Serving Central Oregon since1903 75i t
WEDNESDAY November21,2012
orcon ourswin in oors Dangeroustoys SPORTS• D1
BUSINESS • E1
bendbulletin.com
STATE REVENUE FORECAST
Bachelor ouSin e Snarrow u ski area opens Thurs ay MonthlyOregonhousingpermits since1990
By Laureu Dake
Seasonally adjusted
The Bulletin
3,000 2,500
Total
2,000
permits
1,500
iflgl
1,000
Bulletin staffreport M t. Bachelor ski area,22 miles west of Bend, will open for the season on Thursday,
Thanksgiving Day, according
famil
500 0 '90 '92
'94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '12 Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin
Source: Oregon Office of Economic Analysis
SALEM — The good news: The housing market in Oregon continues to show signs of improvement. The state' s quarterly revenue forecast, presented to lawmakers on Tuesday, wasn't completely rosy, but there were some bright spots. "It certainly seems we're turning the corner in terms of the housing market, which has been the biggest weight on the Central
e
a
"It's just improved, but from Oregon economy,"said Mark McMullen, the state economist virtually no activity," he said. "It But, he said, it's still helps that we're not seegoing to take time to coming a drag." "And that's having conpletely rebound. The state is still looking at a budget struction back to normal, shortfall for the upcoming not to housing-boom levbiennium. els, but back to normal," Permits for single and IN he said. multi-family housing have SALEM The overall state picincreased by 40 to 50 perture, however, remains cent, McMullen said. But gloomy, with more cuts it won't be until the end of 2014 l ike l y in order to keep up with or early 2015 until the housing the current cost of state services. market fully rebounds. See Budget/A5
Illl
to marketing director Andy
Goggins. A foot of snow accumulated at the base of Mt. Bachelor over 24 hours, he said in a Tuesday afternoon announcement. He said the mid-mountain base depth measured 38 inches. Lift operations will include Pine Marten Express, Sunshine Accelerator and Skyliner Express. Lifts will operate from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lift tickets will be priced forthe early season: $59 for adults, $49 for ages 13 to 18 and 65 to 69, and $36 for ages 6 to 12 and 70-plus. Terrain Park features will be available in the Pacific City park off Skyliner Express. All mountain services, including new lift tickets and season pass pick-up, will be available at the Mountain Gateway building in the West Village parking lot. The Nordic Center will also open for the winter season on Thursday. Tubing will also be available beginning Thursday through the Thanksgiving weekend. The MtBachelor.com website will provide updates, snow totals and additional information to prepare for the winter season, Goggins said. The National Weather Serviceforecasted a 60 percent chance of precipitation today, with the snow level at 3,900 feet. No further precipitation was forecast before Friday.
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS •
American households will pay, onaverage, $49.48 for a party of10 on Thanksgiving Day, or 28 cents more than last year. That's less than a1 percent increaseand still less than $5 a person, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation.
THANKSGIVINGDINNER COST 2011price
Item 16-pound turkey Misc. ingredients Dozen rolls 1-pound relish tray (carrots and celery)
Pumpkin pie rni, 30 oz. Pie shells (2) Green peas,1lb Fresh cranberries, 12 oz. Milk, 1 gallon whole Cubed stuffing, 14 oz. Sweet potatoes, 3 lbs. Whipping cream,t/r pint Total
20 12 price
$ 21.57 3.10 2.30
$22. 2 3 3.18 2.33
0.76 3.03 2.52
0.76 3.02 2.51
2,48 3.66 2.88 3.26 1.96 $49.20
2.45 3.59 2.77 3 .1 5 1.83 $49.48
Source: American Farm Bureau Federation
Difference
~ ~ ~
$0.66 0.08 0.03
~
Nochange -0.01 -0.01
~
-0.03 -0.07 -0.11 -0.11 -0.13 +$0.28
~ ~ ~ ~
© 2012 McCtatchy-Trtbune News Service
•
The Bulletin
Dean Guernsey /The Bulletin
A free-range Bronze tom turkeyat Juniper Jungle Farm just outside of Bend. The farm provided a few turkeys for local Thanksgiving dinners.
•
Black Friday ... or is it BlackThursdaynow? Despite protests from store clerks and shoppers, many stores will be opening earlier in the evening on Thanksgiving Day in an effort to profit from the traditional start of the holiday shopping season. urzr., ststa. i 'r se aa
WHAT WEBUY
HOW MUCHWESPEND
Percentage of consumers who say they intend to buy these items this season
Trend in average spending 8 Holiday shopping (other days) • Thanksgiving weekend Yi Projection $750
Clothing ~ 0
*"'
Gift cards ~~
Los Angeles Times
What localstoreshaveplanned Some retailers beganadvertising online sales Monday and Tuesday,while others will have movedBlack Friday to Thursday. A number of businesses in downtown Bend will take part in Small Business Saturday. Hours and information listed below
came from advertising inserts, websites or shopping areas, such as the Old Mill District and Downtown Bend Business Association.
200
Food, candy ~ SS
'06
WHERE 'BLACKFRIDAY' GOT ITSNAME • Term wasfirst usedto describe a very different event, the stock market panic of1864
• In the1950s,factory managers used it to characterize the Friday after Thanksgiving when many workers called in sick • In the1960s,Philly cops borrowed the phrase to complain about crowded shops onthe day after Thanksgiving
THURSDAY 8 p.m.— Wal-Mart; Sears 9 p.m.— Target See Black Friday/A5
'08
'10
AnIndependent
• Itt the1980s,merchants gave the phrase a newspin —a label for the first day their balancesheets moved from red to black •Sincethe2000s,Thanksgiving weekend hasbeenthe holiday season's best for shopping; last year, some stores beganBlack Friday sales onThursday, opening their doors before midnight © 2012 Mcclatchy-Trihune News Service
Source. National Retail Federation, marketplace.org, Time magazine
Vol. 109, No. 326,
e sec t ions
INDEX B usiness E1-4 Crosswords 85, F2 Local News C1-6 Sports D1 - 6 C lassified F1-4 Editorials C 4 O b ituaries C 5 S t ocks E2- 3 Comics 84-5 Horoscope 83 Shopping B1-6 TV& Movies B2
'12
• In the1970s,newspapers began describing the "official" first day of holiday shopping asBlack Friday
MOre BlaCk Friday •Tips for shoppers, including what not to buy,B1
8 P We userecycled newsprint
1
400
Toys ~~ 45 Rob Kerrr rhe Bulletin
Best Buy employee Ryan Farrinreadies televisions Tuesday for this year's Black Friday sale at the Bend store.
1J
j gi
600
CDs, DVDs,videos
By Louis Sahagun
88267 02329
By Ben Botkin
MOre ThankSgiVing Redmond's free-meal tradition,C1 •A list of local services that will be closed for the holiday, C1
Petroglyphs stolen in 'smash and grab'
0
Teachers union opposes bonus plan
•
Turkey day tocost a IIit more
•
BISHOP, Calif. — Ancient hunters and gatherers etched vivid petroglyphs on cliffs in the Eastern Sierra that withstood winds, flash floods and earthquakes for more than 3,500 years. Thieves needed only a few hours to cut them down and haul them away. Federal authorities say at least four petroglyphs have been taken from the site. A fifth was defaced with deep saw cuts on three sides. A sixth had been removed and broken during the theft, then propped against a boulder near a visitor parking lot. Dozens of other petroglyphs were scarred by hammer strikesand saw cuts. See Petroglyphs/A5
•
TODAY'S WEATHER
@o o
Some light snow High 38, Low 26 p age G 6
Bend-La Pine Schools' teachers union opposes a school district proposal that would give bonuses to educators based on students' academic performance. The school district proposal is aimed at providing opportunities for payouts to educators working at nine of the 27 district schools. The nine schools are ineligible to receive bonuses through the federal Teacher Incentive Fund grant program. The remaining 18 schools participate in the federal program, which allows the district to gauge the impact that performance incentives have on schools. The measure, known as a value-added measure, is intended to predict how every tested student should perform on state reading and math tests, taking into account student characteristics like demographics, mobility and socioeconomic status. The goal of the measure is to look at how well students perform beyond what's expected.The federal program provides funding for incentives to teachers at top-performing schools. The Bend Education Association, which represents teachers, believes that approach doesn't have the right focus because of the proposal's reliance on state test scores. "Teachers will say the incentives for student test scores is not something that is an effective way to make teaching better," said BEA President Mark Molner. He stressed that teachers strongly support professional development and improving theircraft. The district proposal would provide up to $100,000 in general fund money for potential payouts to educators at the nine schools that aren't getting federal dollars, but are still participating in the same school improvement efforts. See Union /A5
TOP NEWS GAZA:Progress toward truce, A3 HEALTH lAW. Getting word out, A4
A2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
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TODAY
DISASTER PREPAREDNESS
oon
Li in a s Li wa wi Holdingdackthe flood
with Egyptian officials who are in contact with Hamas abouta
cease-fire.A3
Subway tunnel
HAPPENINGS • Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is due in Cairo to talk
Engineers have developed enormous balloonlike plugs for placement at key points in subway tunnels. Once inflated, the plugs could hold back floodwaters
and reduce storm damage.
It's Wednesday, Nov.21, the 326th day of 2012. There are 40 days left in the year.
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IN HISTORY
N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
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1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
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Highlights: In1789, North Carolina became the12th state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. In 1920, the Irish Republican Army killed 12 British intelligence officers and two auxiliary policemen in the Dublin area; British forces
PLUG ~~10-20ps.i~~ 5 IiATERg r/vvvvvvL'I A plug can bepressurized in about 30 minutes.
Third rail--
Friction The plug would beheld in place byfriction because it is squeezedtightly against the tunnel walls when fully inflated and pressurized.
Track-
Polyurethane bladder---
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation andOperations Keith Foutz .........................541-385-5805 FinanceHolly West...........541-383-0321
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WovenVectran armor--TUNNEL MODIFICATIONS
THREE LAYERSFORREDUNDANCY
The tunnel floor The third rail The utility lines would be raised to match the would have asection would have flexible hangers top of the track to provide a removed where the tunnel to allow them to be pushed better seal for the plug. floor is raised. close to the wall by the plug.
Innermost is an airtight polyurethane bladder, protected by a Vectran liner. The outermost layer of Vectran belts holds the balloon together under high pressure.
INFLATION 0The deployed plug would unfold onto the tunnel floor and start to inflate as its air pump is activated.
QWhen fully inflated and pressurized, the plug can hold back floodwaters entering the tunnel.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed ar www.oregcnlonery.org
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are:
ggo3@gsy(pO The estimated jackpot is now $41 million.
expanded its membership into the borders of the former Soviet Union as it invited seven
Hampshire set its earliest-ever presidential primary, deciding on Jan. 8, 2008.
One year ago:Congress' bipartisan deficit reduction "supercommittee,m tasked with finding $1.2 trillion in cuts the law that established the committee, inability to reach
a compromise would trigger about $1 trillion in automatic
~"=--- --- Subway tunnel
spending cuts in military and domestic government programs beginning in 2013.
Stowed
Fully inflated plug
pILlg
BIRTHDAYS
I I Lg
Baseball Hall-of-Famer Stan
Musial is 92. Actor Joseph Campanella is 85. Singer Dr. John is 72. Actress Juliet Mills
is 71. Comedian-director Harold Ramis is 68. Actress Goldie Hawn is 67. Actress Nicollette
POSSIBLELOCATIONS Plugs could be placed near stations and other points at which water might enter the tunnel.
Street address.......226 N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....Po. Box 788 Redmond, OR97756 .................................541-504-2336 .................................541-548-3203
CORRECTIONS
eastward shift, NATO
over a decade, failed; under
Q In the stowed position, the inflatable plug doesn't restrict train traffic. The plug can be deployed remotely.
REDMOND BUREAU
The Bulletin's primary concern is thatall stories areaccurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at541-383-0358.
Ten years ago:In ahistoric
and Slovenia) under its security umbrella. Five years ago:New
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Soldier's Summit in the Yukon Territory.
Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia
Vectran liner---
ADMINISTRATION
was formally openedat
former communist countries (Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania,
peeeee/pep'e
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match, killing 14 civilians. In 1942, the Alaska Highway, also known as the Alcan Highway,
Inflated plug
S u bway tunnel
New Yorh Times News Service
M ORGANTOWN, WVa . — With a few dull thuds, the 1ton bag of high-strength fabric tumbled from the wall of the mock subway tunnel and onto the floor. Then it began to grow. As air flowed into it through a hose, the bundle inflated until it was crammed tight inside the 16-foot-diameter tunnel, looking like the filling in a giant concrete-and-steel cannoli. The three-minuteprocedure, conducted on a chilly morning this month in an airport hangar not far from West Virginia University, was the latest test of a device that may someday help guard real tunnels during disasters — whether a terrorist strike or a storm like Hurricane Sandy, whose wind-driven surge of water overwhelmed New York City's subway system, shutting it down for days. "The goal is to provide flooding protection for transportationtunnels," said John Fortune, who is managing the project for thefederal Department of Homeland Security's Science and Technology Directorate. The idea is a simple one: rather than retrofitting tunnels 1Adth metal floodgates or other expensive structures, the project aims to use a relatively cheap inflatable plug to hold back floodwaters. In theory, it would be like blowing up a balloon inside a tube. But in practice, developing a plug that is strong, durable, quick to install and foolproof to deploy is a difficult engineering task. The idea has been in development for more than five years — this test was the 21st — and Fortune says there are at least a few moreyears oftesting and design work ahead. If the plugs are shown tobe effective,they will be made available to transit systems around the country; at
Bjork is 47. Pro and College Football Hall of Famer Troy Aikman is 46. MLB All-Star player Ken Griffey Jr. is 43. Pop
River or other body ofwater
singer Carly RaeJepsen is 27. New York Times News Service
Source: Depanment of Homeland Security
By Henry Fountain
Sheridan is 49. Singer-actress
least initially, they are expected to cost about $400,000 each.
A professor's brainchild Work on the plug began in 2007, after Ever Barbero, a West Virginia professor whose specialty is the use of advanced materials in engineering, was contactedby a Homeland Security official looking for outsidethe-box ideas on ways to keep a subway system from flooding if an underwater tunnel were breached — by a terrorist bomb, for example. "I didn'tknowanythingabout this," he said. "Then I found out what happened in Chicago." Barbero was referring to a 1992 episode in which an abandoned freight tunnel under the Chicago River was breached by
— From wire reports
So Barbero and ILC came up with a three-layer plug, with the outer layer consisting of woven Vectran belts. It is designed so that the tearing of one belt will not cause a catastrophic failure.
Overcoming obstacles A subway tunnel is hardly a pristine environment; it is full of grease and grime — and, often, rats. "That's something w e've talked about," Fortune said. "We've actually put Vectran samples in tunnels, to see if rats ate it. They didn't." There are also obstrttctions like tracks, as well as an electrified third rail, pipes and safety walkways, all of which could
cause gaps between the plug and the tunnel walls. Most of
a crew sinking bridge pilings. the obstructions can be dealt That led to a flood that caused close to $2 billion in damage to downtown buildings as the water spread underground. Barbero came up with an idea and shared it T/trith Homeland Security officials. "I said, 'We'll put an air bag in a tunnel,'" he recalled. The department was intrigued and decided to finance the project. About $8 million has been spent so far. Barbero realized that the forces exerted on the pressurizedplug, and the needto rely on friction against the tunnel walls to keep it in place under the onslaught of floodwaters, meant that it had to be made from very tough materials. Experts from ILC Dover, a company in Delaware that makes high-strength soft structures like spacesuits and the force-absorbing air bags used for some of the Mars rover landings, suggested fabric made from Vectran, a strong but lightweight yarn spun from a liquid-crystal polymer. But the first full-scale plug, made with a single layer of Vectran, failed during a pressure test in 2010.
with by modifying a short section of the tunnel to accommodate the plug, which is 32 feet long when inflated. Sharp corners can be curved, flush tracks of thetype used atgrade crossings can be installed, the third rail can be discontinued for a stretch and pipes can be made to swing against the ceiling. T hose modifications w i l l reduce potential gaps but not eliminate them. In the most recent test, when Barbero and a colleague, Eduardo Sosa, inspected the front of the plug, they discovered a two-inch gap in one corner. The procedure called for filling the plug with water to pressurize it further, and then introducing water behind it to simulate a flood. But a plumbing failure, unrelated to the plug, ended the test prematurely. It was repeated successfully several days later, Fortune said, and the plug held back all but a small amount of water. Fortune said that was the goal of the design: to keepthe inevitable gaps small enough that any water that made it through could be easily pumped out.
Aaron Meyer Concert Roclc Violinist Christmas Concert at Broken Top Club
TUESDAY, DEC. 4 7:30 — 9:30 pm For Tickets:541-383-8200 Wine, drinks aztd appetizers are available from the bar aztd the Restaurant will be serving dinner starting at 4:30 pm.
Dining Room Hours: Open Wednesday — Saturday Lunch 11:00 am — 2:00 pm Mid-day Menu 2:00 pm — 8:00 pm Dinner 5:00 pm — 8:00 pm
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012•THE BULLETIN
A3
TOP T ORIES
Bernankeissues warning on 'fiscalcliff'
IN BRIEF Elmo puppeteer resigns in sexscandal Kevin Clash, the longtime voice and puppeteer behind "Sesame Street's"Elmo character,resigned Tuesday after a new allegation was made that he had underage sexual relationships. Announcing th e d e cision with what he called a "very heavy heart," Clash said in a statement, "Personal matters have diverted attention away from the important work 'Sesame Street' is doing and I cannot allow it to go on any longer. I am deeply sorry to be leaving and am looking forward to resolving these personal matters privately." H is s tatement c am e a t around the same time that a lawsuit was filed in f ederal court in New York accusing him of "sexual activity" with a 15-year-old. The accuser is now 24. The suit seeks $5 million in damages. Clash had no comment on the lawsuit. He was first accused last week of sexual improprieties by a man who later recanted and said they had an "adult consensual relationship." That man has not filed a suit.
Church ofEngland rejects womenbishops LONDON — The Church of England rejected a plan to allow women to be bishops, extending 37 years of debate on the issue. While two of the three houses of the church's governing General Synod voted by the necessary two-thirds majority at its meeting in London Tuesday for the change to go through, representatives of lay Anglicans failed to give the measure enough support. Provision for a code of practice to cater for parishes that object to women bishops on theological
grounds did not go far enough to prevent further conflict, opponents said. "Attempts by the House of Bishops to improve the provision for traditionalists in the code of practice" would have been resisted, said Simon Killwick, a canon from the diocese ofManchester, according to a transcript on the Church of England website. He argued that there would have been
"an ongoing political struggle over thecontents of the code for years to come." The church voted for women to be ordained as priests in 1992, leading some Anglicans to switch to the Roman Catholic Church.
Britain recognizes Syrian opposition BEIRUT — Making diplomatic and military advances, a Syrian opposition coalition gained o f ficial r e cognition from Britain on Tuesday and showed offone of its largest hauls of heavy weapons from a captured government base inside Syria. The developments came against a backdrop of steadily increasing violence in the capital, Damascus, with expectations growing of a full conflagration there. In London, Foreign Secretary William Hague told Parliament that Britain had decided to recognize the recently formed coalition as the "sole legitimate representative of the
Syrian people." The coalition has already been recognized by France, Turkey and the members of the Gulf Cooperation Council.
Cop staying injail after alleged cannibal plot NEW YORK — Calling his behavior "depraved, bizarre, aberrational and as of now, unexplained," a federal judge Tuesday declined to release to home confinement a suspended New York Police Department officeraccused of conspiring to kidnap, torture and cook women. Gilberto Valle, 28, of Forest Hills, remained silent at the his bail hearing in front of Judge Paul Gardephe at federal court in Manhattan. Valle's public defender, Julia Gatto, asked to have him placed in home confinement w ith his m other w ith G PS tracking his movements. — From wire reports
By Neil Irwin
Economic Club of New York. And the nation's future prosFederal Reserve Chairman pects may be shaped in part Ben Bernanke delivered a by whether policymakers act stark warning to policymak- in ways that instill confidence ers in a high-profile speech in the stability of U.S. policy, Tuesday, saying that the U.S. he said. economy is at risk if t h ey The economy is already bungle negotiations over the bearing the weight of that looming austerity crisis. anxiety, Bernanke said, and Bernanke's remarks were "such uncertainties will only notable less for their sub- be increased by discord and stance than for their tone and delay. In contrast, cooperatiming. In his most prominent tion and creativity to deliver public speech in almost three fiscal clarity ... could help m onths, B ernanke m a d e make the new year a very clear that he sees grave risks good one for the American should the bargaining over economy." the "fiscal cliff" — a phrase he As he has before, Bercoined — lead to either steep, nanke warned that the tax immediate fiscal austerity or increases and spending cuts prolonged, c o n fidence-rat- scheduledto take effectafter tling brinksmanship. But he Jan. I would harm the econsuggested that 2013 could omy. "The Congress and the be a good year for the U.S. administration will need to economy if lawmakers reach protect the economy from the a deal quickly and amicably. full brunt of the severe fiscal Uncertainty over U.S. fis- tightening at the beginning cal policy "appears already of next year that is built into to be affecting private spend- current law," Bernanke said. ing and investment decisions A failure to act would, by the and may be contributing to reckoning of analysts at the an increasedsense of caution C ongressional Budget O f in financial markets, with ficeand elsewhere, "send the adverse effects on the econ- economy toppling back into omy," Bernanke said at the recession." The Washington Post
Hatem Moassa / The Associated Press
An elderly Palestinian walks next to a destroyed building Tuesday after an Israeli strike in Gaza City. Both sides of the nearly week-old conflict intensified their attacks Tuesday.
rucein azaiscose, iano iciassa New York Times News Service J ERUSALEM — Di p l o matic e f f ort s a c celerated Tuesday to end the lethal confrontation between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza on one of the most violent days yet in the conflict, as the United States sent Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to the Middle East and Egypt's president and his senior aides expressed confidencethat a cease-fire was close. But by late evening there was no announcement, and Clinton said she would be working in coming days to complete anagreement. Appearing beside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel to speak briefly to the press, Clinton said she hoped to achieve an end to the hostilities with a deal that moves "toward a co m p rehensive
peace for all people in the region." The diplomatic moves to
end the nearly week-old crisis came as the antagonists on both sides intensified their attacksbefore any cease-fire takes effect. Israeli aerial an d n aval forcesassaulted several Gaza targets in m ultiple strikes. Those attacks brought the total number of fatalities in Gaza so far to more than 130 — roughly half of them civilians, the Gaza Health Ministry said. Militants in Gaza fired a barrage ofat least 200 rockets into Israel, killing an Israeli soldier. Other Palestinian rockets hit the southern Israeli cities of Beersheba and Ashdod, and l o nger-range r o ckets were fired at Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, but neither main city was struck and no casualties were reported. Senior Egyptian officials in Cairo said Israel and Hamas, the militant Islamist group
that governs Gaza, w e re "very close"to a cease-fire agreement that could be announced within hours. "We have not received final approval but I hope to receive it any moment," said Essam e l-Haddad, President M o hammed Morsi's top foreign affairsadviser. F oreign d i plomats w h o were briefed on the outlines of a tentative agreement said it had been structured in stages — first, an announcement of a cease-fire, followed by its implementation for 48 hours. That would allow time for Clinton to involve herself in the process on the ground here and create a window for negotiators to agree on conditions for a longer-term cessation of hostilities. By late evening, however, there was no word on an announcement, and Israeli television was saying the talks needed moretime.
Former Murdochaides
to face briberycharges New York Times News Service LONDON — In a n ew turn in the scandals swirling around Rupert Murdoch's British newspaper outpost, prosecutors said Tuesday that two former top executives will be charged with paying bribes of up to $160,000 to public officials in addition to several earlier charges against them. The C r ow n P r o secution Service identified the onetime aides as Rebekah B rooks, 44 , a n d A n d y Coulson, 44, both of whom have had close personal or professional ties to Prime Minister David Cameron. Cameron hired Coulson as his director of communications while in opposition
Obama'sAsiatrip marredbyMideast strife McClatchy Newspapers YANGON, Myanmar Welcomedby U.S. friend Thailand and greeted with rockstar status during a historic visit to Myanmar, President Barack Obama felt the love on much of his three-nation tour of Southeast Asia. The tour was overshadowed, though, by violence in the Middle East, and the verdict is still out on whether he achieved tangible results in a region that's often felt neglected by Washington. A "Pivot to Asia" was the central theme of Obama's trip,
a signal of the administration's planned second-term emphasis on improved relations with countries that share the region with an increasingly assertive China. He returns to Washington early today. Yet as Obama and key administration officials tried to devote quality time and attention to Asia during their stops in Thailand, Myanmar and Cambodia — the latter two hosting a U.S. president for the first time — he found himself pivoting back to the Middle East and a violent confronta-
tion between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza. Obama on Tuesday dispatched Secretary of State Hillary Clinton from Asia directly to the Middle East. "Having Clinton fly directly from Asia to the fires in the Middle East reminds Asia that the conflict in Gaza and Middle East strife in general is like a jealous lover, always calling the U.S. high-level political focus away from Asia," said Ernest Bower, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
Q NoRTHWEsT CROSSING
and kept him on after coming to power in the 2010 elections. Under a new bribery act passed by Parliament in 2010, the maximum penalty for bribing a public official is 10 years imprisonment and an unlimited fine.
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Autosource 541-598-3750 20350 Empire Blvd., Suite 5 Bend, OR 97701 I
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BEND AREA RESTORE 740 NE 1" Avenue Bend, OR97701
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RODDA PAINT AND DECOR 63007 Layton Avenue Bend, OR97701
SHERWIN WILLIAMS 20515 Coo/ey Road Bend, OR97701
(541) 330-0370
(541) 312-8546
Tuesday — Friday 9 am - 5 pm Saturday10am -4 pm (541) 312-6709
(541) 317-3163
STANDARD PAINT AND FLOORING 253 NE Greenwood Avenue Bend, OH 97701
LAPINE ACE HARDWARE & BUILDING SUPPLY 51615 HuntingtonRoad La Pine, OR97739
CROOK COUNTY 7 10 SWLandfill Road Prineville, OR97754
PARR LUMBER CO 601N Main Street Prineville, OR97754
Monday Sat - urday8am -4pm
(541) 447-7217
(541) 382-7465
(541) 536-2161
(541) 447-2398
REDMOND HABITATRESTORE 1242 Highway 97 South Redmond, OR97756
SHERWIN WILLIAMS 2835 Sl/V17"Place Redmond, OR97756
LUTTON'S ACE HARDWARE 373 E Hood Avenue Sisters, OR97759
Monday-Friday9am -5pm Saturday 9am - 5pm
(541) 923-2224
(541) 549-8011 S
(541) 548-1406
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PaintCare thanks these local drop-off sites for participating in the Oregon Paint Steutardship Program. Since 2olo we've recycted one million gallons of paint!
DESCHUTES COUNTY HHW FACILITY 61050 SE27' Street Hend, OR97702 P' and 4'" Friday and Satuarday of month9am — 3pm
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Midnight
8am
10am
Game Stop- Xbox 360, $249.99
Chico's —25% off storewide all day. Buy a full priced necklace and get a pair of earrings free. Gift with purchase over $125.
DANI Naturals —Select candles $10 (signature and holiday scents), Pear Sugat
Claire's —Gift with purchase on FriSat. Select clearance items 75% off and 10 for $10. Spend $20+ and receive $10 coupon for future purchase.
Lubbesmeyer Studio & Gallery-
includes two bonus games and one month of Xbox Live.
2am American Eagle -40% off storewide, Wed — Sun. (Excluding Aerie.)
Bath & Body Works —Spend $40 and for an additional $20 get a 2012
Ginger's Kitchenware —Wusthof
VIP Bag loaded with 7 Merry Must Have products (over $100 value).
knives and sets on sale, pick up a classic 3 in. paring knife $40. Purchase any Nepresso coffee maker $199+, receive $100 club credit.
Buckle -15% additional off on sale tops, sweaters, outerwear, shoes and accessories and 10% off on sale denim. 15% off on select jewelry. $15 off Miss Me styles. Specials run through Mon.
Oregon Locker Room- Buy One Get One 50% off storewide. Specials run Wed — Mon.
Pacific Sunwear —Denim, sweatshirts, sweaters, jackets, tees, flannel and long sleeve knits are Buy One Get One 50% until 2pm. First 50 customer purchases receive an iPhone case.
Victoria's Secret- Buy One Get One 50% off onallbras. Spend $65 and receive a free tote stocked with goodies. Select fragrances $30. Pink Hoodie or Yoga Leggings $25.
J • Jill - 25% off entire purchase Wed — Mon. Nashelle- 35% off all jewelry storewide all day. Orvis — All Hydros Reels $50 off. Save $100 on Pro Guide Waders. Men's FleeceJacket, Foul Weather Sweater, Heritage Field Coat and Cascade Storm Jacket plus Women's Quilted Vest and Cashmere Turtlenecks on sale. REI —Save up to 30% on Winter gear and gifts. Ticket Mill — Brewfest growlers, growlettes, Silipints and stainless steel cups.
6am GAP —Up to 60% off entire store all day. Doorbusters on Fri: $19 sweaters for men+ women, kids+ baby graphic tees $5. Men's+ women's $10 tees on
Vanilla Urban Threads -10% off full-priced items from 8am — 2pm. (Ex-
Wonderland ToyShoppe -10% off
Saxon's Fine Jewelers —Limited edition Pandora charm, $55 with any Pandora purchase.
ornaments and fine art.
Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe20% off entire store Fri — Sun; great collection of PFDs, paddles, dry tops, suits and bags. Christmas Eve deliveries.
Breakfast!
fast quesadillas, bagels, yogurt parfaits, fruit cups, muffins, scones, coffee drinks, hot chocolate, tea, cider.
8am
til 10am.
9am Motherhood Maternity — Buy One Get One Free velour sets, Buy One Get One 50% off all denim, Buy One Get One 75% off all sweaters.
Savory Spice Shop- Free spice
7am
blend with any purchase. Enjoy Crystallized Ginger Mimosas, mulled cider and unique spiced treats all day.
Banana Republic-40% off store-
Desperado —20% off on Miss Me and
wide all day.
Rock 8 Roll Cowgirl jeans.
Helly Hansen —Doorbusters until
Coldwater Creek-40% off storewide
Sunglass Hut- Select brands 25% off with One Sight $5 donation. Spend $150 through Sun and receive $20 bonus card for future purchase. 50% off clearance frames on Sat — Sun.
contemporary works of art — painting, sculpture, jewelry, fiber works, printmaking, encaustics and mixed media.
Strictly Organic Coffee Co.—Break-
Sat — Sun.
11am. 10/20/30% off from 11am — 9pm. Footwear Buy One Get One Free. Prostretch fleece $39.99 and select Lifa base layers $40.
mapping contemporary — 10% off
6am
cluding Toms shoes.) Sale racks at $10-$40.
Zumiez —Buy One Get One 50% off Fri — Sun specials. Exclusive name brand collections available for one-day-only on Fri.
Free shipping through the Holidays.
Tumalo Art Company —Unique
White House Black Market-25% off all day. Gold tote with purchase.
Scrub $10, travel size shower gels $2, select soaps $2-$3. Winter Collection items and 12oz Shower Gels 50% off.
Level 2 open for breakfast til 2pmServing a full breakfast and pastries from La Magie Bakery. Plus a variety of Bloody Marys.
Note: All specials subject to change and while supplies last.
until noon. 30% off all weekend.
O LD M I L L D isTRic T For the complete scoop, theoldmill.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012•THE BULLETIN
Health-care law challenge: raising public awareness By Sarah Kliff
sion about the specifics of putting it into action. States such After surviving a Supreme as Texas and Florida, where Court decision and a p resi- opposition to th e l egislation dential election, the Obama was strong, have been slow to administration's h e alth-care embrace the law and critics law faces another challenge: a have been loath to promote it. public largely unaware of ma- Initial White House efforts at jor changes that will roll out in outreach caused congressional the coming months. Republicans to accuse the adStates are rushing to decide ministration of using taxpayer whether to build their own money for political gain. health exchanges and the adIn mid-November, Ways and ministration is readying final Means Committee Chairman regulations, but a g r o w ing Dave Camp, R-Mich., subpoebody ofresearch suggests that naed Health and Human Sermost low-income Americans vices Secretary Kathleen Sewho will become eligible for belius, demanding information subsidized insurance have no about how her agency has used idea what's coming. federal money to promote the Part of the problem, experts Affordable Care Act. The adsay, is that people who will be ministration is preparing a fiaffected don't realize the ur- nal budget for an outreach progency because the subsidies gram focused on the opening won't begin for another year. of the exchanges in October. "People hear it's going to But policy decisions are being made now that will affect tens come in 2014, which makes it of millions of Americans, and not very relevant to their lives," the lack ofpublic awareness said Tevi Troy, a top Health and could jeopardize a system that Human Services official under depends on having many peo- President George W. Bush. "If ple involved. you don't have an understandLow enrollment could lead ing of the law, that's when to higher premiums, health you're going to have real takepolicy experts say. Hospitals up problems." worry t h at, w i t hout w i d eSeventy-eight percent of the spread participation, they will uninsured Americans who are continue getting stuck w ith likely to qualify for subsidies patients' unpaid medical bills. were unfamiliar with the new And advocates say the ma- coverage options in a survey by jor purpose of the Affordable Democratic polling firm Lake Care Act — extending health Research Partners. That surinsurance tomore Americans vey, sponsored bythe nonprofit — will go unmet if large num- Enroll America, also found bers of vulnerable people don't that 83 percent of those likely take advantage of it. to qualify for the expansion of But because "Obamacare" Medicaid, which is expected has been s o c o ntroversial, to cover 12 million Americans, and its fate caught up in the were unaware of the option. presidential campaign, there In separate October polling has been little public discus- data from the Kaiser Family The Washington Post
Budget Continued from A1 For the t w o-year budget cycle that begins July I, economists project Oregon w i l l collect $16.5 billion in taxes. That's more than the $15 billion the state is expected to collect by the end of the current budget cycle, but it's not enough to keep pace with the $17.2 billion cost of continuing all services at their current levels. The spike in costs is driven by rising health-care costs, expanded caseloads for government assistanceand rising personnel costs, among many other factors. "It's not party time, but it's far less challenging than what we experienced last biennium," Sen. Ginny Burdick, a Port-
Black Friday
Outfitters; Bath & Body Works;
Continued from A1
Lids; Pacific Sunwear; Victoria's Secret; White House Black Market;
Buckle; OregonLocker Room,by
10 p.m.— Carters; Classic Beauty
Zumiez
Supply; Claire's, (BendFactory Stores); ColumbiaSportswear; Dressbarn; EddieBauerOutlet;
4a.m. — Smolich Motors, vehicle
Nike Factory Store; Pearl Izumi; Pendleton Outlet; Rocky Mountain
Chocolate ;TuesdayMorning;Van Heusen FRIDAY Midnight —Best Buy; Macy's; Dick's Sporting Goods; Kohl's;
GameStop; CoachFactory Store; Coach Men's Factory Store
2 a.m. —American Eagle
In the coming months, the group will begin an advertising campaign meantto encourage Americans to sign up for the health-care law's subsidized i nsurance coverage. Still i n its planning stages, it is likely to start in the summer or fall of 2013, just before the statebased insurance marketplaces open for enrollment. Thestill-unnamed campaign is likely to put more intensive resources toward a handful of key states. Those could include Florida and Texas, which have a combined 10 million uninsured residents, and have made little effort to do such outreach.
highest unemployment rate. Its jobless rate remains the state's second highest, with G rant County inthe No. I spot. It'sthe first time in four years Crook makers were grappling with a County hasn't topped the list. $3.5 billion gap. McMullen credits the drop in The new Legislature, with unemployment to gains across Democratic majorities in the all industries. "The big-ticket d evelopHouse and Senate, will take office Jan. 14, but lawmakers ments," McMullen said, referwon't begin their actual work ring to Facebook's data center until February. in Prineville, "have a hard time "There is tremendous pres- moving the needle ... It's gains sure building t o i n c r ease across all industries." spending next session, which Uncertainty around loomwill only continue the cycle of ing federal tax hikes and deep painfulcuts and chronic reve- spending cuts remains a drag nue shortfalls," Sen. Chris Telf- on growth in the short term, he er, R-Bend, said in a statement. said. The forecast comes on the The Associated Press heels of news that as of Octocontributed to this report. ber, Crook County is no lon— Reporter: 541-554-1162, ger leading the state with the Idake@bendbulletin.com
but by having this incentive component, it becomes more Continued from A1 than just another lens; it beIt's also intended to address comes the focus. People want the perceived unfairness that to be able to measure and they the educators at those schools don't have an accurate tool to are unable to receive financial do that with." bonuses, unlike their peers in Wilkinson said the advanother schools. tage of the value-added model Under the proposal, schools is to focus on the growth of inwould be eligible for v ary- dividual students. "It is based on test scores, ing payouts based on performance in math and reading. but in this case, it's based on There would be three levels using that data to focus on the with varying payouts: excep- growth of each child," he said. tional growth, high growth The district b elieves it's and above-average growth. i mportant f o r t e a chers t o Schools w i t hout a d e quate work together for schoolwide growth wouldn't receive any improvement, he said, addbonuses. ing that s t ate assessments At the school board meet- will continue to hold schools ing last week, Superintendent accountable. "To pretend we don't want R on Wilkinson c alled t h e value-added measure another to be held accountable based lens by which to look at school on them doesn't fit well with performance. Oregon's accountability sysIn a n i n t erview, M olner tem," Wilkinson said. said, "I suppose that's true, The schoolboard did not vote
L'eggs HanesBali; Maurices;
lanthropy groups.
land Democrat who chairs the Senate Finance and Revenue Committee, said of the latest revenue forecast. During the 2011 session, law-
Union
GNC; Izod; Kitchen Collection;
Foundation, 41 percent of voters described themselves as "confused" about the healthcare law. Even in Maryland, one of the states that has most aggressively implemented the Affordable Care Act, awareness is low. A survey released Monday found that 30 percent of likely Maryland voters describe themselves as knowing "a lot" about the coming changes. "Most Maryland voters don't fully understand the law," said Nikki H i g h smith V e r nick, president of the Horizon Foundation, the nonprofit based in Howard County that sponsored the study. "The people who stand to benefit the most know the least about it." Even as Congress was finishing the debate that led to the law, a coalition of health-care advocates formed to help promote it. Led by Families USA co-founder Ron Pollack, the group started Enroll America, a nonprofit largely funded by health-care industry and phi-
service 5 a.m.— Fred Meyer 6 a.m.— J.C. Penney;Gap 7 a.m.— Banana Republic; Helly Hansen; SunglassHut 8 a.m.— Chico's; Claire's, (Old Mill District); Ginger's
Kitchenware; J. Jill; Nashelle; Orvis; REI; Ticket Mill; Vanilla Urban Threads; Wonderland Toy
Shoppe. 9 a.m.— Motherhood Maternity; Savory Spice Shop;Desperado; Coldwater Creek
on the proposal, but agreed the issue needs further consideration after listening to both sides at its meeting last week. Board chairman Ron Gallinat said the proposal will be discussed in upcoming weeks. If the board were to vote in support of the proposal, the district would need to send a letter to the union about the requested changes. The BEA would then have 14 days to decide whether to accept the changes or enter negotiations with the district. The nine schools are: Amity Creek Magnet School, Highland Magnet School, High Lakes Elementary S c hool, Lava Ri d g e Ele m entary School, Ponderosa Elementary School, W.E. Miller School, Cascade M i d dl e Sc h o ol, Mountain View High School and Summit High School. — Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotkin@bendbulletin.com
10 a.m. —DaniNaturals; Lubbesmeyer Studio 8 Gallery; Mapping Contemporary;Saxon's
Petroglyphs
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Continued from A1 "The i ndividuals who did this were not surgeons, they were smashing and grabbing," U .S . B u r eau of Land Management archaeologist Greg H averstock said last week as he examined the damage. "This was the worst act of vandalism ever seen" on the 750,000 acres of public land managed bythe BLM field office in Bishop. The theft required ext raordinary e f f ort: L a d ders, electric generators and power saws had to be driven into the remote and arid high desert site near
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Raymond Andrews, tribal historic preservation officer of the Bishop Paiute Tribe, visits the area near North Bishop, Calif., that is host to petroglyphs etched by ancient hunters and gatherers into the fractured volcanic cliff faces. Vandals removed at least four prominent petroglyphs with power saws.
Bishop. Thieves gouged h oles in t h e r o c k a n d sheared off slabs that were up to 15 feet above ground and 2 feet high and wide. Visitors discovered the theft and reported it to the BLM on Oct. 31. BLM field office manager Bernadette Lovato delivered the bad news to Paiute-Shoshone tribal leaders in Bishop. "It was the toughest telephone call I ever had to make," Lovato said. "Their culture and spiritual beliefs had b een h o r ribly violated. We will do everything in our power to bring those pieces back." T he region i s k n o w n as Volcanic Tableland. It is held sacred by Native Americans whose ancestors adorned hundreds of lava boulders with spiritual renderings: concentric circles, deer, rattlesnakes, bighorn sheep, and hunters with bows and arrows. For generations, PaiuteShoshone tribal members and whites have lived side by side but not together in Bishop. But d esecration of the site, which Nat ive Americans still u se in spiritual c eremonies, has forced reservation officials and U.S. authorities to come together and ask a to u g h q u e stion: Can further vandalism be prevented? "How do w e m a n age f ragile r e s ources t h a t have survived as much as 10,000 years but can be destroyed in an instant'?" asked archaeologist David Whitley, who in 2000 wrote t h e n om i n ation that succeeded in getting the site listed on the National Register of Historic Places. "Do we keep them s ecret in h opes that n o one vandalizes them? Or, do we open them to the public so that visitors can serve as stewards of the resources?" The easy answer is to
police the site and others listed under the Archaeological Resources Protection Act. But that's not possible given the condition o f c a sh-strapped federal lands agencies,authorities said. Authorities said the petroglyphs aren't worth a great deal on t h e i l l i cit m a rket,
lieved to have been carved by shamans, Andrews took a slow, deep breath and said: "We still use this sacred place as a kind of church to educate tribal members and children about our historical and spiritual connections. So, our tribal elders are appalled by what
probably $500 to $1,500 each.
Federal authorities and Native American leaders plan to mark each defaced petroglyph with a small sign pointing out that, as archaeologist Haverstock put it, "this damage was done by malicious, selfish individuals." T he BL M i s o f f e ring a $1,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the thieves. Damaging or removing the petroglyphs is a felony. First-time offenderscan be imprisoned for up to one year and fined as much as $20,000, authorities said. Second-time offenders can be fined up to $100,000 a nd imprisoned up t o f i v e
But they are priceless to Native Americans, who regard the massive tableaux as a window into the souls of their ancestors. The site is one of dozens of such locations managed by the BLM office in Bishop. A small army of volunteers has stepped up surveillance of the area. For archaeologists, the images carved into a half-milelong volcanic escarpment depict the culture and spiritual beliefs of the ancient tribes that once populated the sage flats and river valleys of the Eastern Sierra. Paiute tribal historic preservation officer Raymond Andrews observed sacred law by quietly chanting a traditional prayer when he approached the site earlier this month. Standing beneath a panel of geometric renderings be-
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WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable
Self Referrals Welcome I
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G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084
WAS YOUR HOME FORECLOSED UPON IN 2008 - 20117 You may beentitled to a paymentfrom the National Mortgage SeNjement.
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leave it to the Certified Packing Experts to pack and ship your gifts. Take the madness out of this holiday season, and start with a Certified Packing Expert at your neighborhood The UPSStore'. We'll get your gifts on their way safely, so you can rest assured they'll arrive that way too. We also have extended holiday hours! Bring your gifts to the Certified Packing Experts today. Now open near you: 740 NE 3rd Street, Suite 3 Bend, OR 97701
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Fine Jewelers; Tumalo Art Co.;
Tumalo CreekKayak 8 Canoe SATURDAY As of Tuesday evening, the
WE Q LOGISTICS
following Bendbusinesses have indicated their participation in Small Business Saturday, which is dedicated to supporting small
businesses nationwide: Faveur Eclectic Unique Boutique; Hot Box Betty; Let It Ride Electric Bikes; Local Joe; Lulu's; North Soles Footwear; 0 Mo Mo!; Tres Chic; TriviaAntiques; Wabi Sabi and What Lola Wants. — 13ullletin staff report
The UPS Store~ locations are independently owned asd operated by franchisees ofTheUPSStore, Ins, in the USAand by its maner licensee asd its fraschisees in Canada Services, pri<ing andhours oi operation may vary by location. Copyright © 2012 TheUPSStore, Ine CBCH466823 11,12 I
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A6
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 20'l2
tate universities' onine o erin s cut into or- ro it institutions' ottom ine By John Hechinger
at a 40 percent annual clip, according to Joan M i tchell, a spokeswoman for the Salt Lake City-based nonprofit online college. It charges about $3,000 for a six-month term. For-profit schools have revolutionized customer service, letting students call and sign up in as little as 48 hours, then attend convenient campuses or online programs, said Phil Regier, dean of Arizona State online, whose enrollment has climbed to 7,000 from 200 in August 2009. Now, traditional schools are starting to offer the
Bloomberg News
Keri Trimble, 33, an employee at a utility call center, was
shopping for an online college so she could take classes at night and on weekends. Trimble r e jected A p o l lo Group's University of Phoenix, the dominant player in the market for selling Internet degrees to working adults. Instead,she chose Arizona State University's program, which typically charges almost 30 percentless. "The cost was outrageous," said Trimble, of Sacramento, Calif. Also, "I didn't think that graduating from the University of Phoenix would give me the respect that comes with a degree from a traditional four-
Joshua Lott/ Bloomberg News file photo
State universities' expanding online programsare pummeling for-profit colleges, like the University of Phoenix, pictured, once among the fastest-growing U.S. industries but now closing campuses as enrollment and stock prices plunge.
year college." Competition from state universities' expanding o n line programs is pummeling forprofit colleges, once among the fastest-growing U.S. industries. The companies, including University of Phoenix and Washington Post Co.'s Kaplan chain, areclosing campuses as enrollment and stock prices plunge. With outstanding student loans totaling $1 trillion, some potential customers are turning away from the schools out of concern about cost and quality. It's a potent threat because publicly tr a de d fo r - profit colleges drew 59 percent of t heir enrollment l ast y e a r from o n l ine-only s t udents, according to estimates from Deutsche Bank. At the University of Phoenix, the figure was three-quarters. More than 80 percent of the U.S. population will have access to less-expensive onl ine programs f r o m t h e i r own state universities by the end of next year, up from 62 percent this year, predicted Paul Ginocchio, an analyst at Deutsche Bank in San Francisco. Up to a third of those students would have gone to a for-profit college if the alter-
native didn't exist, he said. Private universities are also invading the o n line a rena. Last week, a group including Duke, Vanderbilt and Brandeis universities, said it would offer online classes for credit. Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology offer courses free online, though they don't count for credit or toward degrees. F or-profit c o l leges h a v e also suffereddamage to their reputations. In the past two years, the schools, which can receive as much as 90 percent of their revenue from federal student grants and loans, have faced scrutinyfrom President Barack Obama's administration, Congress and state and federal prosecutors. Investigatorshave said the schools use high-pressure sales tactics to mislead applicants about costs and job p lacement, leaving them with government loans they can't repay. For-profit college stocks fell after Republican presidential challenger Mitt Romney, who had called for less regulation of the industry, lost to Obama. Phoenix, Ariz.-based Apollo, the largest U.S. for-profit college company, is down 64 per-
cent this year, among the worst performers in the Standard 8t: Poor's 500 Index. Twelve of the 13 for-profit collegecompanies tracked by Bloomberg have suffered stock declines this year, with six down at least 50 percent. The exception: Grand Canyon Education, which operates a traditional campus in Phoenix with a Christian focus alongside its online program. State universities' o nline programs offer cheaper degrees from better-known institutions. Arizona State charges $442 per credit hour for an Internet bachelor's degree, or about $11,000 a year including fees, according to the school. University of Phoenix typically costs about $585 per credit hour, or about $15,000 a year. P rospective students a t tracted by affordable tuition have boosted enrollment at the University of Florida's online program by 10 to 15 percent a year to7,000 currently,said Andy McCollough, an associate provost. Florida residents pay $147.49 per credit hour, or $5,000 ayear,including other fees. At Western Governors University, with 37,000 students, enrollment is jumping
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Taylor Whitfield holds up a sign protesting the Board of Supervisors' proposal to ban public nakedness, Tuesday at City Hall in San Francisco. The board approved the ban 6-5.
San Francisco passes ban on public nudity
same approach.
"It's not an infinite market," Regier said. "A lot of our students would have gone to a for-profit. I don't know why students would go to for-profits once we get as good at customer service. Their brands are not as good, and they tend to be more expensive." Apollo says its programs often cost less than private, notfor-profit colleges as well as state universities' nonresident tuition. Last month, the University of Phoenix announced it would freeze tuition for all currently enrolled students and
prospects who sign up by June. "We are tremendously competitive," said Mark Brenner, an Apollo senior vice president. Apollo excels at helping jobhunting students, Brenner said. The University of Phoenix has established relationships with 2,000 corporations, i n cluding Verizon Communications, Wal-Mart Stores and Adobe Systems. Those company ties haven't stopped the bleeding at Apollo. Enrollment at the University of
Phoenix has plunged 30 percent to 328,400 students since August 2010. Apollo is shutting 115 locations, including 25 campuses, and eliminating 800 jobs over the next year. In September, Kaplan said it stopped enrolling students at nine campuses and is folding four others into nearby locations.
