Serving Central Oregon since190375
THURSDAY November21,2013
avens' ac<ie oass aze, rawn SPORTS• C1
bendbulletin.com
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BUSINESS • B6
TODAY'S READERBOARD Skatepark in theworks
— Construction is underway on a new skateparkat Ponderosa Park.B1
Wood Stove Decathlon
— Teams compete to craft a more efficient, cleaner-burning wood stove.A3
Ready to ride? —Some fitness tips on how to limber up for the upcoming ski and
snowboard season.D1
And a Web exclusiveA Monty Python reunion is in the works. The influential Brit-
By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
SALEM — The director of Oregon's health insurance exchange faced frustrated lawmakers Wednesday who asked a range of questions about the Cover Oregon website, which more than a month after its launch has yet to enroll
anyone. sumers who want to be covered Rocky King, execuby the first of the year. tive director of Cover OrInstead, Oregonians egon, the state's health should submit a paper insurance exchange, application no later than said more than once Dec. 4to be coveredby throughout the day: The Jan. 1. system is not broken, it's Ki n g But that could also just not finished. prove to be a challenge. And it won't be fixed for conRep. Brian Clem, D-Salem,
ac eorwi
told King he tried to submit the paper application via fax on behalf of his mother-in-law, who has Lou Gehrig's disease. The fax machine was busy. He tried again, still busy. He tried three moretimeswithoutsuccess. His mother-in-law relies on feeding tubes and communicates by writing on a stencil
0 en a e r
Mt. Bachelor ski area was tentatively scheduled to open multiple runs for skiing and snowboarding this Saturday — but a dearth of snow led resort officids to delay the opening till just after Thanksgiving. "Bachelor, however,doesplanto openaterrain park andatuding hill this Saturday.
ish comedy troupe's surviving members plan to assemble for
board. She was kicked off her previous insurance plan. She shouldn't be writing on her board, asking about the status of her insurance, Clem said. And, he added, don't come up to him after the hearing and offer to enroll his mother-in-law. SeeCover Oregon/A4
Spending on dIugs may top $1 trillion
their first live performance in
By Lisa Girion
morethan a decade. bendbulletin.com/extras
Los Angeles Times
Global spending on pharmaceuticals is expectedtosurpass $1trillion for the first time next year, propelled in large part by the rising demand for cheap generic drugs in China and other
EDITOR'5CHOICE
A troubling tale of a teenage Oswald
Related
By Dan Barry New Yorlz Times News Service
NEW YORK — Nearly 30 years ago, a seventh-grader at the East Midwood Hebrew Day School in Brooklyn needed to complete a social studies assignment, something along the lines of what was it like in the olden days. She set down a cassette tape recorder in front of her saba, her grandfather, and pressed a button. The grandfather, Philip Jacobs, who was 78, summoned storiesfrom bygone New York, of Lower East Side toil, business success and the Orthodox Jewish customs of his youth. His days as a landlord prompted one memory in particular. SeeOswald /A5
TODAY'S WEATH ER Sunny and cold
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Snowmaking machines andgroomers worked near the Pine Marten Express chairlift and elsewhere onthe mountain Wednesday afternoon. Crews were assessing the snow depth to decide if a weekend opening was possible. But the packed snow depth at West Village Lodge ranged from zero
to 6 inches Wednesday,which is too thin to handle ski and snowboard traffic, according to a newsrelease. Actual snow depth (not all packed) was 18 inches at the lodge onWednesday, according to mtbachelor.com.
Compared withyearspast • In recent years, Bachelor has only opened onceafter Thanksgiving — in
• The ski area hasopened sev• The chart below compares the snow depth measured eral years on Thanksgiving Day Wednesday with depths reported at WestVillage baseon
2008, and it was well after.
itself, including lastyear.
Bachelor's opening day in five of the past few years.
2010 Nov. 24
Opening day
2007 Nov. 22
Snow depths
2008
2011 Nov. 24
2009 Nov. 20
2013
As measured Wednesday
a'm M
KR
High 36, Low16 Page B6
More details INDEX Business C5-6 Health D1-6 Calendar B2 Horoscope D6 Classified E1-8 Local/State 81-6 Comics E3-4 Obituaries 85 Crosswords E4 Sports C1-4 Dear Abby D6 TV/Movies D6 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper
This year, officials are nowanticipating opening on Nov. 29, the Fridayafter Thanksgiving. (Bachelor will be closed Thanksgiving Day.) This Saturday through Wednesday, aterrain park under the SunshineAccelerator chairlift — with multiple lines, rails and boxes —will be open, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lift tickets will be $29 for adults and $19 for all other age categories. Sources: Bulletin reporting and research
Vol. 111, No. 325,
By Lisa Girion Los Angeles Times
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o 88267 02329
markets, • Low ACA according enrollment to a new could for e c a st hurt drug f r om the sales,D2 IM SInstitute for Healthcare Informatics. More than two-thirds of all pharmaceutical drug spending occurs in eight countries: the U.S., Germany, France, Italy, Britain, Spain, Japan and China, the institute found. Still, the next five years will see two starkly different trends in pharmaceutical consumption, according to the global forecast. The U.S. will continue to lead the world in per-capita spending on pharmaceuticals, largely because of its heavy reliance on expensive, brand-name drugs, the mstitute predicts. However, the rate of
growth in drug spending in the U.S. and the rest of the developed world will continue to slow as generics gain traction and, in Europe, as austerity measures imposed in responsetothe economic slowdown take hold. In China and other developing countries, on the other hand, drug spending is expected to grow rapidly as economic fortunes improve, the middle class expands and governments invest in broader access to health care. See Drugs/A4
Trash andsewage litter Rio's Olympicwaterways
32 pages, 5sections
Q I/I/e use recycled newsprint
Mark Mcncal, David Wray and Andy Zeigert l The Bulletin
emerging
RIO DE JANEIRO — Rio de Janeiro's endless beaches and lush tropical forest will be a photographer's dream during the 2016 Olympics. But zoom in on the likes of once-pristine Guanabara Bay, and the pic-
ture is of household trash and raw sewage. In the neon green waters around the site of the future Olympic Park, the average fecal pollution rate is 78 times that of the Brazilian government's "satisfactory" limitand 195 times the level consid-
ered safe in the U.S. Nearly 70 percent of Rio's sewage goes untreated, meaning runoff from its many slums and poor neighborhoods drain into waters soon to host some of the world's best athletes. Unless Brazil makes headway in cleaning up its
waters, experts warn the Summer Games could pose health risks to athletes and mar what officials hope will be a global showcase event. Instead of the soaring vistas of Sugarloaf Mountain, the world could instead see old couches in the bay and tons of
dead fish floating atop a city lake. Rio's Olympic committee has pledged in writing that the pollution problems will be fixed, and many had hoped the Olympics would force authorities to tackle decades of neglect and poor planning. SeeWaterways /A5
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 20'I3
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NATION de%ORI,D
U.S., Afghanistan agree on
Iran nlICIear talkS —A newround of Iran nuclear talks began in fits and starts Wednesday,with the two sides ending afirst session
semri pact, sansapology
both sides indicated a first-step agreementwas possible on adeal
By Thom Shanker New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — S ecretary of State John Kerry said Wednesday that the U nited States and Afghanistan had completed a bilateral security agreement that will be submitted to a grand council of elders in Kabul the next day, but he stated emphatically that there had been no discussion of a U.S. apology to President Hamid Karzai or to his nation as part of the deal. "President Karzai didn't ask for an apology. There was no
discussion of an apology," Kerry said. "I mean, it's just not even on the table." Kerry's comments appeared to contradict statements from Afghan officials, including Kar-
zai's spokesman, Aimal Faizi, who said Tuesday that Karzai would drop his opposition to future U.S. counterterrorism raids on private homes in return for a letter by President Barack Obama acknowledging military mistakes that have hurt Afghans and promising that they would not be repeated. In interviews, Faizi emphasized that Karzai's approval of the final wording about U.S. home raids — the last remaining holdup to a long-term security agreement, according to Afghan and U.S. officialswas contingent upon receiving such a message from Obama. And while Faizi did not use the word "apology," it was clear that Karzai was seeking some demonstration of contrition or
regret, at the least. There was no i m mediate confirmation Wednesday night from Afghan officials about agreement on the wording of the security deal, which is to approve a framework for a lasting U.S. military presence in Afghanistan past the 2014 troop withdrawal deadline. The agreement itself would not establish a final troop number. That is still to come from the Obama administration, and is expectedtobe a force ofbetween 8,000 and 12,000 personnel to train, advise and assist Afghan forces. There would be no direct combat role for most of those troops — only for the much smaller counterterrorism force envisioned by U.S. and NATO planners.
just minutes after it began amid warnings from Iran's supreme leader of "red lines" beyond which his country will not compromise. Still, to roll back lran's nuclear program in exchange for limited sanctions
relief, despite strong opposition from Israel and unease inboth Congress andamong Iranian hard-liners. President BarackObama appears determined to reachsuch an agreement, which could be a major step toward reconciliation between the United States and a for-
mer ally that turned adversary after the Islamic Revolution of 1979. IllinaiS gay marriage —lllinois Gov. PatQuinn signed legislation Wednesdayallowing same-sex weddings starting this summer, making President Barack Obama's home state the16th overall — and largest in the nation's heartland — to legalize gay marriage. Speaking
in front of thousands at the University of lllinois at Chicago, Quinn said the new law ensured that"lllinois does not have a situation
where individuals are discriminated against in anywaywhen it comes to love and marriage." Freedem medaIS —Honoring the legacy of John F.Kennedy, President BarackObamalaid a wreath at the assassinated president's gravesite as a nation remembers that terrible day in Dallas a half-cen-
tury ago Friday. Obama also recognized agroup of distinguished Americans — including Bill Clinton andOprahWinfrey — with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, an award created by Kennedy. Obama
was joined at Arlington National Cemetery onWednesday byClinton, and each president held handswith Ethel Kennedy, widow of Robert F. Kennedy, as they climbed a flight of stairs to the burial site on a steep hillside overlooking the nation's capital.
OUR ADDRESS Street ...........1777 S.W.Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing......... Po. Box6020 Bend, OR97706
ROAD TO RECOVERY INTHE PHILIPPINES
SimpsoiAve i
Radel plea —Florida Republican Rep.Henry"Trey" Radel pleaded guilty Wednesday to amisdemeanor charge of cocaine possession and was sentenced to ayear's probation. "I've hit a bottom where I realize I need help," Radel told a judge in acknowledging that he
purchased 3.5 grams of cocaine from anundercover police officer. As part of a pleaagreement, Radel acknowledged heagreed to buy the cocaine for $250 in a Washington, D.C., neighborhood on Oct. 29. After the undercover officer gave Radel the drugs, federal agents
confronted him, court documents show. Radelagreed to talk with the agents and invited them to his apartment, where he also retrieved a vial of cocaine he had in the home, the documents said. ADMINISTRATION
Iraq bemdlngS —A waveof bombings hit mainly Shiite commercial
Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief
areas in and outside Baghdad on Wednesday, killing at least 35 people,
Iraqi officials said. Theattacks, many of whichwerecar bombs, were part of a surge in violence that has rocked Iraq over the past months as insurgents seek to thwart the Shiite-led government's efforts to
John Costa........................541-363-0337
stabilize the country. Five ofWednesday's blasts were parkedcar bombs while at least three were remotely detonated bombs, police officials said. The deadliest attack was a bomb hidden inside a cafe in
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt..... 541-363-0370 Circulation/Operations .... 541-365-5605 Finance Holly West..........541-363-0321
Baghdad's southwestern neighborhood of Bayaa,which killed six and wounded16 others, a police officer and a medical official said.
Human Resources Traci Oonaca .....................
Bullying case —Charges havebeendropped against two teenage girls whom a sheriff had accused of bullying a Florida classmate who later committed suicide, the girls' attorneys said Wednesday.
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Ooran.........541-363-0360 City Desk JosephOitzler ..541-363-0367 Community Life, Health Julie Johnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials Richard Coe .....541-363-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 News Editor Jan Jordan...541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-363-0366 Sporls Bill Bigelow............ 541-363-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou ...........541-410-9207
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Mailing address.... Po. Box766 Redmond, OR97756
Last month, Polk County Sheriff Grady Juddannounced the arrest of a12-year-old girl and a14-year-old girl as juveniles on stalking charges. He said then that the two were primarily responsible for bul-
lying RebeccaSedwick, a12-year-old who jumped to her death at an David Guuenfelder/The Associated Press
ATyphoon Haiyan survivor carries his belongings still the main focus. Corpses are still being collected through the ruins of Tacloban, Philippines, on his way from beneath the debris. But in aweekor two, auback to his temporary shelter on Wednesday. Hun-
dreds of thousands of peoplewere displaced by the typhoon that tore across several islands in theeastern
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
Q4QsQ a ®zQ4s9
The estimated jackpot is now $50 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn
Wednesday night are:
Q2QSQ9Q32Q 40 Q47 The estimated jackpot is now $6.2 million.
Homeland Security nomination —President BarackObama's
thorities will start transitioning into an "early recovery phase" and planning how best to rebuild the estimat-
pick to lead the Department of Homeland Security moved a step closer to confirmation Wednesday, advancing to the full Senate after
ed 320,000 destroyed houses.
a swift committee vote. At atime when manytop presidential ap-
Philippines on Nov. 8. The Philippines government said Wednesday that
"It's never too early to start talking about it," said Nancy Lindborg, the assistant administrator of the
the typhoon killed more than4,000 people and left 1,600 missing. Just under two weeks since the ty-
U.S. government's aid arm. "What's very important is to moveasquicklyaspossible,soyouenablepeople
phoon, saving lives andproviding emergency aid are
to start thinking about the future."
pointmentshave been blocked by Senate Republicans,Jeh Johnson's nomination has proved remarkably smooth thus far. The Senate
Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee took just moments to approve Johnson with a voice vote during a meeting Wednesday, less than a week after his confirmation hearing. Just
two of the panel's Republicans, Sens. RandPaul of Kentucky and John McCain of Arizona, asked to be recorded as no votes. McCain is expected to ultimately support him, having called Johnson "highly
................................ 541-504-2336 ................................ 541-546-3203
The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-363-0356.
abandoned concrete plant in September.
JosephPaulFranklin, white supremacist and serial killer, isexecuted in Missouri By Jeremy Kohler St. Louis Post-Dispatch
BONNE TERRE, Mo. Missourihas executed Joseph Paul Franklin, a white supremacist killer who targeted blacks and Jews during a multistate crime spreefrom 1977-1980. F ranklin, 63, was put t o death for the 1977 sniper killing of Gerald Gordon at a suburban St. Louis synagogue. The U.S. Supreme Court early Wednesday upheld a federal appeals courtdecisions overturning stays granted Tuesday
is-area synagogue were part of Joseph Paul Franklin's long record ofmurders and other acts of extreme violence across the country, fueled by religious and
+I
qualified" for the post. — From wire reports
racial hate." He asked that Gordon be remembered and that Franklin's victims and their families remain in the thoughts and prayersofMissourians.
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DEADLI 7VES
by federal judges in Jeff erson City, Mo., and St. Louis. Mike O'Connell, of the Missouri Department of P ublic Safety, said the execution got the final OK from Gov. Jay Nixon at 6:05 a.m. By this time, Franklin was already strapped to a table in the state's death chamber atEastern Reception, Diagnostic and C orrectional Center, ready for the injection. He received a lethal injection at 6:07 a.m., and his death was confirmed at 6:17 a.m. The execution was the first in Missouri using a single drug, pentobarbital. T hree m e dia witnesses said Franklin did not seem to express pain. He did not make any final written statement and did not speak a word inthe death chamber. After the injection, he blinked a few times, breathed heavily a few times, and swallowed hard, the witnesses said. The heaving of his chest slowed, and finally stopped, they said. Jessica Machetta, managing editor of Missourinet, who witnessed the execution, said Franklin did not seem to take a breath after 6:10 a.m. Nixon said in a statement: "The cowardly and calculated shootings outside a St. Lou-
IJ We will be closed Thursday, November 28'"
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THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries,breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Thursday, Nov. 21, the 325th day of 2013. There
are 40 days left in the year.
CUTTING EDGE
HAPPENINGS
•
— Jennifer Lawrence is back
as Katniss Everdeen in the
McAllister swears inVance McAllister, a 39-year-old high school dropout and Army
'Selfie' picked as word of the year
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Hunger Gamesreturns widely anticipated film "Hunger Games: Catching Fire," which hits theaters today. Movie times, D6
TRENDING
We've all sat around a fire in the woods or in a friend's backyard. But in an epoch of 'reduce, reuse, recycle,' some folks have increasingly looked to wood-burning stoves to heat their homes and cook their meals. Now, there's a competition to see who can do it most effectively.
veteran who prevailed in a special election in Louisiana's 5th District, will be sworn in as
the state's newest Republican congressman.
HISTORY Highlight:On Nov. 21, 1973, President Richard Nixon's attorney,J. Fred Buzhardt, revealed the existence of an 18~/~-minute gap in one of the
White House taperecordings related to Watergate. In1789, North Carolina became the12th state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. In1861,Judah Benjamin,w ho
had beenacting Confederate Secretary of War,wasformally named to the post. In1920, the lrish Republican Army killed12 British intelligence officers and two auxiliary policemen in the Dublin
area; British forces responded by raiding a soccer match, killing 14 civilians. In1922, Rebecca Felton of
Georgia was sworn in asthe first woman to serve in the U.S. Senate. In1931, the Universal horror film "Frankenstein," starring
Boris Karloff as the monster and Colin Clive as his creator, was first released. In1942, the Alaska Highway
was formally opened. In1974,bombs exploded at
a pair of pubs in Birmingham, England, killing 21 people. (Six
suspects were convicted of the attack, but the convictions of the so-called "Birmingham Six" were overturned in1991.) In1980, 87 people died in a fire at the MGM Grand Hotel in
Las Vegas, Nev. In1991,the U.N. Security
Council chose Boutros Boutros-Ghali of Egypt to be
Secretary-General. Ten years ago: More thana dozen rockets fired from donkey carts slammed into Iraq's Oil Ministry and two downtown Baghdad hotels used by foreign journalists and civilian defense
contractors. Health officials said a deadly outbreak of hepatitis A at a Chi-Chi's Mexican restaurant in suburban Pitts-
burgh was probably causedby green onions from Mexico. Five years ago: Wall Street staged a comeback, with the
major indexes jumping more than 5 percent and the Dow
Jones industrials surging nearly 500 points. Somali pirates
released ahijacked Greekowned tanker, MV Genius, with
all19 crew members safeand the oil cargo intact after pay-
ment of a ransom. One year ago:Twoweeks after he was re-elected to a ninth full term in Congress, Democratic
Rep. JesseJackson Jr. quietly resigned, in a letter in which he acknowledged anongoing federal investigation. (Jackson would eventually be sentenced to 2~/~ years in prison for
illegally spending campaign money.) Israel and theHamas militant group in Gaza agreed to a cease-fire to end eight
days of the fiercest fighting in nearly four years.
BIRTHDAYS Today's Birthdays:Actor JosephCampanell a is86.Actress Marlo Thomas is 76.Actor Rick Lenz is 74. Singer Dr. John is 73. Actress Juliet Mills
is 72. Basketball Hall of Famer Earl Monroe is 69. Comedian-director Harold Ramis is
69. Actress Goldie Hawn is68. Rock musician Brian Ritchie
(The Violent Femmes) is 53. Actress Nicollette Sheridan is 50. Singer-actress Bjork is 48. Pro and College Football Hall of
Famer Troy Aikman is47. MLB All-Star player Ken Griffey Jr. is 44. Football player-turned-talk
show host Michael Strahan is 42. Pop singer Carly Rae Jepsenis 28. — From wire reports
By Matthew L. Wald New York Times News Service
By Henry Chu
W ASHINGTON — O n l y blocks away, the Energy Department manages the search for quarks and NASA scours the heavens for E a r th-like planets. But inside a big white tent on the National Mall, the focus is on something simpler: oak, ash and elm, and how to make them heat a house with as little pollution as possible. It is not rocket science, but the 12 teams competing to solve the problem are finding ways to get twice as much heat out of a log of firewood. The effort preserves woodlands, reduces the labor and expense for the mostly low-income people who use wood and cleans the air. The stoves on display here, T.J. Kskpatrick/The New YorkTimes in a tent with a dozen chimDesigns on display at the Wood Stove Decathlon, in a tent with a dozen chimneys poking through the neys incongruously poking roof, use combinations of computer controls, catalytic converters and sophisticated gas-flow modelthrough the roof, use coming to make burning as exact a science as it can possibly be. binations of c omputer controls, c a talytic c o n verters and sophisticated gas-flow Many of the stoves use cat- "It's a combination of low tech and high tech. modeling. alytic converters, somewhat It's a humble area that doesn't get enough "It's a combination of low like the ones in cars, to take tech and h i g h t e ch," said carbon monoxide and hydro- attention." James Meigs, one of the judg- carbons, both pollutants, and — James Meigs, judge for the Wood Stove Decathlon, es. "It's a humble area that convert them at high temperaa contest to build a more efficient wood stove doesn't get enough attention." ture into simple combustion On Tuesday, the judges will products: carbon dioxide and announce a winner based on water. In a car, the heat prothe stove's efficiency, clean- duced by a catalytic converter puter controls the fan, varying is transformed into electri cliness, consumer appeal and is useless, but in a stove, it is its speed to keep the tempera- ity. But the heat that they do price. The w i nner r eceives part of the product. ture in the firebox in the prop- not use goes into heating the $25,000, but t h e b r a gging er range. house, he said, so "it really isn't waste." rights ar e p r obably w o r th Clever conservation In a twist, the electricity more, said J o h n A c k erly, The stoves use clever inno- to run the computer and fan A battery, intended for an president of the Alliance for vations. Traditional stoves pull comes from a thermoelectric automobile, runs the system Green Heat, which is running in cool air, but a team from the generator, driven by the heat on startup and is recharged as the competition sponsored by University of M a ryland put of the stove. For production the stove runs. the New York State Energy the air intake pipe inside the models, t h e th e r m oelecMeigs, one of the judges, Research and D evelopment exhaust pipe, an arrangement tric generator will allow the who also is the editor-in-chief Authority, the federal Depart- that heats the inlet air and user to recharge a cellphone, of Popular Mechanics, said ments of Energy and Agricul- cools the exhaust, thus con- said Ryan Fisher, a member t here was something to b e ture, Popular Mechanics mag- serving heat and improving of the team and a graduate said for low tech. "People using wood stoves azine and others. efficiency. student i n f i r e p r o t ection Ackerly, citing census data, Their stove, a p r ototype engineering. in Vermont probably do more "Thermoelectric generators to limit carbon dioxide buildsaid wood was the primary built partly by the machine source of heat for about 23 shop at the university's Col- aren't very e f ficient," Fish- up than all the photovoltaic million American households, lege Park campus, uses a fan er said, explaining that only roofs in Telluride," he said, relargely in rural areas. to draw in air. A small com- about 10 percent of the energy ferring to solar panels.
Los Angeles Times
L ONDON — I n w h a t was described as an unusually unanimous decision, "selfie" has been chosen as Word of the Year by the publishers of the Oxford English Dictionary, beating out "twerk" and a host of other Internet and social media-related terms, such as "bitcoin," that have exploded onto the verbal scene in recent years. "It seems like everyone who is anyone has posted a selfie somewhere on the Internet," Oxford Dictionaries said on its blog, without offering an accompanying selfie of the writer. "If it is good enough for the Obamas or the pope, then it is good enough for Word of the Year." Use of "selfie," to mean a s elf-portrait t y p ically snapped with a smartphone and shared over social networks, has r i sen 17,000 percent in frequency over the past 12 months, Oxford Dictionaries said. "Twerk" experienced a notable midyear surge, thanks to Miley Cyrus, but has not proven quite as popular or universaL Although it was the "runaway winner" for the panel charged with selecting the 2013 Word of the Year, "selfie" was already on Oxford Dictionaries' list of words to watch last year. It made it into Oxford Dictionaries' online version three months ago, but hasn't yet broken through to the magisterial Oxford English Dictionary or OED. P erhaps surprising t o some, the term was first recorded in Australia, not the U.S. or Britain, in 2002.
A proper balance Wood stoves typically deliver only40 to 50 percent of the energy potential of the wood in the space they are supposed to heat. Some of the models in the competition deliver more than 90 percent and make the smoke cleaner. In wood stoves, cleanliness and efficiency turn out to be the same thing. "If you can see it, if you can smell it, that's energy that isn't heating your house," said an-
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other judge, Philip Hopke, a professor at C l arkson University and the director of the Institute for a Sustainable Environment there. Parts of the smoke that can be smelled or seen are particles and gases that failed to burn, Hopke sa>d. The stoves are mostly cast iron or steeland some are covered in enamel or soapstone. They look like low-tech devices, but in the tent they have been hooked up to digital meters that count their output of carbon monoxide and f in e p a r ticles, w hich, like the particles from coal plants, cause respiratory problems. In places with many stove-equipped houses and unfavorable topography, the particles can build up to high concentrations. A successful stove produces a white ash, made up of minerals like silica, calcium and magnesium, and not much else, because all th e w o od has been burned. Managing the combustion for efficiency and cleanliness — a problem recognized for hundreds of years — means providing just enough air for thorough burning, but not too much, because the more air that enters, the more heatleaves the room as exhaust. Some stoves use oxygen sensors,like the ones in cars, to adjust a fan or valve to keep the balance right.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013
Cover Oregon Continued from A1 "I want the system fixed for everybody," he said. King said his team is "laser focused" on getting the site up and running. "We know that Oregonians are frustrated," King said, adding he shares in the frustration. About 400 more people have been brought on to help the exchange process applicati ons. More than 25,000 applications, at about 19-pages each, have been submitted, King said. Oregon embraced the idea of creatingan exchange early and was initially touted as being ahead of other states. On Wednesday, Cover Oregon officials said, in part, that being one ofthe early adopters hurt the state. As federal guidelines and requirements changed, Cover Oregon and its contractor Oracle had to switch gears. In addition, King said, they simply needed more time. "(We) took a four-and-a-half year project and tried to condense it in about two years," he sa>d. The website is now expected to be functional Dec. 16. Rep. John Lively, D-Springfield, asked King how probable the mid-December rollout was and questioned King's credibility. King said he was going to operate under the assumption that the Dec. 16 date was not accurate, despite being told by officials at Oracle it would be
ready.
"I'm assuming it's not going to work," King said. "I'm putting in place all the contingencies I can put in place as if it's not going to work. I'm doing thatbecause every time a commitment has been made that it's going to work, it hasn't." King said he knew before the website was set to launch it was likely not ready. "Last May, June, July, we should have been doing massive testing of t his system," King said. But the site wasn't even ready to test. "We were never able to do end-to-end testing," he said. Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend, told King he was confused by
Drugs Continued from A1 Although patients in the developing world are primarily
TODAY'S READ: STORM DEFENSE
Dec. 4deadline insurance exchange,said consumers should apply no later than Dec. 4 in order to be covered by the first of
By Neil Chatterjee
the year. Visit www.coveroregon.
JAKARTA, Indonesia Replanted mangrove trees in Southeast Asia are getting credit for protecting against d eadly tsunamis a n d t y phoons such as Haiyan in the Philippines and cutting greenhouse gas emissions. Mangrove regeneration in Northern Samar, about 100 miles north of the worst-hit Philippine city of Tacloban, helped m i n imize d a mage from the Nov. 8 storm, according to the Trowel Development Foundation, which oversaw the plantings. On Indonesia's Sumatra island, where a 2004 tsunami killed 170,000residents,companies including Danone and Credit Agricole SA have put up about $4 million in exchange for tradable carbon offsets tied to the reforestation. Mangroves have twisted webs of roots above ground that absorb carbon dioxide linked t o c l i m ate c h ange and helpprotect coasts from tidal surges such as the one that killed at least 3,900 people when Typhoon Haiyan swamped the Philippines this month. The storm, one of the strongest to make landfall, has gripped UN climate talks in Warsaw this week, with a Philippine delegate tearfully calling for action to slow climate change. "Had we not protected the mangrove trees against illegal cutting and had we not planted the areas surrounding the fish farms with native mangrove species, the super typhoon would have destroyed everything that the poor fisherfolks established," Leonardo Rosario, a develo pment consultant on t h e Northern Samar project, said by email on Tuesday.
1-855-CoverOr to request an application.
"I'm assuming it's
not going to work. I'm putting in place a/I the contingencies I can put in place as if it's not going to work. I'm doing that because every time a commitment has been made that it's going to work, it hasn't." — Rocky King, Cover Oregon executive director his PowerPoint presentation on how to apply, let alone how to
get through the paper application and have it in on time. "The problem ispeople are going tolose insurance coverage on Jan. I," Conger said. Rep. Jim Weidner, R-Yamhill, asked at what point does the state call it quits. He said he's not convinced the exchange would be self-sustaining by 2015. "Has the governor said, 'Hey, maybe we should cut our loss-
es,'...Or is he going to keep throwing dollars at this just to save face?"Weidner said. King said it's not about saving face, noting he's taken a bruising in the press. "I'm not trying to save face, my face has been battered," King said. But in six months, King said, his objective is to "have smiles on everybody's face." "I still believe we can do this,"
King said. — Reporter, 541-554-1162 Idake@bendbulletin.com
As consumers everywhere stretch their medical dollars, the i n stitute p r ojects t h at
spending on generic drugs will rise overthe next five years the total. The institute also said the
drug pipeline includes innovations in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, cystic fibrosis, melanoma and prostate cancer.
and uncertainty of the UN approvalprocess. While Indonesia has 141 U N-approved projects d e signed to cu t 2 4 9 m i l lion metric tons of emissions, the nation is designing its own program and methodology, Agus Purnomo, a presidential adviser for climate change, said in Jakarta on Nov. 14. The domestic plan would rely on c ompanies v o luntarily buying offsets, he said. "Most investors in the Yagasu project are corporate and will use those credits to offset part of their own CO2 emissions," said C h arlotte Pasternak, head of external communications for Danone in Paris. Indonesia's rate of deforestation is about half the level of a decade ago because of a government moratorium on logging in n a tural f orests, Purnomo said. Government figures put annual deforestation at about 450,000 hectares (4,500 square kilometers) for 2011-12, he said.
Bloomberg News
com for more details or call
buying generic drugs, which from 27percent to 36 percentof sell for a fraction of the price of name-brand versions, the increasinguse ofpharmaceuticals across large populations is driving a surge in drug spending, the institute found.
Tsunami-blockingmangrovetrees lauded
Officials with Cover Oregon, the state's health
No buffer in Tacloban The devastation in Tacloban was aggravated because it is near open seas with no mangroves to provide a buffer, he said. "So the super typhoon hit the land with it s strongest
might and high speed because there is no mangrove forest that should have slowed it down," he said. "I hope the government would now realize the import of mangrove forests in protecting people, structures and livelihoods in the coastal areas." Mangroves in the Philippines have been lost at a rate of about I percent a year, with
Dimas Ardian / Bloomberg News
A worker plants mangrove trees on the island of Bali in Indonesia in 2007. A study after the 2004 tsunami in Aceh, Indonesia, which killed 220,000, cited models showing that 30 coastal trees per 100 square meters may reduce the flow of a tsunami by 90 percent. conditions "very much degraded," Daniel Murdiyarso, a forestry scientist at the Bogor, Indonesia-based Center for International Forestry Research, said Monday. Mangroves, found on marine coasts and e stuaries,
may help low-lying coasts adapt to rising sea levels by increasing se d i mentation, he said. The t rees, adapted to changing water levels with roots several feet above ground, can help reduce the height and power of waves generated by storms, according to a Cambridge University report published in 2012 by The Nature Conservancy and Wetlands International. A study in the wake of the 2004 tsunami of Aceh, Indonesia, which killed 220,000 people living near the Indian Ocean, cited models showing that 30 coastal trees per 100 square meters may reduce the flow of a tsunami by 90 percent, according to a 2005 report in the journal Science. While field-based evidence was limited, replanting coastal mangroves should buffer communities from future tsunamis, it said. "I have been in far too many disasterareas as a member of the UNESCO International Tsunami Survey Team and seen too many coastal forests overwhelmed to pu t m u ch faith in trees being effective defenses against a tsunami," said Brian McAdoo, professor of science at Yale-NUS Col-
lege in Singapore. The Aceh project by the Medan-based c onservation group Yagasu involves restoring 12,355 acres on the northern coast of Sumatra. The
program will help develop a
methodology for a program letting I n donesian companies buy credits to voluntarily offsettheir greenhouse gas emissions, said Bambang Suprayogi, Yagasu's founder, in a Monday interview.
Accelerating deforestation
Pledge to reduce emissions
A report in the journal Science this month, based on high resolution global maps of forestcover change, said Indonesia's deforestation has accelerated and put the level at more than 20,000 kilometers a year in 2011-12, most than four times the government's figure. "Of all countries globally, Indonesia exhibited the largest increase in forest loss," the report said. Total emissions from Indonesia may reach 2.9 billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalentin 2020 under business as usual projections, Purnomo said. That compares with an environment ministry estimate of 1.79 billion tons in 2005, with 63 percent of that from land use change, forestry and peat fires. The World Bank put the 2005 figure at 3 billion. Greenpeace,the global environmental group, targeted
Indonesian Pres i d ent Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who leaves office next year, pledged in 2009 to reduce Indonesia's emissions by 26 percent at the end of the decade. Deforestation is the main cause of emissions from Indonesia, named by the World Bank as the third-largest emitter on earth in a 2007 report. Indonesia and the Philippines are among about 200 nations meeting in Warsaw this week for climate talks. Indonesia, Southeast Asia's largest economy, doesn't have an obligation under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which envisioned that developing countries would host emission-reduction projects to generate offsets against pollution limits in richer nations. The U.S. never signed the treaty, while Japan, Russia, Canada and New Z ealand have opted against extending their commitments to Kyoto. The UN has yet spell out how credits from reforestation can be recognized. Yagasu hopes to save 9 million tons of carbon dioxide over the Aceh project's 20year time frame, Suprayogi said. While it has applied for UN validation, he expects most of the credits to be sold under a voluntary emission program to avoid the length
Indonesian paper company APP and palm oil producer PT Sinar Mas Agro Resourc-
es and Technology, and buyers oftheir products such as Mattel Inc and Nestle SA, for clearingforests that are home to o rangutans. APP said in February it would end natural forest clearance. PT Sinar Mas has said a 2010 auditshowed the Greenpeace
allegations were unfounded.
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THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
The early years
Oswald Continued from A1 It seemed that s omeone with a B B g u n h a d b e en shooting at a n a p a r tment b uilding he o w ned i n t h e B ronx, p i n ging t h e d a r k brick, piercing the windows, even targeting th e e l derly women who sat and gossiped in front of the building, on the sunny side. A minor nuisance in the overall context of early 1950s New York, but it had to be dealt with. He questioned tenants in the building across the street, figuring that the shots were coming from that direction. A boy piped up to say that the shooter was one of Jacobs' own tenants: a young t eenager who had j ust r e ceived a BB gun as a present. L ee, the b o y s a id . L e e Oswald. "So he got his experience in my building how to use a BB gun," Jacobs said for posterity, adding that this former tenant "eventually killed President John Kennedy." "He k i l led h i m?" a s ked the 11-year-old girl, A lysha Jacobs, in t h e d i sbelief of innocence. Until now, the story that the grandfather shared nearly three decades ago has been a private curio in the stocked cabinet of Jacobs family lore. If true, and the Jacobs family says it is, the tale would add one more detail to tantalize those still scouring the brief, troubled life of Lee Harvey Oswald for answers to the how and why of a presidential assassination, 50 years ago this Friday. A nd one m or e f l ash o f
In August 1952, young Lee and his mother, Marguerite Oswald, moved into an apartment on East 92nd Street in Manhattan, joining another of her sons, John Pic, and his wife and young child. The visit began well enough, with John taking Lee on day trips to the Museum of N a tural History and the Staten Island f erry. But th e m o ther and daughter-in-law clashed, and the guests left after a particularly nasty quarrel. The Oswalds moved to the Bronx, first t o a b a sement apartment on Sheridan Avenue, and then to a five-story apartment building just south of the Bronx Zoo. The landlord was Philip Jacobs, who often brought his work home to Brooklyn, according to one of his sons, Dr. Martin Jacobs, a psychologist in Woodmere, N.Y., and the father of Alysha. "I used to count the dimes that my father brought home from the washers and dryers that the tenants used in the building," Martin Jacobs
says.
M arguerite Oswal d worked long days at a Brooklyn department store and, later, for a hosiery company. Her son, now 13, was a latchkey kid and a c hronic truant, more likely to be at the zoo than in a seventh-grade classroom. F inally, i n A pr i l 19 5 3 , Lee Oswald wa s r e manded to a h om e fo r j u venile delinquents. A social worker there described him as a "seriously w ithdrawn, d e tached a n d emotionally isolated" son of a foreboding. cold, self-involved mother. Among the many pit stops M arguerite O swald w a s in Oswald's unhappy child- " very t i g ht-lipped," P h i l ip hood was a 17-month stay in Jacobs later told his grandNew York City, a disconcert- daughter Alysha. "She was ing place for a w i t hdrawn, sort of anti-Semitic in her apo rnery te e n ager wh o s e proach every time I spoke to Southern accent announced a her." young life spent in Louisiana As for the son, he recalled, and Texas. he was like any other teenThe report by t h e P resi- age boy, "snappy in their and ent's Commission on t h e swers." But he added that no Assassination o f P r e sident good would come from an Kennedy, also known as the absentee landlord getting inWarren Commission, traced volved. "It was better to talk his New York steps. nicely to them than to be an-
Waterways
gry with them," he said. T he y oung O s w ald r e turned to school, but he did little more than sail paper airplanes and refuse to salute the American flag. And, at some point, he apparently received a BB gun. "So he went with his friend who lived across the street and shot at the tenants who w ere sitting in f r ont of t h e b uilding an d a t o u r w i n dows," Jacobs told his granddaughter, his voice gravelly, matter-of-fact. "Which l e ft holes in the windows. From that point on, of course, havi ng found out who did t h e s hooting, we s or t o f t o o k the situation in hand and it
Continued from A1 Leonardo Gr yner, c hief operating officer of Rio's organizing committee, has acknowledged the extent of the water quality problem. But he said projects were "well advanced" to make good on the city's commitment to reduce 80 percent of the pollution flowing into the bay, where sailing an d w i n d s u r f ing events are to be held. With just 2'/2 years to go before the games, however, experts say cleanup efforts are moving at a snail's pace and haven't significantly improved capacity in sewage treatment plants or hooked up more of the city's 6 million residents. "The high concentrations of untreated human waste means there are pathogens and disease-causing organisms in the water," said Dr. Casey Brown, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. "If I were going to take part, I would make sure all my shots were up to date." Tests show the problems are still severe in several of the competition venues. At the site of the Olympic Park, in t h e B a rra neighborhood, untreated human waste flows f r o m n e arby condominiums and sprawling shantytowns, presenting an immediate health hazard, according to Rio de Janeiro Environment Ministry documents examined by The Associated Press. Pollution fills many of the waterways in Barra, where about half the Olympic events will be held. In the waters just off Copacabana beach, the measurement of fecal coliform bacteria spiked to 16 times the Brazilian government's satisfactory level as recently as three weeks ago, bad news for the marathon swimmers and triathletes set to compete there. The Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas often experiences huge fish die-offs that leave its surface blanketed with tons of dead fish. Rowing and canoe-
stopped." Jacobs did not elaborate, but his son M a rtin r ecalls that his f ather claimed to have confronted the Oswalds. They were to pay for the damage, and if it happened again, they were out. I n J a nuary 1954, the Oswalds returned to New Orleans, reducing the New York C it y p o pulation of 7.89 million by two, their faintest of marks on the metropolis soon forgotten. For a while.
Reconstructin g Oswald's life Nearly 10 years later, the traumatized country tried to make sense of a presidential assassination by reconstructing Oswald's 24 years, from his birth in New Orleans to his own murder, two days after Kennedy's. This included his brief time in the Bronx. A reporter for Th e N ew York T i mes f o und G u ssie Keller, a longtime tenant in the building at E ast 179th S treet, wh o r e c alled h o w M arguerite O swald w o u l d cry about her i n ward son. The tenant then referred the reporter t o P h i li p J a cobs, who declined to say much t o The T imes; he told h i s granddaughter y ears l a t er that he had not wanted to get involved. K eller a lso d i r ected a n agent for the FBI to Jacobs. But the landlord again chose not to mention the BB-gun story — or any story, for that matter — about the former tenants of Apartment 3C.
"i"~
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Felipe Dana/The Associated Press
Small boats sit on the shore of Guanabara Bay in the suburb of Sao Goncaio, across the bay from Rio de Janeiro, on Tuesday. The bay has become a watery dump for waste from shipyards and two commercial ports. Rio de Janeiro will host the 2016 Olympic Games. ing events are set to take place on the briny lake. Another entrenched problem is th e 148-square-mile Guanabara Bay, where the only exit for f oul, polluted waters is through a narrow opening into t h e A t l antic Ocean. Home to a thriving artisanal fishing industry and popular palm-lined beaches as recently as the late-1970s, the bay has become a watery dump for waste from shipyards and two commercial ports as well as leachate, the toxic byproduct of mountains of rotting trash sitting at what was South America's largest landfill until its closure last year. At lo w t i d e , h o usehold trash, including old washing machines and soggy couches, float atop vast islands of a ccumulated sewage a n d sediment. Experts say it's even possible that v essels plowing through the water at speeds of more than 20 mph during Olympic events could collide with floating detritus below the surface. Ecology professor Ricardo Freitas knows all too well the risks. As part of his work with a conservation group trying to save Rio's besieged urban caimans, Freitas r egularly w ades in and wrestles thereptiles onto shore or into boats to tag them. "There's no way to work in
these waters, where you are literally neck deep in feces in some places, and not be afraid of the health effects," Freitas said, adding that on the one occasion when he was bitten by a caiman, the small wound got severely infected because of the contaminated water. "Show me the Olympic athlete who's going to have the courage to get into waters like these."
Cleanup efforts With othermeasures coming up short, authorities are pinning their cleanup efforts on the construction of "river treatment units," or R T Us, which are facilities built over rivers that filter most of the trash and human waste before the waters pour into the bay. Costly to operate because they rely on a fleet of trucks to shuttle the collected waste to landfills, RTUs are seen by environmentalists as a stopgap measure that fails to prevent sewage and trash from being dumped, only cleaning them up afterward. Rio officials are also counting on a fleet of 10 garbage boats that will ply the waters of the bay, filtering out garbage and potentially danger-
ous larger debris. The most visible cleanup measures are "eco-barriers," chains of plastic buoys strung acrossrivers that block some of the trash.
