Featuring live
www.volcanictheatrepub.com. JAN. — 1 MATT BROWN (OFRUBY HILL): TheW ashougal,W ash.,blues singer-songwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.
JAN. 3-9
JAN. 3-4 — SCIENCE PARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, broadcast of TimesSquareandprizes; 59800 S. U.S.Highway97, Bend; 541-382$3 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Maverick's 4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. JAN. 3 — FIRST FRIDAYGALLERY maverickscountrybar.com. WALK:Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine DEC. 31 — NEWYEAR'S EVEATOLD andfoodindowntown Bend and theOld ST. FRANCISSCHOOL:Jeff Crosby 8 Mill District.; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout The Refugees performs in the theater Bend. and Worth performs in Father Luke's Room; $5 for music; 9 p.m.-midnight; JAN. — 4 BEND INDOOR SWAP MEET McMenamins Old St. Francis School, AND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, or www.mcmenamins.com. children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend DEC. 31 — PATRIMONY:The Portland blues band performs for New Year's Eve, Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. with other bands to be announced; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. JAN. 8 — BROTHERSANDSISTER: Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or The original sextet performs as part of
SNAP:Cindy Culbertson will provide information about food benefits for your family; free; 1-4 p.m. Thursday; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. CHILDREN'SGOLF CAMP: Practice and instruction on the indoor driving range and put-put course with a Wii tournament; lunch included; $45, $30 for members, registration required by Thursday; 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Dec. 27; Broken Top Club, 62000 Broken Top Drive, Bend; 541383-8200 or www.brokentop.
com. CHILDREN'S DANCECAMP: Children ages 9-12 learn a variety of dance styles; lunch included; $45, $30 for members, registration required by Dec. 27; 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Dec. 28; Broken Top Club, 62000 Broken Top Drive, Bend; 541-383-8200 or www.brokentop.com.
the Great Northwest Music Tour; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. JAN. 9 — THECALIFORNIA HONEYDROPS:TheSouthernsoul band plays the Sisters Folk Festival's Winter Concert Series; $20 in advance, $25 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; 541-549-4979 or www.sistersfolkfestival.org.
PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE
TODAY THE TRAINMAN:Watch Michael Lavrich's extensive collection of toy trains running on a track andask questions.; free; 10 a.m.-1 p.m. and2-6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar; 541-617-7050. SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT: Takea photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joyand more; free, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11a.m.-5 p.m.;SantaLand,330 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. THIRD FRIDAY STROLL: Featuring music, art, food and drinks; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www. visitredmondoregon.com. CASCADE BRASSQUINTET: Enjoy an hour of holiday music as part of Redmond's Third Friday Art Stroll; free and open to the public; 4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. OBSIDIANMIDDLE SCHOOL PROGRAM BENEFIT:Featuring live music and a raffle; proceeds benefit the after school program at the Community Learning Center at OMS; free, donations accepted; 6-8 p.m.; Green Plow Coffee Roasters,436 S.W. SixthSt.,Redmond; 541-923-4900. "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": The oneman one-act reading features DerekSitter in the David Sedaris play followed by a screening of "Bad Santa"; $10 plus fees in advance, $10at the door, $15for both events; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.bendticket.com. (Story,
Page13)
THE MOSTESTWINTER SOLSTICE CELEBRATION:Celebrate the shortest day of the year with live music; free; 8-11 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E.Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. FLOATER: The Portland rock band performs, with Jones Road; tickets from Dec.6 postponedshow willbehonored; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 atthe door; 9 p.m., doorsopenat8 p.m.;Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.randompresents.
com.
SATURDAY Dec. 21 THE TRAINMAN: Noon-5p.m .at Downtown Bend Public Library; see Today's listing for details. BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND
THE BULLETIN• FRIDP
HolidayBazaars TODAY-SUNDAY THREE SISTERSLIONSCLUB HOLIDAYFAIRE:Featuring items by local hand crafters; free admission; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Outlaw Station Shopping Center, 540 W. U.S. Highway 20; 541-595-6967. SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. CHRISTMAS TREELANE: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 N.E.Smith RockWay, Terrebonne; 541-548-1432 or www. ddranch.net. SANTA ATNOLANTOWN CENTER: Take a photo with Santa, enjoy a cookie and meet some furry friends; proceeds benefit BrightSide Animal Center; free, donations accepted; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Nolan Town Center, 2116 Highland Avenue, Redmond;541-923-0882. SANTALAND ATTHE OLDMILL DISTRICT:11 a.m.-5 p.m. at SantaLand; see Today's listing for details. CARRIAGE RIDESIN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8
Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds
benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donationsaccepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. "THE BEER TRAVELER" FUNDRAISER A fundraiser for equipment to shoot a trailer connecting people who love craft beer and those who make it; live music, raffle and more; free; 6-9:30 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop& Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www.btbsbend.com.
(Story, Page21) OREGON STATESILVER GLOVES BOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS: The Deschutes County ROCKSboxing team hosts the event; winners advance to the regionals and nationals; prize drawings, food and drinkavailable; $10, free for children 6 and younger; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-6782286 or www.deschutescountyrocks. com.
"A TOWER CHRISTMAS:HOME FORTHEHOLIDAYS": An original production featuring holiday stories, dances and songs; $12 for adults, $8 for children12 and younger, plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. (Story, Page12) HOLIDAYBREWGRASS JAMBOREE: An evening with The Bluegrass AllStars; proceeds benefit the local Kiwanis Food Bank;donationofcanned or nonperishable food items accepted; 7-11:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com. SATURDAYNIGHT DANCE: Ballroom dancing for all ages; $5; 7-9 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or www. bendseniorcenter.org. "THE SANTALAND DIARIES": 7:30 p.m. at Volcanic Theatre Pub; see Today's listing for details. BRODIE STEWARTBAND:The California country band performs; $5 plus fees; 9 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar& Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. DOWN NORTH:The Seattle, Wash.-
based funk bandperforms; $5;10 p.m.;
The Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www.
astroloungebend.com.
St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. OREGON STATESILVER GLOVES BOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS: 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m. at Midtown Ballroom; see Saturday's listing for details.
MONDAY Dec. 23 THE TRAINMAN: 10 a.m.-1 p.m.,2-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. at Downtown Bend Public Library; see Today's listing for details. SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT:11a.m.-5 p.m. at SantaLand; see Today's listing for details. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT: 2-5 p.m. at Ben & Jerry's; see Saturday's listing for details.
TUESDAY Dec. 24 THE COMMUNITYCHRISTMAS EVE SERVICE: Hosted by Bob Shaw,with carols, family fun, a choir performance, AvenueH and more;$6 plusfees;3 p.m., 5 and 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
SUNDAY
WEDNESDAY
Dec. 22
Dec. 25
COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS:Breakfast and a traditional Christmas dinner, gifts, Santa Claus visit; free; 8 a.m.4 p.m.,1 p.m. Santa Claus visit; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069 or www. bendscommunitycenter.org. THE TRAINMAN: Noon-5p.m.at Downtown Bend Public Library; see Today's listing for details.
NO EVENTSLISTED— MERRY CHRISTMAS!
SANTALANDATTHEOLDMILL DISTRICT: 11 a.m.-5 p.m. at SantaLand; see Today's listing for details. SANTA ATNOLANTOWN CENTER: Noon-4 p.m. at Nolan Town Center; see Saturday's listing for details. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:2-5 p.m. at Ben 8 Jerry's; see Saturday's listing for details. "A TOWER CHRISTMAS:HOME FOR THEHOLIDAYS": An original production featuring holiday stories,
dances andsongs; $12for adults, $8 for children12 and younger, plus fees; 3 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall
THURSDAY Dec. 26 SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:2-5 p.m. at Ben & Jerry's; see Saturday's listing for details. PETER RODOCKER: The Portland folkpop singer-songwriter performs, with Lamp;$5;8 p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. • SUBMIT ANEVENTat www.bendbulletin.com/ submitinfo or email events@bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.
••
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LIVE MUSIC 5 MORE lr
See Going Out on Page11 for what's happening at local night spots.
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DON'T MISS ... Afr
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CARRIAGE RIDES SAT-MON, THURS Even the horse gets into the Christmas spirit with a Santa hat. Take a ride at the Old Mill District and finish your Christmas shopping. The Bulletin file photo
COMMUNITY CHRISTMAS SUNDAY Naughty or nice? There will be a Santa sighting at Bend's Community Center. Andy Tullia/The Bulletin file photo
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'THE SANTALAND DIARIES'
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TODAY & SATURDAY See a grumpy elf at Volcanic Theatre Pub. Maybe he needs a holiday? Submitted photo
SILVER GLOVES BOXING
er
SATURDAY & SUNDAY It's a different kind of boxing day at Midtown — the Oregon State Championships. Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin file photo
ee
PAGE 18• GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
S
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
' g p
Melissa Albright, owner of The Little Bite Cafe in NorthWest Crossing, in rin s u n customer at the French-style deli.
• Little Bite Cafe brings French flair, deliciouscuisine to NorthWest Crossing neighborhood By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
t
t's beginning to look a lot like
grown — the cafe still seats fewer than 20 at a half-dozen tables-
but it has taken on a more cosmo- herself able by summer 2011 to
Christmas. Certainly, that's true at the Little Bite Cafe in Bend's North-
politan ambiance, with a colorful
West Crossing neighborhood. White paper snowflakeshang from the ceiling and poinsettias stand atop the pastry display counter. And there are plenty of delicious Christmas cookies, from
on one wall, and a model of the Pa-
return to her kitchenpassions, sell-
framed photograph of the Eiffel ing French baguette sandwiches at Tower, rising above spring gardens, the NorthWest Crossing farmer's market.
