Bulletin Daily Paper 12-22-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

MONDAY December22,2014

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bendbulletin.com

omin ues a: ereare ourc arita e onations oin? TODAY'S READERBOARD

BEND

Grants focus on housing needs

Winter off to a wet start

— It was a rain-soakedweekend in Central Oregon. Will the rain continue to fall?AS,BS

Beavers battling drought? —California, other parched Western states turn to the buck-toothed animal to help recover from drought.A6

Offseasongolf update

— This week's course: The Greens at Redmond.B7

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• Bend kinetic artist's mechanical creation findsaholidayhomeonMadisonAvenue

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By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

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Federal money is on its

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r 'tis •

By Penny Nakamura

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and work on Patterson. I think

For The Bulletin

And aWebexclusiveIf U.S. efforts to thawrelations with Cubasucceed, will gamblers return to theisland nation? beudbulletiu.cem/extrus

EDITOR'5CHOICE

illness and isolation end with 1 fatal act By Kim Barker and AlBaker New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — Ismaaiyl

1~ " I was contacted by Barneys at A special Oregon owl is the end of August, when they nesting and entertaining large told me they wanted a large crowds on Madison Avenue in moving snow owl," says Cole, New York City. rubbing his eyes. "I lost a lot The 6-foot6-inch mechan- of sleep trying to solve probical owl is being showcased lems with Patterson. Honestly, I at Barneys department store don't know if I'd do a piece like .y thanks to the creative efforts of this again with a t wo-month Bend kinetic artist Chris Cole, deadline. Those two months who was commissioned to cre- were a blur." ate the metal bird. Cole is not only a creative "It's an incredible feeling to artist, he makes his art come have my work displayed like alive through automation and this — with cameras, lights and detailed engineering. Penny Nakamura/The Bulletin "Well, some of the problems Patterson the owl is more than 6 feet tall and features crowds," says a still-disbelieving Cole inside a refurbished I was trying to think through many moving parts. school bus that now houses his were the motors. Each moving Bend art studio. part on the owl had to have 24/7 See a video of the owl in motion onThe Bulletin's website: Before having his largest reliability for nine weeks," exbeudbulletin.cum/uwl masterpiece delivered to New plains Cole. "I'd stay up at night decidYork in early November, Cole worked day and night for two ing to go with one motor per "Everything about Patterson is an f

O

months to get the owl he named

wing or separate motors. Then

"I felt I lost two months of my

for the owl's beak and head movement." See Owl /A8

"Patterson" to Barneys holiday showcase display. life, because all I did was think

I had to install separate motors

amalgamation of new but mostly salvaged materials."

way to Bend to help build access ramps for those in need and purchase a piece of land where a low-income family will have the chance to own a home. The U.S. Department

of Housing and Urban Development's community

development block grant program provides municipal governments with a funding source to address a range of housing and infrastructureneeds. Since

2004, Bend has qualified as an entitlement community, meaning the city annually receives federalmoney to support low- and moderate-income residents. At

last week's City Council meeting, there was a public hearing on $164,000 the city intends to funnel toward four projects. SeeGrants/A8

— Bend kinetic artist Chris Cole

Brinsley, who had drifted

Rural states

between friends and fam-

ily for most of his short life, alienating most of

pulling out

them and failing at almost

anything that he tried, decided to come home

"4

Saturday.

the stopsto

tg

He board-

edabusin

i(~

Baltimore, arrived in Midtown

lure lawyers

~l

Manhattan just before

By Regina Garcia Cano

11 a.m., and then disappeared onto the N train at

The Associated Press

CORSICA, S.D.— By landing a steady job in a hopping metropolis,

the Times Square subway stop. He was headed for

Brooklyn, where he had been born 28 years earlier, carrying the silver Taurus 9-mm pistol he had used hours earlier to shoot his ex-girlfriend. Brinsley had a plan, which he soon announced

Jake Fischer achieved

the dream of many who finished law school during

p

the Great Recession. Then,

he left the big-city life and moved to a small South Dakota town, lured by

a program that seeks to boost the number of rural

to the world on Instagram:

He wanted to kill two cops. SeeShooting/A6

attorneys.

Although federal grant money for decades has been available for doctors,

TODAY'S WEATHER ikia~

nurses and dentists willing to relocate to sparsely pop-

k

ulated areas, the South Da-

C l o udy

High 47, Low32 Page BS

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Chris Cole stands inside his Bend workshop, where he creates art that comes alive through movement. Cole said the popularity of Pat-

to similarly compensate

terson the owl,which is ondisplay on NewYork's Madison Avenue, hasgivenwayto increased interest in the kinetic artist's services.

lawyers. SeeAttorneys/A4

INDEX Calendar A5 Classified C1-6 Comics C3-4 Crosswords C4 Dear Abby A7 Horoscope A7

Local/StateA5-6 M ovies A 7 Nationiworld A2 Sports Bf -8 Teelo Green Bf, 7 Television A7

Reviving a tradition that instills Christmasfear By Melissa Eddy New York Times News Service

The Bulletin

An Independent Newspaper

vol. 112, No. sse, 22 pages, 3 sections

Q I/I/e use recyclenewspri d nt

'I : IIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329

kota program is believed to be the first of its kind

MUNICH — Long before parents relied on the powers

of Santa Claus to monitor their children's behavior, their counterparts in Alpine villages called on a shaggy-furred, horned creature with a fistful

Tom Bierbaumer recalls

the trepidation he felt every Dec. 6, when the clanging of oversized cowbells signaled the arrival of the Krampus, a devilish mountain goblin who serves as an evil counterpart to the good St. Nick. He would think back over his misdeeds

message that they had better

of past months — the days he had refused to clear the sup-

watch out.

per table, left his homework

of bound twigs to send the

unfinished or pulled a girl's

Krampus comes to your house, 1960s and '70s, as postmodern and you are a child, you are society moved away from its "When you are a child, you really worried about getting a rural past. know what you have done hit from his switch." But with cultural homogewrong the whole year," said BiBesides visiting homes with nization spreading across an erbaumer, who grew up in the St. Nicholas, the Krampus has increasingly unified Europe, Bavarian Alps and now heads for centuries run through vila new generation is bringing a Munich-based club, the lage and town centers spread- back the customs that deing pre-Christmas fear and SparifankerlPass — Bavarian fined their childhoods, and dialect for "Devil's Group"chasing away evil spirits. That those of their parents and devoted to keeping the Kram- tradition dwindled across grandparents. pus tradition alive. "When the much of Bavaria during the SeeKrampus/A4 hair.


A2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

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bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

NEW YORK — Faced with

the first targeted killings of New York City police officers in years, the city's police leaders ratcheted up precautions for their v ast p atrol f o rce

Sunday as officials described the predatory final move-

541-383-0367

ments of a gunman bent on

NEW S R O O M FA X

killing officers. "Watch what I'm going to

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DEPARTMENT HEADS

OR LD

were shot dead.

Maryland, the police said. New York City officers goon vacation in Hawaii, called ing out on foot patrol were diBratton on Sunday to offer rected to work only in pairs. condolences as Jeh Johnson, Sentries were posted outside the head of the Department stationhouses. The d epartof Homeland Security, visited ment suspended patrols by the Brooklyn precinct where auxiliary officers — thouthe slain officers worked. sands of unarmed volunteers As the city was thrust into who act as eyes and ears of mourning, with flags lowered the department. Detectives, and police badges ribboned who usually operate alone in black, the way Brinsley or in pairs, were told by the had stalked the officers set head of their union to go out off precautions across the de- in teams of three. President Barack Obama,

ers on a Brooklyn street mo- partment. Officers, who in rements before moving toward cent weeks had felt besieged a marked police car, armed by political attacks, found with a silver Taurus handgun. themselves contemplating the The man, Ismaaiyl Brins- specteroffargreaterperil. ley, circled the car — No. 4324 From Brooklyn to Mem— parked just off of Myrtle phis, Tennessee, at least a Avenue before approaching dozen violent threats against from behind. He fired four police on social media stoked shots through the closed win- fear and prompted rapid indow of the passenger side and vestigations. Most, so far, fled, pursued by two Consoli- were found to pose no credidated Edison utility workers ble risk to officers. who witnessed the attack. Brinsley, a Brooklyn naBoth officers died in the fu- tive with a troubled past and sillade, which roiled a city al- a history of arrests mostly in ready on edge from weeks of Georgiaand Ohio, had made protests over police practices. a series of similar online On Sunday, some of those threats before the k i l l ings, who had been protesting days which officials called an "asbefore held a candlelight vigil sassination." He drifted in in Harlem, while in Brook-

lyn, the police commissioner,

and out of jail and the lives of his relatives, who told the

police of undiagnosed menmemorial emerging at the site tal problems. And hours bewhere Officers Wenjian Liu, fore he killed the officers, he 32, and Rafael Ramos, 40, tried to kill an ex-girlfriend in William Bratton, visited the

Taken together, the orders

represented a retrenchment

TALK TO AN EDITOR

the past year had been hewing to Mayor Bill de Blasio's aim of easing strains between the police and many communities. Instead, the ambush kill-

ing threatened to reverse that goal. A day after the killings, the top uniformed chief, James O'Neill, told officers, especially commanders newly freed to ply social media, to limit all comments about

the deathsto condolences for their two colleagues

"They were assassinated — targeted for their uniform, and for the responsibility they embraced:to keep the people of this city safe," read a message Bratton sent to all

35,000 members ofthe department, the nation's largest. "Be safe."