• COYER OREGON APPLICATION FAIR •
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013
STATE NEWS
Silverton
Crater Lake
• Christmas trees: Business is booming for Northwest farmers, B3 • Budget cuts:At Crater Lake National Park
halts to snowplowing and more,B3
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us! The Bulletin
www.bendbulletin.com/local
Public
BOWMAN DAM
er e inro ucin waer i By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., will reintroduce legislation today that authorizes the release of unallocated water behind Bowman Dam into the Crooked River, helping Prineville ease its water woes. The Crooked River Collaborative Water Security Act of 2013, cosponsored by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., would move a Wild and Scenic boundary line from the middle of the dam about a quarter of a mile down the river. This administrative change would open the 240-foot-high dam to hy-
dropower development, which proponents say could bring 50 construction jobs to the area for two years. It also authorizes the release of 5,100 unallocated acre-feet of water into the Crooked River, and calls upon stakeholders to create a dry year management plan to help decide whether and how much additional water should be released at other times. "The full potential of the Crooked River and the Prineville Reservoir has beckoned for decades, but a common agreement regarding water has just been out of reach," Merkley told The Bulletin
Wednesday. "It's exciting to be putting this legislation forward again with the full support of the range of stakeholders." Those stakeholders include the city of Prineville, which plans to use the extra water in the river to offset groundwater needed to supply an additional 500 homes in the city. Those homes are currently using shallow wells and septic systems. Merkley and Wyden introduced similar legislation during the last Congress, but the bill stalled without ever getting a floor vote. U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, introduced leg-
gets 1st
islation with many of the same provisions as the Senate version, minus the authorization to release additional water beyond the5,100 acre-feet,during the last Congress. He reintroduced his bill again this year without changes; the House of Representatives passed it unanimously in October. At the time, Walden said he was open to amendments to his bill, but it was important to start the legislative process so the bill has the chance to become lawbefore itexpires at the end of this session of Congress, the way last year's efforts did. SeeDam/B5
Call a reporter Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367
comin soon
Deschutes............541-383-0376 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367
State projects......541-410-9207 Salem ....................541-554-1162 D.c....................... 202-662-7456
look at school Cleslgll By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Community members got a look Wednesday at designs for not only Bend's next elementary school, but for other schools that may come in the future. The plans for Bend's newest elementary school will also serve as a prototype for future schools. The building, expected to open in fall 2015, is being
designed by Bend-based Steele Associates Architects and has a construction budget of just under $15 million. The 600-student school will be located on a 12.5-acre site east of Third Street between Reed Market and Brosterhous roads. The land falls within a mostly undeveloped area that Lands Bend LLC intends to develop into a residential neighborhood. The school is funded
Business ..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands.......... 541-61 77812 Public safety.........541-383-0387 Special projects...541-617-7831
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletinIIbendbulletin.com
by a $96 million bond approved by voters in May, which will also support the construction of a new middle school next to Summit High School. "Hopefully this design will not only work at this location but will serve the district for decades," said Scott Steele, the project principal architect. "Some things are inherent to good design, one component is using flexible space and another is maximizing sunlight. If you have those two things, you're already
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email event information to news©bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in thesubject, and include contact a name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
• School newsandnotes: Email news itemsand notices of general interest to newsclbendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academic achieveme nts to youthIIbendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
Photos by Andy Tullis i The Bulletin
Unlike many of Bend's current elementary schools, the design calls for a distinct cafeteria and
Spohn Ranch employees
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbulletin.com
work on the new skatepark and We see fun comin ng your way,
• Community events:
gym space. Steelesaid
skatepath at Ponderosa Park in
Tlns pnrk v>ll be unrlcrgo ngreno N)on
Email events to communitylife© bendbulletin.com orclickon "Submit anEvent" online at bendbulletin.com. Details onthe calendar page inside. Contact: 541-383-0351
Bend on Wednesday morning.
a xvtsmagh spnng201I Imp>Ovements mclude.
According to the Bend Park 8 Recreation District, the skatepark
• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries:
a long way."
and skatepath will be completed in
this will allow for greater functionality in both areas, citing as an example the ability to hold students in the gym during inclement weather without preventing other students from using the cafeteria. SeeSchool /B5
the first week of December.
TheMilestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-383-0358
Bendcouncil hearssevver rate hikeplan
READER PHOTOS • We want to see your themed photos for
another special version of Well shot! that will run in the
Outdoors section. Submit your best work at beudbulletiu.cum
/sigusufwinterand we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the
great outdoors to readerphutusO beudbulletiu.cem and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll
11Mboard feet could come from fire area By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Deschutes National Forest officials early this week final-
choosethe bestfor
ized plans for salvage logging
publication.
of woods burned by the Pole Creek Fire, more than a year since the fire was called completely contained. "It's all about economics," said Kristie Miller, district rangerforthe Sisters Ranger District. "It's trying to get some wood to the mills and some people to work and remove some hazards along the roads." The plans call for harvesting 11 million board feet of fire-killed trees, and gathering 880,000 board feet of firewood, from 38 units on 962 acres of "stand replacement fire areas." About 1.3 million board feet of hazard trees along 42 miles of roads will also be put up for sale.
Submission requirements: Include ae much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — es well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Correction In a story headlined "U.S. 97 project won't
limit access to museum" which appearedSunday, Nov. 17, on Page B1, Ja-
neanne Upp's namewas spelled incorrectly. The Bulletin regrets the error.
Salvageloggingfor PoleCreekFire
POLE CREEK
Lightning started the Pole Creek Fire on the weekend of Sept. 8, 2012, and the fire went on to burn more than 26,000 acres. Miller said an advertisement for the timber sales will be put out within the week and bidding should start 10 days later. Two big questions hang over the plans: Will there be interest in the timber sales and will anyone challenge the plans? As timber manager of the Interfor Mill in Gilchrist, Chuck Burley said he could be interested in the timber, depending on the price. He declined to estimate the value of the timber prior to the bidding. "We know what we think it is worth," he said, "but we have to wait and see what they think it is worth." See Fire/A5
By Scott Hammers
The Deschutes National Forest plans to sell 11 million board feet of timber, from nearly 40 units on 962 acres of forest burned in the Pole Creek Fire. The fire near Sisters burned about 26,000 acres in all in late summer and early fall 2012. The forest also plans to sell 1.3 million board feet of timber cut along forest roads in the burn area. TOSisteis
Firewoodunits
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DESCHUTES FOREST
To Sisters ~ A
i
THREE SISTERS WILDERNESS
Pole Creek Fire
16
Salvage areas
16 MILES
perimeter
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Three Creek PLake Source: U.S. Forest Service
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Sewer rates for the businesses turning out Bend's dirtiest wastewater could nearly double under a plan shared Wednesday night with the Bend City Council. The plan, developed by the city's Extra Strength Charge Advisory Committee, is an effort to see that the cost of treating wastewater is more equitably distributed between households, businesses and those businesses that produce wastewater that's unusually dirty, or "extra strength." Councilors took no action Wednesday, but spent more than an hour discussing the issue with the city's business advocate, Carolyn Eagan, and Craig Mavis and Garrett Wales, respectively representing Deschutes Brewery and 10 Barrel Brewing Co. Breweries have been some of the largest contributors of "extra strength" wastewater to the city system in recent years. SeeSewer /B2
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ENDA R students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. BRETT DENNEN: The Northern California folk-pop singer performs; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.randompresents. com. "WHERE ARE YOUGO": A screening of the documentary about a 7,000-mile bicycle expedition across Africa; proceeds benefit the Central Oregon Trail Alliance; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. HOT BUTTEREDRUM:The bay area jamgrass band performs, with Medium Troy; $10 at the door; 9 p.m.; Pakit Liquidators, 903 S.E. Armour Road,Bend;541-389-7047 or www.j.mp/hbrum.
TODAY
FROM THEFUR BRIGADES TO THE BANNOCK WAR: Learn about the region's lndian Wars from Dr. Steven Fountain, a professor of history; free for members, $3 for nonmembers, reservation requested; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. "GETTINGTHE BEST POSSIBLE CARE":A presentation on what end-of-life care could look like if we overcome our cultural aversion to talking about dying; by Ira Byock, a doctor, author and director of palliative medicine at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center and professor at Dartmouth College; $25 plus fees; 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. TERENCE NEAL: Folk-pop; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR FRIDAY HOLMES FORTHE HOLIDAYS": A 1936 whodunit about a Broadway BOOK SALE:Hosted by the United star noted for playing Sherlock Senior Citizens of Bend; 10 a.m.-2 Homes solving one of his guests' p.m.; Bend Community Center, death; $19, $15 seniors, $12 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-323-3344.
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 Theft —A theft was reported at 7:59a.m.Nov.8,in the20500 block of Northeast Gloucester Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 8 a.m. Nov. 8, in the 63100 block of Northeast Beaufort Court. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:37 a.m. Nov. 9, in the 2400 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. DUII —Jason Lee Cuddy, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:30 a.m. Nov. 10, in the area of Northeast Eighth Street and Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:37 p.m. Nov.10, in the 600 block of Northeast Third Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:34 a.m. Nov. 11, in the 62600 block of Northeast Hawkview Road. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 7:17 p.m. Nov. 11, in the 63300 block of Brody Lane. Theft — A theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest made at 9:52 p.m. Nov. 12, in the 'l500 block of Northeast15th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:08 a.m. Nov. 15, in the 2700 block of Northeast 27th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:37 p.m. Nov. 15, in the 200 block of Northeast Second Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:57 p.m. Nov. 15, in the 2500 block of Northeast Neff Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:07p.m. Nov.15, in the1200 block of Northeast Burnside Avenue. DUII —Ceara Sativa Keller, 18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:17 p.m. Nov. 15, in the area of Northeast12th Street and Northeast Greenwood Avenue. DUII —Frank Jeffery Ellis, 56, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:37 a.m. Nov.16, in the area of Southeast Ninth Street and Southeast Armour Road. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:12 a.m. Nov. 16, in the
bendgospelchoir©gmail.com or 541-390-2441. "THE GAME'SAFOOT; OR HOLMES FORTHE HOLIDAYS": A 1936 whodunit about a Broadway star noted for playing Sherlock Homes solving one of his guests' death; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. BEND IMPROV GROUP:The comedy group performs in the style of Who's Line Is It Anyway; $8 in advance, $10 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave.; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. JAZZ ATTHE OXFORD: Featuring King Louie's Portland Blues Review withLisa Mann andAndy Stokes; SOLD OUT; 8 p.m.;TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. jazzattheoxford.com. THE KYLEGASS BAND:The Los Angeles rock band performs, with KG of Tenacious D; $15 in advance, $18 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-4084329 or www.randompresents. com.
AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Boston novelists Lisa Borders, author of "The Fifty-First State," and Ron MacLean, author of "Headlong," read from their novels; free; 5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Allie Brosh presents from her new book, "Hyperbole and a Half: Unfortunate Situations, Flawed Coping Mechanisms, Mayhem, and Other Things That Happened"; free; 7 p.m.; Barnes& Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. Highway20, Bend; 541-318-7242. COLLEGE CHOIRAND VOCAL JAZZ ENSEMBLECONCERTS: Featuring contemporary pieces, folk songs and vocal pop; $5 at door; 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7512. GOSPEL CHOIROF THE CASCADES THANKSGIVING CONCERT:Canned food will be accepted for St. Vincent de Paul, donations will be accepted for The Shepherd's House; free, donationsaccepted;7-8 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; www. freewebs.com/bendgospel /,
Sewer
NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG
Email events at least 10days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event"at vvvvwbendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
1100 block of Southwest Division Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:22 p.m. Nov. 16, in the 400 block of Northeast Revere Avenue. DUII —Dylian Michael Joseph Hoffman, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants and an act of criminal mischief at 5:44 p.m. Nov. 16, in the 3200 block of Northeast Bain Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:58 p.m. Nov. 16, in the 300 block of Southwest Century Drive. DUII —Heather Lynn Savoy, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:13a.m. Nov.18, in the areaof U.S. Highway 97 near milepost145. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:36a.m. Nov.18,inthe2000 block of Northeast Division Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at11:42 a.m. Nov. 18, in the area of Northeast Jackson Avenue and Northeast Shadow Brook Place. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:15 p.m. Nov. 18, in the 20200 block of Fairway Drive. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:04 a.m. Nov. 19, in the 800 block of Southwest Blakely Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:53 a.m. Nov. 19, in the 61000 blockofSoutheastRuby PeakLane. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:11 a.m. Nov. 19, in the area of Northeast First Street and Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 1:06 p.m. Nov. 19, in the 2700 block of Northeast Aldrich Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:22 p.m. Nov.19, inthe 200 block of Northwest Outlook Vista Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:50 a.m. Nov. 13, in the 1700 block of Southeast Tempest Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:10 a.m. Nov. 16, in the 2600 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 8:20 p.m. Nov. 15, in the 400 block of Southeast Third Street.
businesses would fall in the standard category; businessContinued from B1 es like bakers and butchers Right now, the city's 42 into the medium category; super-high-strength u se r s and breweries, dairies and represent just 0.16 percent slaughterhouses w ould b e of sewer customers, but classified as super high. amount for 8 percent of the Eagan said cl a ssifying city's cost of treating waste- businesses by industry type water. Figures shared by the is more practical than meacommittee Wednesday indi- suring the output of each of catedthose companies cur- the nearly 2,200 non-resirently pay $197,000 a year dential sewer customers in for sewer services, while it Bend, though it doesn't neccosts the city $6 61,000 to essarily reflect the reality of treat their waste. each individual business. Correspondingly, residenMany b r e w eries o n l y tial sewer customers — 92 brew a few days a month, percent of sewer custom- Eagan said, and send relaers citywide — are paying tively clean waste into the $14.3 million in sewer fees, system otherwise. Bakeries $1.8 million more than the and other businesses may cost of treating their sewage also have an in c onsistent output. waste output day-to-day. With the exception of a As part o f t h e pr o poshandful of businesses classi- al, the city would provide fied as "extra strength" pro- a means for businesses to ducers, all commercial sew- demonstrate that their waste er customers' rates are tied output is below what their directly to their water usage, classification might suggest, regardless of what else is in Wales said th at h a ving that water when it leavesthe an appeal process built into building. the system would likely get The proposal would sort brewers and other businesscommercial sewer users into es on board, even if it means five categories — standard, some of them will end up low, medium, high and su- paying higher rates. per high — with each level C ouncilors will pick u p consisting of business ty pes the issue at a future meeting likely to produce increasing- for additional discussion. ly dirty wastewater. Also Wednesday, councilSmall offices and re tail ors heard from a large con-
• Help usdomore! Pleas ebecomeamember or donatetoday.
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defineand profile the organizations that make up this network. Connections wiLL provide readers with a thorough look at nonprofi t organizationsin Deschutes,Jeff erson,and Crook Counties.
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SALES DEADLINE: DECEMBER 5 CALL 541.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR SPACE TODAY. /
ARTW ALKdjiLIVEMUSIC at Broken Top Club
5:30PM — 7:30PM Avt By: CHRIST1AN HEEB PHOTOGRAPHY Christian Heeb is known worldwide for his stunning photo images of scenic landscapes, lush environments as well as vibrant city scenes. Join us in our Lounge or Award Winning Restaurant! I
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The Bulletin Serving CentralOregon since 7903
ATTENTION CENTRAL OREGON NONPROFIT GROUPS The Bulletin is in the process of verifying and compiling a comprehensive list of nonprofit entities in Central Oregon. Please fill out this form to verify information in order to be considered for publication in Connections. Mail back to: The Bulletin, Attn: Kari Mauser, P.O.Box6020, Bend, OR97708.
E-mail information tokmauser©bendbulletin.com orcall 541-382-1 811 exL 404 Name ofNOnPrOfit GrOuP
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Hundreds oforganizationsandthousandsofvolunteersmakeupthis nonprofit network.
• we are aHigh-Save
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$26 a month to fund the upgrade of the old Juni per equipment to city standards. Councilors agreed to meet with re presentatives o f t h e neighborhoods in the near future to discuss their concerns.
providingthe most basic needs of food, 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 sustafnabflity.
THURSDAY NOV 2 l s ~
• we rehomed 98%
already paying a surcharge of
Central Oregon communities continue to grow due to a nationallyrecognized appreciation for the regfon's quality of life. From
TheBulletin
animalshelter
common areas,or force residents to pay far higher rates to irrigate with city water. Water usersin the affected areas are
Wednesday, December 25, 2013 in The Bulletin
Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 6:29 a.m. Nov. 19, in the area of state Highway126.
Every Friday In
tingent of Southeast Bend residents living in neighborhoods previously served by the Juniper Utility District. When the city took over the water district nearly a decade ago, agreementsbetween the city and the neighborhood associations called for phasing out anirrigation system fed by nearby canals. Residents who testified Wednesday said the fulfillment of that agreement would eliminate landscaped
Publishing
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
Weekly AWs & EnteWainment
Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-7492010 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. COLLEGE CHOIRAND VOCAL JAZZ BOOK SALE: Hosted by the United ENSEMBLE CONCERTS: Featuring Senior Citizens of Bend; 10 a.m.-2 contemporary pieces, folk songs p.m.; Bend Community Center, and vocal pop; $5 at door; 2 p.m.; 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-323-3344. Central Oregon Community College, SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way, Learn entertaining information Bend; 541-383-7512. about electricity; $3 for members, JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring $5 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; High King Louie's Portland Blues Review Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or withLisa Mann and Andy Stokes; SOLD OUT; 5 p.m.;TheOxford www.highdesertmuseum.org. Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., THANKSGIVINGFOOD FAIRE:A Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. pop up market for local food for jazzattheoxford.com. Thanksgiving; order turkeys online; QUOTA INTERNATIONALHOLIDAY free admission; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; DINNER &AUCTION: Featuring a Central Oregon Locavore, 1216 N.E. reception, silent auction, dinner First St., Bend; 541-633-7388 or and live auction; $45 per person, www.centraloregonlocavore.org. registration requested; 5:30 p.m.; SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: The Riverhouse Convention Center, Learn entertaining information 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, about electricity; $3 for members, Bend; 541-815-5664 or www. $5 for nonmembers; 1:30 p.m.; High quotaofcentraloregon.org. Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. REMEMBRANCE OFCHRISTIAN Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or FA'UHIVABENEFIT: Featuring www.highdesertmuseum.org. Hokulea Ohana Hula Dancers, AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Boston Amphibeus Tungs and Kingz novelists Lisa Borders, author of Ambassadors; $5; 5:30 p.m.; "The Fifty-First State," and Ron Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. MacLean, author of "Headlong," Century Drive, Bend; 541-323read from their novels; free; 2 p.m.; 1881 or www.reverbnation.com/ Dudley's Bookshop Cafe,135 N.W. amphibeustungs.
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62000 Broken Top Dr. • 541-383-8200 www.brokentop.com
Nonprofit MissionStatement/Purpose
THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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iiona msex e e o im a r a e r a e a r The Associated Press KLAMATH FALLS — Crater Lake National Park visitors are likely to start seeing the effects of a tight federal budget in 2014, Superintendent Craig Ackerman said. The park's budget next year will take hits from a federal pay raiseof 1 percent and the continued effects of the automatic cuts known as sequestration, he said. Ackerman said this year's cuts were handled by not re-
placing some people who transferredor retired. The likely effects next year: The closed Lost Creek Campground won't reopen, the park won'thire seasonal employees and nonessential snowplowing will be halted. Oregon's only national park gets hundreds of i nches of
snow in a typical winter. Cutting back on plowing means part of the road circling the lake, East Rim Drive, probably will be cleared only as the snow melts on its own. The park's current operating budget is $5 million. Combined with previous cuts, those expected next year would mean it has been reduced by about $500,000 since 2012. eYou are likely to see a significantly reduced presence at the park," Ackerman said. Ackerman said last summer's 16-day shutdown, which came during a busy season, cost the park $15,000 to $25,000 in entrancefees,and the concessionaire that operates Crater Lake Lodge and other facilities estimated its loss at more than $300,000. More than 1 ,200 school
AROUND THE STATE MiSSing hunter —Rescuecrews havefound anelk hunter whowas reported missing in eastern Coos County. The Sheriff's Office said search-
ers spotted LloydSinclair shortly before noonWednesday.The33-yearold hunter suffered shoulder and knee injuries, and medics and search personnel were still extracting him at1:30 p.m. A hunting partner told au-
thorities that Sinclair vanishedMondayafter going into thebrush insearch of an elk. Sinclair, of Gold Hill, was lightly dressed and had no survival
supplies. Searcherslookedfor the hunter Mondayevening andTuesday. Additional teamsfrom southwest OregonandNorthern Californiawereto join the searchWednesday. ClatSkallla pl'lllolpal l'BSlgllS — A principal from the Clatskanie School District has submitted his letter of resignation amid a bullying scandal. The letter from Jeff Baughman, principal at the combined mid-
dleandhighschool,wasacceptedatMonday'sschoolboardmeeting. Baughman and the Clatskanie School District are defendants in a federal lawsuit seeking $5 million in damages on behalf of three girls who allege
they wereharassedandbullied byboyswhenthey were12 and13 years old. Superintendent Lloyd Hartley said the resignation is "something we've been working on." Hartley said the district has increased its supervision
of students and istraining teachers in aprogram that teachesstudents positive behavior.
Portland teacher negotiations — Officials with PortlandPublic Schools have declared an impasse in contract negotiations with teachers. Jeff Barnard/The Associated Pressfile photo
Citing sequestration and a federal pay raise, Craig Ackerman, Crater Lake National Park's superintendent, says a reduction of some services is likely. youth who had planned vis- turned away, said M a rsha its through a s chool-in-the- McCabe, the park's chief of parks program were also interpretation.
The announcementwas madeWednesdayat district headquarters. Under state law,both sidesmust releasetheir final offers within aweek,followed by a 30-day cooling off period. A walkout wouldn't occur until late December at the earliest. The teachers union last authorized a strike in 2003, but a
deal wasquickly reached. City emPIOyee laWSuit —Afederal jury hasordered the cityof Portland topay$19,000 to a Parks Bureauemployee whosaid shewas harassed by a co-worker for being a Christian. Kellymarie Griffin said her co-worker at the Mount Tabor maintenance yard complained when she
said "Godblessyou" after asneeze.Theco-worker also said, "I'm tired of
your Christian attitude." The jury sided last week with Griffin, deciding her workplace was hostile to her religion.
Some C ristmastree arms are overso
Boiling water —ThePortland water Bureauadvised about500 customers in southwest Portland to boil their water Tuesday after an
unexpectedshut-off. Thecustomers were accidentally cut off for ashort time by a construction crew. Becausethe loss of pressure could allow contaminants into the system, the bureau notified customers to boil tap
The Associated Press SILVERTON — Christmas tree growers in th e N orthwest say the business looks a little greener this year after a slump that drove out a substantial number of producers. The story is common in agricultural markets: Business gets good, new investors and producers flock i n , s u pply
goes up and prices go down. Then there's a shakeout and finally business gets better. Growers said that after a seven-year slide, prices are up slightly, and inventory is moving. "I'm hearing from a lot of g rowers that not o nl y a r e they sold out, they are oversold," said Bryan Ostlund, executive director of the Pacific Northwest Christmas Tree Association. "They are starting to cut into next year's inventory.... We haven't heard
comments like that for a long time." Oregon leads the nation in Christmas tree production. Washington is sixth. Growers s ai d i n v estors, many new to th e i n dustry, planted millions of trees in the early 2000s to take advantage of a strong market. Seven years later, the noble fir and Douglas fir trees reached market size, the market was flooded and prices plummeted. "It was bad enough that we lost over half of the growers that had over 100 acres o f p r o duction i n Chr i s t mas trees," said McKenzie Cook of McKenzie Farms in Estacada. "Six years ago, there were over 110 growers in that category. Today, that number is less than 50," he said. The total o f C h r i s tmas
t rees in the ground in t h e they need, and to get through Northwest has dropped from these times," he said. about 85 million four or five years ago to about 75 million, Cook said. Growers typically harvest about 10 percent of their trees a year. Prices dropped 35 percent from their peak in 2004 to their low last year, growers said. Producers said prices are now up 2 percent to 3 percent — not enough to sustain them, but they expect better prices over the next two years. John Tillman of Northwest Plantations in Elma, Wash., is looking forward to that. " The people w h o h a v e stuck it out, who have made a living at this through thick and thin, at this point, I think we deserve to be rewarded a little bit for our perseverance and our ability to serve customers with the trees that
City Council explains 3distinct possibilities for sharing the road The (Euf,ene) Register-Guard
Bicyclists sized up s kateboarders and vice versa earlier this week, as the two groups considered whether they could share Eugene streets. About 30 people attended an open house to learn more about three transportation-related ideas, including one that could give skateboardersthe same access to city streets as bicyclists. Generally, bicyclists who attended the city-sponsored gathering at the downtown public library were receptive to sharing streets with skateboarders, who have become more common, especially on streets and sidewalks around downtown Eugene and the University of
— From wire reports
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water as aprecaution.
into three groups, depending on their interest, to discuss them. While bicyclists and skate-
boarders were well-represented, people who c onsidered themselves mainly motorists were in short supply.
This Saturday, Nov. 23rd • Sunriver Aquatic & Recreation Center Enjoy a complimentary continental breakfast while you learn! Inspiration, education and guidance to turn your vision into a reality. 9:30 a.m. 10:15 a.m. 10:30 a.m. RSVP at neilkelly.com for a FREE subscription to Dwell Magazine! Call 541.382.7580 for more info.
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Oregon. But skateboarders need to obey traffic lights and laws, just as bicyclists are required to do, bicyclist Todd Miller said. Skateboards and bikes travel aboutthe same speeds,so there shouldn't be many conflicts between them, he said. "As long as people uphold the law, there shouldn't be a problem," Miller said. The open house allowed city officials to share two other transportation ideas and get public opinion about them. One would expand the downtown area where bicycling and skateboarding are prohibited on sidewalks. The other would allow electric, motor-assisted bicycles on off-street bike paths. Lee Shoemaker, the city's bicycle and pedestrian co-ordinator, gave a brief presentation on each idea. People then broke
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end La-Pine Schools is considering removing lice
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from its communicable disease policy. On the surface, it seems a reasonable idea. But dig a little deeper and there's a tension between protecting the interests of one group of students versus another The change would allow students with lice eggs in their hair to stay in class. Jay Mathisen, the district's human resources chief, said the revision would align the policy with current district practice and is based on studies showing that head lice "is not a health hazard and risk of transmission in the normal school environment is low." That may be a surprise to the many parentswhose children have brought lice home from school, forcing them to go through the complex and difficult task of curing the child, as well as cleaning the home. That said, its hard to argue with the notion that head lice doesn't rise to the standard of other diseases in the district's communicable disease policy, such as tuberculosis, chicken pox and measles. The current policy includes head lice along with those more seriousdiseases and requires an infected child to be excluded from school. Bend-La Pine's administration is asking the school board to approve removing head lice (pediculosis) fromthe communicable disease policy. Last week, the board discussed the issue but didn't make a decision. Mathisen said t h e d i strict's schools now tell children with live lice to stay home, but those who have lice eggs, called nits, in their hair after treatment can return to class. Nits can be either live eggs that could hatch, or they can be the
dead shells of lice that have hatched or been killed by treatment. The problem is that it's difficult to distinguish between the two. In deciding to recommend the policy change, the district considered several sources, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Association of Pediatrics and the National Association of School Nurses, which believe a "no-nitso policy is unnecessary and burdensome. Nits can easily be misdiagnosed, the CDC said, and the burden of absenteeism "far outweighs the risks associated with head lice." The National Pediculosis Association disagrees, arguing that thorough manual removal, not chemical treatment, is needed to protect other students, avoid harm from chemicals and prevent development of t reatment-resistant strains. T h e group argues that a no-nit policy is crucial to controlling the problem. Mathison said he's concerned about disadvantaged students who could be hurt by being kept out of school, and we agree that shouldn't happen unnecessarily. But we're also concerned about students and families who are exposed to head lice because of children who unwittingly bring the pests to school. Simply removing head lice from the communicable disease policy could tip the balance too far unless the district establishes effective procedurestosafeguard students.
Health plansfor state workers need achange he state of Oregon is set to owe tens of millions in taxes because the health plans for state workers are too rich. The state health plans should be changed. The Affordable Care Act is driving the new taxes. The Act says a plan to insure an individual can cost nomore than $850 per month and a plan for a family can cost no more than $2,291 per month. If a plan is over the cap — no matter how the cost of the plan is shared between employee and employer — there's a tax. The premiums for state workers are over the cap for individuals and under it for families. Actuaries told a state board that
if the plan is not changed, the state will owe $24 million in 2018, as Salem's Statesman Journal reported. That's the first year the tax penalty hits. The tax is projected to go up to more than $116 million by 2030. There are many ways the plans for state workers can be changed. They could be switched to a higher deductible. What is apparently more likely is that the cost of individual insurance will be lowered and the cost of family plans will be increased to squeeze under the cap. If that is the choice, the changes should be phased in, so families have time to make adjustments to their budgets.
RNOWLEOPARD
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M Nickel's Worth Protect the fish A large part of my decision to retire to Bend a few years ago had to do with the normally incredible fishing in the Upper Deschutes. It is dismaying to see fish killed because of poor water management in a stream with such a major influence on the ecology and economy of Central Oregon. Just because people have the legal rights to the water doesn't mean it is "right" to take it greedily to the detriment of other users and the wildlife that depends on the river for survival. It is hard to believe in this age of burgeoning awareness of the importance of natural resource management and conservation that Oregon, of all places, cannot find a way to balance the economic and recreational interests of all its citizen water users. Other states have legislated minimum instream flows to protect the fisheries. We can do it, too.
they're in the law itself")
side the boundary. I realize the land is
Wallace Boe probably cheaper outside the boundPrineville
School building impacts westside The Bulletin's front-page article on building programs for local schools, including Oregon State University, was especially interesting to me in light of the fact that I recently had an opportunity to tour the OSU campus in Corvallis. On that tour, I was taken aback by the magnitude of growth of "project" style dorms around the campus, many five stories in height. In my opinion, they overwhelm the historic buildings where I attended classesyears ago. Smaller apartment complexesare pervasive in neighborhoods surrounding the campus and
finding parking is a challenge.
I hope this is not the fate of neighborhoods on the west side of Bend. Tom Leach I would feel more confident if basic Bend plans for the OSU-Cascades campus had been developed before the land Trouble'snot just was purchased. The planners and public would have had the opportuon the website nity to evaluate the impact of student It seems that there is general con- housing, parking and traffic on westsensus thatthe current Obamacare side roads before a commitment to website crisis is the result of poor that particular property was made. organization and leadership. (Wash- Hopefully, the new campus is large ington Post: "Computer snafu was enough to accommodate the longself-inflicted incompetence") It is my range student housing needs of the opinion that this is obviously true, school. Otherwise, the westside may but theroot cause goes further back eventually end up experiencing the to the Democratic Congress pushing same housing, traffic and parking through this lengthy, faulty legislation problems as Corvallis. that they have admitted they were In regard to Bend-La Pine Schools' unable to know what was in before goal of building a new middle school they passed it. (Chicago Tribune: outside the urban growth boundary, I "The bugs aren't just in the software; would prefer they try to find a site in-
ary, but there is no more efficient way to stimulate suburban sprawl than to build a school in a suburban or rural setting.
Charles Boyd Bend
Editorial disheartening Your recent editorial, "No amount of study is enough for LandWatch,n is truly disheartening. As you note, the city has been "rightly faulted ... for not involving the public early in the process of planning." More important, the city has also ignored the recommendation of its own consultant (Brown and Caldwell) that "a more detailed analysis is needed to determine the integrity of the (existing) pipes." Nor has the Forest Service performed anenvironmental assessment based on the size of the pipe (a 30-inch
pipe to replace two 14-inch pipes) that the city intends — at all coststo install. Without this essential information, the city is engaging in a shell game without the pea. It would appear, then, that Central Oregon LandWatch is the only player in this unfortunate bureaucratic imbroglio that has performed any due diligence with its evaluation of both the city's plans and the Forest Service's environmental assessment to identify the gaps in logic and legality therein. The "bottom linen is more likely to be that the Forest Service and the city have chosen not to perform adequate or requisite studies, because those studies are likely to change the answer.
Sherryn Adair Bend
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Oregonians all have a stake in the sage grouse's future By Stacy Davies and Brent Fenty rom cowboys to desert rats, anyone who earns a living in the High Desert, recreates there or caresabout the desert,ha s a stake in the future of sage grouse. It's important to take note when ranchers and conservation organizations agree on an important issue. And we agree that the importanceof conserving greater sage grouse can'tbe overstated for eastern Oregon. The greater sage grouse, a bird native to eastern Oregon's High Desert, is the subject of a great deal of effort to prevent the continued decline of the species. The Bureau of Land Management is the primary land manager of sage grouse habitat in eastern Oregon, with more than 10 million acres of public lands currently occupied by the species. In late November, the BLM will release a draft plan to protect sage grouse habitat throughout Oregon. This plan will guide the future of sage
F
grouse in the state and it will be an imbe carefully reviewed by our organiportant factor in determining whether zations as well as many other groups The BLM's draft sage grouse plan will determine how or not the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serand individuals whose livelihoods, vice lists the sage grouse as a threat- large portions of eastern Oregon will be managedto activities and interests are in some ened or endangered species under the protect sage grouse whilealso allowing appropriate uses way related to sage grouse on pubfederalEndangered Species Act. lic lands. Visit the BLM's website at of the landscape. The plans need to strike a careful Our org a n izations, Ro a r i ng www.blm.gov/or/plans to learn more balance of conservation and economic activity ... Springs Ranch and Oregon Natural about sage grouse and efforts to balDesert Association, may differ as to ance conservation and development how public lands should be managed in Oregon's High Desert. From there and what factors may be contributing activity to protect sage grouse and the conservation. you can find answers to your questo the decline of native species like rural communities of Oregon's High Oregon Natural Desert Associa- tions, links to additional resources sage grouse. Desert. tion is a not-for-profit conservation and you can provide your comments What we do agree on is that the Roaring Springs Ranch is a large organization based in Bend whose on these plans. sage grouse is ecologically and social- and historic Oregon ranching opera- mission is to protect, defend and reAs we decideon management for ly important in eastern Oregon, and tion located in Frenchglen near Steens store Oregon's High Desert. ONDA sage grouse, we're making decisions decisions about its management have Mountain, whose goals include eco- advocates for the protection of High that will affect eastern Oregon for the potential to change life in the High nomic, ecological and social sustain- Desert public lands with important decades to come. Your input is critDesert. ability. Portions of Roaring Springs sage grouse habitat. ONDA believes ical to the process, no matter your The BLM's draft sage grouse plan Ranch operations occur on public that agricultural conversion, develop- perspective. — Stacy Davies serves as the general will determine how large portions of lands within greater sage grouse ment, off-road vehicle use and overeastern Oregon will be managed to habitat. Roaring Springs Ranch is grazing have pushed sage grouse out manager of Roaring Springs Ranch and the protect sage grouse while also allow- of the view that livestock ranching of their historic habitat, resulting in a marketing director of Country Natural Beef. ing appropriate uses of the landscape. operations that manage for ecologi- steady decline in numbers in Oregon Brent Fenty serves as the executive director The plans need to strike a careful bal- cally sustainable native rangelands and throughout the West. of the Bend-based Oregon Natural Desert ance of conservation and economic are compatible with sage grouse The BLM plans for sage grouse will Association.
THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Dam
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Daniel 'Dan' Patrick McNurlin, of Coos Bay
Harold F. Webster, of Sunriver
Feb. 6,1970-Oct. 29,2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are being planned at this time.
May 2, 1937 - Nov. 17, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Harold requested that there be no services.
Keith Neville Garber Jr., of Prinevilie Oct. 1, 1957 - Nov. 16, 2013 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, Prineville, OR 541-447-6459 Services: Saturday, November 23, at 1:00 p.m., at the Redmond Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th St, Redmond, OR Contributions may be made to:
A fund in honor of Keith for his children's college education, has been set up at Wells Fargo.
Hazel Marie Sybrandy Neuman July 26, 1936 - Nov. 16, 2013
Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org
Kenneth 'Ken' F. Berling, of La Pine Jan. 9, 1933 - Nov. 17, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A memorial mass will be held for Ken on Friday, Nov. 22, 2013, at 11:00 a.m., at Baird Memorial Chapel, 16468 Finley Butte Rd., La Pine, OR. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701. www.partnersbend.org
Patricia 'Pat' A. Wilcox, of La Pine April 21, 1938 - Nov. 14, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, OR 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private Urn Committal will take place in McCloud, California, at a later date.
Hazel Marie Neuman of Crooked River Ranch, r -' Oregon, passed away at h er h o m e on No vember 16, 2013. She was 77. Death Notices are free and Hazel Neuman A M e m o will be run for one day, but r ial Se r specific guidelines must be vice will b e h el d a t 1 1:30 followed. Local obituaries a.m., on Saturday, Novemare paid advertisements ber 23, 2013, at The Ranch submitted by families or C hapel, l o c ated a t 5 0 6 0 funeralhomes. They may be S W C l u bhouse R o a d i n submitted by phone, mail, Crooked River Ranch. An email or fax. The Bulletin U rn C o m m ittal w i l l t a k e p lace a t W i l l a m ette N a reserves the right to edit all tional Cemetery at a l a t er submissions. Please include date. contact information in all H azel was born July 2 6 , correspondence. 1 936, in W a u k e gan, I l l i For information on any of nois, to Frank an d B essie these services or about the ( Allmon) S y b r a ndy . T h e obituary policy, contact family lived i n I l l i n ois for 541-617-7825. five years before relocating to the Sacramento area Deadlines:Death Notices w here Hazel grew up a n d are accepted until noon g raduated fro m C .K . M c Monday through Friday C latchy H i g h S c h o o l i n for next-day publication 1954. and by 4:30 p.m. Friday H azel m a r r ie d E d w a r d for Sunday publication. Thomas Jarvis in O ctober Obituaries must be of 1955, i n S a c r a mento, received by 5 p.m. Monday C alifornia, an d t h e y h a d through Thursday for t wo c h i l dren: P a ul a a n d Robert. publication on the second In May of 1983, she was day after submission, r emarried t o D o n al d R a y by1 p.m. Fridayfor N euman i n G r a n it e B a y , Sunday publication, and by California. 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday H azel worked a s a n o f publication. Deadlines for f ice administrator fo r t h e display ads vary; please call State of California until refor details. t iring i n 1 9 9 1 . Sh e t h e n worked as a v o l u nteer at Phone: 541-617-7825 Sutter R o seville M e d i c al Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Center in Roseville, CA. In Fax: 541-322-7254 2002, H a z e l an d D on Mail:Obituaries m oved t o C r o o ked R i v er P.O. Box 6020 Ranch, Oregon to be closer to family. Bend, OR 97708 H azel e n j o ye d s e w i n g , c rocheting , gar de n i n g , r eading, b o w l i ng , w a t c h ing other sports and loved DEATHS h er b e a u t ifu l su r r o u n di ngs i n Cr o o k e d Ri v e r ELSEWHERE R anch. B u t m o s t o f a l l , she enjoyed spending time w ith her f a m i ly . She w a s Deaths of note from around a n active m ember o f t h e Ranch Chapel. H a z el wi l l theworld: Diane Disney Miller,79: Walt b e missed dearly b y h e r Disney's last surviving child, family and friends. Hazel leaves behind h er who stood up for Frank Gehdaughter, Paula (husband, ry's spectacularly abstract deJ eff) V ermily a o f D a l l a s, sign for the Walt Disney ConO regon; s on , R o b er t ( f i - cert Hall in Los Angeles and a nce, A s h ton) J a r v i s o f co-founded a museum dedS pringdale , A r k an s a s ; step-son, Michael Neuman icated to the memory of her of Crooked R i ver R a n ch, fatheras a person rather than OR; and tw o s t e p-daugh- a brand. Died Tuesday in Napa t ers, Cynthia P r ic e ( h u s - Valley, Calif. Robert Bowie, 104: Foreign b and, R o n ) a n d Sh e l l y Tarditi o f S t o c kton, C ali- policyexpert who served four fornia. Other survivors in- presidential a d m inistrations clude her sister, Lora Ro- as an adviser on the Cold War, o rda ( h usband, F r ed ) o f national security and conflicts Standish, Maine; 11 grand- around the globe. Died Nov. 2 c hildren an d t h r e e g r e at grandchildren; seven in Towson, Md. Henry Lind, 92: Reporter of nieces and one nephew. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n decisionsforthe U.S. Supreme d eath b y her hu s b a n d , Court from 1979 to 1987; he Donald Neuman; both of polished and published the her parents; two b r o t hers high court's legal opinions. and one sister. Died Nov. 11 in an assisted livMemorial co n t r i b utions ing facility in Springfield, Va. in Hazel's memory may be Sylvia Browne, 77: Author m ade to Th e Ran ch known for her purported psyC hapel, 5 06 0 S W Cl u b house Rd, Crooked River, chic powers; she assisted in missing persons cases and OR 97760 A utumn Fu n e r a l s of appeared on television, often R edmond h a s b e e n e n - as a guest on "The Montel Wiltrusted wit h t h e a r r a nge- liams Show." Died Wednesday ments, (541) 5 0 4 - 9485. in San Jose, Calif. www.autumnfunerals.net. — From wire reports
Obituary policy
quickly. Now, quickly in the Senate doesn't always mean Continued from B1 immediately, but I'll be workMerkley said he plans to ing with Sen. Wyden to expework closely with W y den, dite the process." who chairs the Senate Energy Merkley said his office has and Natural Resources Com- been in continuous discussion mittee, which has jurisdiction with stakeholders over how to over the bill. address their concerns. Con"I think we have a great servationists worried that givwindow of opportunity that ing irrigators first-fill rights we should seize," he said. would harm fish in dry years, "With al l s t akeholders on while f l atwater f i sherman board, we should have a pret- worried that r eleasing too ty good chance of moving this much water from behind the
dam would hurt recreational activities on the reservoir. The Bureau of Reclamation estimates 575,000 visitors use the Prineville Reservoir and surrounding area each year, pumping $6.7 million into the
region's economy. The current bill carefully accounts for the water and takes all of those concerns into account, Merkley said. It provides certainty for irrigators and the ability to release additional water for the
BS
salmon, steelhead and trout downstream. Merkley's bill has the support of Gov. John Kitzhaber, as well a s t h e ci t y of Prineville, Crook County, the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, American R ivers, NW Steelheaders, Ochoco and North U ni t I r r i gation Districts, Portland General Electric, Trout Unlimited and WaterWatch. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
School Continued from B1 Another forward looking feature is the school's two-story height. "We anticipate land continuing to get more expensive," said Bend-La Pine Schools Board M e mber Nori Juba. "We're hoping to save taxpayers some m oney by r e ducing t h e amount of land required for a school." The school will be constructed with t w o c l assroom wings branching off from a high-ceilinged common area. Each wing will have six classrooms on each floorcentered around more common space, designed to facilitate student and teacher collaboration. There will also be a "sky bridge" connecting the wings on the upper story, which Steele said is meant to better connect teachers and students with their peers. "If the district wants to build a 3 00-head school down the road, they could construct only one of the
Fire Continued from A1 He said the U.S. Forest Service will release a minimum bid price in its advertisement for the sales. Given the time that has passed sincethe fire, Burley said, much of the wood will likely be marked by blue stain fungus and have "bug holes." Those characteristics will reduce the value of the timber. Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwellgranted an emergency determination for the salvage
logging in August, allowing the agency to go ahead with its plans now rather than have an objection window although
Courtesy Bend-La Pine Schools
An artist's rendering of the new elementary school to be built in southeast Bend, set to open in 2015. To see a floor plan of the school, Q o visit bendbulletin.com wings," Steele said. "It would also be easy to add the additional wing." The gym, musicroom and c afeteria wil l b e n e a r t h e front of the school, branching off from a common area. Instead of a traditional library, there will be a "media room," equipped to handle current and anticipated technologies. Other spaces include flexible rooms intended for larger groups of students and vari-
ous activities. "We also won't have any traditional computer labs, which will save on space," said Emily Freed,one of the Steele architects involved. "Instead the whole school will be wired for Internet." The school has also been designed with an eye toward security by m i n imizing entrances and increasing visibility. The office is located near the main entrance, which will
group is looking at the plans and hasn't decided yet whether to challenge them.
On theWeb For more information
about the salvage logging planned for the Pole Creek Fire, go to http:I/bit. ly/1aSKLus and for more information about the cutting of hazard trees along
roads in the burn area, go to http:I/bit.ly/IhpuE2.
the exception doesn't pertain to the roadside cutting. But lawsuits could stop the saws. Tim Lillebo, Eastern Oregon field representative for OregonWild, said the Portland-based cons e rvation
have a view of both the bus and car drop-off areas. "One of the nice details is that teachers will have three teaching s u r faces," S t eele said. "It won't be a teacher just standing in front of a black or whiteboard. There is a teaching wall with sliding boards, but there is also two tackable walls that teachers can use and fill." — Reporter: 541-633-2160; tleeds@bendbulietin.com
chairman of the Oregon Society ofAmerican Foresters and a forestry instructor at Central
In general, he said, Oregon- Oregon Community College. Wild has been trying to get the Forest Service to move away
from salvage logging in favor of protecting ecosystems made sensitive by blaze. He
said heavy logging equipment moving through burnt woods can furtherharm the recovering forest. "It is just really hard to find any ecological benefit to that," he said. Putting together salvage
logging plans, like those for the Pole Creek Fire, typically takes the Forest Service many months, said Ron Boldenow,
"They want to make really sure they don't get sued," he said, "and it takes them really long to go through the process." Miller, the Sisters District ranger, said the plans took less time than expected, even with a three-week delay caused by the federalgovernment shutdown in October. "Usually it takes two years to do that kind of analysis and it only took the team eight or nine months," she said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812; ddarlingCbendbulletin.com.