By Malia Wollan
protesters, sheriff's deputies draped them in blue blanSAN FRANCISCO — The kets and led them out of the command from city officials meeting hall. to residents was simple: Put Under the ordinance, pubyour clothes back on. lic nudity will be subject to a The San Francisco Board series of fines. A first-time of Supervisors voted 6-5 on violation would result in a Tuesday to approve a ban fine ofas much as $100. A on public nudity. The vote second citation in the same means that there will be no year would cost as much as more lounging nude in the $200, and a third would recity's plazas, parading up sult in a fine of as much as and down streets sans pants $500 or a misdemeanor and or riding subways and buses as long as a year in jail. bare-bottomed. On most sunny or even Scott Wiener, a city su- m oderately w a r m day s pervisor who represents the here, a handful of naturalCastro district, introduced ists (known locally as "the the ordinance after an innaked guys") can be found crease inthe number of ha- r eading n e w spapers o r bitual nudists and a rise in stalking around the Castro complaints from r esidents district's Jane Werner Plaza and business owners. looking like an out-of-place "The nudity s i t u ation flock of pale and ungainly in the Castro has become birds. extreme," Wiener told hi s The law will not go into colleagues. e ffect until a f ter F eb. 1 , After city supervisors ap- which wil l a l lo w e n ough proved the ban, the crowd time for a federal judge to at City Hall erupted in loud consider a lawsuit brought heckling and booing. against the city by a group "Recall Wiener! Wiener is of nudists who claim that a Republican!" shouted Ger- the ordinance infringes on hart Clarke, 55, who stood their right to free speech. up along with half a dozen As long as it is not lewd others and stripped down to or offensive, public nudity the buff. is legal under state law. But "Shame on you!" another Tuesday, Sa n Fr a n cisco woman yelled, pulling off joined many o t her c i ties, her shirt. "What are you including nearby San Jose afraid of'?" and Berkeley, that prohibit A nticipating t h e nu d e it. New York Times News Service
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BE N D: 541.385.0594 i
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TV 5 Movies, B2
Dear Abby, B3 Comics, B4
Puzzles, B5 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
O www.bendbulletin.com/savvyshopper
IN BRIEF Turkey hotline to the holiday rescue Need some tips for cooking that turkey? A •
-
•
number of turkey purveyors and government agencies offer advice — both online andon the phone — to help
make for the perfect Thanksgiving holiday. • Oregon State University Extension
Service hotline: 800354-7319. Master food
preserver volunteers are available from10
i~lIJ Ij
a.m.to2 p.m .today. The food safety website
Q
for the extension service is www.extension
.oregonstate.edu/fch/ food-safety. • Butterball Turkey Talk Line: 800-288-
8372. Readanswers to most frequently asked
questions at www .butterball.com. • Honeysuckle White
n
Turkey Lineprerecorded information: 800-810-
6325. Turkey preparation tips at www.honey
sucklewhite.com. • Perdue Farms turkey help line: 800-4737383. Advice on turkey questions at www
.perdue.com. • The National Turkey
Federation offers advice
on turkey preparation at www.eatturkey.com. • U.S. Department of Agriculture Meatand Poultry Hotline: 888674-6854 or www.fsis .Usda.gov.
Shop on Small BusinessSaturday
Thinkstock
After the Black Friday frenzy, downtown Bend
businessesareasking shoppers to support Small Business Satur-
day. The concept is part
• Hate crowds and stressbut love a gooddeal? Retailers roll out
of a national movement to highlight small
competitive pricing so youdon't haveto bustdowntheir doors yghat not to buy
businesses during the holiday shopping sea-
By Katherine Boyle • The Washington Post
son. In Bend, 20 to 30
ome Thanksgiving Day, it's always a question: Will you be in line well be-
businesses areputting on special sales and events on Saturday,
fore midnight to buy a door-busting bargain on Black Friday?
including Local Joe, Trivia Antiques, North
For those who don't like crowds, it has never been easier to have your
Soles Footwear and
shopping done before the big day (or night) rolls around.
Wabi Sabi.
Several businesses are posting more about their anticipated sales throughout the weekat the website below. Contact: www .downtownbend.org/
shop-small.
Millions to shop on Black Friday A survey by the National Retail Federation says that more than 147 million people plan to shop Black Fri-
day this year. Lastyear, roughly
Holiday skip list:
"My advice to people is, start paying attention early," said Jody Rohlena, senior editor of ShopSmart magazine. "Retailers are trying to get you into the stores, not for just one day, but for the whole holiday season." That's great advice if you're not after the five products meant to lure you into a store at the stroke of midnight on Black Friday. With stores offering holiday price matches now, and free shipping options from major retailers, it's easy to skip Black Friday this holiday season.
Start now The shopping season is starting earlier, with Target, Walmart, Best Buy and Toys R Us rolling out deals for the entire period, not just one day or even
one month. That means deals will change from week to week, and using price guarantees and shipping promotions at the right time will help you save big. "We're seeing a lot of really good sales that extend through the holiday season that go up until the very last minute," Rohlena said. "But they're starting now." So pay attention to fliers, online prices and the timing of purchases. There's no reason not to start
shopping now.
Use price matching Retail experts are excited about competitive price matches. Target and Best Buy are matching prices offered online by r ivals including Amazon and Walmart. See Shop/B6
By Katherine Boyle The Washington Post
It's the most wonderful time of the year — arriving year after year after year — and somehow, we still haven't caught on tothe needless consumer spending that the season propagates. Every holiday season, we buy new stockings for the kids, twinkle lights for the house and sparkling clothes that we'll wear to no more than one holiday party. This year, we're giving you an out. Stop buying stuff you don't need! According to the National Retail Federation, Americans spent $6 billion on holiday decorations last year and are expected to spend $6.9 billion this year. (That's more than the 2012 election cost!) According to Bloomberg, we spent $2.2 billion on fake Christmas trees, more than twice what we spent on real ones. (So we're not even
helping Christmas tree farmers.) See Skip/B6
152 million people said they intended to shop the after-Thanksgiving sales rush, while a sub-
sequent survey found that 220 million actually did shop. Consumers will be after numerous items. Clothing and cloth-
ing accessories are the most popular gift
category, according to a separate National Retail Federation survey. About 59 percent
of shoppers will buy gift cards, which are the most requested gift item. Children are also high on the list: 45 percent
of adults surveyed say they will buy toys this
season. And jewelry purchases are expected to go up this holiday season to their highest levels since 2007, the survey
says. About 23 percent of shoppers plan to buy jewelry as a gift. — Heidi Hagemeiec The Bulletin
rimer on rimerS Bottle up costwhen • Experts believe basecoat helpsgive makeuplasting power
touring winecountry
By Shfvanf Vora
By Reaee Enna
New Yorh Times News Service
Chicago Tribune
Many appearance-conscious women have grown accustomed to applying primer, a product said to fill in fine lines and enlarged pores on the skin, before using foundation makeup. But Brooke Filosa, 27, a publicist at Bullfrog & Baum in Manhattan, goes a step further. She uses Urban Decay Eyeshadow Primer Potion ($20), which she believes makes her eye shadow go on smoother and keeps her from having to touch it up throughout her long workday. "I'vebeen wearing makeup every day since I was a teenager, but didn't start wearing eye primer until a few years ago when my makeupartist friend pointed out that my eye makeup looked worn and suggested I use one," Filosa said. "Now I can't go without it." Throw a few more tubes and bottles on the growing pile in your bathroom: Primer is be-
coming more popular, and increasingly specialized. As in painting, it's a base coat meant to help what comes after last longer and work better, and iterations are now being created not only for the skin and eyelids, but eyelashes, lips,
na. I .
sm mcx
s~ashbcx '~ smashbox
HOMFINISN
Tony Cenicola /New York Times News Service
Makeup primers, like Smashbox, were once only used by actresses and brides to ensure their makeup stayed intact for several hours. nails and even hair. Polly Blitzer, the founder of Beauty Blitz Media, a site discussing trends in the industry, observesthat hundreds of products come to market every month and says that primers are one of the fastest-growing categories. SeeMakeup/B6
A trip to wine country can be pricey. Here's how my husband and I cut corners without sacrificing the experience: •Share tastings: Most tastings are $5 to $10 each; it adds up, particularly when you're visiting several wineries in a day. Splitting the tasting saves your palate and salvages your sobriety. And, oh, yeah, it's cheaper. •Buy a bottle: Most wineries will comp you for the tasting when you buy their wine. A few (mostly higherend operations) don't. Though we do not boycott great wineries that charge regardless of whether you buy a bottle, we agree on
principle not to buy their wine. There are too many fabulous wineries that do comp you. • Don't be shy: Talking to winery employees (most are friendly; it's in their interest, after all) sometimes nets extra tastings, but even better, it may yield great advice. And ask for recommendations; we have discovered charming, unpretentious wineries that were under the radar: Sunce in Santa Rosa and Casa Nuestra in Saint Helena. Also, if you go at midweek, the tasting rooms areless frenetic and you'll have more opportunity
to chat (and glean). • Shipping wine horn: In the past, we've mailed a case home via a shipping service, whtch cost upward of $50, plus another $10 for the box. See Wine/B6
B2
TH E BULLETINeWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
T
a M O V IES
Than iving keeps our TVsetsglowing By Diane Werts
(11 a.m.-9 p.m. Thursday,
Newsday
TLC); "Mall Cops: Mall of America" (4 p.m. Thursday-7 a.m. Friday, Destination America).
On the day you give thanks for everything else in your life, you can also give thanks for TV, with TV. The tube is
offering comedy and drama
Movies/miniseries
"The K ar a t e Ki d" marathons, film festivals and o ther view i n g (9 a.m.-5 p.m. events, extending Ty gpoT LIGHT into th e h o l iday again 5 p.m.weekend. I a.m., G4). F ilm classics for k i d s Vintage comedy marathons (8:45 a.m.-8 p.m. Thursday, "Leave It to Beaver" (from Turner C lassic M o vies). late Wednesday midnight to Studio-era family faves inFriday morning at 3 a.m., An- clude "Anne ofGreen Gatenna TV); "Moesha" (8 a.m.-3 bles," "Lassie Come Home" p.m. Thursday, BET); "Friends" and "Little Women." "The Kennedys" (8 a.m.(11 a.m.-6 p .m. T h u rsday, 4 p.m. T h ursday, again TBS); cartoon "Rocky & Friends" (11 a.m.-7 p.m. Thurs- 8 p.m.-4 a.m., Reelz); "The day, VHI Classic); "ALF" (6 Godfather Parts 1-2" (11:30 p.m. Thursday-6 a.m. Friday, a .m. T h u r sday, a g a i n Hub); "The Dick Van D yke 8 p.m., AMC); "Hatfields 8 Show" (8 a.m.-noon Friday, TV McCoys" (6 p.m.-midnight Land). Thursday, History); "Star Wars" films (I-II, 7 p.m.Hourshows 2 a.m. Friday; I-IV, 10 a.m."House" (6 a.m. Thursday- 1 1 p.m. S a t urday; I I I 6 a.m. Friday, Universal HD); V , 1 : 30-11 p . m . S u n "Psych" (6 a .m. T h ursday- day, S p i ke); "Lone6 a.m. Friday, Cloo); 1991 some Dove" (11:30 a.m.prime-time "Dark Shadows" 6 p.m. Sunday, Encore); (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Thursday, and "The Wizard of Oz" Chiller); "Castle" (Thursday (3:45 p.m. Sunday, TBS). 10 a.m.-ll p.m., TNT); "Star Trek: The Next Generation" Holiday TV "It's (Thursday noon-Friday 6 a.m., a S p ongeBob BBC America); Kelsey Gram- Christmas" (9:30 p .m. mer's "Boss" (Saturday-Sun- Friday, CBS / 2 ) pr eday 1-10 p.m., StarzCinema). mieres afterCBS encores "Frosty the Snowman" (8 Reality/documentary p.m.), "Frosty R eturns" "Unlikely Animal Friends" (8:30 p.m.), "Hoops & (8-10p.m. Fridayand Saturday, Yoyo R ui n C h r i s tmas" NatGeo Wild). New look at (9 p.m.) and "Jingle and unusual e m otional b o n ds: Bell's Christmas Star" (8 rhino and sheep, owl and cat, p.m. Friday, Hallmark). "Home Alone: The Holidog and donkey. day Heist" (8 p.m. Sunday,
Unscripted marathons
ABC Family). Comedy
" Tattoo N i g htmares" ( 9 a.m.-noon Thursday) and "Ink Master" (noon-8 p.m. Thurs-
sequel debuts after 1990's original hit "Home Alone"
day, Spike); "Breaking Amish"
(6 p.m. Sunday, and 8 p.m. Saturday).
LOCAL MOVIE TIMES FOR WEDNESDAY,NOV. 21
BEND Regal Pilot Butte 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347
ARGO(R) 12:15, 3, 5:45, 9 A LATEQUARTET(R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:25 LINCOLN(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6, 9:15 THE SESSIONS (R) 1, 4, 7,9:35 SKYFALL(PG-13) Noon, 3:15, 6:30, 9:40 THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING DAWN —PART2 (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:15, 9:10
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX 680S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend, 541-382-6347
ARGO(R) 12:40, 3:30, 6:15, 9:15 CLOUDATLAS(R) 12:20, 4:05, 7:50 FLIGHT(R) 10:40 a.m., 3:10, 6:20, 9:30 LIFE OF PI3-D (PG) 12:50, 3:25, 4:15, 7:10, 9:25, 10:05 LIFE OF PI(PG) 12:30, 6:30 LINCOLN(PG-13) 10:50 a.m., 12:05, 3:05, 4:25, 6:25, 7:45, 9:45 PITCH PERFECT (PG-13) 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 10:15 RED DAWN(PG-13) 1, 3:45, 7, 9:45 RISE OFTHEGUARDIANS (PG) 10:35 a.m., 1:20, 3:55, 7:35, 10:05 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS 3-D (PG) 10:55 a.m., 1:30, 4:40, 7:25, 10 SKYFALL(PG-13) 10:35 a.m., 12:15, 3:35, 6:45, 9:55 SKYFALLIMAX(PG-13) 10:45 a.m., 1:55, 6:35, 9:50 THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING DAWN —PART2 (PG-13) 10:30 a.m., noon, 2, 3, 4 50, 6:05, 8, 9:10
"The Odd Life Of Timothy Green" is playing at McMenamins Old St. Francis School.
EDITOR'S NOTES: Accessibility devices are
available for somemovies
Disney wa The Associated Press
WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) 10:30 a.m., 1:10, 3:50, 6:50, 9:35
McMenamins Old St. Francis School 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562
THE EXPENDABLES 2 (R) 9 THE ODDLIFEOFTIMOTHY GREEN
(PG) 3 TROUBLEWITH THE CURVE (PG-13)6 After 7 p.m., shoivsare 21 and older only.Youngerthan21may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompaniedby a legalguardian.
Tin Pan Theater
WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) 11:15a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45
at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 tI lMAX. • There may be an additional fee for 3-Oand IMAX films. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
PRINEVILLE
SISTERS Sisters Movie House
Pine Theater
720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800
214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014
RISE OF THEGUARDIANS (PG) LINCOLN(PG-13) 3:15, 6:30 Noon, 2:30, 5, 7:30 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS (PG)4:45, THE TWILIGHTSAGA:BREAKING 7:15 DAWN —PART2 (UPSTAIRS SKYFALL(PG-I3) 3:30, 6:45 — PG-13) 4, 7 THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING Pine Theater's upstairs screening DAWN —PART2 (PG-13) 7 room has limited accessibility. WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) 4:45
MADRAS
869 N W Tin PanAlley Bend, 541-241-2271
Madras Cinema 5
PLANES, TRAINSAND AUTOMOBILES(R) 6 TAI CHI ZERO (PG-13) 8:30
1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
REDMOND Redmond Cinemas 1535 S.W. DdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
RISE OFTHEGUARDIANS (PG) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7 SKYFALL(PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2:30, 5:45 THETWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING DAWN — PART2(PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 1:15, 4, 6:45
RED DAWN(PG-I3) 5:15, 7:20, 9:35 RISEOF THE GUARDIANS 3-D (PG) 5, 7:10, 9:25 SKYFALL(PG-13) 3:40, 6:30, 9:20 THETWILIGHTSAGA:BREAKING DAWN — PART2 (PG-13) 4:35, 7, 9:30 WRECK-ITRALPH(PG) 4:30,6:50, 9:10
r bm C
To t al Care"
Bend Memorial Clinic m e one
mplements
HAVEN HOME STYLE 'Furniture nnd Gesi jn 856 NW Bond• Downtown Bend• 541-330-5999 www.havenhomestyle.com
t 541-322-7337
call
541-382-4900
HOME INTERIORS 70 SW Century Dr. Smtetae Bend. OR en02 www compiementahome com
for appointments
STARTS TODAY! REGALPILOTBUTTE6 2717 U.S. 20• 541-317-8309 www.regmovies.com
LOCAL TV LI S TINr.S WEDNESDAY PRIME TIME 11/21/1 2
ALSO INHD;ADD600 TOCHANNELNo •
KATU
I'j
'
*In HD, thesechannels run three hours ahead. l Sports programming mayvary. BD-BendlRedmondlsisters/BlackButte Di ital PM-Prineville/Madras SR-Sunriver L-LaPine
•
fRRRX~RKHK~RKR2RRRK~RRK~RREK~RKR2RREI~~RRKREEK~XKEH t EHK~RDiRH t 1RK KATU News World News K A TU News at 6 (N) n cc Jeopardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune A Charlie BrownThanksgiving 'G' Modern Family Suburgatory n Private Practice (N) n '14' cc KA TU News (11:35) Nightline
Nightly News Newsohannel 21 at 8 (N) « Jeop ardy! 'G' Wheel Fortune Whitney n 'PG' Guys With Kids Law & Order: SVU C hicago Fire Two Families '14' N e ws Jay Leno News Evening News Access H. Ol d Christine How I Met 30 Rock n '14' Survivor: Philippines (N) n cc C r iminal Minds (N) n '14' CSI: Crime Scene Investigation News Letterman K EZI 9 News KEZI 9 News Entertainment The Insider (N) A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving 'G' Modern Family Suburgatory n Private Practice (N) n '14' « KEZ I 9 News (11:35) Nightline 0 KEZI 9 News World News Big Bang The X Faotar HepefulS perfOrm. (N) n '14' cc News KFXO iDi IEI IEIIEI AmeriCa'SFunnieet HOmeVideOS TWO/Half Men TWO/Half Men Big Bang TMZ (N) n 'PG' The Simpsons Family Guy '14' Nature MyLife as aTurkey 'PG' NOVA Inside the Megastorm'G ' N OVA scienceNOWn 'PG' Oregon Experience Koae O B Q B Wild Kratts Y Electric Comp. Equitrekking B usiness Rpt. PBS NewBHour(N) n « NewsChannel 8 NightlyNews Newsohannel 8 News Live at 7 (N) I n side Edition Whitney n 'PG' Guys With Kids Law & Order: SVU Chicago FireTwoFamilies '14' N e wsohannel 8 Jay Leno KGW 0 "Planes, Trains andAutomobiles" (1987) SteveMartin. n Seinfeld 'PG' Seinfeld 'PG' 'Til Death 'PG' 'Til Death 'PG' KTVZDT2tEI 0 B tH We ThereYet? We There Yet? King of Queens King of Queens Engagement Engagement * * * Baking Made Taste This! 'G' Outnumbered Last of Wine S herlock Holmes 'G' cc Doc Martin Dn theEdge'PG' Wor ld News T a vis Smiley (N) Charlie Rose (N) n 'G' cc PBS NewBHour n cc OPBPL 175 173
KTvz 0 0 0 0 News
KBNZ 0 K OHD 0 0 0
*ASIE 130 28 18 32 The First 48 '14' «
DuckDynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty (3:00) **** "Gone Wi t h the Wi nd" (1939, Romance)Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard.Civil War rogueRhett **** "Gone Withthe Wind" (1939, Romance)Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard.Civil WarrogueRhett Butler loves Southernbelle Scarlett O'Hara. *AMC 102 40 39 cc Butler lovesSouthern belle Scarlett O'Hara. cc *ANPL 68 50 26 38 Rattlesnake Republic '14' cc Rat t lesnake Republic 'PG' cc Ri v er Monsters: Unhooked Lair of Giantsn 'PG' cc River Monsters: UnhookedSearchingfor an actual "Jaws." n 'PG' River Monsters: Unhooked 'PG' BRAVO1 37 4 4 Top Chef: Seattle Top Chef: Seattle '14' Real Housewives/Beverly The Real Housewives of Atlanta Life After Top Chef (N) (10:01) TopChef: Seattle (N) (11:01) LDLwork Top Chef CMT 190 32 42 53 Extreme Makeover: HomeEdition Reba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc R eba 'PG' cc T he 46th Annual CMAAwards n 'PG' cc CNBC 54 36 40 52 ** "Walt:TheManBehind the Myth" (2001,Documentary) 'G' American Greed Mad Money Mark Zuckerberg: Inside Face. A merican Greed Quit Your Job! Supersmile 'PG' CNN 55 38 35 48 Anderson Cooper360 (N) cc P i e rs Morgan Tonight (N ) Ande rson Cooper360 cc Erin Burnett OutFront Piers MorganTonight Anderson Cooper360 cc Erin Burnett OutFront coM 135 53 135 47(4:57) Futurama Always Sunny Always Sunny (6:29) Tosh.0 Colbert Report Daily Show C h appelle Show Key 8 Peele S outh Park ImaginationlThe and:Trilogy 'MA' « Key & Peele(N) Daily Show C o lbert Report COTV 11 Dept./Trans. C i ty Edition B e nd City Council Work Session Bend City Council Kristi Miller Ci t y Edition CSPAN 61 20 12 11 Capitol Hill Hearings Capitol Hill Hearings *DIS 87 43 14 39 Shake It Up! 'G' A.N.T. Farm 'G' Phineae, Ferb Shake It Up! n JeSSie 'G' cc DOg With a BIOg *** "BOlt" (2008) VeiCeS OfJOhnTraVOlta. n Phineae, Ferb GOOd-Charlie Ph ineae, Ferb GOOd.oharlie Sh ake It Up! n *DISC 156 21 16 37 Moonshiners n '14' « Moonshiners A Price toPay'14' Moonshiners n '14' « Moonshiners Rise 'nShine! '14' M oonshiners (N) n '14' « Moonshiners (N) n '14' « Moonshiners n '14' « *E! 1 36 2 5 A-List Listings Nicki Minai: My Nicki Minai: My Nicki Minai: My The Soup '14' The Soup '14' Chelsea Lately E! News Celebrity Confessions Ice LovesCoco Dateline on E! E! News (N) ESPN 21 23 22 23 NBA Basketball LosAngeles Clippersat OklahomaCity Thunder (N) Co l lege BasketballSports EA MauiInvitational, Final: TeamsTBA(N) S p ortscenter (N) (Live) « Sportsoenter (N)(Live) « sportscenter (N)(Livel « ESPN2 22 24 21 24 College Basketball College Basketball NITSeasonTip-Off —Michigan vs. Pittsburgh (N) N P L Live (N) cc Best of the NPL NBA Tonight (N) NPL Live cc Sportsoenter ESPNC 23 25 123 25 College Football FromNov.22, 1997. « College Football FromNov. 18,2006. « College Football FromNov. 27,2010. « College Football Played11i30i74. ESPNN 24 63 124203SportsCenter (N)(Live) cc Sportsoenter (N)(Live) cc Sportsoenter (N)(Live) cc Sportsoenter (N)(Live) cc H-Lite Ex. H-L ite Ex. H.L i te Ex. H-L i te Ex. ESP NFC Press H-Lite Ex. ***"WillyWonkaandthe Chocolate Factory" (1971) GeneWilder, Jack Albertson. *** "Charlie and theChocolate Factory"(2005) JohnnyDepp, Freddie Highmore. FAM 67 29 19 41 (3:30) "Miracle on34th Street" The 700 Club n 'G' « FNC 57 61 36 50 The O'Reilly Factor (N) cc Hannity (N) On Record, GretaVanSusteren The O'Reilly Factor cc Hannity On Record, Greta VanSusteren The Five *FOOD 177 62 98 44 BestDishes P a ula'soooking Diners,Drive D iners,Drive R estaurant:Impossible'G' Restaurant: Impossible 'G' Restaurant: Impossible (N) Res t aurant Stakeout (N) Restaurant: Impossible 'G' FX 131 (4:00) * "Grownups" (2010) Two iHalf Men TwoiHalf Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men ** "X-Men:TheLastStand"(2006,Action)HughJackman. American Horror Story: Asylum American Horror Story: Asylum HGTV 176 49 33 43 Love It or List It Smyth « Love It or List It 'G' « House Hunters Renovation 'G' P r operty Brothers 'G' « Buying and Selling (N) 'G' « Hou s e Hunters Hunters Int'I P r operty Brothers 'G' « *HIST 155 42 41 36 Restoration R e storation R e storation R e storation R e storation R e storation R e storation R e storation R e storation R e storation C a jun Pawn C ajun Pawn R estoration R e storation LIFE 138 39 20 31 My Life Is a Lifetime Movie 'PG' The Houstons The Houstons The Houstons The Houstons The Houstons The Houstons The Houstons The Houstons My Life Is a Lifetime Movie '14' M y Life Is a Lifetime Movie '14' MSNBC 59 59 128 51 The Ed Show(N) TheRachelMaddow Show (N) The Last W ord The Ed Show The Rachel MaddowShow The Last Word Hardball With Chris Matthews MTV 192 22 38 57 (4:50) Jersey Shore n '14' « Jers ey Shore Merp Walk n '14' J e rsey Shore n '14' « Jersey Shore n '14' « Jersey Shore n '14' « Jersey Shore n '14' « Jersey Shore Jersey Shore NICK 82 46 24 40 *** "The SpongeeobSquarePantsMovie" (2004) n cc Drake & Joshn 'Y7' cc Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' Full House'G' The Nanny'PG' TheNanny'PG' Fri ends n 'PG' (11:33) Friends OWN 161103 31 103Main Street M a i n Street Ma i n Street Ma i n Street Ma i n Street Ma i n Street Un d ercover Boss n 'PG' « Undercover Boss n 'PG' « Undercover Boss n 'PG' « Und e rcover Boss n PG « ROOT 20 45 28* 26 Bensinger Mark FewShow Seahawks U EFA Champions LeagueSoccerManchesterCi tyFC vsRealMadridCF(N) College Basketball Colorado State at Denver(N)(Live) The DanPatrick Show ** "Eddie Murphy Raw"(1987) EddieMurphy. Premiere. n « SPIKE 132 31 34 46 (4:30) *** "AnyGivenSunday"(1999, Drama)Al Pacino, CameronDiaz. Premiere. n « Eddie Murphy: OneNight Only n '14' Deal-Dark Side Deal-Dark Side Ghost Hunters n 'PG' cc SYFY 133 35 133 45Haunted Collector Ghost Hunters n cc Ghost Hunters City Hell n cc Gho st Hunters n 'PG' cc Ghost Hunters (N) n cc TBN 05 60 130 Behind Scenes Turning Point Joseph Prince End of the Age *** "Amazing Grace" (2006)loan Gruffudd,RomolaGarai. Always Good Jesse Duplantis The Christmas Creflo Dollar F all Praise-A-Thon *TBS 16 27 11 28 Friends n '14' Friends n '14' King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld 'PG' Seinfeld 'PG' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' Big Bang Big Bang Con a n '14' cc ****"To Killa Mockingbird" (1962)Gregory Peck. Alawyerdefends anin- (715) **** "Gone Withthe Wind" (1939, Romance)Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, Leslie Howard.Civil Warrogue RhettButler loves Southernbelle Scarlett (1115) ***"Wise B/ood" (1979) TCM 101 44 101 29 nocent blackmanfor rapein1930s Alabama. «(DVS) O'Hara. Brad Dourif, Amy Wright. *TLC 178 34 32 34 American GypsyWedding Here Comes Here Comes H ere Comes H ere Comes H ere Comes H ere Comes H ere Comes H ere Comes H ere Comes HoneyBoo Boo 'PG' Here Comes Here Comes *TNT 17 26 15 27 Castle Pretty Dead n 'PG' cc The Mentalist n '14' cc The Mentalist RedHerring n '14' Castle A Rosefor Everafter 'PG' Castle Sucker Punch'PG' cc Cas t le The Third Man 'PG' « Per c eption Kilimanjaro '14' cc eTOON 84 NiniaGo: Mstrs NiniaGo: Mstrs NiniaGo: Mstrs NiniaGo: Mstrs NiniaGo: Mstrs NiniaGo: Mstrs Dragons: Riders Lego StarWars King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy '14' Family Guy '14' 'TRAV 179 51 45 42 Man v. Food'G' Man v. Food 'G' Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. FoodNation 'G' cc Bggage Battles Bggage Battles Toy Hunter 'PG' Toy Hunter 'PG' Manliest Restaurants 2 Barbecue Paradise 'G' cc M*A*S'H 'PG' M'A'S*H 'PG' M*A'S*H 'PG' CosbyShow Cosby Show Cosby Show Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Hot, Cleveland Hap. Divorced Love-Raymond Love-Raymond TVLND 65 47 29 35 Bonanza Jonah'PG' cc n 'PG' cc NCIS Murderedmodel. 'PG' cc NC I S BoxednIn 'PG' cc NCIS LightSleeper n 'PG' cc NC I S Head Case n 'PG' cc NCIS FamilySecret n 'PG' cc C o v e rt Affairs Lady Stardust 'PG' USA 15 30 23 30 NCIS Frame-Up Couples Therapy rt '14' Couples Therapy o '14' Couples Therapy(N) rt '14' Cou p les Therapy rt '14' VH1 191 48 37 54 (4:45) Couples Therapy rr '14' (5:50) CouplesTherapy rt '14' C o uples Therapy rt '14' •
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012• THE BULLETIN
B3
ADVICE & ASTROLOGY
Male servergetswrong kind of gratuity at country club Dear Abby: My 24-year-old daughter and 21-year-old son work as banquet servers at a local country club. Many of the receptions at which they serve includeguests consuming large amounts of alcohol. If an intoxicated male guest made suggestive comments to my daughter or touched her, he would be asked to leave the facility. But what is my son supposed to do when an intoxicated woman, usually much older than he, pinches his backside and makes inappropriate comments or "invitations"'? My son isn't a prude. His sense of humor allows him to "laugh it off," but it happens often and he is becoming annoyed. In fact, he'll say, "Mom, it's pretty gross!" Abby, what are these woman thinking? What should he do to promote self-respect but not cause an uncomfortable atmosphere for himself and the guests? — Curious Mom in New Jersey
Dear Mom: The employee protection rules are no different for males than they are for females. What your son should do first is document the incidents with dates, times and the women involved.He should then report their behavior to the banquet supervisor at the country club. I'm sure the person in charge will want to know, because if the sexual harassment isn't stopped, it could result in a very embarrassing — and possibly costly — lawsuit against the club. Dear Abby:I recently began dating a widowed co-worker. We are both private people and we have kept our personal lives out of the workplace. Only our close friends at work know we are dating. The issue we now face is the
office gossip queen has spotted us out and about, and is asking all our friends about whether or not we're dating. We barely know this woman
DEAR ABBY and don't care much for her. How do I p o l itely respond when people start asking me about my boyfriend? I'm concerned that if I tell them we'reseeing each other, I'll be treated differently because he had been widowed only a short time. I have spent my entire life avoiding the drama machine, and now I'm afraid I'll be thrown onto center stage. Please help me. — Drama-free Mouse Dear Mouse:Face it, your secret is out. If you prefer not to discuss your private life, all you have to do is say so to those who question you out of curiosity. But why are you afraid that you'll be treated differently? Whether y ou r c o - worker's wife died two weeks or two months ago, he is available. Widowers have told me that women h a v e ap p r oached them within DAYS of their wives' funerals. You're acting
like you feel guilty for being happy. For both of your sakes, please stop feeling like you're doing something wrong. Dear Readers:I am pleased to offer the traditional Thanksgiving Prayer that was penned by my dear mother, Pauline Phillips. N o Th a n ksgiving w ould be complete for m e without it. Oh, Heavenly Father, We thank Thee for food and remember the hungry. We thank Thee for health and remember thesick. We thank Thee for freedom and remember the enslaved. May these remembrances stir us to service, That Thy gifts to us may be used for others. Amen. — Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Horoscope:HappyBirthday for Wednesday,Nov.21, 2012 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) By Jacqueline Bigar ** * * You pick up on many This year you might find that you are under pressure more often than different vibes, some of which are not. As a result, you frequently send in conflict with each other. The best move is to do nothing until you are out mixed messages. Fortunately, sureabout how youfeel.Someone many people who surround you you look up to cannot express are positive, and their energy floats enough gratitude for how you toward you. If you are single, you'll handle yourself. Tonight: Run with need to work hard if you want to someone's plans. stayunattached,asyoucould have more than one suitor coming LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) forward at the same time. If you ** * Pace yourself and expect are attached, the two of you might to complete whatyou must. From decide to plan and take that special late afternoon on, an important trip. You also will benefit from a phonecallcould come in.Beopen romantic weekend or two away. and listen to what is happening; PISCES likes how you think. be willing to share your feelings. Give that person an extra boost of The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; confidence. Tonight: Hang out. 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * * * Y our imagination carries ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You are coming from an you far and demonstrates an ability to reframe any situation. You easily anchored position, though you will will lend an ear to help a loved one want to hold back a little bit. Gain more knowledge as to what types of who is burdened with a financial or people you might need to deal with. emotional decision. Venus enters your sign and increases your Discussions with a key associate desirability. Tonight: A midweek point to the correct direction. break. Tonight: Do your thing. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * D on't hold back, even if you ** * Emotions could run high, feel like you don't have enough clout as you might feel backed into a corner. Remember, this is justyour to speak up. Takeyour time making perception. If you can alter your a decision; otherwise, you could understanding of the situation, you be extravagant in decisions about will discover a way out. A surge of money, food, feelings, etc. The reaction of a key person could be up compassion and energy will push you forward. Tonight: Head home. in the air. Tonight: Work as a team. CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan.19) GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * T ake a stand and carefully ** * * * Y our words make a big consider what you hear. Even if you difference to a friend. This friendship feel100 percent correct now, others might not be strictly platonic on one side. You need to be careful might notfeel the same. You can with your words and also with this handle a lot of pressure, and you will find a way that lets both you and person's feelings. You will get a lot someone else be right. Tonight: Go done, despite being overwhelmed. Tonight: Where the action is. with a friend's suggestion. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) CANCER(June 21-July 22) ** * * Your possessive side comes ** * * R each out for more out when dealing with a financial information. You might not have matter. You know what is correct, a situation under control as much so follow through accordingly. A as you might like. Tap into your meeting late in the day lets you know creativity, and allow someone to that you made the right decision. share more of his or her thoughts Tonight: Leta meeting move into and feelings. Together, you will make a great team. Tonight: Enjoy dinner or munchies. the moment. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * * You are all smiles, and LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * You move slowly into your you know which wayto go. Your sense of what works comes from a day, feeling full of energy by late afternoon. Follow through on what family member. You sometimes feel overwhelmed by your personal life. you must do, but leave some free time for yourself. You flourish when Reach out to a special friend or a you indulge your personal interests. loved one who offers you a different perspective. Tonight: Yours to play It is important to have a healthy balance of fun and work. Tonight: A out. friend chimes in. © 2012 by King Features Syndicate
O M M U N IT Y
A LE N D A R
Pleaseemail event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY SURVIVOR:ANIMALS ADAPT!: Learn about animal adaptations to dramatic environmental shifts in the High Desert, featuring live animals; $7, $5 for members plus museum admission; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www .highdesertmuseum.org. SHANESIMONSEN:The Washington-based singersongwriter performs, with Selfless Riot; 6 p.m.; Green Plow Coffee Roasters, 436 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-516-1128. "SLEEPWALK WITH ME": A screening of the unrated comedy by Mike Birbiglia about an aspiring stand-up comedian's experience with sleepwalking; $9 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www .towertheatre.org. "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern Productions presents a dark musical comedy portraying history's most famous Submitted photo presidential assassins; $21, $18 Learn about animal adaptations to dramatic environmental shifts in the High Desert during students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; "Survivor: Animals Adapt!" at 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. at the High Desert Museum through Satur2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. day. Entry is $7 plus museum admission. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-3129626, 2ndstreettheater@gmail .com or www.2ndstreettheater "AN EVENINGWITH EBENEZER": Maragas Winery, 15523 S.W. U.S. CIVIL WARFUNDRAISER:Watch .com. Highway 97, Culver; 541-546-5464 Oregon State University and the Sunriver Stars Community or www.maragaswinery.com. University of Oregon football teams Theater presents a reader's theater adaptation of the Charles Dickens play; event also features food, GRANDILLUMINATION:With a drinks, activities and a cannedfood classic, "A Christmas Carol"; $5 THURSDAY magic show, a parade, arts and adults, $3 children and seniors; crafts, live music, food and more; free drive for Bethlehem Inn; a portion of proceeds benefit the Sparrow 2 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners GINGERBREADJUNCTION:A admission; 4 p.m.; Sunriver Resort, Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Club;$7or$5with onecan offood; display of gingerbread houses 17600 Center Drive; 800-486-8591 or opens; through Dec.29; free; www.sunriver-resort.com/traditions. noon, doors open at11 a.m.; Century Overlook Road; dramama@comcast Center, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; .net or www.sunriverstars.com. Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center SISTERSTREELIGHTING: The 541-788-9521. Drive; 541-593-4609 or www. lighting of the Christmastree, sunriver-resort.com/gingerbreadCIVIL WAR FUNDRAISER: Watch with carolers, speechesand more; junction-sunrivenphp. Oregon State University and the donations of nonperishable food MONDAY University of Oregon football teams BEND TURKEYTROT: 5K and requested; 5:30 p.m.; Barclay Park, 10K races through northwest PUNCHBROTHERS:The bluegrass West CascadeAvenue andAsh Street; play; event also features snacks and a raffle; proceeds benefit Bend; registration required; fusion group performs; $25-$50 541-549-0251 or www.sisters Sunriver area youth scholarship proceeds benefit the La Pine plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, country.com. and enrichment programs; $10, Community Kitchen; with a 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317"THESOUND OF MUSIC" SING$7 children; noon; Sunriver canned food drive; $7-$25, see 0700 or www.towertheatre.org. ALONG: Watch the1965 G-rated film Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation website for price details; 9 a.m.; Center, 57250 Overlook Road; N.W. Bonneville Loop; www.bend and sing along with the characters; $20 plus fees; 6:30 p.m.;Tower 541-550-6413. turkeytrot.com. Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend;541TUESDAY CIVIL WAR FUNDRAISER: Watch BGCCO TURKEYTROT: 5K and 317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. Oregon State University and the 10K races through the Old Mill "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern University of Oregon football teams CONVERSATIONSON BOOKS District and along the Deschutes AND CULTURE:Readand discuss Productions presents a dark musical play; event also features food and River; registration required; "Ceremony" by Leslie Marmon comedy portraying history's most a silent auction; proceeds benefit proceeds benefit Girls on the famous presidential assassins; Chimps Inc.; registration requested; Silko; followed by a discussion; Run; $9-$25, see website for free; 4-5 p.m.; Central Oregon $55; noon, doors open at11 a.m.; price details; 9 a.m.; Les Schwab $21, $18 students and seniors; Hooker Creek Ranch, 65525 Gerking Community College, Campus 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312- Market Road, Bend; 541-389-5853 Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bgcco Bend; 541-383-3782. 9626, 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or www.chimps-inc.org. turkeytrot.com. "BRINGOUT YOUR DEAD!" or www.2ndstreettheater.com. CIVILWAR FOOTBALL GAME: I LIKE PIEFUNRUN: Run or walk LECTURE SERIES: Featuring a View the Civil War clash between "FLOW STATE": A screening of 2K, 5K, 10K or10 miles and presentation on "Vampires and the Ducks and the Beavers on Pine the Warren Miller film about skiing eat pie; with a baking contest; thePeopleWho LoveThem";free; Theater's big screen; party food and snowboarding; $10; 7:30 p.m.; registration required; donations included; $10;1 p.m., doors open at 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center benefit Neighborlmpact; $5 noon; Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., Community College, Hitchcock Drive; 800-486-8591 or www Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, and five cans of food; 9 a.m.; Prineville; 541-416-1014. .sunriver-resort.com. FootZone, 845 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-383-7786. GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A JAZZATTHEOXFORD:Featuring a Bend; 541-749-0540, angela© HISTORY PUB:A presentation by display of lighted and mechanical footzonebend.com or www.foot performance by trumpeter Jeremy author and historian SteveLent on Christmas decorations; display Pelt; $49 plus fees in advance; zonebend.com. the pictorial history of Madras; free; through Dec. 24; free; 1-7 p.m.; 8 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. FAMILY KITCHEN Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. 7 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382School, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; 541Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 THANKSGIVING DINNER: Share 382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. a traditional, home-cooked meal 8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. or grimes©crestviewcable.com. The reggae-rock band with the community; free; 11a.m.- THE STEADIES: "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern 3 p.m.; St. Helens Hall,231 N.W. performs, with TheBoomBooms; Productions presents a dark musical Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-610-6511 $5; 9:30 p.m.; Silver MoonBrewing 8 comedy portraying history's most WEDNESDAY Taproom, 24 N.W.GreenwoodAve., or www.familykitchen.org. famous presidential assassins; $21, Bend; 541-388-8331 or $18 students and seniors; 2 p.m.; THANKSGIVINGDINNER FOR Nov. 28 www.silvermoonbrewing.com. 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. SENIORS:Share a home-cooked GRAVITY RESEARCHPROJECT: The Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A meal with senior members of display of lighted and mechanical Eugene-based band plays live dub 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or thecommunity;$7.50;noonChristmas decorations; open www.2ndstreettheater.com. music, with Eleven Eyes; $3; 5 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, through Dec. 24; free; 2-6 p.m.; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; SISTERSCHRISTMASPARADE: Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or 54 I-382-0118. Christmas floats, photos with Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 www.astroloungebend.com. Santa and more; 2 p.m.; downtown or grimes@crestviewcable.com. Sisters; 541-549-0251 or www KNOW HUMOR:THE FUN & ART .sisterscountry.com. OF IMPROVCOMEDY: Learnabout FRIDAY JAZZATTHEOXFORD:Featuring a SATURDAY improvisational comedy from the performance by trumpeter Jeremy RAKU POTTERYSALE:The local improv troupe Triage; free; WONDERLAND EXPRESSAUCTION: Pelt; $49 plus fees in advance; 5 p.m.; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Raku Artists of Central Oregon A silent auction of unique creations; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. host a sale of handcrafted Library, Brooks Room,601 N.W. proceeds benefit Wonderland Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www pottery; free admission; 9:30 Express' annual event; free 8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. .deschuteslibrary.org/calendan a.m.-4 p.m.; The Environmental admission; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sunriver Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., REDMOND STARLIGHTHOLIDAY "GREENFIRE— ALDO LEOPOLD Resort Great Hall, 17728 Abbott Bend;541-610-5684. PARADE: Themed "The Island of AND ALAND ETHIC FOR OUR TIME": Drive; 541-593-4405 or www Misfit Toys"; free; 5 p.m.; downtown A screening of the documentary SURVIVOR:ANIMALS ADAPT!: .wonderlandexpress.com. Redmond; 541-923-5191. about the conservationist Aldo Learn about animal adaptations SALE:The Raku Leopold; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; to dramatic environmental shifts RAKU POTTERY REDMOND CHRISTMASTREE Central Oregon Community College, in the High Desert, featuring live Artists of Central Oregon host a LIGHTING:Santa Claus lights up Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. animals; $7, $5 for members plus sale of handcrafted pottery; free the holidaytree, live music; 6 p.m.; museum admission; 11 a.m. and admission; 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Centennial Park, Seventh Street and College Way,Bend; 541-728-3812 or Evergreen Avenue; 541-923-5191 or www.onda.org. 1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, Environmental Center, 16 N.W. www.visitredmondoregon.com. 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; Kansas Ave., Bend;541-610-5684. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: THE 541-382-4754 or www.high TEMPEST":Starring Audrey Luna SISTERSTURKEYTROT:5K and "ASSASSINS":Thoroughly Modern desertmuseum.org. 10K road races; free, registration Productions presents a dark musical and Isabel Leonard in an encore performance of Shakespeare's required; with a canned food drive comedy portraying history's most WONDERLANDEXPRESS masterpiece; opera performance for Sisters Kiwanis Club Food Bank; famous presidential assassins; AUCTION:A silent auction of transmitted in high definition; $18; nonperishable food donations $21, $ l8 students and seniors; 7:30 unique creations; proceeds 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium accepted; 11 a.m.; downtown p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. benefit Wonderland Express' Sisters; www.bendturkeytrot.com. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626, 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse annual event; free admission; Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. 2ndstreettheater@gmail.com or 11:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Sunriver SURVIVOR:ANIMALS ADAPT!: www.2ndstreettheatencom. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read Resort Great Hall, 17728 Abbott Learn about animal adaptations to and discuss "A Visitfrom the Goon Drive; 541-593-4405 or www dramatic environmental shifts in the JAZZATTHEOXFORD:Featuring a Squad" by Jennifer Egan; free; 6:30 .wonderlandexpress.com. performance by trumpeter Jeremy High Desert, featuring live animals; p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Pelt; $49 plus fees in advance; $7, $5 for members plus museum GRIMES'CHRISTMAS Cedar St.; 541-312-1074 or www 8 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. admission; 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.; SCENE:A display of lighted .deschuteslibrary.org/calendan HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382and mechanical Christmas 8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. decorations; open through Dec. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or 24; free; 2-7 p.m.; Crook County www.highdesertmuseum.org. Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., WINERY BARREL TASTING: Taste THURSDAY Prineville; 541-447-5006 or wines and eat local food; with music SUNDAY grimes@crestviewcable.com. Nov. 29 by Jim Lee and Susan Benson; donations benefit Neighborlmpact; GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A WINERY BARRELTASTING: GRIMES'CHRISTMAS SCENE:A $5 with four cans of nonperishable display of lighted andmechanical Taste wines and eat local display of lighted and mechanical food required, $10 without; 11 a.m.- Christmas decorations; open through Christmas decorations; display will be food; with music by Johnny 6 p.m.; Maragas Winery, 15523 Dec. 24; free;1-7 p.m.; CrookCounty Corona; donations benefit open through Dec. 24; free; 2-6 p.m.; S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Culver; Fairgrounds, 1280 S.Main St., Neighborlmpact; $5 with four Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. 541-546-5464 or www.maragas Prineville; 541-447-5006 or grimes@ Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5006 or cans of nonperishable food crestviewcable.com. required, $10 without; 3-8 p.m.; winery.com. grimes@crestviewcable.com.
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By FRANK STEWART
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Didier Levy, a Frenchman, has developed software that lets you play n ewspaper-column d e al s in t e r actively. To tr y i t f o r f r ee , see Vubridge.com. Many w r i ters are represented there. Levy has also s tarted V - G r een , an onl i n e "magazine."For a modest fee, you r eceive 4 8 n e w d e al s t o p l a y interactively each month. Noted teacher/writer Eddie Kantar provided today's deal. Against four hearts, West leads the K-A of spades, and East follows high-low. West leads the jack next, and East ruffs. On V-Green, you will be prompted to say what East should do next.
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DOWN 1 Class that requires little effort 2 Play the role of 3 Certain pro's selections 4 When repeated, an enthusiastic shout 5 Table tennis tools 6 Field 7 Brush partner 8 Gearshift topper 9 "My Way" singer 10 Dramatic noshow 11 Roulette bet choice 12 Mauna 13 Cook in oil 21 Be unwell 22 Good ones don't
go unpunished,
so they say 25 Change for the better 26 Below the belt 28 "Eek!" inducer 29 Take down a peg 31 Pitney's partner 32 Colorful warning, often say 33 Evangelical hot 45 Soup can painter spot Warhol I 2 3 4 46 Schubert's "The 14 King" 47 Gaming cube
48 Four-song discs, briefly 50 Sound system 52 Venetian marketplace 57 Phone line difficulty ... and what literally appears four times in 20-, 35- and 42-Across 61 Word from the flock 63 "Today" anchor Hill 64 Good listeners 65 Barber's nape sprinkle 66 Starter course 67 Stake in a pot 68 It's not a true
story
69 " Dream": "Lohengrin" aria 70 Harbor skyline feature
17
20
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: S L TA AN R A RI
E D X I O N R A C HA I S R QS I UM B E O S E L E K I S L O E S IJ R V E S E E H A D
G O F 0 R
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I T N E S E E M T S 11/21/1 2
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64
65
66
67
68
69
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By Gary Cee (c)2012 Tribune Medta Services, Inc.
55
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B6 THE BULLETIN •WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
Shop
expected to lose money on some big-ticket items that Continued from B1 are priced lower elsewhere. The goal i s t o c o n vince That means November and shoppers that they can get December is the best time everything they need at the to look for sales (not Janulowest price at one location. ary, after you've received "They are trying to combat your gift card). Although showrooming, which is when gift cards are great options people come to the store, look for those hard-to-shop-for at items and then call them people, you might be doing up o n A m a z on," R ohlena them a disservice if you wait said. Target's price match, to give them their gift card for example, runs t h rough Dec. 25. For the giver: You're Dec. 16, and with online prices not getting a good deal on fluctuating daily, these deals gift cards unless you buy in can change from day to day. bulk at select stores offerBut not all price matches are ing promotions. Deals are equal, and keeping track of the easier to find on products sales can be complicated. If all during the holiday season, of this seems like too much of so encourage recipients to a bureaucratic nightmare, do take advantage of generous what Rohlena suggests: Visit return policies instead. P riceGrabber.com for p r i ce Don't commit to layaway comparisons. You've already missed Free shipping Toys R U s's r eservation Last year, 92.5 percent of on- program for its Hot Toys line retailers offered free ship- list, but luckily, that's not a ping for a portion of the holi- bad thing. Rohlena recomday season, according to the mends forgoing programs National Retail Federation's that lock you into a purShop.org. It's expected to be chase a few months after the same thisyear. There are you sign on the dotted line, retailers including Nordstrom, and that includes layaway. L.L. Bean and Z appos.com "I would argue that you that always offer free shipping shouldn't commit too early with no minimum purchase. to a l a y away p rogram," But fo r h o l iday s h opping, Rohlena said. "You might many storesare offering free cut yourself off from anothshipping an d g u a ranteeing er sale or bargain. It's better items delivered before Christ- to be a smart and informed mas if you purchase before shopper and keep up with Dec. 17. Rohlena recommends ads."Of course,you lose the looking at Freeshipping.org to guarantee of the must-have find out whether your favorite toy being under the tree. retailer is offering free shipping or to learn about promoThe Bottom Line: Many tions on select items. stores are offering holiday price matches that begin Gift card cop-out now, not after Black Friday, For the giver and for the re- so there's no need to wait cipient, this season may be the for the rush. Start shopping worst time to give a gift card. now and take advantage For the recipient: Because of of free shipping and the the h oliday p r i ce-matching friendly retail competition programs, many retail ers are that's sure to benefit you.