JOURNALIST MOURNED IN AFGHANISTAN

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DetrOit tent City —Bankruptcy behind it, Detroit's atmosphere swirls with the promise of better days. Charles Floyd Jones can only hope that the city's good fortune trickles down to him and the 10 other residents of a tent city that's sprouted in the shadow of a resurgent downtown where rental occupancy is close to full and restaurants and shops are doing brisk business. Jones and others in this makeshift community of seven tents — believed to be the only tent city in Detroit — say they havenowhere else to go. "By us being out of bankruptcy, they can seethat you got people out here that's struggling," said Jones, 51. Thecity's homeless numbers swelled over the past decade asmanufacturing and other jobs disappeared and homeswere lost during the national foreclosure crisis. All told, about16,200 of Detroit's 680,000 residents — almost 2.4 percent — are believed to be living on the streets or in temporary shelters — and that doesn't account for other types of homelessness, such as teens going from friend to friend and families living in motels. TuniSia eleCtiOnS —Supporters of Beji Caid Essebsi, a veteran statesman whoserved in thegovernments of both of Tunisia's former dictators, celebrated his expected victory in Sunday's presidential runoff as three exit polls showed him in the lead. His rival, the interim president Moncef Marzouki, did not concededefeat. Essebsi, 88, appeared briefly onstage in front of his headquarters on Sundayand saluted Tunisians for their actions in 2011that set off the Arab Spring, and thanked themfor their trust. He did not claim victory, although his campaign managersaid early returns indicated that he hadwon. A television channel, Nessma TV,which supported Essebsi's campaign, called the election in his favor. Marzouki said the tally remained too close to call. "The margin is minimal and the polls unreliable," said his campaignmanagerandspokesman,AdnenMansour. HSpltitiS llI'IlgS —In a sign that price competition may take hold for hepatitis C drugs, the nation's largest manager of prescriptions will require all patients to use AbbVie's newly approved treatment rather than two widely used medicines from its rival Gilead Sciences. The pharmacy benefit manager, Express Scripts, said it had negotiated a significant discount from AbbVie in exchange for making the drugmaker's treatment, Viekira Pak, the exclusive option for 25 million people. Express Scripts also said it would allow all people with hepatitis C to be treated with AbbVie's drug, not only those with more serious liver damage. Gilead's drugs have set a new standard, curing the vast majority of patients in only12 weeks with few side effects. But their prices have ignited an outcry. One drug, Sovaldi, has a list price of $84,000 for a typical12-week course of therapy, or $1,000 per daily pill. The newer Harvoni costs $94,500 for 12 weeks.

TALK TO A REPORTER All AgesMacMcLean......541-617-7816 Bend government Tyler Leeds........................541-633-2160 Business JosephDitzler...541-617-7615 Calendar...........................541-383-0351 CrookCounty....................541-617-7831

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MideaSt peaCe puSh —Secretary of State John Kerry is ending 2014 much in the sameway hestarted it, frustrated in efforts to push Israel and Palestinians toward peace. With a diplomatic showdown looming this past week over Arab plans to force Israel from occupied Palestinian lands within three years, Kerry prepared for a quick trip to Jordan in hopes of finding a calmer alternative. By Thursday, the crisis appeared to havebeenaverted when Palestinian and Jordanian officials said they would not push their resolution to an immediate vote in the U.N.Security Council, partly because the U.S. threatened aveto. The fast-moving political drama was a small, if temporary, victory for America's chief diplomat in his quest to end generations of fighting and tensions between Israelis and Palestinians.

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POpe aIId Cuba —The key role Pope Francis played encouraging talks between Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro left fractures among his flock in South Florida, where many older Roman Catholics equate the Castro brothers with the devil. Many Catholics worldwide haveexpressed pride in seeing Francis stirring hopes of progress in communist Cuba, but someCuban-Americans say their spiritual leader betrayed them. "I'm still Catholic till the day I die," said Efrain Rivas, a 53-year-old maintenance man in Miami who was a political prisoner in Cubafor16 years. "But I am a Catholic without a pope." Rivas said he cried whenObamasurprisingly announced a reversal of a half-century's efforts to isolate Cuba. Then, when he learned of Francis' role, he got angry.

JOrdan eXeCutiOnS —Jordan ended an eight-year moratorium on execut ionsSundaywhen 11 menwerehangedatdawn.Themen had been convicted of murder charges from 2002 to 2004, according to a statement released by the Interior Ministry. The government carried out the executions at the Swaqacorrections and rehabilitation center, 60 miles south of Amman, the capital, "after taking all required legal measures," according to the ministry's spokesman, Ziad Zubi. Jordan's last previous execution, in March 2006, was carried out for a manconvicted of killing his wife and baby. — From wire reports Massoud Hossaini/The Associated Press

Afghan friends and colleagues of 22-year-old video journalist Zubair Hatami, who died late Saturday from injuries sustained in a Taliban attack, mourn during his funeral, in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Sunday.

Hatami, a cameraman with the privately run Mitra Television, was seriously wounded when a teenage suicide bomber blew himself up during a performance at the Etsiqlal High School on Dec.11 A German aid worker was also killed in that attack.

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HEARING AIDS

DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE1

I

N. I(orea threatensstrikes

amid claimsof hacking By Hyung-Jin Kim The Associated Press

SEOUL, South K orea

President Barack Obama is "reddessly" spreading rumors of a Pyongyang-orchestrated cyberattack of Sony Pictures, North Korea says, as it warns of strikes against the White

House, Pentagon and "the whole U.S. mainland, that cesspool of terrorism."

Union" in an interview broadcast Sunday that Washington is reviewing whether to put

North Korea back on its list of state sponsors of terrorism

The National Defense Commission, led by Kim, warned that its

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army is ready to use alltypes of warfare against the U.S. "Our toughest counteraction

will be boldly taken against Such rhetoric is routine from the White House, the Pentagon North Korea's massive propa- and the whole U.S. mainland, ganda machine during times the cesspoolof terrorism, by of high tension with Washing- far surpassing the 'symmetton. But a long statement from ric counteraction'dedared by the powerful National Defense Obama," said the commission's Commission late Sunday also Policy Department in a stateunderscores Pyongyang's sen- ment carried by the official Kositivity at amovie whose plot fo- rean Central News Agency. cuses on the assassination of its N orth Korea has said i t leader Kim Jong Un, who is the knows how to prove it had beneficiary of a decades-long nothing to do with the hacking cult of personality built around and proposed a joint investigahis family dynasty. tion with the U.S. The U.S. blames North KoNorth Korea and the U.S., rea for the cyberattack that which fought each other in the escalated to threats of terror

<

1950-53 Korean War, remain

attacks against U.S. movie the- technically in a state of war beaters and caused Sonyto cancel cause the conflict ended with "The Interview's" release. an armiNce, not apeace treaty. Obama, who promised to re- The U.S. stations about 28,500 spond "proportionately" to the troops in South Korea to deter attack, told CNN's "State of the aggression from North Korea.

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MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014•THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Monday, Dec.22, the 356th day of 2014. Thereare nine days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS HOme SaleS —The National Association of Realtors releases existing homesales for November.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1944, during the World War II Battle of the Bulge, U.S. Brig. Gen.Anthony McAuliffe rejected aGerman demand for surrender, writing "Nuts!" in his official reply. In1775, Esek Hopkins was appointe dthecommander-in-chief of the Continental Navy. In1864, during the Civil War, Union Maj. Gen.William Sherman said in amessageto President Abraham Lincoln: "I beg to present you as aChristmas-gift the city of Savannah." In1894, French army officer Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of treason in a court-martial that triggered worldwide charges of anti-Semitism. (Dreyfus was eventually vindicated.) In1910, a fire lasting more than 26 hours broke out at the Chicago Union Stock Yards; 21 firefighters were killed in the collapse of a burning building. In1937, the first, center tube

of the Lincoln Tunnel connecting New York City and New Jersey beneath the Hudson River was opened to traffic. (The second tube opened in 1945, the third in 1957.)

In1944, former silent film comedian Harry Langdon (once considered a rival to Charles Chaplin) died in Los Angeles atage 60. In1968, Julie Nixon married David Eisenhower in a private ceremony in NewYork. In1977, three dozenpeople were killed when a250-foothigh grain elevator at the Continental Grain Company plant in Westwego, Louisiana, exploded. In1984, New York City resident Bernhard Goetz shot and wounded four youths on a Manhattan subway, claiming they were about to rob him. In1989, Romanian President Nicolae Ceausescu, the last of Eastern Europe's hard-line Communist rulers, was toppled from power in a popular uprising. Playwright Samuel Beckett died in Paris at age83. In1992, a Libyan Boeing 727 jetliner crashed after a midair collision with a MiGfighter, killing all 157 aboard the jetliner, and both crew members of the fighter jet. In2001, Richard Reid, a passenger on anAmerican Airlines flight from Paris to Miami, tried to ignite explosives in his shoes, but was subdued by flight attendants and fellow passengers. (Reid is serving a life sentence in federal prison.) Tea years ago:Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, stung by criticism that he'd been insensitive to the needs of troops and their families, offered an impassioned defense, saying when hewould meet wounded soldiers or relatives of those killed in battle, "their grief is something I feel to my core." Five years ago:Assailants gunned down the mother, aunt and siblings of a Mexican marine who was killed in a raid that took out one of Mexico's most powerful cartel leaders. One year ago:Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the Russian oligarch who'd crossed President Vladimir Putin and ended up in jail for10 years, told a press conference in Berlin that he planned to devote his life to securing the release of the country's political prisoners.

BIRTHDAYS Former HouseSpeakerJim Wright is 92. Baseball Hall of Famer SteveCarlton is 70. Former ABCNews anchor Diane Sawyer is 69. Baseball All-Star Steve Garvey is 66. Country singer Lori McKenna is 46. Actor Chris Carmack is 34. Actor Logan Huffman is 25. Rhythm-and-blues singer Jordin Sparks is 25. Pop singer Meghan Trainor is 21. — From wire reports

FACT CHECK

STUDY

All-electric car maynot be so green

ea-wor ocorsc ec r. z Using medical evidence, doctors challenge advice dealt out on "The Dr. Oz Show" and "The Doctors"and the results aren't pretty. Nearly 4 in 10 assertions on Oz's show have nothing to back them up at all.

By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press

By Karen Kaplan Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — Peo-

What do real-world doctors have to say about the advice

ple who own all-electric

d ispensed on " The Dr . O z

the power may think they are helping the environ-

cars where coal genemtes

Show"? Less than one-third of it can be backed up by even

ment. But a new study finds

modest medical evidence.

their vehicles actually make

If that sounds alarming, consider this: Nearly four in 10

the air dirtier, worsening

of the assertions made on the

global warming. Ethanol isn't so green,

show appear to be made on the basis of no evidence at alL

either. "It's kind of hard to beat

gasoline" for public and en-

The researchers who fact-

checked Dr. Mehmet Oz and his on-air guests were able to

vironmental health, said study co-author Julian Mar-

find legitimate studies related

shall, an engineering pro-

to 11 percent of the recommendations made on the show.

fessor at the University of Minnesota.