Genetics pioneerSangerwon Nobeltwice By Denise Gellene
FEATURED OBITUARY
New York Times News Service
Frederick Sanger, a British biochemist whose discoveries about the chemistry of life led to the decoding of the human genome and to the development of new drugs like human growth hormone, earning him two Nobel Prizes, a distinction held by only three other scientists, died Tuesday in Cambridge, England. He was 95. His death was confirmed by Adrian Penrose, communications manager at the Medical R esearch Council i n C a m b ridge. Sanger lived in t h e nearby village of Swaffham Bulbeck. Sanger won his first Nobel Prize, in chemistry, in 1958 for showing how amino acids link together to form insulin. The discovery gave scientists the tools to analyze any protein in the body. In 1980 he received his second Nobel, also in chemistry, for inventing a method of "reading" the molecular letters that make up the genetic code. This discovery was crucial to the development of biotech-
Frederick Sanger was born Aug. 3, 1918, in Rendcomb, England, where his father was a physician. He expected to follow his father into medicine, but after studying biochemistry at Cambridge University, he decided tobecome a scientist. His father, he said in a 1988 interview, "led a scrappy sort of life" in which he was
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nology drugs and provided the basic tool kit for decoding the entirehuman genome two decades later. Unusual for s omeone of his stature, Sanger spent his entire career in a laboratory. Long after receiving his first Nobel, he continued to perform many experiments himself instead of assigning them to junior researchers, as is typical in modern science labs. Sanger said he was not particularly adept at coming up with experiments for others to do and had little aptitude for administration or teaching. "I was in a position to do more or less what I liked, and that was doing research," he said.
lem," he said. Survivors include two sons, Robin and Peter, and a daughter, Sally. In a 2001 interview, Sanger spoke about the challenge of winning two Nobel Prizes. "It's much more difficult to get the first prize than to get the second one," he said, "because if you've already got a
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.
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CONDITIONS
FRONTS Cold
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunnsetoday...... 7:09 a.m Moon phases Sunset today.... , 4;34 p,m Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:I 0 a.m Sunsettomorrow... 4:33 p.m
F i r st Full
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PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....5.28 a.m......3.48 p.m. Venus.....10;55 a.m...... 7:18 p.m. Mars.......1:10a.m...... I:52 p.m. Jupiter......747 pm.....II:00 a.m. Satum......5:51 a.m...... 3:59 p.m. Uranus.....216 p m...... 247 am.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low.............. 49/29 24 hours ending 4p.m.*. . 0.09" Record high ...... 66 in1949 Month to date . . 0.2 8 " Recordlow........ -10in1977 Average monthtodate... 081" Average high.............. 45 Year to date............ 4.58" Average low............... 27 Average yearto date..... 8.58" Barometric pressureat 4 p.m.30.17 Record 24 hours ...0.44 in 1991 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
OREGON CITIES
S K IREPORT
Yesterday Thursday F r iday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W Hi / Lo/W the need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at S p.m. yesterday: Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m. for solar at noon. Snow accumulation in inches Astoria ....... 45/29/000 ....49/32/s..... 51/34/s Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Baker City......40/28/0.00.....35/I 8/s......42/I 3/s Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . . 0.0. . .no report L Brookings......59/48/0 00..... 54/39/f......56/39/s Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Burns..........42/30/0.03.....37/18/s......40/11/s 0 Mt. Ashland....... . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Eugene........44/30/0.00.....45/23/s......48/23/s Mt. Bachelor...... . . . . . . . . . . 0.0., no report Klamath Falls ...43/35/0.13.....39/I 2/s......44/I 4/s Mt. Hood Meadows...... . . . .0.0...no report Lakeview.......41/30/0.03.....36/I5/s......43/10/s Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0.0. ..no report La Pine ........34/28/0.00......35/8/s......40/11/s Snow levelandroadconditions representing condiTimberhne...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . . . . 11 atSp.m.yesterday.Key:TT.= Traction Tires. Warner Canyon...... . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Medford.......51/47/0.21 .....48/23/s......48/23/s tions Newport....... 48/32/0.00..... 50/34/s...... 52/34/s Pass Conditions Willamette Pass ...... . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report North Bend.....48/39/0.00.....51/30/s......55/33/s 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit....... . Carry chains or T.Tires Ontario........47/37/0.27.....41/21/s......39/19/s 1-84 at Cabbage Hill...... . . . . Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .15 25 Pendleton...... 39/28/0.00.....40/I 9/s......41/20/s Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T.Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....4-6... . . .14-18 Portland .......48/32/0.00.....44/27/s......47/28/s Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T.Tires Park City, Utah ..... . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Prineville.......43/29/0.03......36/9/s......42/12/s Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T.Tires Squaw Valley, California..... .. . 3 . . . no report Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0... no report Redmond.......42/28/0.00.....36/11/s......39/13/s Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Roseburg.......44/36/0.01 .....45/28/f.....48/33/pc Hwy.138 at Diamond Lake.... Carrychains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0-0 . . .no report Salem.........48/30/0.00.....46/23/s......48/25/s Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Sisters.........41/30/0.00.....33/11/s......40/14/s For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dalles......46/33/0.00.....42/24/s......43/24/s www.tnpcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,cclouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurnes, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-ram-snow mix,w-wind, f-fog,dr-dnzzle,tr-trace
1
JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
-40S i-30S -20
(in the 48 contiguous states):
HIGH LOW
WOAD CONDITIONS
•
Nyssa Juntura m/21
35/1 2
Grants Pass
Gold • Beach
Day
36/17
35/20
50/33
EAST Mostly sunny skies and coolcondiOntariO tions.
35/18
•
SCent Lake g Cre
• Bandon
36/i 7
Baker City
~
Crescent»
49/32 •
Mostly sunny skies and cold conditions.
32/11
seasonably mild
41 18
Moonrisetoday.... 8:17 p.m
CENTRAL
Jose osep
36/i4 U n ion
Gramte sini
36/11
36/i 6
Ente rpns • 32/11
La Grande•
%•
Prilteville 36NI • R~dm~~d • P
Sunriver• Bend
45/23
Coos Bay
• 31/1 9 ondon
• Ma ras
'"'4
•
32/4
30/1 ~-
Willowdale
Sisters 8
• Meacham
Ruggs •
Wagowa
40/1 9
35/1 7
Maupin
Sh rman
47D4
49/35
• Pertdletort
»W8380
Warm Spnngs•
50/34
Florence•
•
•
37/i 7
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• Hermiston n
Ar A I.i n g ton •
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46/23•
NeWnurt
36/20
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•
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McMinnvige 45/23
Umatilla
Hood
Seaside» 50/34 •»Cannon Beach
Mostly sunny skies and coolconditions.
Partly cloudy and
HIGH LOW
BEND ALMANAC
49/32
Bs
Mostly sunny and milder
seasonable
16
,Astoria
•
Mostly sunny and
cold
36 I
Sunny and milder
Clear and
LOW
I 0
Bs
»BA
4
*
8 4 * * * : +++ + . 4 4 4 . »+++ : 3 d 8 8 ' ' * * * * * x * +*
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain
,+ +
F l urries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/yy Abilene, TX......73/57/0.00... 77/39/t. 40/32/sh GrandRapids....45/26/0.00..48/39/sh ..42728/rs RapidCrty.......41/20/000...18/2/50.. 33/9/pc Savannah .......60/50/000..65/54/sh. 7254/pc Akron..........47/24/000 ..47/43/sh. 51/33/sh GreenBay.......44/31/0.00..43/31/sh. 35/22/sn Reno...........54/39/002 .. 42/23/rs. 45/21/pc Seattle..........46/35/000...43/33/s .. 49/35/s Albany..........37/21/0.00 ..42/33/pc.. 47/35/c Greensboro......51/35/0.00..50/42/pc.. 60/50/c Richmond.......51/36/000 ..55/43/pc.. 62/49/c SiouxFalls.......52/35/000 ..28/10/pc.. 27/7/pc NY....39/21/000...46/38/c. 47/34/sh Spokane........34/24/000... 35/I8/s .. 39/20/s Albuquerque.....49/40/016 56/37/sh .. ..41/30/rs Harrisburg.......46/24/0.00..50/36/pc.54/41/sh Rochester, Anchorage....... 5/0/000 20/20/sn. 31/24/sn Hartford,CT.... 41/29/0 00 46/34/s 50/38/c Sacramento......58/54/066..66/40/pc .. 68/41/s Springfield, MO ..57/39/004... 54/41/t. 43/29/sh Atlanta.........57/41/0.00 ..58/49/pc.. 65/53/c Helena...........30/8/0.08...28/I2/s. 35/I8/pc St. Louis.........46/33/007 ..54/45/sh. 49/31/sh Tampa..........81/64/000 ..84/67/pc. 84/65/pc Atlantic City.....45/27/0.00... 52/43/s .. 56/54/c Honolulu........83/70/000..82/74/sh. 81/73/sh Salt Lake City....54/44/001 ..47/28/sh. 44/33/pc Tucson..........76/52/000...76/57/c. 69/52/sh Austin..........74/54/0.00... 79/69/t. 70/42/sh Houston ........73/48/0.00...80/68/t...76/49/t SanAntonio.....77/60/000... 80/71/t...76/44/t Tulsa...........60/45/019... 62/35/t. 36/28/sn Baltimore ...... 44/32/0.00 ..52/40/pc.. 57/43/c Huntsvige.......62/33/0.00..62/49/pc.. 64/42/c SanDiego.......68/61/000 .. 66/57/sh.67/55/sh Washrngton,DC.49/36/000 ..53/42/pc.. 58/47/c Bigings .........47/11/0.1 0.. 25/I 7/pc. 35/I3/pc Indianapolis.....47/30/0.00..53/48/sh. 53/25/sh SanFrancisco....59/55/089 ..64/46/pc.. 65/47/s Wichrta.........61/50/000 ..51/27/sh. 32/22/sn Birmingham.....64/40/0.00 ..64/52/pc.. 70/53/c Jackson,MS.....69/34/0.00..70/58/pc...74/58/t SanJose........63/55/075 ..64/42/pc.. 66/43/s Yakima.........45/22/000... 41/I9/s .. 41/20/s Bismarck........31/18/000...18/7/pc..22/ I/pc Jacksonvige......69/58/005..72/58/sh. 75/58/pc SantaFe........46/3270.02.. 50/32/rs.36/25/sa Yuma...........77/57/0.00... 77/57/c. 68/53/sh Boise...........48/37/0.37... 39/20/s .. 39/22/s Juneau..........20/11/0.08..24/23/sa...35735/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........43/29/0.00... 48/36/s .. 50/40/c Kansas City......51/41/0 I8..54/33/sh. 35/25/sn BridgeportCT....46/30/000...47/40/5.. 51/44/c Lansing.........46/26/0.00..47/40/sh..42/28/rs Amsterdam......3767/003 ..41/36/pc .. 43/37/c Mecca..........73/73/000...87/66/s.89/69/pc Buffalo.........42/22/000 ..49/41/sh. 48/36/sh LasVegas.......66/52/000..63/48/sh. 58/46/sh Athens..........73/62/1.29... 66/57/t.62/53/sh Mexrco City......73/52/3.00... 69/53/t...71/46/t Burlington, VT....36/25/0.00..43/26/pc ..44/32/rs Lexington.......57/28/0.00..5I48/pc. 56/38/sh Auckland........73/59/000 ..70/59/pc.70/59/pc Montreal........34/21/000 ..37/34/pc. 43/36/sh Caribou,ME.....30/21/0.00... 38/24/s.. 39/25/c Lincoln..........62/44/0.00...37/20/c. 30/I4/pc Baghdad........62/57/0.88..72/58/pc .. 74/60/s Moscow........32/32/0.00...36/32/c.. 36/32/c Charleston, SC...61/45/0 00.. 64/54/sh . 71/55/pc Little Rock...... 63/38/0.00. M/56/c63/41/sh Bangkok........81/77/0.00 ..88/74/pc...90/77/t Nairobi.........63/61/0.42... 77/56/t...75/54/t Charlotte........54/36/0 00 .. 55/43/pc .. 63/50/c LosAngeles.....65/59/trace..64/53/sh.69/53/sh Beijing..........36/27/000... 52/28/s. 57/29/pc Nassau.........84/70/000... 80/74/t...79/74/I Chattanooga.....60/32/000 ..61/48/pc .. 64/48/c Louisville........56/31/0.00...60/49/c. 56/38/sh Beirut..........64/64/000... 70/60/s. 73/64/pc New Delhi.......57/52/000... 80/62/s.. 81/59/s Cheyenne.......54/32/0.00... 20/7/sn .. 32/8/pc Madison,WI.....40/33/0.00..44/33/sh. 36/20/sn Berlin...........37/37/000... 39/37/c.43/36/sh Osaka..........52/41/0 00..57/41/pc. 57/41/sh Chicago.........45/28/0.00 ..49/39/sh. 41/26/sh Memphis........65/36/0.00..68/60/pc. 63/42/sh Bogota .......86/52/000 .. 81/43/t 81/51/t Oslo............27/27/000...34/I9/c .. 32/28/c Cinonnati.......51/22/0.00... 55/46/c. 54/33/sh Mram ..........84/72/0.00..83/73/sh84/73/pc . Budapest .......45/41/015..45/40/sh 48/3Ic Ottawa.........34/16/000 ..37/32/pc. 39/30/sh Clevelaad.......48/27/0.00 ..47/44/sh. 50/33/sh Milwaukee......43/32/0.00..46/38/sh..38/24/rs BuenosAires.....79/59/019..79/53/pc.. 79/59/s Pans............37/36/011...41/34c.. 41/34/c Colorado Spnags.57/30/0.00 ..33/I3/sn .. 30/I5/c Miuneapolis.....45/38/0.00..33/23/sa. 32/14/pc CaboSanLucas ..81/64/000 ..81/66/pc. 82/64/pc Rio deJaneiro....93/73/000 ..89/72/pc...88/70/t ColumbiaMO...42738/ , 0.26.. 52/39/sh. 42/27/sh Nashville........62/31/0.00 ..64/50/pc. 66/42/sh Cairo...........63/61/0/m..77/62/pc.82/62/pc Rome...........55/54/000..58753/sh...55/50lr Columbia,SC....59/42/000.. 61/48/pc. 67/52/pc New Orleans.....70/47/0 00.. 77/66/pc...79/66/t Calgary.........lo/8/001... 28/3/pc. 21/I8/pc Santiago........81/48/000...91/54/s. 84/55/pc Columbus, GA....60/45/000 ..62/54/pc. 70/54/sh NewYork.......44/32/0.00...49/42/s.. 54/46/c Cancun.........84/70/0.00... 81/77/t...83/75/t Sao Paulo.......90/70/0.00... 87/70/t...74/62/t Columbus, OH....49/30/0.00... 52/44/c. 53/34/sh Newark,I......45730/0.00... N 49/41/s. 55/46/sh Dubiin..........45/37/0.22..43732/sh.45/39/pc Sapporo ........48/41/0.01...46/35/c. 43/32/sh Concord, NB.....41/22/000...46/2is .. 49/32/c Norfolk VA......52/44/000..57/47/pc .. 63/51/c Edinburgh.......39/39/000 ..41/27/sh .. 43/34/c Seoul...........32/25/000 ..43/35/pc.. 46/34/s City .. 62/52/0 00 64/32/t 33/29/sn Geneva.........34/347030..36/30/sn..34/30/sf Shanghai........59/46/000..64/53/pc.62/59/pc Corpus Christi 86/68/001 ... 85/71/t 82/50/t Oklahoma DallasFtWorth...66/48/000... 74/51/t. 56/36/sh Omaha.........54/43/000...38/22/c. 32/15/pc Harare..........68/68/0.00... 80/59/t...74Mt Singapore.......82/77/0.07... 85/78/t...88/77/t Dayton .........49/27/0.00 ..53/44/sh. 53/30/sh Orlando.........83/66/0.06.. 81/65/sh. 82/65/pc HongKong......70/64/OC0...74/65/c.. 74/68/c Stockholm.......37/36/000,.41/36/sh.36/27/pc Denver..........59/32/0 00 .. 25/I 0/sn. 32/I3/pc PalmSpnngs.....73/56/000..72/54/sh. 68/53/sh Istanbul.........61/597000 ..64/5ipc. 63/54/sh Sydney..........77/68/000... 75/66/t...75/66/t DesMoines......48/39/0 08... 43/28/c. 33/I 7/sn Peoria ..........42/32/0.11..50/39/sh. 43/26/sh Jerusalem.......65/52/000.. 68/55/s 72/59/pc Taipei...........72/64/0.00 ..73/63/pc. 73/63/pc Detroit..........45/29/0 00 .. 48/41/sh . 50/30/sh Philadelphia .....47/32/0.00..51/40/pc.. 55/46/c Johannesburg....80/61/077... 73/53/I 66/51/t Tel Aviv.........63/59/000... 74/60/s. 80/63/pc Duluth......... 44/39/0.00 ..27/I 4/sn.. 29/8/pc Phoeaix.........75/62/0.00...74/59/c. 69/56/sh Lima...........73/63/0.00...77/63/c. 70/62/pc Tokyo...........55/46/0.00...57/43/s .. 57/43/s ElPaso..........72/51/0.00..73748/pc.56/37/pc Pittsburgh.......48/26/0.00...5I/43/c. 52/36/sh Lisbon..........57/43/000 ..60/53/sh. 61/44/pc Toronto.........39/23/000... 46/37/r. 46/36/sh Fairbanks...... -22/-31/0.00..-7/-20/pc..I2/-4/sn Portland,ME.....41/27/0.00...46/32/s.. 46/34/c London.........39/39/0.10 ..46/35/pc. 42/35/pc Vancouver.......39/28/0.00... 41/30/s. 41/32/pc Fargo...........45/26/0.00..21/I0/sa.. 22/7/pc Providence......43/27/0.00...49/35/s.. 51/40/c Madnd.........34/32/0.00 ..49/32/pc. 46/30/pc Vieana..........41/41/0.15..46/37/sh.. 46/37/c Flagstaff ........44/32/0.11..47/33/sh..41/30/rs Raleigh.........52/37/0.00..54/45/pc.. 64/50/c Maaila..........81/77/000 ..87/74/pc. 87/74/pc Warsaw.........43/43/000...45/39/c.. 44/40/c
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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S W Scoreboard, C2 NHL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 College basketball, C3 NBA, C3 College football, C4 O< www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013
PREP VOLLEYBALL
CC's Troutman named 4A POY
PREP FOOTBALL: CLASS 4A STATE PLAYOFFS
Following a season in which four Central Oregon teams qualified for the Class 4A volleyball state tournament and three finished in fourth place or better, the
region now boasts six 2013 all-state players.
Hannah Troutman, who led Crook County to its eighth straight
state championship in Eugene earlier this month, was named the
Class 4A player of the year after connecting on 91.3 percent of her
serves this season while racking up 83aces.The 5-foot-10 senior outside hitter finished with 642 kills on the year to go along with 534 digs
and 62 blocks. Cristina Williams was named the
coach of the yearafter guiding Cascade to its first state championship
appearancein school history. Joining Troutman on the all-state first team
was Crook County junior
'•/
Karlee Hollis and junior Shelby Mauritson of
Madras. Sisters junior Nila Lukens landed second-team all-state hon-
ors, as did Ridgeview senior Katie Nurge and junior Alexis Urbach of
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Ridgeview backs, from left, Boomer Fleming, Tanner Stevens and Cody Simpson have combined their diverse running styles to lead the Ravens to the semifinals of the Class 4A state playoffs.
Madras.
In Class 5A, Bend High's Cassidy Wheeler
was the loneCentral Oregon representative on the all-state first team.
The junior helped the Lava Bears pick up their second straight fifth-
• The Ravens tout three backswith a variety of running styles
place trophy at the 5A state tournament in Hillsboro earlier this month.
Bend junior Callie Kruska was named to the all-
state second team,as was senior DaniTaylor of Summit. West Alba-
ny, which successfully defended its 2012 state title, swept the state's
top 5A honors, as junior Payton Rundwasvoted player of the yearand
By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
REDMOND — Boomer Fleming brings power. Tanner Stevens, speed. And Cody Simpson shows a mixture of both those styles. Together, Ridgeview's trio of running backs have rushed for more than 3,200 yards and a total of 33 touchdowns. As a team, the Ravens have totaled 4,158 yards on the ground and 43 TDs. The three, each with his own style of running,
have guided the Ravens to 346.5 yards rushing per game and a spot in the semifinal round of the Class 4A football state playoffs. "Boomer and Tanner are completely different style of feature backs," Ridgeview coach Andy Codding says. "Either one of them could be a topfive running back in the state right now. We're lucky to have both of them. Throw Cody in there — when he hits the edge, he runs downhill fast. We've got some weapons." See Ridgeview/C4
OSAAFootdall State Championships Saturday's game: Class 4A state semifinals • At Cottage Grove High School
• No. 4 Ridgeview (11-1)vs. No. 1 Philomath (11-0), 3 p.m. • Admission to all semifinal
games is $8 for adults, $5 for students (ages 5and older through high school).
Kelli Backer was tabbed
coach of the year. All-state teams were
voted on by coaches and compiledbyThe Or-
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
egonian newspaper. The state's smallschool all-state teams have not yet been an-
nounced. For complete Class 4A and Class 5A all-
state teams, seeScoreboard, G2. — Bulletin staff report
Pac-12's list of bowl-eligible With Huskies upnext, teams up to 8;10 possible Beavs look to finishstrong By John Marshall
the hyperbole that goes with it, particularly with as difficult as the Pac-12 has PHOENIX — No. 5 Oregon is now a become this season. "You look from a scheduling standlong shot to play in the BCS title game, thanks to its loss to Stanford earlier point this week around the country, this month. there's a lot of conferences that play a Entering Saturday's game against lot different schedule than the Pac-12 Arizona, the Ducks are 9-1 and will does," Helfrich said. "Some of those need some helpfrom the four undefeat- teams, their score is going to look a ed teams in front of them in the BCS lot different than our score. Or a team standings: Alabama, Florida State, that wins a conference game 21-17 and they're a 'workmanlike effort.' And Ohio State and Baylor. Oregon coach Mark Helfrich un- if we win a game 21-17, (the media) derstands the position his team is in would try to fire me. That's part of the and the way the current system works. deal." What he does not particularly like is See Pac-12/C4 The Associated Press
GOLF
Bend pro moves up at Q-School MURRIETA, Calif.
— Bend golfer Andrew Vijarro inched closer to contention Wednesday
with a1-under-par 71 in the second round of the second stage of the
Web.com Tour's National Qualifying School. The 24-year-old
By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
Nextup Washington at Oregon State When:
Saturday, 7:30 p.m. TV: ESPN2
CORVALLIS — First a deflating loss against Eastern Washington, then a six-game winning streak, and now a three-game slump against some of the Pac-12's stronger football teams. Oregon State's season so far has been uneven at best, but the Beavers are heading into their final two regular-season games looking for the positives to offset the negatives. "I think there's some disappointment, but this is a good
group," OSU coach Mike Riley said. "They're going to be fine that way, they're not quitting or anything like that. I'm not worried about that. It's a good group and we've competed hard, we just haven't played well enough to win all the way around." See Beavs/C4
professional played a consistent round with a pair of birdies and
SKIING
one bogey onthe front
nine before closing with nine straight pars at
Bear CreekGolf Club. The steady finish puts Vijarro at 3 over par
through 36 holes andin a four-way tie for 61st
place out of 79 golfers in the field. Vijarro still needs to
make up ground toadvance to the final qualifying stage in December. Nine golfers are tied for
20th place at 3under, and only the top 20 golfers and ties after Friday's
final round advance. Justin Itzen, of Pomona, Calif., leads at 9
under.
— Bulletin staff report
A helmet cameracraze: Skiers recordtheir own runs By Samantha Critchell The Associated Press
WILMINGTON, Vt. — Hey, mom, did you see that cool jump? That explosion of powder? How I squeezed between those trees? There are moments onthe slopes when skiers wish all eyes were on them. But here's the next best thing: helmet cameras,which enable skiers to photograph and videotape their own descents, jumps and tracks to show off later.
Helmet cams have become so ubiquitous that they are "almost the norm" at Steamboat Ski & Resort in Steamboat Springs, Colo. "The cameras take bragging rights to the next level," said resort spokeswoman Loryn Kasten. Steamboat is even incorporating user content into its own social media and marketing, because the vantage point of the skier or boarder taking video has more impact than the pro cameraman standing at the bottom. See Cameras /C4
The GoPro digital camera is mounted on a ski helmet, a hot item on ski slopes and in other settings. Courtesy ofGoPro
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY GOLF European Tour, South Africa Open LPGA Tour, CME Group Titleholders
Time 6 a.m.
World Cup ofGolf
6 p.m.
TV/Radio Golf Golf Golf
10:30 a.m.
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Charlotte vs. KansasState 7:30 a.m. Men's college, Georgetown vs. Northeastern 9:30 a.m. Men's college, Alabama-Birmingham vs. New Mexico noon Men's college, LongBeachState vs. Michigan2 p.m. Men's college, Davidson vs. Georgia 2 p.m. Men's college, Boston College vs. Connecticut
ESPNU ESPNU ESPNU ESPN2 ESPNU
4 p.m.
ESPN2
4:30 p.m.
Men's college, Florida State vs. Virginia Commonwealth
NBA, Chicago at Denver FOOTBALL College, Rutgers at Central Florida
7:30 p.m.
ESPNU Pac-12 TNT CBSSN ESPN2 Root Pac-12 TNT
4 30 p.m,
ESPN
College, Rice atAlabama-Birmingham
4:30 p.m. Fox Sports1
NFL, New Orleans at Atlanta College, UNLV at Air Force
5:25 p.m. 6 :30 p.m.
Men's college, UCSanta Barbara atColorado 5 p.m. NBA, L.A. Clippers at Oklahoma City 5 p.m. Men's college, New Hampshire vs. Marquette5 p.m.
Men's college, Indiana vs.Washington 6 p.m. Men's college, Washington State atGonzaga 6 p.m. Men's college, TexasSouthern at Stanford 7 p.m.
NFL ESP N U
FRIDAY GOLF
European Tour,South Africa Open
Time 6 a.m.
TV/Radio
LPGA Tour, CME Group Titleholders 10:30 a.m. World Cup of Golf 6 p.m. MOTOR SPORTS Formula One, Brazilian Grand Prix, practice 8 a.m. BASKETBALL
Men's college, teamsTBD
9 a.m.
Golf Golf Golf NBCSN
ON DECK Saturday Football: 4A statesemifinal, Ridgeviewvs. Philo math,CottageGroveHigh,3 p.m.
PREP SPORTS Football Class 6A SecondRound Quarterfinals Friday's Games LakeridgeatJesuit, 7 p.m. Canbyat Sheldon,7p.m. Clackamas at Central Catholic, 7 p.m. North MedfordatTigard, 7p.m. Class 5A Semifinals Saturday's Games Autzen Stadium, Eugene Ashlandvs. Sherwood,1 p.m. Hillsboro Stadium Silvertonvs.WestAlbany, 5:30p.m. Class 4A Semifinals
Saturday's Games
Cottage GroveHighSchool Ridgeview vs. Philomath,3 p.m. Autzen Stadrum,Eugene Norlh Bend vs. ColtageGrove, 6p.m. Class 3A Semifinals Saturday's Games Summit High School Nyssavs.Dayton, 3p.m. Valevs. CascadeChnstran,7 p.m. Class 2A Semifinals Saturday's Games Summit High School GrantUnionvs. PortlandChristian 11 a.m. Hillsboro Stadium Heppnervs. Regis,11 a.m. Class1A Semifinals Saturday's Games Cottage GroveHighSchool Camas Va eyvs. Lowell,11a m. Hillsboro Stadium TriangleLakevs. Imbler,2:15p.m.
Volleyball
ESPNU
Class 5A Aff-State
Men's college, Puerto Rico Tip-off,
semifinal, teams TBD 11:30 a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, teamsTBD 11:30 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Pureto Rico Tip-off, semifinal, teamsTBD 2 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, teamsTBD 2 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, 2K Sports Classic, final, teamsTBD 4 p.m. ESPN2 Women's college, Delaware atVillanova 4 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Maryland vs. Marist 4 p.m. CBSSN Men's college, Puerto Rico Tip-off, consolation, teamsTBD 4 :30 p.m. ESP N U NBA, San Antonio at Memphis 5 p.m. ESPN Women's college, USC at Oklahoma State Men's college, Monmouth at St. John's
5 p.m. 6 p.m.
Root F ox Sports1
Men's college, Charleston Classic, semifinal, teams TBD Men's college, Providence vs. Vanderbilt NBA, Chicago at Portland 1110-AM, 100.1-FM NBA, Golden State at L.A. Lakers Men's college, Morehead State at UCLA VOLLEYBALL
6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7 p.m.
ESPNU CBSSN CSNNW,
7:30 p.m.
ESPN Pac-12
8 p.m.
Women's college, OregonState at Colorado 4 p.m. Women's college, Washington State at Stanford 6 p.m. HOCKEY College, North Dakota at Boston University 4 :30 p.m. FOOTBALL Navy at San Jose State 6 :30 p.m.
Pac-12 Pac-12
Player of the year — PaytonRund, jr., West Albany Coach ofthe year —KeffiBacker, West Albany First team — PaytonRund, jr., West Abany; KendraBodine,, sr., ChurchiI; GabbySusee, sr., St. Helens;AlyciaWodke,jr., Wiffamette; MarandaBoeder, sr., WestAlbany,Taylor Ristvedt, jr., Cleveland;Amanda Short sr Lebanon; Cassidy Wheeler, jr., Bend. Second team —HaleyWels, srr,WestAlbany; NoaEna,jr., Hermiston;CaffieKruska,jr, Bend;Taylor Albertson,jr., St.Helens;Whitney Webster,sr, West Albany;HaileyGruetzmacher, sr., Parkrose;DaniTaylor, sr., SummitLi , gie Hoffman,sr., Corvaffis;PerryWilliams,jr., Cleveland;Livia Strandberg,jr., Roosevelt.
Class 4A Aff-State Player of the year — Hannah Troutman, sr., CrookCounty Coach oftheyear —CristinaWiliams,Cascade First team — HannahTroutman, sr., Crook County; HaileyNeson, jr, Cascade; MeganBunn, so., Banks;AnnaGrrgsby,jr.,LaGrande;MaKenzie Cushman, Ir., HiddenValey; KesleyShaw, sr., Elmira; KarleeHollis, jr., CrookCounty, ShelbyMauritson, jr., Madras. Second team —Nila Lukens,jr., Sisters; Tracee Scott,sr., Marshfield;AshlynFlynn, sr., Phoenix; MadelineLehman,sr., Phrlomath; Cartlin Pasturel, jr., Cascade;Katie Nurge,sr., Ridgeview;Alexis Urbach, jr., Madras.
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALLLEAGUE All Times PST AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
NBC S N ESP N 2
Listingsare the mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changes madeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL TigerS trade Fielder to RangerS —TheDetroit Tigers and Texas agreed to a blockbuster trade Wednesday night that would
send slugger Prince Fielder to the Rangers for second basemanlan Kinsler, according to a person with knowledge of the deal. Theperson spokeon conditionofanonymity becausenoannouncementhad been made. Fielder signed a $214 million, nine-year contract with the
Tigers before the 2012seasonthat includes a limited no-trade provision, and the big first baseman was set to approve the deal. Kinsler just finished the first season of a $75 million, five-year contract.
SKIING Vonn Partially tearS rePaired right knee ligamentLindsey Vonn partially tore one of the reconstructed ligaments in her
surgically repaired right knee in atraining crash that at the very least puts her preparation for the Sochi Olympics on hold. What is less clear at the moment: When the four-time overall World Cup champion
and 2010 Vancouver downhill gold medalist will be able to compete again and how her injuries might affect her Olympic hopes. Vonn has not competed since needing surgery to fix her ACL and MCL after the
crash in Austria nine months ago; theACLwas re-jnjured Tuesday.
BASKETBALL UCORR OutrunS Oregan WOmen — StefanieDolsonrecorded the second triple-double in Connecticut history, with a career-high 26 points,14 reboundsand11 assists as the top-ranked Huskies ran away from Oregon 114-68 on Wednesday night in Hartford, Conn.
Breanna Stewart had 28points and eight rebounds and Bria Hartley added17 points, six rebounds, andsix assists for UConn(5-0). Freshman Chrishae Rowe had 27 for the Ducks (2-2j, just over her
season average. TheHuskies never trailed.
CYCLING ArmStrOng SettleS inSuranCe laWSuit — A daybefore hewas scheduled to givesworntestimony about his use of performance-enhancing drugs, Lance Armstrong reached a settlement Wednesday
with an insurancecompany that was seeking $3 million in performance bonuses it paid him from1999 to 2001.Nebraska-basedAcceptance Insurance sued Armstrong in Texas earlier this year after he admitted
he doped during acareer in which hewonthe Tour deFrance seven times. Acceptanceattorney Mark Kincaid andArmstrong attorney Tim Herman declined to disclose details of the settlement, but both said the case was "resolved to the mutual satisfaction of the parties." — From wire reports
NewEngland N.Y.Jets Miami Buffalo Indianapolis Tennessee Houston Jacksonville Cincinnati Pittsburgh Baltimore Cleveland
W L T 7 3 0 5 5 0 5 5 0 4 7 0
South
Pct PF PA .700256 199 .500 183 268 .500213 225 .364236 273
W L T Pct PF PA 7 3 0 .700252 220 4 6 0 .400227 226 2 8 0 .200 193 276 1 9 0 .100 129 318 North W L T Pct PF PA 7 4 0 .636275 206 4 6 0 .400216 245 4 6 0 .400208 212 4 6 0 4 00 192 238
West
W L T Pct PF PA 9 I 0 . 900398 255 9 1 0 .900232 138 4 6 0 .400 194 246 4 6 0 4 00 228 222 NATIONALCONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 6 5 0 .545276 260 Dallas 5 5 0 .500274 258 N.Y.Giants 4 6 0 4 00 192 256 Washington 3 7 0 .300246 311 South W L T Pct PF PA NewOrleans 8 2 0 .800288 183 Carolina 7 3 0 .700238 137 TampaBay 2 8 0 .200 187 237 Atlanta 2 8 0 .200214 292 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 6 4 0 .600265 253 Chicago 6 4 0 .600282 267 GreenBay 5 5 0 .500258 239 Minnesota 2 8 0 .200240 320 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 10 1 0 .909 306 179 SanFrancisco 6 4 0 .600247 178 Arizona 6 4 0 .600 214 212 St. I.ouis 4 6 0 4 0 0 224 234
Denver Kansas City Oakland SanDiego
Today's Game NewOrleansatAtlanta, 5.25 p.m. Sunday's Games Minnesotaat GreenBay, 10a.m. Jacksonville atHouston,10 a.m. San Diegoat KansasCity, 10a.m. ChicagoatSt. Louis, 10a.m. Pittsburghat Cleveland, 10a.m. Tampa Bayat Detroit,10 a.m. N.Y.Jetsat Baltimore,10a.m. Carolina atMiami,10a.m. TennesseeatOakland,1:05p.m. Indianapolis atArizona,I:05 p.m. Dallas atN.Y.Giants, 1:25p.m. DenveratNewEngland, 5.30p.m. Open:Buffalo, Cincinnati, Philadelphia,Seattle
Monday'sGame
San FranciscoatWashington, 5:40 p.m.
College Schedule All Times PST (Subject to change) Wednesday'sGame MIDWEST N. Illinois35,Toledo17
Today's Games SOUTH
NichoffsSt. (4-7)at SELouisiana (9-2), 4 p.m. Rice (7-3)atUAB(2-8), 4:30p.m. Rutgers(5-4)at UCF(8-1), 4:30p.m. FAR WEST
UNLV(5-5) atAir Force(2-8), 6:30p.m. Friday's Games FAR WEST
Navy(6-4)at SanJoseSt.(5-5), 6.30p.m. Pac-12 Standings North
Conf.
Overall
CCSU 53,NewHampshire 52 Caldwell 78,Felician64,OT Dominican (NY)70,Concordia (NY)47 Duquesne 78, Buffalo55 Elizabethtown 57, Susquehanna41 5-5 FranklinPierce75, St.Michael's 69,OT 0-8 1-10 lona 74,Wagner59 South Loyola(Md.)72,Howard62 Conf. Overall NJIT60, LIUBrookyn58 6-1 8-2 ArizonaState NYU93, Manhattanviffe67 5-2 8-2 NewHaven69,LeMoyne54 UCLA 5-2 8-3 Northeastern USC 64 RhodeIsland59 3-4 6-4 Old Westbury71,CCNY48 Arizona 1-6 Colorado 46 PennSt 92,Buckneff49 1-6 4-6 Providence Utah 79,Hartford 53 Saturday's Games S. NewHampshire 71,St.Anselm63 OregonatArizona, 12:30p.m. Saint Joseph's70,Drexel52 Utah atWashington State,12:30 p.m. Shippensburg87,LockHaven85 Californiaat Stanford,1 p.m. St. John'76, s Quinnipiac 66 ArizonaStateatUCLA,4 p.m. St. Rose58, Pace48 USCatColorado, 6:30p.m Stonehig86,Merrimack74 Washingtonat OregonState, 7:30 p.m. Syracuse 113,Md.-Eastern Shore42 IJConn114,Oregon68 LIMass64,Rutgers 63 Betting line Villanova62, SacredHeart 59, OT WilliamPaterson66, Farmingdale 65,20T NFL York (Pa.)65,E.Mennonite52 (Home teams inCAPS) SOUTH Favorite Opening Current Underdog Carson-New man78,Tusculum68 Today Saints 7 9.5 FALCON S CharlestonSouthern68, Wofford 45 Coker76, Newberry 62 Sunday St.86, Wilmington(Del.) 73 LIONS 95 9 Buccaneers Delaware TEXANS 10.5 10 Jaguars ElizabethCitySt.56, Barton55 PACKER S 5 5 Vikings Emory77, Oglethorpe50 CHIEFS 5 5 Chargers FloridaGulfCoast78,Charlotte 73 Panthers 4 4 DOLPHINS GramblingSt.92, TexasCollege 60 BROWN S 2 2 Steelers JacksonvilleSt. 78,KennesawSt. 65 RAMS PK 1 Bears LSU 73,Hampton54 RAVENS 3.5 3.5 Jets Lamar68,Louisiana-Lafayette60 74,Queens(NC) 67 RAIDERS PK 1 Titans Lenoir-Rhyne St.90,Wesley55 CARDINALS 2 2.5 Colts Morgan GIANTS 2.5 2.5 Cowboys NichogsSt. 68,SouthAlabama60 Broncos 2.5 25 PATRIOT S Randoph71,Washington 8,Lee58 SouthCarolina68, Clemson43 Monday 49ers 4.5 5 REDSKINS SouthFlorida93,NCCentral 35 Stet son 77,Bethune-Cookman63 IJNC-Greensboro 73, Norfolk St. 66 Coffege Union(Ky.)77, Montreat 70 Today W. Carolina 62, UNCAshevile 51 C. FLORID A 165 17 MIDWEST Rice 19 185 B ethel (Mi n n.) 101,BethanyLutheran53 AIR FOR CE I I Bluffton74, Kalamazoo57 Friday SANJOSEST 1.5 1.5 Navy CardinalStritch71,St.Xavier61 Carthage 94 Beloit 53 Saturday (Wis.)62, Carroll (Wis.)57 PENNST 1.5 2 Neb raska Concordia 83, Davenport 76 fflinois 7 65 PU RDUEComerstone Pittsburgh I I SY RACUSEDefiance78,Alma65 TEMPLE 9 8.5 Connecticut Evansville80,BallSt. 69 OHIOST 32 34.5 Ind iana FAU81, W.Illinois 77 MichiganSt 7.5 7 NORTHW ESTERN Gustavus77,Wis.-River Falls56 99,Grace54 E. Carolina 7 6 NCSTATE IPFW FLORIDA ST 56 57 Idaho Rl.-chicago88,SIU-Edwardsviffe 65 Madonna 87,Marygrove64 Marshall 32.5 33 FLORIDAINT'L GEORG IA 23.5 23.5 K e ntuckyMichigan83,Pittsburgh75 IOWAST 6 5.5 Kan sas MichiganSt.80, Detroit 41 98, Finlandia61 Duke 5 5.5 WAKEFOREST Minn.-Crookston 70, Kansas59 MARYLAND PK PK BostonCollege Minnesota Wisconsin 14.5 16 5 MINNESOT A N. Iowa86,N.DakotaSt. 82 74, Hofstra 57 MIAMI-FLA 19.5 20 Vir g inia Northwestern Adrian61 HOUSTO N 3.5 3.5 C i ncinnatiOberlin 79, Siena Hei g hts 88, Concordia(Mich.) 81 LOUISVILLE 24.5 24 Me mphis TENNES SEE 3 2.5 V a nderbiltSpringArbor59, Rochester (Mich.) 53 C. MICHIGAN 9 95 UMa s s Toledo96,UMKC81 BowlrngGreen 24.5 24 5 E.MICHIGAN Wayne(Neb) 101,York(Neb) 41 WYOMING 7 6 Hawaii WichitaSt.69,KansasSt 46 Oshkosh79,Ripon51 W. Kentucky 4 4 TE XAS STWis.St.67, N.Kentucky 53 IOWA 6 6 Mic higan Youngstown SOUTHWEST ArizonaSt 2.5 2 UCLA H ouston 66, North Texas61 UTAHST 6.5 8 5 C olorado St Word 99, OurLadyofthe Lake73 Usc 21.5 23 C OLORADOIncamate 99,Texas-Arlington 46 LSU 3.5 4 Te xas A8 MOklahoma I-MississippiSt 2 FAR WEST 2 AR KANSAS Boise St. 92, Coll. of Idaho56 Oregon 18.5 21 AR IZONA 84, Concordia(Cal.) 79 TULANE 17 17 Utep CS Bakersfield STANFO RD 31.5 32 5 C a liforniaColorado90, lowa87 78,E.Washington58 N.TEXAS 85 8 TX-S. Antonio Gonzaga St 58,MontanaSt.-Bilings 49 NOTRE DAME PK PK Byu Montana 58,AdamsSt. 49 Baylor 9 9.5 OKLAHOMA ST N. Colorado Mid TennSt 22.5 23 S. M ISS SanJoseSt 98, SanFrancisco 79 Clara67, San FranciscoSt.57 ARKANSAS ST 24 24 G e orgia StSanta F Austin 60, Arizona56 OREGON ST NL NL Washington Stephen S ALABAMA 3.5 35 U L-Monroe Smu 4.5 4.5 S . FLORIDA HOCKEY FRESNO ST 31 32 New Mexico FLAATLAN TIC 20 21.5 New MexicoSt NHL Tulsa 3.5 3.5 LATECH KANSAS ST 3 45 O k lahoma NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE Missouri 3 2 5 MISSISSIPPI All Times PST WASHINGTONST I I utah BoiseSt 7 7 SAN DIEGO ST EasternConference I-Little Rock,Ark Atlantic Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA Boston 21 14 6 1 29 59 38 BASKETBALL Tampa Bay 2 1 14 7 0 2 8 66 55 Toronto 21 13 7 1 27 62 49 Men's college Detroit 22 9 6 7 25 54 62 Montreal 22 11 9 2 24 58 47 Wednesday'sGames Ottawa 2 2 8 1 0 4 2 0 63 71 EAST Florida 2 2 6 1 2 4 1 6 49 72 AmericanInternational91, Bridgeport79 Buffalo 2 3 5 1 7 1 1 1 42 72 Bentley88,Assumption 76 Metropolitan Division Caldwel91, l Felician 77 GP W L OT PtsGF GA Colgate81, Comeff58 Pittsburgh 2 2 1 4 8 0 28 63 48 Dominican (NY)91, Concordia (N.Y.)84 W ashi n gton 22 12 9 1 25 69 63 Duquesne70,Albany(NY) 59 NewJersey 21 8 8 5 21 46 52 E. Mennonite94,Elizabethtown84 N .Y. Rangers 21 10 11 0 2 0 43 52 Harvard86,Bryant 68 Carolina 21 8 9 4 20 40 59 Holy Cross63, Fairfield 49 C olumbus 2 2 8 1 1 3 19 54 65 LeMoyne79,NewHaven71 N .Y. Islanders 22 8 1 1 3 1 9 63 73 LockHaven78, Shippensburg61 P hiladelphia 20 8 1 0 2 1 8 40 50 Loyol a(Md.)89,UMBC83,OT Western Conference Merrimack83,Stonehiff 77 Central Division Pittsburgh77, Lehigh58 GP W L OT PtsGF GA Quinnipiac71, Hampton68 Chicago 22 14 4 4 32 79 66 S. Connecticut80,Adelphi52 Minnesota 2 3 14 5 4 3 2 61 53 SlipperyRock79, Clarion65 St. Loui s 20 14 3 3 3 1 70 47 St. Anselm 88, S.NewHampshire 65 Colorado 20 15 5 0 30 64 42 St. Michael's68,Franklin Pierce66 Dallas 20 11 7 2 24 58 56 St. Rose84,Pace54 Winnipeg 2 3 10 10 3 2 3 61 66 SOUTH Nashville 21 10 9 2 22 48 63 Apprentice101Mid-AmChristian 60 Pacific Division Belmont 94,Lipscomb64 GP W L DT Pts GF GA Bethel(Tenn.)97, Harris-Stowe71 Anaheim 2 4 1 5 6 3 33 75 63 Carson-New man77, Tusculum70 S an Jose 2 1 1 3 3 5 31 72 50 Dayton82,Georgia Tech72 Phoenix 21 1 4 4 3 31 73 66 Ferrum77,Emory 8 Henry74 Los Angeles 22 15 6 1 3 1 63 48 High Point80,Wiliam 8 Mary69 Vancouver 23 1 1 8 4 26 58 61 Lenoir-Rhyne 81, Queens(NC)77, 2OT C algary 22 7 11 4 18 60 81 Limestone95, Southern Wesleyan70 Edmonton 2 3 6 15 2 1 4 60 83 Md.-EasternShore78, MountSt. Mary's71 NDTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime Mercer109,Johnson8 Wales(NC) 56 loss. Montreat123,Union(Ky.) 119,20T Wednesday'sGames NC Central82,NCState72,OT Minnesota 4 Ottawa3 Newberry89, Coker83 Pittsburgh4,Washington 0 Ohio 65,MorganSt.62 Columbus 2, Calgary1, OT Tulane68,Cedarville 58 NewJersey4,Anaheim3, OT UMKC79, UT-Martin 67 Today'sGames UNCGreensboro92, Greensboro62 St. I.ouis atBoston,4 p.m. VMI112,Bridgewater (Va.) 86 Nashville at Toronto, 4p.m. MIDWEST Buffalo atPhiladelphia,4p.m. CardinalStritch82,St. Xavier74 Carolina atDetroit, 4:30p.m. Cincinnati81,Campbell 62 Chicagoat Winnipeg, 5 p.m. Davenport81, Cornerstone80 N.Y.Rangersat Dallas, 5:30p.m. Defiance70,Ama68 Colorado at Phoenix 6 pm Evansviffe100,Valparaiso92 Florida atEdmonton, 6:30p.m. IPFW106,Purdue-Calumet72 NewJerseyatLosAngeles, 7:30p.m. Madonna 88, Marygrove 39 TampaBayat SanJose, 7:30p.m. Manhattan79,fflinois St. 70 Friday's Games MissouriSt. 97,Grambling St. 67 N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh,4p.m. N. DakotaSt.83, W.Michigan 74 Montrea atWashington, 4p.m. Northwestern93,Rl.-chicago 58 Florida atCalgary,6p.m. Ohio St.63, American U.52 Columbus atVancouver, 7p.m. Presentation104,Augustana(SD)55 TampaBayatAnaheim,7p.m. Purdue83, E.Illinois 55 Ripon82, Marian(Wis.) 65 SienaHeights76, Concordia (Mich.) 73,OT SOCCER SpringArbor92,Great LakesChristian 56 St. Norbert63, Wis.-oshkosh53 Viterbo65,St.Mary's(Minn.) 48 MLS Xavier77,Miami(Ohio)51 MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Youngstown St.82,Thiel 58 All Times PST SOUTHWES T Baylor69,CharlestonSouthern 64 CONFERENCECHAMPIONSHIP LouisianaTech94, Cent. Arkansas57 Eastern Conference Rice63,TexasA8M-CC61 Leg I — Saturday, Nov9:Sporting KC0, Houston 0 SMU70,TexasSt. 49 Leg 2 —Saturday, Nov.23: Houstonat SportingKC, SamHoustonSt. 98,Jarvis Christian48 4:30 p.m. WichitaSt.77, Tulsa54 Western Conference FAR WEST Leg 1 Sunday, Nov.10: RealSalt Lake4, PortAir Force78,ColoradoChristian 51 land 2 FresnoSt.63, CalPoly46 Leg 2 —Sunday, Nov.24:Real Salt LakeatPortland, lowaSt.90, BYU88 6 p.m. NewMexicoSt.67,N. Colorado63 San Diego St. 93,SanDiegoChristian 41 San JoseSt.83,Pepperdine 77 DEALS
Oregon Stanford OregonState Washington WashingtonState California
61 6-2 4-3 3-4 3-4
Women's College Wednesday'sGames
EAST Adelphi92,S.Connecticut 66 Albany(NY)71, CalSt.-Fufferton49 AmericanU.60,UMBC39 Army66, Manhatan 52 Bentley89,Assumption 68 Brown66,Bryant 61
9-1 8-2 6-4 6-4
Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMOR E ORIOLES— Agreedto termswith RHPEdgmer Escalonaon aone-yearcontract. Selected thecontractsof CMichael Ohlmanand LHPTime Berry fromFrederick (Carolina) andRH PEddie Gamboa from Norfolk (IL). BOSTON REDSOX— Selected thecontract of OF
BryceBrentzandRHPAnthony Ranaudo from Pawtucket(IL)and3BGarin Cecchini fromPortland (EL). CHICAGO WHITESOX— Claimed INFJake Elmoreoff waiversIromHouston. Selectedthecontracts of INFCarlosSanchezand OFTrayceThompsonfrom Charlotte(IL). CLEVEL AND INDIANS Named Matt Quatraro major leagueassistant hitting coach. Selectedthe contracts ofRHPBryan PricefromColumbus (IL); RHPAustin Adams, INFJesus Aguilar andOFCarlos Moncriefrom f Akron(EL); and INFErik Gonzalez from Carolina(SL). DesignatedINFCord Phelps for assignmen t. DETROITTIGERS Acquired2BlanKinslerfrom the Texas Rangersfor1B PrinceFiederandcashconsiderations.Selectedthe contracts of LHPKyleLobstein, RHP Justin Miler and1BJordan LennertonIrom Toledo(IL); SSEugenioSuarezand CFDaniel Fields from Erie(EL);andRH PJoseValdezandRFSteven MoyafromLakeland(FSL). HOUSTO NASTROS— Claimed NFRyan Jackson off waiversfrom St. Louis. ReleasedRHPJohn Ely. SentOFJ.D Martinezoutright to OklahomaCity
(PCL).