Skip
$150 and $500. You'll love it for a month, wear it for a Continued from B1 party and never touch the We're not saving m oney thing again because it's not when we buy things we don't all that practical. need. And w e d o n' t n e ed The best time to buy a 10-foot Santas in our yards or holiday dress — one that says "This was purchased another fake tree every year. We love the season, but it for December" — is i n has a way of bullying us into April, when those dressunnecessary purchases. Here es are 70 percent off at a are five things you don't need Neiman Marcus Last Call to spend money on this holi- or a Nordstrom Rack. If day. If you still want that giant you must purchase a dress inflatable snowman after New this month, buy a simple Year's, you'll be happy you solid-colored one that you waited until 2013. c an also wear t o w o r k . Parents,the same goes for
You do not need ...
young girls. They do not
A new television: Yes, this • is counterintuitive. If you are among the first ones in line at Walmart, Target or Best Buy on Black Friday, go ahead: Buy the severely discounted flat-screen TV. But if you don't get your hands on the advertised door buster, you probably won't get the best deal on a television. The Wall Street Journal an d D e c ide, I n c., a consumer research firm, recently sponsored a B lack Friday comparison shopping study. They found that t he average price of a Samsung 46-inch LCD television was $1,159 before Black Friday. On Black Friday, the same TV's average price was $1,355. There'sa logical reason prices might be higher during the holidays: Demand for televisions is high during winter (and football season). For the best deals, wait until March or April, when demand falls.
need to wear red or green on Christmas Eve. If you're looking to cut costs, buy a dress that can be worn for other occasions in the near future, since they won't be the same sizenext year.
1
Makeup
($14) as a part of her collection, intended to be applied before Continued from B1 base coat (yes, a primer for the "Primersgive you the sense primer), which she promises that what you're already using will help polish adhere more could be more effective and evenly, stay on longer and dry amped up, whether it's helping faster. "I want customers to your blush stay in place longer think about nail care the same or ensuring your nails won't way they think about skin chip as easily," Blitzer said. care," Lippmann said, "and "They're the Spanx of cos- this primer cleans the nails of metics, and are so prominent dirt and oil, which is just what today that a lot of women are you want to do with your face starting to feel irresponsible if before putting on makeup." they don't use them." Living Proof, a hair care It was about a decade ago company in Ca m bridge, that brands including Smash- Mass., that counts Jennifer box, La Prairie and Urban De- Aniston as an owner, recently cay introduced faceprimers. introduced one of the first hair At the time, they were mostly primers on the market. Costused by professionals on wom- ing $20 a bottle, the serumen who requiredtheir makeup like l i ght-textured p r oduct, to stay intact for several hours, intended to be massaged into such as actresses and brides. the hairbefore using sprays But they turned out to be a hit or gels, comes with the hefty with average consumers, as claim that it w il l help hairwell. styles last twice as long beVirginia Lee, a senior re- tween shampoos. search analyst at EuromoniEven the basic face primer tor International, a m a rket is becoming more specific. research company in London, Smashbox, based in Los Ansaid the company's tracking geles, now has nine face primof the category "other facial ers, priced at $32 to $42 and makeup," which includes face variously offering anti-aging primers,jumped 73 percent with SPF, hydration or corfrom 2006 to 2011, with sales rection of dark spots. And La in the United States going to Prairie said it saw such suc$46.6 million, from $26.9 mil- cess with its original primer lion. And primers (or correc- (Cellular Treatment Rose Iltors, as they are sometimes lusion Line Filler, $135), that c alled) ar e r e g ularly d i s - it was inspired to introduce a cussed, rated and traded on second one in gold ($165). review sites like makeupalley. But not everyone is buying com. the hype. Julia Dalton-Brush, "Since face primers have a makeup artist and the owner been a success and have been of Brush Beauty, a makeup stuendorsed by beauty editors, dio on Manhattan's West Side, makeup companies are tak- said that she doesn't regularly ing advantageand coming up rely on primers, even when with niche ones for the face painting the faces of models and also going beyond the fa- and actresses who are preparcial category," Lee said. ing to spend several hours in Indeed. Smashbox has de- front of a camera. " Not everyone needs t o veloped primers for the lid, under the eyes and the lashes, spend the money on primers, and is introducing one for the especially if they have good lips in 2013, according to the skin, because they don't necescompany. Urban Decay and sarily boost the performance MAC each offer eye, lip and of your products that much," l ash primers that claim t o she said. She is a fan of one for help eye shadow, lipstick and the eyelidsbecause she said mascara last longer after ap- the eyes have more creases plication. According to Nick and lines than the rest of the Gavrelis, the vice president face, and a primer can help for global product develop- keep them looking fresh for ment for MAC, the company's a lot longer than eye shadow primer category has doubled alone. But she said that there its sales within the last year. are other cheaper ways to set Deborah Lippmann, a man- foundation and lipstick, such icurist, includes a nail primer as baby powder.
Wine Continued from B1
•A cheaper way: Buy a shipping box (some wineries even give you one if you join their club and/ or even buy a couple of bottles). Fill it with your faves. On your day of departure, drive the rental car straight tothe skycap, and check your case as
on your using carry-ons — but we do that anyway. • Stay at chains: Skip the luxury hotels. You're just sleeping there, right? During the peak harvest month of September, we booked the Best Weste rn Plus Dry Creek Inn i n
Healdsburg ($100 a night, and
it was nice) and Comfort Inn Calistoga ($139 a night, and it was fantastic). Both threw a piece of luggage. (It cost us in breakfast, too. And while $25 on American Airlines.) you're scouting for meals, foThis also ensures your wine cus on spots with BYOB and won't be stewing in an over- low/no corkage fee. (Zagat. heated warehouse. This com, the o nline restaurant strategy may be contingent guide, helped us find them.)
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
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Holiday decor: This • is an obvious way to save. The National Retail Federation found that the average person will spend $51.99 this year on ornaments, lights and other decorative baubles, the most in the survey's history. That doesn't include g reeting
SOME PEOPLE DEFINE A DAY BY ITS HOURS. 3
I
cards, wrapping paper and
BY ITS
flowers. The best time to buy holiday items is Dec. 26. Use what you have in the attic and stock up on lights and ornaments the day after Christmas.
Furniture: There is al• ways the urge to buy a new dining table, new A 7-course dinner: OK, curtains or a new sofa im• OK. We are all for pig- mediately before the famging out during the holidays. ily visits for the holidays. But you may want to recon- But retailers know t h i s, sider what you feast on this and they're hoping you'll season. The price of meat is buy the sofa in November expected to rise 4 percent this instead of January. New year due to the drought in the furniture stock arrives in Midwest that caused corn and stores come February, so feed prices to rise. According to there will be massive disthe Bureau of Labor Statistics, counts on sofas and kitchsirloin prices rose by 15 percent en tables in January. Resist between 2011 and 2012. Many the temptation to spend and Americans use the holiday as wait for the sale. an excuse to splurge on luxury foods, with carnivores having The Bottom Line: Holithree or four meats on the table days are expensive enough for a holiday feast. But those with all the travel and giftfeasts will be more expensive giving. Don't waste money this year, with food prices ris- on nonessentials. Those ing and many budgets already things can wait until 2013, strapped by t h e e c onomic when you're sure to find downturn. Holidays happen true bargains. without the tastiest foods on the table, so don't feel bad about cutting back on the roast beast.
2
WE DEFINE A DAY
•I
STORIES AND THEIR IMPACT ON OUR
4
WORLD. The Bulletin To start a subscription, call
541-385-5800 •
•
10 (
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Weekly Arts Sr
A party dress: We're put• ting our f oot down o n this one, ladies. Holiday trends rarely change, but retailers will tell you they do. Every season, we see the same red, green, blue o r j e w el-toned dresses sellingfor between
3
Entertainment In
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TheBulletin
A SMALL COLLECTION OF THE IMAGES PUBLISHED
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2012 THE STORMREIGNAGAIN; 4-STAR LIFESTYLEUNDERSCRUTINY; HANDMADE GIFTSGALORE,A NEWMODEL FORCAR MUSEUMS,AMERICAN ANSWERTOTHECR-V; ISRAELPOUNDSGAZA FROMAIR; BEND'S HOME-BUILDING UPTICK;THACKERAY,86, RIGHT-WING INDIAN PARTYLEADER;. PHOTOS BY:1. MATTHEWALMONRTTI/THE BULLETIN, 2. PABLOMARTINEZMONSIVALS/ASSOCIATED PRESS; 3. JOE KLINE/THEBULLETIN; 4. JOHN GOTTBERGANDERSON/THE BULLETIN; 5. FORD MOTORCO.. 6. HATEM MOUSSA/ASSOCIATED PRESS; 7. JOHN GOTTBERGANDERSON/THE BULLETIN; 8 ANDYTULLIS/THE BULLETIN; 9.ASSOCIATEDPRESSFILEPHOTO, 10. MATTHEWALMONETTI/THE BULLETIN
News of Record, C2 Obituaries, C5 Editorials, C4 Weather, C6 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
LOCAL BRIEFING Police seek leads on poachers Troopers from the Oregon State Police Fish
and Wildlife Division are seeking the public's help
in identifying poachers who unlawfully shot and wasted four deer Friday in the Kotzman Basin
area southeast of Bend. OSP received areport Saturday from two people filming winter range deer who discovered the
four carcasses south of U.S. Highway 20 inDes-
O www.bendbulletin.com/local
REDMOND
en 0 iCerSearnawar • The OregonPeaceOfficers Association recognizesthem for their efforts inkeeping amanfrom making afatal leap
f
Morin — wereawarded the Oregon Peace Officers Association Lifesaving Award at the association's banquet last week in Grande Ronde. Morin said police received a call from garage security on June 28, saying a man was sitting on the edge of the top floor of the garage, threatening suicide. When police responded, they broke into two teams. On the ground, McConkey, Wiles and Poole tried to talk to the man, tried to get him away from the ledge. Meanwhile, Guthrie and Morin headed up the stairs. See Award /C5
By Sheila G. Miller
officers saved the man's life. "We're trying to negotiate and we try The man was perched on the edge of to draw agood outcome and see ifw e can one of Bend's tallest buildings, threaten- get anywhere with a simple conversation ing to jump. He was crying, holding a pic- and provide some resources that can help him," said Bend Police Officer Chris Moture of his daughter. The scene at the Centennial Parking rin, who helped defuse the situation. Garage in downtown Bend could have The law enforcement officials — Deended as many others do, with a suicide. tective Juli McConkey and Officers Todd But on this June day, five Bend police Guthrie, Whitney Wiles, Dave Poole and The Bulletin
chutes County. Three of the four had been
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
Peter Seitz, the owner of Sully's Restaurant, pauses briefly in the kitchen of the Redmond Senior Center. For years, Seitz has been the constant in Redmond's annual free community Thanksgiving dinner.
decapitated. Police say the deer were most likely shot Friday afternoon.
The OregonHunter's Association is offering a $500 reward for information that leads to an arrest in the case. Call the Turn-In-Poachers tip line at1-800-452-7888, or contact OSP Senior Trooper Menlow at 54141 9-1651.
Work closes1 lane of Reed Market
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The eastbound lane of Southwest Reed Market Road will be closed today from the Southwest Bond Street roundabout to Southwest Silver Lake Boulevard while crews work on median landscape rehabilitation. The road will be closed from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Detours will be in
a city's
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and cones to maintain traffic through the work
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Grassland Office plans relocation
The Seitz kids, all grown now, rarely miss a Thanksgiving. Nothing unusual in that, unless you consider the fact that for them Thanksgiving means waking up before dawn and spending the day alongside their father, cook-
Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
A Bend Garbage and Recycling truck unloads a cargoof mixed recycling Monday afternoon at its northeast Bend facility. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality has released a report about recycling rates around the state in 2011.
The Crooked River National Grassland Office will move to the Jef-
ing, cleaning and serving. Peter Seitz, owner of Sully's Restaurant in Redmond, has been the constant in a holiday tradition so longstanding no one seems to remember when it started — a free Thanksgiving meal open to everyone in the community. "One main reason I got involved with the dinner was to teach my kids how to give to others," says Seitz. Although now ranging in agefrom 24 to 30 and, in one case, living thousands of miles away from Redmond, the Seitz kids try to make it home every year to volunteer at the community dinner with their father and mother, Carlye. For most of its history, the meal has been served at the Redmond Senior Center, and has offered all the traditional Thanksgiving staples and treats. But overthe years a variety of organizers have shared the burden of planning and serving a meal for an aver-
ferson County Chamber of Commerce in Madras, starting Dec.4. The office's new address will be 274 S.W. Fourth St. The office will close Dec. 3 to move to its new location. The office will keep its telephone number, 541475-9272, and will be
open Mondaythrough Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
• Deschutes and Jefferson counties havethe best recycling rates eastof the Cascades By Dylan j. Darling
Morebriefing and News of Record, C2
Thanksgiving holidayclosures • City, county, federal and state offices will be
closed Thursday. Most state offices will also be closed Friday. • All schools will be
closed Thursday and Friday, including Central
Oregon Community College. • Banks will be closed
Thursday. • Mail will not be picked up or delivered
Thursday. • All branches of the Deschutes Public Library system will
be closed Thursday and Friday. The Crook County Library and the Jefferson County Library will also be closed
Recycling inOregon
The Bulletin
Deschutes and Jefferson counties are leaders when it comes torecycling ratesfor solid waste on the east side of the Cascades. Deschutes and Jefferson counties have the highest rates on this side of the mountains. Crook County is behind its neighbors by 14 or 16percentage points, accordingto a state Deparhnent of Environmental Quality report released earlythis year.Of the35"wastesheds,n or waste-producing areas roughly based on counties, in the state, Jefferson ranked 10th, Deschutes 12th and Crook22nd. The bottom three wastesheds were Sherman, Gilliam and Wheeler counties, said Mary Lou Perry, solid waste specialist for the DEQ in Portland. The top recycling rates in the state were found in Lane and Marion counties and the Metro wasteshed, comprised of Multnomah, Clackamas and Washington counties. See Recycling /C5
The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality
recently released 2011 recycling rates.
35.3% Clatsop 38.7% Tillamook
59.3%
Yamhill 46.2% Polk
0- 1 9. 9%
•
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See Dinner /C6
Lincoln 34.4% Benton 44.3% Coos 47.7% Curry
27.2% Josephine 55%
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When:Thursday, noon to 3 p.m. Where:Redmond
Jackson Klamal
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Source: Oregon Department of Environmental Quaiity
Senior Center, 325 S.W.
Dog woodAve. Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Thursday andFriday. The Jefferson County Library will close at 2
p.m.today. • The Bend South and Bend East liquor stores will be closed Thursday.
Giorgio's Liquor Store (Bend West) will be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Thursday. The Bend North Liquor Store will be open from11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday.
• Bend Garbage and Recycling, CascadeDis-
A rising star inscienceand agriculture By Megan Kehoe The BuI leti n
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS
posal, High Desert Dis-
posal and Wilderness Garbage andRecycling will operate on their nor-
mal collection schedules Thursday.
Educational news and
activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,C2
Xenotransplantation. It's a term that most teenagers probably don't know, let alone want to know. But for Mountain View High School student Meghan King, the term has become an almost year-long obsession. "BeforeIgavethat speech, I'd never heard of xenotransplantation before," Meghan said. "But look where it's taken us since." Meghan, a junior, went to Indianapolis last month with students in her Future Farmers of America club to compete in the
FFA national competition. The Ag Team, a group of seven students from Mountain View's FFA program that took top prizes at the state level last spring for a presentation, placed in the top 16 at the event. "It was stressful," Meghan said. "The judges ask you questions after you present and there's all this pressure to know the answer. You don't want to let your teammates down." Meghan's journey to the national competition began last year when she gave a speech for her agriculture class. See Student /C2
t h ~
I
RobKerr/The Bulletin
Meghan King, a junior at Mountain View High School, is active in the school's Future Farmers of America program and qualified with her Ag Team for the national competition.
C2
THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
Student
onship round several times for her showmanship. Continued from C1 Academically, Meghan Grade:Junior at Mountain The speech centered on maintains a 3.9 GPA, and View High School the subject of xenotransplansays shepushes herself to atGPA:3.9 tation: the transplantation of tain the best grades she can. "I'm always wanting to get living cells or organs from Favorite Movie: "The A's," Meghan said. "If I get a one species to another, often Notebook" B it's almost like failing. B's from pigs to humans in lifeFavorite TV Show: "Pretty saving medicalprocedures. just don't impress. I always Little Liars," "The Vampire Meghan's speech was so want to do better." Diaries," "Face Off" good that the team decided Meghan has an i nterest Favorite Book: "The Lucky to use it as the topic for their in science and says that in One," by NicholasSparks presentation i n u p c oming college, she hopes to study Favorite Music: Country, competitions, which required sports medicine and overhip-hop s tudents to act out a s k i t come herfear of needles and based on a thought-provokblood tosomeday become a ing subject in agriculture. doctor. "Even though th e t o pic From there, the team spent Meghan's agr i c u lture months practicing the skit, wasn't very well known, I teacher describes the FFA qualifying for nationals in thought the skit made it very leader as hardworking, motithe process. Meghan was the relatable," Meghan said. "It's vated and talented. "She has a true desire to narrator of the skit, which so great to be able to say that centered on a hypothetical we made it to nationals." succeed and puts over 100 situation in which a child's Meghan says she doesn't percent into everything she heart is failing and the child's k now exactly w h er e h e r does," Traci D ulany s aid. family must make a difficult interest in agriculture and " I know t h a t e v ery t i m e decision about whether to go farming came from, but that Meghan says she'll do someshe's always loved animals. thing that she'll complete with a man-made device or organ from a pig. At nation- She's shown Yorkshire pigs the task with her greatest als, the students performed at the Deschutes County Fair effort." the skit twice and made it through 4H in the past, and — Reporter: 541-383-0354, through to the semi-finals. has advanced to the champimhehoe@bendbulletin.com
SCHOOL NOTES
MILITARY NOTES
How to submit
Phone: 541-383-0358 Email: bulletin©bendbulletin
Rafe Holmesgraduated from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio.
Teen feats:Kids recognized recentlyfor academic
.com
He is the son of DawnHolmes, of Culver. Alr Force Airman First Class
participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.)
Andres Chong graduated from basic military training at Lackland
Phone: 541-383-0358 Email: youth@bendbulletin
Alr Force AirmanFirst Class
Air Force Base in San Antonio.
He is the son of Javier Chongand Cecilia Chong, both of Redmond.
TEEN FEATS Emily Waggoner hasbeen named December's High Desert Hero by The Center Foundation of Bend.
Waggoner, a senior at Bend High School,
maintains a 4.19 GPA while taking International
Baccalaureate classes, singing
achievements or for
.com Mail:P.O. Box6020, Bend,OR 97708
Other schoolnotes:College announcements, military graduations or training
completions, reunion announcements. Committee at The Center Foundation, IB Child Abuse
and Veteran Club, Lead-Man Triathalon, Becca's Closet, The Tree, Healing Reins, The Ronald
McDonald House, MSWalk, Grin
n' Bear It Run, The Polar Plunge, piano and participating in a marine Alyce Hatch Center and the Boys biology internship, which included and Girls Clubs. a week of study at"Whalefest Douglas Brucerecently attained 2012" in Sitka, Alaska. She is the rank of Eagle Scout from the involved with the National Honor Boy Scouts of America. Bruceis Society, Interact Club, Honor Code a member ofTroop18 in Bend andBendScienceStation,and and attends Mountain View High has participated in community School. For hisEagleScout project, service with the Student Advisory he built and installed bat boxes in choir, playing
Story ideas School briefs:Items and
announcements of general interest. Phone: 541-633-2161
Email: news©bendbulletin .com Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354
Email: mkehoe©bendbulletin .com
for the Bend Park & Recreation District.Bruce has participatedicthe 100th National
Jamboree, summer camps anda150mile paddling trip
in Minnesota's BoundaryWaters. He enjoys Dutch ovencooking.
MeghanKing
Bruce is active in the JROTC
program andplans to continue in the Naval ROTCprogram while
studying emergencymedicine in college. He isthe son of Adamand
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
LOCAL BRIEFING
Michelle Bruce, of Bend.
For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com!officials.
Continued from Cf
Escaped inmate has ties to Bend
NEWS OF RECORD
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department Unauthorized oee —A vehicle was reported stolen at 6:25 p.m. Nov. 12, inthe20200 blockofRae Road. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:30 p.m. Nov. 14, in the100 block of Northwest Sisemore Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3:13 p.m. Nov. 17, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue.
Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 9:47 p.m. Nov. 17, in the1100 block of Southeast Third Street. DUH —Cassie Nichole Dunn, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:50 a.m. Nov. 18, in the area of Northwest Harmon Boulevard and Northwest Nashville Avenue. DUH —Cesar Jahr CarmonaVences, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:13 a.m. Nov.18, in the 800 blockof Southeast Sixth Street. Unauthorized oee —A vehicle was reported stolen at 5:58 a.m. Nov. 18, in the 1900 block of Northeast Monroe Lane. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:39 a.m. Nov. 18, in the 2200 block of Northwest Lakeside Place. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:05 a.m. Nov. 18, in the 61100 block of Chuckanut Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:04p.m. Nov.18, inthe19700 block of Chicory Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:57 p.m. Nov. 18, in the 1800 block of Northeast Lotus Drive. Crimlnal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:12 a.m. Nov. 19, in the 2000 block of Northeast Sixth Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:42 a.m. Nov. 19, in the 61400 block of Longview Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:05 a.m. Nov. 19, in the area of Northwest Baltimore Avenue and Northwest15th Street. Crimlnal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:19 a.m. Nov. 19, in the 61300 block of Columbine Lane. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at10:29 a.m. Nov. 19, in the 200 block of Southeast Second Street. Crimlnal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:34 a.m. Nov. 19, in the 400 block of Northeast Alden Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:52 p.m. Nov. 19, in the100 block of Southeast Logsden Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:22 p.m. Nov.19, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:18 p.m. Nov. 19, in the 61300 block of U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:39 a.m. Nov. 18, in the 100 block of Northwest Adams Place.
Redmond Police Department
Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 5:36 p.m. Nov.12, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Unauthorized oee —A vehicle was reported stolen at 8:36 a.m. Nov. 13, in the 1600 block of Southwest 21st Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:06a.m. Nov.13, inthe 600 block of Southeast First Street. Unauthorized oee —A vehicle was reported stolen at12:44 p.m. Nov. 13, in the 800 block of Northwest Fifth Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:51 p.m. Nov. 13, in the1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at1:53 p.m. Nov. 13, in the1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 2:08 p.m. Nov. 13, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and SouthwestObsidian Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 2:14 p.m. Nov. 13, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:48 p.m. Nov.13, in the1300 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 7:38 p.m. Nov. 13, in the1200 block of Southwest Indian Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:51 a.m. Nov. 14, in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at1:10 p.m. Nov. 14, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and SouthwestPumiceAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported and two arrests made at 2 p.m. Nov. 14, in the 4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 3:08 p.m. Nov. 14, in the area of North U.S. Highway 97 and Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:18 p.m. Nov. 14, in the 4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 3:34 p.m. Nov. 14, in the 700 block of Northwest Fifth Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 5:28 p.m. Nov. 14, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and Southwest Volcano Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:17 p.m. Nov.14, in the1200 block of Northwest Upas Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:25 p.m. Nov. 14, in the 2200 block of Southwest19th Street. Unauthorized oee —A vehicle was reported stolen at 5:32 a.m. Nov. 15, in the1500 block of Northwest Eighth Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at1:33 p.m. Nov.15, in the area of Southwest Ninth Street and Southwest Black Butte Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:41 p.m. Nov.15, inthe1700block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen and two arrests made at12:48 a.m. Nov. 16, in the 2100 block of Southwest Deerhound Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:14 p.m. Nov. 16, in the 200 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Theft —A theft was reported and
County Court
300 N.E. Third St. Prineville, OR 97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration©co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
Police are searching for an inmate whoescaped from the Jackson County
an arrest made at 2:38 p.m. Nov. 16, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:49p.m.Nov.16,inthe4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 2:59 p.m. Nov.16, in the area of Southwest Obsidian Avenue and Southwest Rimrock Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:16 p.m. Nov. 16, in the 200 block of Southwest Canyon Drive. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:47 a.m. Nov. 17, in the1900 block of Southwest 35th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:16 a.m. Nov. 17, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 5:49 p.m. Nov.17, in the area of Southwest 23rd Street and Southwest Salmon Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:20a.m.Nov.18,inthe2700 block of Northwest Seventh Street. Unauthorizeduee —A vehicle was reported stolen at 9:09 a.m. Nov. 18, in the 3900 block of Southwest 25th Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:59a.m.Nov.18,inthe2200 block of Southwest Pumice Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 12:25 p.m. Nov. 18, in the 2700 block of Southwest Volcano Court. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:57 p.m. Nov. 18, in the 800 block of Northeast Larch Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at4:47 p.m. Nov.18, inthe area of Southwest Ninth Street and Southwest Highland Avenue. DUH —Carlos Jorge Vasquez Jr., 43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:15 p.m. Nov. 18, in the 900 block of Southwest11th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:01 p.m. Nov.18, in the900 block of Southwest 23rd Street.
Email: mike.mccabe©co.crook.or.us
CROOK COUNTY
jail on Monday night, the Jackson County Sheriff's Office said.
Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren@co.crook.or.us Seth Crawford Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: seth.crawford©co.crook.or.us
Crook County Judge MikeMcCabe Phone: 541-447-6555
Bradley William Monical, 42, escaped through the
jail's recreation yard. He was facing charges inJack-
Find it All Online bendbulletin.com
son County stemming from a 2011 robbery.
TheBulletin
Monical has ties to Bend,
Heartlaqd Paiqtiqg
the Bend Police Department
said, and is considered a threat.
"Quality Painting Inside and Out"
He is described asbeing
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pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. Anyone whosees Monical is advised to call 911. — Bulletin staff report
Insured Bonded and Licensed ¹156152
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Prineville Police Department
Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief with an estimated loss of $1,200 was reported at 8:29a.m. Nov.19, inthe area of Northeast Mariposa Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminalmischief was reported at 8:51 a.m. Nov. 19, in the area of Northeast Mariposa Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 1:16p.m. Nov.19, in the area of Southeast Lynn Boulevard. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:51 p.m. Nov.19, intheareaof Northeast Peters Road.
BEND FIRE RUNS
Friday 8:40a.m.— Smoke odor reported, 19885 Eighth St. 10:41 a.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 22025 Erickson Road. 5:43 p.m.— Gas leak, 967 N.W. Brooks St. 24 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 15 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 11:41 p.m. —Building fire, $49,000 estimated loss, 22980 U.S. Highway 20. 13 —Medical aid calls.
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012• THE BULLETIN
C3
REGON NEWS
3,100borrowersshare insettlement
OR EGON IN BRIEF
Sharp weapon killed 2 Occupiers cited dogs, necropsies find for trespassing OREGON CITY — Necropsies performed on two dogs killed i n C l ackamas C ounty show t h e y w e r e killed by a sharp implement. The owner, 25-year-old Japheth Stalcup, reported last week that he'd found the missing dogs down a steep embankment in woods about 100 yards from his house in Eagle Creek. He said they appeared to have been bludgeoned by s omething resembling a n ax. The Clackamas County Sheriff's Office said Tuesday that veterinarians at the Oregon Humane Society did the examination. The Sheriff's Office says it has assigned a deputy to the case, and the Humane Society is offering a reward of up to $500 for information.
The Associated Press SALEM — The nation's five largest banks have extended
EUGENE — Two demonstrators who climbed a chain link fence around the former City Hall property in downtown Eugene were cited for criminal trespassing. Occupy Eugene members Gwendolyn Maeve Iris and Jason Lee Miller were cited early Monday after a weekend demonstration. Occupy Eugene said it was a protest "against the city's lack of action for the unhoused." The Register-Guard r eported the two are due in E ugene M u nicipal C o u r t next month and could be sentenced to jail if convicted
$200 million in mortgage relief to Oregon debtors as part of a national settlement. The five banks have taken a variety of actions in t h e agreement that arises from the "robo-signing" of foreclosure documents filed as the housing bubble burst and the nation sank into the Great Recession.
ROSEBURG — A Roseburg man facing two days in jail for a drug court violation made a leap for freedom from the Douglas County courthouse, but landed hard and was soon recaptured. The Roseburg News-Review reports that 27-year-old Daniel John Cox was supposed to be waiting for a jailer on Monday when he walked f rom th e c o urtroom a n d jumped from a second-story balcony into bark mulch. Awitness said Coxgrabbed his back and slowly made his way to nearby Deer Creek, where he lay on the rocks shirtless and on his stomach for more than 15 minutes. He was taken to a hospital, where he was checked out and released. Then he was booked on charges of violating probation and escape.
Would-be escapee foiled by hard fall
Huson was f ound shot dead in a field after picking up a fare outside a downtown bar.
Elephant to give birth at Oregon Zoo PORTLAND — A n other elephant is expected to arrive any day now at the Oregon Zoo. Rose-Tu is about to give birth to her second calf. Elephant curator Bob Lee told KATU that keepers are closely monitoring her and are ready to help, if necessary. They expect the birth to go easier than Rose-Tu's first delivery in 2008 when she nervously stepped on the calf. Lee says Rose-Tu should be having a calf every four to five years.
forgiven. The fivebanks allowed 377
Department of Veterans Affairs and the result is a marble MERLIN — Ezekiel Colby headstone f r o m Ve r m ont, fought in dozens of bloody weighing close to 200 pounds battles during the Civil War, and gleaming white. On Saturincluding Gettysburg, for the day, it was marked with flags. Union Army before returning Hopkins said only 10 or 12 to Indiana with the 20th Vol- Civil War headstones are addunteer Infantry. ed every year around the counHe came to Astoria around try as unregistered veterans 1890, spent a few years along are found. "This is unique, especially C oyote Creek n e a r W o l f Creek, then lived in the vicin- on the West Coast," he said. "This is the first time our firm ity of Hugo and Merlin until his death in 1907. has handled one of these." For more than a century He added that about 140 Civhis military service had gone il War veterans are buried in unrecognized at his grave in Josephine County. A Civil War Pleasant Valley C e metery, grave registry online shows along Monument Drive a few six Civil War veterans buried miles north of Grants Pass. at Pleasant Valley. But on Saturday, as a handEzekiel Colby's grave for ful of his descendants huddled many years had no marker in the rain, Colby earned his — in fact, the precise location headstone at a memorial ser- of his grave is unknown. There vice, punctuated by three vol- are about 20 unmarked graves leys of gunfire from the Cas- at the cemetery, and the stone cade Civil War Society. was placed in a location away "Ezekiel's stone is now a ful- from those so it wouldn't land fillment of the commitment to on an incorrect grave, Hopkins mark every veteran's grave," said. said David Hopkins, funeral T he original marker w as director fo r T a ylor's Fam- likely wooden — or, if stone, ily Chapter in Winston, who could have been stolen. Hophelped arrange the event. "I think it's a great deal. I think all veterans should be recognized," said David Colby, of Medford, Ezekiel's greatgrandson. "So many were killed and wounded and had amputations. It's hard to find anybody who came through unscathed." Colby and hi s w i fe, Renee, found out about Ezekiel nearly 20 years ago as Renee researched f amily h i s tory. They knew he was buried at Pleasant Valley Cemetery. But it wasn't until they were visiting with Hopkins a few years ago about another r elative in Douglas County that they l earned about the effort t o mark all veterans' graves. Hopkins went through the
on appeal.
paper.
signing of false foreclosure
affidavits without having reviewed the cases. In the most Bank o f A m e r ica C orp. egregious cases,the forecloprovided the most relief in Or- sure documents bore f a ke egon, followed by JPMorgan signatures. Chase 8 Co., Wells Fargo 8 The relief is expected to Co., Citibank and Ally Finan- provide help to less than a cial Inc., the report said. tenth of h o meowners who Nationwide, they have dis- owe more than their houses tributed $26.1 billion in relief. are worth.
kins and the Colbys found documentation of Ezekiel's burial through a local mortuary. Larry McLane, north Josephine County historian, was in attendance on Saturday. His book "First There was Twogood" has n o m e ntion of Colby because Colby was in Wolf Creek for only three years around 1900, his family said. There is a Colby Gulch named for him. But McLane found reference to Raymond Colby, Ezekiel's son, who was once constable in Hugo, in a newspaper from more than a century ago. Raymond died in 1923 in Douglas County, according to geneal-
Grants Pass Daily Courier
O REGON C ITY — A member of an Oregon City f aith-healing c h urch w i l l remain in prison while her manslaughter conviction is A C l a ckamas C o u nty judge turned down a petition Monday for early release while the conviction of Shannon Mae Hickman is reviewed by the Oregon Court of Appeals. She and her husband Dale Ryan Hickman are members of the Followers of Christ church who began serving six-yearsentences last year after they were convicted for failing to seek help for their premature baby son, who had underdeveloped lungs.
There w er e w i d espread allegations o f r obo - signing, which is the fraudulent
by $50.5 million.
By Jeff Duewel
Faith-healing mom to remain in prison
MEDFORD — Police in Medford are hoping that the person who wrote them an anonymous letter about the slaying of a taxi cab driver will get in touch. Lt. Mike Budreau won't say what is in the letter, but he says whoever wrote it appears to have information on the case and wrote it not long after the Oct. 21 slaying of William "Huey" Huson. The Mail Tribune reported Tuesday that the letter is written in pencil on the kind of paperthatcomes on rollsused to print receipts on cash registers. The envelope is made from folded-over notebook
eligible borrowers to refinance, saving an average of $48,000 each. In all, The Oregonian reported,loan balances were cut
Civi Warveteran ina y ets ea stone
of trespassing.
Letter may hold clue to cab driver slaying
A report from the monitor of the settlement said the foreclosure reliefin Oregon reached 3,100 borrowers. Almost half, or 1,500, were from short sales in which the bank used the sale of the home to pay off the loan and forgive the remaining debt. An additional605 borrowers saw second-lien loan debt forgiven, while 258had first-lien loan debt
— From wire reports
exandria, Arlington Heights," she said. "He helped in the fall of Richmond and allthe battles leading upto the surrender of General Lee. He went through all of that and came out with rheumatism,chronic diarrhea and no wounds. Over 620,000 men were killed, North and South, in that war." Colby was one of about 250 of the original 1,100 20th Indiana Volunteers to survive. "Their regiment managed to miss Antietam, but they were in every other major battle for four years," said Ken Quattlander of the Cascade Civil War Society.
ogy records. Renee Colby compiled a scrapbook, and ticked off the names of battles that Ezekiel fought in 150 years ago: "Fraser's Farm, Yorktown, Rappahannock, Manassas, Al-
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The Associated Press ASHLAND — With a proposed California merger off the table, A shland's cashstrapped community hospital is negotiating a deal with a Medford-based organization. City Council members are considering a merger with the Asante system and expect to take public testimony later, the Ashland Daily T i dings reported. Asante operates Rogue Regional Medical Center in Medfordand Three Rivers Medical Center in Grants Pass.
El1RE E n K
A merger would r equire c ouncil a pproval. O nc e a city department, the hospital was spun off as an independent entity, but the city still owns the real estate and fixed equipment. A proposed merger between the hospital and San Francisco-based Dignity Health fell through after Ashland residents raised concerns about Dignity Health's restrictions regarding abortion and Oregon's assisted suicide law. Dignity, previously affiliated with the Catholic Church, pulled
out of the negotiations. Abortion an d p h y sicianassisted suicide are not at issue with Asante, said Doug Gentry, chairman of the Ashland Community Hospital board. Gentry said a merger will stabilize the hospital. Back office positions may be eliminated because of duplication, but Asante is expected to increase the staff size overall, he said. The Ashland hospital has operatingrooms and a Center for Wound Healing 8 Hyperbaric Medicine that Asante needs, he said.
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TH E BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
ane: o acce era ors an arrier us ers on't be fooled by Oregon's latest budget forecast. It's good, not great.
AN INDEPENDENTNEWSPAPER
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Lawmakers learned Tuesday that they may get $30.5 million more in this two-year budget and an additional $54.9 million in the next two-year budget. Millions more is better than mil- fi x was changing the way the state lions less, but the state budget will p r ovides health care to people in the still be nearly $700 million short of O regon Health Plan. maintaining government services Ore on gso faces a lon -term yea ' '." ' Problemofbeingoutclassedb other balancedbudget should nothidethe statesbecause ofitsaverage Per -caP other ways the state is unbalanced ita income. Oregon's is below the naThere are still some 160,000 Ore- tional average. It has lagged behind gonians who can't find a job. Thou- Washington and California. The sands of Oregonians also struggle federal Bureau of Economic Analywith a job that now pays less than it sissaid Oregon's average per-capita did a few years ago. income was $37,909 in 2011. The naThe budget forecast didn't im- t i onal average was $41,663. Oregon provethestate's$16billionunfund- h asn't managed to shrink that ined liability for the Public Employ- comegapoverthelast 10years. ees Retirement System, or PERS. Unless Oregon is somehow more The forecast also Predkcts a future efficient than other states or doesn't gaP between what the state brings face the same needs for public serin and the cost of government. vices, Oregon must tax people at a "The outlook for the 2013-15 bi- higher rate if it wants to spend the ennium calls for some modest im- same amount of money for governprovement in revenue growth," the ment services per capita. forecast says. "However, state revGov. JohnKitzhaber and State enue coiiections wiII still likely fail Treasurer Ted Wheeler talk about to keep pace with the growing cost these deePer challenges. They have of providing public services." both suggested PERS reforms and In Oregon government, this gaP using investments in education usedtobecalledthealligator'smouth to slowly shift the state into a betgraPh, the toP Part of the alligator's ter position. Farlier this year, Kitmouth being the Projected increase zhaber said, "the state must continm state costs and the bottom bemg ue to play a role as job accelerator revenues. The costs of gove~ent and barrier buster in its partnership have kePt going uP by 16 Percent or with the rivate sector" so and revenues have been increasKitzhaber is scheduledto release ing by 10 percent to 12 percent, according to State Economist Mark his proposed state budget on Nov. McMullen. The gap between the two 30. We anxiously await a list of job lines must be fixed every time the accelerators and barrier busters to state budget is written. You may re- give Oregon's economy the balance member that in the last budget, a key it needs.
Add sunshine to Bend council's mayor selection
w
e've always believed that voters inthe city of Bend do not need to have a separate election for mayor. At the same time, Councilor Mark Capell has taken the right step to make the current road to mayordom visible to the public. Bend has a strong city manager form of government, which means councilors hire a manager to take charge of the nuts and bolts of city operation. The council, in turn, sets policy for the city and approves its annual budget. The city's mayor, meanwhile, is one among equals, chosen by his or her fellow councilors to the post for a two-year term. While the mayor is busier with city business than most other councilors, the job remains largely a ceremonial one. It's a system that has served the city well over the years, and there's no need to change it now, barring evidence that the current system has somehow hurt the city. Capell, who wants the mayor's job
next year, announced his desire publidy at Monday night's council meeting. That is unusual: The mayor's post is often filled by the full council with little ornopublic~ on. If there are other members of the council who also want the mayor's job, they, too, should step forward in the next few weeks and make their names known. They, like Capell, should tell the council, in public, just why they believe they're best-suited for the job. Doing so would not give city residents a direct say in who replaces Jeff Eager as mayor come January. It would allow residents to let members of the council know if they have strong feelings about any of the potential choices for the job, however. And that, in turn, might help shape the resulting vote. Again, Bend has no reason to change the way its mayor is chosen. That does not mean, however, that sunshine on the current process isn't worth the exposure a public discussion of the candidates would bring.
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M Nickel's Worth When is enoughenough?
these two programs than they have contributed. Romney won the vote in a large block of Southern states. These statesreceive more federal funding per capita than blue states. May I suggest that these Romney voters are"takers?" I work for a modest wage; however, my income tax rate is almost double the tax rate that Romney pays. Guess that makes me a "giver" and Romney a "taker." May I suggest that instead
While looking at my 2012-13 property tax bill, under "Bonds — Other totals" I see: • Jail Bond • Fairgrounds Bond • Bend Library • City of Bend Bond • Department Of Forestry Fire Patrol • School¹1 Bond 1993 • School¹1 Bond 1998 • School ¹1 Bond 2002 • School ¹1 Bond 2007 • COCC Bond Total: 16 percent of my total tax bill. I'm reminded again of why I did not vote for the most recent Bend Park & Recreation District bond. After already paying them an amount that equals 9 percent of my total bill in "general government" taxes, I'll now be required to pay even more! When is enough enough'? John Rivera Bend
There is no mandate
A number of recent letters have advocated the idea that President Obama's re-election implies that a mandate exists and those of us who voted otherwise are obligated to "cooperate"or "getover our denial." This is wishful thinking because there is no mandate. Almost half (493 percent) of voters did not cast a ballot for Obama. We are unof pointing fingers and making der no obligation to cave in and excuses, we support each other as compromise our values and princitizens'? Good people of our nation, ciples. I suggest those who think come together and help those in differently bone up on civics and the need. Each of us, at times, may need Constitution. a helping hand. I hope that RomOur Founding Fathers wisely creney and Paul Ryan find time this ated checks and balances to keep Thanksgiving to serve at a home- a lid on the power of the executive less shelter or meal program. They b ranch. Republicans control t h e would be lending a helping hand to House of Representatives and will the less fortunate in their communi- have a say in what happens next. ties, and they would be helping us Conservatives have a responsibilall to forget their photo-op debacles ity to blunt Obama's socialist poliduring the campaign. cies, class-warfare rhetoric,and Patricia D. Stoneroad the reckless deficit spending that is Bend bankrupting America both morally and financially. Conservatives have Who are the'takers'? Nothing to celebrate a duty to oppose a man who foolishly continues to blame Bush and Mitt Romney thinks he lost the In response to the letter on Nov. 15 refuses to accept responsibility for presidential election because Presi- chastising The Bulletin for the post- his own dismal economic record. dent Barack Obama appealed to election cartoon and urging you to I agree cooperation is important all the "takers." Romney, if elected, "celebrate the man": to solve America's problems in a would have forced the Department Celebrate what? T h e d e f icit, constructive way w henever posof Defense into the role of "taker," as his foreign policy (a la Benghazi), sible. But everyone needs to rememH he planned to give the DOD substanObamacare" (which very well may ber that liberals did not concede tially more funding than the agency bankrupt this country)? I wonder if their core values during Republican needed or requested. Romney gar- you will feel like celebrating in the administrations and so we should nered many votes from senior citi- coming months as his disastrous not be expected to abandon our core zens. I support Medicare and Social policies take shape. values now. A dictator was not electSecurity f unding, but r e cipients Celebrate? You've go t t o be ed. Just a president, as our Founding of these social programs are defi- kidding! Fathers planned. nitely "takers." The average senior Judy Darst Greg Franklin will extract far more dollars from Bend Bend
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Reducing crime needn't mean building bigger prisons By Grover Norquist s a taxpayer advocate, I was troubled to learn that Ore-
gon's growing prison population will cost the state $600 million in new spending over the coming decade. Conservatives like me are known for being tough on crime. But we must also be tough on criminal justice spending, backing cost-effective approaches that hold offenders accountable and protect public safety. While prisons play an essential role by keeping serious criminals off the streets, they are not the most effective sanction for every offender. Oregonians know this to be true. For years, conservatives have looked to Oregon'scorrections and sentencing policies as an excellent model for other states. Under these policies, Or-
egon has used most of its state prison space for violent and sex offenders and has reducedrecidivism rates through local community corrections
enough for Oregonians to be alarmed, it is not the only cause for concern. When I look at Oregon's proposed corrections spending, I ask the programs that are based on iN M~ question every conservative scientific evidence about what should ask of any governworks. ment program: Will taxpayers get the But over the last decade, the state's best result for the lowest cost'? commitment to this sensible approach In this case, the answer is unequivohas wavered. A growing number of cally no, and other states have the eviexpensive prison beds are occupied dence andexperience to prove it. by nonviolent offenders, while spendTexas is just one state where policy ing on local public safety programs makers have found they can protect has been cut. Now, Oregon's nonvio- and even improve public safety while lent prison population is expected to reducing incarceration. Like Oregon, grow by an alarming 14 percent over Texas was facing the prospect of addthe next 10 years, and state officials ing thousands of prison beds, just as say they need 2,000 new prison beds it had for the past 20 years. Instead, to keep pace. state leaders took a hard look at the What does this mean for the state's data, slammed the brakes on new taxpayers? A $600 million tab. construction and invested in a vaWhile the h igh cost i s r eason riety of local alternatives designed
to reduce recidivism. These have included swift and certain graduated sanctions, incentives to promote compliance with the terms of probation, and drug courts and other problem-solving courts. The verdict is in and Texas is reaping dividends from its decision to strengthen alternativeapproaches. Since Texas passed itscomprehensive corrections reform package in 2007, the recidivism rateis down by 25 percent, crime rates have fallen to the lowest level since 1973, and the state has avoided nearly $2 billion in prison costs. Similar reforms have been signed into law in Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and South Carolina. In fact, all 17 states that reduced incarceration ratesbetween 2000 and 2010 saw their crime rates fall as well.
I have joined Newt Gingrich, Ed Meese, Bill Bennett and others in supporting an initiative called Right on Crime, which brings together conservativeleaders who are eager to see our criminal justice system work better. We are proud to say our group and other conservatives have helped push innovative approaches to the forefront of the corrections debate. Oregon's Commission on Public Safety is now engaged in a critical effort to get the state back ontrack by developing proposals that would hold offenders accountable, keep government spending in check and, most importantly, keep communities safe. Oregon taxpayers can hope that the commission will learn from the successes of anti-crime, pro-taxpayer reforms, and build on Oregon's past reforms. — Grover Norquist is president
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012• THE BULLETIN
Award
BITUARIES DEATH NoTIcEs Eugene 'Gene' Erickson Carla Kaye Simmons,
May 2, 1949- Nov. 10, 2012
of Burns Nov. 19, 1969 - Nov. 17, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private celebration with family and close friends will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
American Cancer Society, P.O. Box 7262, Hillsborough, New Jersey 08844. Americancancerfund.org
Donna 'Diane' Broome, of Bend June 28, 1941 - Nov. 19, 2012 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701. www.partnersbend.org
Ella Mae Newton, of Redmond July 20, 1956 - Nov. 16, 2012 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Redmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private service will be held at a later date.
Eugene 'Gene' Eri ckson, 6 3, died s u ddenly i n h i s h ome i n Sun r i v er , O R , Nov. 10, 2012. L ong-time car r a c i n g fa n, hom e DIY-er, and homem aker t o wife of 44 ( y e ars, . J Sally. Gene is survived r b so n , Evan Eugene 'Gene' Erickson Erickson of B end, OR; g randdaughters, K ayl i e Erickson and Sofie Erickson of B e n d , O R ; s i ster, K aren Waggoner of P o r t land, OR; and father, Paul Erickson of Turlock, CA. G ene's b oo m i n g an nouncer's vice i s r e m emb ered by BM X e rs of Southern California, where Gene and Sally along with s on, Evan an d f o u r p a r t ners, ran BMX Racing Inc. a t Orange Y BM X a n d I r vine BMX. Gene also prov ided all t h e t r o p hies for the races. He retired from B MX t r ac k o p e rations i n 1985, whe n h e a n d th e family moved to Sunriver, OR. There was a Celebration of Life fo r G e ne's friends and relatives at Sunriver's Great Hall Fireside Room, on Friday.
Continued from C1 "He seemed like heobviously had a mental health c risis," M o ri n s a i d . "We were trying to talk him into getting off the ledge, but he wasn't responding to some of our requests." Morin said the team then called a r e presentative of the mobile c r i sis a ssessm ent t eam, w h ic h o p e rates t h r oug h De s chutes County's behavioral health department. But the conversation continued to falter. According to a news release, the man began looking at the ground and officers thought he was going to jump. And that's when Morin and Guthrie acted. "While Officer McConkey was speaking with him, act-
Recycling Continued from C1 In general, urban counties have higher recyclingrates than rural counties, Perry said, "usually because of the higher population and more opportunities to recycle easily that aren't available in less populated parts of the state." Jefferson had a 47.2 percent recycling rate in 2011, Deschutes had a 45.3 percent rate and Crook had a 31.5 percent rate, according to the report. To arrive at those figures, the DEQ used information from 500 companies around the state that deal with solid waste, Perry said. About half
Lou Alice Neal, of Bend Aug. 24, 1935 - Nov. 19, 2012 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 www.niswonger-reynolds. com Services: 2:00 p.m., Friday, Nov. 23, 2012, at Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701
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 funeralhomes. 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 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
DEATH ELSEWHERE Death of note from around the world: Bonita Lynn Fields Elder, 68: An agile dancer who showcased those skills on the 1950s children's show "The Mickey Mouse Club" and later performed on Broadway. She became a "Mouseketeer"at age 12 in 1957, during the show's third season on television, and took the stage name "Bonnie." She laterbecame a performer at Disneyland, in films and on Broadway before opening a dance studio in Santa Monica, Calif. She died Saturday of throat cancer in Richmond, Ind. — From wire reports
ing as a distraction, me and Officer Guthrie moved in and grabbed him and pulled him off the ledge," Morin said. The man was taken to the hospital for an evaluation. Morin and McConkey are trained in c r i sis i ntervention, and Morin believes that may have helped defuse the situation. "I think it had quite a bit to do with calming the situation, not escalating it," he said. "That training can be valuable." He said police deal with s uicidal and m entally u n stable people on a frequent basis. "It seems like it's increasing even more," Morin said. "I probably deal with at least one or two calls a day with somebody having some sort of mental health crisis, from extreme to mild. It just var-
"I think it had quite a bit to do with calming the situation, not escalating it. That training can be valuable."
are waste haulers and about half are private recyclers. The data i s f o cused on waste produced by h omes and businesses. Manufacturing waste is not factored into the figures. "This is a very, very extensive survey they do each year," said Timm Schimke, director of t h e D e schutes County Department of Solid Waste. Over the last three years, the Deschutes County numbers went down and t h en up again. In 2009, the recycling rate was 45.1 percent, Schimke said, and in 2010, it was 41.1 percent. That rate means that of all waste destined for the dispos-
al, nearly half of it, in the case of Jefferson and Deschutes counties, is "diverted," or recycled, Schimke said.