"They became really popurisian landmark on the counter. Although Albright hasn't been lar," she recalled. "When I was to Paris, she is trained in French approached by three downtown culinary techniques.And she coffee shops that wanted to carry cooked at Seattle-area restaurants
for 13 years before moving to Bend scotch-chocolate chip cookies to in 2004 with her photographer ginger snaps in the shapes of cellos. husband, Michael Albright, and Albright opened the Little Bite in their two young boys. September, just two months after The boys are no longer young: its predecessor, the Sage Cafe, had They'reindependentteen-agers,15 dosed its doors. The space hasn't and 13. Her years as a pre-school owner Melissa Albright's butter-
teacher at Mudpies and Lullabies in Bend the past, Melissa found
them, I decided to go wholesale
with my sandwiches."
Breakfasts When the Sage Cafe space became available, Albright jumped at the opportunity. Continued next page
Little BiteCafe Location:102 N.W.Crossing Drive, Bend Hours: 7a.m.to4p.m.Mondayto Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.Saturday, 8 a.m.to 1 p.m. Sunday Price range:Pastries $1.50 to $4, baguette sandwiches$6, soups$3.25 and $4.25, salads$7.25and$8.25 Credit cards:American Express, Discover, MasterCard, Visa Kids' menu:Sweets are for everyone Vegetarianmenu:Choices include a gluten-free beet andwalnut pesto wrap Alcoholic beverages:No Outdoorseating: Sidewalk tables
Reservations:No Contact:541-728-0838, www .facebook.com
Scorecard OVERALL:B+
Food: B+.Comeforthesaladsand baguettes; the breakfast sandwiches need a little work. Service:B+. Order at the counter and wait for orders to bedelivered to your table. Atmosphere: B+.Cozyandcomfortable with a Paris-style ambience. Value:A. Everything is reasonably priced, with $6 sandwiches andsalads no more than $8.25
restaurants
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19
From previous page "I didn't buy the business; I start-
ed fresh," Albright said. "I knew I wanted to do a grab-and-go concept here because of the space. And
I wanted to use local ingredients as much as possible." After ordering at the cash register, patrons may find a seat and wait for orders to be delivered. Busing one's own table is encouraged. Breakfasts are simple. Pastries from the Sparrow Bakery (croissants and ocean rolls) and Fearless Baking (muffins and gluten-free choices)are complemented by a house-made granola blend and a pair of breakfast sandwiches, both served on a somewhat dry rosemary biscuit sprinkled with parsley. My dining companion and I tried
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rti'4™~~, z'
PRIME RIB NIGHT EVERY WEDNESDAY 5:00-8:00 PM Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Fresh pastries from Little Bite Cafe in Bend's NorthWest Crossing.
one ofeach. We preferred the more
traditional match of an egg, fried
Our delectable Roast Prime Rib of Beef is hand-seasoned, slow roasted to perfection and then chef cut to order.
— Each Dinner Includes-
over hard, with bacon and cheddar
cheese, although there was no apparent spread of anything but butter. A touch of mayonnaise might
NEXT WEEK: NIBLICK & GREENE'S
have been nice. The other sand-
wich paired the egg with a thick
For readers' ratings of more than150 Central 0regon restaurants, visit H bendbulletin.cnm/ restaurants.
slice of tomato, a modest amount
of arugula and a sprinkle of lemon curd, which I barely noticed but which my friend didn't like. In either case, on a return visit
I would stick with the pastries, or
"I use really high-end ingredi-
else try one of several breakfast burritos, custom-made for L i t tl e
e n t s," Albright said. "In spring and
Bite by El Comal in Sisters.
summer, when I have more produce
The coffee drinks, on the other h and, were delicious. Little Bit e
f r o m l o cal f arms, I w i l l c h ange t h e c h o ices from t i m e t o t i m e .
vorites, the desserts, which now in-
Twice-Baked Potato • Seasonal Vegetables Au Jus ' Creamed Horseradish & Yorkshire
clude a choice of eclairs ("They are taking off like hotcakes," she said) and candied apples (baked with
$21.9$ for a 10ozCut or $27.9$ for a 14oz Cut
s'mores, with chocolate and white
Seating is limited so RSVP by phone or online today!
chocolate, and with Mexican chiles). "In spring and summer, we'll have fresh fruit tartlets and pies," she promised. Sounds like it will be Christmas at Little Bite year-round. — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com.
Pudding ift Fresh Baked Bread
Join us in our L o u nge or Award Winning Restaurant! I 'I
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62000 Broken Top Dr. 5 4 1-383-8200 ' www.brokentop.com
SMALL BITES
makes its own syrups — vanilla But I will keep the most popular and other flavors — to go with Lone
s a n dwiches."
Pine Coffee and Metolius Tea.
Salad and soup
Sandwiches
I really enjoyed a fresh and deApart from the java, I prefer lunch licious Cobb salad with baby spinat Little Bite to breakfast. ach and leaf lettuce. It also featured The stars of the show at mid- r oasted chicken (picked directly
There's been a flurry of activity in downtown Redmond, especially in the Historic Redmond Hotel.
Scheduled to open by Christmas is The Red Martini Wine Bar & Grill. (Open 4 to 10 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday; 509 S.W. Sixth St.; www
.redmartiniandwinebar.com). In the skins still on) and crunchy northeast corner of the same buildI /f r f eWI bacon b i t es, along with ing, Oishi Japanese Restaurant, business. open sincesummer, serves a menu WglI(ed (p dp ha«-boiied egg ch Like oversized bread- > tomatoes, avocado and of sushi rolls along with noodle and gr>I ><d blue-cheese crumbles, barbecue dishes. (Open 11 a.m. to 10 sticks, the baguettes are about 9 inches long, with gp COnCept all to s sed together with a p.m. every day; 511 S.W. Sixth St.; 541-548-3035, www.oishiredmond soft centers that allow h efe geCgUSe chaivinaigrette. just the right amount of A nother L i t t l e B i t e .com). f P chewiness. My favorite choice is a salad of goat After 10 years in business, Red— I've returned to it twice AAd I WBrlted che esecake in a hazelnut mond's Coyote Ranch Steakhouse — istheprosciuttoandfig ( p USe /pCg/ cru s t , with sun-dried to- will shut its doors at the end of 2013. sandwich, although I'd matoes and roasted shal- "We have decided tobe closed in~ g like it even better if the fig lot vinaigrette. definitely while we evaluate the jam were evenly spread aS muCh a S Soup s a r e made in- sustainability of a restaurant this atoptheItalianbacon. It's ppSSjg/e " house d aily, and Boar's size and caliber, given the present complementedbyshaved Head meats go into a economy here in Redmond," owner cheese, caramelized on- — Melissa Albright charcuterie plate. David Shurtleff wrote in an online day are the French ba-
from the bone, with some
guette sandwiches that first propelled Albright's
•
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ions and a handful of aru-
gula leaves.
~
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G luten-intolerant d i n -
letter to patrons. The airport's Coy-
ers may choose, among
ote Ranch Pub will remain open unOther sandwiches are a t u r - oth e r options, a pair of beet wraps der the direction of Shurtleff's lonkey-and-apricot blend, a bacon-let- — one with walnut pesto, the oth- gest employees, Kathy Walters and tuce-tomatowithroastedgarlicaio- e r w it h white beans and fresh Kellie Lewis. 1368 S. U.S. Highway li, and a roasted vegetable choice for cucumber. vegetarians. And then there are Albright's fa-
97, Redmond; 541-548-7700, www .coyote-ranch.com.
B R E F OOD W IT H A
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2ND ENTREE OF EQUAL OR LESSERVALUE • EXPIRESDECEMBER31, 2013
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PAGE 20 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
rinks • Sunriver couple opens agrowler-fill station that hasturned into a fun getaway By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
M
ark and Tonya Cornett are
going all in with the microbrewing movement.
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Last March, the Central Oregon
E
a
coupleopened The Mountain Jug Beer Shop in Sunriver, a growler-fill station and bottle shop with
a record player, a collection of vinyl records and a sweet arcade cocktail table that is destined to
suck hours from your life. "We'velived outheresince 2002 and always felt like (a beer shop) would be a good fit here," said Mark, whose shop has 12 different
ce' ?' g
beers on tap and around 150 differ-
ent bottles to choose from. "We'd been floating the idea out there for a couple of years. When the (Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center) went in down here, I finally walked away from my commercial construction job. We got the financing and went for it." Of course, the Cornetts are
hardly strangers to the craft brew scene. Tonya Cornett, the Research and Development Brewmaster at
Bend's 10 Barrel Brewing Co., is
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Mark and TonyaCornett opened The Mountain Jug Beer Shop inSunriver in March.