KANSAS CITYROYALS— Selected the contracts of OF LaneAdams, INFChristian Colon, andRHP MichaelMariotfromOm aha(PCL) and INFCheslor Cuthbert fromNorthwestArkansas(Texas). DesignatedLHPNoel ArgueffesandINFIrving Falufor assignment.AnnouncedRHPFelipePaulino refusedhis outrightassignmentto Dmahaand elected to become afreeagent. MINNESDT ATWINS—Selected the contracts of LHPLoganDarnefffrom Rochester (IL),OFMaxKepler and INFsJorgePolancofrom Cedar Rapids (MWL); and KennysVargasfrom Fort Myers(FSL). SentRHP B.J. Hermsenoutright to Rochester(IL). Agreedto terms withRHPsDeolis Guerra,LesterOliveros and Virgil Vazquez;LHPAaron Thompson; OFs Jermaine Mitchell, ChrisRahlandWilkin Ramirez; INFsJason Bartlett, JamesBeresford, DougBernier, Deibinson Romero;andCDanRohlfing onminor leaguecontracts. NEW YORKYANKEES Acquired INF Dean Annafrom SanDiegoforRHPBenPauff usandadded Anna tothe40-manroster. Selectedthe contracts of OF SladeHeathcott from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL), RHPsShaneGreeneandBryanMitchell and CGary
Sanche zfrom Trenton(EL)andRHPJose Campos from Charleston (SAL) OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Selectedthecontract of RHPRaulAlcantarafromStockton (Cal).
SEATTLE MARINERS— Selected the contracts of RHP LoganBawcom,18/DH Ji-ManChoi,OF James JonesandOFStefenRomerofromTacoma(PCL). TAMPABAYRAYS Agreed to termswith RHP SamRunionona minor eaguecontract. Seectedthe contractof18 VinceBelnome,LHPC.J. Riefenhauser and RHP Kirby Yates fromDurham(IL). Selectedthe contract ofRHPJesseHahn fromCharlotte (SL). TEXAS RANGERS — Clai med RHP Shawn Togesonoff waiversfrom the LosAngeles Dodgers. Selectedthecontracts of RHP s I.isalverto Bonila and Ben Rowenand INFLuis Sardinas. AnnouncedLHP EdwarCabreraclearedwaivers andwasassigned outright totheminorleagues.
NabonalLeague
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS Selectedthecontract
of OFEnderInciarte andRHPBoSchultz fromMobile (SL).DesignatedLHPTonySipp for assignment. CHICAGO CIJBS—Selected thecontracts of INF ArismendyAlcantaraandRHPDallas Beeler fromTen-
nessee(SL).
CINCINNATI REDS Selected thecontracts of C TuckerBarnhart,OFJuanDuran,OFRyan LaMarre and RHPChadRogers. COLOR ADOROCKIES—Selectedthecontracts of OF KentMatthesfrom Colorado Springs (PCL); LHP TylerMatzekand OFKyleParkerfromTulsa(TL); LHP Kraig Sittonfrom Modesto (Cal); andRHPRaul Fernandez ,LHPJaysonAquinoandINFRoseffHerrera from Asheville(SAL). LOS ANGELESDODGERS — Selected the contracts ofRHPsPedro BaezandYimi Garcia and LHP Jarret Martin fromAlbuquerque(PCL). Agreedto terms CJ.C. Boscan, INFsBrendanHarris andClint Robin sonandLHPDanielMoskosonminorleague contracts. MIAMIMARLINS— Selected the contract of LHP GrantDayton,RHPMichael Brady, 0J.T.Realmutoand OF BrentKeysfromJacksonville (SL).Selectedthe contract ofRHPAngel SanchezandRHPJose Urena from Jupiter(FSL) MILWAUKEEBREWERS — Promoted Jessica Brown todirector-ticket technology andservices and Caitlin Moyerdirector-newmedia. NEWYORKMETS—Selectedthecontracts of LHP StevenMatzfromSavannah(SAL); RHPsJeff Walters and ErikGoeddel fromBinghamton (EL), andRH PJacob deGrom from LasVegas(PCL). PHILADELP HIA PHILLIES— Selectedthe contracts of OFsAaron Altherr andKelly Duganfrom Clearwater(FSL)andCTommyJosephand LHPRob Rasmussen fromLehighValley(IL). PITTSBU RGH PIRATES—Seected the contracts of RHPCasey Sadler andOFGregory PolancoIrom Indianpolis(IL); INFAlenHansonfromAltoona (EL), and LI-IP JoelyRodriguez fromBradenton(FSL). ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Sig ned manager Mike Matheny to a three-yearcontract extension. Announcedthe retirementof RHPChris Carpenter. Selectedthecontracts of OFOscar Taveras, OFMike O'Neill andINFGregGarcia fromMemphis (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Agreed to terms with RHPJoshJohnsononaone-yearcontract.Selected the contractsof RHPKeyvius Sampson fromTucson (PCL),RHPDonn Roach and LHPJuanOramasfrom San Antonio(TL). DesignatedRHPBrad Brach, RHP Miles Mikolas,LHPJose DePaula andOFJaff Decker for assignment. WASHING TON NATIONALS — Agreedto terms with RHPChris Youngand RHPGabriel Alfaro on minor leaguecontracts. Seected thecontracts ofAaron BarrettfromHarrisburg (EL);andof LHPSammy Solis and OFMichael Taylor fromPotomac(Carolina). Design ated LHPsFernandoAbad andTylerRobertson for assignmen t. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA —FinedBoston F Gerald Wallace$10,000 for usingprofanelanguageduring his postgamemedia availability sessionfollowing aNov.19 gameat Houston. PHILADE LPHIA76ERS Signed GEffiot Wil iams and GI.orenzoBrown. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL — FinedSanFrancisco LBAhmad Brooks $15,570 bytheNFLfor his hit onNewOrleans QB DrewBreesduringaNov.17 game. BUFFALO BILLS—SignedOTJ.J. Uunga. CINCINNATIBENGALS— Signed DTChristo Bilukid cReleasedDTKheestonRandaff . CLEVELANDBROWNS — SignedWR Josh Cooper fromthepractice squad.PlacedWRArmanti Edwards ontheinjured reservelist. SignedWRReggie Dunn tothepractice squad. DETROITLIONS— ReleasedTE Marteff Webb from the practicesquad. SignedRBSteven Miler to the practicesquad.PlacedRBMonteg Owens on injured reserve.ReleasedTEMarteff Webbfrom the practicesquad GREEN BAYPACKERS—SignedGAndrewTiler to the practicesquad. ReleasedGBryan Coffins from the practicesquad. INDIANAP OLISCOLTS—SignedRBChris Rainey. KANSASCITY CHIEFS — Signed OL Chandler Burden tothepracticesquad.ReleasedFBTobenOpurum from thepractice squad NEWYOR KJETS — Signed LBJermaine Cunningham. OAKLAND RAIDERS—PlacedDBD.J. Haydenon the injuredreservelist. ActivatedLBMiles Burris from the PUP list. Re-signedDLBrian Sanford. SignedDT RickyLumpkinto thepracticesquad HOCKEY National HockeyLeague CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS— Recalled F Jeremy Morin fromRockford (AHL). DALLASSTARS Recalled D Kevin Connauton
fromTe xas(AHL). DETROIRE T DWINGS—RecalledLWTrevor Parkes fromToledo(ECHL). Agreedto termswith LWAndreasAthanasiouonathree-yearentry-level contract. MINNESDT A WILD— Recaled F JasonZucker from lowa (AHL). PHDENIXCOYOTES — Recalled FTim Kennedy from Portland(AHL). TAMPA BAYLIGHTNING— Reassigned DDmitry KorobovtoSyracuse(AHL).
TENNIS ATP NamedChris Kermodeexecutive chairman 8 president, effective Jan.1, 2014 COLLEGE EASTERNCOLLEGEATHLETIC CONFERENCEAppointedDannyMccabeof Adelphi to the ECA C BoardofDirectorsfor afour-year term. FELICIAN NamedChrisFoyesoftball coach. OAKLAND —Reinstated men's basketball players Duke MondyandDante Wiliams
THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
NHL ROUNDUP
Penguins get past Capitals The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Even Sidney Crosby acknowl-
edged his goal — and the lickety-split series of passes that led up to it — was "fun" and "one of the nicer ones." Crosby delivered that
h ighlight-reel goal a n d an assist to get the better of a quiet Alex Ovechkin in the past league MVPs' first matchup as division rivals, and the Pittsburgh Penguins ended a threegame road losing streak by beating the Washington Capitals 4-0 on Wednesday night. Crosby's one-timer from a tough angle while leaning on his left knee capped quite a sequence of touches from Evgeni Malkin at the point to Chris Kunitz in the slot to James Neal slightly behind the net to Crosby in the left circle. When the puck flew past goalie Braden Holtby with 29 seconds left in the third period to make it 3-0, Crosby raised his fists, threw his head back and let out a yell. "It's tough to get those," Crosby said. "Teams know where everybody is on the ice. To get that many quick
passes in — you enjoy those, because you don't see those too often. It's right up there." Even Holtby s ounded impressed afterward. "For Crosby to one-time that one off his off-wing, put it where he did — guys like that are going to score
goals," Holtby said, pursing his lips and shaking his head. With Pittsburgh "smothering" W a shington, as Penguins coach Dan Bylsma put it, Marc-Andre Fleury needed to make only 18 saves for hi s second shutout this season and 25th in the NHL. "It was not our day at all — on power play, PK, 5-on5," said Ovechkin, who hit a post early but otherwise was mostly held in check."That kind of game
happens." Pittsburgh woun d up with 4 0 s h ots. Paul Martin, off a p ass from Crosby, and Beau Bennett, with an assist from Malkin, scored less than 5~/2 minutes apart to give Pittsburgh a 2-0 lead in a first period it dominated. Neal tacked on the Penguins' fourth goal 7:16 into the final period. The Penguins beat the Capitals for the fifth time in a row. Also on Wednesday: Devils 4, Ducks 3: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Jaromir Jagr scored the tying goal with 1:01 left i n r e gulation, and New Jersey ended Anaheim's eight-game home winning streak to open the season with a victory over the Ducks. Wild 4, Senators 3: OTTAWA, Ontario — Mikko Koivu scored the tiebreak-
ing goal in the closing minutes of the third period and added two assists to l if t M i n n esota o v er Ottawa. Blue Jackets 2,Flames 1: CALGARY, AlbertaDefenseman Nikita Nikitin scored his first goal of the season 2:25 into overtime to give Columbus a victory against Calgary.
1. ~h®p 5~P
NBA ROUNDUP
azers a ewins rea oei The Associated Press
18 and Miami beat Orlando for its fifth straight victory. Pacers 103, Knicks 96: NEW YORK — Paul George made three free throws to tie it with 5.2 seconds left in regulation, then scored nine of his season-high 35 points in overtime as Indiana handed New York its sixth straight defeat at home. Mavericks 123, Rockets 120: DALLAS — Monta Ellis had a season-high 37 points and assisted on the go-ahead basket for Dallas to spoil Dwight Howard's best offensive night for Houston. Howard made his first 11 shots and scored a season-high 33 points. Spurs 104, Celtics 93: SAN ANTONIO — Tony Parker scored 19 points and San Antonio beat Boston to win its eighth straight overall and remain undefeated at home. Raptors 108, 76ers 98: PHILADELPHIA — DeMar DeRozan scored 33 points and Rudy Gay had 18 to help Toronto beat Philadelphia. Wizards 98, Cavaliers 91: CLEVELAND — B r adley Beal scored 26 points and Nene added 24 to lead Washington over Cleveland. Bobcats 95, Nets 91: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kemba Walker scored a season-high 31 points and Charlotte handed turnover-prone Brooklyn its sixth loss in the past seven games. Hawks 93, Pistons 85: ATLANTAPaul Millsap, signed in the offseason to replace Josh Smith, had 19 points to steal the spotlight in Smith's return to Atlanta with Detroit.
MILWAUKEE — The Portland Trail Blazers kept up their strong start and extended the Milwaukee Bucks' early-season woes. LaMarcus Aldridgescored 21 points, Damian Lillard added 19 and the Trail Blazers got their eighth straight win, beating the Bucks 91-82 Wednesday
night. Portland held th e l ead t h roughout the second half but had difficulty pulling away until late in the fourth quarter. "We got a win. That's all I'm worried about," said Portland guard Wesley Matthews, who had 15 points, all in the first half to help the Blazers complete a sweep of a four-game Eastern Conference road trip. "To finish a road trip undefeated and to do it with the defense and energy that we had in the second half is great," Portland coach Terry Stotts said. Luke Ridnour scored 13 points to lead the Bucks, who lost their sixth in a row and eight of 10 on the season. They last won on Nov. 6 against Cleveland. Portland's last loss came a night earlier against Houston. "Our margin of error is very small," Bucks coach Larry Drew said. "We're trying to dig ourselves out of a hole and the only way to do that is to play every possession like it's going to be the last possession. Portland is hot, needless to say, but we were right there but just couldn't get over the hump." Milwaukee pulled within six points late in the fourth on Caron Butler's 3 -pointer. However, Lillard ha d a breakaway dunk and a 3 of his own to put Portland up 89-78 — matching the Blazers' largest lead of the game. The Bucks got no closer than seven
again. "We are in positions to win games but in the fourth quarter we are just making mistakes," Milwaukee's Zaza Pachulia said. "We have to keep getting better individually and as a team because nobody is happy in this locker room." Portland shot just 41 percent for the game while winning for the 10th time in 12 games this season. "Our mentality is right. We're thinking greedy, we're thinking 'win' like we're supposed to," Matthews said. Bucks guard O.J. Mayo, who had nine points, added to the Bucks' injury woes when he sprained his left ankle. Portland opened the third quarter on a 8-0 run to take a 61-51 lead. The
Jeffrey Phelps /The Associated Press
Portland Trail Blazers' Wesley Matthews (2) drives against the Milwaukee Bucks' Nate Wolters, right, during the first half of Wednesday night's game in Milwaukee. Blazers took an 11-point lead late in the quarter when Nicolas Batum hit a 3 as he fell to the court. The Bucks responded as E rsan Ilyasova scored his first points of the contest when he made a 3, then followed it with a leaner in the lane to cut the deficit to 70-64 at the end of the quarter. Portland held a 53-51 lead at the half. The second quarter ended with an exchange of traditional three-point plays. Lillard drew a foul after making a reverselayup on a strong drive to the basket. Ridnour then made an acrobatic floater along the baseline while being fouled as the clock wound down. Ridnour, who has been battling a back injury, had 11 first-half points for the
Bucks. Milwaukee shot 50 percent over the first two quarters, compared to nearly 49 percent for the Blazers. Milwaukee finished the game at 44 percent, while Portland connected on just 41 percent of its shots. Stotts said he was disappointed with his team's first-half defense. "In the first half, there were three or four times where we had a chance to really nail down a defensive possession and it seemed like (Milwaukee) came up with the ball and finished the
play."
Also on Wednesday: Heat 120, Magic 92: ORLANDO, Fla. — LeBron James had 21 points and seven assists, Chris Bosh scored
Clippers 102, Timberwolves 98: M INNEAPOLIS — B l ak e G r iffin had 20 points and 10 rebounds while dominating his matchup with Kevin Love, and Chris Paul scored 16 in the fourth quarter to lead Los Angeles past Minnesota. Pelicans 105, Jazz 98: NEW ORLEANS — Anthony Davis had 22 points, nine rebounds and eight blocks to lift New Orleans over struggling Utah for its second consecutive victory. Kings 113, Suns 106: PHOENIXDeMarcus Cousins overcame a sore shoulder to score 19 points and grab 12 rebounds, leading Sacramento past Phoenix for its first road win of the season. G rizzlies 88, Warriors 81: O A KLAND, Calif. — Mike Conley shook off a rough shooting night to make a tiebreaking 3-pointer with 1:36 left in overtime and Memphis held on to beat Golden State.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All Times PST NATIONA t BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Eastern Conference
d-Indiana d-Miami Chicago d-Toronto Atlanta Charlotte Philadelphia Detroit Washington
Orlando Ceveland Boston NewYork Brooklyn Milwaukee
1
L 3 3 7 5 6 8 7 7 7 8 9 8 8 8
Western Conference
d-SanAntonio d-Portland Oklahoma City d-LA. Clippers GoldenState Dallas Houston Memphis Minnesota Phoenix NewOrleans LA. Lakers Denver
Sacramen to
W 10 9 6 5 7 6 5 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2
Utah d-divisionleader
W L 10 1 10 2 7 3 8 4 8 4 8 4 8 5 7 5 7 6 5 6 5 6 5 7 4 6 4 7 I 12
Wednesday'sGames Miami120,Orlando92 Toronto108,Philadelphia98 Washington98,Cleveland91 Indiana103,NewYork 96,OT Charlotte95, Brooklyn91 Atlanta93, Detroit 85 LA. Clippers102,Minnesota98 Portland91, Milwaukee82 NewOrleans105,Utah98 SanAntonio104, Boston93 Sacramento 113,Phoenix 106 Dallas123,Houston120 Memphis88, GoldenState81, OT
Today'sGames LA. Clippersat OklahomaCity, 5p.m. ChicagoatDenver, 7:30p.m. Friday's Games Milwaukee atPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. Phoenixat Charlotte,4 p.m.
Pct GB 909 750 1'/z 667 3 417 5'/~ 583 3'/z 500 4
Pct GB 909 833 '/~ 700 2'/~ 667 2'/2
667 2'iz 667 2'/~ 615 3 583 3'/z 53B 4 455 5 455 5 417 5'/2 400 5 1/2
364 6 077 10
NEWYORK(96)
Summaries
1/2
385 6 364 6 364 6 364 6 333 6'/z 30B 7 273 7 273 7 200 7~/~
2-5 3-3 8, G.Hill 7-185-8 23, Stephenson3-10 3-3 9, Scola3-42-28, Johnson0-20-0 0, Copeland 1-3 0-03, Mahinmi0-00-00, Watson1-64-47. Totals 33-8728-36 103.
WashingtonatToronto, 4p.m. IndianaatBoston,4:30 p.m. Atlanta atDetroit, 4:30p.m. Brook ynatMinnesota, 5p.m. SanAntonioatMemphis, 5p.m. ClevelandatNewOrleans,5 p.m. Utah atDallas, 5:30p.m. Chicago at Portland,7p.m. GoldenStateatLA. l.akers, 7:30p.m.
Anthony 10-28 10-10 30, Martin 3-8 0-2 6, Bargnani4-161-2 10, Udrih8-15 0-019, shumpert 1 62-24, J.smith8-19M 21, WorldPeace1-50-0 2, Prigioni 1-2 002, Aldrich 0 000 Ij, HardawayJr. 1-10-02. Totals37-10014-1796 Indiana 14 23 21 31 14 — 103 New York 19 23 20 27 7 — 96
Wednesday'sGames
Hornets 105, Jazz98
Blazers 91, Bucks82
UTAH (98)
PORTLAND (91) Batum3-6 0-2 8, Aldridge10-22 1-2 21, Lopez 3-72-28, Lillard7-183-319, Matthews6-150015, Williams2-60-05, Freeland0-2 2-2 2, Robinson1-4 2-44, Wright3-60-09.Totals35-8610-1591. MILWAUKEE (82) Butler 4-10 0 09, Udoh0 1 0 00, Pachulia 4-10 3-411, Ridnour6-141-313,Mayo382-29,Henson 5-11 0-0 10, llyasova2-80-0 5, M<ddleton 4-40-0 8, Neal4-91-111,Wolters3-50-2 6. Totals 35-80 7-12 82. Portland 23 30 17 21 — 91 Milwaukee 24 27 13 18 — 82 3-Pomt Goal— s Portand 11-31 (Wright 3-6, Matthews 3-9, Batum2-4, Lillard 2-7, Wiliams1-4, Aldridge0-1), Milwaukee5-14 (Neal 2-5, Mayo1-2, Butler 1-3, llyasova1-3,Ridnour0-1). FouledOut None.Rebounds—Portland 55(Lopez,Batum8), Milwaukee51(Pachulia 8).Assists—Portland 26(Batum 8), Milwaukee18(Ridnour5). TotalFouls—Portland 14, Milwaukee19. Technicals—Portland defensive threesecond.A 11,789 (18,717).
Clippers 102, Timberwolves 98
Jefferson4102213, Favors4 9 5613, Kanter 8-13 3-6 19,LucasIII 5-80-014, Hayward1-17 4-4 6, J.Evans4-4 0-0 8, Burke5-8 0-011, Burks3 62 2 8, Harris 1-20-0 2, Garrett2-60-0 4. Totals 37-83 16-20 98. NEWORLEANS(105) Aminu2-50-24,Davis9-124-622,Smi th3-55-6 11, Hol>day 7-14 0-014, Gordon3-133-4 9, Anderson693 319, TEvans5133613, Roberts0 20 Ij 0, Morrow 341-28, Amundson1-1022, Rivers1-1 1-2 3.Totals 40-7920-33105. Utah 17 24 28 29 — 98 New Orleans 20 2 5 28 32 — 105
z Totals 36-81 18-3095. Brooklyn 29 21 20 21 — 91 Charlotte 30 23 30 12 — 95
12-169-1333,Beverley3-90-09, Harden6-14 9-0 23, Lin 051 21, Casspi 5 50 011,Asik001-21, Garcia1-40-03. Totals42-7624-33120.
Raptors108, 76ers 98
Marion 581-1 13,Nowitzki 13207-735, Dalembert1-3 4-4 6 Calderon 4-8 2-213, Ellis13-18 9-12 37, Carter2-75-79, Crowder0-10-00, Blair1-20-0 2, Larkin3-50-0 8 Totals 42-72 28-33123. Houston 40 28 33 19 — 120 Dallas 29 32 26 36 — 123
TORONTO (108)
Gay 6-164-518,Johnson3-81-2 7, Valanciunas 1 42 24, Lowry4122 213, DeRozan10191012 33, Hansbrough 1-53-5 5, Ross7-0 0-0 17, Novak
3-7 0-0 8,Buycks1-40-03, Daye0-0 0-00, Stone 0-0 0-0 0.Totals 36-86 22-28108. PHILADELPHIA (98) Turner4-135-6 13,Hawes10-13 5-6 28, orton 2-4 2-2 6, Carter-Wiliams2-10 6-7 10,Anderson
5-110-013 Wroten3-113-49, Thompson3-50-06, Allen 351-4 7,Davies0 21 21,Wiliams0 00 00, Brown 2-20-05. Totals 34-7623-31 98. Toronto 25 30 38 15 — 108 Philadelphia 25 2 329 21 — 98
Heat120, Magic 92 MIAMI (120)
James5-11 11-11 21,Battier 2-3 0-0 6, Bosh 7-10 3-418,Chalmers3-5 2-2 9, JJones5-8 2-317, Andersen 4-62-210 Allen 2-8 0-0 6,Lewis1-4 0-0 2, Cole3-60-0 9, Beasley4-10 6-614, Haslem1-1 3-45, Mason Jr.1-2 0-0 3. Totals38-7429-32120.
ORLANDO (92)
Hawks 93, Pistons 85 DETROIT (85) Smith 5-151-211,Monroe3-81-2 7, Drummond 5-0 0-0 10, Jennings9-21 0-1 21,Caldwell-Pope 1-9 2-2 4, Stuckey7-12 3-3 18, Singler 2 6 2-26, Siva 0-00-0 Ij, Datome2-4 0-0 5, Harrellson1-1 0-0 3. Totals 35-87 9-12 85.
ATLANTA (93) Carroll 3-64-611,Milsap8-143-419, Horford5-7 0-0 10,Teague8-14 2-2 18,Korver2-5 2-2 8, Ayon 3-41-2 7,Mack0-31-21, Martim1-30-02, Scott 4-9 3-511, Williams 2-61-1 6. Totals 36-7117-24 93. Detroit 13 33 18 21 — 85 Atlanta 15 28 23 27 — 93
LA. CLIPPERS (102) Dudley4-8 2-2 11,Griffin 10-190-0 20, Jordan 2-3 0-0 4, Paul 8-16 2-3 20,Redick5-14 3-4 15, Crawford 5-9 2-4 16, Bullock2-40-0 6, Hollins2-4 1-35, Collison2-40-05. Totals40-81 10-16102. MINNESOT A(98) Brewer5-12 6-8 17, Love2-14 6-1010, Pekovic Bodcats 95, Nets 91 9-13 2-2 20,Rubio2-7 0-0 5,Martin 0-21 3-3 28, BROOKLYN (91) Cunningham 4-B0-0 8, Hummel1-5 2-24, Barea0-4 Pierce3-11 5712, Garnett 2 20-0 4, Evans01 2-2 2, Shved 0-20-0 0, Wiliams0-4 4-4 4. Totals 0-0 0, Williams 1-5 2-2 4, Johnson 6-13 3-4 19, 34-90 25-31 98. LA. Clippers 24 2 2 25 31 — 102 Blatche 0-14 3-425,plumlee3-3 3-69, Anderson 5102-216, Livingston1-5 0-02, Terry0-1 0-00, Minnesota 24 22 21 31 — 98 TTaylor0-20-00. Totals 32-6718-25 91. CHARLOTTE (95) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-100-2 8, McRoberts2-62-4 6, Pacers 103, Knicks 96(OT) Biyombo4-61-3 9, Walker12-20 3-431, Henderson 4-124-513, JTaylor 0-40-00, Zeller2-62-36, SesINDIANA(103) George12-269-1235,West4 132-410, Hibbert sions 5-u 3-5 13,Adrien 2-53-47, Tolliver 1-10-0
DALLAS(123)
Kings 113, Suns106 SACRAMENTO (113) Mbah a Moute4-53-311,Thompson5-60-010, Cousins4-1411-1519,Vasquez2-99-913,McLemore 3-72 28, Thomas 8-136-723, Patterson3 80 0 7, Salmons2-70-0 6, Fredette3-6 0-08, Hayes1-1 0-02,Outlaw 2-41 26 Totals37-8032-38113. PHOENIX (106) Tucker4-10 1-212, Frye0-20-0 0, Plumlee5-9 2-5 12, Dragic 10-208-9 31, Green8-13 1-2 23, MarkMorris 0-4 2-2 2, Marc.Morris 6-8 0-0 13, Goodw>n 0-8 1-21, Len1-2 0-0 2, Smith 1-30-02, Chri stmas3 60-08.Totals 38-8515-22106. Sacramento 27 28 19 39 — 113 Phoenix 27 23 12 44 — 106
Spurs104, Celtics 93
Afflalo 9 165-5 30, Harkless2-7 1-2 5, Vucevic 2-72-2 6, Nelson 5-133-417, Oladipo5-128-820, Moore1-3 0-0 2,Maxiel 2-60-04, S.Jones1-40-0 2, Lamb1-2Ij-03, Price1-10-03, Nicholson0-00-0 0. Totals 29-71 19-21 92. Miami 25 29 36 30 — 120 Orlando 20 29 22 21 — 92
BOSTON (93)
CLEVELAND (91)
Grizzlies 88, Warriors 81 (OT)
J.Green 7-143-419, Sullinger8-172-219, Olynyk 2-9 4 4 8,Crawford5 92 212, Bradley9-180 019, Lee1-3 0-0 2,Bass3-7 0-0 6, Wallace1-3 0-0 2, Pressey1-30-02, Faverani0-10-00, Humphries2-2 0-04 Totals 39-8611-12 93. SAN ANTONIO (104) Leonard7-141-216, Duncan3-137-813, Splitter 4-4 3-6 11,Parker6-117-8 19, D.Green4-6 0-011, Wizards 98, Cavaliers 91 Ginobili 2-5 00 5,Diaw6-10 0012, Belinelli 4-7 Ij-0 9, M>lls1-60-03, Ayres 0-10-00, Bonner1-30-03, WASHINGTON (98) webster5-0 3-3 15, Nene10-16 4-4 24, Gortat Joseph1-10-Oz Totals 39-8118-24104. 3-72-2 8 Wal6-163-315,Beal9-202-226,Vesel y Boston 25 23 22 23 — 93 2-30-04, Temple2-50-04, Booker1-20-02, May- SanAntonio 22 26 32 24 — 104 nor 0-40-0 0 Totals 38-8414-14 98. Clark1-6 0-2 3,Thompson 0-5 2-2 2, Bynum1-3 0-0 2, Irving 9-147-7 28, Miles0-1 0-0 0, Waiters 2-137-811,Jack6-100-014,Dellavedova3-60-09,
Varejao7-100-014, Gee0-2 0-00, Karasev0-12-2 2,Sims3-4 0-06,Bennett0-2 0-00.Totals32-77 18-21 91.
Washington Cleveland
30 26 24 18 — 98 19 19 21 32 — 91
Mavericks 123, Rockets 120 HOUSTON (120)
Parsons7-103-4 21,Jones8-131-1 18, Howard
MEMPHIS(88) Princ e4-8 0-0 8,Bandolph 9-22 3-3 21,Gasol 6-14 6-618, Conle8-19 y 2219, Pondexter2 51 2 6, Koufos 3101-2 7, Miller1-4 0 0 3,Bayless1-5 4-46,Calathes0-10-00.Totals 34-8817-1988. GOLDEN STATE(81) Bames6-14 2-216, Lee9-170-218, Bogut 6-B 0-012, Iguodala3-141-27, Thompson 9-191-221, Speights1-5 0-Ij 2,Green2-4 0-05, Kuzmic0-00-0 0, Bazemore 0-1 0-00.Totals 36-824-8 81. Memphis 16 18 25 1613 — 88
Goldenstate 2 6
18 13 18 6 — 81
No. 8 OhioStatestaysperfect after victory over American
(iaew ~
The Associated Press C OLUMBUS, Ohio — A mi r W i l liams scored a career-high 16 points and Shannon Scott added 13 to lead No. 8 Ohio State to a 63-52 victory over American University on Wednesday night.
Alex Brandon/The Associated Press
night to make shots, finishing 20 of 56 from the field for 36 percent. Scott tied a career best with nine rebounds. Jesse Reed scored 15 points, Tony Wroblicky had 14 and Darius Gardner
The Buckeyes (4-0) struggled all Pittsburgh center Sidney Crosby (87) talks with goalie Marc-Andre Fleury after Wednesday night' s game in Washington.The Penguins won 4-0.
C3
10 for the Eagles (1-2).
MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP The Buckeyes were coming off an impressive52-35 win over No. 17 Marquette in Milwaukee on Saturday. The 35 points were the fewest the Buckeyes have ever allowed against a ranked opponent. Up by f iv e p oints at t h e b r eak Wednesday despite having difficulty making shots, the Buckeyes stepped it up in the second half. Scott got things going with a steal and a layup in the opening seconds. Then Scott came off a pick by Wil-
liams and tossed an alley-oop pass back to Williams for a dunk to start a 5-0 run that pushed the lead to 10 points for the first time. Lenzelle Smith Jr., starting his 79th consecutive game, hit a foul shot before Williams made a left-handed hook for a 37-27 advantage. The Eagles got it down to six points but Williams scored and then missed the accompanying free throw, and Craft popped in the follow. Also on Wednesday: No. 14 Wichita St 77, Tulsa 54: TUL-
SA, Okla. — Fred VanVleet and Ron Baker each scored 21 points and Wichita State finished with a 26-6 run to shake free of pesky Tulsa. No. 20 Baylor 69, Charleston Southern 64: WACO, Texas — Cory Jefferson had 16 points and 11 rebounds for his third double-double already this season and Isaiah Austin also scored 16 points as Baylor beat Charleston Southern. No. 21 lowa St 90, BYU 88: PROVO, Utah — Melvin Ejim and DeAndre Kane each scored 21 points, leading Iowa State to a come-from-behind win over Brigham Young.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013
Ridgeview
of the backfield." Even when injuries sideContinued from C1 l ined e ither F l eming o r The Ravens' arsenal of Simpson — or in two games running b a c k s fe a t ures this season, both of themFleming, a senior who has Ridgeview never lost its biga veraged more t ha n 1 6 0 play potential. yards rushing per game and In the five games in which has scored a team-leading the Ravens were w i thout 16 touchdowns. His p ow- the two senior backs, Steer is complemented by the vens became the featured speedy Stevens, who after back and rushed for nearly accumulating just 388 yards 150 yards per contest and 10 on 54 carries as a sopho- touchdowns. "I got more of an opportumore lastseason has erupted for a t e a m-best 1,401 nity to show what I can do," yards rushing and 12 touch- says Stevens, who during downs. Add in Simpsona stretch of this season ran a Redmond High tr ansfer for 110 or more yards in six who despite injuries (broken straight games. "That gave foot, separated shoulder) me an opportunity to make has run for 557 yards and some big plays and make a five scores — and you have name for myself." "It gave Tanner some time the engine that drives one of the most potent offenses in to mature and grow and get all of Class 4A. a feel for what it's like not "We have threats from being second in line, having both the power backs up the all the pressure on you and middle and that speed on the having to make those plays," outside," Fleming says. "The adds Fleming, who six times defense has to respect both in eight games has rushed threats. It opens up lanes for for more than 150 yards, everyone." including a string of three Each back — be it Fleming straight 2 00-yard p e r forup the middle, or Stevens or mances. "Me coming back Simpson around the edge as just takes that off while he "fly" backs, as Codding de- still has that maturity and scribesthem — has posted growth." a 100-yard rushing game. The multitude of w eapTwo have gone for 150 yards ons Ridgeview trots onto or more in three games, and the field week after week two have rushed for 200 or gives the Ravens an armory more yardsatleastonce. few teams in the state can With each player's con- match. And it has led Ridtribution each week, Rid- geview to 10 straight wins geview's offense has become and a chance to advance to a hefty challenge for oppos- the 4A state championship ing defenses. To add some when the Ravens meet Philoperspective, of the 11 games math at Cottage Grove High the Ravens have played, in School on Saturday. "Having Tanner at fly and only three were they "limited" to fewer than 300 yards Boomer at r u n ning b ack rushing. right now is the best mix of "You've got to try to stop talent that we can have, addthe guys on the outside and ing Cody in there as well," then Boomer up the middle," Codding says. "Fly's not a Simpson says. "It's almost position that you can play impossible." every down because of the To make matters more constant motion they're in. difficult for opponents, Cod- So having a couple of those ding notes that normally, at guys be so dynamic is really least two of his breakout tail- something special for us." backs are on the field at the A nd with t w o o f t h e i r same time. s tandout backs l i ning u p "Not only are we threaten- for each snap, the Ravens ing in different ways, we're possess a formidable double-barreled ground attack. also resting somebody on different p l ays," C o dding Says Fleming: "Just alsays. "We're lucky to have ways knowing we've got two those different styles, be- guys who can make plays, cause if teams spend a lot of having two big playmakers time getting ready for a big, out there at the same time, power back l ik e B o omer, we know we can break one then it's hard to change gears at any time." to catch up with a quick back — Reporter: 541-383-0307;
guy like Tanner coming out
glucasC<bendbulletin.com.
Beavs
Still, Mannion leads the nation with an average of 386
Continued from C1 Oregon State is 6-4 overall and 4-3 in the Pac-12, coming off a 30-17 loss at Arizona State. This weekend they play their final home game, against the Washington Huskies, before visiting the No. 5 Oregon Ducks in the annual Civil War rivalry game. The Beavers hope to finish with a winning conference record and go to t he best bowl possible, as well as work out some of the issues that have vexed them during their recent downturn. Like the so-so running game. Oregon State is averaging just 69.5 yards on the ground this season. The only team with fewer yards in the Pac12 is Washington State, with an average of 57. T he rushing attack b ecomes especially i m p ortant when the passing game struggles, like it did against Arizona State. Sean Mannion passed for 320 yards and two t ouchdowns, but he also threw four i n terceptions against the Sun Devils. Seven of his 10 interceptions this season have come in the past two
yards passing per game and
games.
Pac-12
a total of 33 touchdowns. He is fourth nationally with an average of32.7 completions
per game. Mannion's favorite target, Brandin Cooks, is the nation's leader with 144.3 yards
receivingper game, and heis ranked second with an average of 10 receptions. His 100 catches this season broke the school record of 91 held by James Rodgers and Markus Wheaton, and he needs 90 more receiving yards to set Oregon State'ssingle-season mark in that category. "He (Mannion) is throwing the ball for a reason. He thinks we're open so we need to be open," Cooks said about the recent struggles. "Whether weneed todisengage from the defensiveback quicker or get our eyes behind us ... we just have to make the play." The Beavers' offense averaged more than 44 points a game until the losing streak, during which it has averaged about 14 points. Riley notes that a positive has been the team's defense. The Beavers have forced 24 turnovers, good for a second-place tie in the league.