CS
— Chris Morin, Bend police officer
ies. I don't know if it's environmental changes causing a lot of these things — like the economy or home or family situations — but they're becoming more andmore prevalent, and the police have to use resources to help deal with these problems." The Bend officers who received the award were honored along with other police personnel from around the state. Other w i nners i n cluded the O regon S t ate P o lice sergeants who in February tracked down ahypothermic man who fled a non-injury
The higher percentages might n o t me a n pe o p le changed r e cycling h a b its at their homes, he said. The recycling rates include how much businessesare putting off and how much they're recycling, which can vary with the economy. For e x ample, S c h imke said, there was a drop in the amount of building materials recycled during the Central Oregon construction boom in the 1990s and into the 2000s. He said that may be because builderspreferred to spend their t i m e b u i lding
traffic crash in shorts and a fleece in Douglas County, as well as the troopers who handled a hostage situation at Crescent Lake in May. "I thought our s i tuation was pretty p r ofound, but
nearly every agency represented (at the awards ceremony) had a similar scenario," Morin said. "It was just a realization to me that everybody in police work is dealing with similar situations and dealing with them correctly and providing the best services." — Reporter:541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com
rather than sorting through the waste they were putting off, but now that construction is slow, they're taking the time torecycle more, perhaps to lower disposal costs. While t he Des c h utes County Department of Solid Waste may consider curbside recycling pickup in La Pine and Sunriver, as well as other changes to its recycling program, in coming years, Schimke said he didn't know i f D eschutes County w i l l have a recycling rate over 50 percent anytime soon. "Every additional percent is harder and harder to come by," Schimke said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
FEATURED OBITUARY
FormerSen.Rudmanwarned of terrorist attacks on U.S. By Norma Love
a W ashington, D.C., hospital of CONCORD, N.H. — Colcomplications leagues knew f o rmer S en. from lymphoma, Warren Rudman for his abrupt s aid Bob S t e manner, but they trusted his venson, a long- Ru d man expertise. On one matter in time friend and particular, though, he wished spokesman. He was 82. people would have listened to Rep. Charlie Bass of New him: that the U.S. was vulner- Hampshire didn't serve able to a major terrorist attack. with him, but looked up to Rudman left the Senate in Rudman. "He'd say, 'Vote the tough the early 1990s but later led a commission that predicted the way,' and he'd say, 'Don't let danger of terrorism on Ameri- people push you around,'" Bass can soil just months before the recalled. "'If you know what's attacks of Sept. 11 and called right, vote the way that's right, for the creation of a Depart- and if you're forceful and perment of Homeland Security. suasive and sure of yourself, "No one seemed to take it people will support you even if seriously, and no one in the they don't agree with you.'" media seemed to care," RudPresident Barack Obama man said in 2007. "The report pointed to Rudman's early adw ent into a d ustbin in t h e vocacy for fiscal responsibilWhite House." ity in mourning the passing Rudman, who also co-au- of "one of our country's great thored a g ro u n dbreaking public servants." "And as we work together to b udget balancing la w a n d championed ethics, died just address the fiscal challenges before midnight Monday at of our time, leaders on both The Associated Press
6
sides of the aisle would be well served to follow Warren's example of common-sense bipartisanship," Obama said in a statement Tuesday. Stevenson a c k nowledged Rudman could be abrupt, but said hispeers respected him because he did his homework and was true to his word. The feisty New Hampshire Republican went to the Senate in 1981 with a r e putation as a tough prosecutor, and was called on by Senate leadersand presidents of both parties to tackle tough assignments. He is perhaps best known from his Senate years as cosponsor of the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings budget-cutting law. He left the Senate in 1993, saying the law never reached its potential because Congress and presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush played politics instead of insisting on spending cuts. In 2001, before the 9/11 at-
tacks, he co-authored a report on national security with former Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado that said a major terrorist attack on American soil was likely within 25 years. It was revived after the Sept.
11 attacks, and one suggestion, forming Homeland Security, was adopted. Six years later, Rudman said the sprawling department wasn't functioning well and the country would be hit again.
201 2 THANKSG IYING DEADLINES For Thursday, Thanksgiving, November 22, 2012 and Friday, November 23, 2012 PAID OBITUARIES
DEADLINE
Thursday 11/22......... Wednesday 11/21 10 a.m. Friday 11/23.............. Wednesday 11/21 10 a.m. DEATH NOTICES
DEADLINE
Thursday 11/22.. Friday 11/23.......
..Wednesday 11/21 noon ..Wednesday 11/21 noon
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C6
W EAT H E R
THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
F O R ECAST Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2012.
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A dry and comfortable Thanksgiving.
Tonight: Some light snowfall overnight.
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Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 50/39 24 hours ending 4p.m.*. . 0.1 7" Recordhigh........66m1949 Monthtodate.......... 0.50" Recordlow........ -10i01977 Average monthto date... 081" Average high.............. 45 Year to date............ 7.53" Average low .............. 27 Average year jo date..... 8.58"
Barometricpressureat4 p m2974 Record 24 hours ...044in1991 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
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for solar at noon.
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ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:T.T. =Traction Tires. Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T.Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T.Tires
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Willamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0...no report
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 26 at OchocoDivide..... Carry chains or T.Tires
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OREGON NEWS
Dinner
Storm shouldn't hamper travel plans
Continued from C1 "I don'teven remember for sure how I got involved," says Jay Patrick, the planning part of the planning-implementation team with Seitz. It might have been when he joinedthe Redmond City Council more than 14 years ago — the council took on the mealfor afewyears — oritmight have been through his church at the time, City Center, which also took the reins of organizing the meal for severalyears. «My Wife aSkS me Why t keep doing it, but I just enjoy it, it makes me happy." Patrick says. "I feel lucky that I can do it." Two years ago Patrick and Seitz, both volunteers since the meal's early days, claimed the project as their own, after City Center Church finished its stint. Carmen Patrick also took over the organizational role — solo
By Steven DuBois
The state's largest utility companies reported only a few thousand customers still without power. Portland General Electric worked to restore power to about 6,000 customers east of Portland. Pacific Power, meanwhile, said almost all of its 2,400 customers without electricity live in coastal Lincoln City. "When the damage is this scattered there's always the probability you'll have a couple (of) isolated individuals or smallgroups of customers that might drag on a little longer," said Bob Gravely, a Pacific Power spokesman. The state Department of Parks and Recreation said four stateparks remained closed Tuesday — three because of high water (Devils Lake, near Lincoln City; Sarah Helmick, south of Monmouth; and Will amette Mission, north o f Salem) and one because of downed trees (Cape Meares, on the north coast).
The Associated Press
PORTLAND — T h a nksgiving travel plans are unlikely to be disrupted by a powerful storm that hit the Northwest on Monday and affected residentsfrom the coasttoeastofthe Cascades. Despite power outages and fallen trees elsewhere, Portland International A i r port was undamaged and allmajor highways remained open. The Northwest may escape
rain on Thanksgiving Day but p r ecipitation is almost certain over th e w eekend, according to t h e N a t ional Weather Service. Rain and wind continued Tuesday on the Oregon Coast and flood watches and warnings remained in place. "At least it's not a continuous heavy downpour a n d continuous strong or stronger winds," said Gordon McCraw, directorof emergency management in coastal Tillamook
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Timberline...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 0-0. . . . . . . . 30
YesterdayWednesdayrhursday YesterdayWedoesdayThursday YesterdayWedoesdayrhursday YesterdayWednesdayrhursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hj/Lo/W Hj/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hj/Lo/W Hj/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hj/Lo/W Hj/Lo/I/y Abilene,TX......75/46/0.00...76/55/c.75/46/pc Grand japids....54/39/0.00...56/41/s. 60/44/sh RapidCity.......6760/000...68/39/s .. 46/31/c Savannah.......71/47/000..67/45/pc.. 66/44/s Akron ..........56/35/000..55/38/pc.. 60/41/s GreenBay.......57/39/000...57/42/s. 59/38/pc Reoo...........61/38/0.00 ..58/29/sh.. 53/27/s Seattle..........52/45/0.29... 47/40/r. 49/41/sh Albany..........45/23/000..50/29/pc.. 48/32/s Greensboro......58/41/000..60/38/pc.. 63/36/s Richmond.......58/46/0.00..58/37/pc.. 59/35/s SiovxFalls.......59/21/0.00...67/41/s. 55/27/pc Albuquerque.....61/35/000..64/41/pc.. 63/36/s Harasbvrg.......52/31/000..52/32/pc.. 54/33/s Rochester NY....50/31/000 .. 51/35/pc.. 56/40/s Spokane........50/45/0 72..44/31/sh .. 40/34/c Anchorage .......I4/5/0 00...I7/9/pc.I6/I2/pc Hartford CT .....50/25/0 00..51/33/pc.. 53/33/s Sacramento......66/53/0.00..66/44/sh .. 64/45/s Springfield, MO ..65/40/0.00...66/45/s. 69/43/sh Atlanta .........69/51/000..65/42/pc.. 67/47/s Helena..........58/49/000..49/29/sh..39/29/rs St. Louis.........62/42/000...66/44/s. 67/46/sh Tampa..........76/59/000 ..76/55/pc .. 72/49/s Atlantic City.....53/42/0 00..55/40/pc.. 56/43/s Honolulu........79/71/000...82/69/c. 81/68/sh Salt Lake City....63/42/000 ..61/34/pc. 47/32/pc Tucson..........79/47/000..81/50/pc.. 79/51/s Avsjin..........82/45/0 00..80/53/pc. 77/56jpc Hovston ........79749/000...78/57/s. 78/60/pc SanAntonio.....81/53/OC0..78/57/pc..76/59/c Tulsa...........73/42/000...73/51/s.73/44/sh Baltimore .......54/44/0.00..55/40/pc.. 58/32/s Huntsville.......70/40/0.00...66/42/s.. 67/42/s SanDjego.......66/54/0 jl ..66/53/pc .. 68/56/s Washington,DC..57/45/000 ..57/40/pc.. 59/34/s Bifings.........63/46/0.00..60/34/pc. 47/30/pc jndianapojjs.....57/46/0.01...60/42/s.. 62/45/s SanFrancisco....6657/003 ..60/52/sh.. 60/51/s Wichita.........70/39/000... 72/51/s. 71/40/pc Birmingham .. 69/40/0 00...67/44/s.67/47/s Jackson,MS.....70/47/0 00 ..69/44/s.. 73/47/s SanJose .......68/54/0.00 65/48/sh 66/48/s Yakjma.........58/47/0.03..47/29/sh.. 42/33/c Bismarck........49/26/000 ..55/33/pc..41/19/rs Jacksonvile......71/52/0 00..70/44/pc .. 69/41/s SantaFe........59/2B/O.C O. 58/36/pc .. 58/30/s Yvma...........82/51/0.00... 80/56/s .. 80/58/s Boise...........62/54/0 00 ..54/32/sh .. 49/35/c Juneau......... 28/24/000...25/16/c. 29/22/sn INTERNATIONAL Boston..........48/34/000 ..51/40/pc.. 50/39/s Kansas Cijy......64/38/000...70/51/s. 68/39/sh Bedgepoit CT....50/34/000 ..52/37/pc.. 53/39/s Lansing.........56/36/000...55/40/s. 59/45/sh Amsterdam ...52/46/000 .. 47/43/c 49/42/s Mecca..........97/75/000 .94/76/s ..94/74/s Buffalo.........52/34/0.00 ..53/37/pc.. 57/41/s Las Yegas.......69/48/0.00...71/49/s .. 71/49/s Ajhens..........66/59/000 ..71/60/sh.61/56/sh Mexico City......75/41/000 ..71/45/pc. 72/47/sh Burlington, VT....45/26/0 00..51/29/pc. 50/33/pc Lexington.......63/39/0 00 ..63/39/pc .. 63/43/s Avckland........66/50/000..66/57/pc. 67/53/pc Montreal........43/25/000..40/28/pc. 46/35/pc Caribou,ME.....47/18/000..40/27/pc. 42/30/pc Lincoln..........65/26/000...70/47/s. 63/34/pc Baghdad........68/53/0.01 ..72/51/pc.74/52/pc Moscow........37/32/0.00... 34/32/c. 35/31/pc Charleston, Sc...64/48/000 ..65/45/pc.. 66/45/s Little Rock.......75/47/000...68/45/s. 69/47/pc Bangkok........90/81/0.00... 91/77/t. 93/79/pc Nairobi.........81/61/0.00... 78/63/1...77/61/t Charlotte........63/39/0 00 ..63/38/pc .. 64/37/s LosAngeles......67/56/0 00 ..66/55/pc .. 71/55/s Beiyng..........52/25/000 ..49/30/pc. 41/25/pc Nassau.........79/72/011 ..78/69/sh. 75/66/pc Chattanooga.....69/40/000...69/41/s.. 70/41/s Louisville........65/43/000...63/40/s .. 64/46/s Beirvt..........72/64/000 ..74/64/pc.74/63/sh NewDelhi.......79/54/000... 79/55/s.. 80/56/s Cheyenne.......61/26/000...64/34/s.. 50/24/s Madison Wj.....58/42/000...60/42/s. 57/33/sh Berlin...........43/377000..47/40/pc.45/35/pc Osaka..........59/50/000...60/44/s.61/48/pc Chicago.........58/46/000...61/45/s. 64/43/sh Memphis....... 72/50/000 66/48/s. 69/51/pc Bogota .........86/46/000..70/52/sh.68/54/sh Oslo............46/41/015..45/39/sh.41/35/sh Cincinnati.......63/34/000...61/39/s.. 62/45/s Miami..........70/60/000..78/60/pc .. 76/60/s Rudapest........52/30/000...47/40/c..50/42/c Ottawa.........43/2$/000..44/31/pc.47/37/pc Cleveland.......57/37/000 ..55/43/pc.. 59/45/s Milwaukee......52/39/000... 57/45/s.56/41/sh RuenosAjres.....86/61/000 ..85/65/pc...71/48/r Parjs............54/45/000..51/40/sh. 43/39/pc Colorado Spungs.63/28/000...68/38/s .. 60/27/s Mianeapolis.....54/33/000... 62/48/s .. 58/30/c Cabo530Lucas ..84/72/0.00 ..86/66/pc. 86/65/pc Rjo deJaneiro....86/70/0.00... 87/70/t.89/72/pc Colvmbia,MO...62/39/000...67/46/s. 67/42/sh Nashvife........68/48/000... 66/41/s. 69/45/pc Cairo...........79/61/000..78/64/pc.75/58/pc Rome...........64/54/000 ..65/52/pc.. 64/52/c ColvmbiaSC....65/42/000 ..66/39/pc.. 67/37/s New Orleans.....73/49/000...73/54/s .. 72/54/s Calgary.........45/14/000 ..33/20/sn.. 30/26/c Santiago........81/54/000..76/47/pc.. 75/52/s Columbus,GA....70/55/000 ..70/44/pc.. 70/43/s New York.......51/40/000..53/40/pc .. 56/45/s Cancvn.........79/70/015..80/65/pc. 77/64/pc SaoPavlo.......84/66/000..75/58/pc. 80/62/pc Columbus, OH....55/37/000...59/40/s .. 60/45/s Newark, NJ......52/34/0 00..54/39/pc .. 55/42/s Dublin..........55/45/000..51/49/pc.49/41/sh Sapporo ........39/32/000..33/26/pc.38/30/sh Concord,NH.....49/17/000..47/28/pc .. 52/28/s Norfolk, VA......54/50/0 00 ..59/42/pc .. 59/41/s Edinburgh.......57/46/000 ..47/43/sh. 48/40/sh Seoul...........43/27/000 ..46/29/pc. 49/31/sh Corpus Christi....81/59/000 ..77/63/pc. 76/66/pc OklahomaCity...73/45/000...75/54/s. 72/45/sh Geneva.........41/39/000 ..47/41/pc.. 45/40/c Shanghai........63/45/000 ..62/53/sh. 64/55/sh DallasFtWorth...80/50/0.00... 77/55/s .. 75/52/c Omaha.........62/30/0.00... 68/48/s.62/34/pc Harare..........91/63/000... 89/62/s. 87/60/pc Singapore.......88/77/0 31 ... 87/77/1...87/79/t Dayton .........58/42/000...59/41/s.. 61/45/s Orlando.........74/56/000..74/51/pc .. 73/49/s Hong Kong......75/72/001..80/73/sh...83/73/t Stockholm.......46/37/000..44/39/pc. 44/37/sh Denver..........68/32/0.00...68/36/s.. 55/29/s PalmSprings.... 79/54/0.00...82/52/s .. 84/55/s Istanbul.........66/55/000... 60/54/c.61/53/sh Sydney..........70/61/000 ..81/61/pc. 70/60/pc DesMoines......60/37/000...68/47/s. 64/36/pc Peoria..........62/46/000...62/43/s. 63/43/pc lervsalem.......69/50/0Co...71/55/s.70/55/sh Taipei...........79/66/000 ..7I707sh...80/727r Detroit..........57/39/002...55/42/s.. 56/44/s Philadelphia.....52/40/000..54/39/pc .. 55/40/s Johannesburg....86/6IO.JI... 86/62/t...69/56/t Tel Aviv.........75/61/0.00...75/61/s. 73/60/sh Duluth..........47/28/0 00 ..52/39/pc. 50/29/pc Phoenix.........84/55/0 00... 81/56/s .. 79/56/s Lima...........72/64/O.jl .. 73/62/pc. 72/62/pc Tokyo...........63/43/0.00... 59/47/s.55/45/sh El Paso..........72/44/000... 68/50/1.. 72/42/s Pittsburgh.......53/33/000..53/36/pc .. 59/40/s Lisbon..........63/50/000 ..56/47/sh 5I51/pc Toronto.........48/36/000 .46/35/pc 53/44/s Fairbanks........ 2/19/0 00 ..-13/27/c. -8/18/pc Portland,ME.....49/24/0 00..46/32/pc .. 50/31/5 London.........55/52/0.07 .. 53/45/pc.54/49/pc Yancovver.......50/43/0.41... 46/39/r. 46/43/sh Fargo...........sl/19/000 ..57/37/pc..42/22/rs Providence......51/33/000..54/39/pc .. 53/38/s Madrid .........54/39/000 ..56/41/sh.61/39/pc Vienna..........45/39/000...47/44/c .. 48/42/c Flagstaff........62/20/000... 58/25/5.. 56/26/s Raleigh.........59/43/000..59/37/pc 61/35l .. s Manila..........91/79/003 ..90/77/pc. 92/78/pc Warsaw.........46/37/000 ..39/32/pc. 42/38/pc
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• 85 0 Killeen, Texas
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:I0 a.m...... 4:07 p.m. Venus......4:30 a.m...... 3:17 p.m. Mars.......9:56 a.m...... 6:35 p.m. Jupiter......507 pm...... 816 a m. Satum......4:55 a.m...... 3;31 p.m. Uranus.....2:07 p.m...... 2:25 a.m.
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
states):
PLANET WATCH
Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . . .26-36 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 24 Squaw Valley, California..... .. . 2 . . . . . . .5-28 Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0... no report Taos, NewMexico....... . . . . . 0.0...no report Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 18 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www.skjcentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precjpitation, s-sun,pc-partjal clouds,c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mjx,w-wind, f-jog, dr-drjzzle,tr-trace
•
d4 d449/36 i0 d0 d4 4 4
Astoria ........ 54/45/0.38..... 52/40/r.....53/43/sh Baker City......55/48/0.05....45/27/sh......44730/c Brookings......56/53/2.61 ....54/44/sh......54/49/c Burns..........56/45/0.02.....43/23/r......45/27/c Eugene........ 56/49/1.18..... 52/36/r.....49/43/sh Klamajh Falls .. 52/45/0 08 ...43/25/sh ...46/28/pc Lakeview.......52/43/0.00 ... 42/26/rs.....46/28/pc La Pine........45/37/0.00.... 39/24/rs......41/26/c Medford.......58/50/1.13.....49/36/r.....50/39/pc Newport....... 54/46/0.77..... 52/38/r.....54/45/sh North Bend...... 59/50/NA..... 51/41/r.....55/48/pc Ontario........60/49/0.00....54/33/sh.....48/35/pc Pendleton......54/46/0.31 ....51/34/sh......48/35/c Portland .......58/49/0.47.....50/40/r......49/45/c Prineville.......54/41/0.18....39/29/sh......47/32/c Redmond....... 54/42/0.19.... 42/26/rs......47/32/c Roseburg.......57/50/1.89....50/40/sh......53/43/c Salem ....... 57/48/087 ....51/37/r ...49/42/sh Sisters.........50/39/0.00.... 40/27/rs......45/30/c The Dages......60/46/0 29....50/35/sh......48/38/c
x x x x x x x x )x x x x x x x x ' rqyssa ' Junturd xxx x 54/3355
Hampton,xxx • Burcjsii L a Pirjess/24~ ' 9 7/2&» 'o s o/42~ 4 ii i Rile y i i 4 0 /26 51/43• 4 4 4 4 „ 4 4 4 1 4 C rescenp • ci i d d d 4 d d 4Lakrjj g Cr e3scentv oyortRock40/2hxixk y ,4,4,4 ixx i xi ix ki i i i < i x i i 42/74 7(23 ic c
cooseayd 4
4 J 4 4 4 42 / 18 • Bandond d 4 Fkjyebugj 4
City Precipitation values are24-hovr totajs through4p m.
52132.% q
38/26
4 Oakridge 1 4 4Grove d d d d39/27 Q+. •
G
39 26
Yesterday Wednesday Thursday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
EAST Mostly cloudy with Cjnkano numerous showers 55 % % 5 % % $ 4/33 expected today. 4/ajeo. i
"
52 / 3 6 4 4 44 4
HIGH LOW
44 29
OREGON CITIES
'
'
PXX% XXXN X XXXX XX I"4 4 4"4"4V4 d ~ S i sters ~~~ Redmood~,~~~ j~~~~ ii 4 4 /31 iji e, 0 x t rauhn a 35/zN x x x x C x x x 42/28 F jorencia4 441Eu g eeng II4 d4 d4 d "
HIGH LOW
45 35
• Pl
rain and higher elevation snow expected today.
Lincolncity
53/47
HIGH LOW
40 30
Sunsettoday...... 4 33 p.m F ull L ast N e w First Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:I 0 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 4:33 p.m l• Moonuse today.... I:03 p.m Moonset today ...12:20 a.m Nov. 28 Dec. 6 Dec. 13 Dec. 19
CENTRAL Breezy with
•
"
Chris Fdetooh/The Register-Guard
A day after a torrential downpour and windstorm moved through the area, rain clouds part enough Tuesday for a rainbow to emerge along state Highway 58 near Pleasant Hill. County. "That was the choice yesterday; you could have strong or stronger." The storm took the life of an elk hunter near Nehalem, who died when a tree fell on his tent, and left a trail of downed
branches and limbs from Astoria, where a wind gust of 101 mph was recorded, to Bend and points east. Logs littered the Willamette River and other waterways, making travel more difficult for boaters.
This year Patrick was given an extra challenge when he d iscovered there would b e triple the number of meals to be delivered to homebound people. Even with the knowledge that he'd have to round LTP a dramatiCally inCreaSed number of volunteers in the
days before Thanksgiving, he
wasn't too concerned. "It's always a struggle to put this on, but once we get going it's great — seldom do we encounter someone who says no," Patrick says. That includes the Patrick and Seitz families, who put in the better part of the day, then eventually — maybe — go home to their own holiday meal. Deschutes County Commissioner Alan Unger, a former Redmond mayor, volunteered at the meal in its early days. He said he sees the transition of organizers for the event as a posi— for a year. tive wayto keep it going. "PeOPle haVe been Very SLTP"There's a point where, like portive," says Seitz. "We get do- a lot of public service, you find nations for food, I get donations SOmeOnetO Carry it On,u he SayS. from my suppliers, we have "It's like a relay race, passing plenty of volunteers who have the baton so none of the runa great time. Sometimes they ners gets too tired," he says. even stay and have their dinner — Reporter: 541-548-21 84, with us instead of going home." lpugmirecmbendbufletin.com
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A few showers in the early morning.
HIGH LOW
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 7:09 a.m Moon phases
WEST Cloudy and breezy with rain tapering to showers today.
Astoria 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
4 4 42/404 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 N x x x x x x x x txxxu matjjja,x x x x x x x x x i x x i i i « « t i i i x x 5 easjdco 4 4 0 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4-loodd 4 . xx x xXxXxXxXxx x xx Xx X X X i 5 0 /37 i x ' .x x x x i x x X ' 4 % % %%%%xi t t X X X X • Ciadnd tj n 'i 0 G G G 1 2iverj G Y le t % y % % % i i % % $ it • Hermjstorsi/35, ipi vjmjj 52/42q i l O j j 0 ggs i, i• Arljrjgton,' • 4 4 4 4 44 4dR G47/sg 4 Oalles,46/38, . xt s s 48 / 37 i i i i • Pendlecon'it +2/27i 4 d Hillsboo Portlang 4 4 4 t 4 t t $i 0o /xi3 «• oWa s co ' t s t v t 0 x x x t s j / 34 io hxEnterprru,d )50/jjo '5andy 4 4 4ix TijjamoojtI,' ,'' f 48/ +4 4 i34 x wxxx xx x xxxx • M eachamxxx 4 s/zs ti ' , x ' xx)i 0 co<47/41 d x x x x x i x x R u ggs x x x x x x 54/44 d44 x xxxxx s 48133xxx xx x +44s x 41/29 • (McMjnntdjj Jjk x Maupinci.x ii'xiiiohhkh
More rain through the clay.
sible
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE
1
A few clouds, lateday showers are pos-
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LENDER
good friends. great service.'
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•
Scoreboard, D2 NFL, D3 College basketball, D3 College football, D4 NBA, D3
Tee to Green, D6
THE BULLETIN e WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
LOCALLY Runs on tap for holiday weekend Central Oregonians will have plenty of opportunities to burn
some calories off before or after indulging in a Thanksgiving feast. The following is a list
COLLEGE FOOTBALL: THE CIVIL WAR
At Autzen Stadium, a familiar voice Eight
related running events
The Bulletin
being stagedThursday through Saturday:
It could be kept as a dirty little secret. But Don Essig is happy to talk about it. The public-address voice of University of Oregon sports for the past 45 years and owner of the catchphrase "It never rains in Autzen Stadium," Essig actually attended Oregon State University and was the lead cheerleader forthe OSU
Distances: 2K, 5K, 10K,
10 miles (untimed event) Cost: Donation of $5 or more requested, as is the donation of
s
teams
0
Next up
By Mark Moricai
downtown Bend
Pac-1 2
• The Ducks' longtime public address announcer DonEssigwasonce a Beaver
of local Thanksgiving-
• i Like Pie Run/Walk Date: Thursday Start time: 9 a.m., behind FootZone in
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
rally squad. But Essig, now 74, earned
eligible for bowls
Oregon at OregonState • When:Saturday, noon • TV:Pac-12 Network his master's and doctorate degrees in education at the rival school: the University of Oregon. And after he secured the PA announcer gig at UO in 1967, his transition from Beaver to Duck was complete. See Voice /D4
By john Marshall Chris Pietsch/The Register-Guard
Longtime University of Oregon sports public-address announcer Don Essig, middle, is pictured with statistician Stan Hultgren, left, and spotter Jack Pynes in the Autzen Stadium press box in Eugene.
five pounds of food per participant for Neighborlmpact More info:
footzonebend.com/ events/i-like-pierunwalk • Bend Turkey Trot Date: Thursday Start time: 9 a.m., Northwest Skyline Ranch Road, Bend Distances: 5K run/walk, 10K run/walk and 1-mile trotters walk
• Central Oregon Indoor Golf is welcomingwinter-weary golfers in a newBendlocation
The count is even higher this season: eight bowl-eligible teams, two possibly to BCS games, and an outside shot at the national title game. After aseason ofteams beating up on each other
participants asked to
donate grocery bagof nonperishable foods for the La Pine Community Kitchen More info: bendturkeytrot.com
and some surprising up-
• BGCCO Turkey Trot Date: Thursday Start time: 9 a.m., Les Schwab Amphitheater,
(~(
Bend
(
i e
.~.,y
j
t: I
Distances: 5K run/walk, 10K run/walk and 1.5mile trotters walk
Cost: $9-$25 More info:
bgccoturkeytrot.com • Sisters Turkey Trot Date: Saturday, Village Green Park, Sisters Start time: 11 a.m. Distances: 5K run/walk and 1-mile trotters walk Cost: Free (registration
required); participants asked to donate grocery bag of nonperishable foods More info:
bendturkeytrot.com — Suttetin staff report Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Ravens' Reed avoids suspension OWINGS MILLS, Md. — Baltimore Ravens safety Ed Reed avoided
a one-game suspension for illegal hits after an appeal. He instead will be fined $50,000.
Reed was suspended for one game without
pay on Monday byNFL vice president of football operations Merton Hanks for his third violation in three seasons of the rule prohibiting helmet-to-helmet hits
PHOENIX — Just two years ago, the Pac-12 did not come close to filling its bowl allotment, sending only four teams to the postseason. Two of those teams went to BCS bowls — Oregon played for the national championship and Stanford played in the Orange Bowl — but it was not what the conference was hoping for, even as a 10-team conference. In its first season as the Pac-12, the conference bounced back, sending seven teams to bowl games
a year ago.
Cost: $9-$25;
NFL
The Associated Press
Dan McCleery, owner of Central Oregon Indoor Golfin Bend, plays a round of golf with a customer (not pictured) on his golf simulator on Tuesday. After closing in 2011, the facility reopened in a new location this year. By Zack Hall The Bulletin
Rain. Snow. Sleet. All of it is good for Dan McCleery's business. "I hate the cold, but I'm praying for 10 feet (of snow)," says McCleery, owner of Central Oregon Indoor Golf in Bend. For McCleery, the golf season is just
beginning. As the owner of a facility that uses two
electronic golf simulators to attract golfers to take their games inside, the more severe the weather, the better for business, McCleery says. McCleery, 46, has spent a lifetime around golf. And he is now is in the PGA of America's apprenticeship program at Black Butte Ranch's Glaze Meadow course to become a golf professional. See Golf /D5
TF E TO
CentralOregonIndoorGolf Basic per-hourrates: $20 for singles, $30 for twosomes, $35 for threesomes, $40 for foursomes Hours:Tuesdaythrough Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-9:30 p.m.; Sunday, 10a.m.-6:30 p.m.; Monday, appointment only. Tee times are encouraged. Contact: www.coigbend.com; 541-633-7277 Address:1245 S.E. Third Street, Suite C-4, Bend
sets, the Pac-12 has reemerged as a powerhouse conference. "It's just indicative that this conference is really good and really competitive and I think has done pretty well on a national scope," Oregon State coach Mike Riley said Tuesday. There is still a lot to be decided in the final two weeks. No. 15 UCLA has wrapped up the South Division's spot in the Nov. 30 Pac-12 championship game, but the Bruins can have an impact on who wins the North in the final weekend of the regular season. The Bruins, who have a two-game lead over Southern California after beating their Los Angeles rivals last week, host No. 11 Stanford, which shook up the BCS standings by knocking off then top-ranked Oregon last weekend. If the Cardinal beat UCLA, they will win the North and face the Bruins again the next week in the Pac-12 title game. If UCLA wms and No. 5 Oregon beats No. 16 Oregon State in the Civil War on Saturday in Corvallis, the Ducks will play the Bruins in the
championship game. See Bowls /D5
CO MM E NTARY
against defenseless players. The third violation occurred in
There's still a lot to be
Sundaynight'sgameat
thankful for in sports
Pittsburgh: Reed's hit to the head of receiver Em-
manuel Sanders. Reed appealed the ruling in a phonesession Tuesdaymorning
The Associated Press I
with NFL hearing officer Ted Cottrell. The NFL
Players Association represented Reed,who also
By Tim Dahlberg
o
s
r
rr+s
participated. Hours later, Cottrell reduced the penalty. In a letter to Reed, Cottrell wrote: "I have determined that your
actions were egregious and warrant significant discipline. However, I do not believe that your ac-
tions were soegregious as to subject you to a one-game suspension without pay." — The Associated Press
Wilfredc Lee/The Associated Press
The return of sports to Brooklyn with the NBA's Nets (and guard Deron Williams, pictured) is one thing for sports fans to be thankful for in 2012.
he bad stuff is easy. You read about it almost every day; hear it discussed endlessly by the talking heads on radio and television. But if sports is a microcosm of society — and it is — then there's a lot of good going on, too. And, as we celebrate Thanksgiving, here aresome things to be thankful for this year that have nothing to do with wins and losses, the World Series or the Super Bowl: A COACH'SFIGHT: Circumstances. That's what Indianapolis Colts coach Chuck Pagano called his
health problems when he came into the locker room after a win against Miami a few weeks ago and addressed his team for the first time since unexpectedly being hospitalized just as his first season as head coach was beginning. The circumstances are that Pagano has leukemia, an insidious disease that's difficult to beat no matter how hard you fight. In a moving speech that you have to watch to fully appreciate, Pagano vowed to dance at the weddings of both his daughters and to hoist more than one Super Bowl trophy before
he's done fighting.
See Thankful /D5
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D2 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TELEVISION Today
Thursday
VOLLEYBALL
3 a.m.: College, USC at Oregon State (taped), Pac-12Network. 8 p.m.: College, Arizonaat Washington State, Pac-12 Network.
GOLF Midnight: European Tour, DP World Tour Championship, first round, Golf Channel. VOLLEYBALL
ON DECK Friday Football: Class 5A statesemifinal, Redmondvs Marrst,Wilamette University inSalem,5 p.m.
League, Anderlecht vs. Milan,
Network. BASKETBALL
Root Sports.
9a.m.: Men's college, OldSpice
6:30p.m.: UEFA Champions
Classic, quarterfinal, Marist vs. West Virginia, ESPN2.
11:30 a.m.: UEFA Champions
League, Manchester City vs. Real Madrid (same-day tape),
11:30a.m.: Men's college, Old Spice Classic, quarterfinal,
Root Sports. BASKETBALL
Davidson vs. Vanderbilt, ESPN2.
2p.m.:Men'scollege,Maui
1:30 p.m.: Men's college,
Invitational, fifth-place game, Marquette vs. USC, ESPN2.
DirecTV Classic, quarterfinal, Drexel vs. St. Mary's, ESPN2.
4 p.m.: Men's college, Miami (Ohio) at William 8 Mary, NBC
4p.m.: Men's college, OldSpice Classic, quarterfinal, Oklahoma
Sports Network. 4:30 p.m.: NBA, Los Angeles Clippers at Oklahoma City Thunder, ESPN.
vs. UTEP, ESPN2. 4p.m.: Men's college, Battle for Atlantis, Memphis vs. Virginia Commonwealth, NBC Sports Network.
4:30p.m.:Men'scollege,Maui Invitational, third-place game, North Carolina vs. Chaminade, ESPN2. 6 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Phoenix Suns, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
6p.m.:Men'scollege,Idaho State at Utah, Pac-12 Network. 6:30p.m.: Men's college, NIT Season Tip-Off, semifinal, Michigan vs. Pittsburgh, ESPN2.
7p.m.:Men'scollege,Maui Invitational, final, Butler vs. lllinois, ESPN.
9 p.m.: Men's college, Colorado State at Denver, Root Sports.
6:30 p.m.: Men's college, Old Spice Classic, quarterfinal,
Clemson vs. Gonzaga,ESPN2. 6:30 p.m.: Men's college, Battle for Atlantis, Louisville vs. Northern lowa, NBC Sports Network.
8:30 p.m.: Men's college, DirecTV Classic, quarterfinal, Cal
vs. Drake, ESPN2. FOOTBALL 9:30a.m.: NFL, Houston Texans at Detroit Lions, CBS. 1:30p.m.:NFL,Washi ngton Redskins at Dallas Cowboys, Fox. 4:30p.m.: College, TCU at Texas, ESPN. 5:30p.m.: NFL, New England Patriots at New York Jets, NBC.
RADIO Today BASKETBALL 6p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazersat Phoenix Suns, KBND-AM1110, KRCO-AM 690. BASKETBALL 7 p.m.: Men's college, Maui Invitational, final, Butler vs. Illinois, KICEAM 940.
NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times PST AMERICA NCONFERE NCE East L T Pct PF PA NewEngland 3 0 700 35B 225 N.Y.Jets W 4 6 0 400 202 241 7 Buffalo 6 0 400 230 299 Miami 6 0 400 1B7 205 South L T Pct PF PA Houston f 0 900 293 fBO Indianapolis W 41 4 0 600 2)0 260 6 9 Tennesse e 6 0 400 2)9 31f Jacksonville 9 0 100 164 2B9 North L T Pct PF PA Baltimore 2 0 BOO 267 206 Pittsburgh W 2 4 0 600 2)7 fgo 5 6 B Cincinnati 5 0 500 24B 237 Cleveland B 0 200 IB9 234 West L T Pct PF PA W 7 3 0 700 301 2)2 Denver SanDie 6 0 .400 232 221 go 3 7 0 .300 20B 322 4 Oakland KansasCity f 9 0 .100 152 2B4 NATIONA LCONFER ENCE East L T Pct PF PA N.Y.Giants 4 0 600 267 216 Dallas W 3 5 0 500 211 224 4 5 6 Washington 6 0 400 257 254 Philadelphia 7 0 300 162 252 South L T Pct PF PA Atlanta f 0 900 270 )93 TampaBay W 2 4 0 600 2B7 230 5 6 9 NewOrleans 5 0 500 2B7 273 Carolina B 0 200 1B4 243 North L T Pct PF PA GreenBay 3 0 700 263 207 Chicago 3 0 700 249 165 Mrnnesota 4 0 600 23B 22) Detroit 6 0 400 236 246 West L T Pct PF PA 7 SanFrancisco W 2 f 750 245 )34 Seattle 4 0 600 fgB 161 Arizona 3 6 0 400 f63 fg6 4 6 St. Louis 6 f 350 174 237
Monday'sGame SanFrancisco32,Chicago 7 Thursday'sGames Houstonat Detroit, 9:30a.m. Washington atDalas, I:15p.m. NewEnglandat N.Y.Jets, 5:20p.m. Sunday'sGames Denverat Kansas City, f0a.m MinnesotaatChicago, 10a.m. OaklandatCincinnati, f0 a.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland,f0 a.m. Buffalo atIndianapolis,10 a.m. Tennessee atJacksonvile, 10a.m. AtlantaatTampaBay, f0 a.m. SeattleatMiami,f0 a.m. BaltimoreatSanDiego,f:05 p.m. St. LouisatArizona, t:25 p.m. SanFranciscoatNewOrleans, f:25 p.m. GreenBayatNYGiants, 520pm. Monday,Nov.26 Carolrnaat Phrladelphra,5.30p.m.
College Tuesday'sGame
Volleyball • Former Storm player sets OSij dig record: BeckyDefoe, aBendhome-schoole dstudent who playedsports at Summit and is now a junior at Oregon State,
set the Beavers' single-seasondig record Tuesday in a three-set loss to USC. Defoe ended the night
• Kuroda, Yanks agree to deal: Hiroki Kuroda is staying with the New York Yankees,
agreeing to a$15million, oneyear contract. A person familiar with the negotiations said the
right-hander reachedthe agreement Tuesday.Kuroda,whoturns 38 in February, was the Yankees'
with 577 digs onthe year, break-
most consistent pitcher during the regular season. Hewent
ing her own record of 555 digs from the 2011 season. OSUfell to 4-15 in Pac-12 play with the threeset defeat to the Trojans. The Bea-
16-11, tying for the team lead in wins, and led New York with 33 starts and 219 N innings.
vers end their seasonFridaywith a home matchagainst Oregon.
Football
Basketball
Plaxico Burress is back with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Pittsburgh signed the 35-year-old wide
• 0-iii player scores138
receiver onTuesdayto provide
Jack Taylor wasgiven the green
by injuries. Antonio Brownhas missed the past two games with a sprained ankleandJerricho
light to shoot his way out of a
slump. It only took108 shots for Taylor to make a mockery of the
college basketball record books. Taylor scored138 points to shat-
terthe NCAAscoring recordin Division III Grinnell's179-104 victory over Faith Baptist Bible on Tuesday night in Grinnell, lowa. Taylor, a 5-foot-10,170-pound
sophomore from BlackRiver Falls, Wis., made27of 713-point attempts, was 52 of108 overall from the field and added seven free throws on10 attempts in 36
depth at a position decimated
Cotchery fractured his ribs late in Sunday night's13-10 loss to the Baltimore Ravens. Burress spent his first five seasons in the NFL with the Steelers. He played for the New York Jets last year,
catching 45 passesfor 612 yards and eight touchdown receptions.
Hockey • Lador talks expected today:
with 113 points against Hillsdale in1954.
Baseball
break in talks. Before Monday night's 90-minute session, it had
• Blue Jays hire Gibbons
as manager again: BlueJays President Paul Beeston couldn't
believe it when helearned the BlueJayshadthechancetoland three star players from the Miami Marlins last week. He was equally
surprised whenhis general manager told him he wanted to hire
been eight dayssincethe sides got together. Whether the players' association will bring a new
complete proposal, asrequested by theNHL on Monday, to the
next round of talks remained uncertain.
Boxing
JohnGibbonstomanagetheBlue Jays again. "Theywereback-toback shockers," Beeston said with a laugh.Generalmanager Alex Anthopoulos unexpectedly hired Gibbons ashis new manager onTuesday, adayafter
• Former champ Camacho shot: Former champion boxer Hector "Macho" Camachowas seriously woundedTuesday in ashooting outside thePuerto Rican capital of SanJuan, and doctors andhisspokesman said
a megadeal with the Miami Marlins reinvigorated the roster and raised expectations the Blue Jays
he was expected to survive. At
will make theplayoffs for the first time since winning their second consecutive World Series in 1993.Gibbons managed Toronto from 2004-08 and had a 305-305
record.
least one gunmanopenedfire on the 50-year-old Camachoand another man as they sat in a car in the city of Bayamon. Camacho won super lightweight, lightweight and junior welterweight world titles in the1980s. — From wire reports
Winthrop Bf, Mississippi St.59
Top 25Schedule All Times PBT Thursday No.1BTexasvsTCU,430p.m. Friday No. BLSUat Arkansas, I I:30 a.m. No. )7 Nebraska at lowa,9 a.m. No. 23KentStatevs.Ohio,Bam. No. 24Northernllinois atEastern Michigan,10a.m. Saturday No. f NotreDam eat Southern Cal, 5p.m. No. 2Alabama vs. Auburn, 12:BOp.m. No. 3Georgiavs. Georgia Tech, 9am. No. 4OhioStatevs. No.20Michigan, 9a.m. No. 5Oregonat No. f6 OregonState, noon No. 6FloridaatNo.f0 FloridaState, f2:30 p.m. No. 9Texas AfkMvs. Missouri,q p.m. No. 10FloridaStatevs. No 6Florida, I2:30 p.m. No. ff StanfordatNo. )5UCLA,3:30p.m. No. )2 Clemson vs. No.13 SouthCarolina 4p m. No. 14Okahomavs. No.22 OklahomaState, 1230 p.m. No. )9 Louisvillevs.Uconn,9a.m. No. 21Rutgersat Pittsburgh,9a.m. No. 25Mississippi StateatMississippi, 4 p.m. No.25 UtahStatevs.Idaho,noon
Men's college
Pac-12 Standings All TimesPST North
Stanford Oregon Oregon State Washington California Washington State
Conf.
7-f 7-f 6-2 5-3 2-7 0-B
South
UCLA USC Arizona ArizonaState Utah
Overall
9-2 f 0-f B-2 7-4 3-9 2-9
Conf.
Overall
62 5-4 4-4 4-4 2-6 1-7
92 7-4 7-4 6-5 4-7 1-10
Colorado
Friday's Games Utah atColorado,noon Washington atWashington State,12:30 p.m ArizonaStateatArizona,7 pm Saturday'sGames OregonatOregonState,noon StanfordatUCLA, 3:30 p.m. x-Notr eDameatUSC,5p.m. x-nonconference
This time, NHL owners and play-
ers are staying apart for just one day. Negotiations aimed atended the league's lockout areexpected to resume today,following a brief
minutes. RioGrande's Bevo Francis held theNCAAscoring record
LOUISVILLE tz5 12 C o nnecticutCornell 70,Manhatan60 GEORG IA f3 (3 Ga Tech Delaware 64, Providence46 NCARO LINA 24 24.5 Ma ryland Fairfield52,St. Bonaventure49 VA TEC H f 0.5 t 0.5 Virginia HarvardBO , Holy Cross62 MichiganSt 7.5 B MI NNESOTALa Salle49,Lehigh4B Miami-Fla 5 6 DUKE NC A8,T49,Siena47 NORTH WESTERN IB.S IB.5 glinois NJIT73,St. Francis(NY)61 Nc STA TE fa5 (4 Boston College Navy71,Loyola(Md.)60 TENNE SSEE f4.5 f3 Ken tucky Northeastern 73, Boston U.62 PENN ST 3 3 Wis consin Oakland52, Canisius Sf PITTSBU RGH 2 2 Rutgers Pittsburgh65,Wagner39 PURDU E 5.5 5.5 Indiana PrincetonBB,Rider 42 TexasSt ).5 (.5 TX-S ANTO NIO Sacred Heart 79, St.Peter's 34 UTAHST 39 3B.5 Idaho Syracuse BO,Saint Joseph's39 SanDiegoSt 7 7 WY OMINGTowson62,UMBC44 a-Baylor 2 2.5 T e xas Tech SOUTH ALABAMA 32 31.5 Auburn AppalachianSt B4,Gardner-Webb43 MISSISSIPP I PK f 5 Miss St Be mont66, Binghamton 47 Stanford PK 2 UCLA CoastalCarolina79,S.Virginia 46 Byu 29.5 29.5NEW MEXICOST CoppinSt. 75,Longwood67 FRESNO ST f6.5 )6.5 Air Force Georgia94, SavannahSt. 57 OKLAHO MA B.5 7 O k lahoma StKansas St.62,TennesseeSt. 47 TEXAS AfkM 21 22 Missouri Louisiana Tech65, Cent.Arkansas63 Oregon f 0.5 10 O REGON ST Louisville 94,UCF73 Tulsa 5 5 SMU McNeese St.76,Houston72 FLORIDA ST NL NL Florida MiddleTennessee65,TennesseeTech 59, OT SANJOSEST 4 4.5 La Tech MurraySt.76,Evansville 62 MEMPHIS 4 4.5 SoM iss NC State Bf, CharlestonSouthern54 HOUST ON fz5 t ZS Tulane NewOrleansBB,Ark.-Monticello 5B COLOR ADOST 2 5 a5 N ew MexicoNorthwestern St 65,Wiley57 UTEP ).5 I Rice Old Dominion62, Md.-EasternShore46 CLEMSO N 4 4 SC arolinaSC State 60, Presbyterian55 CFLOR IDA 22 22 Uab SE Louisiana gf, WiliamCarey69 NotreDame 6 6.5 USC SouthAlabama63, Southern U.4f Unlv NL NL HAWAII SouthFlorida60,Bradley50 WKEN TUCKY ff.5 11.5 NT exas Stetson66,Bethune-Cookman52 MID TENN ST z5 z5 Troy UNCAsheville77, Montreat50 UL-LAFA YETTE f B IB.5 SAlabama VCU79, UMKC55 Ul-Monroe 6 6 FLA INT'L W. Carolina67,NCCentral 55
BASKETBALL
• Steeierssign WR Burress:
points: After a poor shooting weekend, Grinnell point guard
"He missed another one ...
After the game, squash him."