one of the industry's most accom-
plished brewers; in 2008, she was the first female ever to win the best brewmaster award at the World
Beer Cup. She helped put Bend Brewing Co. on the map as its head brewmaster before moving to 10
Barrel, where she has created local favorites such as Swill and Suede, a collaboration with Stone and
Ifyou go What: TheMountainJugBeer Shop When:Open11 a.m. to 7 p.m, Tuesday-Sunday. ClosedMondays. Where:56805Venture Lane, Suite C, Sunriver Contact:www.mountainjug .com, ©mountainjug1 onTwit-
just local breweries, we've already had 85 differentbeers on tap,
"We're not really a bar or a restaurant. People start
which is pretty amazing." playing music or 'Donkey Kong' and after a few While many growler-fill stations have embraced the get-your-beer- minutes you see people pushing tables together to and-gomodel,The Mountain Jug chat. It's really become a meeting place." has evolved into more of a com— Tonya Cornett munity hub. With an ever-growing collection of records and retro "Pac-Man" and "Donkey Kong" games practically begging you to tain Jug is its small-shop opera- your new favorite beer. kill a couple of minutes, there's re- tion. Mark's only employee at the "Yeah, we're usually more ally no good reason to go rushing shop is himself. (Tonya helps out well-informed than your average
Bluejacketbreweries. "We always thought this would (be) a perfect community for a beer shop, even before the growler ter, 541-390-0214 crazetook off ,"Tonya said."Peoout of The Mountain Jug. "We'renot reall y a bar or a ple are finding their way to us." The Mountain Jug has attract- Oregon, they want to drink those restaurant," Tonya said. "People ed a mix of locals, tourists and Bend beers. It's such a part of the start playing music or 'Donkey part-time residents in its first nine culture," he said — while the shop's Kong' and after a few minutes you months of operation, the couple bottle selection comes from all see people pushing tables together says. Mark carries only Central over the globe. to chat. It's really become a meet''We're rotating stuff all the time ingplace." Oregon beers on his 12 taps"When people come to Central on tap," Mark said. "Sticking with Part of the allure of The Moun-
some on weekends but is more
involved with the gear and merchandising aspect of the business.) If you want to know more about a certain beer or brewery, Mark's almost always there to chat. And there's a good chance
he has spent some quality time with thebrewer who dreamed up
growler-fill station," Marksaid."I'm
trying to sell the culture more than the beer. That's what I've always been aroundandbeeninterestedin.
I knowmost of the brewers personally, so a lot of times it's like I'm just
selling my friends'beers."
— Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com
drinks
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21
heads up
what's happening?
'Beer Traveler' fundraiser set for Saturday
With the help of the sustainability program at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus, Deschutes tracked Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe (1740 N.W. Pence more than 45 measures of economic, environmental and Lane, Bend) will host a fundraiser at 6 p.m. Saturday to social performance, according to the release. The resultbenefit documentarian and beer aficionado Charlie Her- ing report will provide a way to measure the company's rin's hop-filled adventure show, "The Beer Traveler." progress from year to year. The free event is sponsored by GoodLife Brewing Co. The goal at Deschutes is to produce an annual susin Bend, and proceeds from the purchase of any GoodLife tainability report, the release said. View the full GRI rebeer will go to Herrin to help him continue to film the port at www.deschutesbrewery.com/sustainability. television series, which "aims to be an informative and interesting production, connecting the people who love Broken Top sets 2 anniversary parties craft beer to the people who love to make it," according to Speaking of Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, the its website, www.thebeertraveler.com. west-side Bend "brew hub" will host two anniversary The event will also feature a raffle, a gear demoand parties at the end of January. sale by Nevado Mountain Adventures, and live music by First up on Jan. 23 is Cascade Lakes Brewing's 20th local Americana band Moon Mountain Ramblers at 7 p.m. anniversary, with special Cascade Lakes brews on tap Contact: www.btbsbend.com. and live, honky-tonkin' country music by Bryan Brazier & The West Coast Review. That'll get going around 6 Deschutes creates sustainadility report p.m. Deschutes Brewery in Bendhasestablished its first Then, on Jan. 31 and Feb. 1, Broken Topwill celebrate sustainability report with the Global Reporting Initiative, its own second anniversary with two days of live music. an international nonprofit organization that works to help That's about all we know for now, but chances seem companiesbecome more sustainable. quite good they'll add some special drinks and other fun According to a Deschutes press release, it is the first stuff. Put it this way: You should put it on your calendar craft brewery to use the model, which tracks perforandkeepaneyeonwww.btbsbend.com forupdates. — Bulletin staff mance and sets a baseline benchmark for the future.
I
'
'
TODAY WINE TASTING: Featuring five to six wines of both white and red varietals;
$1 each; 3-6 p.m.; Silver Leaf Cafe
(Eagle Crest), 7535 Falcon Crest Dr., Suite 300, Redmond; 541-604-0446. SATURDAY "THE BEER TRAVELER" FUNDRAISER: A fundraiser for equipment to shoot a trailer connecting people who love craft beer and those who make it; live music, raffle and more; free; 6-9:30 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740N.W. Pence Lane,Suite 1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www. btbsbend.com.
MONDAY KEG RELEASE: A
special release of Kris Kringle's Stuffed Stocking ale;
happy hour
pricing;; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www. mcmenamins.com. DEC. 27 WINE TASTING:Featuring five to six wines of both white and red varietals; $1 each; 3-6 p.m.; Silver Leaf Cafe (Eagle Crest), 7535 Falcon Crest Dr., Suite 300, Redmond; 541-604-0446. • 808MIT ANEVENTby emailing drinksoj bendbulletin.com. Deadline is10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0377.
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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
COMCERTS Dec. 20 —Christine Lavin 8 Uncle Bonsai,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Dec. 20 —An evening with1964The Tribute,McMenamins Crystal * Ballroom, Portland; CT
Dec. 20 — IconaPop,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 20 —Portland Cello Project Holiday Sweater Spectacular,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Dec. 21 —Darol Anger — Keep-ItIn-The-FamHoliday Show, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF*
Dec. 22 —TomassenFoley's A
Courtesy Richard Termine
Caroline Bowman stars as Eva Peron in the nationally touring production of "Evita." The musical runs Jan. 7-12 at the Keller Auditorium in Portland.
via in
0
BI1
• Classic 'rockopera' of the life of EvaPeronisonstage inJanuary By Jenny Wasson
driving in 1972. Around that time, the docu-
The Bulletin
mentary "Queen of Hearts" also debuted and
ased on the life of Argentinian first lady further piqued his interest on Peron. "Evita" is considered a "rock opera" beEva Peron, "Evita" by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice premiered on cause the story is "developed entirely with Broadway in 1979 to rave reviews. characters expressing their dialogue through More than 30 years later, the classic musical songs," according to the guide. The score fea-
B
is back in the limelight with a new production
tures "Don't Cry for Me Argentina," "Another
by director Michael Grandage and choreog- Suitcase in Another Hall" and "High Flying, rapher Rob Ashford. Currently on a national Adored." tour, the "Evita" revival runs Jan. 7-12 at the Keller Auditorium in Portland.
The new productionpremiered on Broad-
way in 2012 and was nominated for three
Composer Webber and lyricist Rice began Tony Awards, including Best Revival and Best Choreography. ship resulted in some of musical theater's Ticketprices range from $25 to $75, demost popular shows, including "Joseph and pending on day of performance and seat loworking together in the '60s. Their partnerthe Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" and
cation. For more information or to purchase
"Jesus Christ Superstar." tickets, visit www.portlandopera.org or call According to the production's study guide, 800-273-1530. the inspiration for "Evita" began when Rice
heard a radio play about Eva Peron while
— Reporter: 541-383-0350, j wasson@bendbulletin.com
Celtic Christmas,Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Dec. 27 —Red Fang,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 27 —Straight No Chaser,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Dec. 27-28 —Beats Antipue, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Dec.28 — The Motet,Mc Donald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Dec. 31 —Bass Odyssey NYE2013, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Dec.31 — TheM otet,Wo nder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Dec. 31 —A NewYears Eve Dance Spectacular with Pink Martini and Chervona,McMenamins Crystal * Ballroom, Portland; CT Dec. 31 —ZeppareHa, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Jan. 3 —Floater, McMenamins Crystal * Ballroom, Portland; CT Jan. 4 —Dead Moon, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 4 —Ramble On,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 9 —Martha Davis 8 the Motels, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 10 —The Reverend Horton Heat, * Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF Jan. 10 —The RoadShow2014, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Jan. 11 —AndyMcKee, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 11 —Hell's Belles/Floater, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW" Jan. 11 —Thao 8 The Get DownStay * Down,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF Jan. 15-17 —Garcia Birthday Band,
McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Jan. 16 —Tribal Seeds, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Jan. 17-18 —"Six Pack Live," Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Jan. 18 —A Gala Night With David Garrett,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 18 —Southern Culture on the Skids,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 19 —JonnyLang, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Jan. 19 —Mark Hummel's Blues Harmonica Blowout,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Jan. 21 —Colin Meloy, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan.22 — Jake Bugg,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 22 —Lord Huron,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF" Jan. 24-25 —Josh Ritter, Aladdin Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT(Jan. 25); TF*
Jan. 28 —The Devil Makes Three, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Jan. 30 — Washed Out, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Jan. 31 —The Devil Makes Three, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT
Jan. 31 — Zappa Plays Zappa, *
Roseland Theater, Portland; TW Feb.4 —ThePianoGuys, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 7 —The WoodBrothers, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Feb. 14 —The Presidents of the United States of America,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 15 —AmosLee/Black Prairie, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Feb. 16 —AmosLee, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5. com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 17 —HotTuna/David Lindley, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW Feb. 18 —HotTuna, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb. 18 —JohnButler Trio, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * Portland; CT Feb. 19 —AniDiFranco, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 19 —Pixies, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5. com or 800-273-1530. Feb. 20 —SunKil Moon, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 23 —Sharon Corr, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF
out of town
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013 Feb.23— TobyMac, Moda Center,Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Feb.25— WalkOffThe Earth,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 26 —Chris Thile & Mike Marshall, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF March 3 —Dr. Dog, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* March 7 —Umphrey's McGee, McMenamins * Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT March14 —Galactic, McMenamins Crystal * Ballroom, Portland; CT
LECTURES 8K COMEDY
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23
*Tickets
,-.-' == : ~
TW:TicketsWest, www.tickets west.com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly.com or
-
-; -
— -=:-~"-.