"I'm proud of the fact that I've seen a lot of growth. Defensively, we've really played some good football. ... It's really been fun to see our c hange there through t h e year," Riley said on the weekly Pac-12 coaches' conference call. "Offensively, we've still done some good things, but we've turned it the wrong way as far as turnovers, and some of those things we've been real good at." Oregon State faces a similar team in Washington (6-4, 3-4). The Huskies got off to a great start this season, winning their first four games and climbing to No. 15 in the rankingsbefore a loss to Stanford that was the start of a three-game losing streak. Washington is coming off a 41-31 loss to UCLA. "We're frustrated, but we know what w e're capable of and we know there's still plenty for us to go out and
accomplish, and it's going to take really good effort to do so," Huskies coach Steve S arkisian said d u ring h i s Monday news c onference. "But I think we've got the leadership i n t h a t l o c k er room to do it; I think we've got really good coaches that can make it happen."
years of landing two. The conferencehas a tie-in for its champion to play in the Rose Bowl, so that is one guaranteed spot. Oregon, in control of the North, will be the likely host for the Dec. 7 Pac-
Cal is just 1-10, but Saturday's game is the Big Game, in Continued from C1 which anything can happen. "We've shown that we have The Pac-12 is as deep as it's been in years, with eight weaknesses," Stanford coach teams already bowl eligible. David Shaw said. "Don't think The conference could confor one second that we cannot ceivably have 10 bowl-eligible 12 Championship game and give this game everything we teams, with Washington State should face either No. 19 Arhave." (5-5) and Utah (4-6) still with- izona State or No. 14 UCLA, Stanford's loss to USC mudin reach of a n eeded sixth which face off on Saturday. dled things a bit in the Pac-12 win. No. 10 Stanford had its na- division races. That is a nice change for a tional championship chances The Cardinal appeared to conferencethat was not able end and put its BCS hopes in be in control in the North afto fulfill its bowl obligations doubt with last week's 20-17 ter beating Oregon, but they five times in the past 10 years, loss to USC. The Cardinal (8- are now half agame behind including three times when it 2) are still No. 9 in the BCS the Ducks at 6-2 in conference. fell two teams short. standings but h a v e f a l len Stanford holds the tiebreaker Problem is, some of the Pac- down in the BCS bowl peck- over Oregon, but it needs to 12's bowl-eligible teams may ing order, with most projec- win its final conference game not have a place to play when tions putting them in the Ala- and have the Ducks lose to the season is over. mo Bowl. Arizona this weekend or to The conference has affil To have any shot of playing rival Oregon State in the regiations with seven bowls, so in a t hird consecutive BCS ular-season finale. there could be a scramble to bowl, Stanford must beat rival The South will likely come find postseason homes at the California this week and then down to Saturday's game beend of the regular season, par- beat Notre Dame to close out tween the Sun Devils and Bruticularly with potentially 75 or the regular season. ins at the Rose Bowl. more teams becoming eligible for 70 overall bowl slots. The Pac-12 also could be limited to one BCS bowl berth this season after three straight
I
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
N. Illinois rolls over Toledo The Associated Press TOLEDO, Ohio — Jordan Lynch rushed for three touchdowns and 161 yards to lead No. 20 Northern Illinois over Toledo 35-17 on Wednesday night, securing a fourth consecutive trip to the Mid-American Conference title game. Lynch's third touchdown, a 1-yard dive into the end zone, capped a 99-yard drive that stretched the lead to 28-17. The Huskies started the fourth quarter backed up a g ainst their end zone, clinging to a four-point lead. That's when L ynch t ook control. He ran for 62 yards on seven carries during the drive, the big play coming when he scrambled out of the end zone to pick up a first down. T he H u skies ( 11-0, 7 - 0 MAC) extended their 24-game conference winning s t reak and are off to the best start in school history.
Arizona State is a g a me ahead of UCLA, but a l oss would create a tie and give the Bruins the tiebreaker. USC still has a chance at winning the South, but the Sun Devils and Bruins can go a long way to deciding what happens in the division, a f act n either coach is hiding from his team. " We talk about it al l t h e time. It's something w e've been talking about all year long," Arizona State coach Todd Graham said. "From the time we walked in the door year one, we talked about having one goal, winning a championship. Winning every day." UCLA's Jim Mora and his team are t aking a s i m ilar approach. "I address it, but they also understand the significance of this," he said. So do a lot of other teams still jockeying for position in the conference.
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Camera Continued from C1 The user videos, Kasten says, are a "scrapbook in motion."
Sharing video: not just for kids A new teencenterat a members-only resort will even have indoor video editing booths and a screening room to play footage and finished filmsfor a crowd. The teen center is part of a new lodge at The Hermitage Club at Haystack Mountain in Wilmington, Vt. Hermitage owner and founder Jim Barnes was inspired by the interest of his own children — ages 16, 14 and 9 — in using the cams. But the cameras are not just for kids. Barnes recalled a 40-something who took video of 47 runs during a single day last season. "Each generation pushes other generations to do it. Gen-Xers are sharing, and Gen-Yers and Z. There's a push for all of them to use cameras because they're going to share it," said Kelly Davis, director of research for the SnowSports Industries America association. "Sharing" is the key: The explosion of social media is what's led to the leap in cameras among skiers and boarders — not to mention surfers, skate boarders, rock climbers and mountain bikers. "The cameras seem to be driving people to do more adventurous things, explore the back country, so they can share it," said Davis. "It's not just ego. But people are aware that they are presenting an image of themselves, and videos of them doing this stuff starts conversations." Even older skiers who don't use the cameras are watching the footage. "My grandma loves to see thevideo. She got them forus so she can see us skiing," said Will Coffin, a 13-year-old member of Vermont's Mount Snow race team. "And I don't ski with my parents much, so sometimes I'll show them, too." His 11-year-old brother Charlie will show them "to anyone who's there after skiing." Most likely his videos are off-trail in the trees, which he thinks makes the best visuals. The Coffin videos will occasionally go up on YouTube, and they'll watch the ones their friends make.
Sales and impulse buys Sales of the cameras, like the industry leader GoPro, were up 50 percent to 123,000 at snow sports retailers for the 2012-13 ski season, according to the SnowSports Industries America. The trade group expects a higher number for 20D-14, with additional sales at electronics stores and elsewhere that the SIA does not track. GoPro sells its HD Helmet Hero Plus 3 model for close to $400, but the price has not deterred impulse buyers who see others using it and must have one.
"Veteran skiers are looking for the best deal, and might get their GoPro in an off-season sale," said Kasten. "But it's also not farfetched to say, a family will come into one of our retail outlets and tell us, 'We're using our iPhone for video, but we just saw someone else's video'" shot with a GoPro. Often they'll buy one on the spot. Jonathan Harris,GoPro's vice president of sales, thinks this season will see more groups collaborating on videos, divvying up camera angles and pooling footage. "As a kid, I loved watching Warren Miller ski movies," he said, referring to the annual snow sports films beloved by skiers and boarders. "You wished for a way to do that, but I didn't have a camera crew waiting for me at the bottom of the run. Now with $400 — boom! — you are out there getting your own movie."
Family time andmemories Wing Taylor, 42, who lives in North Vancouver, British Columbia, uses his GoPro mostly to record keepsakes of the days when his children are still mastering the mountains, but he'll also play them on gray fall days to get his son and daughterjazzed forthe season. "I will also share the videos at my kids at work. Who doesn't like an audience to say, 'Look at my kids. They're awesome!'" he said. And with just the right camera angle, the jump of a 6-year-old can look a lot bigger than it really is. If you're hanging at the Taylors' house, you might watch the videos on their flat screen. "We can pick'home movies'on our Apple TV, and forus,home movies are ski movies." The only downside, Taylor says, is the audio. There's a lot of loud "schussing," which he typically fixes up by dropping in music on the final cut. Noah Shelton, 14, of Cary, N.C., says the camera lets him relive happy or proud moments: "You can capture the beauty of the nature around you,but if you're a freestyle skier or boarder, you're really doing it for the crazy
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I
jumps and flips." Sometimes, he'll move the camera from his helmet to his back or pole to try and get the look on his own face or others around him. "When there's a good jump, the reaction of other people is priceless." Nick Skally, 36, of Portsmouth, N.H., likes to record the tips of his skis popping in and out of the powder. "It's so much fun to see where
you've gone," he said. Cameras have b ecome s o l i g htweight, low-profile and easy to use that Skally sometimes forgets it's on his helmet and wears it into the lodge still recording, which makes for some funny outtakes. But the main reason for the videos, he says, is "to remember the epic runs, the powder dumps, the good times. If the memory fades, the video doesn't."
Contact your B u l l etin A d v e r t ising R epresentative for m or e i n f o r m a t i o n
541-382-1S11 • www.bendbulletin.com
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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, go tobendbulletin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013
NASDAQ+ 3,921.27
Toda+ Holiday preview
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Target's latest quarterly earnings should offer clues into shoppers' mindset for the all-important holiday season. The retailer, due to report thirdquarter financial results today, has experienced choppy business heading into the holidays. To woo shoppers, Target is counting on a number of strategies. Investors will want an update on how early holiday sales in November are faring, and whether Target shoppers are pulling back because they're worried about rising health care costs.
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Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp Mobile-friendly? ColumbiaBnkg Wall Street projects that Pandora Columbia Sportswear Media generated higher earnings Costco Wholesale and revenue in the third quarter Craft Brew Alliance versus a year earlier. FLIR Systems The Internet radio company has Hewlett Packard benefited from improved revenue Home FederalBncpID at its mobile unit. One reason: Intel Corp Keycorp It reversed its decision to limit Kroger Co free listening on mobile devices. Lattice Semi Investors will tune in today, after Pandora reports its latest earnings LA Pacific for clues as to how the company's MDU Resources executives plan to compete with a Mentor Graphics growing number of rivals, including Microsofl Corp Nike Inc 9 Spotify, Apple and Google. Nordstrom Inc Nwst Nat Gas P $28.44 $35 PaccarInc $7.51 Planar Systms 25 Plum Creek '13 Prec Castparts 15 Safeway Inc Schnitzer Steel 5 Sherwin Wms Operating $$ $$ • Stancorp Fncl EPS StarbucksCp 3 Q '13 3Q ' 1 4 Triquint Semi Price-earnings ratio: lo st money UmpquaHoldings based on trailing 12 month results US Bancorp WashingtonFedl Dividend: none Wells Fargo & Co Source. Factaet Weyerhaeuser
Eye on prices The government releases its latest report on wholesale prices today. Aside from sharp swings in gas prices, consumer and wholesale inflation have barely risen in the past year. Economists predict the index will fall 0.1 percent in October, the second decline in a I'ow.
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OividendFootnotes: a -Extra dividends werepad, but are not included b - Annual rate prusstock c - uqumatmgdividend. e - Amount declared or Cad mlast12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcreased bymost recent dividend announcement i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate ] - Sum of dividends paid this year Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears m - Current annual rate, which was decreased bymost recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial avoend, annual rate not known, yield not shown r - Declared or paid m precedmg 12months plus stock dividend t - Paid m stock, approximate cash value on ex-d<stnbut>on date PEFootnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 9a du - Loss in last12 months
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Dodge 8 Cox Fidelity
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 BalA m 23.8 2 - . 18+18.3 +21.3 +13.1+16.9 A A A CaplncBuA m 57.99 -.36 +12.8 +15.9 +9.5+14.4 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 44.07 -.25 +20.7 +26.6 +10.5+18.1 C C D EurPacGrA m 47.59 -.27 +15.5 +22.6 +6.5 +17.3 C 0 8 inlnvA m 50.7 3 - . 28+25.4 +30.1 +14.7 +21.4 D C 8 GrthAmA m 43 . 67 - .18+27.1 +32.0 +15.0 +21.2 8 C C IncAmerA m 20.34 -.09 +15.5 +18.4 +11.8+16.9 8 A A InvCoAmA m 37.82 -.13 +26.9 +30.9 +14.5+19.0 C C D NewPerspA m 38.04 -.16 +21.7 +27.9 +11.9+20.8 C 8 B WAMutlnvA m39.12 -.19 +27.2 +30.9 +17.0+19.9 C A C Income 1 3.59 -.04 +0.2 + 0.6 +4.3 +8.4 A 8 8 IntlStk 42.29 -.15 +22.1 +32.3 +8.2 +21.4 A A A Stock 161.35 -.38 $-33.9 + 41.5 $-18.1$-23.7 A A A Contra 98.17 -.21 +27.7 +31.1 +15.2+21.2 C 8 C GrowCo 121. 31 - .12+30.1 +33.8 +17.6+26.1 A A A LowPriStk d 48 .88 -.08+ 29.9 +36.9 +17.4+26.9 8 A 8 500 l dxAdvtg63.31 -.23+27.2 +31.1 +16.5+21.4 C 8 B
Fidelity Spartan FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 42 -.01 +12.2 +16.3 +9.9+17.5 A A A 00 IncomeA m 2.4 8 ... + 12.8 +17.0 +10.5+18.2 A A A FrankTemp-Templeton GIBondAdv 13.07 -.01+1.5 +3.8 +5.3+10.7 A A A 40 Oakmark 26.55 -.15 +26.9 +39.9 +12.9 +25.8 A A A RisDivA m 2 1.02 -.08 +21.7 +25.4 +13.5+17.4 E D E Morningstar OwnershipZone™ Oppenheimer R isDiv8 m 1 9 .08 -.08 +20.7 +24.3 +12.4+16.3 E E E o Fund target represents weighted Q R isDivC m 1 8.91 -.07 +20.9 +24.5 +12.6+16.5 E E E average of stock holdings SmMidValA m42.88 -.09 +32.1 +37.8 +12.5+25.4 8 E C • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings SmMidValB m 35.87 -.08 +31.1 +36.6 +11.6+24.4 C E D CATEGORY Large Growth PIMCO TotRetA m 18 . 88 -.01 -1.4 - 0.7 +3.7 +7.6 8 8 C MORNINGSTAR T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.85 -.12 +25.9 +30.5 +16.0 +21.2 C 8 8 R ATING™ *** * * GrowStk 49.42 -.15 $-30.8 +34.9 $-16.9$-25.3 A A A ASSETS $7,602 million HealthSci 5 9.38 +.27 +44.1 +47.7 +30.8 +31.8 8 A A EXP RATIO 1.03% Vanguard 500Adml 164.72 -.59 $.27.3 +31.1 + 16.5+21.5 C 8 8 500lnv 164.69 -.59 +27.1 +31.0 + 16.4+21.3 C 8 8 MANAGER David Poppe CapDp 45.86 -.12 +36.4 +43.3 +16.8+25.0 A A A SINCE 2006-05-01 Eqlnc 29.91 -.11 +26.3 +29.6 +18.5+20.6 D A 8 RETURNS3-MD +6.4 StratgcEq 28.84 -.06 +34.5 +41.5 $ .19.7 $.27.7 A A 8 YTD +28.2 TgtRe2020 27.04 -.18 +13.5 +16.8 + 9.7 $-15.9 A A 8 1-YR +32.4 Tgtet2025 15.68 -.06 +15.4 +19.2 +10 4 +17 0 8 A C 3-YR ANNL +20.2 TotBdAdml 10.64 -.03 -1.8 -1.7 + 3.0 +5.3 D D E 5-YR-ANNL +23.1 Totlntl 16.56 -.11 $-12.7 +21.0 + 52+170 D D 8 TotStlAdm 44.98 -.15 +28.0 +32.5 + 16.7+22.6 8 A A TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 44.96 -.15 +27.8 +32.3 + 16.5+22.5 8 8 A Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc USGro 27.27 -.04 +28.3 +32.5 + 16.4+21.2 8 A C 14.34 Welltn 38.84 -.16 +16.9 +19.6 + 12.1+16.6 8 A 8 Berkshire Hathaway lnc Class A 7.9 Fund Footnotes b - ree coveong market costs 1$paid rrom rund assets d - Deterred sales charge, or redemption TJX Companies 7.57 fee f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketmg fee aud either a sales or I astenal Company 4.68 redempson ree Source: Mornngstar
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La-Z-Boy LZB Close:$26.82 %2.40 or 9.8% Quarterly profit more than doubled, revenue rose and the furniture company boosted its quarterly dividend payout by 50 percent. $30
N $23.10
Vol.:98.6m (2.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.88 b
P E: .. Yield: ..
LOW Close:$47.33T-3.11 or -6.2% The home improvement retailer fell short of profit projections after a surprisingly strong quarter from rival Home Depot. $55
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$43.90 ~
N $22 31
Vol.:2.2m (5.6x avg.) P E: 28 .2 Mkt. Cap:$1.41 b Yiel d : 0 .6%
Gray Television GTN Close:$11.03 %1.62 or 17.2% The broadcaster teamed up with Excalibur Broadcasting to acquire 15 television stations in seven markets for $335 million. $12 10
50
8
A
S 0 52-week range
$34.05~
N $52.09
A
J
S 0 52-week range
$1.99 ~
N $11.22
Vol.:26.1m (3.6x avg.) PE: 23.8 Vol.:2.4m (3.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$49.78 b Yiel d : 1 .5% Mkt. Cap:$576.23 m
P E: 61 .3 Yield :...
Lululemon
LULU Northwest Bio. NWBO Close:$68.17L1.42 or 2.1% Close:$4.97 T-1.69 or -25.4% CanaccordGenuity sees no end to The biotech company priced a public the trend toward more active lifeoffering of 4,895,834 units at $4.80 styles, which would certainly benefit per unit, for gross proceeds of $23.5 the yoga outfitter. million. $80 $8 75
70 65 ~
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S 0 52-week range
N
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$59.60 ~
$82.50
Vol.:2.3m (0.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $7.84 b
P E: 37 .1 Vol.:6.6m (11.0x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$191.38 m Y
Tesla Motors
TSLA Close:$121.11 V-4.98 or -3.9% The electric car maker continued to sell-off a day after federal regulators announced an investigation into vehicle fires. $200
$2.99~
N $6.59
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Yahoo
YHOO Close:$35.62L0.99 or 2.9% The Internet company announced plans to sell $1 billion in senior notes and increase its stock buyback authorization by $5 billion. $40 35
150
30
DOA
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N
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$31.52~
$194.50
$19.20 ~
$36.22
Vol.:13.8m (1.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $14.85 b
P E: . . . Vol.:32.4m (1.7x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$36.13 b
PE: 29.7 Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
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mi 6
Shares of J.M. Smucker fell 6.5 percent Wednes- f i s cal second-quarter net income rose 3 percent, but day. Thecompany, whose brands include Jif, the results fell short of analysts' expectations. The Folgers, and Pillsbury, said it expects Orville, Ohio-based food maker said its revenue to decrease by about 2 sales were hurt by lower prices, percent compared with 2013. It had particularly for coffee and peanut butter. The yield on the For the quarter ended Oct. 31, J.M. 10-year Treasury previously predicted a revenue decrease of about 1 percent. Smucker earned $153.4 million, or $1.46 note rose to 2.78 percent WedThe company backed it s previous per share, up from $148.8 million, or nesday. Yields full-year adjusted earnings prediction of $1.36 per share, in the same quarter of gQCK+y, .8 between $5.72 and $5.82 per share. 4'$ 20 1 2. Revenue fell 4 percent to $1.56 affect rates on mortgages and J.M. Smucker also reported that its billion from $1.63 billion. other consumer
J.M. Smucker (SJM)
0.2
1.3420+
25
AP NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
... L -0.01 -0.01 T
L L
L L
.07 .14
L
T
.17
2 -year T-note . 28 .28 ... T 5-year T-note 1 . 3 8 1 .35 + 0.03 L 10-year T-note 2.80 2.71 + 0.09 L 30-year T-bond 3.92 3.80 + 0.12 L
T L L L
T .26 T .67 T 1.67 2.82
~
0.4
EURO
StoryStocks
Lowe's
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1 YR V OL TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO DTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E Dlv
p1
Stockssli d on Wednesday as many investors concluded thatnew details from a recent Federal Reserve meeting signaled the central bank is getting ready to pull back its support of the U.S. economy. The Fed released minutes from a two-day meeting last month showing that the U.S. economy was improving steadily enough to warrant a reduction in stimulus in coming months. The Fed has been buying $65 billion everymonth in Treasury and mortgage-backed bonds,which keeps long-term interest rates artificially low and makes stocks seem inexpensive in comparison to bonds. Investors worry that the pullback is imminent and would come before the economy is ready.
J.C. Penney
HIGH LOW C LOSE DDW 16016.85 15865.37 15900.82 DDW Trans. 7139.00 7077.76 7094.72 DDW Util. 504.08 495.40 495.55 NYSE Comp. 10182.00 10072.40 10096.43 NASDAQ 3952.08 3911.61 3921.27 S&P 500 1795.73 1777.23 1781.37 S&P 400 1300.01 1286.11 1290.15 Wilshire 5000 19030.75 18833.56 18878.08 Russell 2000 1107.70 1096.46 1099.79
NYSE NASD
CRUDEOIL ~ $93.33
25
Dow Jones industrials
Close: 1,781.37
.
SILVER
GOLD ~ $1 25790
10 YR T NOTE 2.80%
s&p 50p "
Vol. (in mil.) 3,043 1,690 Pvs. Volume 3,146 1,700 Advanced 1030 1168 Declined 2054 1363 New Highs 75 94 New Lows 71 34
$<
-
1,720 "
+
1,781.37
1,840
Thursday, November 21, 2013
'.4(/0,3 •
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BONDS
. 08 . 09 .11
.08 .10 .12
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.68 3.58 +0.10 L L T 2.50 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.05 5.05 . . . T T T 4.00 Barclays USAggregate 2.32 2.29 +0.03 T L T 1 70 . PRIME FED Barcl ays US High Yield 5.69 5.69 ... T T T 6 .76 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.62 4.65 -0.03 T L T 3.53 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.61 1.60 +0.01 T L T .94 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3 . 1 9 3.17 +0.02 T L T 2.70 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
loans.
Commodities
FUELS
The price of oil fell amid news that crude oil supplies posted their ninth consecutive weekly increase last week. Gold and silver led a decline in metals. Soybeans rose.
METALS
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 93.33 93.34 - 0.01 + 1 . 6 Ethanol (gal) 1.95 1.84 +0.54 -11.0 Heating Dil (gal) 2.95 2.91 +1.68 -3.0 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.67 3.56 $ .3.32 $ . 9 . 6 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.66 2.64 +0.89 -5.3
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1257.90 1273.40 20.05 20.33 1399.60 1419.90 3.16 3.16 713.65 721.60
%CH. %YTD -1.22 -24.9 -1.36 -33.6 -1.43 -9.0 -0.02 -13.2 - 1.10 + 1 . 6
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.31 1.31 + 0.08 + 0 . 9 1.07 1.05 +2.58 -25.4 Corn (bu) 4.17 4.18 -0.18 -40.3 Cotton (Ib) 0.76 0.76 - 0.33 + 0 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 365.90 363.50 +0.66 -2.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.38 1.36 +1.06 +18.8 Soybeans (bu) 12.74 12.76 -0.20 -10.2 Wheat(bu) 6.47 6.50 -0.46 -16.8 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
«0
Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the euro, British pound and other
currencies amid speculation the Fed will soon taper efforts reducing long-term interest rates. It fell versus the Japanese yen.
h5I4 QG
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6095 —.0022 —.14% 1.5916 C anadian Dollar 1.0 4 55 —.0022 —.21% .9979 USD per Euro 1.3420 —.0111 —.83% 1.2807 Japanese Yen 100.10 .10 —.10% 81.71 Mexican Peso 13. 0 928 +.1425 +1.09% 13.0302 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5626 +.0367 +1.03% 3.9025 Norwegian Krone 6. 1 291 + .0426 +.70% 5.7380 South African Rand 10.1573 —.0327 —.32% 8.8679 Swedish Krona 6.65 1 7 + . 0307 +.46% 6.7718 Swiss Franc .9183 +.0068 +.74% .9407 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0718 + .0098 +.91% .9 6 39 Chinese Yuan 6.0930 -.0006 -.01% 6.2395 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7517 +.0001 +.00% 7 .7502 Indian Rupee 62.595 $..315 $-.50% 5 5 .115 Singapore Dollar 1.2472 +.0029 +.23% 1 .2251 South Korean Won 1059.82 +2.71 +.26% 1083.30 Taiwan Dollar 29.52 + .08 +.27% 29 . 13
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013
BRIEFING
Bend security firm in merger A Bend cybersecurity business hasmerged with an Oklahoma com-
pany but plans to keep its office and a dozen
en isi e esc ues rewe eamin u orauni uew is e
employees in Bend. Redhawk Network Engineering, located in
northeast Bend, provides data andinformation protection services for customers in the
financial, healthcare, government and utility industries. It was incor-
porated in 2003, according to state records. Redhawk will merge
with Securio Group,an Oklahoma City cyber-
security company,and become RedhawkNetwork Security LLC, John Pelley, president of Red-
hawk, said Wednesday. Redhawk will become a subsidiary of Advancia,
By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
Bendistillery and Deschutes Brewery have joined togetherto create Bend's own American malt whiskey. "The motivation is not necessarily economic but more of a desire to stay on the cutting edge of our respective industries," said Alan Dietrich, CEO of Bendistillery Inc. The first batch of the yetto-be-named whiskey, which will be tasted by select guests this afternoon at the distillery northwest of Bend on Pinehurst Road, is about 9 months old and not expected to hit shelves any time soon.
"It's nowhere near being ready to serve," Dietrich said. "We're probably 3 years away from having a sellable product. But it's a glimpse behind the curtain to what it takes to create an American malt whiskey." The project started in April when Deschutes delivered a special batch of its flagship beer — Black Butte Porter — to Bendistillery to distill into whiskey. Dietrich plans to create about three batches a year in order to create an inventory of whiskey. "This is uncharted territory.... Nobody can definitively say how long it's going to take
for a whiskey like this to mature," he said. "Very few people have ever aged whiskey in our climate here." Whiskey sales and the production of new whiskeys are on the rise, he said. In the past five years, whiskey production nationwide has more than quadrupled, from about 4.7 million gallons in June 2009 to 19.9 million in June 2013, according to the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. The increase in production of brown spirits — generally those aged in wooden barrels — in Oregon speaks to the maturing of the craft
distilling industry, said Christie Scott, spokeswoman for the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. White or clear spirits, like gin and vodka, are easier to make because they don't have to be aged. They can be bottled right out of the still, she said. They're favored by new distilleries. "(Distilleries have) been in business long enough now that they can actually produce brown goods, because it takes years before they can bottle it and sell it." Dietrich said he joined with Deschutes Brewery because it is the oldest, most established
brewery in town. "We're both very innovative companies and were right there at the beginning of both of our industries," Dietrich said. "We want to stay on the forefront. This is just one step to stay ahead of everybody." For Deschutes Brewery CEO Gary Fish, the project is a fun experiment that has potential to expand the Deschutes brand. "We don't perceive it as a huge business opportunity at this point in time," Fish said. "What we see it as is a creative opportunity." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
a federal government contractor headquartered in Oklahoma City. It has about150 employ-
ees at offices across the nation, according to its
i s e e in
website. Pelley said Redhawk
has been growing and expects to add acouple of employees in the comingmonths.
int e
Dates for Ray's closures notset
By Matthew Daly
The dates for the sale or closure of the Ray's Food Placestores in Bend andRedmond have not been deter-
mined, a spokesman from parent company C8 K Market lnc. stated
Wednesday. However, the company, which filed for bankruptcy reorganization Tuesday,expects to complete the sales or closures by theend of the year, spokesman Grant Lunde wrote in an email. The Bend and Red-
mond stores areamong 16 grocery stores Brookings-based C&K plans to sell or close as it
reorganizes underChapter11. In its bankruptcy filings, the company,
which owns 60 groceries in Oregonand Northern California, has asked the court for permission to sell merchandise in
store-closing sales. Deschutes County property records show C8 K Market has ownership interestin the
property at 900 S.W. 23rd St. in Redmond
where Ray's FoodPlace is located. TheRay's in Bend at 200 S.W. Century Drive is located
on property owned by a Eugene investment
company, according to property records. — Bulletin staff reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • SoroptimistInternational of Bend:$10; registration required byNov.20; noon-1 p.m.; Boston's,61276S. U.S. Highway97,Suite140; 541-408-9333 orwww. sibend.org. FRIDAY • Howto Starta Business: Registration required;$29; 11 a.m.-1p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College,Redmondcampus, 2030 S.ECollegeLoop, Redmond;541-883-7290. MONDAY • OregonAlcoholServer Permit Training:Meets Oregon LiquorControl Commission minimum requirementsto obtain an alcoholserver permit; registration required;$35; 9a.m.-1 p.m.;RoundTable Pizza,1552 N.EThird St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining. com.
• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
PUERTO RICO
ri in
o u se;u ic a n s e e
Bdvlsel's
The Associated Press
WA SHINGTON — The House approved a bill Wednesday aimed at speeding up drilling for oil and natural gas. The measure was one of three energy measures the House was considering this week as Republicans controlling the chamber push to expand an oil and gas boom that's lowered prices and led the U.S. to produce more oil last month than it imported from abroad. Another bill expected to win approval would restrict the Interior Department from enforcingproposed rulesto regulate hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, on public lands. A third bill would streamline permitting for natural gas pipelines. Supporters say the bills are needed to ensure that a drilling boom taking place on state and private lands extends to millions of acres, mostly in the West, under federal control. President Barack Obama has promised to veto the bills, saying they are unnecessary and run counter to protections put in place for oil and
gas drilling. Rep. Doug Lamborn, R-Colo., who sponsored the bill to speed up permitting, saidthe current energy boom has mainly occurred on state and private lands, including the Bakken formation in North Dakota and Montana and the Marcellus Shale region centered in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia. "The only reason we haven't seen that same dynamic growth on federal lands is because ofexcess regulations," Lamborn said. Lamborn's bill would deem a drilling application
Obama to send Lisa Lerer
Li
Btoomberg News
Keith Srakocic/The Associated Pressfile photo
ln a Republican-controlled House, bills aiming to broaden the recent surge in energy production are expected to pass. Pace of the application process and access to federal land, however, are issues that some Democrats perceive as an affront to environmental protections. approved if no decision is made within 60 days, set a minimum threshold for lands leased by the Bureau of Land Management and charge a $5,000 fee to groups that protest lease permits. The House approved the measure, 228-192. Lamborn said the bill would reduce federal "red tape" and cut down on "frivolous lawsuits that act as stumbling blocks to job creation and energy development." Democrats and environmental groups called the bill a handout to the big oil companies and said it would gut important environmental protections and stifle efforts by the public to intervene in drilling decisions. House Minority Leader
Steny Hoyer, D-Md., called the bills a waste of time, since they were unlikely to be taken up in the Democratic-controlled Senate and faced veto threats from Obama. The drilling bill and others being considered in the House "distract and delay this body's critical attention to the issues of critical concern to all Americans," including adoption of a federal budget and passage of a farm bill and immigration overhaul, Hoyer said. The House was debating another bill, sponsored by Rep. Bill Flores, R-Texas, that would block the Interior Department from enforcing a proposed rule on hydraulic fracturing on federal lands in states where drilling regula-
tions are already in place. Fracking, involves pumping huge volumes of water, sand and chemicals underground to split open rocks to allow oil and gas to flow. Improved technology has
allowed energy companies to gain access to huge stores of natural gas underneath states from Wyoming to New York but has raised widespread concerns that it might lead to groundwater contamination and even earthquakes. A draft rule issued this spring would require companies that drill for oil and natural gas on federal lands to publicly disclose the chemicals used in fracking operations. A final rule is expected next year.
WASHINGTON — A team of U.S. officials is being dispatched to Puerto Rico to help the island better manage its nearly decade-long economic crisis. Officials from the Department of Education, the Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Environmental Protection Agency will participate, according to an administration official who spoke anonymously because she wasn't authorized to announce the team. Puerto Rico debt is having its worst year since at least 1999, as a shrinking economy strains the island's finances. The territory and its agencies face $70billion in public debt and a 13.9 percent unemployment rate — higher than any U.S. state. All three major rating companies grade the island's bonds one step above junk, with a negative outlook. The federal team was created out of a presidential task force that has worked with Puerto Rican authorities since 2009 on fiscal management andeconomic development, including energy and air-travel projects. The decision to send Obama administration officials follows speculation that the U.S. would bail out the island. Puerto Rico's $29 billiontotal budget for this fiscal year relies on about $6.7 billion of federal funds. The team is expected to advise the government on how to maximize federal funds, the official said.
PERMITS City of Bend • Koppel LLC, 396 N.E.Vail Ave., $100,995 • Wood Hill Park15 LLC, 20556 N.E Gloucester Lane, $174,423 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61159 S.E ManhaeLane, $270,606 • Pacwest II LLC, 3031 N.E.Red Oak Lane, $272,893 • Long Term Bendlnvestors LLC, 21323 N.E. Brooklyn Court, $226,919 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20766 N.E Sierra Drive, $172,164 • Stonegate Development LLC, 60337 Sage Stone Loop, $328,084 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20767 N.E.Smoke Stack Loop, $246,452 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61136 S.E. ManhaeLane, $249,202 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 61132 S.E. ManhaeLoop, $205,697 • Wood Hill Park15 LLC, 20552
N.E Gloucester Lane, $209,697 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 61128 S.E Manhae Loop, $294,487 • Ralph Giffin, 2 l125 Bear Creek Road, $371,277 • FC FundLLC,3015 N.E.RedOak Drive, $206,717 • River Edge Investments LLC, 3053 N.W. Clubhouse Drive, $237,178 • J and K Partners LLC, 20979 S.E. Avery Lane, $353,277 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 61155 S.E Manhae Lane, $294,487 • Robert R. Tong, 61665 Cedarwood Road, $254,835 •RPB Land InvestmentsLLC,698 N.E Vail Lane, $185,738 •RPB Land InvestmentsLLC,690 N.E Vail Lane, $185,252 • CW Ventures LLC,1595 Milwaukee Ave., $392,051 • Joseph A. Emerson 2008 Revocable Trust, 18991 Park Commons Drive, $241,220
• Signature Home Builders LLC, 61418 S.W.Sunbrook Drive, $198,373 • Hayden Homes LLC,61145 Brosterhous Road, $210,037 • The Salvation Army, 755 N.E. Second St., $195,000 • Hayden HomesLLC, 61141 Brosterhous Road, $220,842 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 61116 S.E. ManhaeLoop, $294,487 • Greg Welch Construction lnc., 19175 N.W.Chiloquin Drive, $329,257 • Long Term Bend lnvestors LLC, 30889 N.E Corona Lane,$174,416 • Timothy P. Whitehurst, 80 S.E. Myrtlewood St., $120,539 • Brookswood Bend LLC,61146 Teton Lane, $208,250 • Wallstrom Administrative Trust, 2227 N.W. Lolo Drive, $338,571 • Dunn Revocable Trust, 2215 N.W. Lolo Drive, $403,189 • 3151 N.W. Shevlin Meadow LLC,
3151 N.W. Shevlin Meadow Drive, $369,060 • FC Fund LLC, 1049 S.E Sixth St., $207,498 • William Wecks, 61183 Loy Lane, $251,629 • Upper 40 LLC, 63135 N.E Beaufort Court, $176,789 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20762 N.E Sierra Drive, $193,473 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 61124 S.E. ManhaeLoop, $33 l,456 • Creative Real Estate Solutions, 2344 N.W. Todd's Crest Drive, $260,533 • Long Term Bendlnvestors LLC, 653 N.E.Providence Drive, $191,612 • Liberty Lots LLC, 61759 Bridgecliff Drive, $191,612 • Hidden Hills Bend LLC, 61053 S.E. Ruby Peak Lane, $198,140 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited
Partnership, 20779 N.E Smoke Stack Lane, $172,164 • Brookswood Bend LLC,61154 Teton Lane, $186,878 • Jill A. Ballantyne, 19946 Alderwood Circle, $117,788 •HiddenHillsBend LLC,20604 S.E Cougar PeakDrive, $212,202 • Peter Caine Trust,61337 Larry St., $191,438 City of Redmond • Hayden HomesLLC,2320 N.W. Hazelwood Ave., $221,940 • Hayden Homes LLC,3474 N.W. Dogwood Ave., $157,723 • Hayden Homes LLC,2321, N.W. Glen OakAve., $171,610 • Hayden Homes LLC,3454 N.W. Dogwood Ave., $171,610 • Hayden HomesLLC,3494 N.W. Dogwood Ave., $138,011 • Hayden Homes LLC,765 N.W. Green Forest Circle, $333,256
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT W Medicine, D3 Fitness, D4 Nutrition, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
MEDICAID
Making use of
Stretching principles Brock Monger, co-founder of ApexPhysical Therapy in Madras, demonstrates stretches recommended for skiers and snowboarders. Hold stretches for 30 seconds and repeat two to three times per side.
ungs'
STANDINGQUADRICEPS STRETCH Use left hand on wall or countertop as needed to steady. Single leg balance position on left foot, knee slightly bent for stability. Reach
back with right hand andpull right ankle/foot toward the right hip.
ong ives
Keep right thigh vertical, avoid twisting at either knee. Stretch should be felt in front of the hip and thigh.
Coverage of diabetes test strips
is debated
By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press
By Tara Bannow
The pair of lungs sits inside a clear dome, gently inflating as doctors measure how
The Bulletin
Some Type 2 diabetics in Oregon who rely on Medicaid would likely see the number of blood sugar tests their insurance covers each
MEDICINE well they'll breathe if implanted into a patient who desperately needs a new set. It's a little-known twist of nature — your lungs can live on for a while after you die. The air left inside keeps them from deteriorating right away as other organs do. An innovative experiment now aims to use that window of time to boost lung transplants by allowing donations from people who suddenly collapse and die at home instead of in a hospital. "There aren't enough lungs. We're burying them," said Dr. Thomas Egan of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who is leading the project. "It turns out your lungs don't die when you do." This is a new frontier for transplants. Today, registered organ donors don't get to fulfill that last wish if they die outside of a hospital. The U.S. doesn't have a system to recover their organs quickly enough. It can be
an added shock to grieving families and a waste of potentially good organs that might ease transplant shortages. "The general public does not understand how hard it is to become an organ donor. They assume if they sign their card, when they die, then it will happen," said bioethicist Arthur Caplan of New York University's Langone Medical Center. "Only 2 to 3 percent of people die in circumstances that let them
be organ donors." The new study in the Research Triangle area of North Carolina is trying to change that, focusing on lungs because Egan's researchsuggeststhey last the longest. Here's how it works. Someone collapses with cardiac arrest. Emergency workers exhaust attempts at CPR. If the driver's license lists the person as a registered donor, the local
organ recovery agency tracks down next of kin for permission to participate in the research. If that happens within about an hour of death, then workers pump a little air into the lungs to preserve them while the body is transported to an operating room for organ recovery.
MONEY month halved PRONE QUADRICEPSSTRETCH (ALTERNATE TOSTANDING QUADRICEPS STRETCH) Lie on stomach, keep lower spine still, avoid over-arching back. Pull right foot/ankle to the right hip, keeping it in line
with body. Usestrap or belt around ankle if needed. Increase stretch by placing a pillow under right knee if needed.
L'
to
Get Photos by Andy Tullis The Bulletin
• Don't ignore flexibility and balance when training for skiing or snowboarding By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin
end's many ski bums have undoubtedly begun grabbing their dumbbells after leaving the office. They're clomping on treadmills. Huffing through situp after situp, all to prepare their bodies for the hours they'll spend hunched over in skier's stance. If you're one of them, take heed: Flexibility and balance, local physical therapistssay, are often overlooked when it comes to training for winter sports. And they can easily be incorporated into typical strength-building and cardio routines. "You can prevent a lot of injury just by making sure that you work on your balance and flexibility before the season starts," said Brock Monger, lead physical therapist and co-founder of Apex Physical Therapy in Madras. "It's pretty simple to integrate into current, fall exercise programs."
FITNESS That canmean walking on an uneven terrain rather than pavement, mountain biking rather than training indoors or taking yoga or step classes, Monger said. Monger recommends stretching four to seven times per week after a regular exercise routine and performing two to four balance drills per week, which he said tend to be even more overlooked than flexibility. He stresses using one's body weight rather than machines because they incorporate movement
strategies as well as strength. Monger's three key stretches for flexibility and balance are: • Hamstring stretch (back side of
your thigh):Lie onyourback, grab the upper thigh of the leg you're stretching, and hold it at 90 degrees to your body, perpendicular to the floor. Then
use your quads (front thigh muscles) to elongate the back of your leg.
• Stretching the back side of your hips: Lie on your back, bend your knee and pull it toward your opposite shoulder without t w i sting through your spine. SeeFit /D4
CALF(GASTROC ) STRETCH Stagger stance with left
foot forward, right foot back. Lean into wall with
hands, press right heel into the ground with knee fully extended in straight position. Stretch will be felt in right calf muscles.
SUPINEHAMSTRING STRETCH Position1:Lie on back, left knee bent with left foot flat on floor, elevate
right thigh so that right hip is approximately 90 degrees. Hold onto
Will it work?
back of right thigh with both hands, relax neck and torso.Position 2:
Workers wheeled a cooler bearing the first set of lungs donated in the experiment into Egan's lab for the next crucial step — determining if they're
Straighten knee bycontracting front thigh muscles (quadsj and elongate leg to a stretch position that can beheldfor 30 seconds. For increased
really healthy. Inside the science fiction-looking domed machine, a ventilator slowly filled the lungs. They resembled a turkey awaiting roasting. Some black speckles on the outside didn't worry Egan.
under a proposal being considered by a state commission. Oregon's Health Evidence Review Commission — the group that decides what's covered under the state Medicaid program, the Oregon Health Plan — is considering a change that would take the recommended number oftest strips most non-insulin-dependent Type 2 diabetics receive every 90 days from 100 strips to 50 strips, or about one strip per week. Some members of the commission, which is expected to issue a final decision at its Dec. 5 meeting, say there's not enough evidenceforthe strips' effectiveness in improving quality of life and reducing adverseevents fordiabetics. In fact, they say using too many strips has been shown to cause low blood sugar in some cases. Commission members also argue some patients frequently use the strips unnecessarily, and limiting coverage would save the state money in the long run. But diabetics and providers counter that reducing the number of strips would have the opposite effect. They say restricting the number of tests diabetics are allotted could result in more illnesses and hospitalizations. See Diabetes /D2
stretch, consider pulling right foot and toes down toward the front shin to stretch calf and back of knee. As you gain flexibility, you will be able to
CALF (SOLEUS )
straighten your kneefurther with practice.
STRETCH Stagger stance with left foot forward, right foot back. Lean into wall with hands, keep right knee bent at approximately
45 degrees, allow right ankle to bend forward more than
the gastroc stretch.
They're a sign of city
Stretch will be felt
living or maybe earlier smoking. It's deeper inside that counts. Egan infused them with a special fluid that flows like blood normally would. SeeLungs /D3
deeper and lower in the right calf muscles.
POSTERIORHIP STRETCH Position 1:Lie on back, left knee bent with foot flat on floor, cradle right knee with both hands, right ankle resting on left knee.Position 2: Increase stretch by pulling right knee toward left shoulder. Keep low back
still and even onthefloor, no twisting. Avoid pain in the right knee or in front of the right hip. Stretch should be felt in back side of the right hip.
Coconut oi: Does it ive uptoa
the hype? By Teresa Farney The Gazette (Colorado Springs,
Colo.)
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Coconut oil is returning to the kitchen, thanks to a boost from i nthe NUTRITION those nutrition business who have taken a fresh look at the numbers. Those numbers, according to an article in Today's Dietitian by Aglaee Jacob, show the fat in coconut oil might raise "good" HDL cholesterol and lower "bad" LDL cholesterol while also burning body fat rather than storing it. "Some research has shown that increased coconut oil consumption leads to reduced cholesterol production, less oxidation (hardening) of LDL cholesterol and better ability to break up blood clots," says Laura Brieser-Smith, a dietitian and owner of Healthy Designs nutrition counseling in Denver. For those who avoid animal products, such as vegetarians and vegans, using coconut oil is becoming
popular. "If you're going to fry something," says Alan Roettinger, author of "Extraordinary Vegan," "extra-virgin coconut oil is the best vegan medium for it." SeeCoconut oil /D5
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013
HEALTH EVENTS "GETTINGTHE BEST POSSIBLE CARE":A presentation on what end-of-life care could look like if we overcome our cultural aversion to talking about dying; by Ira Byock, a doctor, author and director of palliative medicine at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center and professor at Dartmouth College; $25 plus fees; 6:30 p.m. today; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre. olg. END OFLIFELECTURE: A presentation on fostering development at the end of life that can empower clinicians to alleviate suffering; $25, registration required; 10a.m.-noon Friday; Partners in Care, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend; 541-383-7257.
How to submit Health Events:Email event
information to healthevents ©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publica-
tion. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly and will appear at bend
bulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. People:Email information
about local people involved in health issues to healthevents©bendbulletin. com. Contact: 541-3830358.
Can I bLjy
insurance even after I get sick? By Mlchelle Andrews Special To The Washington Post
The news has been focused on the troubles of people trying to use the health care law's insurance exchanges and on options for people whose individual polices are being canceled. But open enrollment continues,
and people who are shopping for individual or job-based coverage have many questions. Here are some answers. • I know t here's an en• rollment period for the health law's insurance market-
Q
places, but people can also buy a policy directly from a company or agent, outside the marketplaces. So will people be able to buy a regular health insur-
ancepolicy from a company or agent after March? If so, won't people wait until they're sick or injured to buy insurance? • The law r e quires that • health plans sold either through the marketplace or outside it be comparable in many ways, including the benefits that are covered and consumer cost-sharing requirements, such as the rule that plans pay at least 60 percent of medical costs. In addition, all plans sold on the individual market, whether through the exchange or outside it, must offer open enrollment during the same time period. So there's no easy way to game the system by waiting to buy a plan until you get sick. If you skip open enrollment, you've generally missed your chance to buy coverage for the year unless you have a significant change incircumstance,
such as losing your job-based insurance. You'll also face a penalty for not having insurance: $95 or I percent of your income in 2014, whichever is more. . We just received a notice . from my wife's health insurance company that says if her spouse is employed and has the option for insurance at his/ her workplace, it must be taken.