The key is where the

However, in these cases, the

recommendations ran counter

source of

t h e e l ectricity

to the medical literature. "Consumers s h oul d be

all-electric cars. If it comes from coal, the electric cars

skeptical about any recom-

produce 3.6 times more

mendations provided on television medical talk shows,"

the researchers wrote in a study published this week in BMJ. "Viewers need to realize that the recommendations

may not be supported by higher evidence or presented with enough balanced information

13 percent of the claims made

soot and smog deaths than gas, because of the pollution made in generating the electricity, according to the study that is published Monday by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. They also are significantly worse at heat-trapping carbon dioxide that worsens global warming, it found. The study finds all-electric vehicles cause 86 per-

on "The Doctors."

cent more deaths from air

The researchers also noted that for both shows combined,

pollution than do cars powered by regular gasoline.

40 percent ofthe recommen-

Coal produces 39 percent of

dations mentioned a specific

the country's electricity, ac-

benefit of t h e i n t ervention being touted. The size of the

cording to the Department

Lauren Victoria Burke/TheAssociated Press

Dr. Mehmet Oz, a cardiac surgeon and host of "The Dr. Oz Show," testified on Capitol Hill in Washing-

ton in June before the Senate subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety and Insurance, which examined protecting consumers from false and deceptive advertising of weight-loss products. Researchers examined information dispensed from Oz's show and found less than a third of it can be

backedby medicalevidence.

to adequately inform decision

making." Critics of Oz, an accomplished cardiac surgeon with degrees from two Ivy League universities, complain that his show is little more than

an hourlong infomercial for weight-loss fads like green coffee bean extract. (The Federal Trade Commission has sued the company that hawks this dubious product.) A spokesman for the Center for Inquiry accused him of selling "snake oil." In June, a Senate subcommittee took him to task for telling his viewers (who number 2.9 million on any given day) things

"The Dr. Oz Show" and "The

Doctors," another daily talk show that averages 2.3 million viewers per day. After watch-

ing two episodes of each program, they hypothesized that only half of the claims made on the shows could be supported with actual evidence. They also calculated that they

cent of the 445 recommendations were about "general medical advice," 9

Good or so-so evidence contradicted 11 percent of the

p e rcent claims made on "Dr. Oz" and

were aboutdietand 8 percent were about weight loss. (0ther categories included exercise, alternative therapies and cosmetics.) Among all of these recommendations, the researchers randomly selected 80 from

would need to review 158 specific recommendations to see each show and looked to see benefit was discussed in fewwhether their hypothesis was what evidence, if any, could er than 20 percent of cases, correct. b ack them up . T w o t e a m possible harms or side effects Lucky for them, the shows members conducted indepen- came up less than 10 percent are rife w it h r ecommenda- dent searches, spending up to of the time, and potential contions — 12 in a typical episode an hour on each one. "In an flicts of interest were menof "The Dr. Oz Show" and ll in attempt to be as fair as possi- tioned in less than 1 percent of an episode of "The Doctors." ble" to the shows, they wrote, cases. like: "I've got the No. I miracle So members ofthe research they "used a relatively broad Neither Oz nor the team behind "The Doctors" could be in a bottle to burn your fat. It's team watched 40 episodes of definition of support." raspberry ketones." each show, which were ranAnd yet only 21 percent of reached for comment about "I don't get why you need domly selected among all the the recommendations on "The the study's conclusions. to say this stuff, because you episodes that aired in the first Dr. Oz Show" could be supThe whole exercise left the know it's not true," Sen. Claire five months of 2013. ported by what the research- researchers to ponder "whethMcCaskill, D-Mo., said during They found that 32 per- ers considered "believable" er we should expect medical the hearing. cent of the 479 recommen- evidence. Another 11 percent talk shows to provide more A large group of physicians, dations made on "The Dr. were supported by "somewhat than entertainment." p harmacists and o t her r e - Oz Show," either by the host believable" evidence. searchers from Canada had or his guests, fell under the The r e commendations 541-388-0262 their own questions about heading of "general medical made on "The Doctors" were programs like "The Dr. Oz advice." Another 25 percentof more credible— 32.5 percent Show." So they set out to see the claims were about diet (i.e., were supported by "believwhether the "skepticism and foods that boost the immune able" evidence and another Affordable a complete criticism from medical profes- system) and 18 percent were 20 percent were backed by Veterinary Care for Cats & Dogs "somewhat believable" evisionals" was warranted. about weight loss. s197 A-1 N. Hwy 97 (next to petco) On "The Doctors," 66 per- dence, the researchers found. The Canadians focused on

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SCIENCE

1-year stay on International SpaceStation will allow astronauts to expandenvelope •Pl64~94c8td ~O' Rc& By Marcia Dunn

someday, the I nternational The Associated Press Space Station is really a great CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. platform to learn much more — The two men assigned to about having people live and a one-year spaceflight said work in space for longer duraThursday that their upcoming tions. It's dose to the Earth, and mission will allow the world to it's a great orbiting facility." push deeper into space. Kelly and Kornienko have NASA astronaut Scott Kel- been training for this mission ly and Russian cosmonaut since their selection two years Mikhail Kornienko will rocket ago. Both already have spent into orbit from Kazakhstan in a half-year aboard the orbiting March and move into the Inlab, on separate flights, and ternational Space Station for have been advised by previous an entire year. For NASA, it yearlongspace fliers to "pace willrepresent a space endur- yourself." ance record; for Russia, it will The 50-year-old Kelly, a forfall two months shy of its world mer Navy fighter pilot, said his record. goals are the same as they are At a news conference Thurs- every time he flies in space: day at UNESCO headquarters "No one gets hurt, we don't in Paris, Kelly and Kornienko break anything and we leave as said they anticipate many scientific gains from their mis-

friends." Kelly noted that his f i rst

spaceflight, back in 1999, lasted eight days. At the time, it

"seemed like that was a long time." His second flight, also on a space shuttle, lasted 13 days, and his space station visit in

2010 lasted 159 days. "They're getting longer," he told reporters. "I think if I fly again, it just goes on forever and I never come home."

Kornienko, 54, a former Soviet paratrooper, said the support of his family has helped him deal with the preparations and the flight itself. He had exciting personal news for those tuning in: "You can congratulate me. I am becommg grandpa.

sion. Researchers need to know

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A4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

ROLEX

Gordon Welters /The New York Times

People watch as a group who call themselves the Sparifankerl Pass, Bavarian dialect for "Devil"s

Group," re-create the tradition of parading through Marienplatz to scare awayevil spirits in Munich this month. With cultural homogenization spreading across an increasingly unified Europe and concerns festering about the dilution of local ways, a new generation is bringing back the customs that defined their childhoods.

Krampus

not with lot of commercialization, like from Hollywood Continued fromA1 films." A decade ago, Bierbaumer, Local Krampus clubs will 46, persuaded Munich author- spend about $2,200 to $3,000 ities to stage an old-fashioned eachyear to acquire costumes, Krampuslauf: a spectacle in made only from local materiwhich the fearsome season- als found in the Alps. Masks al beasts run through rows are carved from lime, Swiss of adorned wooden huts at pine or alder wood. Skins the Bavarian capital's oldest come from farm animals such holiday market. He saw it as as sheep or goats, although no a way to ensure that future one turns away a Krampus generationswould share his wearing wild boar. childhood ritual, which takes The dress code is not the place between lateNovember only rule that the 400 creaand Dec. 23. At that point,

similar beasts, known as Perchta, take over the fun until

Epiphany. The M u nich

K r a mpu-

slauf celebrates the history

of the custom, including the artistry of the hand-carved, hand-painted masks. Advo-

cates of the ritual say reviving it i s i m portant because

American Christmas customs, which they see as more commercialized, have made their

way into the German holiday. Only old-fashioned Krampus, mixed with their cousins, the Perchta, are allowed

to participate in the Munich

500-year-old custom.

A Krampuslauf can easily get out of hand. The police in the Bavarian town of Im-

menstadtare searching for a Krampus with light-colored fur and a long bearded mask who whipped a 19-year-old duringa parade there in early December, while those in Kuf-

stein, Austria, canceled the annual event after removing

illegal fireworks from several participants. As men and women covered

in furs, their masks tucked bet ures must abide by w h en neath their arms — no masks rushing nearly a mile through are allowedbefore or afterthe the Christkindlmarkt crowds. run — made their way to the T he devilish e n forcers o f Munich run's starting point on good behavior are themselves a recent Sunday, the poundbound to uphold a strictly en- ing of drums and clanging of forced decorum, including the cowbells echoed off the walls cardinalrules ofthe modern, of narrow back streets. Edelurban Krampus: No drinking! traudt Danzing and her husNo hitting! Be nice! band, Kurt, looked on. "This is a pagan tradition Gabriele Papke, who helps o rganize M unich's m a i n that belongs in the village," Christkindlmarkt, o n the said Edeltraudt D anzing, Marienplatz square before shaking her head at the specthe neo-Gothic turrets of the tacle in the Bavarian capital. Neues Rathaus, stresses the "I am glad my grandchildren importance of crowd-friendly a ren't here, they would b e and safe events. Organizers estimate that this year's hol-

terrified."

Once the run began, some iday market attracted some children ducked behind their 1.7 million people in its first parents' legs as the horned mas. To join the run, they must two weeks alone, drawn by b easts w oun d t h ei r w a y be dressed in wooden masks its hot mulled wine, heart- through the crowds, pulling with horns and goat or sheep shaped gingerbread cookies boys' caps down over their pelts, and carry bells and and roasted candied almonds eyes, or ruffling claws through switches — though only for in the first two weeks of this women's hair. One Krampus year's holiday market. show. made a game of pulling ponyUpholding the s easonal Its Krampaus clubs are tails loose, looping the hairritual is of "absolute impor- hand-selected, based in equal bands over his long, curved tance,"said Gunter Tschinder measure on the a r tistry of horns in a teasing game of from Lavanttal in A u stria's their costumes and their clean Krampus ringtoss. Carinthia region. reputations. But other children grew "This is a t r a dition that "People in M u n ich d on't bold as each Krampus or our great-grandparents were know what to expect from the Perchtaromped past,darting already doing that must be Krampus," said Papke, and out to tug at their fur, reveling handed down to the next that is especially true of the in the thrill of a roar or the generation," said Tschinder, thousands of tourists from threat of a tap from a switch. Eight-year-old Ma r l ene a member of th e Hofleiner across the globe who descend Moorteufel from Carinthia, on the market. This year, a Michl insisted that she was not one of 27 groups that partic- special event the day before afraid— thisyear,anyway. "Last year was a lot more ipated in Munich this year. the run allowed children to "But properly handed down, meet the people behind the scary," she said. "This year, I as it was 40, 50, 60 years ago, masks and learn about the knew what was coming." runs, held on the second and third Sundays before Christ-

Attorneys Continued fromA1 Fischer, who i s m a r r i ed with one child, is the first of

up to 16 attorneys accepted into the program, which is funded by the state's judicial system, the South Dakota Bar

OYS TE R P E R P E T U A L

G M T - M A S T E R 11

Association and the counties.