--=--Prem
—.XEi i ieein
877-435-9849
CT:CascadeTickets, www.cascade tickets.com or 800-514-3849 trumpeter Byron Stripling; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Jan. 31, Feb, 2, 6, 8 —"Lucia Di
Lammermoor":Tragic opera byGaetano
Jan. 10 —Charlie Murphy, Aladdin Theater, Donizetti; Portland Opera; Keller Auditorium, * Portland; TF Portland; www.ortlandopera.org or 866-739-6737. Jan.11 —"The Silence of the Sengu": Lecture by Peter Grilli, President of the Japan Feb. 9-10 —"Beethoven's SymphonyNo. 7": Society of Boston; Portland Japanese Garden, Featuring music by Lutoslawski, Schumann Portland; www.japanesegarden.com or and Beethoven; Oregon Symphony; Arlene 503-542-0280. Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. Jan. 17 —David Koechner, Aladdin Theater, orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. * Portland; TF Feb. 14-15 —"A Storm Large Valentine": Jan. 24 —Jerry Seinfeld, Arlene Schnitzer Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Concert Hall, Portland; www.portland5.com or Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-273-1530. 800-228-7343. Jan. 24 —Mike Birbiglia, Newmark Feb.22-24 — "Cohen Plays Rachmaninoff": Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or Featurin g music by Debussy,Haydn and 800-273-1530. Rachmaninoff; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. Jan. 25 —Mike Birbiglia, McDonald Theatre, orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Eugene; TW* Feb. 28 —Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra March 9 —lewis Black, Craterian Theater with Wynton Marsalis,Arlene Schnitzer at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000. Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.
Dec. 21 —"Natalie Cole Christmas": Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Dec. 22 —"Comfort & Joy: A Classical
THEATER 5 DANCE
Through Dec. 22 —"Camelot": Lerner and Loewe's1960 musical recounts the tragic and morally-rich story of King Arthur, Queen Guenevere, Lancelot and the Knights of the Round Table; part of the 2013 Shedd Christmas":OregonSymphony; Arlene Theatricals season; The Shedd Institute, Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; SOLDOUT; Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Through Dec. 22 —"It's A Wonderful life": Dec.30-31 — "Odeto Joy:A Holiday Spectacular": The Oregon Symphony performs Stumptown Stages; Brunish Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Beethoven's Ninth Symphony; also includes music byThomas Lauderdale,China Forbes, Through Dec. 22 —"Twist Your Dickens": A Storm Large (Dec. 30 only), the von Trapps, complete send-up of the holiday classic, fully Gus VanSantandcantorIda RaeCahana; festooned with the improvisational genius Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. behind the legendary comedy troupe The orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Second City; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org Dec. 31, Jan. 3, 5 —"La Traviata": Eugene or 503-445-3700. Opera, Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter. org or 541-682-5000. Through Dec. 29 —"The Santaland Diaries": Jan.11-13 —"Emanuel Ax/Bach & Strauss": Based on the outlandish and true chronicles Featurin g musicby Beethoven,Bach and of David Sedaris'experience as Crumpet the Strauss; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Elf in Macy's Santaland display; Portland Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, or 800-228-7343. Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Jan.18,20— "Sibelius'Symphony No.1": Through Dec. 29 —"XMAS UNPLUGGED": Featuring music by Glanert, Wieniawski and Double-bill featuring "The Reason for the Sibelius; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Season" and "The Night Before Christmas"; Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org Artists Repertory Theatre; Morrison Stage, or 800-228-7343. Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Jan. 19 —Itzhak Perlman in Recital: Arlene Through Jan. 11 —"Noises Off": Third Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. Rail Repertory Theatre; Winningstad orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Jan. 25-26 —"Red RotBlues": Pop Series Concert featuring vocalist Dee Daniels and Continued next page
T ower T h e a t r e
www",gaiaconcer)s.com
g 4 g
www.towertheatre.org
g g g
Qg QQ
Having Guests This Winter? Let's show them why you live here. 4 Nightly Starlight Snowshoe Tours +D aily Shoes, Brews S Views +H alf-day Snowshoe S Desert Cave Tours +B onfire on the Snow Events Dec. 23 S 26-30 @ Dec. 31 New Years Eve Grand B o n f i r e www.wanderlu s t t o u r s .com
541-389-8359
out of town
PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
From previous page
h ay D~ining Foir Hoili C ,i'
Christmas Eve ' 11:30am — 8pm Regular Menu
Christmas Day 3pm - 8pm Specials in addition to Regular Menu
New Year's Eve 11:30am — 9pm Specials in addition to Regular Menu
Dec. 13 —Popovich ComedyPet Theater, Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Dec. 13 —Wanderlust Circus "A Circus Carol,"McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Dec.14-24 —"George Balanchine's The Nutcracker":Oregon Ballet Theatre; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.obt.org or 888-922-5538. Dec. 14-29 —"Beauty and the Beast": Broadway show based on the Academy Award-winning animated feature; Newmark Theatre, Portland; www.portland5.com or 800-273-1530. Dec. 20-22 —"The Nutcracker with OrchestralNEXT":Eugene Ballet; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Jan. 7-12 —"Evita": Tony Award-winning musical by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www. portlandopera.org or 800-273-1530. Jan. 8-Feb. 1 —"Tribes": New play by Nina Raine; Oregon Contemporary Theatre; The Lord/Leebrick Playhouse, Eugene; www. octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Jan. 9-26 —"3x3": An original architecturally-based work of contemporary dance; showtimes run Thursday through Saturday; The Leftbank Project, Portland;
www.povdance.org. Jan. 17 —"Disney Junior Live on Tour! Pirate & Princess Adventure,"Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Jan. 17-Feb. 9 —"Chinglish": Broadway hit comedy by David Henry Hwang ("M. Butterfly," "Golden Child"); Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Jan. 23-25 —Phillip Adams BaHetLab:Part of the White Bird Dance Series; Portland State University, Portland; www.whitebird. org or 503-245-1600. Jan. 23-Feb. 2 —Fertile Ground Festival of New Work:Featuring more than 75 new acts of creation in theater, dance and multidisciplinary arts; Portland; www.fertilegroundpdx.org.
New Year's Day Closed
EKHIBITS
•
•
•
Through Dec. 24 —Holiday Gift Sale, Portland Japanese Garden, Portland; www. japanesegarden.com or 503-223-1321. Through Dec. 29 —Sea of Lights: An after-hours holiday light show; on display Saturdays and Sundays only;Oregon Coast Aquarium, Newport; www.aquarium.org or 541-867-3474. Through December —"The Sea & Me": A new children's interactive exhibit; Oregon Coast Aquarium, Newport; www.aquarium.org or 541-867-3474. Through Jan. 5 —"The International Exhibition of Sherlock Holmes":World premiere; Oregon Museum of Science
•
•
•
and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through Jan. 5 —ZooLights: Featuring close to 1.5 million colorful lights; Oregon Zoo, Portland; www.oregonzoo.org or 503-226-1561. Through Jan.11 —"The Toolat Hand": The Chipstone Foundation invited14 contemporary artist to make a work of art using only one tool; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland;
www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through Jan.12 —Portland Art Museum: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Samurai! Armor from the Ann and Gabriel Barbier-Mueller Collection" (through Jan. 12), "2013 Contemporary Northwest Art Awards" (through Jan.12) and "APEX: Charles Gill" (through Jan. 26); Portland; www. portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Through Jan. 25 —"Slip Slab Coil Pinch Press Throw":Exhibit features more than 24 artists from around the country; Eutectic Gallery, Portland; www.eutecticgallery.com or 503-974-6518. ThroughJan.26 — Jordan SchnitzerM useum of Art:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Traditional and Contemporary Korean Art from the Mattielli & JSMA Collections" (through Jan. 26), "Korda and the Revolutionary Image" (through Jan. 26), "Ave Maria: Marian Devotional Works from Eastern and Western Christendom" (through July 20), "Transatlanticism" (through Feb. 9) and "Art of the Athlete II" (through Feb. 9); Eugene; jsma. uoregon.edu or 541-346-3027. Through Feb. 8 —"Quality is Contagious: John Economaki andBridge City Tool Works": Thecompany'sproducts,sketches and tools from the past 30 years will be on view; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft. org or 503-223-2654. Dec. 21-22 —Victorian Christmas at The BeekmanHouse:A lookathow Christmaswas celebrated during the late1800s; Jacksonville; 541-899-1231, ext. 312.
MISCELLANY Through Dec. 22 —Christmas in the Garden,The Oregon Garden, Silverton; www. oregongarden.org or 503-874-8100. Jan.24 — Good EarthHome,Garden & Living Show,Lane County Convention Center,
Eugene;www.eugenehomeshow.comor 541-484-9247. Feb. 15-16 —Monster Jam, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Feb. 22 —Harlem Globetrotters, Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Feb.27 — Champions Series Tennis: Featuring Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras, John McEnroe, Jimmy Connors and Jim Courier; Moda Center, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
movies
t
+ia~g~p i „
j
Courtesy Paramount Pictures
David Koechner, left, is Champ Kind, Paul Rudd is Brian Fantana, Will Ferrell is Ron Burgundy and Steve Carell is Brick Tamland in "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues."
S US 1I1:
O IITLBI1 1 S
o actor in the history of
danger of a backlash. You don't
wouldn't even show up to be last
modern cinema has shilled
want folks to be Burgundy-ed out
rn lme.) Veronica gets a promotion,
for any movie as relentlessly, as shamelessly, with such creativity, and did I mention as relentlessly, as Will Ferrell has
for "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues."