Q
How can a company charge for a family plan and then revoke coverageforone oftheinsured? . Employers aren't required . to offer health insurance to the spouses ofemployees, and if they do offer it, they can choose to stop at any time. But discontinuing spousal coverage altogether isn't common. Evaluate which plan is the most advantageous for your
A
family's needs, keeping in mind that all family members may not be best served by staying on the same plan. Don't limit yourself to evaluating the medicalcoverage and provider networks.
MONEY Multiple births costly in manyways, study indicates The most comprehensive
That means twins cost five
analysis of the health care costs of multiple births is a real
times as much as single births, and higher multiples cost19
(stickerj shock.
times as much. Past studies,
When thepregnant woman's
prenatal care and the babies' care through the first year are included, a single birth
costs $21,458, compared with $104,831 for twins and
which looked just at hospital costs, found far less disparity.
Behind the price tags is the human toll. The study found that for both mother and new-
"Those NICU costs can be pretty staggering," said study author Bradley Van Voorhis, an ob-gyn who heads the Univer-
sity of lowa's assisted reproduction program. Reproductive technology is the driving force for multiple births. Consider that since 1980, the twin birth rate in this
$407,199 for triplets or more,
according to a newstudy of insurance claims in the Amer-
borns, multiple births mean more deaths and complicacountry has risen 76 percent, tions, and longer hospital stays. while the rate of higher multiEven twins spent on average ples is up 400 percent.
ican Journal of Obstetrics and
a month in neonatal intensive
Gynecology.
care.
embryos be transferred to the wombs of women using in vitro fertilization. This has helped — but mostly with higher multiples, and
scientists. The paper cited research that women in fertility clinics said they wanted twins, even after
not enough. In 2011, the num-
they understood the risks.
ber of higher multiples was the lowest since 1995. Yet 5,137
The real problem, the authors say, is that IVF usually is
up to 85 percent of childless
sets of triplets, 239 of quadru-
not covered by insurance, so
plets, and 41 of quintuplets
women want to maximize their
were born. chances of getting pregnant on The twin rate has also stayed the first IVF attempt — even
"stubbornly high" at 33 per 1,000 births, said Van Voorhis, ommended that only one or two who did the study with Merck
if that means risking twins by
implanting two embryos.
Expert guidelines have rec-
— The Philadelphia Inquirer
Lower ACAenrollment coul hurt U.S. rug sales By Anna Edney
surers. The 2010 health law's promise of making medical WASHINGTON — Poten- coverage an affordablepossitial shortfalls in enrollment bility for at least 25 million unfor President Barack Obama's insured peoplewas projected health care overhaul would put to provide another boost. "There's a lot at stake," said a 30 percent dent in projections for U.S. prescripti on-drug Michael Kleinrock, director of sales in 2017, a report from research at the IMS Institute IMS Health shows. for Healthcare Informatics. That worst-case scenario "This would be a very dramatwould translate to $320 billion ic decline. We don't think that in drug spending, according that kind of sky-is-falling sceto the report. The best case is nario is most likely, but it is not supposed to be $460 billion, off the table." boosted by demand from the Last month, 106,185 people health law's expansion of inenrolled in private health plans surance coverage and medi- through insurance exchangcal screenings,and removal es that debuted Oct. 1 as part of restrictions on pre-existing of the Patient Protection and conditions. Affordable Care Act of 2010. Expenditures in t h e $2.7 U.S. health officials had a goal trillion U.S. health care sys- of enrolling 800,000 people tem have doubled since 1980, t hrough November and an growing to 18 percent of gross estimated 7 million sign-ups domestic product and lead- were predicted for the first ing to financial success for year. drugmakers, hospitals and inA middle ground that inBloomberg News
Diabetes
volves a slower coverage expansion would generate as much as $380 billion in U.S. drug spending in 2017, according to the report from Kleinrock's group, which is the research arm of IMS Health, a drug sales analysis company based in Danbury, Connecticut. Drug spending in 2012 was about $328 billion, the
in emerging markets, with as much as $25 billion in spend-
ing. Spending on generic
drugs may make up 21 percent of sales in developed countries in 2017 from 16 percent in 2012, the report found. Global phar m aceutical spending may a lso f l uctuate based on the European Union's economic recovery, group said. according to the report. A middle-ground scenario where acStill, global spending on drugs isprojected to surpass cess to medicines is sustained $1 trillion in 2014 for the first would generate as much as time, and reach $1.2 trillion in $31 billion in spending in 2017 2017. The growth of as much as on novel drugs that enter the $235 billion from 2012 to 2017 market in the 2013 to 2017 time would roughlymatch the $234 period, according to the report. billion increase in the prior five IMS also found 641 drug years,according to the report. candidates are in l ate-stage Oncology drugs will see research, a third of which are the most spending in devel- biologics, which ar e m a de oped countries, with sales of from living organisms and as much as $84 billion in 2017, are more complex than trafollowed by $39 billion on diditional pills. About 35 new abetes drugs, IMS said. Pain drugs are expected to reach medicines will lead the way the marketeach year through
2017, and transform treatment in skin and breast cancer, multiple sclerosis and hepatitis C, among others, IMS said. GlaxoSmithKline Plc won Food and Drug Administration approval in May for two drugs to treat the deadliest form of skin cancer. Gilead Sciences Inc. and Johnson & Johnson and Medivir AB are awaiting FDA clearance for hepatitis C treatments that can lessen side effects. In the end, structural changes within health care systems globally will determine
spending growth, according to the report. Japan is pushing to control drug costs amid an aging population, China is moving toward a goal of universal coverage by 2020 and the potential for new austerity measures in Europe is leading countries there to look for savings through greater use of
generics.
meet the exceptions will get w hether t o i m p lement t h e a b e tter c o st-containment 100 strips for 90 days. HERC guidelines, Smith said. s trategy would be t o l i m i t Continued from D1 The AD A a l s o r e comAnd it's l i kely t hat, giv- the brand of strips OHP will What:Meeting of the "It's l ik e R u ssian rou- mends that taking sulfonyen the lively testimony the cover, much like the way the Oregon Health Evidence lette rather than k nowing lurea medication, which is c ommission has h eard o n Women, Infants, and ChilReview Commission, inwhat's going on," said Nancy covered under OHP, should the issue, the measure that's dren program covers only a cluding discussion of the Gotchy, a 60-year-old Type 2 be added as an exception, ultimately approved Dec. 5 certain type of baby formula. diabetes test strip reducdiabetic who lives in Bend. because that medication is will look different from what The alternative — limiting tion proposal. Currently, HERC guideknown to cause hypoglycethe subcommittee approved, strips — could cost a lot more When:2 to 5 p.m. Dec. 5. lines provide for 100 test mia in some cases, Keller Smith said. in the end, she said. Where:Legacy Meridian "One trip to the ER is gostrips per month for Type said. The difficult thing about "I think if t hey were to Park Medical Center, I and Type 2 diabetics who this issue, Keller said, is that ing to cost more than a year's require multiple daily insuchoose to m ov e f o r ward Conference Room117B8C, there's no data on how many worth of test strips," she said. lin injections. That wouldn't without including sulfony19300 S.W. 65th Ave., Type 2 diabetics rely on OHP — Reporter: 541-383-0304, Tualatin. change under the proposal. lureas, they could potentially and would be affected, nor is tbannow@bendbulfetin.com be adding more costs to the theredata on how much mon'The hallmark state in the long-term around ey the change would save. of diabetes care' diabetes complications," she day: First in the morning and There's wide variation in Lori Brizee, a Bend-based sa>d. then two hours after a meal. the price of the various test 541-548-2066 dietitian and co-leader of the She pays about $25 through strips on the market, from Oregon Diabetes Educators A lack of research her privateinsurance for her around 20 cents per strip to Association,urges occasionSomnath Saha, a HERC monthly 50-strip packs. about $1 per strip. Brizee said al pre-meal and post-meal member and associate proThat c a n v a r y w id e l y, testing among her clients to fessor of medicine and pub- though. For instance, if she learn how certain foods af- lic health at Oregon Health gets sick, she has to check of~ AISPZRDVji fect their blood sugars. and Science University, said more frequentlybecause the r~s j jQ '; B I I R t tlf t yl ' "They can say, 'Oh gosh, at the Oct. 10 meeting that levels change quickly. MXtTREss when I eat Frosted Flakes for thereisno evidence supportJ eanene S m i t h , ch ie f G allery-Be n d Retire with us Today! breakfast, my glucose is 400 ing the necessity of testing medical o f f i cer f or the 541-312-9690 541-330-5084 or 200 an hour after break- blood sugar once a day or O regon He a lt h A uth o r fast, but when I eat eggs and more, according to H ERC i ty, e m phasized t h a t th e HERC's guidelines are only toast, it's only 140 two hours records. after breakfast,' " she said. Keller said that's because recommendations. "People can't learn to man- test strips are so widely acThe c u r r en t pr o p osal, age their diabetes if t h ey cepted by the medical com- w hich was approved by a "Quality Painting Inside and Out" can't test." munity, no pharmaceutical HERC subcommittee in Au4 Painting rn Central Oregon for over 18 years In general,Brizee recomcompany or government or- gust but still requires approvmends Type 2s use between ganization is going to spend al by th e f ul l c o mmission, four and eight test strips per money researching them. would apply to the fee-for-ser"They're saying there's not vice enrollees, she said. The week. "Basically, self-monitoring a lot of research, but they're vast majority of OHP recipiis sort of the hallmark of dia- right because no one's going ents — 95 percent — are covInsured Bonded and Licensed<156tsz phone: 541-383-2927 betes care," she said. to do the research," she said, ered under coordinated care 18633 Riverwoods Drive Email; heartlan Jllc@msn.com "because we just know that it The American Diabetes organizations,whose leaders Bend, OR 97702 Inquire about trading goods for services. Association recommends works." can d e cide i n d ependently letting physicians determine Saha argued t ha t t e st the number of strips diabet- strips provide benefits to ics should receive, said Lau- an extent, but setting limits ra Keller,advocacy director would ensure the state is not for the American Diabetes over-spending on a practice Association. that hasn't been proven to do That said, for Type I dimuch good. abetics, the A D A r e c omIn fact, Saha, who did not mends four to five strips per respond to a request seeking day. For anyone using incomment, said evidence has sulin — Type I or 2 — it's a suggested that over-testing minimum of three strips per can lead to hypoglycemia. day. For Type 2 diabetics on He said he's seen patients sulfonylurea med i cation, skip meals or take extra inat www.gobeilleortho.com and which is known to cause low sulin because they over-test, blood sugar: a minimum of causing their blood sugars to three strips per day. fluctuate wildly. Keller testified in oppoGotchy, who wa s d i agSl H "I sition to the proposal at an nosed with Type 2 diabetes Oct. 10 HERC meeting, and in 2002, said if she tried to RECEIVE OFF TREATMENT said the ADA recommends reduce the number of strips OHP cover 100 test strips per she used to one per week, uith this couPon Expires 12/3 I/2013 Cannot be combined urirh any other offers. she'd be playing a guessing month for all diabetics. I The proposed change game with potentially danwould apply to Type 2 diabet- gerous consequences. "I think a lot of people are ics who do not rely on insulin and have an average blood going to end up sick or in the sugar level,referred to as hospital," she said. "You need HbAlc, less than 8 percent. to be able to monitor. I think It carves out eight exceptions it will be a lot higher health for newly diagnosed diabet- costs that way because I do ics, patients who changed think people will be making their treatment regimen and a lot of trips to their doctor or patients with recent hypo- the ER." glycemia or low blood sugar, Gotchy said s h e t e s ts among others. Those who her blood sugar twice per
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THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
MEDICINE Anal fissures: a pain that's hard to discuss Anal fissures are not exactly a topic for cocktail party conversation, and the
So like many others, she suffered in silence.
reluctance to discuss them often leaves sufferers thinking they are the only ones
If you've ever noticed bright red blood on toilet tissue or in the bowl after a
affected.
bowel movement, chancesare it is a
In fact, this potentially painful, debilitating, anxiety-provoking condition is
small tear in the rim of the anus. Such
As with a small cut on the pad of
the thumb, every usehurts the injured area, and evenworse, can aggravate the wound. Any trauma to the anal canal can cause a fissure. In women, childbirth is
quite common. If a fissure doesn't heal
tears are commonly mistaken for hemor- acommon cause.Othercausesinclude rhoids, which unlike fissures don't cause the insertion of a foreign object, anal
on its own, it can usually be treated and
pain with bowel movements.
in an email about these tiny tears in the
tory bowel diseaseand Crohn's disease. If you have afissure, the sharp, stinging or burning pain that occurs with a bowel movement can be brief or long-lasting. And, as Rushton experienced, debilitat-
and result in a chronic problem that persists for more than a month. The tear
anal opening. "Believe me,when I was struck down by mine, the last thing I
need not bevery big to cause consider-
wanted to do was tell people."
ing spasms canpersist for hours. The resulting agony canprompt
able discomfort.
healing. Most often, the doctor will rec-
ment, which only complicates matters by making the stool harder and more difficult to pass.
ommend taking a sitz bath two or three times a day: sitting in plain warm water for about 20 minutes at a time. Sitting on a warm heating pad or a hot water bottle
Anyoneexperiencingsymptoms should consult a doctor who candetermine the cause. It is unwise to assume
intercourse, a digital rectal exam and chronic constipation or diarrhea. Fissures often affect people with inflamma-
recurrences prevented with conservative In an estimated 90 percent of cases, measures. these tears heal on their own. Whenthey "Most people don't know they exist don't, everysubsequentbowelmovebecause nobody wants to talk about ment — especially if the stool is large, them," EmmaRushton, of Nashville, said hard and dry — can reopenthe wound
people to try to postpone abowel move-
rectal bleeding, however slight, is
healing.
innocuous.Thedoctorcanexaminethe anus and the anal canal in the office with the unaided eye or byusing asmall instrument called an anoscope. If a more serious problem must be ruled out, a sigmoidoscopyorcolonoscopy may be recommended. When an anal fissure fails to heal quickly on its own andcauses repeated pain, conservative treatments can speed
Cleanse thearea with water only; using soap can dry out the lining of theanal ca-
Lungs
The gift of life
Continued from 01 This so-called ex vivo lung perfusionpreserves the lungs even longer. It can tell if they transfer oxygen properly or help spot signs of d i sease. Egan also peeked inside with a bronchoscope, looking for abnormalities. These lungs didn't pass the test because Egan found some early disease. But they did show it was possible to get a donation in time to try. Lungs that do pass will be transplanted i n t o pa t i ents willing to take a chance on these nontraditional organs as part of the study funded by the National Institutes of Health. "That would be the greatest thing — to be able to breathe normal," said Lisa Bowman, 51, of Union Grove, N.C. Bowman has been on the waiting list for new lungs for two years after a rare genetic
Today, people who die outside a hospital can't donate their organs. A pilot study in North Carolina is testing if lungs could be an exception, because the air in them keeps them from deteriorating as quickly as other organs Here is how it works:
POO OOO
QOO
ooo
•
•
' p
•
••
•
•
'
000 000
1. EMS tries to revive
2. If the person dies and
someone whohas collapsed from cardiac arrest.
was registered asan organ donor, an organ
3. The lungs are ventilated as an ambulance transports
bank asks the next of kin
the body to an
if lungs can bedonated.
operating room.
4. Donated lungs are examinedinadomed machine that provides oxygen and blood-like fluid. 5. Healthy lungs can be
transplanted. Source: Unicersity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
AP
disease gradually damaged her own until, she says, it became like "breathing through a pinhole." She hopes Egan's research will help her find a match more quickly. S ome previous U .S. a t tempts at out-of-hospital donation of another organ, kidneys, didn't pan out because of logistical hurdles. But transplant specialists are watching this newest experiment closely, saying that if it works, it eventually could open the way to many more donationsnot just lungs but maybe other organs, too. "We've h ad a num b e r of very d i sgruntled family members that wanted to do-
I8
nate (a loved one's organs) and weren't able to," said Dr. Jeffrey P u n ch , t r a n splant surgery chief at the University of Michigan. Spurred by that family reaction, in a few months, his team plans to try recoveringkidneys from cardiac arrest victims who are rushed tothe emergency room but can't be saved and turn out to be registered donors. In North Carolina, Egan's study likewise will try to recover lungs from people who die in the ER, as well as in the community. Today, the vast majority of donated organs come from people who suffer a severe injury andare hooked to a ventilator for days, even weeks, until doctors determine they are brain-dead. Machinery keeps blood and oxygen flowing until surgeons can collect organs deemed healthy enough.
r
f ! .~
I
Allen G. Breed/The Assoaated Press
What about registered donors who collapse with cardiac arrest at home, the office or the gym — and efforts at CPR fail? Experience overseas shows it's possible to take quick steps to preserve and recover their organs. Doctors in Spain have transplanted kidneys, livers and lungs from these unconventional donors. France has reported some success with kidneys. In the United States, more than 6,000 people died last year while awaiting one of those organs. Lungs are in p a rticularly short supply. Only 15 percent
to 20 percent of donated lungs potential organ donors if sciare usable, often b ecause entists settle some ethical and complications during the do- practical questions. nor's hospitalization damaged Buying t im e t o r e c over them. Just 1,700 lung transplants are performed each year, compared with nearly 11,000 ki dney t r a n splants from deceased donors. Egan, a cardiothoracic surgeon, said doctors don't even s uggest the possibility of a lung transplant to thousands who might benefit because there aren't enough donors. Yet the Institute of Medicine has estimated that as many as 22,000 people a year who die outside of hospitals could be
PERIOD
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"This trial is very timely and very pertinent," Meyers said, to see if testing in that domed machine could substitute for that hospital track record. E gan n o te s t h a t l un g blood flow for oxygen, Egan d isease i s t he nati o n 's explained. When the heart stops beating, they use what third-leading killer. He says oxygen is left in the air sacs the untapped pool of potential donors who die outside and airways. For how long? In a series of the hospital could expand o f experiments w i t h a n i - transplants significantly. "There are h uge l ogistimals, Egan showed l u ngs cal hurdles," he said. "But if stay viable for an hour, or four hours if they are venti- we're right, this would have lated, before they're cooled a profound impact on t h e n umber of l u ng s t hat a r e to await transplant. T hat v entilation i s o n e available for transplant." key to the $4 million, 3-year study, because when emergency workers exhaust atSee us for tempts at CPR and declare someone dead, they typically $100 mail-in rebates on leave behind the breathing select Hunter Douglas tube inserted in the person's
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throat. That makes it simple to restart ventilation to preserve the lungs, Egan said. "If we can get the lungs v entilated within a n h o u r , and then removed within an hour or two and cooled, we think they'll work just fine," he said. Kidneys don't have as long a survival w i ndow. But i n Michigan, Punch has a similar preservation plan: Insert a few tubes near the kidneys to filter blood to them until they're recovered. Fast retrieval isn't the only issue. Surgeons don't know if nontraditional organs work as well, cautioned Dr. Bryan Meyers of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. Chest X-rays an d o t h er i n-hospital d o n o r te s t i n g determine the quality of today's traditionally d onated
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adults. They can interfere with work, exercise, and life in general.
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Unless diarrhea is acause, measures to soften the stool and promote regular
those organs means doing some things no t n o r mally done to dead bodies, noted bioethicist Caplan, and that can mean ventilating lungs or filtering blood to the kidneys. How wil l g r i eving f amilies react? Is it possible to tell who's a registered donor and find next-of-kin in time to try? New York City studied kidney donations after at-home deaths in 2011. Dr. Stephen Wall of Bellevue Hospital Center said community and religious groups met wit h r e searchers and were interested. But s t udy rules restricted which deaths were eligible, and researchers had just 20 minutes to get initial family permission. In 6 months, 9 deaths were considered but didn't qualify, often because the deceased hadn't previously registered as an organ donor, Wall said. New York is among states with low donor registration rates. Wall's team i s c o nsidering trying again with lungs because of the longer time window. Lung cells don't depend on
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Lungs donated as part of research at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, sit inside a machine as they're ventilated and tested to see if they are healthy enough to transplant.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013
FITNESS STUDY
ODD FITNESS NEWS
Slow-poke generation? Globally, kids are less fit
Need a subwayticket? That will be 30 squats
DALLAS — Today's kids can't keep up with their parents. An analysis of studies on
millions of children around theworld finds they don't run as fast or as far as their par-
ents did when theywereyoung. On average, it takes children 90 seconds
Bulletin wire reports A scene from a r e cent commercial for the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, shows a subway ticket machine that accepts payment in the form of 30 squats. What would you do to get a free ride on the subway? Would you be willing to stop in the middle of a subway station and start exercising if it meant your trip that day was free'? That's what commuters in Russia are doing. In a new commercialbefore the 2014 Sochi Olympic
longer to run a mile than their counterparts did 30 years ago. Heart-related fitness has
declined 5 percent per decadesince1975 for conference featured the research onTuesday, says it's the first to show that children's fitness has declined worldwide over the last
three decades. "It makes sense. We have kids that are less active than before," said Dr. Stephen tion.
Health experts recommendthat children 6 and older get 60 minutes of moderately vig-
orous activity accumulated over aday. Only one-third of American kids do now. "Kids aren't getting enough opportunities to build up that activity over the course of
the day," Daniels said. "Many schools, for economicreasons,don'thaveanyphysical education at all. Somerely on recess" to provide exercise. The new study was led by Grant Tomkin-
son, an exercise physiologistat the University of South Australia. Researchers analyzed 50 studies on running fitness — a key mea-
sure of cardiovascular health andendurance — involving 25 million children ages 9 to17 in 28 countries from 1964 to 2010.
Fit Continued from D1 • Calf stretch:This is a classic runner's stretch w here you push against a wall with a staggered stance. To stretch the right calf, position your right leg in back and your left foot pushes against the wall. Brian Timm , a p h y sical therapist with B end Physical Therapy, agreed that the biggest mistake he sees people make is not i m proving their flexibility and balance before they start skiing or snowboarding. "They ride the chair up, it's cold, it's early in the morning and they just go right out on that first run, and that's usually when people get hurt," he said. "They either g et hurt on the first run or at the end of the day, when they're fatigued."
A good way to get prepared
Thinkstock
World Health Organization numbers suggest that 80 percent of the world's young couch potatoes (and youths in general) may not get enough exercise. The studies measured how far children could run in 5 to15 minutes and how quickly
China, and Japan never had much fallofffitness has remained fairly consistent there. they ran a certain distance, ranging from half About 20 million of the 25 million children in a mile to two miles. Today's kids are about the studies were from Asia. 15 percent less fit than their parents were, In China, annual fitness test data show researchers concluded. the country's students are getting slower "The changes arevery similar for boys and fatter over the past couple of decades.
and girls and also for various ages," but differed by geographic region, Tomkinson
Experts and educators blame anobsession with academic testing scores for China's
sald. The decline in fitness seems to be leveling off in Europe, Australia and New Zealand, and perhaps in the last few years in North America. However, it continues to fall in
competitive college admissions as well as a proliferation of indoor entertainment
options like gaming and websurfing for the decline. — The Associated Press
Find It All Online
Balanceprinciples
bendbulletin.com
Brock Monger, co-founder of ApexPhysical Therapy in Madras, demonstrates balanceexercises recommended for skiers and snowboarders. Theseexercises can bedone two to seven times per week.
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LATERALLEAN Stand on right leg, kneeslightly
SINGLELEG FORWARD HINGE
Stand on right foot, knee slightly bent. Create a straight line with
bent. Place hands on hips. Lean torso to the right 2 to 8 inches,
stationary single leg balance,
hinging through the hip sideways to the right, core engaged with neutral spine, then return to
starting position. Repeat three to 10 reps.
y > y
y
'
I
Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
STATIONARY SINGLELEG BALANCE
hip, knee andmiddle of the foot. is by doing dynamic warmKeep hips andpelvis level, core ups before exercising, Timm s aid. That m e an s m i x i n g muscles engaged. Avoid twisting or letting the right knee goinward stretching while moving with (knock knee). Start with a short static stretching. Some key stretches for bal- time frame of 5 seconds, increase ance and flexibility are a sim- to 30 seconds. Three to10 reps. ple calf stretch against a wall or a quad stretch, where you stand, bend one knee so that
With the same alignment as the stand with hands on hips or at
side, keep spine neutral and hinge forward through your supporting hip. Avoid flexing the spine. Start with a slow, steady lean of 2 to 4 inches and return to starting
i
position. Increase distance of leaning forward as you improve.
/
Avoid twisting at knees. Repeat
for three to10 reps. Foradvanced measures: Createhalf-circle of
your leg folds in half, grab
five cups on floor within reach and
your ankle behind you and pull your heel up and back. Balance boards are a great tool for p r acticing keeping one's balance on unstable surfaces, Timm said. Many of th e muscles involved in winter sports aren't the same ones emphasized in summer or fall sports, like c ycling and r u nning, so a
pick them up oneat a time.
Find It All Online
training regimen should pay special attention to those muscles, Timm said. For example, both downhill and cross-country skiing rely heavily on the lateral muscles because of all the side-to-side movement they entail. The glutes also get a heavy workout, as do the hip abductors, Timm said. "A lot of people don't realize, too, that it takes a lot of core strength for both alpine and nordic skiing," he said, "and I know for myself, my back is usually pretty tired when I first start alpine skiing. Those are ones you may not be doing through the summer and fall." Once people have already become established in their training, Timm suggests trying plyometric exercises, especially for those who plan to downhill ski. That involves intense, explosive movements like box jumps, he said. In addition to jumping or bounding a ctivities, w h ich target the lower body, plyometrics routines usually involve medicine ball t hrows or elasticrebound cords for
pure genius.
In other random Olympic news, the International Olympic Committee says there is a p o ssibility that baseball and softball could be added to the program for the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo. Baseball and softball were dropped from the 2012 program after a 2005 vote by the IOC. They failed in a bid to be reinstated for the Olympic program for 2020 and 2024 at an IOC vote in Games, subway passengers September, but Tokyo's winare challenged to stop and ning bid has refueled calls complete 30 squats (a cam- for them to be included when era w atches p a r ticipants the Japanese capital hosts to make sure they're not the games. cheating), and for their efBaseball and softball are forts, a free subway ticket is popular in Japan, and there dispensed at the end of the are many existing facilities exercise. in the Tokyo area that could Despite your possible cring- be used if the sports were es at poor form throughout included.
children ages 9 to 17. The American Heart Association, whose
Daniels, a University of Colorado pediatrician and spokesmanfor the heart associa-
the commercial (push your knees out, people!), we can't help but think that this idea is
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bendbulletin.com DOUBLELEG STANCE Bosij
SINGLELEG STANCE BOSU
Stand upon aBosu orthick foam pad. Neutral spine, headupright,
Practice single leg balance with
hands slightly in front of the torso. Shift weight from side to side in a
hip, knee and ankle on an un-
ideal vertical alignment through
controlled fashion for three to five
steady surface such as aBosu or thick foam. Kneeslightly bent.
minutes. For increased difficulty,
Start with 5 seconds, increase to
work on a perfect form body
30 seconds asable. Three to 10 reps.
weight squat in this position, 10 to
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balance of the athlete. As for those who are neither balanced nor flexible when they hit th e slopes, typical injuries include pulled hamstrings and quads, torn anterior cruciate ligaments (ACLs) and, for snowboarders, shoulder injuries, Timm said. B oth Monger and T i m m recommend people begin training at least six weeks before they begin winter sports. Hydration is also commonly overlooked in winter sports, Monger said. "Oftentimes, because we're exercisingin 30 degree temps the upper body, according or lower, we don't have that to the National Council on same thirst mechanism," he Strength and F i tness. The said. intensity will vary according He says it's also good to to the experience and levels simply stand in your ski boots of strength, coordination and at home to see how they feel
and practice balancing while shifting your weight around. And don't forget to take your skis into a local shop and have your b i n d ings c a l i brated, Monger said. When it comes down to it, though, any conditioning is better than none before winter sports, Timm said. He sees many people who consider skiing or snowboarding the very exercise that will make them more fit and healthy, so they don't properly prepare. "A lot of people do that, they just say 'Oh, I'll just ski myself into shape,'" he said. "I've seen a lot of people over the years get hurt trying to do that. It's completely different muscles, different movement patterns." — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
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THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DS
NUTRITION STUDY
Inflammatory diet found to increase likelihood of gastrointestinal cancers cent University of South Carolina ing, took a fresh look at existing
and Control Program anda distinguished professor at the
study's authors and anassociate professor at the university, cau-
play a major role in diseases bread and milk (but not low-fat such as esophageal, stomach milk) also are inflammatory. and colorectal cancer. Andan Fruits and vegetables and inflammatory diet can contribute many nonprocessed foods are
study showing a strong link between inflammatory foods and
University of South Carolina, researchers determined that
tioned that the sample size for Gl deaths in the study is small. The
to higher rates of those cancers. Foods high in saturated or
participants with an anti-inflam-
400 percent number shouldn't
trans fats, sugar andgluten are
matory diet were 400 percent less likely to die from gastroin-
be the takeaway as much as the growing evidence that diet can
especially inflammatory on the digestive tract. Alcohol, white
The evidence for the health benefits of anti-inflammatory foods keeps building, with a re-
Research and presented asa
director of the South Carolina
poster at a recent American Institute of Cancer Research meet-
Statewide Cancer Prevention
dietary data from the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study from 1987-2003. Using an inflammatory diet in-
gastrointestinal-tract cancers. The study, funded by the uni-
versity's Center for Colon Cancer dex developed byJames Hebert,
testinal cancers. Susan Steck, one of the
anti-inflammatory, and so are
many spices such asturmeric, ginger, oreganoandgarlic. — Joey Holleman, The State (Columbia, S.C)
Youcanma et issuas o ou e u as asta • It's an easy way to introduce aheart-healthy veggie to your diet By Elaine Gordon Special To The Washington Post
Despite the fact that the U.S. Agriculture Department recommends you fill half your plate with fruits and vegetables, they are rarely the main attraction. As fall rolls around and squash becomes abundant in grocery stores, maybe it's time these healthful foods had their moment in the spotlight. Squash comes in many varieties, including acorn, butternut, delicata, pumpkin and spaghetti. Spaghetti squash is available year-round, with its peak season in early fall through winter. Inside spaghetti squash is a wonderful surprise: loads of strands of squash that look like spaghetti noodles. Because of this resemblance, it can be easily substituted for noodles — for about a quarter of the calories. Although the mild flavor of spaghetti squash will not replace pasta's taste, it pairs wonderfully with sauces you would normally put over pasta. You can get fancy when
preparing this vegetable (the USDA counts it as a vegetable, though technically it's a
Thinkstock
When cooked,spaghettisquash pulls apart into pasta-like strands that can be used as a substitute for noodles.
They could reduce your risk of many diseases. Like many other fruits and vegetables, spaghetti squash offers n u m erous b e nefits, i ncluding antioxidants a n d other important nutrients to keep your entire body healthy. Some of its key nutrients include Vitamin A (to keep your eyes and skin healthy and protect against infections) and Vitamin C (to help heal cuts and wounds and keep your teeth
and gums healthy). I t also contains a g o o d fruit) or simply drizzle lightly a mount of f i b er, w hich i s with olive oil and add a sprin- important for overall heart kle of salt and pepper. For an health and helps to control added flavor boost, try topblood sugar for people with ping with a bit of fresh garlic diabetes. Fiber also aids in and a sprinkle of Parmesan weight management by makcheese. ing you feel fuller faster. SpaWhen selecting your spa- g hetti squash offers all o f ghetti squash, it should be these benefits without lot of hard all over and heavy for calories. its size. Inspect the squash As you work your way toto make sure there are no ward your daily fruit and vegscratches, punctures or blem- etable intake, keep in mind ishes. The freshest spaghetti that variety is important. In squash will be bright yellow addition to incorporating lots and without discoloration. of different types of vegetables The D i etary G u i delines into your diet, you should also for A m ericans r ecommend aim for a variety of colors. If eating more fruits and veg- you haven't tried a yellow vegetables than any other food etable recently, give spaghetti group, and for good reason. squash a try.
Coconut oil
"This is my concern." Marleen Swanson, a dietiContinued from D1 tian and department chair of Lily N i chols, a d i e t itian culinary nutrition at Johnson and owner of a private nutri- & Wales University in Dention business in Los Angeles, ver, is also cautious about cosays, "Being mostly aerated, conut oil's role in the diet. "Basically, it still is a sat(coconut oil is) an optimal fat for cooking since the fats ar- urated fat and needs to be en't easily damaged by heat. regarded as such," she says. I recommend it frequently to "It has gotten rave reviews of my clients, and the flavor is late because of the vegan diet. incredible." Certainly, it fits as a spread in However, Patricia Kulbeth, place of butter for these peoa clinical dietitian at Memori- ple, but it's still a saturated al Health System Outpatient fat. The one pro of coconut oil Nutrition Services, is c auis that it is a medium-chain tious about coconut oil use. fat that is m ore easily ab" Coconut oil is still a f a t sorbed in the body." and should not be excessively Swanson isreferring to coused," she says. conut oil's biochemical makeKulbeth's point is that too up. In Jacob's article in Tomuch of any fat in the diet day's Dietitian, she describes can cause weight gain and the fat in coconut oil as medicontribute to d i abetes and um-chain fatty acids, or MCheart disease. FAs, as opposed to long-chain " When any new f ood i s fatty acids, or LCFAs. Of the in the news, people tend to fat in coconut oil, 65 percent eat too much of it," she said. is MCFAs, which don't need
to break down i nt o s i ngle fatty acids for the body to absorb them. They can make their way directly to the liver foreasier absorption. The unique structure of the MCFAs in coconut oil make them easier to burn and harder to store in adipose tissue, compared with the LCFAs found in other fats. Kulbeth remains skeptical. "Even though the type of saturated fats in coconut is m edium-chain and i s p u r ported to be healthier, it is still not as healthy a type of fat as is olive oil or other high mono- and polyunsaturated fats," she said. "It is my opinion that coconut milk or coconut oil should not be used as a main part of the fat intake in the diets but could be used along with other healthier oils as part of a healthy diet." Her rule of thumb is that calories from fat should not
Spaghetti Squash with Ground Turkey and Tomato Sauce Makes 6 servings. 1 medium spaghetti squash (about 4 Ibs), rinsed well 3 TBS extra-virgin olive oil 2 C diced Vidalia or other sweet onion 12 white button mushrooms, stemmed, then sliced (about
2C) 1 C frozen peas (optional)
~/2 C dry white wine 2 cloves garlic, pressed or minced 1 Ib 95 percent lean ground white turkey meat or ground chicken breast Freshly grated ParmigianoReggiano cheese, for garnish
1 medium zucchini, diced
(optional) '/4 teaspoon sea salt /2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 14'/2 oz canned, diced Italianstyle tomatoes, preferably no-salt-added, plus their juices
(optional)
FOR THE SQUASH Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Cut the squash lengthwise in half, avoiding the stem. Place the halves cut
sides up in a baking dish. Bakefor about 45 minutes or until the flesh is easily pierced with a knife. Cool completely. FOR THE SAUCE Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a large saute pan over medium heat. Once the oil shimmers, add the onions, mushrooms, the peas and zucchini, if using, half the salt and half the pepper, stirring to coat. Cook for 10 min-
utes, stirring occasionally. Stir in the tomatoes and their juices, the wine and garlic; cover and cook for 10 minutes to create a chunky
sauce,breakingupthetomatoesastheycook. Heat the remaining tablespoon of oil in a separate medium skillet over medium heat. Once the oil shimmers, add the meat. Season with the remaining salt and pepper. Cook for 15 minutes, using a wooden spoon to break up clumps. The meat should be completely browned. Stir into the sauce until well incorporated and heated
through. Scoop out the squashseeds; discard or reserve for another use. Useafork (or two) to shred the squash flesh, dragging the fork through lengthwise. Transfer the resulting strands to a mixing bowl or serving platter. Discard
the empty skins. Spoon the sauce over the squash and toss to incorporate, or spoon evenly over the squash. Garnish with a sprinkling of the cheese, if desired. Serve right away.
Nutrition per serving: 300 calories, 17 gprotein, 18 g carbohydrates, 13 gfat, 3 g saturated fat, 55 mgcholesterol, 180 mg sodium, 4 g dietary fiber, 7 g sugar. — Adapted from Elaine Gordon, amaster of public health professional and amaster certified health education specialist. Sheis creator of the healthful recipe site EatingbyElaineoom
be more than 30 percent of y our total d a ily i n t ake o f calories. Until further research indicates coconut oil is better than other saturated fats, it seems prudent to enjoy the great flavor of coconut oil in moderation. Here are some m ore numbers to k eep i n mind about coconut oil: One
tablespoon of coconut oil contains 117 calories, 14 grams of fat, 12 grams of saturated fat, and no vitamins or minerals.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOV 21, 2013
ADVICE ck ENTERTAINMENT
Rosanne as an te'Riseo Americana' TV SPOTLIGHT
Rosanne Cash, the daughter of legendary musicians Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash, has a long career as one of country music's leading singer/ songwriters. She is featured on PBS' "Nashville 2.0: The Rise of Americana."
"Nashville 2.0: The Rise of Americana" Friday on OPB By Luaine Lee McClatchy-Tribune News Service
BEVERLY H I L LS, C a lif. — Though she comes from a long line of musicians, singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash is constantly moving on. To prove that, Cash will be one of the celebratedperformers on PBS' "Nashville 2.0: The Rise of Americana,"a documentary on the impact of roots-based American music premiering Friday. Rosanne, daughter of iconic singer Johnny Cash and his first wife, credits that heritage for some of her talent. "Part of it i s D NA, going back even before my father, because his grandfather was a choir leader in a B a ptist church in Arkansas," she says. "And, before that, we were Scottish minstrels before we even came to America.So I think the DNA has kind of coalesced over the centuries. But also, of course, it's what I grew up around. Music was currency in my family. It was a language. If you didn't know how to say how you felt in words, you had songs to say how you felt." Though she was constantly exposed to his music as a child, her dad never dispensed advice about career. "My father would have never sat me down and said, 'This is how you do it.'
PBS via McClatchyTribune News Service
He never gave unsolicited advice, ever. You had to ask him for it. But I did sit in the wings and watch a few thousand of his shows, and just how he connected with an audience was always of great interest to me. I mean, I can't do what he did, but just the willingness to want to connect, I think I got that from him." Friday's show, which is part of PBS "Arts Fall Festival," is produced by Terry Stewart, former CEO an d p r esident of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland. "Americana is not something new," he explains. "It goes back even as early as 1947 when Capitol Records
started the Americana label and tried to hide race music and folk music and Western music and hillbilly music under one label. "But what's really important ... it is a movement, and its time is truly now ... We lose track of how often music changes and morphs and moves on, and I think, now, we are seeing part of that period," he says. "The story is being told. You can understand the words, all of the, sort of, classic cliches that you hear about it. I think it's there on the charts now. I don't think we have to wait for it. If you look at the plethora of artists at South by Southwest or any of these other festivals
i e ees vioate
where they are sitting side by side with heavy metal groups and really winning the day, I mean, it's just one of those moments in time where the music has shifted." Cash says she's not only influenced by her past, but by a variety of modern musical genres, "I listen to everything," she says. "Probably, the one that would most surprise you is Miles Davis. Miles Davis got me through a divorce. I just listened to that record obsessively, 'Kind of Blue,' and 'Sketches of Spain' as well. But I listen to everything, everything from The Decemberists to Bill Monroe to Aaron Copland." Americana music not only a cknowledges the r oots o f country music, it celebrates the poetry of the songwriting, says Cash. "It's about real songwriting, the craft of songwriting, not six people putting together a sequence ofbeats, but a real song that has a narrative arc and a melody and imagery. And the other part is I think that we respect the tradition we came from. We know our folk music and Appalachian and Delta blues, and all of that has become part of the river that goes into what's now called 'Americana.' So melody, real songwriting, tradition, that's a good staN." Cash says her approach to songs has changed over the years. Her focus when she was 23 is different from what it is
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now. "Ray Charles said, 'You are a better singer at 50 than you are at25 because the life you've lived shows up in your voice.' And that is partly what Americana music is about, too — a life lived shows up in the voice." Four years ago she introduced her album, "The List," based on a l ist o f t h e 100 greatest country and American songs that her dad gave her. She says it originated this way: "I was a young girl. I was 18 years old. I had just graduated high school, and I went on the road with him. And I was not interested in country music. I liked the Beatles and Elton John. I liked Creedence (Clearwater Revival) and The Band and Blind Faith. I grew up in Southern California in the '60s and '70s, and that's the music I loved. "Of course, I heard my dad's music and what h e p l ayed around the house and what my mother played.And Ray Charles' 'Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music' kind of went in on a cellular level at that time. "But, on that tour, we were talking about songs, and he mentioned a song. I said, 'I don't know that one,' and then he mentioned another. I said, 'I don't know that one.' And he got very alarmed. And he felt that I had half of my musical education. So he made this list for me, and he said, 'This is your education.'"
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be anadditional fee for 3-Dand INIAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby: I love my husband very much. Until the last few years there have never been any problems in our 20-year marriage. I have depression and epilepsy, and I am on five different medications for them. Sometimes when I have come out of a s eizure, I have found that my clothes have been re• EAR moved and my husABBY band is "touching" me. Also, b ecause the medication puts me into a deep sleep at night, I have half-awakened to him having sex with me. I am so groggy I can't respond. Is this right? I feel like I have been violated, but I haven't said anything to him. This causes me to cringe most of the time when he touches me now. I'd like to get back to a normal love life, but I can't get over what he does to me when I'm not fully aware. How do I tell him I know what he has been doing without ruining my marriage? — Feeling Violated in Rio Rancho, N.M Dear Feeling Violated:You feel violated because what your husband is doing is called spousal rape, and it's a criminal offense. Having sex with someone who is so doped up
she (or he) can't give consent is a sexual assault. Tell your husband you know what he has been doing, how you feel about it and that you would prefer that the two of you make love while you are wide awake and able to fully enjoy it. This should be discussed with a marriage counselor and, i f n e cessary, t h e
police. D ear Abby: I ' m a married father of two very young children (2 and 6 months). I have excessive student loan debt that is making my life extremely tough, and between that, day careand my mortgage, I'm on the brink of bankruptcy. My mother is extremely wealthy. She is very involved with my family and we both do things to help each other out. I mow the grass in her large yard every week. She sees me struggling,yet she makes no offer to help financially. I am becoming resentful about it. If she helped, it would not change her lifestyle at all. My wife's family is the opposite. Her parents aren't wealthy, but they have done everything within their power to help their children. I know how I will treat MY kids.
Am I wrong to feel resentment because my mother has decided differently'? Or should I just "grow up"'? — Frustrated in North Carolina Dear Frustrated:If you have discussed with your mother that you are under extreme financialpressure and she has refused to help, then I can see why you might feel some resentment. My question is, HAVE you talked to her about it? That would be the "grown-up" thing to do. The worst she can say is no. If she does, what you will need to do is take a part-time job to help with the bills — even if it means you mow your mother's lawn less often. Dear Abby: Next month will be our 25th anniversary. My wife and I are permanently separated but will not divorcebecause she would lose health coverage under my employer's plan. How do I acknowledge this "landmark" — or should I just ignore it, since it isn't really a celebratory event? — Not Quite an Ex in the South Dear Not Quite An Ex:If you and your wife are on speaking terms, call her and say something nice. Or send her a card. If you're not on friendly terms, then diplomatically ignore the landmark. — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 6 • 'Where Are YouGo"screensat9tonight. • After 7 p.m., shows are21andolder on/y. Younger than 21may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • MUSCLESHOALS(PG) 3:30 I
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, NOV. 21, 2013:This year,you will be serious and determined about your direction and the choices you make.You draw people from various walks of life toward you. If you are single, you could meet several different people. Enjoy dating. You will know when someone is right for you. If you are attached, the two of you will enjoy each other so much Starsshowthe kind that you won't need of day you'll have anyone eise to have *** * * ' y nal apart. Llsecare with money, as you often are extravagant. CANCER sometimes rains on your parade.