MIDWEST
Toledo35,Akron23
SP0RTs IN B RI EF
In the Bleachers c 2012 steve Moore. Dist. uy Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleacners
FOOTBALL
4 a.m.: College, Colorado at Stanford (taped), Pac-12
SOCCER
IN THE BLEAcHERs
Betting line NFL
(Hometeamsin Caps) Open Current Underdog Thursday Texans 3 3 LIONS COWB OYS 4 4 Redskins Patriots 7 6 JETS Sunday BENGAL S z5 B Raiders Steelers NL NL BROWN S COLTS 3 3 Bills Broncos f0.5 10.5 CHIEFS Titans 3 3 JAGUAR S BEARS NL NL Vikings Falcons PK t BUCS Seahawsk z5 3 DOLPHINS Ravens 1.5 t CHARG ERS 49ers N l. N L SAINTS CARDS z5 z5 Rams GIANTS z5 z5 Packers Monday EAGLES NL NL Panthers Favorite
COLLEGE
Thursday
Tuesday'sGames EAST
Army67,St.Francis (NY)59 CCSUB3,UMBCB2,OT Canisius7f, Buffalo64 Columbia75,Vilanova57 JamesMadison69, YoungstownSt. 6B La Salle64, Hartford5f N. DakotaSt.57, Duquesne43 RutgersBf, BostonU 79 Saint Joseph's75, Harvard56
SOUTH Alabama ABMf03, Oakwood77 Albany(NY)B3,ScState55 CoastalCarolina96,JohnsonBWales(NC)40 ETSU59, Charleston Southern 57 EastCarolinaB2,AppalachianSt 72 Evansville62,TennesseeTech50 Florida5B,SavannahSt.40 Georgi aSt.59,TennesseeSt.57 LSU f02,NorthwesternSt.95 LouisianaTech71,Chatanooga 63 MarylandB3,Lafayette 74 MiddleTennessee75, UCFBt Mississippi76,McNeeseSt. 50 Monmouth(NJ)73,SouthAlabama71 NC Central94,ToccoaFals 40 NewOrleans99, BlueMountain 51 Richmond64,Wofford SB SE Louisiana 91, LouisianaCollege49 SouthFloridaB2,Bradley63 SouthernMiss.69, UcIrvine 65 Troy 59,SEMissouri 56 UAB76,Prairie View70 UT-Martin92, LyonSB VirginiaBO,North Texas64 Winthrop59,Lenoir-Rhyne35 MIDWEST Cincinnati91,Campbell 72 Creightonf05, Longwood57 IPFW92,Judson22 llinois St.9), FairleighDickinson5B IndianaSt.BB,Ball St. 4B lowaSt.BB,NcAikT57 KentSt.69,Bethune-CookmanBB MichiganSt. 74,BoiseSt.70 Northwestern69,DelawareSt. 50 Ohio 75,Hampton67 S. Illinois 7f, SIU-Edwardsville55 WisconsinBB,Presbyterian 43 SOUTHWES T ArkansasBg,Florida ABM60 Oakland71,TexasSouthem69 Pepperdine 57, Houston Baptist 53, OT SamHoustonSt. 64,Liberty Lg StephenF.Austin 78,Jarvis Christian39 TCU47, Navy45 TexasTechgt, Grambling St. 56 FAR WEST ArizonaSt.64 Cornell53 Idaho72,GreenBay62 SanJoseSt.94,Uc SantaCruz54 SantaClaraB5,SC-Upstate65 UC DavisBT SacramentoSt. 76 UtahValleyBB,EasternWashington B3 TOURNAMEN T CBEHall of FameClassic Championship Kansas73,Saint Louis59 Thtrd Place TexasA&M55,Washington St 54 CancunChallenge-Mayan First Round AustinPeay7Z W.Carolina 7f Gardner-Webb 55, Howa~d43 CancunChallenge-Riviera First Round lowa63,W.Kentucky55 WichitaSt.75, DePaul 62 EA Sports Maut Invttattonal Semifinals Butler B2,North Carolina Tf llinois B4,Chaminade61 Consolation Bracket MarquetteBg,Mississippi St.62 SouthernCal59, Texas53, OT
TEXAS
B5
Nebraska c-BowlGreen CMichigan Ball St Syracuse No lllinois CINCINNA TI ECARO LINA KENTST Lsu Utah WVirginia Washington ARIZON A
f4 145 IOWA 9 9. 5 Buffalo ProgressiveLegendsClassic f 1 1 0 5MASSAC HUSETTS Championship B.S 9 MIAMI-OHIO IndianaB2,Georgetown72,OT 9 B TEMPLE Third Place f g.5 2 0 EMICHIG AN UCLA60,Georgia 56 f3 13 SFlorida 4.5 5 Marshall Monday' sLateGame 10 1 0.5 Ohio U EA SportsMaui Invitational f z5 f 2 ARKANS AS First Round 2 ).5 2 3 COLOR ADO llinois 94,SouthernCal64 PK 1 IOWA ST ID.S )1.5 WASHINGTON ST Wo m en's college 3 3 Arizona St
OHIOST Vanderbilt
55 4 12 1 1.5
7
Friday
Saturday
Tcu
Tuesday'sGames
Michigan WAKEFOREST
EAST BostonCollege64, New Hampshire 59
MIDWEST Creighton53,SouthDakota49 IUPLR 71, IndianaSt. 67 lowaSB,Robert Morris 44 Nebraska B5,SamHoustonSt. 72 NotreDame93, Mercer36 Ohio St.70,St. Francis(Pa) 54 SOUTHWE ST Oklahoma St. 96,Texas-PanAmerican42 Stephen F.Austin Bg,Northwood(Texas)2B Texas BO , Jackson St. 53 Texas ABM70, Liberty 55 UtahSt. 67,Prairie View66 FAR WEST BYU62,Arizona4B FresnoSt. 64,GramblrngSt. 52 Gonzaga BO,Missouri St. 66 IdahoSt. 64,BoiseSt.55 LoyolaMarymountBS,Cal St.-Fullerton 73 NewMexico60,New MexicoSt.37 OregonSt. 49,UCSantaBarbara46 Pacitic 72,SantaClara45 PortlandSt.67, Corban52 Sacramento St. 74,UtahValley 62 Toledo66,ColoradoSt 62 Utah62,N.Colorado55
USAToday/EBPN Women'sTop25 Poll The top25teamsin theUSAToday-ESPNWomen's collegebasketball poll, withfirst-placevotesin parentheses,recordsthroughNov. 19,total pointsbasedon 25 pointsfor afirst-place votethrough onepoint for a 25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: Record Pts Pvs 5-0 75B 4 f. Stanford (f7)
2. Uconn ()2) 3. Baylor(2)
4. Duke 5. NotreDame 6. Louisville 7. PennState
B. Kentucky 9. Georgia 10. Maryland It. California fa Purdue fa Oklahoma f4. WestVirginia 15. Tennesse e 16. St John's
I 7. OhioState f B. Oklahoma State f9. Vanderbilt 20. Nebraska
zt. Texas
2-0 749 2 4-f 719 1 2-0 676 3 2-0 646 6 3-0 603 B 3-0 5B2 9 2-f 545 7 4-0 519 f0 2-f 502 5 3-0 4 6 4 12 3-0 3 B B 14 2-f 3 2 3 ff 3-0 3 ) 9 fg 3-f 2 B 7 20 2-f 2 5 5 fB 2-I 2 5 3 21 3-0 2)2 22 3-f f g g f6 3-f fB O f 5 2-0 f B B 24
20 fo g 2a Kansas 3-0 1 0 6 25 24. Texas ABM 0-3 9 5 f3 4 -0 Bf 25. Dayton Others receivingvotes: Miami53, Gonzaga41, South Carolina3B,Georgia Tech3f, lowa State30, North Carolina29,Virginia 20, DelawarefB, DeP aul I B Green Bay(6, Georgetown(2, MiddleTennessee f1, Syracuseff, Chattanoogaf0, Rutgers6, Florida State 3,MinnesotaZ 2Z UCLA
SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER Time PBT MLS CUP Saturday,Dec.f: Houstonat LosAngeles,f 30 p.m
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Traded INFRobert Andino to SeattletorOFTrayvon Robinson. Selectedthecontracts ofINFJonathanSchoopandLHPMike Belfiore from Bowie(EL). AssignedRHPOliver Drakeoutright to Norfolk(IL). BOSTON RED SOX NamedAmie Beyeler first basecoachSelectedthecontracts of CDaniel Butler, OF AlexHassan,RHPAlex Wilson andRHPSteven Wright fromPawtucket (IL), andC Christian Vazquez and RHP Alen Webster fromPortland (EL). Designated INF IvanDeJesus, 3B DannyValencia, RHPDavid Carpenter,RHPSandyRosario andRHPZachStewart for assignmen t. CHICAGO WHITESOX—Selected thecontracts of OF JaredMitchell, CJoshPhegley,RHPAndreRienzo, LHPSantosRodriguez andRHPCharles Shirek from Charlotte(IL). CLEVEL AND INDIANS Selectedthe contracts of OF TimFedroff andRHPChen-ChangLeefrom Columbus(IL) andRHPTrey Haley andLHPTJ. House from Akron(EL). AssignedINFMatt LaPorta andINF Brent Lillibridgeoutright to Columbus.Designated RHPFabioMartinezfor assignment. DETROITIG T ERS Selectedthecontracts of RHP
Melvin Mercedes, RHPBruce Rondonand SSDixon MachadofromToledo(IL). ReleasedOFRyanRaburn. AssignedRHPTyler Stohroutright toToledo. HOUSTON ASTROS—Selected the contracts of RHPJoseCisnero, RHPJarred Cosart, LHPBrett 01berholtzerandRH PRoss Seaton fromOklahomaCity (PCL); OF Robbie Grossmanand INFJonathanVilar from CorpusChristi (TL);andRHPChia-JenLofrom Lancaster (Cal).AssignedINFScott Moore outright to Oklahoma City. KANSAS CITYRO YALS—Agreed to terms with RHPJeremyGuthrie on a three-yearcontract and C Brett Hayeson a one-year contract Selectedthe contracts ofLHPChris Dwyer,LHPDonnie Joseph, LHP JohnLamb,LHPJustin Marks, LHPMikeMontgomeryandRHPJ.C. Gutierrez from Om aha (PCL). Designated RHPVin Mazzaro, LHPRyanVerdugo, C AdamMoore,CBrayanPena, INFClint Robinsonand OF Derrick Robinsonfor assignment. LOSANGELESANGELS—Selectedthecontracts of RHPRyanBrasier, LHPBrandon Siskand OFTravis WitherspoonfromSalt Lake(PCL). MINNES OTA TWINS—Seected the contracts ot LHP CalebThielbar,RHPKyle Gibsonand RHPTim WoodfromRochester (IL); OFAaron Hicks(NewBritain), CJosmil Pinto(NewBritain) andRHPB.J. Hermsen from NewBritain (EL);andINFDannySantanaand RHPMichaelTonkinfromFort Myers(FSL). Agreedto termswith RH PSamuel Deduno, RHPShaironMartis, RHPLuisPerdomo,RHPEsmerling Vasquez,RHPPJ. Walters, OFBrian Dinkleman,OFWilkin Ramirez, INF JamesBeresford, INFDeibinson Romero, CEric Fryer, RHPTomBoleskaandINFJason Christian on minor league contracts. NEWYORKYANKEES—Agreedtotermswith RHP Hiroki Kurodaona one-year contract. ClaimedRHP MickeyStoreyoffwaiversfromHouston. Selectedthe contr actsofLHPMannyBanuelosandLHPFrancisco RondonfromScranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL); OFRamon Flores,RHPBrett Marshall andLHPNik Turley from Trenton(EL);and RHPJose Ramirez from Tampa (FSI.).AnnouncedRHPDaveHerndonrefusedoutright assignmentandelectedfree agency. DAKLAND ATHLETICS—Selectedthe contracts of RHPArnoldLeon,INFGrant GreenandOFShanePeterson fromSacramento(PCL)andRHPMichaelYnoa from Verm ont(NYP). AssignedRH PAndrewCarignan outright to Sacram ento. DesignatedRHPJim Miler and INFBrandonHicksfor assignment. SEATTLE MARINERS—Selected the contracts of INF VinnieCatricala, LHPAnthony Fernandez, LHP BobbyLaFromboise,RHPBrandonMaurerandOFJulio Morban fromTacoma(PCL). DesignatedOFScott CousinsandINFChoneFiggins forassignment. TAMPABAYRAYS—Agreed to terms with Rl-IP Joel Peralta on a two-yearcontract. Selectedthe contracts ofSSTim Beckhamfrom Durham(IL), SS Hak-JuLeefromMontgomery(SL), LHPFelipeRivero from Bow ingGreen(MW)andLHPEnnyRomerofrom Charlotte(FSL). TEXASRANGERS—Selected the contracts of INF LeuryGarciafrom Frisco(Texas) andLHPJoe Ortiz from RoundRock(PCL). Acquired RH PJakeBrigham from theCubstor RHPBarret Louxandaplayer to be named. TORONTOBLUE JAYS— Named John Gibbons manager.Selectedthe contracts ofSSRyanGoins and CA.J.JimenezfromNewHampshire (EL). Designated 1B MikeMcDade, INFMike MccoyandRHPCory Wadeforassignment. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Selected the contracts of C Christian Bethancourt,RHPZekeSpruill, RHPCory Rasmus, RHPDavid HaleandRHPAaron Northcraft fromGwinnett(IL). CHICAGO CUBS—Selected the contracts of RHP Trey McNuttand INFLoganWatkins fromTennessee (SL) and INFChristian Viganuevaand RHPRobert WhitenackfromDaytona(FSL). Designated INFBryan LaHaifor r assignment.AnnouncedRHPCarlos Gutierrez cleared waiversandwasassignedoutright to lowa
(PCL).
CINCINNATIRED S—Selected the contracts of RHPDanielCorcino,RHPCurtis PartchandRHPJosh Ravin fromPensacola (SL), RHPCaros Contreras from Bakersfield(Cal)andLHPIsmael Guilon andOF YormanRodriguez fromDayton(MWL). COLORADOROCKIES— Traded LHP Matt Reynolds to Arizonafor INFRyanWheeler Selectedthe contractsof RHPJoe Gardner fromTulsa (Texas), INF CristhianAdamesfrom Modesto (Cal) andOFTim WheelerfromColoradoSprings(PCL).AssignedOF AndrewBrownandINFOFMat McBrideoutright to Colorado Springs. LOSANGELESDODGERS Selectedthecontracts ot RHP StevenAmesand RHPMatt Magil fromChat-
tanooga (SL).
MIAMI MARLINS —Selected thecontracts ot LHP
EdgarOlmos,OFKyle JensenandCKyle Skipworth from Jacksonville(SL),andOFMarcell Ozunatrom Jupiter(FSL). MILWAU KEEBREWERS—Selectedthecontracts of RHPHiramBurgos andOFKhris Davisfrom Nashville (PCL);INFScooter Gennett andOFJosh Prince from Huntsville(TL)andRHPNickBucci fromBrevard County(FSL) NEWYOR K METS—Agreed to termswith LHP Scott RiceandRHP Carlos Torreson minor league contracts.Selectedthecontracts ofRHPZackWheeler and RHP Greg Burke fromBufalo (IL), INFWilfredo Tovar,LHPDarin GorskiandRHPGonzalez Germen from Bingham ton (EL) and RH P Hansel Roblesfrom Brooklyn (NYP). PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES —Selected the contracts ofRHPJonathan Petibone from LehighValley (IL); RHPEthanMartin andRHPTrevor Mayfrom Reading(EL);andOFZach Colier fromClearwater (FSL).NamedDaveBrundagemanager andRayBurris prtchingcoachof LehighValey(IL); DaveLundquist pitchingcoachof Reading(EL); BobMilacki pitching coachof Clearwater (FSL); AaronFutz pitching coach ofLakewood(SAL);LinoConnellcoachandLesLancaster pitchingcoachof Wiliamsport (NYP);Ramon Hendersoncoachof theGulf Coast Phillies; Andy Tracyminorleaguehitting coordinator; CarlosArroyo minor leagueroving pitching coach;andJorge Velandia speciaassi l stant, player development. Fightin Phils FieldStatfAnnouncedfor 20)3 PITTSBU RGHPIRATES—Selected thecontracts of RHPPhil IrwinandCTonySanchezfrom Indianapolis (PCL)andRHPVictor Black,CRamon Cabrera and RHPHunterStricklandfromAltoona(EL). ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Selectedthecontracts of RHPMichaelBlazek,RHKerth Butler, RHPEric Fornataro andLHPKevin Siegrist fromSpringfield (TL). SAN DIEGO PADRES—Selected the contracts ot RHPAdysPortillo and OFJaff DeckerfromSanAntonio (Texas) andOFYeisonAsencio fromFort Wayne (MWL).DesignatedRHPCory Burnsfor assignment. Named PatMurphy manager, Bronswell Patrick pitching coach andTomTornincasahitting coachotTucson (PCL);JacqueJones hitting coachandDaniel Turner trainer ofSanAntonio (TL); BrianLawrencepitching coach ofLakeElsinore (Cal); MorganBurkhart hitting coachandRicky Huerta trainer ofFort Wayne(MWL); Jim Gabellamanager, DaveRajsich pitching coach, Ivan Cruzhitting coachandMitch Mattoontrainer of Eugene(NW L); MichaelCollins manager, Nelson Cruz pitchingcoach,CarlosSosahitting coachandWade Yamasakitrainer oftheGulf Coast Padres,andMiguel Serratotrainer andJonathanBorgesassistant strength coachoftheDominicanSummerLeaguePadres. SANFR ANCISCOGIANTS—Selectedthecontracts of INFNickNoonan,LHPEdwin Escobar, RHPChris Heston ,RHPJakeDunningandOFJuanPerezfrom Fresno (PCL). WASHING TDN NATIONALS Selectedthe contracts ofRHPErik Davis fromSyracuse(IL) andRHP Nathan KarnsfromPotomac(Carolina). BASKETBALL
Women's National Basketball Association CONNEC TICUT SUN—Firedcoach Mike Thibault
and assistant coachesScott hawkand Bernadete Mattox. FOOTBALL
National Football League NFL— Reducedtheone-gamesuspensionofBaltimore S Ed Reedtoa$50,000fine. ATLANTAFALCONS— Signed G HarlandGunn. CAROLINAPANTHERS— Waived K Justin Medlock. Signed KGrahamGanoto atwo-year contract. JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS— Signed WR Jordan Shipley.WaivedFBWil Ta'ufo'ou. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS Si gned CB Malcolm Williams tothepracticesquad. NEW YORK JETS— Waived WR Jason Hilland LB Marcus Dowtin. PITTSBURGHSTEELERS— Signed WR Plaxico Burress. SAN FRANCISCO49ERS— SignedSEddieWhitley to thepractrcesquad. TENNESSEE TITANS— SignedLB MikeMohamed to thepractrcesquad. WarvedLBRico Councrl. WASHING TON REDSKINS—Signed CBJerome Murphy.PlacedS BrandonMeriweather on injured reserve. COLLEGE BIG TEN CONFERENCE—Announced Rutgerswil become amember atadate tobedetermined. CALIFOR NIA—Firedfootball coachJeff Tedtord. IDAHO STATE Announcedoffensive line coach DerrickRoche,secondary coachDaniel Drayton,defensiveline coachToddBates andlinebackers coach RudyGriffin will not returnnextseason.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012• THE BULLETIN
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NBA ROUNDUP
u er o so I ra o. in aui ourne The Associated Press L AHAINA, H a w a i i Maybe North Carolina should have just gone to the beach. Butler is the team to beat in Maui. R otnei Clarke an d K e l len Dunham each scored 17 points Tuesday night to lead the unranked Bulldogs to an 82-71 win over No. 9 UNC in the second round of the Maui Invitational. Butler jumped out to a 17point halftime lead and held back s everal s e cond-half surges from the Tar Heels. " It wa s a n entertaining game to be a part of," Butler coach Brad Stevens said. "When you are playing a program like Carolina, you know they are coming. Their run is coming next." The runs sure came, but UNC was too far behind to make them worth anything. "We just dug too big a hole
21 points and the Bruins (4-1) made enough free throws late to hold off the Bulldogs in the consolation game of the Legends Classic tournament. No.12 Kansas...... . . . . . . . 73 Saint Louis...... . . . . . . . . . . 59 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jeff Withey matched a c a r eer high with 25 points, Travis Releford added 23 and the Jayhawks (4-1) held off Saint Louis to win the CBE Classic. No. 14 Creighton...... . . . . 105 Longwood...... . . . . . . . . . . 57 OMAHA, Neb. — Doug McDermott a n d Gr e g ory Echenique scored 17 points apiece to lead four Creighton
(4-0) players in double figC4 I
against a very, very good team," North Carolina coach Roy Williams said. The Tar Heels (4-1) missed their first t hree shots and never led. One day after beating Marquette at the buzzer, Butler (3-1) held North Carolina to 18 points in the first half — by far the worst output in a half for the Tar Heels so far this season. P.J. Hairston led UNC with 15 points. Marcus Paige and Reggie Bullock each scored 13. A ndrew S m it h h a d D points for Butler, while Kyhle Marshall had 10 points and 11 rebounds. Butler got out to a 10-2 lead in just over four minutes then built it to 14 points with a 9-0
~,, fg. ; '~ixjj Eugene TannerI The Associated Press
Butler's Andrew Smith (44) blocks the shot of North Carolina's James Michael McAdoo (43) in the first half of Tuesday night's game in the Maui Invitational in Lahaina, Hawaii.
kicked us," Williams said. "In the second half, we're trying to make comebacks, but they were making shots." Butler took a 27-point lead roughly seven minutes into the second half. D u hman hit back-to-back 3s less than 19 seconds apart thanks to a steal and nifty assist from run capped by a layup from Clarke. Erik Fromm with 9:36 left in But the talented Tar Heels the first half. Minutes later, did not go quietly. Fromm grinned and nodded Hairston scored 10 straight after hitting a 3-pointer from — eight points in just over one the top of the key that put But- minute and screaming after ler up 16 with less than four every bucket — to pull Carominutes to go in the half. lina within 17 with 9:39 to go. M eanwhile, P a ig e a n d Carolina pulled within si x James McAdoo combined for with less than two minutes just nine points in the open- left after scoring eight points ing 20 minutes as UNC made in just over 40 seconds, inonly a combined eight shots. cluding six from Paige. "In the first half, they really B ut Butler hi t f i v e f r e e
D3
throws in the last I:01 to nail down the win. Also on Tuesday: No. 1 Indiana...... . . . . . . . . 82 Georgetown ...... . . . . . . . . 72 NEW YORK — A night after an ineffective game, Cody Zeller had 17 points and eight rebounds to lead Indiana (5-0) to an overtime win in the title game of theLegends Classic tournament. No. 7 Florida ...... . . . . . . . . 58 Savannah State ...... . . . . . 40 GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Mike Rosario scored 13 points, Patric Young added a double-double and the Gators
ures,and the Bluejays defeated Longwood. No. 15 Michigan State...... 74 Boise State ...... . . . . . . . . . 70 EAST L A NSING, M i ch. — Keith Appling scored 22 points while Branden Dawson and D enzel Valentine made key contributions to help slow-starting Michigan State (3-1) rally twice to beat the Broncos. No. 22 Cincinnati ...... . . . . 91 Campbell..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 CINCINNATI — Cashmere Wright scored acareer-high 28 points and the Bearcats (40) remained undefeated with a win in the Global Sports Invitational. U SC..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 9 T exas...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3 LAHAINA, Hawaii — Dewayne Dedmon hit a layup and a free throw with less than two minutes left in overtime to help USC win at the Maui Invitational. Texas A&M....... . . . . . . . . . 55 Washington State ...... . . . 54 K ANSAS CITY, M o . Elston Turner hit a 3-pointer from the top of the key with two seconds left, and Texas A&M won i n t h e c onsolation game of the CBE Classic. Dexter Kernich-Drew had a career-high 16 points for the
Cougars (2-3). Arizona State ...... . . . . . . . 64
(4-0) overwhelmed Savannah C ornell..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3 State. N o.11UCLA.... . . . . . . . . . . 6 0
Georgia.......... . . . . . . ... 56 NEW YORK — Freshman Shabazz Muhammad scored
Lakersdefeat Netsin D'Antoni's debut ascoach From wire reports LOS ANGELES — Before Mike D'Antoni made his Los Angeles Lakers bench debut Tuesday night, he said that whatever happened against the Brooklyn Nets, he would have to take it sitting down because he was still in pain following recent knee-replacement surgery. By the third quarter of the Lakers' 95-90 victory at Staples Center, D'Antoni was up and barking at the officials several t i mes. A p p arently, what he was seeing on the court was more painful than w hat he was feeling in h i s knee. In the end, after Deron Williams missed a potential game-tying three-point shot and Kobe Bryant hit a pair of free throws with two-tenths of a second left, D'Antoni and the crowd were on their feet and smiling to celebrate the Lakers' ninth straight victory over the Nets (6-3). "I'm really happy to get a win," D'Antoni said, joking that he had about 15 minutes until his pain-killing medication wore off. "It was great to be out there and great to be with the guys. That's what you coach for." D'Antoni's first game in full command was also the Lakers' last of a 5-1 homestand. They were fortunate to have a relatively soft schedule during their transition from Mike Brown to interim coach Bernie Bickerstaff and, finally, to D'Antoni, but Tuesday's game also began a stretch of four in five nights that will include the first real trip of the season for the Lakers (6-5). D wight H oward h a d 2 3 p oints despite hitting o n ly seven of 19 free throws, part of a poor 19-for-37 team performance. Howard also pulled down 15 rebounds and was credited with four blocks. Bryant finished with 25 points. Brooklyn was led by Brook Lopez's 23 points and Williams' 22. Unlike their previous two games against Phoenix and Houston, both relatively easy
CavsguardIrving out amonth INDEPENDENCE,OhioKyrie lrving couldn't handle playing with just one hand. Now, it's the Cleveland Cavaliers turn.
Irving will be sidelined for the next month with a broken left index finger, the latest injury to the NBA's reigning rookie of the year and a devastating blow to
the rebuilding Cavs, who have lost six straight and must face playing without their talented star point
guard. "It's frustrating," Irving
said Tuesday. "But we're just going to get through it and just gotta stay positive." — The Associated Press
wins, the Lakers had to play some defense Tuesday and managed pretty well. They also cut down on their turnovers, finishing with 11. "They shot 31 percent in the second half and we held them to 33 points. That's a good offensive team," D'Antoni said of the Nets, who brought a 62 record, second-best in the East, into Tuesday's game. "We weren't clicking offensively and we didn't play real well overall but g o od
(in) spots and especially a win against a team that's hot — they'd won five in a rowto outplay them, that means something." Also on Tuesday: Knicks...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 Hornets...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 NEWORLEANS — Carmelo Anthony scored 29 points and New York extended undermanned New Orleans' losing streak to four games. 76ers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
Raptors......... . . . . . . . . .. 98 PHILADELPHIA — Jason Richardson scored six of his 21 points late in the fourth quarter, Nick Young had 23 off the bench and the 76ers rallied to beat Toronto.
TEMPE, Ariz. — Jahii Carson scored 21 points, Jordan Bachynski b l o cked s even shots and Arizona State (3-0) won.
NFL
8 Freemanexcels in BLjcs' remadeoffense By Chase Stuart New York Times News Service
Ten months ago, Tampa Bay Buccaneers general manager Mark Dominik had a disaster on his hands. The Bucs lost their final 10 games of the 2011season and fired coach Raheem Morris. The team ranked 27th in scoring, and quarterback Josh Freeman had regressed considerably in his third season. In 2011, Freeman led the NFC in interceptions and had seemingly lost his way. He averaged a meek 10.4 yards per completion, placing him 33rd in the league and just barely ahead of the weak-armed
Colt McCoy (10.3). If Freeman's career had continued on that trajectory, Dominik probably would have become collateral damage. So in the off-season, Dominik rebuilt the team with a clear vision: He wanted an offense built around a strong running game and complemented by a deep passing attack. Dominik's first move to was hire Greg Schiano, then the coach at Rutgers. The decision seemed odd at the time, especially in light of Tampa Bay's flirtation with Oregon coach Chip Kelly. Kelly is considered an offensive mastermind, and Schiano is a defensive coach by trade. That meant the man Schiano would hire to coach his offense would be the most critical hire in Freeman's — and potentially Dominik's — career. Schiano didn't have to venture far from Piscataway, N.J., to find his coordinator, Mike Sullivan, who was working as the New York Giants' quarterbacks coach. The decision was considered risky because Sullivan had never called plays for the Giants, but he had a reputation for wanting to stretch the field with long passes in connection with a
Bob Leverone/The Assoc>ated Press
Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Josh Freemanhas led his team to a 6-4 record so far this season.
over that span among players with at least200 catches. During Jackson's best season, in 2009, San Diego quarterback Philip Rivers led the league in yards per completion. Tampa Bay also signed All-Pro guard Carl Nicks from a division rival, New Orleans, although he is now out for the year with a left foot injury. Then, in the 2012 draft,the Buccaneers selected running back Doug Martin with the 31st pick in the first round. Martin has 1,000 rushing yards in 10 games and is leading the NFL in yards from scrimmage. By adding one of the game's best deep strong running game. In 2011, among threats, an excellent offensive lineman the 25 quarterbacks that started at least and a t a lented, all-purpose running 10 games andthrew at least 300 passes, back, along with finding the right ofEli Manning led the league in yards per fensive coordinator and coach, Dominik completion. put the pieces in place around his franIn March, Tampa Bay signed wide re- chise quarterback.This year, Freeman ceiver Vincent Jackson, who had starred is having a breakout season. Playing in for the San Diego Chargers. From 2008 Sullivan's offense, alongside Jackson to 2011, Jackson averaged 18.0 yards per and Martin, has transformed Freeman catch, the highest average in the league into one of the game's most valuable
players. Consider that through 10 games in 2011, Manning's Giants were 6-4 and he was averaging 8.2 adjusted yards per attempt; through 10 games in 2012, Freeman's team is 6-4 and he is averaging 8.2 AY/A. After ranking 26th in adjusted net yards perattempt lastseason, Freeman ranks second in ANY/A and net yards per attempt, trailing Peyton Manning in both categories.After ranking second to last in yards per completion last year, Freeman ranks second in that metric this season, just barely behind Cam Newton. According to ESPN Stats 8 Information, Tampa Bay leads the league in expected points added (50.8) on passes that travel at least 20 yards downfield, a sign of how successful Tampa Bay's deep passing game has been in 2012. Freeman ranks third with 22 completions on throws of 20-plus yards, behind only Andrew Luck (26) and Peyton Manning (23), and both players have attempted significantly more passes overall than Freeman. Jackson is leading the league with a robust average of 20.5 yards per reception, and his value was never more clear than late in the fourth quarter against the Panthers on Sunday. Tampa Bay trailed Carolina, 21-13, with 32 seconds remaining and faced a third-and-4 on the Carolina 41-yard line with no timeouts. According to Brian Burke of Advanced NFL Stats, that left Tampa Bay with a 5 percent chance of winning the game. Freeman dropped back and hit Jackson for a 17-yard gain to give the Bucs a first down. After spiking the ball, Tampa Bay was at the Panthers' 24-yard line with 20 seconds left. Freeman then threw a perfectpass into the middle of the end zone to Jackson. With the Bucs still needing a 2-point conversion to send the game into overtime, Freeman went back to Jackson, this time on a well-designed pass off a play-action fake. In overtime, Freeman drove Tampa Bay down the field and connected with Dallas Clark — another offseason acquisition by Dominik — for the winning touchdown.
jae C. Hong/The Associated Press
Los AngelesLakers head coach Mike D'Antoni looks downward in the first half of Tuesday night's game against the Brooklyn Nets in Los Angeles. It was D'Antoni's first game as the Lakers' coach; the Lakers won, 95-90.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
ConferenceGlance All TimesPST EASTERNCONFERENCE W L Pct GB d-New York 8 1 889 d-Miami 8 3 727 1 d-Milwaukee 6 3 667 2 Brooklyn 6 3 667 2 Philadelphia 7 4 636 2 Charlotte 5 4 556 3 Atlanta 5 4 556 3 Boston 6 5 545 3 Chicago 5 5 500 31/2 Indiana 5 7 417 4'lz Orlando 3 7 300 51/2 Toronto 3 8 273 6 Cleveland 2 8 200 O'I~ Detroit 2 9 182 7 Washington 0 9 000 8 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB d-L.A. Clippers 8 2 800 d Memphis 8 2 800 d-Oklahoma City 8 3 727 'Iz SanAntonio 8 3 727 'I~ Minnesota 5 4 556 2'/z L.A. Lakers 6 5 545 2'lz GoldenState 6 5 545 2'Iz Utah 6 6 500 3 Dallas 6 6 500 3 Portand 5 5 500 3 Denver 5 6 455 31/2 Phoenix 4 7 364 4'Iz Houston 4 7 364 4'Iz NewOrleans 3 6 333 4 1/2 Sacramento 2 8 200 6
d-divisionleader TUesday'sGames Philadelphia106,Toronto98 NewYork102,NewOrleans80 LA. Lakers 95, Brooklyn90 Today'sGames Philadelphiaat Cleveland,4p.m. TorontoatCharlotte, 4p.m. NewOrleansatIndiana, 4p.m. Detroit atOrlando,4 p.m. L.A. c ippersatoklahomacity, 4:30p.m. SanAntonioatBoston,4:30 p.m. Washington atAtlanta, 4:30 p.m. Milwaukee atMiami, 4:30p.m. Chicag oatHouston 5p.m. Denverat Minnesota,5p.m. NewYorkatDalas, 5:30 p.m.
Portlandat Phoenix, 6p.m. L.A. Lakers atSacramento, 7p.m. Brooklynat GoldenState,7:30 p.m.
Summaries
Lakers95, Nets90 BR00KLYN I90) Wallac e2-7 3-47,Humphries 2-10 3-4 7,Lopez 0-181-3 23, Williams6-18 r-8 22, Johnson6-16 0 014, Watson37 0 0 8,Stackhouse2 31-2 5, Evans0-0000,childress0-00-00,Blatche2-30-04, Brooks0-0e-0 0. TotaIs 34-8215-21 90. LA. LAKERS (95) WorldPeace6-131-217,Gasol 7-153-617, Howard8-117-1923, Morris1-40-03, Bryant8-158-10 25,Duhon2-30-04,Hill2-70-04,Jamison1-3e-0 2, Meeks 0-2 e-00.Totals 35-7319-3795. Brooklyn 23 34 16 17 — 90 LA. Lakers 29 27 20 19 — 95
Knicks102, Hornets 80 NEWYORK(102) Brewer 25 4710, tnthony1222 33 29,Chandler2-23-57, Kidd1-30-03,Felton5-80015, Walace 2-82-26, J.Smith6-14 2-215, Novak3-12 e-0 8, Prigioni0-00-00, camby0-30-00, White3-40-0 7, copeland1-200zTotals37831419102. NEWORLEANS (80) Aminu 0-40-0 0,Anderson6-14 0-0 15,Lopez 5-71-3 0, vasquez 4-9 2-210, Rivers5-102-714, Ja.smit h0-34-44,renry2-60-04,Mason0-31-1 1, Miller 0-00-00, Roberts 4 92-213, L.Thomas3-4 2-2 aTotals29-t914-21 80. New York 29 24 30 19 — 102 Newerleans 1 7 31 1 6 16 — 80
76ers106, Raptors98 TORONTO (98) McGuire2-3 0-04,Bargnani10-21 0-222,valanciunas 3 6 5 6 u, calderon5-102-2 13, DeRozan 8-18 7-824,Lowry5-143-813, Johnson2-5 0-04, Kleiza1-3 3-35, Davis1-20 0 z Lucas0 0 e-0 a Totals 37-82 20-2998. PHILADELPHIA (106) Turner5142212, TYoung8132418, Brown 0-0 0-0 0,Holiday9-210-019, Richardson7-143-3 21, AllenI-4 2-2 4, N.Young7-13 6-e23,Hawes2-4 226, Ivey0 00 00,Wright1-2003. Totals 4085 17-19 106. Toronto 29 22 29 18 — 98 Philadelphia 22 2 92 2 33 — 106
D4
THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Rutgers Ca ires Unero Beavers eievet e coac canta e ivi Wara ainstDuc s officially jumps to Te or By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
By Josh Dnbow The Associated Press
BERKELEY, Calif. JeffTedford made a downtrodden program relevant as coach at California, putting out competitive teams for a decade, developing dozens of NFL players and spearheading a f a cilities
upgrade. When he w a s u n able to match his ow n e arly on-field success in recent years, he was fired after 11 years as coach. C al fired T edford o n T uesday, ending a t e n ure that began with great promise and ended with a disappointing run of mediocrity capped by his worst season as coach. "This was a difficult decision made after considerable thought and analysis and reflection," athletic director Sandy Barbour said. "Jeff Tedford is a good man who has brought great success and celebration and to his universityand deserves to occupy a place of honor in the Cal family. His legacy is unquestioned." Tedford engineered an impressive turnaround for the Bears after taking over a one-win team following the 2001 season. He won a school-record 82 games, churned o u t nu m e rous NFL prospects and was a major factor in a $321 million stadium renovation. B ut after w i n n ing 1 0 games twice in his first five years and taking a share of th e 2 006 c onference title, Tedford was unable to keep the Golden Bears near the top of the Pac-12
Conference any longer. The program bottomed out this season, losing the final five games to finish 3-9 for T e dford's w orst year. The Bears lost to rival Stanford for the third straight season, and the year was capped by the most lopsided losses of Tedford's career, a 59-17 h ome loss to Oregon where Tedford had served as the Ducks' offensive coordinator before he left for Cal — followed by a season-ending 62-14 loss at Oregon State. Barbour met with Tedford the previous two days to discuss the future of the program and announced her decision Tuesday. "I certainly wanted the answer to b e J e ff," she said. "But I have that obligation to do what's right for Cal. It was a matter of did I believe that we could turn around some of these worrisome trendscompetitively and academically. Ultimately my conclusion was it wouldn't be deep enough to take us to where we need to be." T edford r e l e ased a s tatement t h anking t h e school for t h e o p portunity to c oach there. He is still owed $6.9 million over the final three years of his contract, although Barbour said the sides are working on a settlement. She also said n o s t a te funds or student fees will be used to pay Tedford or the new coach. Barbour said she would c onsider both N F L a n d college coaches and wanted to find a replacement
quickly. Tedford established himself at Cal as a quarterback
guru, helping develop Kyle Boller and Aaron Rodgers into first-round draft picks in his first three seasons after tutoring No. 3 overall pick Joey Harrington as offensive coordinator at Oregon. But if there was one reason for Tedford's downfall it was his inability to find another big-time quarterback after R odgers left following the 2004 season. The Bears ran through a group of pedestrian passers like Joe Ayoob, Nate Longshore, Kevin R i ley, Brock Mansion and Zach Maynard.
CORVALLIS — While they are still underdogs, the Oregon State Beavers certainly have reasons to be hopeful heading into Saturday's football Civil War against rival Oregon. The surprising No. 16 Beavers are not only buoyed by t heir ow n d r a m atic t u r n around this season but also by the vulnerabilities No. 5 Oregon showed in last weekend's loss to Stanford. Oregon State has already defied the odds by i mproving to 8-2 overall after going just 3-9 last season. After two years without a bowl game, the Beavers were bowl eligible early after a 6-0 start, their best since the 1907 season. They have also overcome an injury to starting quarterback Sean Mannion, and now one to successfulbackup-turnedstarter Cody Vaz. It all g ives Oregon State more reason to be hopeful this season against Oregon, after four straight losses in the series. While Oregon State coach Mike Riley often says that in the Civil War "anything can happen," the past two meetings were pretty much foregone conclusions. Last season, the then-No. 9 Ducks beat the Beavers 49-21 in Eugene, clinching the Pac12 North's spot in the inaugural Pac-12 Conference championship game. The D ucks would go on to defeat UCLA for the league title before a 4538 victory over Wisconsin for their first Rose Bowl win in 95 years. The season before, Oregon beat Oregon State 37-20 in Corvallis. That win sent the Ducks on to the BCS championship game against Auburn, while the loss kept the Beavers from becoming bowl eligible. Oregon State has not won the Civil War since an overtime upset at Autzen Stadium in 2007. "It's great to be where we are," Riley said. "We try not to be surprised by success, we work for that hard. But I am proud of the turnaround in this team and the work they did in the offseason and what they've accomplished to this point. It's much more fun and
r f
Greg Wahl-Stephens/The Associated Press
Oregon State's Markus Wheaton (2) celebrates a touchdown against California with quarterback Sean Mannion (4) and Kevin Cummings (84) during the first half of Saturday's game in Corvallis. Oregon State is a 10-point underdog against Oregon in Saturday's Civil War. exciting to be going into the Civil War at 8-2 rather than 38, or whatever we were."
for the BCS title game just yet, but it will need USC (7-4, 5-4) to defeat top-ranked and undeOregon (10-1, 7-1) is wound- feated Notre Dame on Satured heading into the 116th edi- day. That is a tall order for the tion of the rivalry game after Trojans, who have lost three of a 17-14 overtime loss to Stan- their past four games and will ford last Saturday at Autzen not have senior quarterback Stadium. Matt Barkley. Freshman Max The loss knocked Oregon Wittek will make his first caout of the top spot in the AP reer start in place of Barkley, rankings a n d c o m plicated who hurt his right shoulder the Ducks' bid for a second in last weekend's 38-28 loss to national championship game UCLA. "There's a lot of disappointberth in three seasons. Oregon would have clinched ment, but it's one game," Orthe Pac-12 North for the sec- egon q u arterback M a r cus ond straight season with a Mariota said in the wake of victory against the Cardinal. the Stanford loss. "The seaInstead, the Ducks will have son's not over. We have a lot to to wait a week to see how the play for." conference shakes out. He is right. Even if the Ducks If No. 11 Stanford (9-2, 7-1) do not play in the conference can defeat No. 15 UCLA (9-2, championship, they could be 6-2) on Saturday at the Rose an at-large selection for one Bowl, the Cardinal will go to of the other BCS bowls, a scethe conferencechampionship. nario that seems likely if they If Stanford loses and Oregon defeat Oregon State and finish wins, the Ducks will go to the the season with just one loss. Pac-12 title game. Interestingly, Oregon State's The winner of the confer- season isalso far from over. ence title game gets a Rose Win or lose to the Ducks, the Bowl berth — unless the win- Beavers have a home game ner is tapped for a place in the set for Dec. I against Nichnational championship. The olls State. (The Beavers were Bruins have already clinched supposed to open the season the Pac-12 South. on Sept. I against the ColoOregon is not out of the mix nels, but the game was post-
Voice Continued from 01 "We (Essig and his wife, Janet) were really pretty much Oregon State people, even living in Eugene," Essig said. "When (then UO athletic director) Norv Ritchey called and said, 'Hey, we want you to do the announcing,' from then on the orange and black clothes went to the back of the closet and green and yellow came out." In that deep, soothing voice that over the years has become so familiar with fans of University of Oregon football and men's basketball, Essig has announced nearly every home game, witnessing the UO football program go from perpetual loser to a perennial college football power. Oregon suffered it s f i r st loss of the current season this past Saturday against Stanford. But the Ducks (10-1) still have a chance to make a BCS bowl game if they can beat the Beavers in the 116th Civil War this coming Saturday in Corvallis. "We're not done yet," Essig said of the UO football team. In Bend last week to promote a new biography on his life, "It Never Rains In Autzen Stadium," Essig talked about some of his favorite Civil Wars and reflectedon the early days of his announcing career. He also recalled his days as the
poned because of the threat Hurricane Isaacposed to the s chool's T h i bodeaux, L a . , campus.) Then Oregon State will await its bowl bid. Riley announced on Monday that Mannion would start Saturday at Reser Stadium. Mannion started the first four games of the season, throwing seven touchdown passes
and averaging 339 yards, but he injured his left knee and required surgery. Vaz, who had not started since high school, took over and helped the Beavers to win in the next two games, and he later became the team's starter. But Vaz sprained his left ankle in the final moments of a loss at Stanford, and he sat out last Saturday during Oregon State's 64-14 victory at home over California. As of Tuesday, Oregon was about a 10-point favorite over Oregon State. Stanford coach David Shaw, who has defeated both Oregon and Oregon State this season, was asked on Tuesday for his assessment ofSaturday's matchup in Corvallis. "Whatever d e fense can
keep the offense from making the big plays will have a good chance to win," he said.
such degrees were not offered at Oregon State. Through a friend, Don met Mel Krause, a former Duck basketball and baseball star and at that time the athletic director at Eugene's Sheldon High School. Krause persuaded Essig to announce Sheldon High basketball games, and eventually to a nnounce the football games at Civic Stadi-
um, where Eugene-area high -r ~~A. S Warren Morgan/The Register-Guard
Don Esslg stands In the press boxduring a game at Autzen Stadium in October 1975.
ted with patrons at the Duck Store. "It was so ugly ... and cold,freezing our buns off.O f course, we never shut the windows in the press box. It (the temperature) was in the 20s." But a n other m e m orable Civil War was one that Essig did not announce because it was played in Corvallis — the 1994 game, a 17-13 victory for Oregon that sent the Ducks to their first Rose Bowl since 1958. "I actually think '94 probably was one of my favorites, because it had been 37 years (since a Rose Bowl appearance)," Essig said. "We went to the game in Corvallis and it was a lot of fun to watch. But they're always fun. Every one of 'em." "yell king" during his senior Even though he is 100 peryear at Oregon State in 1959- cent Duck now, Essig likes to 60. Some of his old Beaver bud- see both universities' football dies still call him a turncoat. teams succeed,and at 8-2,the "Oh, it c o mes u p e v ery Beavers are on their way to time," Essig said. "It's always an upper-tier bowl berth this good kidding." season. "I think it's great that both Even with all th e Ducks' recentsuccess,one particular Oregon and O r egon State Civil War stands out in Essig's right now are in that position memory: the forgettable 0-0 tie (for a good bowl game)," Esin 1983 that has now become sig said. "We had a lot of years unforgettable. in the '70s and '80s where we "The zero-zero game, you were both in the toilet. It was don't forget that," Essig said terrible." as he signed books and chatEssig has missed just one
full home football game in his 45 years of announcing for Oregon football — a 44-10 loss to Arizona State in 1984 that he skipped while recovering from back surgery. For most of his announcing career, Essig has been flanked by the same two men in the Autzen Stadium press box: spotter Jack Pynes and statistician Stan Hultgren. According to Essig, Pynes has missed only two football games in 45 years, and Hultgren has missed only two in 37 years. "So we kind of know what we're doing," Essig said. Essig's biography was written b y C h u c k W e n strom, whom Essig called his "best friend from O regon State." The two attended school there together, and Wenstrom still lives in Corvallis. The book details Essig's life growing up on a farm near Oregon City and his 30 years in the education profession as an elementary teacher,elementary and high school principal, and school district administrator. Don and Janet — who have two grown sons — met while attending OSU. The couple moved to Eugene from Oregon City in 1963 to pursue advanced degrees in education at UO because,as Es sig recalled,
schools played back then. Krause, who would go on to coach the UO baseball team, helped Essig get the PA job for Oregon men's basketball in 1967 and football in 1968. Now, 45 years later, Essig's signature phrase is as much a part of Oregon football as fast offenses and flashy uniforms. Essig first announced to an Autzen crowd that "It never rains in Autzen Stadium" in 1990, after reporting a new stadium policy that banned umbrellas. "So here it is September and
Big Ten
The Associated Press PISCATAWAY, N.J. — As the Big East was being picked apart, Rutgers was looking for a way out and a new place to show off a football program that has been resurrected in the past decade. Not only did Rutgers find that escape hatch, the Scarlet Knights ended up in one of the most desirable neighborhoods in college sports. Rutgers joined the Big Ten on Tuesday, leaving the Big East behind and cashing in on the school's investment in a f o o tball team that only 10 years ago seemed incapable of competing at the highest level. The move follows Maryland's announcement a day earlier that it was heading to the Big Ten in 2014. The additions give the Big Ten 14 schools and a presence in lucrative East C oast markets. Rutgers announced its decision Tuesday at a campus news conference attended by Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany, Rutgers President Robert B archi and athletic director Tim Pernetti. "The Big Ten is really where Rutgers belongs," Barchi said. "This is not just a good fit for us athletically, it's a good fit for us academically and as an institution." Rutgers has been competing in the Big East since 1991. But the league has been torn up by conference realignment, losing three key members last year. Pernetti had insisted all along that Rutgers would land on its feet, that being a member of the prestigious American Association of Universities and residing in the largest media market in the country would ensure the school wouldn't be cast aside as the landscape of college sports changed.
he was thinking.
"(Heeke) said, 'No, you're not stopping,'" Essig remembered. "'It has nothing to do with the weather. The statement now is part of the ambiance.' So I just started telling people, well ... emotionally, when you walk into Autzen Stadium, it's a sunny experience. It's a positive, sunny experience, so it doesn't matter if I'm soaking wet." It has been an especially positiveexperience for Duck football and its fans over the past several years. In his fouryear tenure as head coach, Chip Kelly has led Oregon to a 44-7 record, including just two losses at home. Perhaps more telling, in the first half of Essig's announcing career at Autzen (1968-1990), Oregon football and its fans endured 14 losing seasons. In the latter halfofEssig's career (1991-2012) — since Essig in-
troduced his popular "never rains" catchphrase — t h e it's 90 degrees and I'm making Ducks have postedjust three the no-umbrella announce- losing seasons. "It's great because we're ment, and my dry sense of humor kicks in," Essig recalled. winning all the time and we've "Since then, it's evolved into, got great crowds," Essig said. I do my opening shtick, and "We have a lot of new fans, here's the weather report." however. There's a lot of peoWhich is always followed, ple that weren't around for the regardless of the forecast, by 2-9 seasons in the rain every Essig's reminder that "It never game, with 10,000 people." rains in Autzen Stadium." Now Autzen Stadium rou"And now, of course, 50,000 tinely hosts nearly 60,000 fans people are saying it. I've had for Duck home games. But so many people say, 'Oh yeah, while Essig's voice remains our kids can hardly wait to unmistakable, the man himget to the game, that's where self remains anonymous to they're there for." most of those fans, old and According to Essig's biog- new. "It's exciting and it's also raphy, Oregon went 11 years without a rainy game at Aut- humbling," said Essig, who zen after 1990. But the rain said he wants to get to 50 years finally did come, and seven or as the public-address voice of eight years ago Essig actually the Ducks. "Everybody knows considered doing way with his t he voice. But I get off t h e signature phrase. That thought (press box) elevator after the came to him at a Civil War in game and walk into thousands Eugene during which it rained of people and they haven't got the entire game. Essig went to a clue who I am." then associate athletic director — Reporter: 541-383-0318, Dave Heeke and told him what mmoricalCbendbulietin.com
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012• THE BULLETIN
Golf Continued from D1 But his indoor golf business got off to a slow start. In fact, at this time last year, Central Oregon Indoor Golf's simulators were in storage after years of scraping for business in an industrial section of northeast Bend. That shop closed in July 2011. But this past February, McCleery found a more centralized location in a strip mall on Third Street and Brosterhaus Road in southeast Bend. And now he i s h oping the business he first started in 2007 is about to take off. "I couldn't get people from the west side (of Bend) to drive over there," McCleery says of his former location, which was tucked away in a nondescript commercial center off Empire Avenue. Now, he says, his indoor golf facility is more accessible to area players. Even potential customersfrom Sunriver "are just 15 minutes away." At worst, McCleery's business seems like a tap-in par:
golf the whole time, but it is enough golf that you can work on your swing and actually work on different clubs for distances and things like that. It's a lot of fun." McCleery is hopeful that he can now attractmore golfers like McClure.
McCleery's golf l eagues
~.)i( A -
on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday nights are nearly full for this winter. And he has thoughts of adding more leagues on Monday and Friday nights, if demand warrants.
.