From fronting car commercials to playing the flute on "Conan" to showing up on "Saturday Night Live" to making an appearance at the Canadian Olympic curling trials to interviewing Peyton Man-
ning on ESPN to anchoring the local news in North Dakota, Ferrell has spent almost more time
RICHARD ROEPER
grew into a bona fide pop culture phenomenon over the years, two weeks before the release date. thanks to home video. Now the movie's actually comThe sequel finds Ron and his ing out and Ferrell can go col- wife, Veronica (Christina Applelapse in a heap somewhere. The gate), living in the New York of top story tonight: "Anchorman 2: the early 1980s, anchoring a local
0 Ron gets fired — and that leads
to a split in the marriage. Unable to handle Veronica's success and incapable of relating to his son, "Anchorman2: The Legend Continues" is even newscast at a station where the Walter, Ron Burgundy is down The LegendContinues" funnier and — I really mean this boss is the legendary hard-ass on his luck until a fledgling, 24119 minutes — more thought-provoking than Mack Harken, played by Harrison hour news network called GNN PG-13, for crudeandsexual content, the original. Ford, who is pretty funny because hires Ron and gives him the OK druguse,languageandcomicviolence Believe it or not, it's been near- he doesn't try to be funny. (If you to round up the old San Diego ly a decade sincethe release of lined up all the actors in the world posse, including Paul Rudd's Brias Ron Burgundy than he has as "Anchorman: The Legend of Ron according to their willingness an Fantana, Steve Carell's Brick Will Ferrell in the last month. If he Burgundy," which did pretty OK and ability to promote a movie, Tamland and David Koechner's weren't so ridiculously hilarious, commercially (grossing about $85 Ferrell would be first, then every- Champ Kind. you'd think there would be the million domestically), but really body else, and then Harrison Ford Continued next page
movies
PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
' us e ' w i
e n ra o u o een H
Rcg
omerun. "American Hustle" is the best time I've had at the
m oviesallyear,a movie so perfectly executed, such wall-to-wall fun, so filled with the joy of expert filmmaking on every level, I can't imagine anyone who loves movies not loving THIS movie.
We're told "some of this actually happened" at the outset, and some-
RICHARD ROEPER
"American Hustle" 138 minutes R, for pervasive language, somesexual content and brief violence
Courtesy Columbia Pictures
Christian Bale, left, Amy Adams and Bradley Cooper join forces in "American Hustle."
how that seems more honest than
the usual"based on atrue story," or In the opening scene, we see "inspiredby actual events." Christian Bale's Irving Rosenfeld In the late 1970s, the FBI reallydid engaging in the painstaking and enlisttheservices of aconmanfrom quite ludicrous ritual of putting the Bronx to lead an undercover op- on a toupeeand executing a comeration called Abscam that indud- plicatedcomb-over. Paunchy, on ed the creation of a fictitious Arab his way to fat, and wearing flashy sheikh named Abdul and resulted clothes even for the time period, inthe conviction of sixcongressmen Irving seems like a walking punch and aU.S. senator, amongothers. line, but in fact he's oftenthe smartThat's the foundation for "Amer- est guy in the room, even when ican Hustle," but director David O. the room is filled with FBI agents. Russell is telling us from the start It's another transcendent perfor-
Irving falls hard for Amy Adams' emy Renner in one of HIS best Sydney, a hard-time gal from New performances), who's looking for
esting for me.) "American Hustle" is clearly in-
Mexico who has transformed her-
financial backing to restore Atlan-
fluenced by Scorsese films such
London socialite with international business connections. They team
tic City. Carmine's a family man, and at heart a good guy whose only real weakness is his willingness to do anything to help his
as "Goodfellas" and "Casino," but Russell realizes the enormous co-
constituents.
uine dramatic tension — from the
self into Lady Edith Greensly, a up, and the cons get bigger and more lucrative.
medic potential in this story and goes for it. There's also some gen-
As Irving, Sydney and Richie Bradley Cooper steals every scene work closely on a series of increashe's in as FBI agent Richie DiMa- ingly ambitious undercover operaso, a would-be hotshot who curls tions, alove triangle ensues. But it's his hair and lives with his "Ma." reallya love quadrangle,because If this guy ran into Tony Manero remember, Irving's got that "other from "Saturday Night Fever" on life," which indudes Jennifer Lawthe streets, they'd become best rence as his wife, Rosalyn, who's friends. Richie's intense, and unin- bat-bleep crazy but has a deathtentionally goofy, but also insanely grip on Richie's heart, even when ambitious to the point where he'll she's getting fall-down drunk in literally beat his boss (Louis C.K.) restaurants or inadvertently starting the occasional small fire at to a pulp when he's frustmted. After nabbing Irving and Syd- home. (Lawrence gives the kind of ney (who continues to maintain showy, over-the-top performance the Lady Edith charade even after that generates Oscar buzz, but I getting pinched), Richie enlists thought some of her choices were their help in exchange for possible so big, even for such a colorful immunity. They go after Camden, movie, they took us out of the story. N.J., mayor Carmine Polito (Jer- Her story line was the least inter-
intertwining love stories, through
lifting, they would do well to look
the worst meet-the-family dinners win our affection. Ron Burgundy's ever filmed. a loathsome, bigoted, ignorant oaf. joking. Actors always talk about And, oh yeah, Ron becomes He also wears his vulnerability on how it's harder to do comedy than a huge national star because he his sleeve, believes it's possible to drama, and the way Ferrell flings makes some really dopey on-air tame a shark as a pet — and when sportscasters, and Carell plays a himself into this absurdist charac- decisions that click with the pub- he's struck blind, he's the least inman so stupid it's a wonder he's ter and wrings laughs out of some lic, spike the ratings and forever spirational struck-blind character gotten this far in life without some- of the most politically incorrect change the way the news is pre- in the history of movies, and that's how walking right into a fatal scenarios anyone would dare try sented. He keeps tripping on his, kinda great. accident. in2013 is a marvel. um, stupidity, and landing in a pile I know the celebrity cameos in "Anchorman 2" have been leaked But of course, this is Ferrell's Ron Burgundy takes up with of fame and fortune. movie, and if the Academy of Mo- Meagan Good's Linda, a producFerrell and his longtime collabo- all over the Internet, but I'm still tion Picture Arts and Sciences er at GNN who realizes Ron's a ratorAdam McKay have aunique hoping you're surprised by at least ever decided to recognize acting complete idiot, but finds herself gift for creating characters that are some of them. The fight sequence that goes beyond heavy dramatic attracted to him, leading to one of human car wrecks yet somehow from the original is reprised here
and then some, in an extended bat-
at Ferrell's work, and no, I'm not
tle montage featuring some of the most familiar faces in the world
that we're going to take off on a
mance from Bale, making the ar-
flight of fancy. The hustle is on
gument that he's the best actor of from start to finish, and at times I his generation. felt like the mark in a magic actIrving runs a few dry-deaning but it's the kind of high-level magic stores around New York, but he's act where you're delighted to learn first and foremost a con man, offering loans to the kind of people you just got played. Russell and his "Silver Linings who can't get loans from legitimate Playbook" stars Bradley Cooper sources. It's the simplest of cons: and Jennifer Lawrence went right You giveIrving $5,000,hepromisback to work together on "Ameri- es to get you $50,000, you never get can Hustle," which also features a your money and you'll never see Ircouple of choice cameos from oth- vingagain, and what areyou going er "Silver Linings" cast members. to do, tell the cops? They should make 10 more movies Though married and the adoptogether. tive father of his wife's young son,
From previous page These guys are all great. Rudd puts his deadpan delivery to terrific use, Koechner is only slightly more buffoonish than some real
As great as Bale and Adams are,
our empathy for Carmine Polito
and his family, to a meeting with some Florida mobsters in which Robert De Niro makes a 10-minute return to the form he exhibit-
ed when he was the greatest and sometimes the most frightening
screen presence in the world. This is the kind of moviegoing experience where the credits roll and you immediately want to watch it again to see how all the pieces of the puzzle were put to-
gether, knowing what you know now — and there's a good chance you're going to enjoy it even more the secondtime around. — Richard Roeper is a film critic for The Chicago Surt-Times.
having the time of their lives. And then, back to the news. The
early 1980s Ron Burgundy is an idiot for the ages, but the scary thing is, he also turns out to be a vision-
ary. "Anchorman 2" is one of the funniest movies of the year, but in
its own loony way, it's a sobering look at the television news business then — and now. — Richard Roeper is a film critic for The Chicago Surt-Times.
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
' avin
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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27
an s'ma es isne ma c
ull disclosure: On some occa-
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'. th Q4
sions in my career, induding presently, I have done work for television programs owned by the Disney Co. Equally full disclosure, and some of you will shake your umbrellas at me for this one: While I love many things Disney, including any number of motion pictures, "Mary Poppins" never did it for me. I recognize the brilliance of Julie Andrews and Dick
Winter Salon Small art 6 tiny original fine art ornaments, jewelry, ceramics and more. Madewith love by
Van Dyke, and I admire what were
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some pretty nifty visuals for 1964, but all those obnoxiously sunny tunes such as "A Spoonful of Sugar" and
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"Chim Chim Cher-ee" — no thank
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you.