It offers an annual subsidy of $12,000 — or 90 percent of the

- j i ig: —-

cost of a year at the University

of South Dakota Law School — to live and practice in rural communities.

The 30-year-old left his job at a Minneapolis nonprof-

Regina Garcia Cano/The Associated Press

The new Swier Law Firm is nestled between businesses in Corsica, South Dakota, a rural town of 600. A program in South Dakota

is helping to lure attorneys from bigcities to sparsely populated his new law office in Corsica, areas. South Dakota, about 25 miles it this past spring to work at

from his hometown of Park-

ston. He's the only full-time

side the Atlanta area. And even in New York with nearly

as prosecutors or court-ap-

pointed defenders. 170,000 attorneys, more than Jim Silkenat, immediate in a county of about 3,000 60 percent concentrate in New past president of the American Bar Association, said people, almost 100 miles away York City. from the nearest metro area. South Dakota Supreme South Dakota has "led the "Being in a small town, of Court Chief Justice David Gil- way" in its effort to attract rucourse you have to do a little bertson, a former small-town ral attorneys, but some other bit of everything — crimi- lawyer himself, said such a states are starting to take simnal law, land deals, business disparity threatens the legal ilar steps. deals, estate planning, the system. Nebraska next year will "You can have the court- begin repaying loans for law whole range of stuff really," Fischer said. house doors wide open, you school graduates who commit Four urban areas in South can have the judge sitting in to serving at least three years D akota have65 percent ofthe the courthouse, but without in u n derserved c o mmunistate's lawyers and rural resi- lawyers to represent the cli- ties in the state. The state bar dents sometimes have to drive ents, nothing is going to hap- also is teaming with two law nearly 100 miles for legal ad- pen, or very little," Gilbertson schools to offer summer clerkvice. But South Dakota isn't the said. "They make the whole ships at rural firms. only state struggling with at- system work." And Legal Aid of Arkansas tractinglawyers to rural areas. In the sparsely populated recently received a $15,000 I n Nebraska, 12 of t h e state, cash-strapped commu- grant from the American Bar state's 93 counties have no nities have to hire lawyers Association to fund fellowpracticing attorney. Only from nearby towns to take ships for newly admitted lawabout 30percent of Georgia's part in board and commission yers who serve in rural areas attorneys can be found out- meetings, as well as to serve for one year. attorney in the town of 600 and one of just two full-time

F INE JE W E L E R S Old Mill District 360 SW Powerhouse Drive Bend, OR 97702 541-389-6655

R OLEX e OYS T E R

P E R P E T U A L A N D G M T - M A S T E R 1 1 AR E T R A D E M A R K S .


MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014•THE BULLETIN

BRIEFING

Redmondhomes hit with bullets Shots were fired Friday night near Umatilla Park in Redmond, and two homes werestruck by bullets. Police received several calls about shots being fired shortly before 8:30 p.m. andthat a vehicle fled the area at a high rate of speed, according to a news release Saturday night from RedmondPolice. One caller said about a dozen shots were fired. As officers were investigating and found evidence at SWUmatilla Avenue and30th Street, a homeowner onSW MeadowLanecalledto report that a bullet had come through the window and landed onthe kitchen floor. Thehome is about 900 yards southeast of where the shots were reportedly fired. Police believe this is related to the park incident but confirmation is pending ballistic testing. Officers returned to Umatilla Park during daylight Saturday anda homeowner on SW28th Street reported finding a bullet inside their home Saturday morning, police said. Police are asking the public's help in identifying a vehicle speeding away from the area about 8:24 p.m. Friday. It was last seenturning

Awetwee en, By Ted Shorack

Deschutes County Sheriff's

The Bulletin

Office Sgt. Nathan Garibay.

Rain pummeled Central Oregon on Saturday but eased up on Sunday as some areas prepared for possible flooding along streams and creeks. The Sisters area was one of

stream gauges, but Whychus Creek is holding steady or dropping," said Garibay, who is also the county's emergency services manager.

the hardest hit in Deschutes

County and received nearly 4 inches of rain over the weekend, according to the National

Weather Service. Although some were concerned Whychus Creek might rise and cause minor flooding, the water had subsided by Sunday evening and no property damage had been reported, according to the

A5

u t no maor 00 in O'P ~-

-

al

"We're still watching the

tcttrrl

Deschutes County and the

From left, Jessica Pelz walks her dog with her mother, Cindi Steward, of Lakeview, and her husband, Zach, of Port-

city of Sisters made sand and sandbags available at

land, around a large rain

Sisters City Hall for residents to use to ward off pos-

puddle on the river trail in the Old Mill District.

sible flooding. Tumalo Creek was at a

higher-than-usual water level Sunday as well, Garibay said,

Meg Rouesoe The Bulletin

especially at the confluence with the Deschutes River northwest of Bend.

SeeWeather/A6

on swais on' erae rOm m i

north onto SW 27th

Street from Umatilla Avenue. Anyone with information should contact Deschutes County dispatch at 541-693-6911 or go to the Redmond Police Department Facebookpage(https:// www.facebook.com/ RedmondPolicet!/RedmondPolice) to share information. — Bulletin staffrepoft

CIVIC CALENDAR TODAY

Bend Planning COmmiSSiOn —The commission meets at 5:30 p.m. in City Council Chambers, 710 NW Wall St., Bend. Work session on affordable housing and public hearing on water overlayzone development proposal.

Meg Rouceoe/The Bulletin

From left, brothers Paxton Harris, 3, Parker Harris, 6, and Peyton Harris, 5, all of Bend, talk with Santa before getting their photos taken at SantaLand in the Old Mill District on Sunday.

By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

Contact:541-383-0354, newe©bendbulletin.com. In emailo, please write Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication ie noon Thursday.

EVENT

CALENDAR TODAY STORYTIMES— TRAIN MAN: ALLABOARD: All ages, meet"Train Man" Mike and his toy trains; 10 a.m.-8 p.m., with breaks from 1-2 p.m. and 5-6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7050. SANTALANDATTHE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Takea photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost for take-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand,330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. "SORDID LIVES": Presented by the LGBT Stars and Rainbows; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Volcanic

It was a busy day for Santa Claus on Sunday at the Old Mill District

during the last weekend of

"This is so nice because they have the toys. Waiting in line isso hard, especially with three boys that are so little and close together."

SantaLand. The wait to see Santa

books for children to — Julie Miller-Harris, who brought her sons, peruse while waiting for Paxton, Parker and Peyton, to visit Santa Claus their picture to be taken. "This is so nice because

and take a picture with him was up to three hours long in the afternoon, but

eager kids and parents could go shopping or get

go depending on the time of day. Knight and volun-

something to eat instead of

teers sent text messages to

waiting in line.

parents when it was about

A'Leah Knight, the event planner for SantaLand,

10 minutes away from their children's turn.

said the rush can come and

Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. ATOWER CHRISTMAS: A showcase of traditional stories, dances and songs withatheme of "Holiday Cheer Through The Years"; $12 plus fees, $8 for children12 and younger; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. "THESANTALAND DIARIES":A performance of the one-man, one-act play based on aDavid Sedaris essay; $12 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. SARA JANESCOUTEN AND JACK DWYER: $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com

The event, held inside

or 541-323-1881. TUESDAY SANTALANDATTHE

SantaLand experience

includes toys for children to play with and a gift wrapping station on select weekends. The Deschutes Public Library donated

OLD MILL DISTRICT: Take a photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joy and more; free admission, additional cost fortake-home photos, $5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 54 I-312-0131. THE12 BANDSOF CHRISTMAS:Featuring Justin Lavik, Moon Room, Redwood Son, The Rum and theSea and more; noon-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT: Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry'sand

Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. WEDNESDAY

THE COMMUNITY CHRISTMASEVE SERVICE:Featuring carols and guest performances with Bob Shaw, Pete Kelley and Justin Lavik; $6, free for children 11 andyounger; 2, 4, and 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. FRIDAY JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: The Oregon Piano Summit II, with Gordon Lee, Tom Grant and more; $39 plus fees; 8 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel,10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend;

they have the toys," said the former Orvis building Julie Miller-Harris, of at the Old Mill, began Nov. Bend, who brought her 28. Santa Claus came in sons to take a picture with on an AirLink helicopter Santa. "Waiting in line is landing at Les Schwab so hard, especially with Amphitheater instead of three boys that are so little sleigh and reindeer. The and close together."

www.jazzattheoxford. com or 541-382-8436. THE MORTIFIED SESSIONS:Musicians, writers, actors and more expressthemselves; free; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com, derek© volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. SATURDAY FREEZEYOURFANNY

WALK/RUN/SWIM: A family fun run to benefit MountainStar Madras, witha 3-mile runl walk, an 8-mile run or a3-mile run/500-yard swim biathlon; $20, registration requested, free for children12 and younger; registration at 8:30 a.m., 8-mile run starts at 9 a.m., 3-mile run/walk and biathlon start at 9:30 a.m.; Madras

Aquatic Center, 1195 SE Kemper Way; www. macaquati c.com/events or 541-475-2537. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRIGT: Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Ben & Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDSCenter; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben & Jerry's,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: The Oregon Piano Summit II, with Gordon Lee, Tom Grant and more; $39 plus fees; 5 and 8:15 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NWMinnesota Ave., Bend; www. jazzattheoxford.com or 541-382-8436. ELVIS "NEVER FORGOTTEN"TOUR: Award-winning tribute artist Clint Ingbretson performs Elvis Presley

Parker Harris, 6, Peyton Harris, 5, and Paxton Harris, 3, arrived with Miller-Harris at 11 a.m. and

went to get lunch while waiting for a picture. The SantaLand event

at the Old Mill has been held for eight years. A local "celebrity" — known throughout the community — plays Santa Claus for the children. The photo-

graphs are taken by Karen Cammack, who has been

the photographer of the event for three years. SeeSantaLand/A6

8-3 Organ Group; $39 plus fees; 4 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheOxford. com or 541-382-8436. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring Mel Brown's 8-3 Organ Group; $39 plus fees; 7 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford. com or 541-382-8436. SISTERSOLD-TIME RADIO SHOW:Featuring SUNDAY CARRIAGERIDES IN THE two scripted Christmas radio shows performed OLD MILL DISTRICT: by the Sisters Old-Time Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, located between Classic Radio Experience group; donations Ben & Jerry'5 and accepted; 7-9 p.m.; The Francesca's; proceeds Belfry, 302 E Main Ave.; benefit the KIDSCenter. www belfryevents com or weather dependent; 541-815-9122. donations accepted; 2-5 Contact:54f -383-0351, p.m.; Ben & Jerry's, 680 communitylifeObendbulleiin.com SW Powerhouse Drive, or "Submit an Event" online at Bend; 541-312-0131. www.bendbulletin.com. Entries JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: must be submitted at least 10 days before publication. Featuring Mel Brown's songs;$22-$54 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. JAZZ ATJOE'S, VOL.50: Featuring saxophonists David Evans, Tim Willcox, Jay Thomas andTravis Ranney; SOLDOUT;7 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.jazzatjoes. com or 541-389-0803.