)
"He's got guys coming in
just about every night play-
'I
ing leagues," says 70-year-
Ryan 6renneckei The Bulletin
Dan McCleery, owner of Central Oregon Indoor Golf in Bend,stands at one of the simulators as a customer plays a round of golf on Tuesday. the facility is much closer to what McCleery had originally intended. "We wanted it to be more like a'man cave,'"McCleery
Bowls
consecutive losing seasons and dire predictions for this one to win eight games so far and become bowl eligible. Washington corrected its problems during a three-game losing streak midway through the season to become bowl eligible for the third straight season. USC did not live up to its national-title expectations, losing four games, but will still head to a bowl in the first season after its two-year bowl ban was lifted. Utah is facing some long odds to make it nine Pac-12 teams in the postseason. The Utes are 4-7 heading into their season finale against Colorado, which in most years would knock them out of the bowl picture. But if there are not enough eligible teams to fill the 35
bowls, teams with the highest APRs (academic progress rates) will be placed in a group for bowls with open slots to negotiate with. Utah has an APR of 33 and, with a win over Colorado, could be in the running for a bowl with teams like Rice, Wake Forest and Missouri. Don't beat Colorado and it won't matter, sending Utah to its first four-win season since 2000. "I've told this team many times you shouldn't need a carrot out in front of you to play hard," Utah coach Kyle Whittingham said. "It should be just for the respect of the game and the competitive fire that is within. That should be
OPPORTUNITIES: F or t y years ago this summer, Congress passed and President Nixon signed into law a bill that changed sports forever. Title IX opened up opportunities for women to play sports that were once unimaginable, and it's a gift that will keep on giving for generations to c ome. When Title I X w a s enacted, fewer than 30,000 female students participated in sports in colleges and universities, a number that has now increased nearly six-fold. Some 3 million girls participate in high school athletics today, 10 times the number who played sports in 1972. Women may never make big breakthroughs in professional sports, but the resources now devoted to female sports means your daughters and granddaughters can d r eam of doing things in sports they could never do before. SPORTS EXTRA: You pay for it more than you realize, every time the cable or satellite bill is due. The Yankees cost you money, and so do the Knicks. There are so many new sports networks popping up that each want their share o f the pie that the bill w i l l keep going up until customers finally revolt. What you once got for free now costs a lot, but what a bargain it really is. The variety of sports on television is astonishing, even more so to the generations that grew up before ESPN, when watching sports meant a few football games and Saturday's baseball game of the week — and having to get up to turn the channel to watch it. W e're living i n a w o r l d where the options for sports fans are greater than ever. We can watch basketball on the decks ofaircraft carriers, hockey on the infield of old baseball parks, and the NFL from soccer stadiums in London. Instead of being parked in front of a TV we can feed our seemingly insatiable sports fix on laptops, tablets and even
s martphones. If t h a t's n o t enough, it's easier than ever to have a little something riding on the game, whether in the form of a wager or a fantasy team payout. S till there's nothing l i k e a Saturday morning spent watching the kids play soccer or, at my house, a Thanksgiving Day street football game with relatives of all ages. Even in an era of amazing technology, there's room at the local
Thankful Continued from D1 "It's already beat. It's already beat," Pagano told his team. DRUG BUSTERS: It would have been easy for T r avis Tygart and his investigators at the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency
Oregon coach Chip Kelly said. nYou can run through 27,000 scenarios, but if we don't win Saturday, none of them come true." The Pac-12 has plenty of postseason options. Arizona has had a successful season in its first year under coach Rich Rodriguez, fighting a thin roster with an explosive offense to win seven
games. Up Interstate 10 in Tempe, Todd Graham also has Arizona State bowl eligible in his firstseason as coach, clinching the six-win mark last week by rolling over Washington State. The desert rivals face each other on Friday in their annual
rivalry game, with bragging rights and positioning for a bigger bowl on the line. Riley's Beavers shook off
and his gift to the new Dodger owners was the announcement that he will come back for at least one more year at
the age of 85, calling games
as he always does, solo in the announcer's booth. In the interest of full disclosure, I was one of those kids in L.A. who went to sleep at night with a to simply give up on nailing transistor radio underneath Lance A r m strong. Federal my pillow, growing up listenprosecutors already had, and ing to Vinny. if they couldn't build a case RORY TIME:For years, golf against Armstrong, hard to fans waited for a rival to the imagine the doping agency great Tiger Woods, only to be doing any better. But Tygart disappointed by every David pressed on, eventually build- Duval who came along. Rory ing a case that tore apart the McIlroy is the anti-Tiger, an facade Armstrong had cre- accessible and grounded suated, detailing a widespread perstar from the town of Holyand systematic doping scheme wood i n N o r t hern I r eland on a level not seen before in who hits the ball incredible organized sports. Yes, he took distances, all with an inner joy down an A m e rican sports that Woods will never have. hero and damaged his charita- McIlroy has his own reason to ble work, but Tygart also sent be thankful, with tennis star a message that a level playing C aroline Wozniacki a s h i s field is important. Sports will constant companion. be a cleanerand better place CONCUSSIONS: G ood because of it. things are happening in the BROOKLYN REBORN: No, fight against the once silent the Dodgersaren'treturning. epidemic of concussions on Suddenly, though, Brooklyn sports. Brains are being anais a sports town again, thanks lyzed, millions of dollars are to a new, $1 billion arena and being poured into research, a Russian b i llionaire w h o and there's a n a w a reness parked his basketball team about the danger of hits to there. The New York Island- the head that could save lives ers will also be moving there everywhere from your child's in 2015, assuming, of course, soccer field to the stadiums of that the NHL lockout is re- the NFL. Unfortunately, it's solved by then. too late for thousands of forBRITISH INVASION:Bradley mer players who are paying Wiggins became the first Brit- for the blows to their head evon to win the Tour de France, ery day of their lives — somewhile Andy Murray became thing the NFL refuses to own the first British man to claim a up to. tennis major in 76 years when DEATH OF THE BCS: Our he won the U.S. Open. Peren- long national nightmare is alnial also-rans, the British had most over. The Bowl Champia spectacular sporting sum- onship Series is, for all intents mer the country w il l n ever and purposes, dead, killed off forget, including a L o n don by a fan revolt at the age of 16. Olympics that surpassed ex- It will be replaced in 2014 by a pectations at every turn. four-team playoff that, while VIN SCULLY: He would be not perfect, will help legitimize a national treasure, but the the n ational c h ampionship people of Los Angeles like to game. Meanwhile, a possible claim him as their own. For Notre Dame against Alabama more than 60 years, Scully title game this season could be has broadcast the Dodgers, one ofthe biggest ever.
says. "The goal is starting to be realized, which is to grow this thing to m u ltiple machines and to add a little restaurant andbar," McCleery adds, envisioning a sort of combination sports bar and golf center. A full bar and restaurant are still a ways off. But the seeds of growth appear to have been planted. Bill McClure, a 63-year-old
old Bend orthodontist Vince Quas, another regular at Central Oregon Indoor Golf. "And they are having a really good time." League nights can get rowdy, McCleery says, with hooting and hollering that would
largely be frowned upon in
a m or e c o nventional g o lf setting. Prineville dentist who l ives T hat is j ust th e k i n d o f in Bend, is a regular at Cen- atmosphere McCleery had tral Oregon Indoor Golf. And dreamed of when he first dehe says the new facility is a cided to open, after having a marked improvement. similar experience himself at M cClure, wh o s a y s h e an indoor center in Klamath practices w it h Mc C leery's Falls. "That's what hooked me on simulators about three times a week, calls the new facility "a these things," McCleery says little warmer and closer," and of the simulators. "I was down should increase foot traffic there playing in a league on and help golfersexperience Thursday nights in Klamath what keeps McClure coming Falls ... on two of these things back. (simulators). And I just fell in "It is a good way to keep love with it. I was having a your swing going," says Mc- blast." Clure, and avid golfer with — Reporter: 541-617-7868, a 15 handicap. "It's not real zhall@bendbulletin.com
is not the f irst business to have a golf simulator in Bend. Retailer Pro Golf of Bend uses similar technology, particuoffering golfers a place to play larly for club fittings and ocin a golf-crazy area that large- casionally for recreation. ly shuts down for the season Now he believes he has the in October. space to take advantage. InOne of the facility's simula- stead of what was essentially tors uses computer graphics a small warehouse, Central and the other uses still frames Oregon Indoor Golf in its new of real courses. And each of- location is more inviting, with fers dozens of real layouts, tables and chairs and a couch including such famous tracks t hat allow p l ayers to w a i t as Augusta National, to give a in comfort for their turns to golfer a re-creation of the real swing. game. W ith t h e a v a ilability o f Central Oregon Indoor Golf beer and wine for purchase,
Continued from D1 What may be the best scenariofrom a conference standpoint would be if Stanford and Oregon both win. If the Cardinal beat the Bruins on Saturday, it won't matter who wins the Pac-12 title game the next week because the champion has a slot in the Rose Bowl already waiting. If Oregon beats Oregon State, the Ducks are almost certain to get an at-large bid to a BCS bowl, most likely the Fiesta. Oregon still has an outside shot at the national championship game, but, at No. 5 in the BCS standings, the Ducks would need some help from the teams ahead of them to play in Miami on Jan. 7. "The only thing that matters is winning on Saturday,"
DS
enough." E ven if th e U tes do n ot squeak in,it has been a good year for the Pac-12. What was supposed to be a
runaway to the title game by Oregon and Southern California turned into one of the most competitive seasons in recent years for the conference. It started with Stanford upending USC's n ational-title hopes in the conference opener, and the standings changed seemingly every week, capped by the C ardinal's overtime win over Oregon last Saturday night. Once the dust settles, the Pac-12 will have teams playing throughout December, maybe even a couple in January. "We kind of predicted it coming in, you could see it happening: This is the most competitive this league has been ever, I think," OSU's Riley said. "It's very exciting for the fans, but very hard on the coaches." A nd very g oo d f o r t h e conference.
playground for a pickup game of hoops, and grass at the park to toss a baseball around. So enjoy the turkey and the NFL on TVaswell. Save room for the pumpkin pie, and yet another game to feast your eyes on. There's a lot to be thankful for. — Tim Dahlberg isa national sports columnistfor The Associated Press. Write to him at tdahlberg@ap.org or http://
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T EE T O G R E E N
THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
LP AToura ea o curveon o a trave By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
NAPLES, Fla. — A l arm bells went off when the best golfersno longer were Americans, whether the m easure was a ranking or simply who kept winning the majors. That was the LPGA Tour a
nrhe~
i
(I .ir
generation ago. It took awhile for the men to experience the same shift to
I
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a more global game, such as Europeans occupying the top four spots in the world ranking at the end of last year, or the Americans getting shut out of six straight majors. Or the time Lee Westwood, whose humor can be vastly underrated, was speaking at a dinner when he mentioned Steve Stricker winning the previous week at the John Deere Classic. Looking at PGA Tour c ommissioner Tim Finchem, he said, "Nice to see an American win on your tour." The next cause for concern in women's golf was having to leave home to build a schedule. It looks like the LPGA Tour again was ahead of its time. The women finished a whirlwind — not to mention worldwide — schedule over the past three months by going from Virginia to England to A l abama in consecutive weeks, and then ended its season with three straight t o u rnaments that took them from Japan to Mexico to Florida. This might not have been what Karrie Webb had in mind when sh e m o ved h a l fway around the world for a H all of Fame career on the LPGA Tour. Her rookie season, there were 34 events on the LPGA Tour schedule, all but four of them in the United States. This year, 12 of the 27 official events were outside the country. "I envisioned playing most of my careerin the U.S.," she said. "Even for me, coming from Australia, it was a bit of an adjustment. But I realized that's where the money is. It will take many years to get the economy back to where it was for us to have a luxurious schedule in the U.S. There's money in Asia and a lot of in-
Cerey Perrine / Naples Daily News via The Associated Press
Steffi Yo, 16, center left, of Tampa, Fla., takes a picture with golfer So Yeon Ryu, as others clamor for autographs at the LPGA Titleholders event on Sunday in Naples, Fla. The LPGA became an international tour quickly, with 12 events outside of the United States this past season. have gone away. We have a lot to be thankful for of the Asian countries." How the LPGA Tour's The LPGA Tour's worldschedule has grown wide schedule used to be seen internationally from 20 as a stigma. Now it is a way of years ago andevery year life for them. since 2002: And it's getting that way for others. Year U. S . Intl . The European Tour had no Events Events choice but to follow the mon33 2 ey when economies faltered. 26 6 Just look at the past 10 years. 26 5 About 65 percent of its tour27 5 naments in 2002 were played in Europe, including seven in 24 7 England. This year, only 47 25 8 percent of t h e t o urnaments 23 8 were held in Europe. 24 10 There were as many tourna17 10 ments in China as there were in Scotland this year. There 14 10 were as many tournaments in 13 10 Dubai as there were in Eng15 12 land. And th e country that held the most official events on the European Tour? That terest in golf. I was OK with it would be the United States then. But learning more from (with three majors and three being on the (LPGA) board, "World" Golf Championships). "It was clearly a stigma," having Asian events helps the health of our tour." L PGA Commissioner M i k e C ristie Kerr pu t i t m o r e Whan said. "But I said this bluntly, as she always does. to our players and our staff, "We were definitely ahead 'Gang, I promise you the rest o f th e c u r ve," K er r s a i d . of our sport is going to follow.' "Without that, our tour might Unfortunately, we're going to
LPGA growth
be the model. We're going to make all the silly mistakes. But you can't go back." By mistakes, he was alluding to former Commissioner Carolyn Bivens' short-lived attempt to penalize players who didn't learn to speak English. Four years later, Kerr is starting to learn Korean, in part because one of her sponsors is the Korean Exchange Bank. "Every business where I've worked went global," Whan said, mentioning Proctor & Gamble, TaylorMade and the hockey industry. "And the end result is pretty cool. Your buffet is so much fuller. We believe we're the future of sport. That sounds pretty bold. But how much money has the NBA spent a year to power into an international program? Or the NFL or Major League Baseball'? For us, we're there." Is it ideal? Maybe not. "We have the bestplayers from around the world. They move here and they want to play here," Whan said. "I've had more than our share of players ... you would think, 'Oh, they l ove y our K o r ea event.' No. They want another Atlanta event." The PGA Tour is the stron-
gest in the world. Thanks in large part to Tom Wade, the top executive in c h arge of marketing, the tour has been able to renew sponsorships or find replacements for nearly every tournament d omestically. Then again, that didn't keep the tour from following the money. When it goes to a fall start for its 2013-14 season, two of the events will be in Asia. The tour might have looked for other opportunities if it had not been a little late to the table. The LPGA T ou r s t a rted g oing international even i n healthier times. It was during the recession that domestic events started to go away — 24 domestic events at the start o f 2008 compared with 1 3 last year — and international events slightly increased. Whan is optimistic that the LPGA Tour will add another event next year outside Beijing, and the ideal schedule w ould include four o r f i v e more American events, with about 60 percent of the tournaments at home. There is work left to get that done. Players, meanwhile, found cause to embrace tripsoverseas. They get a b u sinessclass plane ticket and stay in five-star hotels in Singapore and Malaysia and just about e verywhere e lse t h e y g o . There is no cut, so everyone makes money.They are treated likerock stars,compared with getting ignored at times in America. "In Malaysia, our players stayed in a five-star hotel connected to a mall," Whan said. "I'm sure we raised the gross national product that week." He said the HSBC Women's
Champions in Singapore had the atmosphere of th e U .S. Women's Open, and its South Korean event attracted more
coverage and bigger crowds than the K.J Choi Invitational held the same week. The LPGA is off for nearly three months. Its new season will start a n o cean or two away from home, which no longer seems all that far
away.
GoLF %EEI4 European Tour DP WORLDTOUR CHAMPIONSHIP Site: Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Schedule:ThursdaySunday. Course:Jumeirah Golf Estates, Earth Course
(7,675 yards, par 72). Purse:$8 million. Winner's share: $1,333,560. Television:Golf Channel
(Thursday-Sunday, midnight-5 a.m.). Last year:Spain's Alvaro Quiros won the
season-ending event, and England's LukeDonald finished third to become the first player to win the
PGA Tourand European Tour money titles in the
same season. Last week:Spain's Miguel Angel Jimenez became the oldest winner in European Tour history, winning the
Hong KongOpenfor the third time. At 48 years, 318
days, Jimenezbroke Des Smyth's mark of 48 years, 34 days set in the 2001
Madeira Islands Open.... Sweden's Henrik Stenson won the South African
Open for his first victory since the PGATour's 2009 Players Championship. Notes:All12 members
of the winning European Ryder Cupteam — Donald, Rory Mcllroy, lan Poulter, Lee Westwood, Justin
Rose, Nicolas Colsaerts, Sergio Garcia, Peter Hanson, Martin Kaymer, Paul Lawrie, Graeme
McDowell and Francesco Molinari — are in the 57-player field.... The top-ranked Mcllroy has already won the money title to match Donald's feat of
sweeping the PGATour and European lists.... Donald won the Dunlop Phoenix on Sunday in Japan.... South Africa's Branden Grace
has a season-high four victories.... Greg Norman designed the Earth Course. Times PST
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its Calendar weekly local golf results listings and events The Bulletin welcomes contributions to calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to the sports department, 541-385- its weekly local golf events calendar. Items 0831, emaued to sports@bendbttueutn. shouldbe ma iled to P.O. Box 6020, Bend, 97708; faxed to the sports department at com,ormailedto p.o.Box6020;Bend,QR OR 541-385-0831; or emaued to sportsObettd97708. bulletitt.com.
Club Results AWBREY GLEN
Turkey GrinderScramble, Nov. 18 Scramble Flight 1 — Gross: 1,RickyVirk/Jey Barton,66. Net:1, JeffKeller/RustyErtle, 65. Flight 2 — Gross: 1, DaveMorton/Shannon Morton, 73 Net: t, Toml.aeissoitiere/BarbLaeis-
soniere,6a
CROOKEDRIVERRANCH Men's Golf Club, Nov. 13 Stroke Play
A Flight IO-17 Handicap) — Gross: 1,Darrell Wells, 75. 2,FredJohnson, 76. 3, HerbParker, 77. Nei: 1, ScottEbeile, 65.2, JimPlatz, 66.3, Joe
Griffin, 67 B Flight (18 attd higher) — Gross: 1, Ari Crossl ey,81.2,JackMartin,82 3,veneDunham,86. Net:1,LenJohnson,63.2,Richard Wiggs,64.3, EddieMarortey,66.
TOURNAMENTS Nov. 30 — CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at EagleCrest Resoli's RidgeCoursein Redmond.
shamble beginswithan0 a.m.shotgun.Two-person teams withnomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team.Costis $30for protessionals, $50foramateurs.
Cost includesgrossattd ttet skins competitions. Cart costs extra.All playersmustsignttp bynoononthe Thursdaybefore theevent. Toregister orformoreinformation, call PatHttffer, headpro at CrookedRiver RanCh, at 541-923-6343 Ol email him at CrrPat@
crookedriverranch.com. Dec. 8 — Christmas GooseGolf Tournament at MeadowLakesGolf Coursein Prineville. Chapm an is for twoperson-teamsaitdteesoff with an10a.m. shotgun.Costis $20plus greenfee.Toregister orfor more information,call the MeadowLakesgolf shop at 541-447-7113.
Jan. 18 — Central Oregon Winter Series event atKah-Nee-TaHighDesert ResortnearWarm Springs Better-ball toumamettt beginswith an tt a.m. shotgun.Two-personteamswith rto morethan one protessional allowedper team.Cost is $30 EAGLECREST for professionals,$50for amateurs. Cost includes Men's Club, Nov. 14 gross attdnetskins competitions. Cart costsextra. at RidgeCourse All playersmustsign up by noonott theThursday Three NetBest Balls betoretheevent. Toregister orior moreinformation, 1, HankMcCauley/RogerEdgerly/Jerry Rogers/ call PaiHufter,headproat CrookedRiver Ranch, at Bill Hottck, 196. 2(tiel, ReedSloss/Bill Olson/Alan 541-923-6343oremail himatcrrpat@crookedriverFalco/Bily Balding,197;NateWilhite/MikeNarzisi/ ranch.com. Ralf Schmidt/ChuckScrogin, 197. 4, BobMowlds/ Feb. 1 — Central OregonWinter Seriesevent SteveAttstiit/Ken Wellman/SteveGould, 200. 5, Tim at Meadow LakesGolf Club irt Pritteville. Triple-six Swope/JimKelly/MikeBessonette/BobReed, 201. tournamentbeginswith att tt a.m shotgun. Twoperson teamswith no morethan oneprofessional LOSTTRACKS allowedperteam.Cost is $30for professionals, $50 for amateurs.Costincludesgrossattd ttet skinscomCentral OregonWinter Series, Nov. 16 Triple Six petitions.Cartcostsextra. All playersmustsign up by noonott theThursdaybefore the event. Toregister 1st Flight — Gross: 1,NickWarren/Don Orrell, oiior more intormatiott, call PatHttffer, headpro at 6a 2, TimCecil/Charlie Rice,64. 3,RyanWhitcomb/ Ross Kraniz67. , Net: t, Pat C'Gormalt/LesBryan, CrookedRiverRanch, at541-923-6343or email him 6z5. 2, Jasonpigot/Lyle zurflu, 63. 3 (tie), Sean at crrpat@crookedriverrattch.com. Feb. 2 — SuperBowlScrambleat Meadow Remer/Rigo Montes, 65.5; Corey Lackaff/Woody LakesGolt Course in Prinevile is a tour-person Kinsey,65.5. 2nd Flight — Gross: t, TimBooher/Jack Tebbs, scramble. Eventtees off with a 10 a.m. shotgun. Cost is $15 plusgreenfee. For moreinformation 71. 2, BobRoach/Jim Rodgers, 73 3, GregSollers/ Brian Britton,74.Net: u Markscott/Roger palmer, or to register,call the MeadowLakes pro shop at 6Z 2, Larry Patterson/BarryTank, 6Z5. 3, Aaron 541 447 7113. Feb. 22 —CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat Boehm/To m Warton,63.5. Kps — 0-12handicaps:RossKrantz, No a13 CrookedRiverBanch. Aggregateshamble beginswith an 11a.m.shotgun.Two-person teamswith nomore and higher.Lyle Zttrfltt, No.16. Skins — Gross:WardNllilsort, No.7;CeciVRice, than oneprofessional alowedperteam. Cost is $30 No. 14.Net: Holley/Polis,No.2; Patterson(Tank,No. for professionals, $50for amateurs.Cost includes grossandnetskins competitions. Cartcostsextra. All 13; Booher/Tebbs,No.17. playersmustsignupbynoonoit theThursdaybefore the event.Toregister orlor moreinformation, call Pat MEADOWLAKES Httffer,headproat CrookedRiver Ranch, at541-923Turkey ShootOpen,Nov. 17 6343 oremail himatcrrpat@crookedriverranch.com. Best Ball (Worst Hole Eliminated) March 2 — Polar BearOpenis an individual Gross: t,Rosie Cook/Jean Gregerson,64.2 stroke-play tournament at Meadow Lakes Golf (tie), Jim Molttgomery/JeaBrown,65;Jea Storm/ Course itt Prineville. Individual stroke-playtourttaTodd Goodew, 65. Net: t, HowardZangari/Dennis mentteesoifwith a10a.m. shotgun. Costis $20plus Brockman, 56. 2, LesBryan/Becky Bryan, 60. 3, Eric green fee. For m ore i n formati on oi to register, cal the MagidsolVDeidre Magidson,61. MeadowLakespro shopat541-447-7113. KPs —BeckyBryan,No.8;Jeff Storm,No.17. March15 — CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent Long Putt — FredBttshottg, No.9. Skins — Gross: Jeff Storm/ToddGoodew , at JuniperGolf Coursein Redmond.Beter-ball tournament beginswith ant 1a.m.shotgun. Two-person Nos. 4, 16; Jim Montgomery/Jeff Brown,Nos. 10, withnomorethanoneprofessional allowedper 14; GeorgeLienkaemper/Fred Bttshong, No. 13;Jeff teams Roundtree/DaveJenkitts, No. 18 Net: Les Bryan/ team.Costis $30for professionals, $50foramateurs. includesgrossattd netskins competitions. Cart BeckyBryan,No.5;JimMontgomery/Jeff Brown,No. Cost costs extra.All playersmustsignttp bynoononthe 14; John Traveit/cliff Garrett, No.16. Thursdaybefore theevent. Toregister orformoreinformation, call PatHttffer, headpro at CrookedRiver
Hole-In-One Report Nov. 1 CROOKEDRIVERRANCH
David Wudt, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 4.............141 yards...........4-iron Nov. 15 CROOKEDRIVERRANCH
Roger Ferguson,Redmond
No.11............146 yards...........7-iron Nov. 18 ASPENLAKES Ted Carun, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 4.............156 yards...........5-iron
al allowedperteam. Cost is $30for professionals, $50 for amateursCostincludesgrossaltd ttet skins competitions.Cartcostsextra All playersmustsign up bynoonontheThursdaybefore the event. Toregister orfor moreinformation, call PatHutfer, headpro at CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343 or email him atcrrpatOcrookedriverranch.com.
Professiona LPGATour Money Leaders Final 1. InbeePark Z Na YeolChoi t
3. StacyLewis 4. YaltiTSettg
5. Ai Miyazato
6. SoYeonRyu 7.Jiyai Shin
a AzahaiaMttltoz 9. Sttzann Pettersen 10.ShaitshanFettg
11. MikaMiyazato 12. KarrieWebb
ut Amy Yang
14. CristieKerr
15. PaulaCreamer 16. AngelaStanford 17.SunYoungYoo 18 CatrionaMatthew 19. AnnaNoidqvisi 20. ChellaChoi
21. LexiThompson
zz Hee Kyungseo
23. Brittanyuncicome 24. BrittanyLang 25. Sandra Gai
26. uc Kim
27. KarineIcher 28. Candie Kung 29. HaeiKattg i 30. JennyShin 31. JttlietaGranada 3z BeatrizRecari 33. SeRiPak 34. Hee YoungPark 35. VickyHurst 36. Eun-Hee Ji 37 KatherineHull 38. Meena Lee 39. Gittlia Sergas 40. IlheeLee 41. JessicaKorda 4z NatalieGulbis
43. Karin siodin
44. Mitta Harigae
45. Morgan Pressel 46. Hee-Won Han 47. KatIeFutcher 48. Geriita Piller
49. undsey wright 50. JenniferJohnson 51. Nicolecastrale 5z DartielleKang 5a Lizette Salas 54. JodiEwart
55. PomaitongPhatlum
56. Momoko ueda 57. CindyLacrosse 5a M.J.Hur 59. CarolineHedwall 60. AlisonWalshe 61. Mariaiouribe 6z sydtteeMichaels 6a MoMartin 64. SophieGustafson 65. MichelleWie
66. Dewiclaireschreefel
JaneSmith RanCh, at 541-923-6343 Ol email him at CrrPat@ 67. Sarah
Trtt
24 22 26 24 23 24 18 26 24 t9 20 20 22 23 23 26 23 20 27 27 23 25 24 25 26 2t 24 25 24
25 26 27 t2 25 27 25 26 26 22 22
20 22 23 26 23 25 23 23 17 23 19 19 18
21 26 19
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18 22 19 19 2t 22 23 20 17 2t 21 18 22 20 18 19 14
6a BelenMozo 69. JiminKang at Pronghorn Clttb's Nicklaus Cottrse near Bend. 70. PernillaLindberg Scramble beginswith an 11 a.m. shotgun. Two- 7t JenniferSong stttpples person teamswith no morethan oneprofessional 7z Karen allowedperteam.Cost is $30for professionals, $50 73. JennieLee for amateurs.Costincludesgrossandtet skinscom- 74. BeckyMorgan petitions. Cartcosts extra All playersmustsign up 75. VeronicaFeiberi by noonontheThursdaybefore the event. Toregister oi for moreintormation, call PatHuffer, headpro at Vare TrophyStandings CrookedRiverRanch, at541-923-6343or email him Final at crrpat@crookedriverranch.com. 1. InbeePark,70.2118 April 5 — Central OregonWinter Seriesevent z So Yeon Rytt, 70.3023 at BrasadaRanch Golt Coursein Powell Butte. Bet- a Jiyai Shin,70.3077 ter-ball tournamentbegins with an0 a.m. shotgun. 4. StacyLewis,70.3333 Two-person teamswith nomorethan oneprofession5. NaYeonchoi, 70.4878 crookedriverranch.com. March 22 —CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent
6. Ai Miyazato,70.5641 7. Suzannpetterseit, 70.7442 a Shaltshan Feng,70.8406 9 Azahara Mttnoz,70.8977 10. MikaMiyazato, 70.9394 11. PaulaCreamer, 70.951B tz AmyYang,71.0400
$2,287,080 $1,981,834 $1,872,409 $h430 159 $1,334,977 $1,282,673 $1,234,597 $h230,751 $1 482,860 $1,101,147 $1,098749 fl884 973 $844,305 $837,314 $815,574 $794,294 $7B1,587 $714 272 $688 703 $634,622 $611,02t $600,403 $581,631 $575,263 $574,323 $561,302 $541,532 $4B5,rj63 $456,425 $447,731 $445,685 $444,620 $430,338 $427,717 $401,457 $3B2,597 $376,192 $374,312 $362,659 $355,780 $339,320 $321,472
ta catrionaMathew,71.0882 14. KarineIcher,71.1039
11. BubbaWatson 1Z Phil Mickelson 13.lan Pottlter
14. steveStricker 15. KeeganBradley 16. NickWatttey
17. MattKuchar ta DitstiltJohnson
19. PeterHanson 20. ErnieEls 21.ZachJohnson 2Z SergioGarcia
usA usA USA Ettg
usA usA usA usA USA
swe SAi
usA
2a Bovanpelt 24. Graeme Mcoowell
25. HunterMahan 26. JimFriryk 27. PaulLawrie 2a RickieFowler 29. FraricescoMolinari
Ger
34.JasonDay 35. Nicolas colsaerts 36. Bill Haas
Aus Bel
usA Aus
37.Johit Senden 3a BraltdeltGrace 39. DavidToms
Men World G ov Ranking Throttgh Nov.18 Rank. Name Country Points 1. RoryMcllroy Nlr tz59 2. LukeDonald Eng 9.06 3. TigerWoods usA 9.00 4. LeeWestwood Eng 660 5. AdamScot Aus 6.59 6. LouisOosthuizen SAi 6.15 7. JustinRose Eng 6.08 a JasonDttfner USA 5.B3 9. WebbSimpson usA 5.71 10. BrandtSttedeker
swe
SAi 3a GonzaloFernandez-castano Esp
15. YaniTsettg,71.1220
Money
30. MartinKaymer 31. CarlPettersson 3Z CharlSchwartzel
Esp
usA
Nlr USA USA
sco usA Ita
564 5.49 5.2t 5.16 5.08 4.97 494 4.88 4.81 4.77 4.69 4.64 460 4.44 4.37 4.17
3.95 3.79 361 3.61
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40. Robert Garrigus 41. Ryan Moore 4z Scott piercy 43. MatteoMarassero 44. Thomas Btom 45. DavidLynn 46. K.J.Choi 47. HiroyukiFuiita 4a JamieDonaldson 49. Georgecoetzee 50. FredrikJacobson 51. Geoff Ogilvy 5z AlexanderNoren
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Stock listings, E2-3 Calendar, E4 News of Record, E4
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
+ NASD AQGHANGE'+.61+.02%
V DOWJON ES cNaNGE-745-.o6/.
IN BRIEF
chairman, BenBernanke, again strongly urged Congress onTuesday to ward off the sudden
and severe combination of tax increasesand federal spending cuts coming at the end of the year. "Uncertainties about
the situation in Europe and especially about the
prospects for federal fiscal policy seem to be weighing on the spend-
+ BONDS Tressu~ cIlaNGE L,s zs/, V
CaimS rau in
Bernanke urges fiscal accord The Federal Reserve
+ S&P500cNaNGE+9z+oz/.
By Peter Svensson The Associated Press
NEW YORK — HewlettPackard Co. said on Tuesday that it's the victim of a multibillion dollar fraud at the hands of a British company it bought last year that lied about its finances. HP CEO Meg Whitman said executives at Autonomy Corporation PLC "willfully" boosted the company's figures through various accounting tricks, which convinced HP to pay $9.7 billion for the com-
pany in October 2011. Autonomy's former CEO said HP's allegations are false. HP is now taking an $8.8 billion charge to align AutonWhitman omy ' s purchase price with what HP now says is its real value. More than $5 billion of that charge is due to false accounting, HP said. The revelation is another blow for HP, which is strug-
gling to reinvent itself as PC and printer sales shrink. The company's stock hit a 10-year low in morning trading. Among other things, Autonomy makes search engines that help companies find vital information stored across computer networks. Acquiring it was part of an attempt by HP to strengthen its portfolio of high-value products and servicesfor corporations and government agencies. The deal was approved by Whitman's predecessor, Leo
GOLD cHaNGE-'stoso + SILVER cNaNGE-sozss
C Bi'e Trader Apotheker, but closed three weeks into Whitman's tenure as chief executive. Whitman was a member of HP's board of directors when Apotheker initiated the Autonomy purchase. Among the tricks used at Autonomy, Whitman said: The company had been booking the sale of computers as software revenue and claiming the cost of making the machines as a marketing expense. SeeHP/E4
ing decisions ofhouseholds and businessesas well as on financial conditions," Bernanke said
in a speech at theNew York Economic Club. "Such uncertainties will
charged in $276M insider scheme
By Peter Lattman New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — Federal prosecutors brought what they called "the most lucrative insider trading scheme
ever charged," filing a crim-
"Our littlest consumers need to be protected from unsafe toys." — Evan Preston, fellow, Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group
only be increased by discord and delay."
Investorsapprove Glencore deal Investors on Tuesday approved Glencore International's $31 billion takeover of Xstrata,
leaving clearance by regulators in Europeand China as the remaining hurdles for this year's
biggest deal. Xstrata shareholders voted in favor of Glencore's all-stock offer, while rejecting retention bonuses for about 70 Xstrata managers, the Zug, Switzerland-based
inal case Tuesday against a former trader at a unit of the hedge fund SAC CapitaL Mathew Martoma, a former trader at CR Intrinsic, a division of SAC Capital, was charged with making about $276 million in combined profits and avoided losses by obtaining confidential information about a drug trial for an Alzheimer's drug developed by the pharmaceutical companies Elan and Wyeth. The case is the latest to put billionaire investor Steven Cohen and his hedge fund, SAC Capital, in the spotlight over insider trad-
ing crimes. M artoma received the information from Sidney
Gilman, a neurology professor at the University of Michigan, a leading expert in Alzheimer's disease. Gilman is cooperating with the government and has entered into a nonprosecution agreement with the U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan. See Insider /E3
mining company said in a series of regulatory filings.
Moody's lowers France's rating France's government has shrugged off the latest downgrade of its credit rating, saying Tuesday that it just needs time for reforms to the
sluggish economyto take root. Socialist President Francois Hollande noted that markets barely budged on the credit rate
cut by Moody's Investors Services, andsaid that was a sign the government should stay its
course of gradual budget tightening. But he also
used the downgradeto warn the French that the
country can nolonger avoid "the most difficult decisions" if it wants to preserve its "credibility." — From wire reports
State ofSwiss danks European andU.S. economic troubles are causing many countries to crack down on secretive Swiss banks and those who use them
as tax havens. NUMBER OF SWISS BANKS 450 400
2011 267
350 300 250
ANALYSIS Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
Evan Preston, a fellow with the Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group,demonstrates how a plastic toy french fry exceeds federal regulations, although it could still be a choking hazard, during a news conference Tuesday at Crawmer's Critterz Preschool in Bend.
Who wi ead the housing recovery?
an erous o s s i o u er e o u w a r ns
By Neil Irwin The Washington Post
• Eventoysdeemedsafebyregul atorscanposehazards,OSPIRG says ::OntheWeb • To view the Oregon By Tim Doran The Bulletin
Despite decades of warningsfrom consumer-protection advocates and the passage of tougher laws, unsafe toys can still be found on store shelves, a representative from the Oregon Student Public Interest Research Group said Tuesday. Evan Preston, a fellow with OSPIRG, displayed potentially harmful toys during a news conferenceheld at Crawmer's Critterz Preschool — in a room away from the children — in Bend. "Our littlest consumers need to be protected from unsafe
toys," Preston said. Joined by state Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, Preston provided tips for finding safe toys and said more action needs to be taken to protect Americans. The news conference in Bend coincided with others around the nation and the release of OSPIRG's 27th annual report on dangerous toys, "Trouble in Toyland." Preston, and the report, focused onfour main issues:toys that could be choking hazards; those that contain toxic chemicals;magnets; and excessively loud toys. He showed how the length
of atoy french fry — part of a toy food set — met federal safety requirements. It stood just above the rim of the choketest measuring device, which equals the length required by law. "If a toy is a couple millimeters above the lid, it's still a choking hazard," he said. To avoid such hazards, Preston suggestedparents measure the length of children's toys using an empty toilet paper roll. Other imitation food items, such as a toy strawberry, passed the small-parts regulation, as the law requires. See Toys /E3
Student Public lnterest
Research Group's report, "Trouble in Toyland," visit www
.ospirg.org/. • To see lists of recalled
and unsafe toys, report an unsafe toy or read tips for toy shopping, visit www.toysafety .mobi. • For information about
other unsafe products or to report an unsafe product, visit www
.saferproducts.gov, the database maintained by the Consumer Product
Safety Commission.
A housing comeback is now under way; that much is clear. Adding to a steady drumbeat of positive data for the sector, new data on Tuesday showed a surprising 3.6 percent gain in housing starts in October, which came on the back of a 15.1 percent rise in September. The question now is how strong it will be and where it will take place. And to answer those questions, it helps to look into the fundamentals of the major U.S. housing markets. These numbers suggest the future for housing is looking bright in the Atlanta, New York and Chicago metro areas. But that's getting ahead of things. See Housing /E3
'S5 '90 '95 '00 '05 '10
CROSS-BORDER PRIVATE BANKING As a percentage of market share, 2009 Switzerland ~g g } U.K., Channel Islands Caribbean, Panama Luxembourg Hong Kong, Singapore U.S. Other
11
8 7
Source: Swiss National Bank, Boston Consulting Group, Swiss Bank Corp.
© 2012 Mcctatchy-Tribune NewsService
Washington'spot legalization may not protect workers By Jonathan Martin The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — Anyone with a job who plans to attend a marijuana "Legalization Day" party might as well pack their employment contract along with their rolling papers. Washington voters this month agreedtomake marijuana legal for recreational use for adults 21 and up, but the new law gives no protection in the workplace. If employees
show up with marijuana in their systems — even residual amounts from a few weeks back — there's no guarantee the boss will look AT WORK the other way. In this new frontier of
drug policy, employers could simply view employees' afterhours use of marijuana like alcohol, intervening only when necessary. But few appear to be loosening bright-line drug
policies, as if Initiative 502 never passed, say the region's top employment lawyers. Last week, the city of Seattle joined other employers in reminding its 10,500 workers that, because it gets federal funding, and because federal law still considers marijuana a banned substance, it must maintain a drug-free workplace. But enforcing such policies for after-hours use is likely to be contentious, especially for
unionized workers, because most workplace marijuana tests don't differentiate past use — even weeks prior — from the impairing buzz of a freshly smoked joint. "We think 502 changes everything," said Dan Swedlow, senior staff attorney at the 16,000-member Teamsters Local 117. "We're clearly headed for a showdown with some
employers." See Marijuana /E4
"We think (Initiative)
502 changes everything. We're clearly headed for a showdown with
some employers." — Dan Swedlow, senior staff attorney, Teamsters Local 117
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012• THE BULLETIN E3
Hortt'rr
'r
Housing
Evan Preston of the Oregon Student PubIlc Interest Research Group, left, displays a guide for measuring the size of toy balls as state Rep. Jason Conger, RBend,looks on Tuesday at Crawmer's Critterz Preschool in Bend.
' 4%+e -
p
Continued from E1 A good way t o l ook a t which h o u sin g ma r k e ts are potentially overvalued and which ar e u n dervalued — and where the mar-
ket seems to be begging for new home construction and where there is still a surplus of unneeded houses — is to look at the relationship b etween rents an d h o m e
prices. Over long periods of time, the price to rent a given house should rise at about the same rate as the price to buy one. But over shorter periods of time, the two can diverge. And when they do, it is usually a sign that something curious is up in that market. For example,from 2000 to 2005, prices in the M i ami metro area rose by D6 percentage points more than did rents, a sure sign that it was one of the nation's most bubbly housing markets. (Those numbers, like all in this p iece, come f r om comparing changes in the S &P C a se-Shiller h o m e price i ndex f o r d i f f erent m ajor metro a r eas c o mpared with the Labor Department's consumer price index measure of "Owner's Equivalent Rent," for those same areas. Owner's equivalent rent is a measure of what it would cost to rent the housing stock that people in that city own. Because there aresome metro areas for which Case-Shiller data is available and BLS data is not, and vice versa, only 12 major markets are included in this analysis). Sure enough, in M i ami, in the four years starting in 2005, rents kept rising, up 23 percent, while home prices fell 38 percent. Essentially, the imbalance reversed itself. Few places have experienced booms and b u sts quite that dramatic, but the same analytical tools can
Rob Kerr The Bulletin
Toys Continued from E1 But the roundish fake fruit would not meet th e smallball size r equirement, 1.75 inches. Preston and OSPIRG expressed specific concerns about food toys. "Kids think they should be eaten," he said. While lead is banned from house paint and the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 prohibits toys containing lead at levels greater than 100 parts per m i llion, OSPIRG's researchers s t ill found toysfor sale exceeding that level, according to the report. The nonprofit also pointed out that the American Acad-
Insider Continued from E1 G ilman c o nnected w i t h Martoma through an expert network firm based in New York. Expert networks became popular on Wall Street in the past decade, linking Wall Street money managers to specialists in various industries to help give them an edge on their investments. Expert networks have been a focus of the government's widespread crackdown on insider trading at hedge funds. His consulting work at the expert network firm earned Gilman more than $100,000, according to a parallel civil
emy of Pediatrics says lead levels should not exceed 40 ppm. OSPIRG also has concerns about phthalates, chemicals used to soften plastic, that have been linked to fetal development problems, premature delivery and other health issues. The 2008 law banned three of the phthalates and created an interim ban on several others, according to OSPIRG's report. But o ther countries totally prohibit them in toys, and several states, including Washington and California, have higher restrictions than the federal government. Magnets continue to be an issue in toys, according to OSPIRG. Two or more magnets
that get swallowed can join together and tear up the digestive system. And lastly, Preston suggested parents be aware of toys that make loud or excessive noise. Because a child is likely to place the toy up to his or her ear, there is potential for hear-
complaint against Martoma and Gilman filed Monday by the Securities and Exchange Commission. According to the complaint, between 2006 and 2008, Martoma consulted with Gilman about the preliminary results of the drug trial and accumulated a roughly $700 million position in the stocks of Wyeth and Elan. In June 2008, the complaint says,Martoma received secret information about n egative data relating to the drug trials. Martoma caused SAC Capital to sell its entire inventory of roughly 10.5 million shares in Elan and about 7 million shares of Wyeth before the
public release of th e d ata. The day after the study was announced, Elan stock lost about 42 percent of its value and Wyeth dropped about 12 percent. In a statement, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: "The charges unsealed today describe cheating coming and
ing damage. OSPIRG says lawmakers should ensure that consumer protection laws get enforced and provide consumers greater protection from toxins in products.
"The (need) for consumer safety should not be a political question or a partisan issue," Preston said. — Reporter: 541-383-0360, tdoran@bendbulletin.com
going — specifically, insider trading first on the long side, and then on the short side, on a scale that has no historical precedent. As alleged, by cultivating and corrupting a doctor with access to secret drug data, Mathew Martoma and his hedgefund benefited from what might be the most lucrative inside tip of all time."
Iknfelll
help explain what cities are poised for a rise in prices and construction in the future. When rents are rising faster than home prices, it is a sign that purchasing a home is becoming relatively more affordable, and so it will behoove people to seriously think about buying. That in turn should create upward pressure on prices in the future and so coax builders into t h e m a r ket. These things can move in slow waves, so it's not necessarily proof that the markets flashing green lights f or improvement w il l g e t better next year. But over time, this is a solid indicator of where new construction ought to occur. As alluded to above, the biggest divide between rents a nd prices, both over t h e last year and the last three years, has been in Atlanta. It was a city that experienced far less of a housing bubble d uring th e 2 000 t o 2 0 0 5 years, with price increases outstripping rent increases only 22 percent percentage points (recall that in Miami that was 136 percent). But despite having missed the excesses of the boom, the Atlanta metro area housing market still saw a steep price drop during the housing bust, falling 16 percent drop from 2 005 t o 2 0 09. Prices have continued falling in the last three years, even as equivalent rents in Atlanta have been r i sing slightly. All that adds up to a market that would seem primed f or i m provement; at t h i s point, Atlanta would seem to be the most undervalued of the 12 major markets examined here. In the l ast y ear a l one, prices fell another 6.1 percent while equivalent rents rose 1.3 percent. A similar, if less dramatic, story is evident in New York and Chicago. Both markets similarly avoided the worst
excesses of the bubble, but have had a steady drop in prices since then at a time rents in those places kept rising. Over the last year, New York saw a 1.4 percent rise in rents and a 2.3 percent decline in prices, while Chicago experienced a 1.7 percent rise in rents paired with a 1.6 percent drop in p rices. Both point to a r ebound in home prices and construction activity in the future. What markets are showing the opposite trend, with prices rising much f a ster than rents? The good news is that there are no markets showing numbers that are dramatically out of whack. The two w it h t h e l a rgest spread between prices and rents are those that were so distorted by the housing boom and bust that it is hard to know how to read their numbers. In Mi ami, h ome p r ices rose 4 p e rcentage points more than rents over the past year, and i n D e t roit that was almost 6 percent. But over a longer time horizon, going back to 2000, both Miami and Detroit still show the reverse, so there may be a catch-up effect under way. The best news out of this a nalysis, though, may b e this: Most of the largest U.S. cities have housing markets that have been i n p r e t ty good balance over the last year, with prices rising at about the same rate as rents. That's true of the Washington metro area ( where prices are up 4.3 percent, rents
bo~aC1ASSIC
Providing unparalled service across a variety of industries since 1983.
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•
Ilti iri r
San Francisco, Los Angeles, Boston, Dallas, Seattle and Cleveland. And that may be the best sign for the housing market of all. After all these years of bubbles and busts, ups and downs, there finally is a measure of stability. And that is a shift that bodes well for the economy.