A FINE ART GALI,ERy
So I might not have been as keen
to see a movie about the making of "Mary Poppins" as the multiple generations of fans who adore the
film. But regardless of whether you can type "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" without even Googling or you've never heard ofthe m agical nanny, "Saving Mr. Banks" quite likely mightbeyour cup of tea. It's 1961, sixyears after Disneyland was opened in Anaheim, Calif. The avuncular Walt Disney (Tom Hanks) is presiding over an already legendary entertainment empire that con-
tinues to expand withgreat leaps and bounds. (On the wall in Walt's office
Courtesy Franqois Duhamel / Disney
Walt Disney (TomHanks) showsDisneyland to "Mary Poppins" author P.L. Travers (EmmaThompson) in "Saving Mr. Banks." adventurous ways of her charming
RICHARDROEPER
but utterly irresponsible father, Tra-
vers (Colin Farrell). The deeper he sinks into his alcoholism, to the point
where his wife becomes suicidal with despair, the more we understandhow "Saving Mr. Banks" 125 minutes PG-13, for thematic elements including some unsettling images
is a map of Florida with Orlando cir-
cled.) No single project will have too Banks family getting the Hollywood gleat an impact on Disney's bottom musical treatment. Problem is, royalline, but Walt is determined to the ties aren't what they used to be, and point of near-obsession to bring P.L. Travers has to entertain the notion of Travers' Mary Poppins books to the signing away the rights. Director John Lee Hancock (workbig screen. It's a promise he made to his girls some 20 years earlier, and ing from a well-structured script by Walt doesn't break promises. Kelly Marcel and Sue Smith) gives Tom Hanks doesn't look much like us a stylized and gorgeous version the Walt Disney we know from old of 1961 Los Angeles. When Paul black-and-white clips, and he doesn't Giamatti as Ralph the driver extols strive for an imitation, but it feels as if the glories of another beautiful day he gets Disney's folksy, friendly man- in Southern California, when Mrs. ner as well as his keen business acu- Travers oversees the efforts of the men and his willingness to outwork screenwriter Don DaGradi (Bradley anyone. Walt's best friend might be Whitford) and the songwriting Shera cartoon mouse, and we can see man brothers (B.J. Novak and Jason he genuinely cares for his employ- Schwartzman) to win her over, it ees and he loves the fans who flock seems there would be no more excitto Disneyland — but there's little doubt he can be as cutthroat as any
Inthe Old Mill District Open Everyday 54t $85-gt44 tumaioartco.com
ing place on Earth to be — but Mrs.
O~gliQ~ I
the little girl would idolize and then
•
idealize the nanny who showed up on the doorstep and announced she was there to fix things.
This being a Walt Disney film with one of the most beloved actors of all time playing Walt Disney, it's no surprise "Saving Mr. Banks" is thoroughly kind to Mr. Disney, who is portrayed as basically the best boss in the world. Thompson has more of a journey to convey, as Mrs. Travers slowly emerges from her shell. (There's one bit of business involving a giant stuffed Mickey Mouse that's cute and funny.) No doubt the real story of Walt Disney's film-rights courtship of P.L. Travers was much less whimsical
and not nearly so tidy. (Travers wrote eight books, but never allowed Dis-
P EA
Travers still refuses to sign overthose the parallels between actual events cigar-chomping old-school movie rights. and the fictionalized version, which mogul. In numerous — I thought too many is part docudrama, part pure Disney Emma Thompson is a perfect — flashback scenes, we go back to magical storytelling. This is a lovingly rendered, sweet choice to play the prissy, humorless, P.L. Travers' girlhood days in Austrasnobbish P.L. Travers, who shudders lia. As a little girl, even as her family film. — Richard Roeper is a film critic at the very notion of her beloved suffered declining fortunes, little HelMary Poppins and her precious en was mesmerized by the wondrous, for The Chicago Sttn-Times.
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movies
PAGE 28 o GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
Aoliday O N LO C A L Sreetings S CREEN S
— from-
OregOII AutoS0uire Help us support our
local AAA office with the...
Aoliday VParmtII 'Drive for the
SisepisersI's House We are collecting the following items: Coats • Jackets Rain Gear Boots • Shoes Socks • Mittens Gloves • Hats Scarves Tents Sleeping Bags tSt Backpacks For the remainder of 2013, I will pay an additional $50.eoto you, or make a donation to the Shepherd's House, for every referral I receive that purchases a new or used car.
Thank You for your past and continued support.
director Martin Scorsese for the fifth time (after "Gangs of NewYork," "The Aviator," "The Departed" and "Shutter Island") for this adaptation of Jordan Here's what's showing onCentral Belfort's memoir about his meteoric Oregon movie screens. For show- rise and inevitable fall as acorrupt stockbroker. Matthew McConaughey, times, see listings on Page31. Jonah Hill, Jean Dujardin andSpike Jonze co-star. The film opens locally Wednesday. (R) —TheMiami Herald Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger Moore,unless otherwise noted.
WHAT'S NEW
HEADS UP "47 Ronin" — A band of18th-century samurai warriors tries to avengethe murder of their master. With Keanu Reeves andRinko Kikuchi. The film opens locally Wednesdayand is available in 3-D. (PG-13) —The Washington Post "Grudge Match" — Old boxing rivals (Robert De Niro, Sylvestor Stallone) come out of 30 years of retirement to settle a long-standing feud. The film opens locally Wednesday. (PG-13)The Washington Post "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" — Ben Stiller directs and stars in an adaptation of JamesThurber's short story about an office worker whose vivid imagination sends him onan epic world adventure, as heromances a co-worker played byKristen Wiig. The film opens locally Wednesday. (PG-13) "The Wolf of Wall Street"Leonardo DiCaprio teams upwith
.
"American Hustle" — Thebest time I've had atthe movies this year. Christian Bale gives a transcendent performance as aconman who falls hard for hard-time gal Amy Adams. Director David 0. Russell and his "Silver Linings Playbook" stars Bradley CooperandJennifer Lawrence went right backto work together on this wild tale about con artists helping the FBI on sting. a Theyshould make10 moremovies together. Rating: Four stars. 138 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues" — It's a marvel the way Will Ferrell flings himself into playing the loathsome idiot for the agesRon Burgundy, hired in this sequel to anchor on a cable newsnetwork in the early1980s. The gangall returns — Paul Rudd, SteveCarell, David Koechner, Christina Applegateand they're great. Funnier than the original, "Anchorman 2" is also, in its
a
•
Submitted photo
own loony way, asobering look at the television business then — andnow. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 119 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "Saving Mr. Banks" —Emma Thompson is aperfect choice to play prissy P.L.Travers, who wrote the
treatment, complete with cutesy story and dino-poop jokes, in "Walking With Dinosaurs 3D." Aimedsquarely at that dino-crazy demographic (ages7 to12), it pumps a few IQpoints into a kid film genre sorely in need ofthem. "Walking" takes care to IDeach new dinosaur species introduced, including factoids about what theyate andany special skills they might havehad.
Continued next page
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Mary Poppins booksandresists the efforts of Walt Disney (TomHanks)to givethe magical nannythe Hollywood musical treatment. A lovingly rendered, sweet film, set in astylized and gorgeous rendition of1961 Los Angeles. Rating: Threestars. 125 minutes.(PG-12) — Roeper "Walking With Dinosaurs" — The BBC series "Walking With Dinosaurs" gets a kid-friendly big-screen
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movies
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29
From previous page It's downright educational. Just don't tell your kids that. The story they package all this in might be too childish for anybody over12, but the research behind it and effort to pass that knowledge on toyoungdinosaurfans make "Walking With Dinosaurs 3D" as athomein the classroom as it is in theaters. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Twoand a half stars. 86 minutes.(PG) —Moore