A6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

OREGON NEWS

eaVerS IU ci I OI'I1lcl Stu e tires are I e e SO IS I'OU osing popuarity By Samantha Clark

The Associated Press

Santa Cruz (Calif) Sentinel

LOS GATOS,

C a l if.

Three punishing years of drought have parched California streams, rivers and

The state Department of

(A) study calculates

Transportationhas released a report showing only 4 per-

it will cost more than

cent of registered vehicles in

Oregon were equipped with

wetlands. O ne animal has th e p o -

studded tires in 2014. That's down from 16 percent at the

tential to restore these dry landscapes.

turn of the century. The report, however, found

W ith

t he ir

indu s t r i -

that the number of

al-strength buck teeth and flat tails, beavers and their dams offer a defense against drought. The rodents are known as ecosystem engi-

$44 million to repair damage from studded tires to Oregon roads between 2012 and 2022.

a x l es

on which studded tires are placed upon has grown. Be- e ducated about w hat t h e fore, many c ar s

i n stalled studded tires can do to the

studded tires on just one axle roads and buy them a lot instead of both. The new less," he said. report indicates that users The decline in studded these days have all tires re- tire usage is likely due to the placed instead of just the rear increasing popularity of allor just the front axles. wheel and four-wheel drive Oregon allows studs from vehicles in Oregon, as well

neers. And they once populat-

ed most of California until fur traders nearly wiped them out in the 19th century,

"This state has lost more

of its wetlands than all other states, and beavers can re-

Nov. 1 through March 31, although most transportation

build those wetlands," said

officials would prefer driv-

snow tires. "The quality of product

Rick Lanman of the Institute

ers to use all-weather tires or

in studless tires is just so

for Historical Ecology in Los

chains when it snows. They much better," M cCallister say studded tires cause mil- said. "They're pretty popular lions of dollars of damage to now." highways andbridge decks. ODOT also encourages Bernie McCallister, who drivers to consider using

Altos. "Knowing that it is na-

Noah Berger/Associated Pressfile photo

tive should help guide resto-

A member of a beaver family that created tension in Martinez, California, several years ago because a ration efforts." dam and lodge they built posed a flood threat to the city. Now, with the state in the midst of a threeBeaver dams benefit the year drought, scientists say beavers and their dam-making abilities can help restore streams, rivers e nvironment i n w a y s t h a t and wetlands. "There's a growing interest in using beaver as a habitat restoration tool," said Michael humans can't easily copy. Pollock, an ecosystem analyst with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle. They turn land into a sponge "They create good wetland habitat much more cheaply than other restoration methods.

for water. Their gnawing and nesting promotes richer soil proving imperiled fish hab-

manager for the department. L undquist, director of t he "We are investigating how Occidental Arts and Ecology

itat. Their dams raise water

anic and Atmospheric Ad-

beaver promote habitat and

tables, nourishing shrubbery

ministration in Seattle. "They

"Most of his postings and rants are on the Instagram

Continued fromA1 account, and what we're seeWhat e x actly p u shed ing from this right now is anBrinsley to fatally shoot two ger against the government," police offi cers,before shoot- said Robert Boyce, the police ing himself, is not clear. But department's chief of detecby Sunday evening, several tives, at a news conference things had become obvious. Sunday. He added that one He had an extensive histo- post showed a burning flag, ry with police, having been and in others Brinsley talkarrested 20 times — mainly ed of the anger he felt toward for petty crimes like steal- the police. There were, Boyce ing condoms from a Rite Aid said, "other postings as well, drugstore in Ohio and firing a of self -despair, of anger at stolen gun near a public street himself and where his life is in Georgia. right now." Brinsley had also suffered No members of his famfrom mental problems. Rel- ily claimed him or spoke of atives told the police that he him with fondness. Brinsley had been taking medication bounced from family home at one point, and when he was to family home growing up, asked during an August 2011 attending high school in New court hearing if he had ever Jersey, butonly reaching the been a patient in a mental in- 10th grade. A sister in Atlanstitution or under the care of ta, Nawaal Brinsley, said that a psychiatrist or psychologist, she had not seen him in two he said yes. He had also tried years. Another sister who had to hang himself a year ago, lived in the Bronx could not the police said. be reached, butthe police had By this year, Brinsley had been called to a dispute with become isolated. He was es- Brinsley at her home in 2011. tranged from his family. His Brinsley's mother, who lives on-again, off-again relation- in Brooklyn, told the police ship with Shaneka Thomp- that she feared her son and son, 29, who is employed by had not seen him in a month. the Maryland Department She said that "he had a very of Welfare and serves in the troubled childhood and was Air Force Reserves, was off often violent," Boyce said. again. By Saturday, he had Brinsley was so transient seized on the deaths at the that the police did not have a hands of policeofficers of good address for him. That Eric Garner in Staten Island made tracing his movements and Michael Brown in Fergu- difficult, even as his disinteson, Missouri, focusing all his gration on social media was rage against the authorities. there for anyone to see. But In his short life, during which his movements Saturday beBrinsley failed to finish high came clearer Sunday. school, hold a steady job, or, About 5:30 a.m. Saturday, seemingly, to commit even the Brinsley arrived at the apartsmallest crime without being ment complex of Thompson, caught, thoughts of revenge who lives in Owings Mills, seemed to be the only thing Maryland, just n orthwest giving him a purpose. of Baltimore. The two had

known each other for about a year. Brinsley made it into

• Honesta Fair • No iobTooSmall •State-of-the-Art Computer Diagnostics

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newspaper he's certainly no-

The study calculates it will cost more than $44 million

counties, including t hose

Continued fromA5

some sections of the mountain resort would need a day

in the Bay Area and Santa Cruz, according to a recent

paper proving that beavers are native in nearly all of California.

The beaver p opulation grew from less than a thousand t o

2 0 ,000 b y 1 9 5 0.

No on e k n ow s t o day's population. A beaver family can improve damaged land at less cost, but restoration isn't as simple as moving in beavers. They can inflict serious damage on culverts and farmland and flood homes,

The Fish and Wildlife Department is experimenting with artificial beaver dams

to avoid moving the animals and the damage they can cause.

I n s tagram. O n e

shoes, spattered in blood. The other showed his pistol. "I'm

Putting Wings On Pigs Today They Take 1 Of Ours...... Let's Take 2 of Theirs .Shoot-

ThePolice," he wrote. At 12:07 p.m., B r insley

dropped the phone, effectively disappearing. main anonymous to maintain The phone kept pinging, his privacy. "I heard him run though, and Baltimore Counout the door. She was yelling ty police contacted the police for help, banging, yelling 'help in Brooklyn. At 2:10 p.m., me, help me.'" Baltimore County authorities The Baltimore police ar- reached the 70th precinct, rivedabout 5:50 a.m. Thomp- near where the signal had son then told Baltimore Coun- been detected, and faxed over ty police that Brinsley had a "wanted" poster of Brinsley. shot her in the stomach and Only at 2:45 p.m. did that taken her cellphone, leaving information circulate widely his phone behind. throughout the Police DeAs Brinsley made his way partment. Five minutes latto the Bolt Bus station in Bal- er, the police said, Baltimore timore, he called Thompson's County sent t h e w a r n ing mother from her daughter's about Brinsley by Teletype to phone,about 6:05 a.m. He told the real-time crime center at her that he shot her daughter New York Police Department by accident and thathehoped Headquarters. me, you shot me!" said the neighbor, who wanted to re-

But time had run out. Brins-

ley had made his way to Bedford-Stuyvesant. He stopped two men on a street corner. He asked them what gang they belonged to. He urged them to follow him on Instagram. Then he said they should

bound on Interstate 95. Brins-

ley was on the bus to New York. While on the bus, Brins-

watch what he did next. That was when Brinsley ley kept calling Thompson's walked past the patrol car m other, trying t o f i n d o u t where Officers Wenjian Liu and Rafael Ramos sat, near Thompson's condition.

Meanwhile, Baltimore po- Myrtle and Tompkins Avelice tracked his progress. By nues. Brinsley crossed the 10:49 a.m., Brinsley was in street and approached the car New York. The phone let out from behind. He fired four a signal near 43rd Street and shots, killing both men. He Eighth Avenue. A video cam- fled to a nearby subway staera caught him slipping into tion, where he shot himself. '

~

tween 2012 and 2022.

and a low of 34 degrees.

showed a leg of his camouflage pants and his greenish

ing Thompson's cellphone. It soon pinged, moving north-

"Customers are now more

Weatber

p osts t o

that Thompson survived. She dld. By 6:30 a.m., the Baltimore County police started track-

studs, particularly in the past to repair damage from studfive years. ded tiresto Or egon roads be-

the 1920s and 1940s in 58

Once in Brooklyn, he used Thompson's phone to make

ment easily ,because he had a key. Thompson called her mother, complaining about Brinsley being there. Thompson's mother overheard the two arguing. The phone went dead. A neighbor heard a woman scream, and a pop. "She was yelling, 'You shot

a l t ernatives,

such as chains.