Also see usfor
7:30 AM - 5 :30 PM MON-FRI 8 AM - 3 PM SAT.
ce n t er
Rebecca Nonweiler, MD, Board CertiSed •
r
up 2.4 percent), and also of
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1.0630 .0343
1.0407 1.5905 1.0034 .002071 .1603 1.2807 .1290 .Ot2296 .076589 .0318 .000920 .1486 1.0635 .0343
Selected mutual funds YTD HiYldBd 7.93 t0.02 +136 LgCap p 16.67 +0.02+11.5 Fidel 3 5.13 i0.13 +13.5 Name NAV Chg%Ret Cohen &Steers: FPA Funds: RtRateHir 9.92+0.01 +5.9 RltyShrs 6621 +033 +105 N ewlnco 10.62 +2 . 0 GNMA t t.78 -0.01 +2.8 Amer Ceoturtr Intr. FPACres 28.34 +0.03 +6.7 Govtlnc t063 -002 +2.8 Eqlnc 7 .78 +0.01 +9.0 ColumbiaClassZ: Growthl 27.25+004 r109 AcomZ 3055+006+122 Fbrholme 29.71 +0.15 +28.3 GroCo 9326+045 +t53 FederatedInstb Acomlnt Z 3 9. 5 4 0. 0 4 +t 5 . 9 Grolnc 2063 +004 +t47 Ultra 25.52 t0.03 rth3 Credit SoisseComm: TotRetBd 11.61 -0.02 +6.2 GrowCor 9331 +045 +t55 American FondsA: +4 . 9 GrorrthCoK93 AmcpAp 21.01 +0.04+12.0 ComRett 8.22 -0.01 +0.5 S trValDvlS 4.94 28+045 +l5 4 Fidelity Advisor A: AMutlA p 2776 +0.02 +9.2 DFA Funds: H>ghlnc r 9.21 +0.01 +12.0 + ' I 0.0Nwlnsgh p22.26+0.06 +12.9 IntBd t h 16 -0.01 +4.8 BalAp 1998+0.02 +tt 3 IntlCorEq 9 95 +8. 7 I ntmMu 10.76 +5. 6 BondAp 1295 402 +56 USCorEqt tt.94+Oot +t22 S trlnA 12.70 IntlDisc 3t.rt +0.03 +14.8 CaplBAp 5212+003 +89 USCorEq211.8t +0.02 +t2.7 Fidelity Advisor I: Davis Funds A: Nwlnsgtl 2258 +0.06 +13.1 InvGrBd t'I 69 -002 +5.5 CapWGA p35.74 +0.01 +13.6 InvGB 801 -001 +6.'I CapWAp 21.45 -0.03 i6.6 NYVenA 35.27+0.12 +8.5 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 t416 +84 LgCapVal 1105 -001 +97 EuPaCA lt 39.48 +0.01 +t 2.3 Davis FundsY: FF2010K l297 +85 LowPr 3838 -004+t24 rdinvA p 39.57 +0.07 +t2.9 NYVenY 3571 +ot2 +88 FF2015 ll 84 +001 +86 LowPnKr 3836 -005 +t26 GovtAp 1457 402 +21 Delaware InvestA: +86 Magelln 71.87 +0.14 +14.3 GwtNtp 3336 +009 +161 averlncp 9.42 -0.01 +6.2 FF2015K t303 FF2020 14.31 +0.01 +9.4 MRCap 28.99 +0.12 +11.0 Hl TrA p 11 19 +0.01 +11 9 Dimensional Fds: t885 405 +108 FF2020K 1344 +0.01 +95 M unilnc 13.74 r8. 8 IncoAp 17.80+0.01 +9.2 EmMCrEq EmMktV 2787 +t2 +87 FF2025 11 89 +0.01 +10.3 NwMktr 17.73 +0.01 +17.0 IntBdAp 13.77 -0.02 +2.6 ICAA lt 29.96 +0.01 +t 2.1 IntSmVa 14.9t +002 +th6 FF2025K 1356 +001 +10.4 OTC 57.54 +0.11 +5.2 NEcoAp 28.09 +0.05 +18.1 USLgVa 21.93+0.05 +t60 FF2030 1415 +001 +105 t00lndex 997+0.01 +130 N PerA p 30 07+0.08 +t4.9 US Small22.57 +0.03 +t0.7 FF2030K 13.69 +0.01 +10.6 Puritn l921 +003 +11.4 N wWrldA 5206 + t 2 9 USSmVa 25.98 -0.01 +12.7 FF2035 11.69 +0.01 +11.0 PuritanK 19.21 +003 +ll 5 F1276+003 +t36 SmCpAp 3842+0.09 +158 IntlSmCo 14.98 + 10.1 FF2035K 13.74 +0.02 +11.1 SAIISeCqE 1 0 .3 5 +0.9 FF2040 8.16 +0.01 +11.1 TxExAp 1332+0.0t +98 Frttl WshAp 30.56 +0.05 +9.4 IntVa l 5 .46 -002 +77 FF2040K 13.78 +0.02 +11.2 Glb5Fxlnc ll 30 -001 +46 Fidelity Invest: Artisan Funds: +ho AIISectEq 1274+0.03 +134 Intl 23 . 3 5 +17.8 2YGIFxd t014 AMgr50 16.16 -0.01 +8.9 IntlVal r 29.10 +0.01 +t6.0 Dodge&Cox: AMgr20r 13.30 -0.01 +5.8 Balanced 75.20 -0.07 +13.5 MidCap 37.70 +0.08 +14.5 MidCapV al2T04+O.ot +6. 8 Income 13.91 -0.02 +7.5 Balanc 19.88 +0.01 +10.7 Bernstein Fds: IntlStk 32.66 -0.08 +11.7 BalancedK19.88+0.01 +10.9 Intour 14 25 402 +5 3 Stock ll580 -009 +155 BlueChGr 4834 +0.12 +14.0 CapAp 29.20 +0.21 +18.6 ovuu 1499 40t +38 Doublebine Funds: BlackRockA: TRB(I I 11.39 NA Cplncr 931 +0.01 +129 Eqtysv 1946 +0.03 +88 TRBdNp 11.39 NA Contra 76.39 +0.22 +13.2 ContraK 76.42 +0.22 +13.4 GIAIAr 1928 40t +69 Dreyfus: BlackRock 8&C: Aprec 43.34 +0.01 +8.2 avlntl 28.92 +0.03 +13.3 GIAIC t 17.91 -0.01 +6.1 Eaton Vance I: DivrslntK r28.92+0.03 +t3.5 BlackRocklnstb FltgRt 9 0 9 +7.4 DivGth 29.22 +0.05 +13.7 EquityDv 19.51 +0.03 +9.0 GblMacAbR919+Oot +32 Eq Inc 45.98 +0.09 +13.6 G lbAlloc r 19.39 + 7 . 2FMI Funds: EQII 1 9.14 +0.05 +11.9
SCmdtyStrt 905 +0.01 +t.O SCmdtyStrF9.08 +0.01 +1.2 SrslntGrw th45 +0.02 +13.3 SerlntlGrF th49 +0.03 +13.5 SrslntVal 9.10 -001 +12.6 SerlntlValF 9.13 + 12.9 SrlnvGrdF 'I'l.69 -002 +5.5 STBF 8 6 0 +2 3 S tratlnc 1h37 +9 0 TotalBd th02 -002 +62 USBI 1193 -002 +41 Value 73.09 +0.07 +15.2
Fidelity Spartan: 500ldx lnv49.33 +O.ot+12.5
500ldx I 49.33 +0.03 +12.5 Fidelity Spart Adtr. ExMktAIt r 39.08 +0.09 +11.5 500ldxAdv49.33 +0.04+12.5
TotMktAdr4045 r004 +12.3 CapApp 41.51 +0.06+11.7 Lord Abbett C: RisingDivA16.98+0.04 +9.3 EmMktS 31.80-0.08 +11.5 TotRetBdl 10.30 -0.01 +12.0 Windsor 49.09t0.01 +15.1 USBond I 11.93 -0.02 +4.2 IVA Funds: S hourlncct4.67 + 5 . 3S&MdCpVI31.08+0.08 +4.9 Eqlnc 25.67+0.03 +13.1 Templeton Iostit: WdsrllAd 51.05+0.09 +12.9 First Eagle: Wldwide Irt609 -002 +48 Lord Abbett R Oppenheimer8: EItlndex 37.51+0.03 +12.3 ForEqS 18.75 rtt06 +10.2 VanguardFds: GlblA 4870 +002 +79 InvescoFundsA: S ittDurlnco 4 64 + 6 . 0RiengovB1534+003 +84 Grorrth 36.71+0.08 +15.3 Tbornburg Fds: Capopp 33.25+0.15 +12.7 OverseasA 2207 -0.01 +84 CmstkA 17.04 -0.01 +13.3 MFS FondsA: S&MdCpVI2625 +006 +4.t HlthSci 41.96+0.32 +28.7 IntValAp 26.05+0.06 +9.5 ovdGro 16 36+003 +7.3 p1837 + 7 . 3Energy 58 93-0 l8 -0 t Forum Funds: EqlncA 9.06 +0.01 +10.4 TotRA 14.98 >0.01 +9.0 OppenhetmerC&M: HiYield 6.85 +0.01 +12.2 I ncButdC A bsStrl r 11.20 +1. 4 GrlncAp 20.48+0.04 +th3 ValueA 24.91 t0.06 +12.6 RisingDvC p15.28+0.03 +86 InstlCpG 18.21+0.03 +13.0 IntValueI 26.65 r0.07 +9.9 Eqlnc 23 72+0.02 +t06 Frank/TempFrnk A: OppenheimerRoch: Explr 77 71 +0.27 +88 H YMuA t0.24 +1 4 5 MFS FundsI: IntlBond l0.03-0.02 +5.1 Tweedy Browne: FedTFA p 12.95 + t o.t Ivy Funds: Valuel 25 03 +0 06 +12.9 RcNtMuA 7.70 + 1 9 .2Intl G&l t2.43 -0.02 +7.9 GblValue 24.78 +0.07 +13.4 GNMA ll.00 +2.t GrwlhAp 49,01 +0.02 +9.8 AsrrtSCt 2428+O.ot +t2.3 MFS FondsInstt: OppenheimerY: HYCorp 6.01+0.01 +11.7 IntlStk t3.75 +11.9 VanguardAdmiral: HYTFA p 11.11 <0.01+12.3 AssetStAp25.15+0.01 +13.0 IntlEq 18.09 r0.05 +t3.6 DevMktY 3322 +020 +14.7 udCap 5r 88 +9. 2 HlthCre 144.70+0.41 +12.5 +98 B alAItml 23.42 IncomAp 2.17 r0.01 +9.6 AssetStrl r 25.41+0.01 +13.2 MainStay Fundsk I ntlBdY 6.52 +9. t MCapVal 2452+002 +t46 C AITAtdm 11.88 + 7 . 6InflaPro 14.92-0.06 +6.7 ssDvAp 37.27 +O.t6 +7.1 JPMorgan AClass: H>YldBA 607 +001 +11.0 IntGrowY 2930 +018 +14.8 NAse l6.15 -0 05 +t6 t CpopAdl 76.83 +0.35+12.7 IntlGr 18.31+0.04 +12.0 Stratlncp 10.69+00t +t06 t:oreBdA 1214 4.0t +4.8 ManagersFunds: PIMCOAdmio PIMS: r -0.06 +9.6 Intlval 29.62 +11.2 NewEra 42 02 -0 07 -0.'I EMAdmr34.28 USGovAp 682 +l 2 JP MorganInstt: Yacktman p18.74 -0.02 +8.4 TotRtAd 11.58 -0.02 +9.4 N Horiz 3461+015 +11.5 Energy 110.69 -0.33 ITIGrade l0.47-003 +8.8 EqbAdmn4973+006 +t0.7 Frank/rmp FrnkAdv: MdCpVal 27.97 +0.08 +17.8 Yacktroc 20.16 r0.01 +7.9 PIMCOInstl PIMS: N Inc 9 9 4 -002 +55 LifeCon t7 t2 -0.0l +73 Manning&Napier Fds: GlbBdAdv13.47 <0.03 +13.6 JPMorgan RCt: AIAsetAut r1 122 -002 +14.5 overSSF 8.15+001 +tt 3 ExtdAdm 4395 +0.11 +t t.7 LifeGro 23 09 +l03 +1 2 .2 R20to 16.46 12840 +O.to +t25 ufeMod 20 6740t +88 I ncmeAd 2.15 +9. 8 CoreBond 12.14 -0.02 +5.2 WldoppA 741 +002 +11.8 AIIArset l2 66 +96 500Adml + 1 . 6ComodRR 686 -0.02 +7.4 R2015 12.78 +22 LTIGrade ll.05 -007 +12.3 Frank/Temp Frnk C: ShtourBd 1101 -0.01 +1.8 M ergerrd l5 84 +t04 GNMAAd 11.00 Metro WestFds: Divlnc l222 +0.01 +12.9 R2020 17.68 rl l 'I GrwAdm 3592+0.04 +t40 Morg 19.51+0.04 +11.7 IncomCt 2.t9 +90 JPMorganSelCls: Frank/Temp Mll A&B: CoreBd 12.13 -0.02 +5.1 TotRrtBd 11.09 -0.01 +t0.7 EmgMkCurt046 +0.01 +68 R2025 12 93 rll 7 HlthCr 61.07 +O.t7 +t26 Mulnt 14.54 i6.5 SharesA 21.81 r0.01 +10.8 HighYld 8.08 +0.01 +11.9 totRtBdl 11.08 -0.02 +ttt8 EmMkBd 12.33 +14.0 R2030 18 56+001 +t22 H>YldCp 6.01 +0.0t +11 8 PrmcpCor14.85+0.04 +10.1 ShtourBIt 11.01 -0.01 +h6 Mutual Series: HiYld 9 .51 +0.02 +11.8 R2035 13.t t +001 +t24 InfProAd 2932 -0.09 +68 Prmcp r 68.41+0.25 +10.8 Frank/Temp Tempk 45 GblDecA 2918 +001 +9.2 InvGrCp th33 -0.02 +13.7 R2040 1865 +002 +t26 ITBdAdml 12.20 -0.03 +7.0 SelValur 20.84+0.06 +12.1 GIBdAp 13.5t +003 +t33 USLCCrPls22.60 +009 +1 GrwlhAp 18.49+003 +t35 Janus TShre: GlbDiscZ 2962+002 +9.5 Lowou 10.63 -0.01 +5.7 S IItB[I 4 85 +'I0.3 +27 ITsryAdml 11.81 -0.02 +2.9 STAR 20,49 48+00t +64 S haresZ 22 02 + 1 h l RealRtnl 1263 -0.05 +9.0 SmCpStk 3490+010 +ll 7 IntGrAdm 58.31+0.14 +12.2 STIGrade 1087 +42 WorldAp 15.38 r0.02 +11.9 PrkMCValT21 Frank/TempTmp8&C: John HancockCl1: Neuberger&BermFds: ShortT 990 -0.01 +3.2 SmCapVal3790 +004 +99 I TAItml 14.54 +6. 6 StratEq 20 72+007 +130 GIBdt:p 1354+0.03 +t29 LSBalanc 13.34 +0.01 +10.5 Geneslnst 49.71 +0.02 +7.1 TotRt 1158 -002 +9.6 Specln 12 9l -001 +86 ITGrAdm 10.47 -0.03 +8.8 TgtRetlnc t216 40t +68 GMOTrust III: LSGrwth t3.23 +0.02 +11.1 Northern Funds: PIMCOFundsA: +2. t TgRe201024.23 -003 +SO Value 25 7l +0.07 +l4.1 L tdTrAd 11.20 HiYFxlnc 742+00t +12.2 AIIAstAutt rh15 -0.01 +14.1 Principal Iotr. Quahty 22.81 -0.04 +9.4 Lamrd Instb LTGrAdml11.05 -0.07 +12.4 TgtRe201513.36-0.01 +8.6 Oakmark Fonds b GMO TrustIV: EmgMktl t893 405 +t27 RealRtAp 12.63 -0.05 t8.6 LgGGlln 999 +t25 L TAdml 11.96 +9. 2 tgRe202023.68 -0.01 +9.2 Eqttrlncr 28.86 -0.04 r6.7 TotRtA 11.58 -0.02 +9.2 Putnam FundsA: IntllntrVI 1993 -002 +66 Longleaf Partners: MCpAdml9880+0.20 +t08 TgtRe202513.46-0.01 i9.7 +1 7 .2 PIMCOFundsC: GMO TrustVb Partners 25.72 + 12.4 I ntl I r 19.39 GrlnAp 14.23+001 +t32 M uHYAdm1142 + t 0 2 TgRe2030 23.06 +10.2 Oakmark 4847+002+16.3 TotRtCt 1158 -0.02 +85 RoyceFunds: PrmCap r 71.02 +0.26 +t0 9 TgtRe203513.85 EmgMkts r11.04 -0.03 +7.4 Loomis Sayles: +l0.7 t.SBondlx1494 407+123 Old Westbury Fds: ReitAdmr 90.l8 +0.52 +t25 GoldmanSachsIost: PIMCOFunds 0: PennMul r t t 56 NA TgtRe204022.74 +t0.9 +'I'I 0 H>Yield 7.30 +0.01 +12.7 StrlncC 1528 +92 Globopp 7 52 +0.0t +1h9 TRtn p 1158 -0.02 +9.3 Premierlr t979 10.79 + 07 TgtRe204514 NA S TsyAdml 28 HarborFunds: tSBondRx1488 -0.07 rll.9 GlbSMdCapt 4.66+0.02 +10.8 PIMCOFunds P: STBdAdml1066 -0.0l +t 9 USGro 20 70 +147 SchwabFunds: Bond 13.03 -001 +86 S trlncA 15.20 +9. 9 L gCapStrat 9.63 + 9 . 8AstAIIAutttP11.21 -0.02 +14.4 1000lnvr 39 66 +0 04+12.l S htTrAd 1594 +1. 1 Wellsly 24 36404 +88 CapAplnst41.27+0.05+11.8 Loomis Sayles Intr. Oppenheimerk TotRtnP 11.58 -0.02 +9.5 S&P Sel 2202 +0.02 +t2.5 S TIGrAd 1087 +4. 3 Welltn 33 80+0.03 +10.t Intllnvt 58.46 r0.05 +12.4 InvGrBdY t2.74 -002 +108 DvMktA p 3352 +020 +14.3 Perm PortFunds: ScoutFunds: SmCAdm 37.11 +0.07 +11.2 Wndsr 14.55 +15.0 Intlr 5 9 .17 +0.05 +t2.8 Lord Abbett A: GlobAp 6l 02+ot8 +12.9 Permannt 4877 -010 +5.8 Intl 3l. 52 +0.05 +13.5 TtlBAdml 11.17 -0.02 +4.1 Wndsll 28.76 +0.05 +12.8 Hatttord FdsA: AffilA p 1l 62 +0.02 +'I'l.5 G blStrlncA 4.3t +h t 5 Price Funds: Sequoia t6296 -0.08 +12.0 TStkAdm 34.68 +0.03 +12.4 Vanguard IdxFdS: CpAppA p 32.48 +006 +l27 BdDebAp 801 +001 +107 I ntBdA p 6.52 +8. 6 BICtrp 4450+0.12+15.1 TCW Funds: WellslAdm59.03 -tt08 +8.8 ExtMktI 108.48r0.27 rth7 Harttord HLSIA: S hDurlncA p4.64 + 5 .9 MnStFdA 36.32 + t 2 .9 CapApp 23.07 +0.0t +11.9 EmMktln 9.29 +0.01 +18.3 WelltnAdm58.38+0.05 +10.2 MidCplstPI107.66t0.21 r10.9
TotlrrAdmr23.67 -0.01 +t0.2 Totlntllnst r94 65 -0 08 +t0.2 TotlntllPr 9467 -0.08 +10.2 500 1 28.38 +0.10 +12.4
TotBnd 11.t7 -0.02 +4.0 Totllntl t414 -002 +10.t TotStk 34.67 +0.04 +12.3
Vanguard Instt Fds: B allnst 23.42 +9 . 2 Devuklnst 933 -001 +10.8 Extln 4 3.95 +0.11 +11.7 Grwthlst 35.92 r0.04 rt4.1 InfProlnrt ll 94 -004 +6.8 Instldx l2755 +0.10 +12.5
InsPI 127.56 +0.10 +12.6 InsTStPlus3t.39+003+125 M>dCplst 2l S3 +005 +10.9 S TIGrlnst 10.87 + 4 .4 SClnst 37.11 +0.07 +11.2 TBlst t t 1 7 -002 +4.1 TSlnst 3469 +004 +12.4 Valuelst 22.27 +0.02 +11.0
VanguardSignal: 500Sgl l06 06 +0 08+12.5 M>dCpldx 31.18+0.07 +10.9 STBdldx 10.66 -0.01 +1.9 SmCpSig 3343 +0.06 +th2 TotBdSgl 11.17 -0 02 +4.t TotStkSgl 33.47 +0.03 +12.4 Virtus FundsI: EmMktl 9 19 +O.ot +13.3
WestemAsset: CorePlus I 11.67 -0.02 +8.0
E4
THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012
If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Ashley Brothers at 541-383-0323,email business@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10days before the desired date of publication.
MARI<ETPLACE Marijuana Continued from E1 It may not be an issue for many workers: Pre-employment testing is rare among technology and c r eativeclass jobs, and random testing even rarer. But there is no w iggle room for many manufacturing and transportation jobs, and even less so in public safety, and national employers appear unlikely to flex policies for Washington state. "I think people who voted for 502 will be really surprised that if you use it in your home, in accordance with the initiative, you can still get fired," said Seattle employment-law attorney Michael Subit. Workplace drug tests became widespread after President Ronald Reagan issued anexecutive order in 1986 mandating drug-free policies. A federal standard intended for big-rig truckers — 50 nanograms of carboxy-THC per milliliter of blood — became widelyadopted by employers in most industries, from bakers to warehouse workers. Courts across the country have upheld the right of employers to drug-test and fire workers with THC in their urine, even those with valid medical m arijuana authorizations. The Washington Supreme Court in 2011 ruled in favor of employers, upholding the firing of a call-center worker who used marijuana to treat migraines. One of the few groups exempted from drug testing: elected officials, thanks to a 1997 U.S. Supreme Court case, Chandler v. Miller.
Employers have good reasons — from productivity to absenteeism to cheaperinsurance coverage — to maintain drug-free workplaces, said James Shore, an employment lawyer with Stoel Rives in Seattle. In the wake of I-502, he advises employers to update policies to prohibit drugs illegal under state or federal law - "with an exclamation point on federal law," he said — and ban any detectable amount. "It takes the gray area away." Mark Berry, an employment-law attorney with Davis Wright Tremaine, said employers like "a bright-line standard" of zero tolerance because marijuana affects people differently, accord-
ing to past usage and body size. "It may or may not relate to impairment, but because there is a widely used standard, that's what is used," he said. At Swedish Medical Center's urinalysis collection clinic in Ballard, Wash., the toilet water is bright blue, fresh samples must be body temperature, and staff keep a sharp eye out for urinetest cheating devices like the "Whizzinator." Marijuana co n s umed within the past seven to 10
TODAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 9:30-11 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.
THURSDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E Reed Market Road; 541-610-9125. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 2-3:30p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
FRIDAY CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. FREE TAXFRIDAY:Freetax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax .com;free;2-4 p.m.;Zoom Tax,963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite100, Bend; 541-385-9666.
TUESDAY BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. SIMPLIFIED SOLUTIONS:A workshop from Bethanne Kronick with practical strategies and tools to help time-stressed workers improve focus and productivity at work and in their personal lives; registration required; $175; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Sisters Art Works, 204 W. Adams Ave.; 503-260-8714 or info@ simplifynw.com. KEEP YOURCUSTOMERS COMING BACK:Business success program; reservations required; $25 for chamber members and $45 for nonmembers;11 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 23:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 3-4:30p.m.;Redmond Public
Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschutes library.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. SMALL-BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free oneon-one small-business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentral oregon.org. ID THEFT, WHO'S GOT YOUR NUMBER?:Identity theft and scamscancostyou money;learn precautions that can keep you safe; registration required; free; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 305 N.E. Hickey Farms Road, Prineville; 541382-1795.
WEDNESDAY Nov. 28 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541749-0789. ORGANIZINGWITH OUTLOOK FOR BUSY PEOPLEWEBINAR: Discover howto integrate all the components of Outlook (email, calendar, tasks and contacts) to make your time rich and productive; hosted by SIMPLIFY; registration required; $65; 8 a.m.-9:30 p.m.; Camp Sherman; 503-260-8714 or info@ simplifynw.com. BUSINESSAFTERHOURSAT THE OXFORD HOTEL: Reservations required; $25 for chamber members and $45 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel,10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-3823221 or www.bendchamber.org. NETWORK OFENTREPRENEURIAL WOMEN MONTHLY MEETING: An evening of networking, discussions and a workshop hosted by the Network of Entrepreneurial Women; registration required; $22 members and $27nonmembers;5-8 p.m.;St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E Neff Road; 541-848-8598, amanda.albrich@ gmail.com or www.networkwomen .QrQ. HOW TO STARTA BUSINESS: COCC Small Business Development Center workshops for people contemplating business ownership; registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend;541383-7290. WHAT ARETHE LEGALITIES INVOLVED?:Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290.
THURSDAY Nov. 29 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALDESCHUTES BUSINESSNETWORKERS CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E Reed Market Road; 541-610-9125. REPUTATIONMANAGEMENT AND CRISISPREPARATION FOR BUSINESSES:Learn the importance and the fundamentals of sustaining a strong, ongoing public relations effort, while preparing the company for unexpected crises; registration
required; $25 for members and $45 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E Neff Road; 541-385-1992 or director© adfedco.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: Reservations recommended; free; 2-3:30p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765. GREEN DRINKS:Network, learn about other businesses and their sustainability efforts and share a drink or two with like-minded community members; 5-7 p.m.; Anjou Spa 8 Salon, 225 N.W. Franklin Ave., Suite 3, Bend; 541382-1138. CCB LICENSETESTPREP COURSE:Three-day course for contractors; approved by the Oregon Construction Contractors Board and satisfies the educational requirement to take the test to become a licensed contractor in Oregon; course continues Nov. 30 and Dec. 1; $299; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7290.
FRIDAY Nov. 30 COFFEECLATTER: 8:30-9:30 a.m.; The Plaza, 446 S.W. Seventh St., Redmond. EDWARDJONESCOFFEECLUB: Current market and economic update including current rates; free; 9 a.m.; Starbucks, 61470 U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-617-8861. CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com. KNOW INTERNETSEARCHING: Reservations recommended; free; 12:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-6177050 or www.deschuteslIbrary.org. FREE TAXFRIDAY:Freetax return reviews; schedule an appointment at 541-385-9666 or www.myzoomtax .com;free;2-4 p.m.;Zoom Tax,963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite100, Bend; 541-385-9666. KNOW FACEBOOK:Reservations recommended;free;3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.
change Commission and the UK's Serious Fraud Office, Continued from E1 she said. The company will Revenue from long-term also try to recoup some of contracts was b ooked up the cash it paid for Autonomy front, instead of over time. through lawsuits. The allegations are seriIn a statement to the Finanous, according to accounting cial Times, Lynch said "The experts. former management team of "According to GAAP (gen- Autonomy was shocked to erally accepted accounting see this statement today, and principles), th e o v erstate- flatly rejects these allegations, ment of revenue under any which are false. "It took 10 years to build tax code is illegal," said Mark Williams, a finance professor Autonomy's industry-leading at Boston University and a technology and it is sad to see former bank examiner for the how it has been mismanaged FederalReserve. since its acquisition by HP," he As a result of its alleged ac- added. countingpractices, Autonomy On a conference call with appeared to be more profit- Whitman following the earnable than it was and seemed ings report, analyst Ben Reitzto be growing its core soft- es of Barclays Capital asked ware businessfasterthan was who will be held responsible actually the case. The moves internally for the disastrous were apparently designed to acquisition. groomthecompany foran acWhitman answered that quisition, Whitman said. t he tw o e x ecutives w h o Once HP boughtthe com- should have been held repany, Autonomy's reported sponsible — Apotheker and revenue growth and profit strategy chief Shane Robison margin q u ickly d e c lined. — are gone. But the deal was Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch also approved by the board of continuedto run the company directors. "Most of the board was as part of HP, but Whitman forcedhim out on May 23 be- here and voted for this deal, cause the company was not and we feel terribly about living up to expectations. that," Whitman said. "What "Little did I know that there I will say is that the board rewas more than met the eye," lied on audited financials. AuWhitman said. dited by Deloitte — not 'Brand With Lynch gone, a senior X' accounting firm, but DeAutonomy executive volun- loitte. During our very extenteered information about the sivedue diligence process,we alleged accounting irregulari- hired KPMG to audit Deloitte. ties, prompting an internal in- And neither of them saw what vestigation, Whitman said. we now see after someone The case has been referred came forward to point us in to the U.S. Securities and Ex- the right direction."
SATURDAY Dec. 1
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MID-CONSTRUCTION REMODELINGOPEN HOUSE AND WORKSHOP:Tour the worksite at No. 14 McNary Lane in Sunriver and learn about Neil Kelly's services; noon-2 p.m.; Neil Kelly, 190 N.E. Irving Ave., Bend; 541-382-7580.
TUESDAY Dec. 4 BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALHIGH DESERT CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7:15 a.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E U.S. Highway 20; 541-420-7377. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: 3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050.
Publishing Tuesday, December 25, 2012 in The Bulletin Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationally-
recognized appreciation for the region's quality of life. From providin g the most basic needs offood,shelter and security,to creating and maintaining positive social, educationaL, recreational and professional environments, Central Oregon's nonprofit community is a foundation for our area's success and sustainability. Hundredsoforganizations and thousands of volunteers make up this
nonprofit network.
days usually triggers a positive result, said Swedish's Dr. Ray Jarris. Inthe future, tests — such as oral swabs — may be ableto more preciselypinpoint recent usage, but not yet, he said. "The issue of marijuana impairment is a really difficult issue," said Jarris. "But that's not what the (federal) DOT cares about, and it's not what most employers care about." That frustrates Paul Armentano, a marijuana-science expert at NORML, a leading national drug-reform group. The testsdetect carboxy-THC, a nonpsychoactive compound in marijuana stored in fat cells, not the active THC, which provides the high. That means a p ositive drug test"could be someone who used two grams six hours ago, or someone who used two weeks ago," he said. The Nov. 6 passage of legalization measures in Washington and Colorado, as well as medical-marijuana laws in 18 states, reflect a new public attitude about marijuana and civil-liberties issues related to testing, he said.
HP
BUSINESS CALENDAR
Through the publication of Connections, The Bulletin will both defineand profile the organizations that make up this network.
NEWS OF RECORD
Connections wiLL provide readers with a thorough look at nonprofi torganizationsin Deschutes,Jeff erson,and CrookCounties.
BANKRUPTCIES Filed Nov. 13
James E. Sexton,600 East Viewpoint Drive, Culver Ryan A. Hughes,380 S.W. Fifth St. No. 422, Madras Filed Nov. 14
Steven T. Gallaher,51420 Wheeler Road, La Pine James B. Preuss,2728 N.W. Scandia Loop, Bend Anne S. Hofweder,927 N.E Locksley Drive, Bend Dick A. Veldsma Jr.,614 N.W. 19th Place, Redmond Phillip J. Harris,59675 Cheyenne Road,Bend Filed Nov. 15
Janine R. McFarland,16650 Sage Hen, Terrebonne Autumn L. Smith,4522 S.E Umatilla Loop, Prineville Jeff C. Murray,1836 N.E. Yellowstone Lane, Bend Filed Nov. 16
William J. Rozzell,2310 S.W. Wickiup Ave., Redmond Filed Nov. 19
Kirk S. Betterton,61535 U.S. Highway 97 PMB 228, Bend
Sidney S. Towell,730 S.E Sun Drive, Madras Peter S. Taylor,61366 Ward Road, Bend Robert D. Green,21232 Hurita Place, Bend Rodby J. Patrick,P.O. Box130, Prineville Chapter 13 Filed Nov. 15
Anna M. Gullickson,20701 N.W.
Oneil Highway, Redmond Filed Nov. 16
Marlene L. Hasler,1594 N.W. Awbrey Road, No.1, Bend
SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 7 CALL 541.382.1811 To RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY.
The Bulletin
Filed Nov. 19
Toby J. Cundell,P.O.Box1799, Bend Michael S. Walker,14065 S.W. Ridge Place, Terrebonne
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/ Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintaqe costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
WANTED: RAZORS, Double or singleedged, straight razors, shaving brushes, mugs 8 scuttles, strops, shaving accessories & memorabilia. Fair prices paid. Call 541-390-7029 between 10 am-3 pm.
Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows
Three Sisters Lions Club Holiday Faire! Open Nov. 17-Dec. 16, Mon-Fri 10-2 & Sat-Sun, 10-5 - 445 W. Hwy 20, 3 Wind Shopping Plaza (by Bimart) in Sisters. Unique handmade items by local artisans. Ca/IHelen for info, 541-595-6967
Saturday Market 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
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Border Collie/New Zeal- Maremma Guard Dog and Huntaways, 2 male pups, purebred, great 700 Rem 7mm magnum pups, wonderful dogs, dogs, $350 e a ch, rifle w/scope bolt acworking parents, $300 541-546-6171. tion $400 541-504-3242 each. 541-546-6171 POODLE PUPS, AKC Belgian-made Browning toys. Small, friendly, 8 SA 22LR with N i kon Piano, SteinwayModel loving! 541-475-3889 Prostaff rimfire scope, 0 Baby Grand 1911, like new, $950 firm. gorgeous, artist qualPOODLE TOY PUPPIES all 541-593-7483 Parents on site, ity instrument w/great $300 ea. 541-520-7259 action 8 S t einway's USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Boxer Pups, AKC / CKC, Queensland Heelers warm, rich sound. Will adorn any living room, 1st shots, very social standard & mini,$150 & Door-to-door selling with $700. 541-325-3376 church or music stuup. 541-280-1537 or fast results! It's the easiest dio perfectly. New rehttp://rightwayranch. way in the world to sell. tail $ 6 9 ,000. Sacriwordpress.com fice at $26,000 OBO, The Bulletin Classified call 541-383-3150. 541-385-5809
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Chinchilla with: cage, exercise wheel, food, bedding 8 book. $115 Shih-Tzu puppy 10 wks 541-480-8050 old, shots, wormed, AKC parents. $400.
Buy/Sell/Tradeall firearms. Bend local pays
Misc. Items
cash! 541-526-0617
45 rpm records, over CASH!! 1900 to choose from, For Guns, Ammo 8 w/sleeves, good cond. Reloading Supplies. 1950s-80s. $3 ea, cash 541-280-8069 541-408-6900. only. 541-316-1265 Shih Tzu-Toy Australian M 1 G a r and, m n f ' d Shepherd mix (1/2 each) 1956, finish 95%, $1795 Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash designer puppies! 1st vet obo 541-480-5203 Saxon's Fine Jewelers c heck 8 ready to g o English Bulldog now. $425. Call Kelly at Pre-1964 Win mdl 12 541-389-6655 Pups ready for Christ20 ga., nice clean gun 541-604-0716 or mas! 2 females, 1 male, $500 541-548-3408. BUYING 541-489-3237 incredible bl o odlines. Lionel/American Flyer Remington 700 .22-250, Being raised with lots of trains, accessories. stainless fluted syn, more. love 8 attention. Taking 541-408-2191. $750. 541-419-1578 depositsnow; come pick out your favorite! Willing Taurus Millennium 40 cal BUYING 8( SE L LING to work with you on paysemi automatic handgun, All gold jewelry, silver ment option. Call Denise, $295 firm. 541-350-1554. and gold coins, bars, Springer Spaniel pup541-740-3515 . rounds, wedding sets, pies, AKC, ready 12/6! class rings, sterling silTAURUS PT709, 1st shots, dewormed, 8 ver, coin collect, vinSlimline, Stainless, dewclaws removed. tage watches, dental 9mm, 2 clips, $500 ea. 541-771-8221 gold. Bill Fl e ming, box/papers, like 541-382-9419. new, $400, ~ Oo
Frenchton pups, ready now! Registered parents on site. Puppy pack a ge inci. $650.
541-604-5115
MOrePiXat Bendbulleti!,COm
Yorkie AKC male pup, small parents, health uar., 8-wks, adorable!
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NOTICE TO
Gardening Supplies • & E q uipment
ADVERTISER
Since September 29, For newspaper delivery, call the 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 been limited to models which have been To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 c ertified by the O r egon Department of or email classibed@bendbollebn.com Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental gerrrng CentralOregon rrnte tgm Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met Prompt Delivery smoke emission stan- Rock, Sand & Gravel dards. A cer t ified Multiple Colors, Sizes w oodstove may b e Instant Landscaping Co identified by its certifi541-389-9663 cation label, which is SUPER TOP SOIL permanently attached www.hershe soilandbark.com to the stove. The Bul- Screened, soil 8 comletin will no t k n ow- post m i x ed , no ingly accept advertis- rocks/clods. High hui ng for the s ale o f mus level, exc. f or uncertified flower beds, lawns, woodstoves. gardens, straight s creened to p s o i l . 267 Bark. Clean fill. DeFuel & Wood liver/you haul.
The Bulletin
To avoid fraud, The Bulletin
recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.
Lost Cat: Felix escaped 11/19, NE 8th St. by Juniper Park. Brown shorthair Tabby, white chest/ tummy, has collar, needs his meds! 541-382-9835 /541-788-0504 421 REMEMBER: Ifyou have lost an animal, Schools & Training don't forget to check The Humane Society Oregon Medical Training PCS Ph lebotomy in Bend 541-382-3537 classes begin Jan. 7, Redmond,
Q0~0 ~
541-923-0882 Prineville, 541-447-71 78; OR Craft Cats, 541-389-8420.
2013. Registration now P ": medicaltrainin .com 541-343-3100
TRUCK SCHOOL www. IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free 1-888-387-9252 476
Employment Opportunities
DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE • Lo s t 8 Found Blue Grass Hay RIGHT NOW? 3 x 4 bales, Call The Bulletin FOUND: a very small 1300-Ib avg, $80/bale. before 11 a.m. and green bag with 9 sen541-419-2713 get an ad in to pubtimental items inside, lish the next day! at NE Red Carpet car Wanted: Irrigated farm 541-385-5809. ground, under pivot irwash. 541-390-0720 VIEW the rigation, i n C e n tral F OUND chainsaw o n Classifieds at: OR. 541-419-2713 www.bendbulletin.com Bear Creek Rd. Call Wheat Straw: Certified 8 to ID 541-410-6814. Bedding Straw & Garden Truck Driver FOUND man's w e d- Straw;Compost.546-6171 Livestock Must have CDL,2yrs exp, ding band at Lake Wheat Straw in shed, progressive co., 401k, Billy Chinook Call to $2 bale or $400 all. $50,000/yr, insurance ID. 541-948-6029. Call after 6 p m . NW only. 541-475-6681 Found Sheltie, 11/1 9, 541-546-9821 Culver. Optometry office needs NE Providence area, dispensing o p t ician Bend. Has collar; call to exp. helpful but not Farmers Column • identify, 541-815-0164 r equired. Reply t o FOUND: tire on road Wanted: Irrigated farm B ox 20236077 c / o coming down offTu- ground, under pivot ir- The Bulletin, PO Box malo Butte. Call to B e nd , OR rigation, i n C e n tral 6020, 541-548-3949.
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD...
Lost & Found
Hay, Grain & Feedg
Call The Bulletin ClasCostco Hot tub, 6-per- sifieds today and have Serving Central Oregon enre tg03 Sunriver Resort son, like new, $2500 this attention getter in your classified ad. 11th Annual Traditions German Shepherd pups, Furniture & Appliances obo. 541-389-9268 541-385-5809. claim 541-382-0781 OR. 541-419-2713 97708. Holiday Marketplace Re a d y T h anksgiving! 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Fri., 11/23, 11:30-5:30 $400. 541-620-0946 6 dining room chairs, $200/cord. Multi-cord Wantedpaying cash Sat.,11/24, 9-4:30 8 t/gcords b rocade, like n e w TV, Stereo 8 Videog German Shorthair AKC for Hi-fi audio & stu- discounts, Homestead/Heritage $180. 541-504-1493. available. Immediate Pups, bred to hunt! $550. dio equip. Mclntosh, 60" Phillips-Magnavox, Free Admission delivery! 541-408-6193 each. 541-598-6988 $400. CASH ONLY. J BL, Marantz, D y A1 Washers&Dryers naco, Heathkit, San541-548-9686 20 ton gas wood splitGolden Lab female 4 t/a $150 ea. Full warsui, Carver, NAD, etc. ter, runs great, first mo old puppy, purebred, ranty. Free Del. Also Itemsfor Free Call 541-261-1808 $300. 541-536-3409 $500/cash. Call wanted, used W/D's Computers 541-633-0909 or ComPlete set Encyclo- Golden Retrievers, En541-280-7355 263 541-318-7555 pedia Britannica, free! g l i sh Cream 4M, 4F, T HE B U LLETIN r e Tools Call541-475-6302 $700 $750 ' AII Year Dependable quires computer ad541-279-6820. vertisers with multiple Jet Pro series table saw Firewood: Sp lit, Del. FREE wooden pallets Lod g epole, ad schedules or those with dust collector, $500. Bend. greatforfirewood. Pickup GSP puppies AKC 1st Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 selling multiple sys- Call Allen, 541-536-9120 behind bldg at 6 3 1 20 shots and worming. for $350. Cash, check Nels Anderson Rd, Bend p a r ents on site. Males Call The Bulletin Clastems/ software, to disD EA D L I N E S bought a new boat? or credit card O K. $400, female $450 sifieds today and have close the name of the Just Sell your old one in the 541-420-3484. this attention getter in business or the term Ready 11/24. See fa"dealer" in their ads. classifieds! Ask about our your classified ad. Pets & Supplies cebook.com/gsp.pupDRY JUNIPER $190/ Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809. Private party advertispies.3 541-306-6766 split, or $170 rounds 541-385-5809 Adult comPanion cats Kittens/cats avaii. thru GENERATE SOME ex- ers are defined as per cord. Delivered. FREE to seniors, dis- rescue grouP. Tame, citement i n your those who sell one 265 Call 541-977-2940 or abled 8 veterans! Tame, shots, altered, ID chip, neighborhood! Plan a computer. 541-977-4500. Building Materials altered, shots, ID chip more. Sat/Sun 1-5, call garage sale and don't RETAIL, CLASSIFIED & LEGALNOTICEADVERTISING 257 more. Will always take re: other days. 6'5480 forget to advertise in 269 Musical Instruments MADRAS Habitat back if c ircumstances 78th, Bend. classified! Gardening Supplies RESTORE change 389-8420. Visit 541-'389-8420 541-385-5809. Lowry Regency organ Building Supply Resale & Equipment 541-598-5488; I nfo at DAY DEADLINE info www craftcats or SE/10. Quality at Twin poster head / foot- m odel I www.craftcats.org. 541 -31 7-51 69. LOW PRICES MTD 22" 2-stage yard board 8 mattress set, + Thursday 11-22 ............................ Monday 11-19 Noon Aussie-Shepherdpuppies Lab pups AKC, black dresser w/mirror, nice! Monarch upright Piano, 84 SW K St. machine snowblower GO! Magazine 11-23 .................... Monday 11-19 5 pm 1st shots/dewormed, 541-475-9722 & yellow, Ma s t er$400. 541-549-2253 179cc OHV, $ 1 2 5. good cond., $ 300. $150. 541-977-4686 I-lunter sired p e rfor Open to the public. 541-923-8271. Friday 11-23.................................. Tuesday 11-20 Noon Jenni 714-495-0597 mance pedigree, OFA Saturday 11-24............................. Tuesday 11-20 Noon cert hips & e lbows, 541-977-1737
950. 541-316-0005
541-548-0747-279-3588
The Bulletin
Ka5More Pix at Beridbulletiri.c
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We will be closed Thursday, November 22nd
DEADLINES
Aussies, Mini & Toy sizes, all colors, 9 week's $250 cash.
Call 541-771-2330
www.kinnamanretrievers.com
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Labradoodles - Mini & Bulletin reserves med"slze,'several colors The the right to publish all 41 04 2 ads from The Bulletin www.alpen-ridge.com newspaper onto The Barn/shop cats FREF some tame, some not. LhasaApso/ShihTzuPup Bulletin Internet webWe deliver! Fixed, shots. Simp!y gorgeousi $275 site. 503-888-0800 (Madras)
For Special pick up please call Ken @ 541-389-3296
PLEASEHELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE.
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17 Rem. center fire, 700 bdl, 3x9 Nikon var-
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gen ng Cem al0 egontnte tggg BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! lt) The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are 243 still over 2,000 folks in our community without Ig Ski Equipment permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift camps, getting by as best they can. Mono skis: 180 T UA The following items are badly needed to $205; 18 5 B l izzard help them get through the winter: $250. 541-419-2383. @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ Call today and speak with New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. S WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. our classified team to Guns, Hunting PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT place your ad 8 Fishing
THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m.
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THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD No. 1017
Edited by Will Shortz Across 1 Mlles., across the border 6 Big bird 9 Clear up, in a way 14 Verb in "The Raven" 15 PC connection 16 Word on a lawn sign 17 Free from bondage 19 Send sky-high 20 Gore and Green 21 Cinema chain 22 Something that's good to break 23 Handed down, as lore 25 Stops procrastinating 27 Frivolous gal of song 30 Aldous Huxley's school 31 Collections of like objects
63 Excessive detail, in a text 64 Mad magazine's Gang of Idiots" 65 Smart-alecky 66 Yet, in verse 67 Hamilton vs. Burr and others
Down 1 With 55-Across, what the circled letters, reading clockwise, form 51 Exactly right 2 Brook 53 Quizzical 3 Throw in the utterances direction of 55 See 1-Down 4 Greek capital, to 57 Coach airlines Parseghian 5 Intend to 58 Hoops Hall-ofdefinitely Famer Thomas 6 Sommer of film 60 Italian P.M. 7 Viruses, worms, nicknamed Divo etc. Giulio 8 Intl. peace and 62 Uniform human rights grp. decoration 9 Distant regions of the universe TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 10 First name in scat I F E N D I A D Z 11 Is intrepid 5 A L I E N R I A A N IM A L S K E G 12 Thanksgiving
ANSWER D O R M E PE E
F A R M A
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(from the 39 August meteor beginning) shower
51 Orch. section 52 Pretentious sort 40 Suffix with 54 Lukas of 34 In a Victorian serpent "Witness" manner 42 "My treat" 56 Asgard ruler 35 Larklike songbird 44 Fill with gas 58 Some AOL 37 Floor model 46 Center of many a transmissions caveat plaza 59 Chantey subject 38 Nimble for one's 47 Way in 61 The Cowboys of age 48 Slimy pests the N.C.A.A.
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Ranch Mechanic Looking for e xperienced mechanic with own tools, a wide var iety of s k ills i s a must. Diesel engine knowledge i s required; some hydraulic, welding, electrical w ork necessary. I n shop and field repairs, CDL license a plus, but not required. Full t ime p o s ition w i t h benefits 8 h o u sing a vailable, mail r e sume to: ZX Ranch, PO Box 7, P aisley, OR 97636.
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Leading M a nufacturer of F ishing & H unting Wad e r s looking for an Eastern Regional Sales Manager. Must have Significant e x p erience i n Sp o rting Goods, Sales and Management fields. Location open, but m ust be a b l e t o travel when needed. Salary package with Benefits. Mail Resumes to SMI PO Box 1410, La Pine, OR 97739
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
People Look for Information The Bulletin About Products and extra Services Every Daythrough l Recommends caution when purThe Bulletin Clasaifieds l chasing products or services from out of 8 %(KIRCQ@ Remember.... l the area. Sending A dd your we b a d - c ash, checks, o r dress to your ad and l credit i n f o rmation readers on The l may be subjected to Bulletin' s web site FRAUD. will be able to click For more informathrough automatically l tion about an adverl tiser, you may call 528 to your site. the Oregon State Loans 8 Mortgages l Attorney General's SALES Office C o n sumer Growing dealership seek- l Protection hotline at l WARNING ing salespeople looking The Bulletin recomfor a performance-based I 1-877-877-9392. mends you use caupay p l an, p o tential tion when you procommissions of up to gT}~e Bulletttt g vide personal 35% equaling $100,000 information to compaplus, Retirement Plan, nies offering loans or Veterinary T e chniPaid Vacation, and a credit, especially Imm e diate competitive med i cal cian: those asking for adbenefit package. Look- Opening. CVT prevance loan fees or ing for a team player ferred. F/T, benefits, companies from out of with a positive attitude, 4 day work weeks. state. If you have to operate with energy Our team is fun and concerns or quesand to be customer ser- clients ar e g r e at! tions, we suggest you at t i tudes vice oriented. Will pro- Positive consult your attorney vide training. only. Contact Pia at or call CONSUMER Send resume' to: B anfield, th e P e t HOTLINE, bcrvhireO mail.com Hosp. 541-330-1462 1-877-877-9392.
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• Space rent $180 mo. 32.42 Acres in Urban 13' Smokercraft '85, • Homes for rent Growth Bou n dary, CHECK YOUR AD good cond., 15HP $350 - $495 mo. Adjacent t o The Please check your ad gas Evinrude + • Large treed lots Greens, kitty corner to on the first day it runs Minnkota 44 elec. • J.D. Riverfront lots new Ridgeview High to make sure it is cormotor, fish finder, 2 • Playground and School. $59 9 ,000. rect. Sometimes inextra seats, trailer, Community Center MLS ¹ 201 2 03193 s tructions over t h e • Next to Thriftway Pam Lester, Principal phone are misunderextra equip. $3200. 605 • RVs Welcomed, B roker, Century 2 1 541-3B8-9270 stood and an e rror Roommate Wanted Snowmobiles • Gold Country Realty, can occur in your ad. Riverside Home Park Inc. 541-504-1338 677 W. Main, If this happens to your Sharecozy mobile home 17' 1984 Chris Craft John Day, Oregon ad, please contact us in Terrebonne, $275+t/2 CUTE! 3 bedroom, 2 - Scorpion, 140 HP Call Llsa 541-575-1341 the first day your ad utils. 503-679-7496 home, close to inboard/outboard, 2 riversidemhp.jimdo.com bath appears and we will Arctic Cat (2) 2005 F7 the lake on over an depth finders, trollbe happy to fix it as 630 Firecats: EFI Snowacre. This is a must s oon a s w e ca n . ing motor, full cover, 687 pro It EFI EXT, exlnt Rooms for Rent see! MLS¹201206076 EZ - Lo ad t r ailer, Deadlines are: Weekcond, $3700 ea; Commerclal for $45,000 $3500 OBO. 11:00 noon for $7000 both. Studios & Kitchenettes Rent/Lease D8D Realty Group LLC days 541-382-3728. next day, Sat. 11:00 541-410-2186 Furnished room, TV w/ 866-346-7868 a.m. for Sunday and cable, micro & fridge. Restaurant Pu b for Monday. Utils & l inens. New lease. SW corner of Fieldstone crossing, 4 541-385-5809 owners. $145-$165/wk 3rd and Greenwood. bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2130 Thank you! 541-382-1885 Formerly Cheerlead- sq.ft., gas fireplace, The Bulletin Classified tile countertops, slate ers, now Taylors SauSnowmobile trailer 634 entry, hardwood, huge sage. Over 3000 sq 2002, 25-ft InterApt./Multiplex NE Bend feet. Lottery r oom, d eck, f e nced, R V Call The Bulletin At state & 3 sleds, 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 area. $189,900. MLS wired & running 4 ma541-385-5809 $10,900. Volvo Penta, 270HP, $299 1st mo. rent!! * chines now. 20-ft bar, ¹ 2012059483. P a m Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-480-8009 low hrs., must see, GET THEM BEFORE 10 tap handles. 4-pan Lester, Principal Bro- At: www.bendbulletin.com $15,000, 541-330-3939 THEY ARE GONE! hot well, Ansell hood, ker, Century 21 Gold 2 bdrm, 1 bath automatic dishwasher. Country Realty, Inc. 775 860 541-504-1338 $530 Ik $540 Terry, 541-415-1777 Manufactured/ Motorcycles & Accessories Carports & A/C included! taylorsausage@fronuernet.net Large Lot In SW RedFox Hollow Apts. Moblle Homes Hariey Davidson Soft- 20.5' 2004 Bayliner mond. 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 693 f541) 383-3152 Tail De luxe 2 0 0 7, 205 Run About, 220 1108 sq.ft, 9148 sq.ft. Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co Office/Retail Space FACTORY SPECIAL white/cobalt, w / pas*Upstairs only with lease lot, hot tub, sprinkler HP, VS, open bow, New Home, 3 bdrm, for Rent senger kit, Vance & system, greenhouse. exc. cond., very fast $46,900 finished Call for Speciais! MLS¹201207599. w/very low hours, on you site,541.548.5511 Hines muffler system Limited numbers avail. 150 to 900 sq. ft. up$84,000. Pam Lester, www.JandMHomes.com 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. lots of extras incl. stairs office at 63356 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. cond, $19, 9 9 9, P rincipal Brok e r , New Construction - 3 tower, Bimini & Nels Anderson Road, Century 2 1 541-389-9188. W/D hookups, patios Gol d bdrm, 2 b ath, 1548 custom trailer, all utilities paid, pri- Country Realty, Inc. or decks. $19,500. sq.ft., vaulted, g as Harley Heritage vate bath and confer- 541-504-1338 MOUNTAiN GLEN, 541-389-1413 furnace-range-water Softail, 2003 ence room, $150 to 541-383-9313 $5,000+ in extras, $900 per month. NE Redmond, 3 bdrm, heater, fenced, landProfessionally scaped. $1 6 2 ,900 $2000 paint job, 541.480.4744, Jim managed by Norris 8 2 bath, 1360 sq. ft., ¹ 20 1 2 07750 30K mi. 1 owner, triple garage, office, MLS Stevens, Inc. bay f r ont w i ndow, Pam Lester, Principal For more information please call 636 large patio, mature B roker, Century 2 1 20.5' Seaswirl Spy541-385-8090 landscaping, fenced Gold Country Realty, Apt./Multiplex NW Bend der 1989 H.O. 302, or 209-605-5537 Inc. 541-504-1338 yard. $128,000. MLS 285 hrs., exc. cond., 201207127 2 Bdrm, frplc, micro, DW, NEW HOME BU1LT stored indoors for Pam Lester, Principal HD FAT BOY W&D incl. W/S/G 8 cable $87,450! life $11,900 O BO. B roker, Century 2 1 Includes, garage, founpd. Completely remod. 541-379-3530 1996 Gold Country Realty, $700/mo, $700 dep. no dation, a p p liances, Completely rebuilt/ Inc. 541-504-1338 smkg. 541-383-2430 central heating, heat customized, low pump ready. call tomiles. Accepting ofUsed out-drive Single level on 1 acre, 3 Quiet 2 bedroom, oak day to schedule your 732 fers. 541-548-4807 bdrm, 2 b ath, 1716 parts - Mercury cabinets, DW, W/S/G & personal appointment. Commercial/Investment cable paid, laundry facilisq.ft., master separaOMC rebuilt ma541-548-5511, ties. $650, $500 dep. No tion, office, fenced, HD Screaming Eagle rine motors: 151 Properties for Sale 541-350-1782 smkg. 541-617-1101 f lower garden, R V www.JandMHomes.com Electra Glide 2005, $1595; 3.0 $1895; 103" motor, two tone parking. $ 1 4 5,000. Prime Hwy 97 commer4.3 (1993), $1995. Rent /Own 648 ¹ 20 1 0 07848. candy teal, new tires, cial updated in 2006, MLS 541-389-0435 Pam Lester, Principal 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes 23K miles, CD player, Houses for 850 sq.ft., plenty of $2500 down, $750 mo. B roker, Century 2 1 hydraulic clutch, exparking in rear, cenRent General OAC. 541-548-5511, cellent condition. tral a i r . $ 1 1 9,900. Gold Country Realty, 875 541-350-1782 Inc. 541-504-1338 Highest offer takes it. MLS ¹ 201 0 03034 For rent or lease to buy Watercraft www.jandmhomes.com 541-480-8080. Pam Lester, Principal 3 bdrm, 2 bath with B roker, Century 2 1 Need to get an shops on 2 172 acres, Take care of 2007 SeaDoo off Hwy 20 between Gold Country Realty, ad in ASAP? Softail Deluxe 2004 Waverunner, your investments Sisters & Bend, $1450 Inc. 541-504-1338 You can place it 2010, 805 miles, excellent condition, mo. Ready to move with the help from Black Chameleon. LOW hours. Double Check out the online at: 12/5 541-610-5785. $17,000 trailer, lots of extras. classifieds online The Bulletin's www.bendbulletln.com Call Don I $10,000 650 tNwvv.bendbuttetin.com "Call A Service 541-410-3823 541-719-8444 Houses for Rent Updated daily 541-385-5809 Professional" Directory NE Bend
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Find exactly what you are looking for in the RDO Equipment Co. is looking for talented CLASSIFIEDS and ambitious people who thrive on working in a team-oriented culture. Openings in our new state of the art facility in Dickinson, ND. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party Ask us about our employment incentives will loan on real esincluding; c o mpetitive w a ges, h o u sing tate equity. Credit, no allowance and a sign on bonus for: problem, good equity is all you need. Call • Diesel Technicians now. Oregon Land •Resident Field Service Technician Mortgage 388-4200. •Service Technicians •Parts Specialist LOCAL MONEYrWebuy •Customer Service Advisor secured trustdeeds tk note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev RDO Equipment Co. is a proud dealer of John 541-382-3099 ext.13. Deere construction equipment. Our company has over 60 locations in the U.S. We are 573 dedicated to being a great place to work; energizing the creativity, talents & entrepre- Business Opportunities neurial spirits of our people. We provide 745 training to develop our employees. To learn 771 A high quallty used Newer Home, 3 bdrm, Homes for Sale more about opportunities & to apply, go to: Item store - buy the Lots www.rdoequipment.com 2.5 bath, loft/TV area, business or the mernear Forum shops & BANK OWNED HOMES! Three 9148 Sq.ft. Iots, chandise. Make offer. EOE Prineville, 503-470-0585 medical centers, No FREE List w/Pics! cul-de-sac, ut i l ities smoking. $1095/mo. www. BendRepos.com s tubbed i nt o P U E , bend and beyond real estate Call 541-550-0333. close to West Can20967 yeoman, bend or Independent Contractor yon Rim Park and ac658 Cascade mou n t ain cess to the dry canHouses for Rent views, w it h q u a lity yon t rail. $ 3 5,000, construction. Move-in $35,000 8 $ 5 0,000. Redmond MLS¹ 20 1 2 0 7692, Ready! $287,000. MLS ¹201205860. 201207694, and Newer 2326 sq.ft. deluxe 201207687. Pam home, 3/3, gas fire- Cec DeClerck, Princ. Broker, Coldwell Lester, Principal Broplace, 7500' lot, fenced ker, Century 21 Gold yard, 1655 SW SaraBanker Mayfield soda Ct. $ 1 195/mo. Realty Country Realty, Inc.