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STILL SHOWIMG "The Armstrong Lie" — It would be too easy to dismiss Alex Gibney's "TheArmstrong Lie" as a two-hour-and-three-minute exercise in moral relativism and rationalization, too late to the party about a cheating athlete we've already made upour mindsabout —again. But the Oscar-winning Gibney ("Taxi to the Dark Side") had access to Lance Armstrong before he wascaught cheating, and after. His cameras captured the seeds ofArmstrong's undoing. And while he allows plenty of screen time to condemnthe corrupt, arrogant, bullying Tour deFrancechamp, he is just as interested in bringing backthe context, the "everybody wasdoing it" argument that Armstrong has fallen back onhimself. Gibney, with footage from 2009andfresh interviews with Armstrong's victims, shows the intimidation Armstrong used to keephis myth intact and keepthose rumors at bay. Most despicably, Armstrong wasnevershyabout playing the cancer card, suggesting that there was an "ends justifythe means" logic to his chicanery and self-righteous pose.Gibney, knowing what to lookfor in that old footage, plays a wonderful game ofcatch-up here. He is never less than blunt about the scope of the cover-up and thecorruption of the sport and those who monitored it. This is a real insidecycling "how they did it" expose. Rating: Three stars.123 minutes.(R) — Moore "Blue is theWarmestColor" — Saythis for "Blue is theWarmest Color," the Cannes award winner that is as famousfor its long, explicit sex scenes as it is for its honors and actresses: It earns theNC-17rating the MPAA imposed on it. This overlong, somewhat sad-faced account of a lesbian romance, from its beginnings to its end, features what has already becomethe most notorious lesbian sex scene in screenhistory — 10minutes of grappling, groping andbare-skin slapping that flirts with pornography. Wemeet Adele (Adele Exarchopoulos) as a17-year-old high school junior with a lot of girlfriends given to frank talk about boys andsex. In a long first act, we see the bookish Adele, all mussed hair and lips that default to a sort of depressed pout, deal with the confusion she feels amid the peerpressure to hook up. Thomas (Jeremie Laheurte) is interested. But he doesn't do itfor her. Adele's erotic dreams areabout the girl with the short, blue hair she glimpsed in acrowd. Andwhenshe finally meets Emma(Lea Seydoux), Adele learns what chemistry is all about. Director and co-writer Abdellatif Kechiche pours most of his effort into the signature sexscenes. Everything else exists to establish Adele's character, her pragmatic life, her state of mind. But Exarchopoulos isa revelation, wearing her neediness, vulnerability and arousal with every muscle in herface, her posture, evenherhair. It's an utterly naked performance, literally and figuratively. Rating: Three stars. 177 minutes.(NC-17) — Moore "The Book Thief" — The film is awondrous, richly textured, sometimes heartbreakingly effective movie about goodGermans in World War II, including a remarkable little girl and the couple who took her in while sheltering a teenageJewish boy in their basement. Geoffrey RushandEmily Watson deserve
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Matthew McConaughey stars as Ron Woodroof, who learns he's HIV positive in the drama "Dallas Buyers Club." Oscar consideration for their lovely, layered performances. Oneof the year's best movies. Rating: Four stars.131 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "Cloudywith aChanceofMeatballs 2" —The Herculean task of any sequel is repeating the experience of the original film, or improving on it. That's nigh on impossible due to the simple fact that you only get to take the viewing public utterly by surprise once. The out-of-nowhere novelty and delight of Sony Animation's "Cloudy With aChanceof Meatballs," based onJudi andRon Barrett's children's book, is missing in "Meatballs 2." The design andcolor palette is as glorious as ever. But the laughs arefew andinnovations fewer in this generally winded knock-off. It's all more cynical than silly, the sort of movie you get whenthe corporate desire for a sequel precedes the creative team's great ideafor a sequel. Which, in this case, they didn't have. Rating: Twostars. 93 minutes. (PG) —Moore "Dallas BuyersClub" —Matthew McConaughey playsRon Woodroof,agrimy, shady, homophobic,substance-abusing horndog in 1985Texaswho learns he's HIV positive and procures unapproved means of treatment. McConaughey's masterful job of portraying one of themore deeply flawed anti-heroes in recent screen history reminds us why he becameamovie star in the first place. Westart out loathing this guy and learn to love him. Jared Leto disappears into the role of atransgender drug addict and Jennifer Garner is Ron's empathetic doctor. Rating: Threeand a half stars.117 minutes. (R) — Roeper "Frozen" —Whenaqueen with icy powers (voice of Idina Menzel)accidentally freezesher kingdom, sheruns awayand her intrepid sister (Kristen Bell) goes tofind her. Sure todelight children andcaptivate adults, Disney's musical "Frozen" is the instant favorite for theanimated feature Oscar,anddeservedly so. This film is
available locally in 3-D.Rating: Threeandahalf stars. 102 minutes.(PG)— Roeper "The Hebbit: TheDesolation efSmaug" — There's far less fussing about in this movie than in its precursor "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,"andalthough"Smaug" moves at afaster pace, it still feels overlong. At least this leg of the quest features giant spiders and ahot elf. Can't miss with that. Martin Freeman, lan McKellenandRichard Armitage return to star, andPeterJackson's 3-D visuals are asbreathtaking as ever.This film is available locally in 3-D, HighFilm Rate 3-D and IMAX3-D. Rating: Three stars.161 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "The HungerGames:CatchingFire"The proceedings in this sequel gooverthe top, but the actors — Jennifer Lawrence, Woody Harrelson, newcomer Philip Seymour Hoffman — aremajor talents taking their roles seriously. This is aworthy sequel to the original and afitting setup to the finale of the series. Evenwith all the wondrous special effects and futuristic touches, at heart this is the story of a girl thrust (against her wishes) into the forefront of a revolution. Rating: Three and ahalf stars.146 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "JackassPresents: BadGrandpa" — Strip the danger out of "Borat" and the injuries out of "Jackass" andyou've got a beadon "Bad Grandpa," afitfullyfunny, semi-scripted "Jackass" outing built around elaborately staged pranks played on the unsuspecting. JohnnyKnoxvilledonsold-agemakeup and becomes Irving Zisman. Thescripted interludes aren't funny at all. Thegags are more embarrassing thananything else. As "Jackass" japes go, "BadGrandpa" was better in concept and in its short, punchy TV commercials than it is as a feature. Rating: Two stars. 92 minutes.(R) — Moore
Continued next page
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PAGE 30 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
Duke Weselton (voiced by Alan Tudyk), left, talks with Anna
(voiced by Kristen Bell) and Elsa the Snow Queen (voiced by Idina Menzel) in "Frozen." Disney via The Associated Press
his Digital DingoDog," is built to mirror the signature traits of its star. LikeVin Diesel, it hasbulk, lumbering clumsily along as it repeatsDiesel's greatest hits — the onesthat don't require himto drive afast andfurious car. It's the third movie in Diesel's career-making "Pitch Black" (2000) trilogy, roughly picking up where2004's "TheChronicles of Riddick" left off. The story arcconvict redeemshimself by killing monsters andsaving people — isthe same, but there's nosnapto it. Rating: One and ahalf stars.119 minutes. (R) — Moore "The Secret of Kells" — In aremote medieval outpost of Ireland,young Brendanembarks onanew life of adventure when a celebrated master illuminator arrives from foreign lands carrying abookbrimming with secret wisdomand powers. Tohelp complete themagical book, Brendan has to overcomehis deepestfears on a dangerous questthat takeshim into the enchantedforest where mythical creatures hide. It is herethat he meets the fairy Aisling, amysterious young wolf-girl, who helpshimalong the way. But with the barbarians closing in, will Brendan's determination andartistic vision illuminate thedarkness and show that enlightenment is thebest fortification against evil? This film was nominated for BestAnimated Feature Film at the2010AcademyAwards. "The Secret of Kells" screens atthe Tin Pan Theater inBend.(no MPAArating) — Synopsis fiom Cinedigm "Tyler Perry'e AMadeaChristmas" — Tyler Perry madehis fortune by pandering to apredominantly AfricanAmerican audience. So atip of the Santa hatfor him trying to broaden his appeal bypandering to awhite one with "A MadeaChristmas," his most integrated movieever. Butfrom its unfunny Madea-in-customer-service opening tothe abrupt thud of afinale, on into the seriously stiff outtakes that cover the closing credits, "Christmas" is his worst Madeamovieever. Rating: One star.101 minutes. (PG-13) — Moore
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"Mr. Nobody" — Framedwithin the flashbacks of "the last mortal onEarth," 118-year-old manNemoNobody (Jared Leto) interviewed byboth his future (2092) shrink (AllanCorduner)anda journalist (Daniel Mays), it's about love and life andentropy anddecayand the fateful choicesyou makeandwhatyou might could if youcould chooseagain. Writer-director JacoVan Dormael ("Toto the Hero") spins flashbacks and time-lapsephotography, stunning montages, whirling, circling cameras and stunning underwater, deepspace and Martian landscapephotography into a film that is asintentionally opaque as it isoverlong. "Mr. Nobody" takes a good70minutes to get to the point whereyou guesswhere it's going. And that's only thehalfway mark.But it is fascinating to chewonand mull over, a cryptic "puzzlepicture" set in the playground ofthe psyche. Rating: Two and ahalf stars.140 minutes. (R) — Moore "Nebraska" — What ajoy it is to watch Bruce Dernplayingsuch amiserable SOB in thebest role of his longcareer. WoodyGrantisacrabby,boozy, sometimes delusional oldguy onaroad trip with his son(Will Forte) to collect a sweepstakesprize.AlexanderPayne's latest film is amodern American classic about the dynamicbetweenafather from the generation that didn't speak about itsfeelings and agrown son who's still trying to gethisfather to explain himself. Stark, beautiful and memorable. Rating: Fourstars.115 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Out of the Furnace" — Oneof the best movies I'veseenthis year is a stark, bleak, intensedramaset in a dying corner of theRust Belt. As asolid guy recently releasedfrom prison and looking out for his tinderbox brother, Christian Balestrikes manydifferent notes andhits eachwith the same precision. Rating: Fourstars.116 minutes.(R)—Roeper "Riddick" —"Riddick," a movie that might havebeentitled "A Diesel and
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, DEC 20, 2013
MOVI E
T I M E S • For t:he meekof Dec. 20
• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
The Associated Press
Johnny Depp, left, and Armie Hammer star in "The Lone
Ranger."
N EW O N D V D L BLU-RAY The following movies were released the week ofDec. 17.