,

Mt. Bachelor reported that

"At this point, we're not

expecting (flooding); it's just for water to "drain" from the one of those things we want snow. They said the recent to make sure we keep an eye weather could make the snow on," he said. "a bit funky on Monday," acSome areas near Bend

cording to the resort website,

received nearly 2 inches of except in areas that were gorainfall over the weekend, ing to be groomed overnight. while the eastern slope of the Temperatures on the mounCascadeMountains received tain were expected to drop between 5 and 7 inches of Sunday night and provide a precipitation. few inches of new snow. On Sunday, the Oregon The rain eased up on SunDepartment of T ranspor- day, just in time for the artation sent out alerts about rival of winter at 3:03 p.m. possible delays on U.S. High- Pacific Time. Bend had its way 126 east of Springfield least amount of daylight due to high water. Sunday, the winter solstice, The weather service is but beginning today it picks forecasting a 20 percent up a second of daylight, and chance of rain in Central Or- progressively more each day. egon today and later tonight, — Reporter 541-617-7820 with a high of 46 degrees tshorack@bendbulletin.com

SantaLand

residents in January. "Essentially,

Sa n t a Land

Continued fromA5 money goes all over locally," On Sunday a f ternoon, said Knight. "It's really cool." Santa was played by Zak SantaLand finishes up on Boone, associatedirector of Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Deschutes Land Trust. Each Carolers from the Trinity Lucelebrity Santa spends two theran High School concert hours talking with and pos- choirarescheduled toperform ing for photographs with the at the Old Mill at 5 p.m. today. processionofchildren. Complimentary carriage rides To m a i ntain

c o n t inuity, will continue at the district

Knight said she makes sure shopping area from 2 to 5 p.m. all the actors playing Santa until Dec. 28. look close to exactly the same.

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbullettn.com

Their excuse for leaving for a moment after a shift: They have to "check on their rein-

deer on the roof." Volunteers dressed as elves

Little ad

this year were from the Bend

BIG savings!

High School choir. Every two years, the volunteers are from a different local school. The

organizers donate to the students' program or department at their school.

Members of a local chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, a nonprofit made up of women of all ages, held their first gift wrapping

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25% to 45/o

event at the Old Mill this year.

Donations from people getting presents wrapped went to the Ronald McDonald House, a

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group that is drafting beaver policy recommendations. California called on beavers to prevent erosion from

the N train.

Thompson's third-floor apart-

Iardwoodllutlet. •

studded t ir e

Center's Water I nstitute, a

water conservation through create good wetland habitat their habitat manipulation. lize eroding banks, and add much more cheaply than oth- We are also creating pubhabitat for birds and deer. er restoration methods." lic and s cientific i n forma"Beaver ponds are benefi- tion about the beaver, its They also help the endangered California red-legged cial because they also create ecological role and current frog. a lot of wetland that provide r egulations and l aws a f B ecause beavers ar e s o a lot of food for fish," Pollock fecting its management and good at recharging ground sald. conservation." water, they can make streams Beavers can also help reO ther arid states in t h e flow when they would other- verse the rising temperatures West have comprehensive wise run dry such as during o f water, which can h a r m policies for managing beathe summer months. fish.The deep pools created vers. California allows beaAfter beavers move to by their dams have cooler ver to be hunted or moved a new area, at night, they water at the bottom. and killed if they cause trou"With a range of tempera- ble. Utah has a beaver mandrag a tree across a shallow stream to start a dam. They ture conditions, fish are able agement plan, and New Mexcarry rocks and mud with to find the temperature that ico recently mandated that their paws and branches with is ideal for them at a given its Fish and Wildlife come up their big incisors. time," Pollock said. with a plan too. Water in t h ese beaver The C a l ifornia D e p artOregon, Washington and ponds would otherwise flow ment of Fish and Wildlife is Idaho also have relocation away. So it's no surprise that starting to embrace the bea- programs. " It would be great if w e thirsty Western states are ver, ashift beaver advocates turning to the beavers with applaud. could recognize the benefit "Our effort now is to show of the beaver and to resolve open arms. "There's a growing interest its many sides — sides that conflict nonlethally and manin using beaver as a habitat have always existed," said age them to continue receivrestoration tool," said Michael Kevin Shaffer, a f isheries ing those benefits," said Kate alongside streams that stabi-

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MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014• THE BULLETIN

A7

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT TV TOQAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

Ex orin t e ar si eo a i ita uture TV SPOTLIGHT

commentary on events and media coverage of them.

"Black Mirror" 9:30 p.m.Thursday, Audience New Yortz Times News Service

Picture, if you will, a world

where our digital devices seem eerily alive; where technology lets us block unwanted people not only from our social media

QFX

streams but from our eyes and

ears; and where the maladroit can receive stealthy, real-time pickup and dating advice from debonaircoaches resembling the "Mad Men" star Jon Hamm.

'

Chris Pizzello I rhe Associated Press

This is the very near future imagined by "Black Mirror," the British anthology drama that mines cautionary, "Twilight Zone"-style narratives from our modern-day obsessions with gadgetry and the Internet, and which returns to American television Thursday

Jon Hamm stars in the Christmas special of "Black Mirror," a British anthology drama about our obsession with gadgetry and the Internet.

maybe further than we want."

As Charlie Brooker, the

"Black Mi r r o r," creator of "Black Mirror," exWhile which is shown on Channel 4 plained, what seems to unite

in Britain, is often skeptical of for a holiday-themed special phenomena that spread rapcalled "White Christmas." idly and unpredictably, it has Beneath that seemingly also benefited from virality. cheerful title lurks an ambigThe series, which had its uous premise that begins with first American showings on Hamm and Rafe Spall as men the satellite broadcast serwho find themselves in a cabin vice DirecTV (which will also

tional Anthem," focused on

a kidnapping plot in which the captor of a royal family member said he would release Set," in 2008, which imagined her only if the prime minister a zombie apocalypse taking (Kinnear) performed an act of place around the reality series bestiality on live television. "Big Brother." " Often wit h ' B l ack M i r For a follow-up, Brooker ror,' the ideas really make said he wanted to try his ver- me laugh," said Brooker, who sion of a series like Rod Ser- wrote that episode. "That ling's "Twilight Zone," which probably doesn't come across He also wrote a hit British horror mini-series, "Dead

Etm '"

By DaveItzkoff

people these days is the clumsy way we adapt to new tech-

to star in the "Black Mirror"

the garb of traditional science fiction.

special, Hamm said he did not have to worry about when or if

The logical 21st-century

it would reach American audiAs he has learned from his

to "deliberately unnerve the viewers" rather t han s cold them. "Most dramas tend to reassure the viewer, I think," he

experiences on "Mad Men," Hamm said, "No one cares about ratings anymore." "The stigma of not being on network television, which was

said. "Even crime procedurals arereall y about the good guy catching the bad guy."

the gold standard forever, is

Dear Abby:I am a soldier in Afdo. I have less than a year to figure ghanistan who is single with few friends back home know how you things out, and it's starting to stress friends, if you would even call them feel. They are not mind readers. You me. Please give me some advice. I that. We work 24/7. No days off, say you heard from them in the early need a friend. no breaks. It's not an easy life. You months of your deployment. Buthave — Lost In Texas would not believe how nice it is to you reached out to them recently? If Dear Lost:You not only need a receive a message from family or you haven't ,they may assume you friend, you also need a counselor to friends. are being kept so busy help you find direction. If there isn't Don't ge t me that you at te unable one at yourschool,considerdiscusswrong, I have a loving to stay in touch with ing this with a career counselor at DEAR family who support them. The stnest way a nearby university or community ABBY me and everything to get what you need college. Some courses in business LR'~ is to comm unicate administration would be valuable I do. When I first got here, I'd get a mes— and that applies to foryou soyou canlearnthenuts and sage fromthem atleast once aweek more situations inlifethanthis one. bolts about running a business and But now that I am seven months into Dear Abby:I am a senior in high avoid common mistakes that might a 12-month deployment, it has been school in Texas. Everyone has de- causeyours to fail. almost two months since I have got- cided which college they want to go Some classes in commercial ten anything. to and what they want to be. I have cooking would also be helpful. If Now, I know if I reach out and no clue. It is frustrating, because there isn't atrade school nearbythat send a message — which I have when adults ask what my plans for offers them, consider working for a done — I'll get replies, but am I the future are and I say I don't know, year or two in the restaurant induswrong for not wanting to have to do they look at me like I'm stupid. try to see how it functions. Many that? Is it wrong to wish that I could I feel 18 years isn't long enough to of the best chefs in the world startcome in, relax, and find a message figure all that out. I am an introvert, ed out that way, and you will learn waiting for me? I know they love and I would really like to open up a quiddy if this is something you realcute little cafe in New York when I am older. But every time I tell some-

ly want to pursue. P.S. Being an introvert doesn't

ten. It would be comforting to know one this is what I'd like to do, they someone is thinking about me. Any ask how I'm goingto make money at day now could be my last. it. They're right — I can't make a liv— Deployed Soldier ing off a coffee shop, especially with Dear Deployed Soldier:Because the high cost of living in New York. I'm lost and don't know what to you're feeling lonely and forgotten,

have to stop you, if you partner with someone who's a people person to

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY,

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

ity soars. You also seem to develop your intuitive ability. You seem to know which direction to go in situations that previously would have had you debating the pros and cons. The unexpected occurs with your domestic life. With so much going on, you'll want to simplify your life where

you can. If youare

are likely to meet

more to you.You

* Difficult

a special person

you the art of "schmoozing." — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

** * * You are likely to gain a broader perspective about how to approach a key By Jacqueline Bitrar person. Thanks to others' feedback, you will see the transformation that could powerofhaving aone-on-one discussion. be possible. You might want to make an You will be able to head in whichever adjustment to your schedule. Tonight: direction you choose as a result. Tonight: Squeeze in a favorite stressbuster. Make it a duo.