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*Supplement Your Income* Operate Your Own Business
541-350-2206
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541-504-1338
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Must have reliable, insured vehicle. Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933
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YOIIhaVearight to knOW What yOur gOVernment iSdOing. Current Oregon law requires public notices to be printed in a newspaper whose readers are affected by the notice. But federal, state, and local government agencies erroneously believe they can save money by posting public notices on their web sites instead of in the local newspaper.
If they did that,you'd have to know in advance where, when, and how to look, and what to look for, in order to be informed about government actions that could affect you directly.
Less than 10% of the U.S. population currently visits a government web site daily,' but 80% of all Oregon adults read a newspaper at least once during an ** average week, and 54% read public notices printed there.
Keeppublic noticesinthenewspaper! 'US censussueauMay2009 "Amencanopruen Raeaatt aeeee w sepfemser2010
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012 F3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 932
Motorhomes
Watercraft
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Fifth Wheels
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Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Monaco Dynasty 2004, Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 Class 870. loaded, 3 slides, dieby Carriage, 4 slide541-385-5809 sel, Reduced - now outs, inverter, satel$119,000, 5 4 1-923- lite sys, fireplace, 2 8572 or 541-749-0037 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 880 541-480-3923
The Bulletin Motorhomes I
Southwind 35.5' Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at Country Coach Intrigue $132,913; 2002, 40' Tag axle. asking $93,500. 400hp Cummins DieCall 541-419-4212 sel. two slide-outs. 41,000 miles, new tires & batteries. Most ~ ef I ~ ) L options. $95,000 OBO 541-678-5712
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More Pixat Bendbulletij),com
Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' 2004, only 34K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243 881
Travel Trailers Econoline R V 1 9 89, fully loaded, exc. cond, COACHMAN 1979 35K m i. , R e duced 23' trailer $17,950. 541-546-6133 CAN'T BEAT THIS!
Look before you buy, below market value! Size & mileage DOES matter! Class A 32' Hurricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, Ithr, cherry, slides, like new! New low price, $54,900. 541-548-5216
Gulistream S cen i c Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires, under cover, hwy. miles only,4 door fridge/freezer ice maker, W/D combo, Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp propane gen 8 m o r e! $55,000. 541-948-2310
Fully equipped. $2000.
541-312-8879 or 541-350-4622.
Pioneer Spirit 18CK, 2007, used only 4x, AC, electric tongue j ack, $8995. 541-389-7669
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
Utility Trailers •
Antique & Classic Autos
So~Ler! Big Tex Landscaping/ ATI/Trailer, dual axle flatbed,
Mercury M o n terrey 1965, Exc. All original, 7'x16', 7000 lb. 4-dr. sedan, in stor- Buick Enclave 2008 CXL V-6, black, clean, GVW, all steel, age last 15 yrs., 390 AWD, y sound, 82k $1400. High C o m pressionmechanicall miles. $21,995. 541-382-4115, or engine, new tires & liCall 541-815-1216 541-280-7024. c ense, reduced t o $2850, 541-410-3425. Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 4x4. 120K mi, Power seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd Automotive Parts, row seating, e xtra Service & Accessories tires, CD, pnvacy tinting, upgraded rims. Fantastic cond. $7995 (4) Snow tires, 3 mo. Contact Timm at old, P 195 - 65R15, Plymouth B a r racuda 541-408-2393 for info F leetwood Wilderness $270. 541-410-0206 1966, original car! 300 or to view vehicle. 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, 4 studded tires on rims hp, 360 V8, centerrear bdrm, fireplace, for Toyota Camry, used lines, (Original 273 Ford Explorer 4x4, AC, W/D hkup beau- 1 y ear, $ 3 50. C a l l eng 8 wheels incl.) 1991 - 154K miles, tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. 541-593-2134 541-593-2597 rare 5-speed tranny 541-815-2380 PROJECT CARS: Chevy 8 manual hubs, Look at: 2-dr FB 1949 8 Chevy clean, straight, evBendhomes.com Coupe 1950 rolling eryday driver. Bring ,rj II-/ for Complete Listings of chassis's $1750 ea., 2200 dollar bills! I •: Area Real Estate for Sale Chevy 4-dr 1949, com- Bob, 541-318-9999 piete car, $1949; CaK omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 4 Studless winter tracdillac Series 61 1950, 2 slide, AC, TV, awning. tion tires on 5-lug 4.5" dr. hard top, complete wheels, 225/60R-16, NEW: tires, converter, w/spare front c l ip., $350. 541-410-0886 batteries. Hardly used. $3950, 541-382-7391 $15,500. 541-923-2595 4 used Hankook studded DOI'I IIISS THIS snow tires, 205/65R15's mounted on custom GMC Yukon XL S LT black modern wheels, VW Karman G hia 2004, loaded w/fac1970, good cond., $475. 541-382-6773 tory DVD, 3rd seat, new upholstery and $6950.. 541-280-6947 NEED HOLIDAY $$$? convertible top. We pay CASH for $10,000. MONTANA 3585 2008, Kia Sportage 4 x4 Junk Cars 8 Trucks! 541-389-2636 exc. cond., 3 slides, 1996, full power, air, buying batteries & king bed, Irg LR, Arc- Also 1 50K, hitch, S t o catalytic converters. tic insulation, all opmaster tow bar, lights Serving all of C.O.!• tions $37,500. for towing, studded Call 541-408-1090 541-420-3250 tires. Paint rough, but Winter Tires 4 Bridgeruns great! $3200 Nuyya 297LK Hitchtone 2 2 5/55 R 1 6 obo. 541-280-0514 Hiker 2007, 3 slides, s95W on alloy rims, VW Thing 1974, good 32' touring coach, left like new, tire pres- cond. Extremely Rare! kitchen, rear lounge, sure monitors many extras, beautiful Retail©$1900)incl. built in 1973 & $650. Only c ond. inside 8 o u t , n Bend 619-889-5422 1 974. $8,000. 541-389-2636 $32,900 OBO, Prineville. 541-447-5502 days Where can you find a & 541-447-1641 eves. Antique & Porsche Cayenne 2004, helping hand? Classic Autos 86k, immac, dealer From contractors to maint'd, loaded, now yard care, it's all here $1 7000. 503-459-1 580 in The Bulletin's 940 "Call A Service Vans 1921 Model T P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h Professional" Directory Delivery Truck wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Restored & Runs TV,full awning, excel933 lent shape, $23,900. $9000. Pickups 541-350-8629 541-389-8963
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Springdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 obo. 541-408-3811
•
C all 541-385-580 9 to r o m ot e o u r s ervice
1/3 interest i n w e l lequipped IFR Beech BoBuilding/Contracting H o me Improvement nanza A36, new 10-550/ FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, prop, located KBDN. door panels w/flowers NOTICE: Oregon state Autumnridge Const. $65,000. 541-419-9510 & hummingbirds, law req u ires any- Quality custom home white soft top 8 hard one who co n t racts improvements. No job Executive Hangar top. Just reduced to for construction work too big or small. I/et &Sr. at Bend Airport $3,750. 541-317-9319 to be licensed with the Discounts! CCB¹198284 (KBDN) or 541-647-8483 Call 541-300-0042 60' wide x 50' deep, C onstruction Con tractors Board (CCB). w/55' wide x 17' high A n active lice n se bi-fold door. Natural means the contractor LandscapingNard Care gas heat, office, bathi s bonded an d i n room. Parking for 6 s ured. Ve r ify t h e N OTICE: O R E G O N c ars. A djacent t o contractor's CCB Landscape Contrac- Frontage Rd; g r eat tors Law (ORS 671) visibility for a viation Ford Gaiaxie 5001 963, c ense through t h e bus i - bus. 1jetjock©q.com 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, CCB Cons u m er r equires a l l 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & nesses that advertise 541-948-2126 Website radio (orig),541-419-4989 www.hirealicensedcontractor. to p e rform L a n dCom scape C o nstruction Ford Mustang Coupe or call 503-378-4621. which inclu d es: 1966, original owner, The Bulletin recom- p lanting, decks , V8, automatic, great mends checking with fences, arbors, shape, $9000 OBO. the CCB prior to con- w ater-features, a n d $@ll 530-515-8199 tracting with anyone. installation, repair of Some other t r ades irrigation systems to ONLY 1 OWNERSHIP also req u ire addi- be licensed with the • SHA R E LEFT! Ford Ranchero tional licenses and Landscape Contrac- Economical flying in 1979 certifications. Ce s s na with 351 Cleveland t ors B o a rd . Th i s our o w n 172/180 HP for only 4-digit number is to be modified engine. I D ebris Removal 1 0,000! Based a t included in all adverBody is in BDN. Call Gabe at tisements which indiexcellent condition, JUNK BE GONE cate the business has roiessionai Air! $2500 obo. I Haul Away FREE 541 -388-001 9 a bond, insurance and 541 -420-4677 For Salvage. Also workers compensaCleanups & Cleanouts tion for their employMel, 541-389-8107 ees. For your protecFord T-Bird 1966 tion call 503-378-5909 390 engine, power Handyman or use our website: everything, new www.lcb.state.or.us to paint, 54K original ERIC REEVE HANDY check license status miles, runs great, SERVICES. Home & before con t racting excellent cond. in 8 Commercial Repairs, with th e b u s iness. out. Asking $8,500. Carpentry-Painting, Persons doing land541 -480-31 79 Pressure-washing, scape m a intenance Honey Do's. On-time do not require a LCB Diamond Reo Dump promise. Senior license. Truck 1974, 12 -14 Discount. Work guaryard box, runs good, anteed. 541-389-3361 $6900, 541-548-6812 or 541-771-4463 Nelson Landscape Bonded & Insured Maintenance CCB¹181595 G K E A T GMC Y~ton 1971, Only Serving I DO THAT! Central Oregon $19,700! Original low Home/Rental repairs mile, exceptional, 3rd Residential Hyster H25E, runs owner. 951-699-7171 Small jobs to remodels 8 Commercial well, 2982 Hours, Honest, guaranteed $3500,call work. CCB¹151573 541-749-0724 Garage Sales • Fall Clean up Dennis 541-317-9768 Storm Damage Clean Garage Sales Up &Tree Debris Home Improvement
+
R U Y T
Quality & honesty, from carpentry 8 handyman jobs, to expert wall covering install / removal. Sr. discounts CCB¹47120 Licensed/bonded/insured 541-389-1413 /410-2422
Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759
541-771-6500.
Legal Notices •
DON'TMI SSTHIS
$9500. 541-788-8218.
Nissan Sentra, 201212,610 mi, full warranty, PS, PB, AC,8 more! $16,000. 541-788-0427
Porsche 911 1974, low
mi., complete motor/ trans. rebuild, tuned suspension, int. & ext. refurb., oi l c o oling, shows new in 8 out,
perf. mech.
Garage Sales Peterbilt 35 9 p o table water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
pump, 4-3" h o ses, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. 541-385-5809 541-820-3724
RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L
hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. 541-420-3634/390-1285
c o nd.
Much more! $28,000 541-420-2715
Say"goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds 5 41 -385-580 9 PORSCHE 914 1974,
Roller (no engine), lowered, full roll cage, 5-pt harnesses, racing seats, 911 dash & instruments, d e cent shape, v e r y c o ol! $1699. 541-678-3249
ChevyAstro Cargo Van 2001, pw, pdl, great cond., business car, well maint'd, regular oil
changes, $4500. Please call 541-633-5149
Toyota Camrys:
1984, $1200 obo; 1994 Chev full size van, seats 7, sleeps 2. Su1985 SOLD; per condition, 128K, 1986 parts car, famous 35 0 m o tor, $500. runs & looks like a milCall for details, lion! Ready for fun & 541-548-6592 travel. Limit 1! $4000. Bob, 541-318-9999
Corolla 2004, Need help fixing stuff? Toyota auto., loaded, 204k Call A Service Professional miles. orig. owner, non find the help you need. smoker, exc. c ond. www.bendbulletin.com $6500 Prin e ville 503-358-8241 Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 7 -pass. v a n wit h Toyotas: 1999 Avalon p ower c h a i r lif t , 254k; 1996 Camry, $1500; 1989 Dodge 98k, 4 cyl. Lots of Turbo Va n 7 - pass. miles left in these cars. Price? You tell has new motor and me! I'd guess t rans., $1500. I f i n $2000-$4000. terested c a l l Ja y Your servant, Bob at 503-269-1057. 541-318-9999, no charge for looking.
Chrysler Town & Country LX, 2000,66Kmi, 1owner,
araged, very good cond,
VW Beetle, 2002
6500. Call 541-923-3971 5-spd, silver-gray, black leather, moonroof, CD, 975 loaded, 115K miles, Automobiles well-maintained
(have records)
Buick Lucerne CXL 2009, $12,500, low low miles; 2000 Buick FORD RANGER XLT Century $2900. You'll 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 not find nicer Buicks speed, with car alarm, One look's worth a CD player, extra tires thousand words. Call on rims. Runs good. Bob, 541-318-9999. Clean. 92,000 miles for an appt. and take a o n m o tor. $ 2 6 00 drive in a 30 mpg. car OBO. 541-771-6511. Cadillac Seville STS 2003 - just finished $4900 engine work I nternational Fla t by Certified GM meBed Pickup 1963, 1 chanic. Has everyton dually, 4 s p d. thing but navigation. trans., great MPG, Too many bells and could be exc. wood w histles t o l i s t . hauler, runs great, bought a new one. new brakes, $1950. $4900 541-419-5480.
extremely clean, $4850 obo. 541-546-6920
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
541-420-1283
Chevrolet Lumina 1997 4-door, One owner, low mileage, clean interior. Tires, body, paint in good condition. $3050. 541-350-3109
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE ADOPT-Abundance Ford Crown V i ctoria of love to offer a 1995, LX sedan, 4 dr., child in stable, se& nu r turing V8, o r ig . ow n e r, cure home. Contact Jen 70,300 mi., studs on, (800) 571-4136. reat condition. 3000. 541-549-0058. LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT COURT OF Honda Civic LX 2006 4-dr sedan, exc. cond, OREGON FOR DESCHUTES C O UNTY. 3 1K miles AC p.s d r locks & windows, pre- HSBC BANK U SA, mium wheels, new stud- N.A., AS T RUSTEE ded tires, chains, AM/FM ON BEHALF OF ACE -CD, all records from SECURITIES CORP. EQUI T Y 2009, 24-40 mpg, must H OME sell! $12,500/ofr. Local: LOAN TRUST AND 503-806-9564 FOR TH E R E GISTERED HO L D ERS Hyundai Elantra 2012 4 OF AC E S E CURIdoor, c o lo r b l a ck, TIES CORP. HOME 2,773 miles. $16,500. EQUITY LOAN 541 -31 7-51 69. T RUST, SERI E S A SSET BAC KED Mitsubishi 3 00 0 GT 1999, a uto., p e a rl PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, w hite, very low m i .
Chevrolet G20 Sportsman, 1993, exlnt cond, $4750. 541-362-5559 or 541-663-6046
4p • Ip
• Pruning • Flower bed clean-up • Snow Removal
looks great, extra set of winter tires on rims, only $3000.
tglI=~i •, „
' jj 0
Kelly Kerfoot Const.
1997 4 door, 127k, d rives, runs a n d
I
Dodge 2500, 1996, V10, Pilgrim In t e rnational Chevy C-20 Pickup WITH 1979 Conestoga 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, camper, great cond, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 $5500. 541-420-2323 Fall price $ 2 1,865. auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. 541-312-4466 4 x4 t o t o w , 1 3 0 K F250 2009 Super duty owner, $22,000, mostly towed miles, Springdale 29' 2 0 07, FX4 4x4 crew cab 541-923-6049 nice rig! $15,000 both. slide,Bunkhouse style, diesel. ONLY 20k mi. 541-382-3964, leave .r" ~ $38,995 ¹A79900 sleeps 7-8, excellent Canopies & Campers msg. condition, $ 1 6 ,900, Elkhorn 8.5' 2003, self 541-390-2504 Oregon contained, oven, steAutnSoarce r eo, v e r y cle a n . 541-598-3750 $8500. 541-389-7234 Chevy Wagon 1957, aaaoregonautosource.com 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO, trades, Jayco Seneca 2 007, please call 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy 0 0 • I 541-389-6998 5 500 d i e sel, to y Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 hauler $130 , 000. 29', weatherized, like Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe n ew, f u rnished & 541-389-2636. 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Ford 250 XLT 1990, ready to go, incl Wine/'~ auto. trans, ps, air, 6 yd. dump bed, ard S a t ellite dish, frame on rebuild, re139k, Auto, $5500. 26,995. 541-420-9964 painted original blue, 541-410-9997 original blue interior, original hub caps exc tii m -,>I II Ford F250 2002 I chrome, asking $9000 Supercab 7.3 diesel, or make offer. Immaculate! 130,000 miles, great 541-385-9350 Beaver Coach Marquis shape with accessoWarrior Toy 40' 1987. New cover, Weekend ries. $13,900. Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, new paint (2004), new fuel station, exc cond. 541-923-0231 day or inverter (2007). Onan sleeps 8, black/gray 541-923-2582 eves. 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, Chrysler SD 4-Door parked covered $35,000 i nterior, u se d 3X , 1930, CD S R oyal $24,999. obo. 541-419-9859 or 541-389-9188 1/3 interest in Colum- Standard, 8-cylinder, 541-280-2014 body is good, needs bia 400, located at F250 XLT 4x4 Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. some r e s toration, Ford Lariat, 1990, r e d, runs, taking bids, Call 541-647-3718 80K original miles, 541-383-3888, 4" lift with 39's, well 541-815-331 8 maintained, $4000 obo. 541-419-5495
28 yrs exp in Central OR!
Aut o m obiles
Ford Crown Vic.
Hunter's Delight! Package deal! 1988 Winnebago Super Chief, 3 8K m i l es , gr e a t shape; 1988 Bronco II
•
Sport Utility Vehicles •
I The Bulletin recoml mends extra caution ~ I when pu r chasing I f products or servicesf from out of the area. f S ending c ash ,f checks, or credit inI formation may be I
LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT COURT OF OREGON FOR DESCHUTES C O UNTY. O NEWEST B A N K , FSB Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF LORENA K. WRIGHT, DECEASED; THE ESTATE OF LORENA K . W R IGHT, D E CEASED; THE UNITED STATES OF A MERICA, THE S ECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URB AN DEV E L O PM ENT; AN D P E R SONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN CLAIMING A N Y RI G HT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST I N THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED I N THE COMPLAINT P laintiff, v . DI A N A HEREIN, Defendants. NOVOTNY; LARRY NO. 12CV 0 8 66. FUDENNA; M O R T- SUMMONS BY PUBGAGE ELECTRONIC LICATION. TO: T he REGISTRATION Estate of Lorena K. SYSTEMS, INCJ CO- Wright, de c eased; LUMBIA RIV ER Unknown Heirs and BANK D B A CRB Devisees of Lorena K. M ORTGAG E T E A M ; Wright, de c e ased; AND PERSONS OR and Persons or ParPARTIES UN- ties Unknown ClaimKNOWN CLAIMING ing Any Right, Title, ANY RIGHT, TITLE, Lien, or Interest in the LIEN OR INTEREST Property Described in IN THE PROPERTY the Complaint Herein, DESCRIBED IN THE I N THE NAME O F COMPLAINT THE STATE OF ORHEREIN, Defendants. E GON: You ar e NO. 12CV0 7 2 2. h ereby required t o SUMMONS BY PUB- appear and d efend L ICATION. TO : D I - against the a l legaANA NOV O T NY; tions contained in the LARRY F U D ENNA; Complaint filed AND PERSONS OR a gainst you i n t h e PARTIES UN- above entitled proKNOWN CLAIMING ceeding within thirty ANY RIGHT, TITLE, (30) days from the LIEN OR INTEREST date of service of this IN THE PROPERTY Summons upon you. DESCRIBED IN THE If you fail to appear COMPLAINT and defend this matHEREIN, I N THE ter within thirty (30) NAME OF THE days from the date of STATE OF OREGON: publication specified You are hereby reherein along with the quired to appear and r equired filing f e e , defend against t he OneWest Bank, FSB allegations contained will apply to the Court in the Complaint filed f or th e r e l ief d e a gainst you i n t h e manded in the Comabove entitled proplaint. The first date ceeding Within thirty of publication is No(30) days from the vember 7, 2012. NOdate of service of this TICE T O DE F ENSummons upon you. DANTS: READ If you fail to appear T HESE PAP E R S and defend this matCAREFULLY! You ter Within thirty (30) must "appear" in this days from the date of case or the other side publication specified will win automatically. herein along with the To "appear" you must r equired filing f e e, file with the court a leH SBC B an k U S A , gal paper called a N.A., as Trustee on "motion" or "answer." behalf of ACE Securi- The "motion" or "anties Corp. Home Eq- swer" must be given uity Loan Trust and to the court clerk or for t h e re g i stered w i t hin holders of ACE Secu- administrator thirty days along with rities Corp. Home Eq- the required filing fee. uity loan Trust, Series It must be in proper 2 005-HE6, Asse t and have proof Backed Pass-Through form o f service o n t h e Certificates will apply plaintiff's attorney or, to the Court for the re- if the plaintiff does not lief demanded in the have a n at t orney, Complaint. The first proof of service on the date of publication is plaintiff. IF YOU November 14, 2012. HAVE ANY Q U ESNOTICE TO DEFEN- TIONS, YOU DANTS: READ S HOULD SE E A N T HESE PAP E R S ATTORNEY I M M ECAREFULLY! You DIATELY. If you need must "appear" in this help in finding an atcase or the other side torney, you may call will win automatically. the O r egon S t a te To "appear" you must Bar's Lawyer Referral file with the court a le- S ervice a t (503) gal paper called a or toll-free "motion" or "answer." 684-3763 in Oregon at (800) The "motion" or "an- 452-7636. object swer" must be given of the said The action and to the court clerk or the relief sought to be administrator W ithin o btained therein i s thirty days along with fully set forth in said the required filing fee. complaint, an d is It must be in proper briefly stated as folform and have proof' Foreclosure of a o f service o n t h e lows: Deed of T r ust/Mortplaintiffs attorney or, if gage. Grantors: The the plaintiff does not Estate of Lorena K. have a n at t orney, Wright, de c e ased; proof of service on the Unknown Heirs and plaintiff. IF YOU Devisees of Lorena K. HAVE ANY Q U ES- Wright dec e ased; TIONS, YOU Persons or P a rties S HOULD SE E A N Unknown C l a iming A TTORNEY IMMERight, Title, Lien, DIATELY. If you need Any o r Interest i n th e help in finding an atProperty Described in torney, you may call the Complaint Herein. the O r egon S t a te Property address: 309 Bar's Lawyer Referral South Locust Street, S ervice a t (503) OR 9 7 759. 684-3763 or toll-free Sisters, P ublication: Ben d in Oregon at (800) Bulletin. DATED this 452-7636. The object 30th day of October, of the said action and 2012. Craig Peterson, the relief sought to be OSB ¹120365, Robino btained therein i s Tait, P.S., Attorfully set forth in said son neys for Plaintiff.
complaint, an d is briefly stated as folLEGAL NOTICE [ sublect to FRAUD. lows: Foreclosure of a IN THE C I RCUIT For more informaDeed of T r ust/Mort- C OURT OF T H E f tion about an advergage. Grantors: Dl- STATE O F ORtiser you may call A NA NOVO T N Y; EGON DESI the Oregon State I LARRY F U D ENNA; CHUTES COUNTY. Attorney General's ~ AND PERSONS OR Volkswagen PU 1981 ChryslerSebring 2006 Fargo Bank, Office C o nsumer PARTIES UN- Wells Runs well, good paint, Fully loaded, exc.cond, N.A., its successors KNOWN C L AIMING very low miles (38k), f Protection hotline at r edone i nterior i n in interest and/or 1-877-877-9392. ANY RIGHT, TITLE, assigns, Plaintiff/s, cluding hea d liner, always garaged, LIEN OR INTEREST v. Patnck A. Rose; transferable warranty canopy, alloy r ims, IN THE PROPERTY and Occupants of ood tires, CD player incl. $8300 Servmg Central Oregon srnce 1903 DESCRIBED IN THE 541-330-4087 3950. 541-410-1119 the Premises, DeCOMPLAINT fendant/s. Case No.: .' • ~W r t . W t '~ ~ HEREIN. Pr o perty 11CV0671. NOaddress: 2792 North- T ICE O F SAL E west Fairway Heights UNDER WRIT OF Drive, B e nd , OR EXECUTION 97701. P u b lication: REAL PROPERTY. Bend Bulletin. DATED Notice i s h e r eby this 2nd day of Nogiven that I will on vember, 2012. Craig .O. December 6, 2012 Peterson, OSB at 11:00 AM in the ¹120365, R o binson main lobby of t he 0 Tait, P.S., Attorney for Deschutes County Plaintiff. S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, Tick, Tock sell, at public oral to the highTick, Tock... auction est bidder, for cash Call the Bulletin ClassiTiedDept. or cashier's check, ...don't let time get the following real 541-385-5809or541-382-1811 away. Hire a property, known as 25221 Deer Lane, forratestoday! professional out B end, Oreg o n of The Bulletin's 97701, to wit, Lot Eighty-Seven (87) in "Call A Service u nit Three (3) of Bend Cascade View Professional" E states, Tract 2 , Directory today! Deschutes County,
f
I
I f
The Bulletin
BUYTWOWEEKS ANDGET TWO WEEKSFREE!
;ggM 2< "-Ã(
SNOWM OBILES 8tANs ONL Y!
Classifieds
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
F4 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2012•THE BULLETIN
1000
I
Le g al Notices Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ o f E x ecution i n Foreclosure issued out of t h e C i rcuit Court of the State of Oregon f o r the C ounty o f Des chutes, dated October 15, 2012, to me directed in the a bove-entitled a c tion wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., i ts successors i n interest and/or assigns as plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment of Foreclosure on June 18, 2012, against Patrick A. Rose as d efendant/s. BE FORE BIDDING AT T HE
SA L E ,
A
PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor;
(b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the prope rty; (d) Limits o n farming o r f o r est p ractices o n th e property; (e) Rights of neig h boring property o w n ers; and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. L A R RY B LANTON, Des-
c hutes Coun t y S heriff. Krist a Mudrick, Civil Technician. Date: October 29, 2012. Published i n Bend Bulletin. D at e of First and Successive P u b lications: October 31, 2012; November 7, 2012; November 14, 2012. Date of Last Publication: November 21, 2012. Attorney: Erik Wilson, OSB ¹ 095507. Rou t h C rabtree Ols e n , P.C, 621 SW Alder St., Ste. 800, Portland, OR 97205-3623, 503-459-0104.
Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's f unds. Only U . S. c urrency and / o r c ashier's ch e c ks m ade payable t o Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I RCUIT C OURT OF T H E STATE O F ORDESEGON CHUTES COUNTY.
Wells Fargo Bank, NA, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Andrew S White; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 11CV1091. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION -REAL P ROPERTY. N o tice is hereby given t hat I w ill o n D e cember 18, 2012 at 1 1:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 515 NW Columbia S treet, Bend, O r egon 97701, to wit, Lot Twelve, Block Six, Highland Addition, Des c hutes County, Or e gon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, d a t ed November 2, 2012, to me directed in the a bove-entitled a c tion wherein Wells Fargo Bank, NA, as plaintiff/s, re c o vered General Judgment o f F o r eclosure Against: ( 1) Andrew S. W h ite, and Money Award Against Andrew S. White, on Septemb er 2 0, 2012 , against Andrew S. White as d efendant/s. BE FORE BIDDING AT T HE
SA L E ,
A
PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor;
(b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the prope rty; (d) Limits o n farming o r f o r est p ractices o n th e property; (e) Rights of neig h boring property o w n ers; and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. L A R RY
Legal Notices
•
B LANTON, Des c hutes Coun t y Sheriff. Ant h o ny Raguine, Civil Technician. D a t e: November 16, 2012. Published in Bend Bulletin. D at e of
First and Successive P u b lications: November 21, 2012; November 28, 2012; December 5, 2012. Date of Last Publication: December 12, 2012. Attorney: Calvin Kni c k erbocker, OSB ¹ 050110,
Ro ut h
Crabtree Olsen, PC,
5 11 SW 1 0th A v e nue, S uite 4 0 0 , Portland, OR 97205,
(503) 459 - 0140. Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d d ers must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's f unds. Only U . S. c urrency and / o r cashier's ch e c ks m ade payable t o Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale.
Garage Sales
GarageSales
Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!
541-385-5809 LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C IRCUIT C OURT O F T H E S TATE O F OR EGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Nick P. Williams; Wendy A. Williams; State o f O r e gon; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 1 1CV0772.
NO-
T ICE O F
SAL E
U NDER WRIT O F
EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on December 18, 2012 at 11:00 AM in the main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 580 NW Utica Ave nue, Bend, O r egon 97701, to wit, Lots Fourteen (14) and Fifteen (15), Block Two (2), Bend View Addition, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ o f E x ecution i n Foreclosure issued out of t h e C i rcuit Court of the State of Oregon f o r the C ounty o f Des chutes, dated November 1, 2012, to me directed in the a bove-entitled a c tion wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered Corrected Gen e r al Judgment of Foreclosure on October 10, 2012, against Nick P . W i l liams, Wendy A. Williams, State o f O r e gon, and Occupants of t he Premises a s d efendant/s. BE FORE BIDDING AT THE SA L E , A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment c r editor;
(b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the prope rty; (d) Limits o n farming o r f o r est p ractices o n th e property; (e) Rights of neig h boring property o w n ers; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. L A R RY B LANTON, D esc hutes Coun t y Sheriff. Ant h o ny Raguine, Civil Technician. D a t e: November 16, 2012. Published in Bend Bulletin. D at e of First and S uccessive P u b lications: November 21, 2012; November 28, 2012; December 5, 2012. Date of Last Publi-
cation: December 12, 2012. Attorney: Erik Wilson, OSB ¹ 095507, Rou t h Crabtree Olsen, PC, 511 SW 10th Ave nue, S uite 4 0 0 ,
Leg a l Notices • Portland, OR 97205, (503) 459 - 0104. Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d d ers must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the
Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's f unds. Only U . S . c urrency and / o r cashier's c h e c ks m ade payable t o Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E
C I R CUIT
C OURT OF T H E STATE O F O REGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest a nd/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. An t hony S. Jones; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 11CV0861.
T ICE O F
NO-
SAL E
U NDER WRIT O F
EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on December 18, 2012 at 11:00 AM in the main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property further des cribed in th e a t tached Exhibit "A": 411 Southeast Evergreen A v e nue, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Said sale is made under a Writ o f E x ecution i n Foreclosure issued out of t h e C i rcuit Court of the State of Oregon f o r the C ounty o f Des chutes, dated November 2, 2012, to me directed in the a bove-entitled a c tion wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., i ts successors i n interest and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered S t i p ul ated Gener a l Judgment of Foreclosure and Shortening of Redemption Period Against D efendant: 1) A n thony S. Jones, on September 4, 2012, against Anthony S. Jones, a s d e f endant/s. BE F O RE B IDDING AT T H E
SALE, A PROS PECTIVE BID DER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY
INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor;
(b)Land use laws
and regulations applicable to the prop-
erty; (c)Approved uses for the prope rty; (d) Limits o n farming or f o rest p ractices o n th e property; (e) Rights of neig h boring property o w n ers; and (f) Environmen-
tal laws and regulations that affect the property. L A R RY B LANTON, Des c hutes Coun t y Sheriff. Ant h o ny Raguine, Civil T echnician. D a t e: November 16, 2012. Published in Bend B ulletin. Dat e o f First and Successive P u b lications: November 21, 2012; November 28, 2012; December 5, 2012. Date of Last Publication: D e cember 12, 2012. Attorney: Calvin Knic k erbocker, OSB ¹ 050110,
Ro ut h
Crabtree Olsen, PC, 5 11 SW
1 0th A v -
e nue, Suite 4 0 0 , Portland, OR 97205, (503) 459 - 0140. Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d d ers must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bid d e r's f unds. Only U . S . c urrency and / o r c ashier's c h e c ks
made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale.
LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C I RCUIT C OURT O F T H E S TATE O F OR EGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Edward M. Protas; and Occupants of th e P r emises, Defendant/s. Case No.:
11C V 1 005.
NOTICE OF SALE U NDER WRIT O F
EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on December 13, 2012 at 11:00 AM in the
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1000
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main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 544 S o ut h Oak Street, Sisters, Oregon 97759, to wit, Lot Three (3), Block Two (2), Loe Brothers Town N' Country Second Addition to the City of Sisters, Des c hutes County, O r e gon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, d a ted October 25, 2012, to me directed in the a bove-entitled a c tion wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., i ts successors i n interest and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment of Foreclosure on April 6, 2012, against Edward M. Protas and O ccupants of t h e Premises as defendant/s. BE F O RE B IDDING AT T H E SALE, A PRO-
Lorentz, 2) Lyle E. Lorentz, Jr., on August 9, 2012, against Rebecca L. Lorentz and Lyle E. Lorentz, Jr., as defendant/s. BEFORE
SPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY
B IDDING AT T H E SALE, A PROS PECTIVE BID DER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY
INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor;
(b)Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the prope rty; (d) Limits o n farming o r f o r est p ractices o n th e property; (e)Rights of neig h boring property o w n ers; and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. L A R RY B LANTON, Des -
c hutes Coun t y Sheriff. Ant h o ny Raguine, Civil Technician. D a t e: November 2, 2012. Published in Bend Bulletin. D at e of First and Successive P u b lications: November 7, 2012; November 14, 2012; November 21, 2012. Date of Last Publication: November 28, 2012. Attorney: Tony Kullen, OSB ¹ 090218. Rou t h Crabtree Olsen, PC,
INVESTIGATE: (a) 5 11 SW 1 0th A v The priority of the e nue, Suite 4 0 0 , lien or interest of the Portland, OR 97205, judgment c r editor; (503) 459 - 0101. (b) Land use laws Conditions of and regulations apSale:Potential b idplicable to the propders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the erty; (c)Approved uses for the propauction to allow the Deschutes County e rty; (d) Limits o n farming or f o rest S heriff's Office t o p ractices o n th e review bidd e r's property; (e)Rights f unds. Only U . S . of neig h boring c urrency and / o r property o w ners; cashier's ch e c ks and (f)Environmenm ade payable t o tal laws and regulaDeschutes County tions that affect the Sheriff's Office will property. Published be accepted. Payin B end B u lletin. ment must be made Date of F irst a nd in full immediately Successive Publicaupon the close of tions: November 14, the sale. 2012; November 21, 2012; November 28, Sell an Item 2012. Date of Last Publication: Dec ember 5 , 20 1 2 . Attorney: Erik Wilson, OSB ¹095507, Routh Cra b t ree O lsen, P .C., 5 1 1 If it's under $500 SW 10th Ave, Suite you can place it in 400, Portland, OR The Bulletin 97205, (503) 459-0104. C o n diClassifieds for: tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m i nutes $10 • 3 lines, 7 days prior to the auction $16 • 3 lines, 14 days to allow the D esc hutes Coun t y (Private Party ads only) S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's f unds. Only U . S . LEGAL NOTICE c urrency and / o r IN THE C I RCUIT cashier's ch e c ks C OURT O F T H E m ade payable t o S TATE O F OR Deschutes County EGON DESSheriff's Office will CHUTES COUNTY. be accepted. PayWells Fargo Bank, ment must be made N.A., its successors in full immediately in interest and/or upon the close of assigns, Plaintiff/s, the s ale. L A R RY v. Andrew N ash; B LANTON, D e s - O ccupants of t h e c hutes Coun t y Premises, D e fenSheriff. Lisa Griggs, dant/s. Case N o.: Civil Tec h nician. 11CV0460. NODate: November 9, T ICE O F SAL E
FAST!
2012.
LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C I RCUIT C OURT O F T H E S TATE O F OR EGON DESCHUTES COUNTY. Federal Na t i onal Mortgage Association, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. R e b ecca L. Lorentz; L yl e E. L orentz, Jr. ; a n d
U NDER WRIT O F
EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on December 6, 2012 at 1 1:00 AM in the main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 5 9620 Navaj o Circle, Bend, O regon 97702, to wit, Lot Three (3), Block C, DE S C HUTES RIVER W O O DS, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ o f E x ecution i n Foreclosure issued out of t h e C i rcuit Court of the State of Oregon f o r the C ounty o f Des chutes, dated October 15, 2012, to me directed i n the a bove-entitled a c tion wherein Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as plaintiff/s, recovered Corr ected General Judgment of Foreclosure on May 2, 2012, a gainst And r e w Nash an d O c c upants of th e P r e-
O ccupants of t h e Premises, D e f endant/s. Case N o.: 11CV1007. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on December 4, 2012 at 11:00 AM in the main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 106 Southeast 15th S treet, Bend, O r egon 97702, to wit, Lot Six (6), Ramsay Estates No. 1, City of Bend, Deschutes County, O r e gon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Exmises as ecution in Foreclod efendant/s. BE sure issued out of FORE BIDDING AT the Circuit Court of THE SA L E , A the State of Oregon PROSPECTIVE for the County of BIDDER S H OULD Deschutes, d a t ed INDEPENDENTLY October 22, 2012, to INVESTIGATE: (a) me directed in the The priority of the a bove-entitled a c lien or interest of the tion wherein Fedjudgment c r editor; eral National Mort(b) Land use laws gage A ssociation, and regulations apits successors in plicable to the propinterest and/or aserty; (c)Approved uses for the propsigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered Core rty; (d) Limits o n rected S t i pulated farming or f o rest General Judgment p ractices o n th e of Foreclosure and property; (e) Rights Shortening of Reof neig h boring d emption Per i od property o w ners; Against Defendants: and (f) Environmental laws and regula1) R e becca L.
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tions that affect the p roperty. L A R RY B LANTON, D e s c hutes Coun t y Sheriff. Ant h o ny Raguine, Civil T echnician. D a t e: October 29, 2012. Published in Bend Bulletin. D at e of First and S uccessive P u b lications: October 31, 2012; November 7, 2012; November 14, 2012. Date of Last Publication: November 21, 2012. Attorney: Erik Wilson, OSB ¹ 095507, Rou t h Crabtree Olsen, PC, 6 21 SW A lde r Street, Suite 8 0 0, Portland, OR 97205-3623, (503) 459-0104. C o n d itions of Sale:Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cas h ier's
checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office w il l b e accepted. P a y ment must be made in full i mmediately u p o n t he close o f t h e sale. LEGAL NOTICE IN
THE
CIR C U IT
COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DES C H UTES PROBATE DEPARTMENT. E s t at e of ROBERT E DWARD
Leg a l Notices • ment of F o reclosure on August 1, 2012, against Mary S. McGlynn as defendant/s. BEFORE B IDDING AT T H E SALE, A PROS PECTIVE B ID DER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY
INVESTIGATE: (a) The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment c r editor (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to the prop-
erty; (c)Approved uses for the prope rty; (d) Limits o n farming or f o rest p ractices o n th e property; (e)Rights of neig h boring property o w n ers; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. L A R RY B LANTON, Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff. Ant h o ny Raguine, Civil Technician. D a t e: November 9, 2012. Published in Bend B ulletin. Dat e o f First and S uccessive P u b lications: November 14, 2012; November 21, 2012; November 28, 2012. Date of Last Publi-
cation: December 5, 2012. Atto r ney: Tony Kullen, OSB ¹ 090218,
Rout h
Crabtree Olsen, PC,
5 11 SW 1 0th A v e nue, S uite 4 0 0 , Portland, OR 97205,
(503) 459 - 0101. Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d d ers must arrive 15 minW HITTIER, De u tes prior t o t h e c eased. Case N o . auction to allow the 12PB0110. NOTICE County TO INT E RESTED Deschutes S heriff's Office t o PERSONS. NOTICE review bidd e r's IS HEREBY GIVEN Only U . S . that the undersigned fcunds. urrency and / o r has been appointed c ashier's ch e c ks Personal Representa- m ade payable to tive. All persons hav- Deschutes County ing claims against the Sheriff's Office will Estate are required to accepted. Payp resent them, w i th be must be made vouchers attached, to ment in full immediately the undersigned Per- upon the close of sonal Representative the sale. at Karnopp Petersen LLP, 1201 NW Wall LEGAL NOTICE S treet, S u it e 3 0 0 , THE C I RCUIT Bend, Oregon IN C OURT O F T H E 9 7701-1957, wi t h i n S TATE O F OR four months after the EGON DESdate of first publicaCHUTES COUNTY. tion of this notice, or Wells Fargo Bank, the claims may be its successors barred. All p e r sons NA, in interest and/or whose rights may be assigns, affected by the pro- v. StanleyPlaintiff/s, ceedings may obtain Marlo H . C. Paroz; r o z; additional information M ortgage Pa Ele c from the records of tronic R egistration the court, the P er- Systems, Inc ., sonal Representative Solely as Nominee or the attorneys for Northwest Mortthe Personal Repre- for gage Group, Inc; s entative, wh o a r e and Occupants of Karnopp P e t ersen LLP, 1201 NW Wall the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: S treet, S u it e 3 0 0 , NOBend, Oregon 97701- T11CV1083. ICE O F SAL E 1 957. D ATED a n d UNDER WRIT OF f irst p ublished N o EXECUTION v ember 1 4 , 20 1 2 . PROPERTY. Nancy Whittier Pabo- REAL Notice i s h e r eby toy, Personal Repre- given that I will on sentative. PE RDecember 18, 2012 SONAL at 11:00 AM in the REPRESENTATIVE: lobby of t he Nancy Whittier Pabo- main County toy, 4073 Champion- Deschutes S heriff's Offi c e , ship Court, Annadale, 63333 W Highway Virginia 22003. AT20, Bend, Oregon, TORNEY FOR PERat public oral SONAL REPRESEN- sell, auction to the highTATIVE: K ARNOPP est bidder, for cash PETERSEN LLP, cashier's check, Brent S . Ki n kade, or OSB¹ 933301, the following real property, known as bsk© karnopp.com, 1201 NW Wall Street, 3040 S W Q u artz Place, R e dmond, Suite 300, Bend, OR 97701-1957, TEL : Oregon 97756, to (541) 382-3011, FAX: w it, Lot o n e ( 1 ) , B lock F o ur (4), (541) 388-5410. Of Phase A ttorneys fo r P e r - Summerfield Deschutes sonal Representative. County, O r e gon. LEGAL NOTICE Said real property IN TH E C I R CUIT being more accuC OURT OF T H E rately described as: STATE O F O RLot one (1), Block DESEGON Four (4), SummerCHUTES COUNTY. field Phase II, reFederal Na t i onal corded October 22, Mortgage Associa1992, in Cabinet C, tion, its successors P age 707 , D e s in interest and/or chutes County, Orassigns, Plaintiff/s, egon. Said sale is v. Mary S. McGlynn; made u n de r a and Occupants of A mended Writ o f the Premises, DeExecution in Forefendant/s. Case No.: closure issued out 12CV0015. NOof the Circuit Court T ICE O F SAL E of the State of OrU NDER WRIT O F egon for the County EXECUTION of Deschutes, dated REAL PROPERTY. November 2, 2012, Notice i s h e r eby to me directed in the a bove-entitled a c given that I will on December 13, 2012 tion wherein Wells at 11:00 AM in the Fargo Bank, NA, its main lobby of t he successors in interDeschutes County est and/or assigns, S heriff's Offi c e , as plaintiff/s, recov63333 W. Highway ered Corr e cted 20, Bend, Oregon, Stipulated General Judgment of Foresell, at public oral auction to the highclosure and Shortest bidder, for cash ening of Redempor cashier's check, tion Period Against the following real Defendants: 1) property, known as Stanley C. Paroz, 2) 1884 Nor t h east Marlo H. Paroz on Carson Way, Bend, J une 1 3 , 201 2 , Oregon 97701, to against Stanley C. wit, Lot Twenty (20) Paroz and Marlo H. in Block Two (2) of Paroz as The Wi n chester, d efendant/s. B E City of Bend, DesFORE BIDDING AT chutes County, OrT HE SA L E , A egon. Said sale is PROSPECTIVE made under a Writ BIDDER SHOULD of E x e cution i n INDEPENDENTLY Foreclosure issued INVESTIGATE: (a) out of t h e C i rcuit The priority of the Court of the State of lien or interest of the Oregon f o r the judgment creditor; C ounty o f Des (b) Land use laws chutes, dated Octoand regulations apber 25, 2012, to me plicable to the propdirected i n the erty; (c)Approved a bove-entitled a c uses for the proption wherein Fede rty; (d) Limits o n eral National Mortfarming or f o rest gage Association as p ractices o n th e p laintiff/s, re c o v- property; (e)Rights ered General Judgof neig h boring
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property o w ners; and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Published in Bend B u lletin. Date of F irst a nd
Successive Publications: November 14, 2012; November 21, 2012; November 28, 2012. Date of Last Publication: Dec ember 5 , 20 1 2 . A ttorney: Cal v i n Knickerbocker, OSB ¹ 050110, Rou t h C rabtree Ols e n , P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., S t e 400, Portland, OR 97205, 503-459-0104.
Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's f unds. Only U . S . c urrency and / o r cashier's ch e c ks m ade payable t o Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will
be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the s ale. L A R RY B LANTON, D esc hutes Coun t y
Sheriff. Lisa Griggs, Civil Tec h nician. Date: November 9,
Legal Notices clude accrued intere st at t h e r a t e o f $66.44 per diem after June 26, 2012, additional late c harges, expenditures, or trustee fees, and additional attorney fees and costs. A t o t al payoff amount as of a specific date is available upon written request to the successor trustee. On June 8, 20 0 9 Ron a l d Ringer filed a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy petition as B ankruptcy Case No. 09-34416-elp13 in the United States Bankruptcy Court District of Oregon. The B ankruptcy Court entered an Order of Dismissal o n A pril 3 , 20 1 2 . W HEREFORE, n o tice hereby is given that the undersigned successor trustee will on WED N ESDAY, JANUARY 9, 2013 at
10:00 o'clock a.m., in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the front e ntrance o f Des chutes County Courthouse, 1100 Northwest B on d S t reet, B end, State o f O r e gon, which is t h e
hour, date and place last set for the sale, sell at public auction 2012. to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the Real P r operty, Just too many without warranty, excollectibles? press o r imp l ied, which the Grantor had Sell them in or had power to conThe Bulletin Classifieds vey at the time of the execution by Grantor of the Deed of Trust, 541-385-5809 together with any interest w h i c h t he LEGAL NOTICE Grantor or Grantor's successors in interest TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE. Reference acquired after the execution of the Deed of is made to that certain Deed of Trust (the Trust, to satisfy the "Deed of Trust") made foregoing Promissory by Ronald Ringer as Note secured by the Grantor(s), to Amer- Deed of Trust and the iTitle, as Trustee, in costs and expenses of favor of West Coast sale, including a reaBank, as Beneficiary, sonable charge by the tr u s tee. dated May 30, 2007, successor recorded J un e 1, The successor trustee 2007, in t h e m o r t- intends to foreclos gage records of Deschutes, Oregon, as Document No. 2007-31268, and covering the following described real property situated in the above-mentioned county and state, to wit: Lot One Hundred Seventy-three, NORTHPOINTE-PHA SES IV and V, Deschutes, County, Oregon. Property Tax Account No.: 253701. Real property or its address is commonly k nown a s 637 6 8 Wellington Str e et, Bend, OR 97701 (the "Real Property"). The undersigned hereby disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of t h e ab o v e-des cribed street a d dress or other common designation. The u ndersigned as t h e successor tr u stee hereby certifies that no assignments of the Deed of Trust by the Trustee or by the current Beneficiary, West Coast Bank, and no a ppointments of a successor tr u stee have been made except as recorded in the mortgage records of the county or count ies i n wh i c h t h e above-described Real Property is s ituated together w it h ap pointing Shannon R. Martinez as the current successor trustee; further, that no action has been instituted to r ecover the debt, or any part thereof, now remaini ng secured by t h e Deed of Trust, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as p ermitted by ORS 8 6.735(4). The Real Property will be sold to satisfy the Promissory Note identified below secured by the Deed of Trust and a Notice of Default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Stat utes 86.735(3); the default(s) for w h ich t he f o reclosure i s made is/are the foll owing: L oa n No . 48013337. Failure to pay the balance owing on the m aturity date on April 1, 2009 pursuant to the terms of the Deed of Trust securing that certain Promissory Note dated May 30, 2007 and refe r enced therein ("Promissory Note") and the supp orting Relat e d D ocuments as d e fined in the Deed of Trust. By reason of the(se) default(s), the current B e n eficiary has and does hereby declare all sums owing on the Promissory Note secured by the Deed of Trust immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to wit: Principle Balance: $368,000.00. Accrued Interest: $52,185.01. Late Charges: $1,192.85. Total: $421,377.86*. * Total does no t i n -