ARIES (March21-April19) ** * You will feel as if you are on an emotional seesaw. You could be feeling a lot about someone close. You might be weighing the prosand consofa change involving property and perhaps family. Irritation could bubble up at the slightest provocation. Tonight: Stay centered.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
jealous. Tonight: Go with the flow.
CANCER (June21-July22) ** * * * You might sense a change in others. What has been held back in the past, or perhaps even today, could become a fiery issue. Don't worry; it can be resol ved.You seem to know exactly what to do and when to do it. Followyour own advice. Tonight: Make an important phone call.
LEQ (July23-Aug. 22) ** * Take your time right now, and be slightly less accountable. You are full of enthusiasm for a new friendship. Try to lighten up about a domestic situation or investment. If you are not sure, wait before engaging in a conversation or taking action. Tonight: Vanish whileyou can.
VIRGO (Aag.23-Sept. 22)
** * * * Keep your eye on the big picture, and proceed in the direction you want TAURUS (April 20-May20) to head in. You might feel as if you can't ** * * Do not stand on ceremony. You handle a personal matter, and you could might want to make acall or reach out to become angry if you are pushed. Excuse someonewho hasbecome distant.Your yourself rather than explode. Tonight: temper soars, as you seem to keep hitting Hang out with your friends. a brick wall. Relax, and take awalk to get LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) some fresh air. Be more hospitable and ** * Listen to news that is forthcoming. open. Tonight: Get together with a friend. You might want to assume a less-promiGEMINI (May 21-June20) nent position in a project once you hear it. ** * You'll want to indulge others as Someone in your daily life might become well as yourself. You can't seem to decide a burden to you. You need to express your what would be more fun and memorable. feelings before anger builds. Tonight: A Trust yourself to choose the right event or force to be dealt with. happening. At times, you give in to excess. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) Be careful — a family member could be
** * * I f you are questioning what to do, detach. Allowyour feelings and instincts to guide you, as they are likely to lead you in the right direction. Recognize when you are feeling triggered. At that point, your best bet is to do nothing. Tonight: Touchbasewith someone ata distance.
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(R) Noon, 3:05, 6:15, 9:20 • ABOUT TIME (R) 1:40, 4:35, 7:25 • ALL IS LOST (PG- I3) 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:45 • THE BEST MANHOLIDAY (R) 12:10, 3: l5, 6:25, 9:30 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-13) 12:05, 3:10, 6:20, 9:25 • CLOUDYWITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS 2 (PG)1:30 • ENDER'SGAME (PG-13) I,3:50,6:40,9:40 • ENOUGH SAID (PG-13) 1:10 • FREE BIRDS (PG)3:35 • FREE BIRDS 3-0 (PG) 12:30 • GRAVITY(PG-13) 12:45 • GRAVITY3-0(PG-13) 3:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)8,9,10 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE IMAX (PG-13) 11 • THEHUNGER GAMES DOUBLE FEATURE (PG-13)5:15 • THEHUNGER GAMES DOUBLE FEATURE IMAX (PG-13) 5:15 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) 2, 4:55, 7:40, 10 • LAST VEGAS (PG-I3) 1:50, 3:35, 4:45, 7:10, 7:45, 9:50 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)12:20,1:20,3,4:05, 6:35, 7:35, 9:15 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD 3-0 (PG-13)12:35,3:25,6:50 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD IMAX3-0 (PG-I3)12:50 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
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TV TQQAY Sp.m. onA I , " Parksand Recreation" —Leslie (Amy Poehler) attempts to achieve some of the goals shesetwith the city council, including fluoridating the drinking water and bringing the Indianapolis Colts to town for a Play 60 event. Chris and Ron(Rob Lowe, Nick Offerman) try to bond over the construction of cribs for their future children. Aubrey Plaza and Adam Scott also star in the new episode "Fluoride." 9 p.m. on C3, "Glee" —If you love Billy Joel, you'll want to catch this new episode, in which the members of NewDirections pay tribute to the Piano Manwith performances ofhis songs.The seniors are looking ahead to life after McKinley in "Movin' Out." Matthew Morrison and Jane Lynch star. 9 p.m. on USA,"White Collar" — Asmuggling ring in Little Odessa is on NealandPeter's (Matt Bomer, Tim DeKay) radar in thisnew episode.Toexposethe dangerous operation, they must work under cover and infiltrate the neighborhood's criminal underworld. Gregory Korostishevsky, Bridget Regan and M ike Dopud guest star in "Ice Breaker." 9:30 p.m. on H f3, "The Michael J. FoxShow" — Charles Grodin and CandiceBergenguest star in this new episode asMike's (Michael J. Fox) parents, who come to visit for Thanksgiving. While Mike tries to have anhonest exchange with his dad, Annie (Betsy Brandt) struggles with her mother-in-law's controlling tendencies. EveandHarris (Juliette Goglia, Wendell Pierce) join forces to keeptradition alive in "Thanksgiving." 10 p.m. on FOOD,"Restaurant Divided" —Phil and Robin seek Rocco's help with their barbecue restaurant in Collegeville, Pa.The place is struggling, and Robin thinks converting it to a chop house will attract more customers. Phil, however, isn't ready to give up on his dream of all barbecue, all the time. Rocco offers them the chance to try both options and see which works better in the new episode"Phamous Phil's." 10:01 p.m. on USA,"Covert Affairs" —In the season finale, Annie and Auggie (Piper Perabo, Christopher Gorham) join forces to bring Henry (Gregory Itzin) to Iustice. Calder (Hill Harper) is back in the U.S. with a victory for the agency, but he mayhaveonly one true ally left: Joan (Kari Matchett). Marianna PhungandCarl Ng guest star in "Trompe le Monde." Dc Zap2it
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BOSCH Dishwasher Step up to Bosch with this great value!
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • DELIVERYMAN(PG-13) 8:30 • ENDER'S GAME (PG-13) 4:30 • FREE BIRDS (PG) 5, 7 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)8 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) 5:30 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)4,6:30
Stainless steel 4 wash cycles Holds 14 place settings
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Someone close to you will demand the stage. You might as well retreat rather than fightfor the podium. Ifyou start to feel down, indulge a little. You might want to buy a new item for winter or perhaps a gift for a loved one. Tonight: Togetherness is the theme.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * You will see a situation differently from how the majority of people around you see it. As a result, you might proceed as you wish and not bother to explain why. You will note that several people give you the benefit of the doubt. Keep them around. Tonight: Just don't be alone.
TV.APPLIANCE Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-13) 5 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)8 • LAST VEGAS (PG-I3) 5:30 • MUSCLESHOALS (PG)5:I5,7:30 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)5,7:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, 541 -475-3505 • CAPTAIN PHILLIPS(PG-I3) 4, 6:45 • ENDER'SGAME(PG-13) 4:35 • FREE BIRDS (PG)4:40, 6:50 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)8 • JACKASSPRESENTS:BADGRANDPA(R) 5:30, 7:40 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD 3-0 (PG-13)4:30,7
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * Focus on completing your work or errands. You will want to be free and relaxed for the coming weekend. A partner expects a lot. In a sense, you feel driven by this person. Be aware if you are giving too much, as you could become resentful. Tonight: Get ready for a hot tango.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * If you are honest with yourself, your mind seems to beeverywhere all at once. Your self-discipline seems to be on vacation. If you can enjoy these flights of fancy, do. A close friend suddenly might becomeangry.This person wantsm ore attention! Tonight: Keep it light. 04 King Features Syndicate
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Bend Redmond John Day Burns Lakeview La Pine 541.382.6447 bendurology.com
Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • ENDER'S GAME (PG-13) 4:30 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)8 • THOR: THE DARK WORLD (UPSTAIRS — PG-I3)4:30 • Theupstairs screening roomhas limited accessibi/ity.
E L EVAT ION
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Find a week's worth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
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0 GO! Magazine • Watch movie trailers or buy tickets online at bendbulletin.com/movies
Elevation Capital Strategies 775 SW Bonnet Way Suite 120 Bend Main: 541-728-0521 www.elevationcapital.biz
ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 20'I3 •
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Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
Monday - Friday : 7:30a.m. -5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
. Classified telephone hours:
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371
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00 ~ Want to Buy or Rent CASH for dressers,
dead washers/dryers 541-420-5640
COWGIRL CASH
We buy Jewelry, Boots, Vintage Dresses & More. 924 Brooks St.
541-678-5162 www.getcowgirlcash.com
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
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Adopt a rescued kitten or cat! Fixed, shots, ID chip, tested, more! Nonprofit rescue at 65480 78th St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/Sun 1-5,
Wanted: canopy that fits 541-389-8430; kitten fos1980 Toyota long bed. ter appts 541-815-7278 Call 5 4 1 -306-0412,www.craftcats.org. ask for Joel.
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Furniture & Appliances
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"QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 k 2N ~2 Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Queensland Heelers Yorkie/Maltese (1) and Entertainment. Center Standard & Mini, $150 Yorkie Chihuaha (1), shelves, dra w ers, 8 up. 541-280-1537 males, $200 ea. obo. $25. 541-350-6925 www.rightwayranch.wor Cash. 541-546-7909. FREEZERS: GE upright dpress.com 22 cu.ft., $450; People Look for Information 19 cu.ft. upright $325. Rodent issues? Free About Products and 541-948-9191 adult barn/ shop cats, Services Every Daythrough f ixed, s h ots, s o m e friendly, some not. Will The Bulletin ClassiNeds deliver. 541-389-8420 Yorkie mix males, (2) Dgglfr< FREE Russian B l ue $150 each. Visit our HUGE male cat, 3 yrs, micr541 -771 -2606 home decor chipped and neutered, consignment store. needs loving home, New items prefers outside warm arrive daily! place. likes other ani930 SE Textron, mals. 541-330-8712. Bend 541-318-1501 www.redeuxbend.com Siberian-Husky pups, AND Wolf-Husky pups, Yorkie puppy, adorable SOM E $400 ea. 541-977-7019 male, 3 months, AKC, G ENERATE EXCITEMENT in your brown/blk, initial shots, neighborhood! Plan a $550. Sisters,
The Bulletin recommends extra
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541-388-7382
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Antique Dining Set 18th century legs, mahogany top95"x46"x29";
6 Chippendale style chairs, $2770. 541-639-3211
GREAT SOFA
9'x28"h x 37"d. Tan, down feather with foam for support. 3 Back 8 3 seatloose cushions. Very comfy! $400 OBO 541-504-5224
LThe Biilletipg Antiques 8 Collectibles A ntique sewing m a chine, 6 dra w ers, $130(458) 206-4825 Antiques wanted: tools, furniture, marbles, beer cans, early B/W photography, Western items. 541-389-1578
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Estate Sales
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service 1 1/228 23, 9-4 : 3 0 , Professional" Directory Sun. 11/24 9-noon.
Bob & Ginni(Virginia) Huesby •
garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified!
541-526-1332
chasing products or, services from out of I 210 the area. Sending I~i 541-385-5809. Furniture & Appliances c ash, checks, o r L oveseat, wood t r i m I credit i n f o rmation Tan floral, exc. cond. may be subjected to A1 Washers&Dryers $40. 541-350-6925. I FRAUD. For more $150 ea. Full warinformation about an I ranty. Free Del. Also Refrig/freezer, older 19 advertiser, you may I wanted, used W/D's cu.ft. Whirlpool $40. call t h e Or e gon / 541-280-7355 541-948-9191 State Attor n ey ' Sectional w/ottoman, by I General's O f f i ce Crandall, 1 year old, Consumer Protec- • Bed, queen, four post t ion ho t l in e at I frame, Simmons firm, brown, excellent cond. Paid $1596; asking $500. I 1-877-877-9392. $175. 541-382-3479
14698 SW P eninsula Dr. CRR, follow signs. Quilting table, materials, supplies, household, misc. Fri./Sat.
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HANCOCK & MOORE SOFA Salmon/Coral c h enille fabric with diamond pattern. Traditional styling w ith loose pillow back, down-wrapped seat cushions, roll arms, skirt, two matching pillows a n d arm covers. L i k e new condition. $1500.
RB BiI1c
541-549-6703
*AD RUNS UNTIL SOLD!
f or Rummage S a l e. Donate items through Dec. 6. Receipts available for donations. TACK & EQUIPMENT, 15% Consignment Let us sell your tack & Blue Tick/Walker Cross equip. For info call Good Hunting Par541.548.6088 or kim- ents. Ready to start training today, $250 berly.griffithsOoreach. Been wormed egonstate.edu healthy, & eating solid food 541-815-6705 3rd Holiday Fair Coming to Sisters at Outlaw Station ShopFind It in ping Center close to The Bulletin Classifiedst Ray's Food Place, 541-385-5809 Hwy 20. Open11/29 thru 12/22, Mon. Thur., 10-4, Fri. Sat. Border Collie purebred puppies, ready 12/15; will Sun., 10-6. hold until Christmas with Vendors wanted! deposit. Working parents, 541-595-6967 4 males available. $325. Country Christmas & 541-280-5217 More. Fri. Nov. 22, 9-7 Cat - grey tabby, young, & Sat., Nov. 23, 9-4. at Smith Rock Community 2 yrs, neutered male. Good w/humans, but Church, 8344 11th St., not w/other cats or Terrebonne. Non perdogs. Needs loving ishable foods appreciated for church food home, indoor/outdoor, bank. 541-419-8637 8 safe from coyotes. 541-480-8469. 541-388-4167
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Kittens! Fixed, shots, ID puppy, male Chihuahua/Yorkie mix, chip, tested, more! Many Pomeranian wolf sable, 8 weeks old, 2 males, $150. O PetSmart on 11/16 & very sweet with a great 541-771-2606 17, also at rescue, 65480 personality. $350 78th, Bend, Thurs/Sat/ 541-480-3160 Sun 1-5, 541-389-8430; Choc. Lab pups k itten f o s te r ap p t s Poodle pups, AKC. Toy AKC $300-$400 541-815-7278 Also-7mo. M,$200; F, 503-537-8411 www.craftcats.org. $250. 541-475-3889
Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows
... A BlG Deal ... VENDORS WANTED for Craft Fair & Bazaar Dec. 7; 9-5 8 Dec. 8; 10-3. Booths: $30 crafts / $50 commercial Accepting donations
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Whoodle puppy, 16 wks, Lab Pups AKC, black & 3rd shot, wormed, just 1 yellow, Master Hunter male left! Reduced to not exceed $500. sired, performance pedi- $700. 541-410-1581 gree, OFA cert hips & elCall Classifieds at bows, 541-771-2330 Yorkie 9-wk male, tail www.kinnamanretrievers.com docked, dewclaws, $600. 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Just bought a new boat? Can deliv. 541-792-0375 Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Yorkie female, perfect 208 size (7 I b s ) for Super Seller rates! Take care of breeding. 4 years old. 541-385-5809 Pets 8 Supplies your investments $500. 541-388-3322 LABRADOR AKC black with the help from pups born 8 - 18-13, BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS The Bulletin recomThe Bulletin's $250. 541.508.0429 mends extra caution Search the area's most when purc h as"Call A Service comprehensive listing of Labrador Pups, AKC ing products or serChocolate & Yellow. classified advertising... Professional" Directory vices from out of the Hips OFA guaranteed. real estate to automotive, area. Sending cash, Chihuahua puppies, tea$300-$400. merchandise to sporting checks, or credit in- cup, shots & dewormed, 1 -541 -954-1 727 goods. Bulletin Classifieds f ormation may b e $250. 541-420-4403 appear every day in the subjected to fraud. Labradors AKC Chocoprint or on line. For more i nformalate males, shots, Take care of Call 541-385-5809 tion about an adverwormed, health guaran- www.bendbulletin.com your investments tiser, you may call $500. 541-536-5385 English Labrador, AKC tee, the O r egon State www.welcomelabs.com with the help from The Bulletin r egistered, 6 wks , Attorney General's iewmg central 0 egon sn ce eii beautiful white, cham- PUPPY SALE! Poodle/ The Bulletin's Office Co n s umer pion bloodlines, parMaltese females, Protection hotline at "Call A Service ents hip 8 eye certified, 1-877-877-9392. $200, males, $150. $800. 503-551-3715 Professional" Directory Cash 541-546-7909. sen ng cee al0 egonsnce e03
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292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood
The Bulletin
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Pets & Supplies
Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all volunteer, non-profit rescue, 264- Snow Removal Equipment for feral cat spay/ neuter. Cans for Cats trailer at 265 - Building Materials Bend Pet Express East, 266- Heating and Stoves across from Costco; or Kittens left at the side of 267- Fuel and Wood donate Mon-Fri at Smith Day Rd., La Pine 11/7, 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Siqn, 1515 NE 2nd; or at w/mom, in a plastic bin. 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment CRAFT in Tumalo. Call Seeking info on who did for pickup of large quan- this, to add to Sheriff re270 - Lost and Found tities, 541 - 389-8420. port. Nice mom/kittens GARAGESALES www.craftcats.org now adoptable. 541-389-8420 or 275 - Auction Sales www.craftcats.org. 280 - Estate Sales DO YOU HAVE 281 - Fundraiser Sales SOMETHING TO 282- Sales Northwest Bend SELL Get your FOR $500 OR 284- Sales Southwest Bend business LESS? 286- Sales Northeast Bend Non-commercial 288- Sales Southeast Bend advertisers may a ROWI N G 290- Sales RedmondArea place an ad with •
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo and Video 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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MOVING SALE 1055 SE BAYWOOD CT. Friday, Nov. 22 • Saturday, Nov. 23 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sales Northeast Bend S ales Northeast Bend
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit
Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!
Moving Sale! Sat., 9-4 Too much to move! Miscellaneous items. Cooley Rd. to High Standard to 20657 Beaumont Dr.
Sales Other Areas
KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
NOTICE Remember to remove
your Garage Sale signs (nails, staples, etc.) after your Sale event is over! THANKS!
Crowd control admittance numbers From The Bulletin issued at 8:00 a.m. Friday and your local utility PICK UP YOUR (Take 27th OR 15th Streets south to Reed companies. GARAGE SALE KIT at Market Rd. go to Shadowwood entrance to 1777 SW Chandler Tang/ewood-turn north and follow to Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Autumnwood to Baywood Ct.) sen er central oregans nce 19IU Glass-top dining room table with six chairs; Comwww.bendbulletin.com puter armoire'; Computer system complete; Walnut flat top buffet; Nice watercolor; Three large mirrors; Two large occasional chairs; FloMINI FARM ESTATE SALE ral small recliner; Silverplate set by Community HOUSE, BARN, 2 OUTBUILDINGS FULL! "Bird oi Paradise" pattern; Unique TV cabinet; Leather & other recliners, trundle bed, oak rolltop Antique wood folding box; hunting knives; Wood 8 two other desks, rolling kitchen center, ~ KB DR OM ET carving tools; Glass-top coffee table; Artist paint mid-century china cabinet 8 dining table, small Two dark oak night brushes and more art supplies; Sextant; Pan pieces, KitchenAid 8 lots nice kitchenstands and matching Flute;Pots and Pans and more Pots and Pans; furniture head boards condition: Replace That old tired Bedroomsei you gof from your Parents! ware, Franciscan Apple dishes, Hummels, KitchenAid mixer (red); lots of electrical kitchen No scratches. Very glassware 8 collectibles, electronics, vintage sturdy. Was $1200 new, Item Priced at: Yo ur Total Ad Cost onl: appliances cleaning supplies; Food items; Pet cameras 8 electronics, 2 freezers, radial arm Taxi-small dog; Electrical tools, hand tools and offering for only • Under $500 $29 table sander & scroll saw, 3 chain nuts and bolts; Christmas tree and smaller saw, Delta s650 ono 7 ladders, 3 lawn mowers, 3 wheel bar• $500 to $99 9 $ 39 Christmas tree; Christmas decor; Rug sham- saws, 541-000-000 rows, John Deere Sabre riding mower, 2 yard • $1000 to $2499 $4 9 pooer; 10 cu. ft. freezer; Trash compactor; set of carts, Sabon 3 HP compressor, power 8 hand four studded tires;225/60/R16; Modern folding tools of all kinds, cowboy boots, western cloth• $2500 and over $59 ladder; Step ladder; Down comforters; Electric ing 8 belts, loads of household, antique wagon Includes up Io 40 words of text, 2" in length, with queen blanket; Suitcases;AND OVER 300 wheels, horse collars, store clock, antique border, full color photo, bold headline and price. COOKBOOKS AND OTHER BOOKS!!! Sewing Schwinn bike, cast iron, pulleys, machinist cabiServmg Central Oregon srnce 1903 table; Nlce large bound rug. and, as always, • The Bulletin, • The Cent ral OregonNickelAds net; outdoor & more, stained glass supplies. more and more!Handled by .... Fri.-Sat., 9-4 ... numbers Fri. 8 a.m. • Central Oregon Marketplace + bendbulletin.com Some restrictions apply Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC 62950 Eagle Rd off Butler Market 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves Attic Estates 8 Appraisals• 541-350-6822 Privatepariy merchandiseonly - excludespetss livestock, autos,Rvs, motorcyclei, boats,airplanes,andgaragesale categories. www.deeedysestatesales.com www.atticestatesandappraisals.com
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
The Bulletm
E2 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
260
270
Misc. Items
Lost & Found
Mickey Mouse-Snoopybear stuffed animals $5 ea. (458) 206-4825 REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, Older Necchi Super Nova don't forget to check automatic sewing maThe Humane Society c hine i n c a binet w / Bend E clipse Model B L E 1 serger, all attachments & 541-382-3537 many extras. $300 obo. Redmond 541-548-0913 541-923-0882 pp 4 ille Wanted- paying cash 541-447-717rr for Hi-fi audio & stuor Craft Cats dio equip. Mclntosh, 541-389-8420. J BL, Marantz, D y naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 WHEN YOU SEE THIS
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
Monday • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N o on Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . N oon Wed. Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday RealEstate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Saturday • . • .. 3:00 pm Fri. ~ OO PixatBendbolletin,coin Sunday.. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • More On a classified ad go to
Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER s500 in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days.................................................$33.50 28 days.................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days .................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*Must state prices in ad
www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
Hay, Grain & Feed
265
ALFALFA, 4th cutting,
Building Materials
nice 8 clean; not too fine-stemmed. Mid-size bales (800 Ib avg) $200 / ton. 541-480-8264 Culver
REDMOND Habitat RESTORE
325
fg,/F~>Jirr JI,J j Jl)tJjjJ~ lg Can be found on these pages:
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans andMortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
RV Technician
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad also appear on 8 Camper experience will bendbulletin.com required. Competitive which currently pay plus, retirement receives over 1.5 plan, paid v acation million page views and medical benefit every month at package. S end reno extra cost. sume to: Bulletin Classifieds rv4fun@ ahoo.com Get Results! or apply in person at Call 385-5809 Big Country RV or place 63500 N Hwy 97 your ad on-line at Bend, OR 97701 bendbulletin.com
H I P P O FINANCIAL
RV dealership seeks service t e chnicians. Looking for a t e am player with a positive attitude t o op e rate with energy and to be customer oriented. RV
Mortgage Bankers Responsible for : consulting with clients about their curr ent a n d fut u r e needs to help them achieve their financial goals. A d vise and educate clients on the home buying process. Assist clie nts t hrough t h e loan process from application to closing. No Cold Calling. Desire to work hard. Strong communication sk i l ls, and a positive attitude. C o m petitive compensation package includes health, dental, and 4 0 1k. To apply email your resume, to:
Building Supply Resale First quality Orchard/TimQuality at othy/Blue Grass mixed LOW PRICES hay, no rain, barn stored, 1242 S. Hwy 97 $250/ton. Patterson Ranch Sales 541-548-1406 Sisters, 541-549-3831 A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend/Redmond) Open to the public. rowing d e a lership Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. TURN THE PAGE 266 seeking salespeople RM)XCQ B ELOW MARKED WITH A N (*) For More Ads looking for a perforHeating & Stoves ® Bedkceu m ance-based p a y REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well The Bulletin plan potential comNapoleon 2100 woodas any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin missions of up to 35% stove, new, w/pedestal, careers@hippofinancial com bendbulletin.ccm equaling $ 1 0 0,000 reserves the right to reject any ad at $1050. Whitfield WP4 Looking for your plus, retirement plan, Quest p e llet s t ove, next employee? any time. is located at: paid vacation, and a $550. 541-815-2406 Place a Bulletin Garage Sales 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. competitive m e dical help wanted ad NOTICE TO benefit pac k age. 526 Bend, Oregon 97702 today and Garage Sales ADVERTISER Looking for a t e am Loans & Mortgages reach over Since September 29, player with a positive Garage Sales 60,000 readers 1991, advertising for attitude, t o o p e rate PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction each week. used woodstoves has with energy and to be The WARNING Find them is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Bulletin recombeen limited to mod- Your classified ad customer service orito accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these mends you use cauels which have been will also in ented. Will p r ovide newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party tion when you proc ertified by the O r appear on training. The Bulletin vide personal Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. egon Department of bendbulletin.com Send resume' to: information to compaEnvironmental QualClassifieds which currently rv4fun2001 © ahoo.com nies offering loans or 241 243 ity (DEQ) and the fedreceives over or apply in person at credit, especially eral E n v i ronmental 1.5 million page 541-385-5809 Big Country RV Antiques & Bicycles & • S k i Equipment • Computers those asking for adProtection A g e ncy 63500 N Hwy 97 views every Collectibles Accessories vance loan fees or NURSE "Cold Killer" winter train- T HE B U LLETIN r e - (EPA) as having met Bend, OR 97701 month at no companies from out of smoke emission staning p ants, T i tl e 9 , quires computer adextra cost. Reber's Farm Toy Sale! state. If you have cer t ified women's med. tall. Retail vertisers with multiple dards. A Just too many Each Sat. 8 Sun., 10-5 Bulletin concerns or ques$99; selling for $69. Worn ad schedules or those w oodstove may b e until Christmas, 4500 SE collectibles? Classifieds tions, we suggest you Saint Alphonsus 1x, 541-815-2737 selling multiple sys- identified by its certifiTillamook Lp., Prineville. consult your attorney Get Results! cation label, which is BOISE NAMPA Or47AR10 BAKERCITY tems/ software, to dis541-447-7585 or call CONSUMER 541-385-5809 Sell them in From mountain hiking, close the name of the permanently attached Call HOTLINE, or place your ad thrill-seeking white wa- The Bulletin Classifieds business or the term to the stove. The Bul2005 Maverick ML7 1-877-877-9392. on-line at t er rafting, skiing a t Find exactly what "dealer" in their ads. letin will no t k n owM ountain Bike, 1 5 " bendbulletin.com 8,000 feet, or visiting the CHECK YOUR AD Private party advertis- ingly accept advertisyou are looking for in the frame (small). Full BANK TURNED YOU 54$.3BS.SBO9 historic Oregon Trail lni ng for the s ale o f ers are defined as suspension, Maverick DOWN? Private party CLASSIFIEDS terpretive Center, Baker uncertified those who sell one s hock, S RA M X O County welcomes you. woodstoves. computer. The Bulletin drivetrain 8 shifters, 9 I tat e equity. Credit, no Recommends extra ~ p robiem good equity The Bulletin reserves speed rear cassette, Regency small gas fire• Nurse Manager, 34-11, Avid Juicy disc caution when PurI i s a l l you need. gall the right to publish all place blk, model¹ C34Acute Care Misc. Items I chasing Products or I Oregon Land Mortads from The Bulletin brakes. Well t a ken on the first day it runs NG3, used for 1 yr askBaker City, Oregon • services from out of • ga g e 541-388-4200. of. $950. to make sure it is coring $1500 OBO. Pictures newspaper onto The care l the area. Sending Bulletin Internet web- 541-788-6227. rect. "Spellcheck" and Bike trailer, new $130. available. (541) 647-4106 RN Positions also Foot & b a c k m a sc ash, c hecks, o r LOCAL MONEYrWe buy human errors do ocsite. 267 available: NOVARA hooded cylcling cur. If this happens to sager, $200. Inverl credit i n f o rmationl se c ured trustdeeds 8 • ICU jacket, women's Ig, pink 8 Fuel & Wood The Bulletin gray. Retail $99; sell $69, your ad, please con- sion table, $60. Or l may be subjected tog note,some hard money • OB serving centrat oregon since l903 FRAUD. I loa n s. Call Pat Kelley Best Offer, top quality tact us ASAP so that 476 • Resource RN worn 1 x. 541-815-2737 541-382-3099 ext.13. items! 541-385-5685 I For more informacorrections and any • RN Supervisor, Employment WHEN BUYING • tion about an adver- l adjustments can be Brand new RV cover, 242 float pool environment made to your ad. FIREWOOD... Opportunities Crafts & Hobbies class C, box unopened. Exercise Equipment the Oregon State • Business Opportunities 541-385-5809 To avoid fraud, 3 layer all cliTolearn more &apply Attorney General's I The Bulletin Classified Tyvek 3rd Holiday FaircomThe Bulletin mate. 23' to 26' $250 www.saintal honsus.or / CAUTION: I Office Consumer I Mobiie Knife Sharpening to Sisters, at Outrecommends payNordic Trac A2350. OBO. (541) 410-2944 ~bakercit Ads published in Protection hotline at l ing business for saie. inlawstationEIShopping Presents beautifully. ment for Firewood "Employment O p cludesvan, equipment, Center close to Ray's Buying Diamonds Hardly used. A only upon delivery portunities" in clude OPERATIONSI Food Place, Hwy 20. /Gold for Cash and inspection. perfect holiday gift. ie Bulletin g $ 500 0 503 860 2885 employee and indeLTl CLIENT Open 11/29 -12/22 Saxon's Fine Jewelers • A cord is 128 cu. ft. $350.00 pendent p o sitions. Mon.-Thur. 10-4, 4' x 4' x 8' 800 rds 7.62x39+ ammo 541-389-6655 SERVICE Cash and carry. Ads fo r p o s itions Fri. Sat. Sun. 10-6. 541-390-1713. box. $265; 6 AK mags, • Receipts should Press Operator that require a fee or BUYING Vendors wanted! $15 ea. Must sell, surGrowing Bend-based The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is include name, upfront i nvestment Lionel/American Flyer 541-595-6967 gery. 541-306-0166 investment adviser phone, price and seeking a night time press operator. We are part must be stated. With trains, accessories. Check out the office looking for an kind of wood of Western Communications, Inc. which is a Bend local pays CASH!! 541-408-2191. any independentjob operations/client classifieds online purchased. small, family owned group consisting of 7 newsfor all firearms 8 opportunity, please AGATE HUNTERS service per s o n. • Firewood ads wwtN.bendbugetin.com papers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our ammo. 541-526-0617 i nvestigate thor Polishers • Saws Prior bro k erage/ Call a Pro MUST include ideal candidate must be able to l earn our Updated daily oughly. Use e xtra s' investment adviser species & cost per equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Whether you need a c aution when a p Repair & Supplies operations e x pericord to better serve is a requirement for our 3 7/a tower KBA press. In Proform Crosswalk 380 plying for jobs onfence fixed, hedges ence and financial our customers. addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we treadmill, like new, $275 Door-to-door selling with line and never proknowledge preobo 541 408-0846 have numerous commercial print clients as well. vide personal inforfast results! It's the easiest trimmed or a house f erred. M u s t b e : In addition to a competitive wage and benefit The Bulletin built, you'll find mation to any source way in the world to sell. ServingCentral Oregon since 7907 proficient i n MS program, we also provide potential opportunity you may not have professional help in Office, tech savvy, for advancement. researched and The Bulletin Classified o rganized, sel f The Bulletin's "Call a 1 cord dry, split Juniper, deemed If you provide dependability combined with a to be repu541-385-5809 starter, team player, $200/cord. Multi-cord positive attitude and are a team player, we Service Professional" table. Use extreme • • able to work under discounts, & ya cords would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable i c aution when r e Directory Browning 12 ga. light pressure, and have available. Immediate work environment that provides a great place to s ponding to A N Y auto5 Belgium $475. 541-3B5-5B09 delivery! 541-408-6193 online employment great written & verlive and raise a family, let us hear from you. C all 54/-3 8 5 -5 8 0 9 541-410-6336 bal communication Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at ad from out-of-state. A-1 DRY JUNIPER to Promote your service s kills. Start i n g anelson@wescom a ers.com with yourcomBUYING & SE L LING CASH!! We suggest you call $185 split, or $165 rnds $36,000 plus benplete resume, references and salary history/reFor Guns, Ammo & All gold jewelry, silver multi-cord discount, deliv. the State of Oregon efits. Please email and gold coins, bars, quirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is Building/Contracting Handyman Reloading Supplies. Consumer H o tline Call 541-977-4500 your r e sume to required prior to employment EOE 541-408-6900. rounds, wedding sets, at 1-503-378-4320 resume@valentinclass rings, sterling sil- Call The Bulletin At NOTICE: Oregon state Chester Elliot Constr. For Equal Opportuver, coin collect, vinlaw r equires anyone Home remodel/renovate DON'TMISSTHIS The Bulletin 541-385-5809 nity Laws c ontact eventures.com. tage watches, dental who con t racts for Creative designs Oregon Bureau of Place Your Ad Or E-Mail gold. Bill Fl e ming, construction work to 541-420-2980 Labor & I n d ustry, Good classified ads tell 541-382-9419. At: www.bendbulletin.com Civil be licensed with the CCB¹ 148659 DO YOU HAVE Rights Division, the essential facts in an Construction Contrac971-673- 0764. SOMETHING TO All Year Dependable interesting Manner. Write tors Board (CCB). An SELL Cemetery plot at Firewood: Seasoned The Bulletin from the readers view - not active license Landscaping/Yard Care Tumalo cemetery. FOR $500 OR Lodgepole, Split, Del. Advertising Account Executive the seller's. Convert the means the contractor LESS? A bargain at $450. Rewardingnew business development Bend: 1 for $195 or 2 541-385-5809 facts into benefits. Show is bonded & insured. NOTICE: Oregon LandNon-commercial 541-848-7436 for $365. Cash, Check the reader how the item will Verify the contractor's scape Contractors Law advertisers may or Credit Card OK. The Bulletin is looking for a professional and help them in someway. CCB li c ense at (ORS 671) requires all place an ad 541-420-3484. driven Sales and Marketing person to help our businesses that a dAccounting www.hirealicensedThis with our customers grow their businesses with an vertise t o pe r f orm contractor.com Growing CPA firm advertising tip C .O. m i xe d w o o d , "QUICK CASH expanding list of broad-reach and targeted seeks a CPA or CPA or call 503-378-4621. Landscape Construcbrought to you by semi-dry, split, Del. in SPECIAL" products. This full-time position requires a Candidate with 2 to The Bulletin recom- tion which includes: Bend. 2 cords $250; 1 deck s , 1 week3lines 12 background in c onsultative sales, territory mends checking with p lanting, 5 years public acThe Bulletin cord for $135, Cash or OI' arbors, management and aggressive prospecting skills. counting experience. the CCB prior to con- fences, check. 541-312-4355. ~2 e e k s 2 0 ! Two years of media sales experience is Please visit tracting with anyone. water-features, and inAd must PARTS MANAGER Classic Stallion Some other t r ades stallation, repair of irwww.bendcpa.com/ Growing dealership has preferable, but we will train the right candidate. rigation systems to be include price of Pine & juniper Split also req u ire addiiobs for application Boots immediate opening for The p o sition i n c ludes a the 4~ 14 te or $5rro comp etitive information. tional licenses and licensed w i t h Ladies size 77/a, full time experienced compensation package including benefits, and Landscape Contracor less, or multiple certifications. PROMPT D E LIVERY seldom worn, tors Board. This 4-digit items whose total Parts Manager who rewards an aggressive, customer focused 54X-369-9663 Paid $1100; will share our comnumber is to be i ndoes not exceed salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Debris Removal selling for $290. Get your cluded in all advermitment to our cus$500. 541-480-1199 269 tisements which indibusiness tomers. Will train the Email your resume, cover letter JUNK BE GONE cate the business has Call Classifieds at Gardening Supplies r ight person. C o m and salary history to: I Haul Away FREE a bond,insurance and 541-385-5809 FIREPLACE GRATE petitive pay plus, ReJay Brandt, Advertising Director 8 Equipment For Salvage. Also workers c o mpensa- www.bendbulletin.com a ROW I N G 30"x16", $5.00 tirement Plan, Paid 'brandt@bendbulletin.com Cleanups & Cleanouts tion for their employVacation and Medical 541-383-4231 OI' Mel, 541-389-8107 ees. For your protec- FNH 40 cal. wtih (3) BarkTurfSoil.com Benefit Pack a ge. with an ad in drop off your resume in person at tion call 503-378-5909 14-rnd clips, M6 tactical Come find out why we 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; The Bulletin's I Domestic Services or use our website: laser sight, new condiHome Security are one of the best Or mail to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. PROMPT D E LIVERY www.lcb.state.or.us to tion, $800. 541-255-9705 System 2GIG "Call A Service p laces to w o r k i n No phone inquiries please. 542-389-9663 A ssisting Seniors a t check license status Brand new installed Central Oregon. Professional" Home. Light house before contracting with Hungarian PA-63 9mm by AbbaJay inEmail your resume to: EOE / Drug Free Workplace Directory keeping 8 other ser the business. Persons Mak with 59 rounds 8 cludes 2 hour inRV4FUN2001 For newspaper v ices. Licensed 8 doing lan d scape military issue holster, stallation and one @YAHOO.COM delivery, call the Bonded. BBB C erti maintenance do n ot $200. 541-410-3367 Add your web address year basic security Pressroom or apply in person at Circulation Dept. at fied. 503-756-3544 r equire an L C B to your ad and readservice. $325. BIG COUNTRY RV Mossberg 930 JM Pro, Night Supervisor 541-385-5800 cense. ers on The Builetin's (Valued at $850) 63500 N Hwy 97, Tactical, 24", as new, The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrTo place an ad, call Drywall web site, www.bend541-382-3479 $795. 541-647-7894 Bend, OR 97701 egon, is seeking a night time press supervi541-385-5809 bulletin.com, will be Nelson sor. We are part of Western Communications, JL' S D R YWALL or email Ruger MKIII 22/45 Gold able to click through Landscaping & Where can you find a classifiedobendbulletin.com Inc. which is a small, family owned group conHow to avoid scam Over 30 years of fast, Lite; Ruger MKII 22, 6" automatically to your Maintenance sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon helping hand? and fraud attempts reliable service. SS. 541-390-8000. website. The Bulletin Serving Central and two in California. Our ideal candidate will ServingCentral Oregon since l907 Commercial & Residenv'Be aware of internaFrom contractors to Oregon Since 2003 manage a small crew of three and must be 249 tial. 541-815-4928 tional fraud. Deal loResidental/Commercial Apartment Manager(s) yard care, it's all here able t o l e ar n o u r e q u ipment/processes CCB¹161513 Art, Jewelry cally whenever pos270 wanted for small comin The Bulletin's quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for sible. Sprinkler Blowoufs & Furs plex in Bend. Please fax Lost & Found our 3 7/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ "Call A Service Handyman v' Watch for buyers resume to 541-388-6973 Sprinkler Repair leadership experience preferred. In addition to who offer more than Professional" Directory our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nuI DO THAT! your asking price and Fall Clean Up Automotive merous commercial print clients as well. BeHome/Rental repairs who ask to have Driveabilify Tech sides a competitive wage and benefit proSmall jobs to remodels Planning Director. I Snow Removal money wired or needed. gram, we also provide potential opportunity for Honest, guaranteed Applications are behanded back to them. We are an extremely l ing accepted for the advancement. work. CCB¹151573 Schedule for 2014 Fake cashier checks If you provide dependability combined with a busy automotiveshop l position of Planning Dennis 541-317-9768 •Weekly 8 Monthly and money orders Missing: Chihuahua in n e e d of a Director. For more positive attitude, are able to manage people Maintenance 14 carrot white gold are common. since 8/2 in Crooked TOP-NOTCH EXPEand schedules and are a team player, we ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape ladies wedding band VNever give out perand a job deRiver Ranch. Male, 8 SERVICES. Home 8 RIENCED Driveability lI details would like to hear from you. If you seek a Construction with a bright polish scription, please visit sonal financial inforyrs old, about 6 lbs. stable work environment that provides a great Commercial Repairs, •Water Feature Technician. S tarting our finish, 1.66 c a rrot w e b site at There has been a mation. Carpentry-Painting, wage is $30 per flat place to live and raise a family, let us hear lnstallation/Maint. diamond Hearts and sighting of him with a I www.cityofprineville. YTrust your instincts from you. Pressure-washing, rate hour plus ben- com. Your applica•Pavers arrows round cut, man in his late 50's and be wary of Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations efits. If you have the i tion and resume' Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at Sl -1 Clarity, F color. with black hair, mussomeone using an anelson©wescompapers.com with your compromise. Senior proven skills and abil- I may be submitted •Irrigation Installation Appraised at tache 8 glasses in escrow service or Discount. Work guarplete r esume, r e ferences a n d s a l ary ity, we have a posi- o nline also at o u r $15,000. Very CRR. $5000 c ash agent to pick up your history/requirements. No phone calls please. anteed. 541-389-3361 Senior Discounts tion available for you. unique piece. Askreward, no questions merchandise. or 541-771-4463 S end replies to PO Drug test is required prior to employment. Bonded & Insured ing $9500. asked. 541-325-6629 EOE. Bonded 8 Insured 541-815-4458 Box 6676, Bend, OR 541-281-7815 or 503-805-3833 Thc Bullctin CCB¹t 81595 LCB¹8759 97708
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E4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, NOV 2'I, 2013
DA I L Y
B R ID G E C L U B
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD wjll sh( )rtz
Th ursday, November 21,2013
ACROSS 1Z3 maker 4 Onetime N.FL. star nicknamed Joe Willie 10 Challenge in "Legally Blonde," for short 14 "Phooey!" 15 San Argentina 16 D-Day objective 17 Distance at St. Andrews golf course? 20 Org. of which 18 U.S. presidents have been
Not worth his salt By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"Before I l eft home," Unlucky Louie told me, "I threw some salt over my shoulder for luck." "Do you think that will help you?" I asked. "It hasn't so far," Louie admitted. "The salt shaker hit a mirror and broke it." Louie ascribes his bad results to bad luck — a sentiment we take with a grain of salt. When he was declarer at 3NT, he took the king of spades and led the queen of diamonds. West won and shifted to a club.