CANCER (June21-July22)

Stsrsshowthekind single someone ** * * * D efer to others whom you feel of ttsy yos'll hsys yo u meet In your might know more than you do. By recog** * * * D ynamic daily routine could nizing their expertise and demonstrating ** * * Positive co m e to mean a lot youropenness,youwillbeseenasateam

*** Average ** So-so

workthe front of the shop and teach

player. An older relative or friend could surprise you and force you to adjust your plans. Tonight: Accept an offer.

after spring 2015. LEO (July23-Aug. 22) Ifyou are attached, thetwo ofyou often love to talk about the future. Together, you ** * * You might venture into a new might opt to try out a different lifestyle. project only to feel as though you are A fellow CAPRICORN will be less flexible stuck in quicksand. Brainstorm with a than you are. trusted friend to find a more solid approach. Someone could surprise you with ARIES (March21-April 19) a unique idea. Areyouup for trying it out? ** * You could be overly aware of your Tonight: Weigh the pros and cons. image andhowaboss seesyou. You might want to consider making an alterVIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ation. Weigh the pros and cons before ** * * * Y our creativity could take you you decide to go ahead. Listen carefully down a new path where you feel more to your inner voice, then apply it appropri- centered and energized. Be aware of the ately. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. mixed signalsyouaresending.Someone seems to be misreading your intention beTAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * Detachment will help you see cause ofyourword choice. Beasclear as you can be. Tonight: With a loved one. what would be best to do. Youevenmight decide to take off and visit with someoneat LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) a distance. Beaware of your limits, espe** * * You could have difficulty dealing cially when it comes to how much time you with someone who is very unpredictable. have. Tonight: Be willing to beadventurous. Avoiding the person simply won't work. GEMINI (May 21-June20) You can postpone this conversation for ** * * Deal with someone directly. You only so long. A new beginning will bemight feel as if this person wants you to come a possibility once you have this talk. head in a certain direction. Recognize the Tonight: Head home.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) *** Take care ofwhatyou value, as no

one else will be able to do it in the same way. Your emotions could be on a roller-coaster ride because of an unexpected development. Maintain a sense of humor. Tonight: Catch up on some last-minute holiday details or shopping.

GAPRIGORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * Complete any last-minute shopping in the morning. You might need to run several other errands as well. You could find yourself walking into a surprise at home or dealing with a family member. Be willing to revise your plans. Tonight: Do what you want to do.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.10) ** * You will have a hectic pace to keep up with if you are going to get done what you must. Still, you might be surprised by the power of a cat nap. You'll find that you will be much more energized as a result. Visit a dear friend if you have time. Tonight: Get some extra R and R.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Others might want to tap into your imagination when they are faced with last-minute holiday hassles. Your creativity is likely to come up with some unusual ideas that will work. Make a point of catching up with someone you care about. Tonight: Eggnog with friends. Ct King Features Syndicate

9 p.m.on10, "Sleepy Hollow" — A new villain isn't exactly the Pied Piper, but he — or, perhaps more accurately, it — has a similar effect in luring youngsters in "Go Where I Send Thee ...." Ichabodand Abbie (Tom Mison, Nicole Beharie) encounter the evil being as they seek a missing child, whose accursed family history may be the reason the creature has struck. Orlando Jones, Katia Winter and John Noble also star.

ences, or what size audience would see it.

relationship with technology, but Brooker said he wanted

it's important to let your family and

YOURHOROSCOPE

Smith, Pharrell, OneRepublic, Meghan Trainor, 5 Seconds of Summer, Jessie J., Shawn Mendes, Charli XCX, Rita Ora and Nick Jonas.

When he was approached

update would take aim at our

one so iermus reac ou

DEG. 22, 2014:Thisyear your creativ-

Maroon 5,ArianaGrande, Sam

offered parables about rac- in the final show."

ism, McCarthyism and nuclearparanoia, concealed in

just obliterated," he said.

9:30 p.m. on CW, "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" —Popular comic and character actor Gary Anthony Williams ("Malcolm in the Middle") joins recurring performers Wayne Brady, Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie for a zany half-hour of improvised games, fueled primarily by random suggesti onssupplied by the studio audience. Aisha Tyler ("The Talk,""Archer") is host.

With the curtain about to come down on "Mad Men,"

nology and media. What he wanted to create, "We're like people who are he said, was "an anthology playing a driving video game that would potentially unsetfor the first time, and we're tle, and speak about things smashing into the walls left other than 'Isn't crime terriand right," Brooker said in an ble?' and 'Isn't the class divide for unknown reasons. A sin- first show the "White Christ- interview. "As we get better as an awful thing?'" "Black Mirror," which had ister episode full of the series' mas" special on its Audience a species, we'll master it. But trademark twists and turns channel), has recently been at the moment we're colliding its first three-episode seaand a macabre sense of humor added to Netflix's on-demand with things all the time." son in 2011, gained attention unfolds. library. It now has its best Brooker, a British w r iter, as much for its use of actors Hamm explained in an inchance to infiltrate the cultur- producer and columnist for like Rory Kinnear ("Skyfall") terview that "Black Mirror" al consciousness of America, The Guardian, made his repu- and Jessica Brown Findlay aims a distorted lens at society where its absurdist explora- tation as a satirist and host of ("Downton Abbey") as for its to show "where it's probably tions of progress gone amok shows like "Screenwipe" and provocativepremises. "Newswipe," offering caustic Its debut episode, "The Nagoing, which is further — and will resonate just as loudly.

me and are busy with their lives, but sometimes it seems that I am forgot-

8 p.m. on CW, "The iHeartradio Jingle Ball 2014" —Elvis Duran of Clear Channel Z100 is host for the 2014 edition of this star-studded concert at Madison Square Garden. The lineup of featured musical performers includes Taylor Swift, Iggy Azalea,

Hamm has been appearing in offbeat t elevision r oles,

playing a morphine-abusing physician during the Russian Revolution on "A Young Doc-

tor's Notebook" (alongside Daniel Radcliffe) and the voice of a talking toilet on "Bob's

Burgers." "It becomes simply about c ontent," H am m

s a i d . "If

10p.m. on5, 0, "Stateof Affairs" —During a trip to Qatar with the president (Alfre Woodard), Charlie (Katherine Heigl) finds herself drawn into the strange case of a local man who insists he is a CIAasset, although the agency has no record of him, in the new epi-

enough people are in your ear — or your virtual ear — about a specific piece of content," audiences will seek it out.

sode "Masquerade." Elsewhere,

MOVIE TIMESTODAY

Charlie takes a potentially fatal risk in pursuit of the truth about her fiance's (guest star Mark Tallman) death. Adam Kaufman, Sheila Vand and David Harbour also star.

• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ANNIE(PG) 11a.m., 1:50, 4:40, 7:30, 10:20 • BIGHERO 6 (PG)11:25a.m.,2:05,4:45,7:25,9:55 • BIRDMAN(R)noon, 2:50, 6:40, 9:45 • EXODUS:GODS AND KINGS (PG-13)10:55 a.m.,2:35, 6:05, 9:20 • EXODUS:GODSANDKINGS3-0 (PG-13) 11:55a.m., 3:10,7,10 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 10:45 a.m., 2:30, 6:15, 10 • THE HOBBIT:THEBATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES 3-0 (PG-13) 11:15a.m., 3, 6:45, 10:30 • THE HOBBIT:THEBATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES IMAX 3-D (PG-13) 10:15a.m., 2, 5:45, 9:30 • THE HOMESMAN (R) 11:40a.m., 2:40, 6:10, 9:05 • HORRIBLEBOSSES 2(R)11:45a.m.,2:25,4:55,7:40, 10:15 • THEHUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 10:20 a.m.,1:15, 4:10, 7:05, 10:05 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) 10:40 a.m., 2:20, 6, 9:40 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG) 10:30 a.m., 1:30, 4:30, 7:15, 10:15 • PENGUINSOFMADAGASCAR(PG) 11:10 a.m., 1:35,4, 6:25, 9 • WILD(R) 11:30 a.m., 1, 2:15,3:45, 5, 6:30, 7:45, 9:15, 10:25 • Accessibility devices areavailable for some movies.

10 p.m. on TRAV, "BoozeTraveler" —A new episode called "Iceland's Warm Fire" reveals how locals in that country keep warm during chilly months via a shrewd combination of moss schnapps (which, yes, is actually a thing), volcanic beer and marathon pub crawls. Later, on the edge of the Arctic, Jack Maxwell explores how innovation and isolation, coupled with a Viking spirit, give Iceland its national spirit. ©Zap2it

V Pu.fk 6dZrd 6 60.

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • ANNIE(PG)11:15a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45,9:15 • EXODUS:GODSANDKINGS (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) noon,3,6:05,9 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG13) 11:30 a.m.,1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30

John Day Burns Lakeview

La Pine 541.382.6447

bendurology.com

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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • EXODUS:GODS AND KINGS (PG-13)6 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 3,6 • THE HOMESMAN (R) 3:15 • THETHEORY OF EVERYTHING (PG-13)3:30,5:45 • WILD(R) 3A5, 6.30 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • ANNIE (PG)1:25,4:05, 6:50, 9:25 • EXODUS:GODS AND KINGS (PG-13)3:50,7,9:50 • *THEHOBBIT:THE BATTLE OF THE FIVEARMIES (PG13) 1,4:30,8 • *THEHOBBIT:THE BATTLE OF THE FIVEARMIES 3-D (PG-13) 12:30, 4, 7:30 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PGI3) 12: I0,2:30,4:50,7:10,9: I5 • 'iNo passes ordiscountsaccepted. •

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O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus •film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e o t s h o m e . c o m


AS THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

Owl Continued from A1 If the engineering wasn't enough to worry about, Cole had more than 1,000 pieces to cut, polish, weld and bolt to cre-

ate the owl that is holding court on Madison Avenue through New Year's Day. The lights within the owl also had to work, along with all the gearing. Ev-

al

eryone who sees Patterson will

see his mechanical heart and inner parts working through two portal windows that Cole

salvaged from an old sailboat. "Everything about Patterson

Sketches of Cole's owl in his Bend workshop.

is an amalgamation of new but

mostly salvaged materials," says Cole, who loves to recycle or repurpose discarded parts for his art.