"Elysium" — It's amazing howbad Jodie Foster is in this movie, and how little it matters in the grand, rabidly schizoid scheme ofthings. Matt Damon stars as a criminal on dystopian 2154Earth trying to get to a utopian spacestation in one of the most entertaining action films of the year. DVDExtras: Twofeaturettes; Blu-ray Extras: Six additional featurettes. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 109 minutes.(R) — Roeper "The Lone Ranger" — In the unholy messthatis "The LoneRanger,"we finally have amovie that combines the slapstick antics of a live-action "Road Runner" cartoon with a villain so bloodthirsty, he literally cuts out the heart of a vanquishedfoe and eats it. Everything that could gowrong with this movie does gowrong, from a rare badperformancefrom the great Johnny Depp,whoplays Tonto as a crazy desert vaudeville performer, to the decidedly unmemorable workfrom the promising talent Armie Hammeras the title character, to ascript that feels like somesort of mash-up of every attempt to reboot astoried franchise. Some films arefor everyone. This film is for just about no one.DVDExtras: Bloopers; Blu-ray Extras: Three additional featurettes anddeleted scenes. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 149 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper
Also available:
• "Ain't Them Bodies Saints"Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 92 minutes. (no MPAA rating) — Moore • "The Family — Rating: Three stars. 111 minutes.(R) —Roeper •"KickAss2"— Rating:Oneanda half stars. 103 minutes.(R) — Roeper • "One Direction: This is Us"Rating: Twostars. 93 minutes. (PG) — Moore • "Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters" — Rating: Twostars. 106 minutes. (PG) — Moore • "Prisoners" — Rating: Three anda half stars. 153 minutes. (R) —Roeper
Next Week:
"Insidious: Chapter 2"
HIGH DESERT BANK
• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 ff IMAX
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend,800-326-3264. • 47 RONIN (PG-13) Wed-Thu: 4:20 • 47 RONIN 3-D (PG-13) Wed-Thu: 1, 7:20, 10:20 • AMERICAN HUSTLE(R) Fri-Tue: 12:40,3:45, 7,10:10 • ANCHORMAN2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) Fri-Tue:11:30a.m.,12:50, 2:20, 335, 5:10, 6:20, 8:05, 9:10 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 12:35,3:50, 7:15, 10:20 • DALLAS BUYERS CLUB(R) Fri-Tue: 11:10 a.m., 2:10, 4:55, 7:50 • FROZEN (PG) Fri-Tue: 10 35a.m.,1:15, 410, 6 50, 935 • FROZEN 3-D (PG) Fri-Tue: 10:55a.m.,1:35, 4:25 • GRUDGE MATCH(PG-13) Wed-Thu:11:15a.m., 2:05, 4:50, 7:40, 10:25 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG(PG-13) Fri-Tue: 10:30a.m., 12:30, 2, 4, 6,7:30, 9:30 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG HIGHFRAME RATE3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 1,4:30, 8 • THE HOBBIT: THEDESOLATION OF SMAUGIMAX3-D (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 11a.m., 2:30, 6:30, 10 • THE HUNGERGAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) Fri-Tue:11:20a.m., 3:30, 6:45, 9:55 • NEBRASKA (R) Fri-Tue: 12:55, 3:40, 6:15,9:05 • OUT OF THE FURNACE(R) Fri-Tue: 7:05,9:50 • SAVING MR. BANKS(PG-13) Fri-Tue: 10:40a.m.,1:30, 4:40, 7:35, 10:25 • THE SECRETLIFEOFWALTER M ITTY
(PG)
Wed-Thu:11:10a.m., 2, 4:45, 7:30,10:15 • TYLER PERRY'S A MADEACHRISTMAS (PG-13) Fri-Tue: 10:45a.m., 1:10,4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • WALKING WITH DINOSAURS(PG) Fri-Tue: 1:45,7:20, 9:40 • WALKING WITH DINOSAURS3-D (PG) Fri-Tue:11:25a.m., 5 • THE WOLFOFW ALL STREET (R) Wed-Thu: Noon, 4:10, 8 • High Frame Ratemovies record andplay vfsualsat twicetherate orhigher SannormaL • As of press time, complete movie timesforl4'ednesdayand Thursday were unavailable. CheckTheBulletfn s Community Life section thosedays for the complete movie listings. I
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St.,Bend,541-330-8562 • CLOUDY WITHA CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2(PG) Tue:1:30 Sat-Sun, Thu: 11:30a.m., 2:30 Mon, Wed: 2:30 • JACKASS PRESEN S:TBADGRANDPA(R) Fri-Sun, Wed-Thu: 9 • RIDDICK (R) Fri-Sun, Wed-Thu: 6 • TheNFLfootballgamescreensat5:40 p.m. Monday. TheOregonState Vniversity football gamescreens at 5 p.m. Tuesday. • After 7p.m.,showsare21and olderonl y. Youngerthan21mayattend screenings before 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by alegal guardian.
Mountain Medical Immediate Care
541-388-7799 1302 NE 3rd St. Bend www.mtmedgr.com b
pure 6rfz/6 Co. Sony Pictures Animation via The Associated Press
Sam Sparks (voiced by Anna Faris), left, Barry the Strawberry (voiced by Cody Cameron) and Flint Lockwood (voiced by Bill Hader) star in "Cloudy with a
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • THE ARMSTRONG LIE(R) Fri-Sat, Mon-Tue,Thu: 6 Sun: 5 • BLUE IS THEWARMEST COLOR (NC-17) Fri-Sat, Mon: 8:30 Sun: 7:30 • MR. NOBODY (R) Fri-Sat, Mon-Tue:3 • THE SECRET OFKELLS(no MPAArating) Sun: 11:30 a.m. Mon-Tue:1 Thu:4 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • 47RONIN (PG-13) Wed-Thu: 1I:15 a.m., 1:45, 415, 6 45, 9:15 • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND CONTINUES(PG-13) Fri: 4, 6:30, 9 Sat-Thu:11 a.m.,1:30,4, 6:30, 9 • FROZEN (PG) Fri: 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Sat-Tue: 11:15a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF SMAUG(PG-l3) Fri: 3, 6:15, 9:30 Sat-Thu: 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:30 • WALKING WITH DINOSAURS(PG) Fri: 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 Sat-Thu: 11:15a.m., 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND CONTINUES(PG-13) Fri: 4:45, 7:30 Sat-Sun: 2, 4:45, 7:30 Mon: 1:30, 4, 6:45 Tue:1 Wed:12:30,3 Thu: 2:30, 5, 7:45 • THE BOOK THIEF (PG-13) Fri: 6:30 Sat-Sun: 7:15 Mon: 5:30 • FROZEN (PG) Fri: 4:15 Sat-Sun: 12:30, 2:45, 5 Mon:1,3:15 Tue:1:15 Wed:12:15 Thu: Noon,1:30
• THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF SMAUG (PG-13) Fri: 3:45, 7 Sat-Sun:1,4,7 Mon: 2:30, 6 Tue:12:30 Wed: 2:30 Thu: 4, 7:15 • SAVING MR. BANKS(PG-13) Fri: 4:30, 7:15 Sat-Sun: 1:45, 4:30, 7:15 Mon:1, 3:45, 6:30 Tue:12:45 Wed:12:15,3 Thu: 2, 4:45, 7:30 • THE WOLFOF WALL STREET (PG-13) Wed:1:30 Thu: Noon,3:30,7
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Bend Redmond
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John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
Aeana.Range
(- ''$359 -
vouhaul Limited quanriliss
Large oven Spillsaver cooktop ¹ACR31308Attr
Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • 47 RONIN (PG-13) Wed-Thu: 2:05, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES(PG-13) Fri-Mon, Wed-Thu: 2, 4:30, 7:10, 9:40 Tue: 2,4:30 • FROZEN (PG) Fri-Mon: Noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:20, 9:40 Tue: Noon, 2:25, 4:50 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF SMAUG (PG-13) Fri-Mon, Wed-Thu: Noon, 6:30 Tue: Noon • THE HOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG3-D (PG-13) Fri-Mon, Wed-Thu: 3:10, 9:45 Tue: 3:10 • THE HUNGERGAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) Fri-Mon: 1, 4, 7,9:55 Tue:1,4 • WALKING WITH DINOSAURS (PG) Fri-Mon, Wed-Thu: 12:35, 2:40, 4:45, 6:50, 9 Tue: 12:35, 2:40, 4:45 •
HNsog
TV.A™ PPLIANCE
See us for $100 mail-in rebates on select Hunter Douglas products.
aea C,LASSTr COVERINGS
541-388%418 www.classic-coverings.com
•
Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt., Prineville, 541-4 I6-1014 • ANCHORMAN 2: THELEGEND CONTINUES(PG-13) Fri, Mon-Thu: 4, 7:30 Sat-Sun: 1, 4, 7:30 • THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATIONOF SMAUG (Upstairs — PG-13) Fri, Mon-Thu: 3:20, 7 Sat-Sun: Noon, 3:20, 7 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility
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JEN BOWEN, BROKER, GRI, THE KELLEHER GROUP 541-280-2147 Franklin Brothers New Construction - Model Home, loaded with upgrades. 5299,000 • MLS 201310337 DIRECT IONS; South3rd Stto east onMurphy Rd,southon Parrell Rd,right onGrandI'arghee, 1sthouseonright. 60983 Geary Dr.
HOLIDAY TREATS SERVED! New 1743 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, Pental Quartz island, hardwood floors. 5429,900 • MLS 201309073 DIRECTIONS: Newport Ave to south on NW Crossing Dr. 2466 NW Crossing Dr.
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DON KELLEHER,BROKER,THE KELLEHER GROUP 541-706-1897
JAN LAUGHLIN, BROKER, ABR CRS, GRI CSP, 561-350-60II9
Franklin Brothers New Construction - 1800 sq.ft. single level, landscaped front 8 back. Owner financing available 5264,900• MLS 201308645 DIRECTIONS:South 3rd St to east on Murphy Rd, south on Parrell Rd, Right on Grand 1'arghee, left on Geary. 61186 Geary Dr.
Recently renovated to preserve its historic character. 2 master suites, 2593 sq.ft. home.
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5699,000• MLS 201301793 DIRECTIONS: Tumalo Rd. east of Riverside to Broadway(Near NW Idaho). 498 Broadway
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VIRGINIA ROSS,BROKER, ABR CRS,GRI, ECO BROKER, PREVIEWS 541-480-7501
RAY BACHMAN, BROKER,GRI 541-408-0696
NW CROSSING - New Construction 1743 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, Pental Quartz island, hardwood floors.- M 5429,900• MLS 201309073 I DIRECTIONS: Newport Ave to south on NW Crossing Dr. 2466 NW Crossing Dr.
Franklin BrothersNew Construction - 3 bedroom 2 bath, 1800 sq.ft. single level, landscapedfront & back. Owner financing available
5264,900• MLS 201305442 DIRECTIONS:South3rd St to east onMurphy Rd south on Parrell Rd Ri ht on Grand Targhee left on Geary. 61182 Geary Dr.
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www. bendproperty.com 541-382-4123 • 486 SW Bluff Dr., Old Mill District, Bend, OR 97702
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