NORTH 4IK
Louie won and continued with the jack of diamonds: king, spade, heart discard from West. East then led another club. Louie won, cashed the ten of diamonds and tried a heart to his jack, losing. He ended with seven tricks. " I j ust n eeded a n o rmal 3 - 2 diamond break," Louie grumbled. Louie salts away the contract by giving himself an extra chance. He leads a heart to his ace at Trick Two quite safe - and returns a diamond toward dummy. When West has the bare ace, Louie can set up and cash the diamonds, getting home easily. DAILY QUESTION
Q 1043 0 Q J10 6 5 4 2 4AK WEST 4 10 9 8 7 4
EAST 4J63
(v) K Q 8 2
(v) 96
0A 4962
0 K98 3
4QJ54
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
SOUTH 4I A Q 5 2 QAJ75 0 '7 4 108 7 3 North
A LCA P P O H MY M O O S H U F A R E F L O O R M A T H IS M A P
East
South P ass 1Q P ass 2 NT AII P a ss
1O 20 3 NT
I N T O
West
Pass Pass
H U M O R
Youhold: 4 A Q 5 2 Q A J 7 5 Opening lead — 4I 10 0 7 4 10 8 7 3. You are the dealer, neither side vulnerable. What is your (C) 2013 Tribunc Contcnt Agcncy, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
E I R
B A C CH O K E OO N HR O W I A S H S B E G O O I SP A N T E S A N H E N S EV T E X E
O D N I D I R A N
1
5 Y C O A U E C RA N F A T H E R I R A I S E AS I F A H T H E TOW E A D A R A N N O Y E C R O O M A C H T MA S H E Y B A B C L EO N A A P T B O A
L E G G S S L E D C Y S T
2
3
4
14
DOWN
5
6
7
8
9
10
15
17
23-, 49- and
56-Across 38 White House fiscal grp. 40 Stuffed animal option 41 "The Beverly Hillbillies" dad 440ne way to play something 470ne on a Facebook News Feed 49 First-aid supply members for Springsteen? 21 Hindu life lesson 53 Morsel 22 Base figs. Summer camp 23 Cost of mail from 54 sight Manhattan? 55 Aunt in "Bambi" 27 Statue in the Parthenon 56 Top-secret proverb? 28 Itching 29 " Nature, red 61 Drain in tooth and claw 62 Actor Martin of ...": Tennyson 1960s-'70s TV 63" 30 Arcturus, e.g., , non verba" spectrally (Latin proverb)
opening call? ANSWER: Most experts would deem this hand worth opening. It has ample defensive values and length in both majors. The case for passing is that hands with three four-card suits can be awkward to describe. If you p ass an d t h e op p onents b i d diamonds, you can show the hand well by doubling for takeout. I would pass, but I don't feel strongly. North dealer Both sides vulnerable
SEVEN TRICKS
34 Places docs wear 64 Vase handle smocks 65 Looks bad? 35 Wing, e.g.... 66 Forerunner of or a hint to Bach? answering 17-,
No. 1017 11
12
13
42
43
16
18
19
20
21
22
1 Shot from a
certain gun
23
2 Source of the line "Something wicked this way comes" 3 Elite group 4 Zip 5" reminder
9 Like a speaker with a 25-Down 10 Trip inits. 11 Reel 12 Locale of a 1956 fight for independence 13 Low digits 18 Diggs of "Rent"
25
26
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28
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34
35
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44
6 Capital whose main street is Nezavisimosti 7 Tally 8" Remember"
24
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41
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PUZZLE BY GARY J. WHITEHEAD
38 Noted Ohio 58 German article 48 Picked out of a conservatory lineup 39 "Good heavens!" 50 In conclusion, in 19 Pro Cannes 41 Dada pioneer 23 Writer Hentoff 51 Decorative fabric 59 " 42 Listening, say Poetica" 24 Like a private 52 Designer peeling potatoes 43 Onetime White House inits. Geoffrey 25 See 9-Down 53 Numerical prefix 45 Slow pitches 26 Pulitzer winner have them James 57 One of two 60 Abbr. after some possibilities to professionals' 31 William Shatner's 46 Adjusts one's Paul Revere sights names sci-fi drug 32 Year abroad For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. 33 Dietary std. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday 35Aid in a scam, crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. e.g. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit 36 Ro m e o nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. 370nly U.S. senator Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). with a unit of measure named Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords. after him
DENNIS THE MENACE
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LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
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(A08we(8 tomorrow) Jumu(88: THIIII+ Answer: The mountain climber who reached the peak first wa8 in — TIP-TOP SHAPE
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55 Honshu port 56 Admit to the club 57 Twisty-horned ant e l ope 5 8A dmitting a breeze, perhaps 59 "Frasier" actress Gilpi n 60 S h a ngri-la
64 Press coverage
65 M a ke haste 6 6 Uno e due
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S E A B A S S
A D S A P E C L A M P A I O U R S B A H L E B A A P E P W I L L P S H E K 0 I PO R K B E L L AM A N A Y R I S O T T O K N I T B A C L I N T S H U E D G Y P U R xwordeditor@aol.com 5
A L D E N T E
L O C A T O R
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K E G A E L O R N M O T T R I D E A RO M K P A N I I E S W E R I SO B A P O L I M F A R A B S P B U T T O C H E R S ER T
R 0 M A N I A 11/21/1 3
10
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60
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25 26 29 3 0
28
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D E T R A C T
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41
IS
70 Similar 71 Face-off locales 72 Low joint 73 Wings, for instance
VECOT
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5 Brief missions? 6 Hi and Lois's daughter 7 Foreboding 8 Cupboard arrangement 9 Officers-to-be 10 Floral wreath 11 Word-of-mouth 12 Riesling product 13 Aid factor 17 Opposed party 18 *Filet mignon dish 19 Grow together named for a 21 Rock-filled goddess 25 It can be viewed 20 Jet sounds with a scanning 22 Proactiv target tunneling microscope 23 Was in the vanguard 26 Column style 24 'Emergency 29 Paranormal supplies ability 27 Dog in Baum 30 Tip for a croupier stories 31 Large gulp 28 Dangerous fly 32 Prefix with 33 Puffin kin skeleton 36 Sizable music 33 Book after John combo 34 River through 39 Planted Orsk 40 Troubled youth 35 Broccoli relative literally hiding in 37 Prefix with each answer to a skeleton starred clue 38 Metronome 44 Fable settings 45 Makes the scene 41 Prize 46 I trouble? component? 47 Slob's napkin I 2 3 4 50 Spheres studied by Mendel 14 52 *Pipe-smoking 17 royal 58 Tailless primate 20 61 Explorer on Nick Jr. 24 62 Art support 63 *Fictional rank 27 above Padawan 33 3 4 35 36 67 Pro 68 Where the action
69 Former Neet rival
02013 Tobuoe ContentAgency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
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ACROSS 1 "Are you serious?" 5 Handicapper's concern 9 Class 14 Doth possess 15 Los Angeles, for one 16 High nest
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By MaryEIlen Uthlaut (c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
11/21/1 3
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
~
e
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•
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747 -Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook County Homes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 687
745
Commercial for Rent/Lease
Homes for Sale
750
870
Redmond Homes
Boats & Accessories
881
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Motorhomes
Motorhomes
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$349,500 - Small acreage with i r r igated pasture overlooking p on d & fenced pas t u re ready for horses or other critters. De-
Sunchaser Pontoon Fleetwood D i s covery Rexair 28-ft boat - $19,895 40' 2003, diesel mo20' 2006 Smokercraft torhome motorhome, 1991w/all Snowmobiles cruise, S-8521. 2006 Ideal for camping or MLS¹201307823. options-3 slide outs, hunting, it has 45K 75hp. Mercury. Full satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Call Don C h apin, • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 camping e n c losure. miles, a 460 gas enP rincipal Bro k e r etc. 3 2,000 m i les. EXT, $1000. Pop u p cha n ging Wintered in h e ated gine, new tires, au541-923-0855 • Yamaha 750 1999 room/porta-potty, BBQ, tomatic levelers, Redmond RE/MAX Mountain Max, SOLD! swim ladder, all gear. shop. $84,900 O.B.O. Onan generator, 541-447-8664 L and & Hom e s • Zieman 4-place Trailer, 2006 E a syking-size bed awReal Estate trailer, SOLD! loader gal v a nized. ning. Nice condition 541-771-7786 All in good condition. P urchased new, a l l Call a Pro Sell or trade? $8700. Located in La Pine. records. 541-706-9977, Whether you need a 541-815-9939 Want to impress the Call 541-408-6149. cell 503-807-1973. fencefixed hedges relatives? Remodel 860 1 3 'Seaswi r l P 1 4 , 1 5 h p trimmed or a house your home with the Motorcycles & Accessories morotarailer)500. help of a professional built, you'll find 5 41-410- 2 30 8 from The Bulletin's professional help in "Call A Service Find It in The Bulletin's "Call a Professional" Directory The Bulletin Classifiedsl Service Professional" TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 541-385-5809 Directory 350hp diesel engine, Ranch $389,900 541-385-5809 $129,900. 30,900 miles, house - Barn - Shop 2013 Harley great condition! 6.39 Acres zoned for Davidson Dyna dishwasher, washer/ 2 acre lots, 3 Acres IrWide Glide, black, dryer, central vac, roof rigation & Mt. Views, 5 only 200 miles, satellite, aluminum S tall Barn & 6 0 F t . brand new, all stock, wheels, 2 full slide-thru round pen, 210x105 plus after-market basement trays 8 3 TV's. Arenas, Oversize gaexhaust. Has winter 16'9" Larson All AmeriFalcon-2 towbar and can, 1971, V-hull, 120hp rage an d wt l arge cover, helmet. Even-Brake included. I/O, 1 owner, always ga- G ulfstream Su n shop. Selling for what I raged, w/trlr, exc cond, sport 30' Class A Call 541-977-4150 Audrey Cook, Broker owe on it: $15,500. $2000. 541-788-5456 541-923-4663 1988 ne w f r i dge, Call anytime, Windermere Tioga 24' Class C 541-554-0384 TV, solar panel, new Advertise your car! Motorhome Central Oregon Real refrigerator, wheelAdd A Picture! tached garage shop w/storage.
850
Trav el T r ailers
Keystone Laredo 31' RV 2006 with 12' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w e r. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 541-447-4805
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E-
Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388
Bought new in 2000, Estate Reach thousands of readers! c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W currently under 20K Harley Davidson 2009 Call 541-385-5809 g enerator, Goo d Super nice. Well cared miles, excellent Super Glide Custom, The Bulletin Classifieds condition! $12,500 Say "goodbuy" shape, new tires, Fenced storage yard, for NE Bend, 3 bdrm, Stage 1 Screaming obo 541-447-5504 professionaly winterbuilding an d o f f ice 2 bath, 1502 s q.ft. to that unused Eagle performance, ized every year, cuttoo many options to trailer for rent. In con- This one owner home item by placing it in off switch to battery, list, $8900. venient Redmond lo- has new carpet, inte r ior paint, l ight f i x plus new RV batter541-388-8939 The Bulletin Classifieds cation, 205 SE RailOrbit 21'2007, used ies. Oven, hot water tures, sink f aucets, road Blvd. Reduced to 827 heater & air condionly 8 times, A/C, qu a lit y dis $700/mo. Avail. 10/1. high 1 8' Maxum ski boat , 20 00, tioning have never What are you oven, tub s hower, tressed har d wood 5 41-385 -5 8 0 9 Vacation Rentals 541-923-7343. inboard motor, g r eat been used! micro, load leveler laminate in k i tchen, & Exchanges looking for? cond, well maintained, $24,000 obo. Serious hitch, awning, dual 693 dining & utility rooms. KOUNTRY AIRE $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 inquiries, please. batteries, sleeps 4-5, Nice t i le d ki t c hen Looking for your next You'll find it in Office/Retail Space 1994 37.5' motorStored in Terrebonne. EXCELLENT CONcounters, tiled floors emp/oyee? home, with awning, for Rent 541-548-5174 The Bulletin Classifieds DITION. All accesand counter in bath Place a Bulletin help and one slide-out, sories are included. r ooms. Nice w o r k wanted ad today and Only 47k miles fdgjl 500 sq. ft. upstairs bench and cabinets in reach over 60,000 $14,511 OBO. and good condition. office on NE side of 541-385-5809 541-382-9441 garage. Extraordinary readers each week. town, private bath, all $25,000. landscape & w a t er Your classified ad Christmas at util. paid. $500 month feature 541-548-0318 19' Seaswirl 1969 I/O, in vinyl fenced will also appear on the Coast (phofo aboveis oi a plus $500 d eposit. b ack y a 160hp 6-cyl MerCruiser, similar rd . U n d er bendbulletin.com Find exactly what WorldMark model & not the 541-480-4744 heavy duty trailer, $1000 ground sprinklers front which currently reDepoe Bay, OR actual vehic/e) you are looking for in the obo. 541-389-1473 a nd back. Move i n ceives over 2 bedroom condo, Winnebago Aspect CLASSIFIEDS r eady! N o dis a p 1.5 million page sleeps 6 2009- 32', 3 slideBMI &iRin p ointments here ! views every month 21' Crownline Cuddy 12/22 - 12/29 or outs, Leather inte•5 ¹201308584 at no extra cost. 12/23 -12/30. Cabin, 1995, only rior, Power s e at, Pcn Qnks Harley Davidson John L. Scott Real Bulletin Classifieds 325 hrs on the boat, $1399 locks, windows, 2011 Classic LimEstate 541-548-1712 Get Results! 541-325-6566 5.7 Merc engine with Aluminum w h eels. ited, LOADED, 9500 Call 385-5809 or outdrive. Bimini top 17" Flat S creen, miles, custom paint 12250 NW Dove Rd. place your ad on-line & moorage cover, S urround so u n d, "Broken Glass" by NATIONAL DOLPHIN One level 2500 sq. ft at $7500 obo. camera, Queen bed, Nicholas Del Drago, Tick, Tock 37' 1997, loaded! 1 custom log home on bendbulletin.com 541-382-2577 mattress, Awnew condition, slide, Corian surfaces, FoamGenerator, Tango 29.6' 2007, 4.9 acres. Floor to InTick, Tock... 732 heated handgrips, wood floors (kitchen), ning, Rear living, walkceiling windows with verter, Auto Jacks, auto cruise control. 771 2-dr fridge, convection Commercial/Investment around queen bed, ...don't let time get views of t h e m t ns. Air leveling, Moon $32,000 in bike, only microwave, Vizio TV 8 central air, awning, Properties for Sale Hickory hardwood and Lots away. Hire a $23,000 obo. roof satellite, walk-in roof, no smoking or 1 large slide, tile floors $ 385,000 p ets. L i k e ne w , 541-318-6049 shower, new queen bed. professional out Downtown Investment MLS 201101447 MLS¹201305077 $15,000 obo (or $74,900 White leather hide-aProperty - 5 u nits Juniper Realty, $169,000. 20+ trade for camper of The Bulletin's bed & chair, all records, 541-480-6900 across from the river 541-504-5393 A CRES I N WE S T FIND IT! 21' Sun Tracker Sig. se- no pets or s moking. that fits 6/a' pickup "Call A Service BVY IT! on 1st St. 8 1509 NW POWELL BUTTE ES ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker $28,450. bed, plus cash). Professional" 2nd St. Original vin- $279,000 - E x t raordi- TATES, gated c om SELL IT) 50hp, live well, fish fndr, 541-280-2547 or Call 541-771-4800 tage 1917 home renary Cascade views. munity, mtn. v iews, new int, extras, exc cond, The Bulletin Classifieds 541-815-4121 Directory today! modeled in 2007. 3 1-acre, custom home, private well, p aved $7900. 541-508-0679 Just bought a new boat? BR, 3 bath, gourmet knotty hickory, knotty r oads w/access t o Sell your old one in the 630 Ads published in the classifieds! Ask about our kitchen, h a r dwood, alder, Corian, BLM. Rooms for Rent "Boats" classification granite 8 4-level el- wrap-composite deck, Pam Lester, Principal Super Seller rates! Winnebago Suncruiser34' include: Speed, fishevator. Main l i ving dbl attached gar. MLS B roker Century 2 1 541-385-5809 2004, 35K, loaded, too Room for rent in Red- with vacation rentals 201302855 ing, drift, canoe, Gold Country Realty, much to list, ext'd warr. mond, $350+ utilities. No which will p r oduce house and sail boats. Nancy Popp, Inc. 541-504-1338 thru 2014, $49,900 Dens moking. Mature, r e Harley Davidson SportFor all other types of ost i n come. A t Principal Broker nis, 541-589-3243 sponsible, 8 stable. Call m ster 2 0 01 , 1 2 0 0cc, MLS¹ 20 12 0 0 9 37 watercraft, please go WEEKEND WARRIOR tached vacation rental 541-815-8000 Jim, 541-419-4513 9,257 miles, $4995. Call to Class 875. People Look for Information Toy hauler/travel trailer. $535,000. Estate liv is 1 BR, 1 bath, great Crooked River ing in The highlands Michael, 541-310-9057 541-385-5809 24' with 21' interior. About Products and room 8 huge deck, Realty Need to get an a t b roken t o p 1 0 Sleeps 6. Self-conseparate e n t rance, Services Every Daythrough ad in ASAP? acres, gated, private HD Faf Bo 7996 tained. Systems/ heating, etc. MLS ¹ The Bulletin Classifieds Take care of Head south well, utilities at l o t, appearancein good 201309397. You can place it for the winter! app for cap-fill septic. condition. Smoke-free. $1,500,000. your investments BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS online at: Pam Lester, Principal 1997 Tropical by with t/s-ton. Strong Call Ainslie Reynolds, Search the area's most Travel Trailers • Tow with the help from www.bendbulletin.com B roker Century 2 1 National RV. 35-ft, suspension; can haul Principal Broker comprehensive listing of Gold Country Realty, Chevy Vortec enATVs snowmobiles, ReMax Key Properties. The Bulletin's classified advertising... Inc. 541-504-1338 gine, new awnings, even a small car! Great 541-410-1054 Cell 541-385-5809 "Call A Service real estate to automotive, everything works, price - $8900. 541-728-0033 Office Completely merchandise to sporting excellent condition, Call 541-593-6266 Professional" Directory $97,000 - 2.59 acres. 632 Rebuilt/Customized goods. Bulletin Classifieds 738 R eady t o bui l d . 1 owner, non-smok2012/2013 Award Apt./Multiplex General Multiplexes for Sale appear every day in the MLS¹201100751 ers, $15,000 OBO. Winner print or on line. 8579 SW Panorama Looking for your Call Travis L. Han541-408-7705 Showroom Condition CHECK YOUR AD Well maintained 3 bed, F leetwood Am e r i nan, PC, Principal next employee? Call 541-385-5809 Three fully o ccupied 2 bath, 1,404 sq. ft., Many Extras cana W i l liamsburg Place a Bulletin help Broker www.bendbulletin.com 3182ysq.ft. t r iplexes Low Miles. 2006. Two king tent of the Mtns. In541-788-3480 wanted ad today and l ocated just a f e w view end beds w/storage $77,000 The Bulletin reach over 60,000 blocks from shopping s ulated s ho p w i t h Redmond RE/MAX 541-548-4807 t runk b e lo w on e , power & co n crete Land & Homes readers each week. & the facilities of Juni- f loor. slideout portable diAc r oss t h e Your classified ad Real Estate per Park. Exterior of n ette, b e nch s e a t , will also appear on from the comm. 541-771-7786 on the first day it runs buildings have vinyl street Suzuki DRZ400 SM cassette t o i le t & 8 trails . bendbulletin.com to make sure it is corsiding and are neat p ark Providence 2005 2007, 14K mi., shower, swing level which currently reMLS Hager Mountain Estates rect. "Spellcheck" and and attractive. $134,000. Fully loaded, 35,000 4 lots, $30,000 each lo4 gal. tank, racks, galley w/ 3 bu r ner ceives over 1.5 milhuman errors do oc$ 325,000 fo r e a c h ¹201308611 miles, 350 Cat, Very cated in Silver Lake. recent tires, fully cook top and s ink. lion page views evJuniper Realty, cur. If this happens to triplex clean, non-smoker, Underground power serviced. outside grill, outside 541-504-5393 ery month at no Beautiful h o u seboat your ad, please conMLS ¹201309427, 3 slides, side-by-side and conduitfor phone $3900 OBO. shower. includes 2 extra cost. Bulletin $85,000. 541-390-4693 tact us ASAP so that 201309433, refrigerator with ice and internet. Views of 541-383-2847. www.centraloregon propane tanks, 2 batClassifieds Get Recorrections and any 201309444 AUCTION maker, Washer/Dryer Hager Mountain. Septeries, new tires plus houseboat.com sults! Call 385-5809 adjustments can be Bobbie Strome, BANK OWNED Flat screen TV's, In tic feasibility for stanbike trailer hitch on or place your ad made to your ad. Principal Broker Six contiguous GENERATE SOME exmotion satellite. d ard s y stem. T h e back bumper. Dealer on-line at 541 -385-5809 John L Scott Real citement in your neigvacant parcels area is a sportsman's $95,000 serviced 2013. $8500 bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classified Estate 541-385-5500 +/- 60.94 AC borhood. Plan a ga541-480-2019 paradise. 541-948-2216 rage sale and don't STARTING BID Bobbie Strome, 848 Have an item to forget to advertise in Principal Broker $550,000 Houses for classified! 385-5809. December 17, 2013 John L Scott Real sell quick? Rent General 1675 SW Veterans Estate 541-385-5500 If it's under Triumph D a y tona Way/Reindeer Ave, 2004, 15 K m i l e s, serv>ng central oregon zince r903 SHEVLIN RIDGE PUBLISHER'S '500 you can place it in Redmond OR perfect bike, needs NOTICE 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apBROKER'S 875 The Bulletin Vin All real estate adverproved plans. More nothing. WELCOME Watercraft tising in this newspadetails and photos on ¹201536. Classifieds for: Call 310.887.6225 craigslist. $159,900. $4995 per is subject to the KENNEDY WILSON Ads published in "Wa541-389-8614 F air H o using A c t '10 - 3 lines, 7 days www.kwreoauction.com Dream Car tercraft" include: KayAuto Sales which makes it illegal '16 - 3 lines, 14 days aks, rafts and motor775 to a d vertise "any 1801Division, Bend Ized personal DreamCarsBend.com preference, limitation (Private Party ads only) NOTICE Manufactured/ watercrafts. For 541-678-0240 or disc r imination All real estate adverMobile Homes "boats" please see Dlr 3665 based on race, color, 745 tised here in is subClass 870. religion, sex, handiject to t h e F e deral Homes for Sale 541-385-5809 F air H o using A c t , 3 Bedroom, 2 bath cap, familial status, mobile home for marital status or na- 16751 SW DOVE RD. which makes it illegal sale or rent. tional origin, or an in- One level 2500 sq. ft. to advertise any preftention to make any limitation or 541-389-2636 custom log home on erence, such pre f erence, 880 acres.Floor to ceil discrimination based limitation or discrimi- 4.9 SPECIAL ing windows w/views on race, color, reli- FACTORy Motorhomes New Home, 3 bdrm, nation." Familial stasex, handicap, ThurSday, NOVember 28' h the Mtns. Hickory gion, $46,500 finished tus includes children of familial status or nahardwood & tile floors. tional origin, or intenVictory TC 2002, on your site. under the age of 18 $499,999 MLS tion to make any such RETAIL,CLASSIFIED & LEGAL NOTICE ADVERTISING runs great, many J and M Homes ft ~ a 8 C living with parents or 201208751 541-548-5511 accessories, new legal cust o dians, preferences, l i mitaJuniper Realty, tires, under 40K pregnant women, and tions or discrimination. 541-504-5393 LOT MODEL We will not knowingly miles, well kept. people securing cusDAY DEADLINE LIQUIDATION tody of children under Look at: accept any advertis$5000. COACHMAN Prices Slashed Huge ing for r eal e state 18. This newspaper Thursday 11-28 ........... .......... Monday 11-25 Noon Bendhomes.com 541-771-0665 Freelander 2008 Savings! 10 Year will not knowingly ac- for Complete Listings of which is in violation of 32' Class C, M-3150 GO! Magazine 11-29 ... .......... Monday 11-25 5 pm cept any advertising Area Real Estate for Sale this law. All persons conditional warranty. Pristine - just 23,390 Finished on your site. for real estate which is are hereby informed Friday 11-29 ................ ......... Tuesday 11-26 Noon miles! Efficient coach Need to get an ad ONLY 2 LEFT! in violation of the law. Gorgeous Custom Built that all dwellings adhas Ford V10 Saturday 11-30 ............ ......... Tuesday 11-26 Noon Redmond, Oregon O ur r e aders ar e Home On 3 3 A c re vertised are available w/Banks pwr pkg, in ASAP? 541-548-5511 on an equal opportu14' slide, ducted furn/ Sunday 12-1 ................ ..........Tuesday 11-26 4 pm hereby informed that W/Views! $1,990,000 JandMHomes.com all dwellings adver- TEAM Birtola Garmyn nity basis. The BulleAC, flat screen TV, Monday 12-2 ............... .. Wednesday 11-27 Noon tin Classified Fax it to 541-322-7253 16' awning No pets/ tised in this newspaHigh Desert Realty Rent /Own per are available on smkg. 1 owner541-312-9449 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes a must see! $52,500. an equal opportunity www. BendOregon Need help fixing stuff? $2500 down, $750 mo. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-548-4969 basis. To complain of RealEstate.com Call A Service Professional OAC. J and M Homes CLASSIFIED PRIVATE discrimination cal l Pristine Large Family find the help you need. 541-548-5511 885 HUD t o l l -free at www.bendbulletin.com P ARTY DEAD L I N E S Home o r V a c ation 1-800-877-0246. The Reduced $1Ok! ATVs 780 toll f re e t e l ephone Getaway. $399,900 ThurSday, NOV. 28th and Friday, Nov. 29th Birtola Garmyn 750 Mfd./Mobile Homes number for the hear- TEAM High Desert Realty DeadlineiSNoon WedneSday, Nov. 27th ing im p aired is Redmond Homes with Land
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DEADLINES
1-800-927-9275.
541-312-9449
www. BendOregon Nearly $279,900 - Home - 3 $189,900 RealEstate.com 858 Car Garage - RV 71/2-acres with CasHouses for Rent 7150 SW S WALLOW Parking, 3 b drm, 2 cade & D e s chutes RD. Spacious 1804 b ath, Great R o o m River canyon views. Honda TRX 350 FE Redmond sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2 bath Vaulted, Ga s F i r e- 3 bdrm, 2 bath, w/ex- 2006, 4 wheel drive, w ith S m i t h Roc k place, 12x20 Bonus/ tensive decks. Double electric start, electric Newly renovated SW hift, n ew tire s , Redmond home, 1008 sq v iews. B r ight a n d Media Room, 22x48 garage and workshop. s$2500, 541-980-8006. MLS 201307097 ft 3 bed/2 bath. 2-car gar, o pen k itchen a n d Concrete RV Area. Audrey Cook, Broker Nancy Popp, fenced backyard w/extra great room. Private The Bulletin 541-923-4663 5.62 Principal Broker parking. No s moking. location on To Subscribe call Windermere 541-815-8000 $750/mo + security dep. acres. $199,000. MLS 541-385-5800 or go to Taking app l ications. 201304491 J u n iper Central Oregon Real Crooked River 541-419-1917 Realty, 541-504-5393 Estate Realty www.bendbulletin.com
Fleetwood Discovery 2008 40X, Corian counters, convection/ micro, 2-door fridge/ freezer, washer/dryer, central vac, new tile & carpet, roof sat., 3 TVs, window awnings, levelers, ext'd warranty, multimedia GPS, 350 Cummins diesel, 7.5 gen. Many extras! $119,900. 541-604-4662
Classifieds • 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Circulation Telephone Service at 541-385-5800willbe open Thanksgiving Day from 6:30 am
t010:30 am to help with your holiday morning delivery.
The Bulletin
E6 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013 • THE BULLETIN • s •
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BOATS &RVs 805 -Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats &Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies andCampers 890 - RVs for Rent
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
s
Antique & Classic Autos
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Fifth Wheels
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963 Chevy 1955 PROJECT car. 2 door wgn, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6500 for all. 541-389-7669. j~ r
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Alpenlite 2002, 31' with 2 slides, rear
kitchen, very good condition. Non-smokers, no pets. $19,500 or best offer. 541-382-2577 /tcatt> •
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Pickups
Vans
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882
Fifth Wheels
933
Ne//ze
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at
sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 27 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s c issor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new!
Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO / trades. Please call 541-389-6998
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FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4
matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190
fc,(ctfl I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.
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GMC 1995 Safari XT, A/C, seats 8, 4.3L V6, studs on rims, $1500 obo. 541-312-6960 ,
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory 975
Automobiles
Au t o mobiles
Holiday Warmth Drive for The Shepherd's House. For the remainder of 2013, we are collecting coats, rain gear, footwear, gloves, hats, tents, sleeping
bags, backpacks at Autogource
20350 Empire Ave., Suite A5, Bend. Plus I will pay an additional $50 to you or make a donation for every referral received that purchases a new or used car. Thankyou for
yourpast and continued support! Bob, 541-598-3750
541-419-5480. 935
Sport Utility Vehicles
541-447-5184.
Corvette Coupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell!
cs
Honda Accord LX, 2004, 4-door, silver exterior with charcoal interior, great condition, 67,000 miles, asking $9000. Call 435-565-2321 (located in Bend)
Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Ford Model A 1930 SUBARU OUTBACK Weather Model 34 5B, Coupe, good condition, 541-923-1 781 LTD 2006 - $13,495 licensed thru 2/15, exlnt $16,000. 541-588-6084 One owner, Immacucond. 3 elec slides, solar 541-419-0566 late 2.5i AWD runs and panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal looks like new with a BMW 525 2002 Honda Civic 1991 sun/moonroof, leather Luxury Sport Edipropane tanks, 2 batts, runs good, needs rg' heated seats, 6 d i sc catalytic htr in addition to tion, V-6, automatic, clutch. Asking $900 Price Reduced! SuperhawkCD, 100k c h eckup, central heating/AC, genloaded, 18" new 541-480-3179 Only 1 Share Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 new belts, timing belt, tly used, MANY features! tires, 114k miles. engine, power every- water pump, transmisMust see to appreciate! Available $7,900 obo Take care of thing, new paint, 54K sion fluid & filter. Auto. $19,000. By owner (no Economical flying (541) 419-4152 original m i les, runs trans. with sport shifter. dealer calls, please). Call Recreation by Design in your own your investments 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. great, excellent condi- 541-549-6028. or text541-325-1956. IFR equipped with the help from Top living room 5th in/out. $7500 obo. 172/1 80 HP for tion wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 Cessna 541-480-3179 The Bulletin's only $13,500! New USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! A/Cs, entertainment Garmin Touchscreen "Call A Service center, fireplace, W/D, avionics center stack! Door-to-door selling with Tick, Tock garden tub/shower, in Professional" Directory Exceptionally clean! fast results! It's the easiest great condition. $42,500 Hangared at BDN. Tick, Tock... or best offer. Call Peter, way in the world to sell. BMW M-Roadster, Call 541-728-0773 Lexus ES 330 2004 307-221-2422, BMW X3 2 0 07, 99 K ...don't let time get 2000, w/hardtop. black 79,317 mi. ( in La Pine ) miles, premium packThe Bulletin Classified $19,500 away. Hire a ¹037528 $ 1 1,888 WILL DELIVER age, heated lumbar 541-385-5809 57,200 miles, supported seats, pan- Titanium professional out silver. Not oramic moo n roof, many M-Roadsters Oregon of The Bulletin's CHECK YOUR AD Bluetooth, ski bag, XeAutogource available. (See non headlights, tan & "Call A Service Craigslist posting id 541-598-3750 Ford 1965 6-yard black leather interior, Professional" ¹4155624940 for www.aaaoregonautodump truck, good n ew front & rea r source.com additional details.) paint, recent overbrakes © 76K miles, Directory today! Serious inquiries haul, everything one owner, all records, RV Transport only. 541-480-5348 Just too many works! $3995. very clean, $16,900. Local or Long Dison the first day it runs 541-815-3636 541-388-4360 collectibles? tance: 5th wheels, to make sure it is corcamp trailers, toy rect. "Spellcheck" and haulers, etc. Chevy Tahoe 1998, Sell them in human errors do ocNeed to get an Ask for Teddy, cur. If this happens to 4x4, 5.7L V8, 197K The Bulletin Classifieds ad in ASAP? 541-260-4293 your ad, please conGMC /te ton 1971, Only mi., good c o nd., You can place it runs great, w/studtact us ASAP so that $19,700! Original low 541-385-5809 corrections and any online at: mile, exceptional, 3rd ded tires on extra Buick LaCrosse CXS factory rims. $3000 adjustments can be owner. 951-699-7171 www.bendbulletin.com 2 005, loaded, n e w o OBO. 541-480-8060 made to your ad. battery/tires, perfect 541-385-5809 $8495. 541-475-6794 541-385-5809 Garage Sales The Bulletin Classified Check out the Cadillac El Dorado Garage Sales classifieds online I Total Cream Puff! www.bendbulletin.com 1994 Body, paint, trunk as Garage Sales Updated daily Lincoln LS 2001 4door showroom, blue $•s sport sedan, plus set Find them leather, $1700 wheels w/snow tires although of snow tires $6000 Peterbilt 359 p o table in 541-317-0324. 908 car has not been wet in water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, Fleetwood Prowler The Bulletin 8 years. On trip to Aircraft, Parts 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 32' - 2001 Chevy Tahoe 2001 Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., pump, 4-3" h o ses, Classifieds Mercedes Benz & Service 2 slides, ducted 5.3L V8, leather, $4800. 541-593-4016.s camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. E500 4-matic 2004 air, heated seats, heat & air, great 541-820-3724 541-385-5809 86,625 miles, sunfully loaded, 120K mi. condition, snowbird roof with a shade $7500 obo ready, Many uploaded, silver, 2 sets 541-460-0494 grade options, fiof tires and a set of nancing available! chains. $13,500. $14,500 obo. 541-362-5598 ~~!:t~ 1/3 interest in Columbia Call Dick, Corvette 1979 400, $150,000 (located 541-480-1687. L82- 4speed. GMC Sierra 1977 short O Bend.) Also: Sunri85,000 miles bed, e xlnt o r i ginal ver hangar available for Garaged since new. cond., runs 8 drives sale at $155K, or lease, lnliniti FX35 2012, Atwood Tilt Trailer, I've owned it 25 great. V8, new paint LXT/4 @ $400/mo. 4' 2" wide x 7' 10" silver, 541-948-2963 and tires. $4750 obo. Platinum years. Never dam24,000 miles, with long, great condition, 541-504-1050 aged or abused. factory war r anty, $350. 541-389-9844 Mercedes C300 $72,900. f ully l o aded, A l l Get your Dave, 541-350-4077 2009 Wheel Drive, GPS, Keystone Challenger 4-door 4-Matic, business sunroof, etc. 2004 CH34TLB04 34' red with black $35,500. fully S/C, w/d hookups, leather interior, 541-550-7189 new 18' Dometic aw- a ROWI N G navigation, panning, 4 new tires, new oramic roof, loaded! MGA 1959 - $19,999 Kubota 7000w marine One owner, only with an ad in New 2013 Wells Cargo Convertible. O r igidiesel generator, 3 29,200 miles. V-nose car hauler, 8ye' x nal body/motor. No The Bulletin's slides, exc. cond. in$23,000 obo. 20', 5200-Ib axles. Price rust. 541-549-3838 CORVETTE COUPE s ide & o ut . 27 " T V "Call A Service 541-475-3306 new is $7288; asking Glasstop 2010 dvd/cd/am/fm entertain Professional" Grand Sport -4 LT $6750. 541-548-3595 center. Call for more ~ OI-I loaded, clear bra Directory details. Only used 4 ELK HUNTERS! 929 M ore Pi x a t B e n d b u l e t i n c o m Porsche 911 hood & fenders. times total in last 5y2 Jeep CJ5 1979, orig. Automotive Wanted Carrera 993 cou e i New Michelin Super years.. No pets, no owner, 87k only 3k on Sports, G.S. floor smoking. High r etail new 258 long block. Wanted: canopy that fits mats, 17,000 miles, $27,700. Will sell for C lutch p kg , W a r n 1980 Toyota long bed. Crystal red. $24,000 including slidhubs. Excellent runCall 5 4 1 -306-0412, $42,000. i ng hitch that fits i n ner, very dependable. ask for Joel. 503-358-1164. your truck. Call 8 a.m. Northman 6~/e' plow, to 10 p.m. for appt to 1/3 interest i n w e l lPlymouth B a r racuda Warn 6000¹ w i nch. 1996, 73k miles, see. 541-330-5527. equipped IFR Beech Bo- • Automotive Parts, • 1966, original car! 300 $9500 or best reaHave an item to Tiptronic auto. nanza A36, new 10-550/ sonable offer. Keystone Challenger prop, located KBDN. Service & Accessories hp, 360 V8, centertransmission. Silver, 541-549-6970 or sell quick? lines, 541-593-2597 30-ft, triple slide, blue leather interior, $65,000. 541-419-9510 541-815-8105. If it's under awning, current tags, 4 Mini Cooper wheels & moon/sunroof, new $16,000. 541-410-2308 Hankook studded tires, Subaru Outback 2011 '500 you can place it in quality tires and 195/60R-15, 2 seasons, battery, car and seat wgn,53k mi., The Bulletin $220. 541-389-9819 covers, many extras. The Bulletin's ¹339328 • $16,988 Recently fully ser"Call A Service Classifieds for: Bridgestone Bli z zak viced, garaged, Studless Ice & Snow Professional" Directory Oregon VW Bug Sedan, 1969, looks and runs like Tires, 235 / 4 0R18. '10 3 lines, 7 days Autogource is all about meeting fully restored, 2 owners, new. Excellent conPaid $750; used 2 1/5th interest in 1973 541-598-3750 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days with 73,000 total miles, yourneeds. dition $29,700 seasons, $450 OBO. $10,000. Cessna 150 LLC www.aaaoregonauto- (Private Party ads only) 541-382-5127 541-322-9647 Call on one of the 150hp conversion, low (541) 410-2944 source.com VW Golf, 1985 r uns, time on air frame and FJ Toyota 4 snow tires professionals today! drives, needs work. $750 engine, hangared in on 17" rims, $495 obo. 4 studded ties on Bend. Excellent perobo. 541-420-3277 rims incl. 541-678-2028 formance & affordYOUR ADWILLRECEIVECLOSETo 2,000,000 able flying! $6,500. Classified •a LesSchwab Mud & EXPOSURES FORONLY$2SO! 541 -41 0-6007 Snowblackwall Pickups Advertising Oregon Ctu ee/ Aduroru Yerwou ua seuce Vthe Ougu '/e s paperptblrsuu usocrarun Murano
Automobiles • Porsche 911 Turbo
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior new quality t i res, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700. 541-322-9647
Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928
Automo b iles
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
G T 2200 4
cyl, 5
speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o n vertible around in this price range, ne w t i r es, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. i n side and out. Fun car to d rive, M ust S E E ! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory WHEN YOU SEE THIS
Subaru Imp r e za ~OO 2006, 4 dr., AWD, silver gray c o lor, On a classified ad auto, real nice car in go to great shape. $6200. www.bendbulletin.com 541-548-3379. to view additional photos of the item. Subaru Outback 1999 5 speed. red/qray g Say "goodbuy" ¹ 644600 $5, 9 9 5 to that unused item by placing it in Oregon Autogource The Bulletin Classifieds 541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonauto5 41 -385-58 0 9 source.com
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Keystone Raptor, 2007 37 toy hauler, 2 slides, generator, A/C, 2 TVs, satellite system w/auto seek, in/out sound system, sleeps 6,many extras. $32,500. In Madras, call 541-771-9607 or 541-475-6265
Observe G02, used 1 winter. Pd $1200. Will take reasonable offer. 541-306-4915
1974 Beilanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ft.; 3 s lides; immaculate c o ndition; l arge screen TV w / entertainment center; reclining chairs; center kitchen; air; queen bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. $20,000 OBO. (541) 548-5886
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MONTANA 3585 2008,
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250
NetWOrlS
P245/50/R-20 102T
In Madras, call 541-475-6302 Dramatic Price Reduction Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock@q.com
44 i
STUDDED SNOW TIRES
size 225/70-R16
and Hyundai Santa Fe wheels, new! $600. 541-388-4003
CLASSIC 1966 Ford F250 3/4 ton, 352 V8, power steering, straight body, runs good. $3000. 541-410-8749
Chevy 1986, long bed, four spd., 350 V8 rebuilt, custom paint, great tir e s and wheels, new t a g s, $5000 obo. 541-389-3026
Studded tires (4) and rims for Ford p/up Dodge 2007 Diesel 4WD 235/85/16, 10- p l y. SLT quad cab, short box, New $970, sell $550. auto, AC, high mileage, $12,900. 541-389-7857 541-923-8202 Toyo studless snow tires (4) on 17" silver rims w/lug nuts, $400. 541-504-0783
Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not Piper A rcher 1 9 80, the seller's. Convert the based in Madras, alfacts into benefits. Show ways hangared since the reader how the item will new. New annual, auto help them in someway. pilot, IFR, one piece This windshield. Fastest Aradvertising tip cher around. 1750 tobrought to youby tal t i me. $68,500. 541-475-6947, ask for The Bulletin Rob Berg.
Ford Supercab 1992, brown/tan color with m atching f ul l s i z e c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 over drive, 135K mi., full bench rear seat, slide rear w i ndow, bucket seats, power seats w/lumbar, pw, HD receiver 8 trailer brakes, good t i res. Good cond i tion. $4900. 541-389-5341
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541-385-5809
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Legal Notices • LEGAL NOTICE C IRCUIT COU R T , STATE OF OREGON, C OUNTY OF D E SCHUTES D E PARTMENT OF PROBATE. In the Matter of the Estate of RAYMOND JOHNSON, De-
Legal Notices of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: Da i n a Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 N E T h i rd Street, Prineville, OR 97754.
ceased. CASE NO. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The prop13PB0122. N O TICE TO INT E RESTED erty described below was seized for forfeiP ERSONS. Date o f ture because it: (1) Death: 09/26/1 3. To Interested Persons: 1. Constitutes the p roT he p r obate p r o - ceeds of the violation ceeding r e f erenced of, solicitation to violate, attempt to vioabove is pending in late, or conspiracy to the Circuit Court for the State of Oregon violates, the criminal for Deschutes County. laws of the State of Oregon regarding the 2. The name of t he decedent is Raymond manufacture, distribuJohnson. 3. The per- tion, or possession of sonal representative controlled substances appointed is F r a nk (ORS C h apter475); Taylor an d c l a ims and/or (2) Was used may be presented to or intended for use in him, care of Michael committing or f acilitating the violation of, B. McCord, 65 N.W. Greeley Ave., Bend, solicitation to violate, OR 97701. 4. All per- attempt to violate, or sons having claims conspiracy to violate against th e e s t ate the criminal laws of must present them to the State of Oregon regarding the manuthe personal reprefacture, distribution or sentative at the a ddress set forth above p ossession of c o nsub s tances within four m o nths trolled (ORS Chapter 475). after the date of first publication of this notice or they may be IN THE MATTER OF: barred. 5. The date of first publication of this (1)One 1996 H onda A ccord, OL N 61 5 notice is October 31, EFQ, and $3,217.00 2013. 6. All p ersons whose rights may be in US Currency, Case No. 12-251999 seized affected by the pro12-12-12 from Adam ceeding may obtain additional information Merritt. from the records of LEGAL NOTICE the Court, the perNOTICE TO sonal representative, INTERESTED or the attorney for the PERSONS personal representa- The undersigned has tive. /S/ M i c hael B. been appointed PerMcCord. Michael B. sonal Representative McCord, OSB 78300, of the Estate of MarAttorney for the PerRae Czwarkiel, sonal Representative. lene Deceased, by the CirFrank Taylor, 4062 E. cuit Court, State of Harrison St., Gilbert, O regon, County o f AZ 85295, Personal Deschutes, P r obate Representative. No. 13-PB-0124. All Michael B. M c Cord persons having claims OSB ¹78300, Attoragainst the estate are ney at Law, 65 NW to p r esent Greeley Ave., Bend, trequired heir c l a im s wi t h OR 9 7 7 01, Phone proper vouchers number: (541) within four m o nths 388-4434, Fax numthis date, to the ber: (541) 388-5089, from or they Email: mccord Oour- undersigned, may be barred. Addibendlawyer.com, Atinformation may torney For Personal tional be obtained from the Representative. court records, the undersigned, or the atLEGAL NOTICE torneys named below. NOTICE OF SEIZURE Dated and first pubFOR CIVIL lished: November 7, FORFEITURE 2013. G i u l ian J. TO ALL POTENTIAL Czwarkiel, P ersonal CLAIMANTS R epresentative C / o AND TO ALL LEV UNKNOWN PERSONS S TEVEN H . READ THIS CAREFULLY
ENTHAL, OSB ¹ 023653, ATT O R N EY-AT-LAW, 2 3 1
Lo o p , If you have any interest S calehouse in the seized property Suite 203, Bend, OR described below, you 97702. must claim that interThe Bulletin At est or you will auto- Call 541-385-5809 matically lose that interest. If you do not Place Your Ad Or E-Mail file a c laim for t he At: www.bendbulletin.com property, the property LEGAL NOTICE may be forfeited even if you are not con- The following units victed of any crime. will be sold at PubTo claim an interest, lic Auction on Friyou must file a written day, December 6th claim with the forfei- 2013 at 11 a.m. at Bend Mini Storage, ture counsel named 3 r d St, below, Th e w r itten 100 S E claim must be signed Bend, OR 9 7 702. Unit ¹ C129 — Jenby you, sworn to under penalty of perjury nifer Bradley, Unit ¹ before a notary public, C121 — Jessica Deand state: (a) Your van, Unit ¹ C171 Burt John Duer & true name; (b) The address at which you Maylene W o o ds, will a c cept f u t u re Unit ¹ B77 — Laura m ailings f ro m th e Evans, Unit ¹ C188 court and f o rfeiture — Frederick Jensen, Unit ¹ B33 c ounsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u Michael Ray Perry, have an interest in the Unit ¹ B51 — James seized property. Your Scott. deadline for filing the Look at: claim document with Bendhomes.com forfeiture cou n sel for Complete Listings of n amed below is 2 1 days from the last day Area Real Estate for Sale