"The name? Oh, while I was work on his art for probably an working on the owl, I listened to entire year without worrying the rock group Drive-By Truck- aboutpayingthebills. ers every day for two months, But interest in Patterson has and the lead singer of the group given flight to more commis-

cc

Cole says creating Patterson was almost a community effort,

Photos by Meg Roussos /The Bulletin

is named Patterson, and I

sioned art for Cole in the new

as he had many friends help Chris Cole cuts fish gills from sheet metal for a new sculpture he's working on at his workshop in him with the prep work by cut- Bend. ting 800 metal feathers, grindingandpolishingthose feathers before hecould even startthe Patterson trims his beak, which Barneys flagship store at 660 it together, and you're hoping welding andboltingprocess. moves up and down. Madison Ave. Cole says he still it all works," confesses Cole Cole credits Crux FermentaBarneys placed outside doesn't know how Luhrmann with a smile. "I was meticulous tion Project in Bend for letting speakers around P atterson, found out about his k inetic when I disassembled Patterson, him salvage the brewery's ex- where the massive owl seems art but assumes he saw his putting all the dozen washers, tra stainless steel beer tubing, to be saying, through a record- website. bolts and screws inside differwhich serves as the framework ing: "A life lived in fear is a life To get the 500-pound owl to ent Ziploc bags to make sure or skeleton of the mechanical half-lived." New York, Cole hired a trusted we could put it back together owl. Sunnyside Sports is also Cole laughs and says he's friend to drive his truck to the again. It took about two hours represented in NYC, as Cole not sure exactly what the om- city, where the owl arrived in to reassemble. It was like doing repurposed discarded bicycle inous message portends but several pieces in early Novem- a puzzle." cassettes and bike chains from explains it's the brainchild of ber. Barneys then flew out Cole After double-checking that the Bend store. Cole worked as Hollywood director and writer and his wife, Sweet Pea Cole, everything worked and all a Sunnysidebicyde mechanic Baz Luhrmann and his wife, also an artist, to reassemble the bolts were tightened, the curbeforehis artcareer took off , Hollywood costume designer large bird. tains rose over the holiday win"It was a little stressful, be- dow at Barneys. Cole was like but he still sees the beauty of a Catherine Martin, who were smooth-working chain. tapped to orchestrate and di- cause you have all these peo- a proud father allowing PatterA prominent bike chain on rect the holiday windows for ple around watching you put sonto take wing.

thought, 'That's a cool-sounding year. Though he doesn't want

Grants

Another award will help Housing Works, Central Oregon's housing agency, purchase land where it will build a home for a low-income family to purchase. If that family ever decidesto move, theprice of the

Builders Association. The grant with families and provide zeexample, Corvallis received will fund the construction of ro-interest loans. Continued from A1 $509,401, despite having about streets, sewers and sidewalks in Building Partners is also in In total, the city received 25,000 fewer residents than the Southern Pines subdivision. line to receive $30,000 to build $415,767 through the program Bend. Springfield, which has BuildingPartnerspurchased ramps fordisabled residents. "We hope this money will be this year but didn't allocate all about 20,000 fewer people, re- the subdivision when much of of the funding during an earli- ceived $451,142. the land was undeveloped and the seed to start a long-term, er round of awards. Jim Long, Despite the city's relatively foredosed upon and began sustainableprogram where the city of Bend's affordable small awards, the program building homes intended to we build ramps once or twice housing manager, said the has helped acquire, rehab or sell for $130,000 and $200,000. every month," said Andy High, program has brought $5.2 provide down payment assis- Those prices are in reach for the Central Oregon Builders million to the city since 2004. tance on 288 units. families living below 70 percent Association's vice p resident Long said the city "doesn't The largest award from of the region's median income, for government affairs and really get what it deserves," as the current cyde will provide which is around $40,000 a year membership. "7ypically we do the funding formula used by $85,000 to Building Partners for a family of four, according a ramp-a-thon as a one-day HUD favors older cities when for Affordable Housing, an off- to HUD. First Story, a local non- build, but the goal is to turn the age of a city's housing shoot of the Central Oregon profit, will help pair the homes this into a year-round thing." stock is taken into account. For

GelakrrQ Sanka

name,' so I named the owl after

to disdose the name, he says,

parts, so they seemed to real-

in New York City without a

ly enjoy that, and they'd snap photos with their phones," says Cole. Though it took two labori-

hitch — allparts, bicycle chains and motors working perfectly — and Cole couldn't be happier this Christmas season, when

ous months out of his life, Cole

he hopes to catch up on some

on Patterson will enable him to

— Reporter: halpenKlaol.com

him," says Cole with a smile. The Barneys holiday window display has been men-

"A very famous Hollywood actor called and would like to purchase some of my kinetic tioned in The New York Times art," explains Cole, who's still already, but showing his Bend reeling over that phone call. "I roots, Cole says the biggest thought he'd have his assistant kick he got was seeing bicycle call me, but it was actuallyhim, couriers stopping and taking the actor, and he asked me, 'Is photos of Patterson. this a bad time?' I was so hon"The New York City bike ored and flattered." couriers knew a lot of PatterPatterson the owl continues son's movingparts were bicycle to enthrall the holiday throngs

says the commission he earned much-needed sleep.

Doing a big, multifamily development gets a lot of attention,

because it takes more funding and provides rental assistance to a lot of families. But with

ownership, there's stability." Housing Works i s a l so home will remain affordable. in line for a smaller, $3,580 "We just finished one of award to help develop its mithese projects, sold it to a c rolending program. T h e homebuyer and celebrated last funding will be used to purnight," Kelly Fisher, Housing chasesoftware to manage the Work's client services man- system, which is intended to ager, said Friday. "I think it's provide families with security pretty amazing when you can deposit loans. take a family and put them in — Reporter: 541-633-2160, a homeownership situation.

tleeds@bendbulletin.com

CrAWIAge Rlks/s

Saturday - Tuesday, Dec. 20 - 23 SantaLand is open 11am - Spm

D ec.20 - 2 3 a n d Dec. 278 28 from 2pm - 5 p m

Take a photo with the holiday's biggest celebrity...Santa! Photography by Karen Cammack Photography. Petswelcome.

Snjo a FeaIivtL ~aal tuI! on tri s kaas Ds

Complimentary carriage rides with Cowboy Carriage provided by Brasada Ranch and the Old Mill District. Located between Ben 8 Jerry's and Francesca's. Tips and donations benefit Kid's Center.

Tke pe+uk SiH Old Mill District Gift Certificates are good at any of our shops, restaurants, galleries and movies. For sale at the Ticket Mill, Bend Chamber of Commerce and VisitBend.com.

Anthony's and Hola! at the Old Mill are open on Christmas Day.

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theoldmill.com/holiday-happenings/

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Monday, Dec. 22, Spm - 6pm Trinity Lutheran High School Concert Choir

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R iverside r e s t a u r a n t s , t r a i l s , s hops and s h o w s . B en d i s h e r e .

theol d m i l l . co m

I 5 4 1 . 3 12.0131


IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Scoreboard, B2 Basketball, B3 Winter sports, B8

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, DECEMBER22, 2014

The week ahea

A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports (all times Pacific):

Today

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Satulday-NOnday

HFl. football, Denver at Cincinnati, 5:30 p.m.(ESPN): In the final Monday night game of theyear, theAFCWest championBroncostakeonaBengals team still looking to secure its position in the playoffs. Next Sunday, for the only time all season, all 32 teamsare in action on the same dayastheNFLregularseason comes to anend.

HBA basketball, Portland at Oklaboma City, 5 p.m. (CSHHW):Thered-hot Trail Blazers wrap up a four-game road trip by facing the resurgent Thunder at Chesapeake Energy Arena. On the day after Christmas, Portland takes on the Philadelphia 76ers in the first of sevenconsecutivegames attheModa Center.

College football, Hawaii Bowl, Fresno State vs. Rice, 5 p.m. (FSPH):If sitting around watching a low-profile bowl game on Christmas Evehas you feeling like a loser, take heart — you'll have company in FresnoState, which brings a 6-7 record into this contest at Aloha Stadium. And don't fret, the compelling bowl gamesare just a few days away.

HBA basketball, ClevelandCavaliers at Miami Heat, 2 p.m.(ABC):Theshowcase contest among fiveChristmas Daygames features the return of LeBronJamesto Miami to facethe Heat for the first time since he left South Florida. Also onthe holiday menu:Wizards at Knicks (9a.m., ESPN); Thunder atSpurs (11:30 a.m., ABC); Lakers atBulls (5 p.m., TNT); and Warriors at Clippers (7:30 p.m.,TNT).

Prep basketball, les ScbwabOregon Holiday Hoopfest in Bend: The annual three-day prep hoopsextravaganza includes 32 boysand girls varsity teams from around OregonandWashington. Games will be played atSummit High School, the tournament host, as well as at Bendand Mountain View high schools. Championship finals are all scheduled for next Monday atSummit.

TEE TO GREEN

NFL

COMMUNITY SPORTS

Chari

plays a c

big part in the game

v Seattle'e Russell Wilson celebrates his v " ws

running touchdown

yg. F/g

against Arizona.

Seahawks cruise

l@

2ACK HALL

Seattle romps Arizona in a key NFC West showdown,B4

.yS -',

• Yearly tournaments lead to donations that help nonprofits in CentralOregon

Scoreboard, roundup,B5

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s

C

breakfast joint.

So common are thefundraising golf tournaments that if a golfer chose to, he or she could play in atournament in this region on just about any day during the golf season. The relationship between nonprofit fundraising and most area golf courses has • A profile been an endurof The ing one. Courses Greens of allot a signifiRedmond, cant amount of B7 time each golf season to host such golf tournaments, typically for a relatively modest fee, and in turn area nonprofits are

A group of snow~", : ",-':,",;,:,; ... =; shoe runners',-.„'"-

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er is big or small, golf remains an important vehicle for donations for many Central Oregon

•Oncethecookies,pieand eggnog aregone,hereare a few suggestions onhow to burn afew holidaycalories love the holiday season — always

raisers throughout the season, and all have varied levels of

in-laws, I know I'm going to be itching to

success," says Zach Lampert, the head pro at Meadow Lakes

get out the house.

Golf Course in Prineville.

"They all make money for their See Charity/B7

and alpine trails are expected to be cra-

zy busy over the next fortnight or so, as

BEAU EASTES

grid but should make for a fun and family-friendly escape during the holiday break.

does Virginia Meissner Sno-park. So in the theme of fresh beginnings with the new year, here is a list of sporty

snow-covered traiL

By Eric Olson The Associated Press

2

Steelers Chiefs

2 12

3

Jets

16

Gian s Rams

3 27

Raider Bills

2 24

3

6

SeeHoliday/B6

Christmas!

Inside

talking wives and kids and moving

braska's interim head coach.

and new schools and all that. That

John Locher/The Associated Press

Packers Buccaneers

• Is Jim Harbaugh ready to leave San Francisco and head toMichigan?B4

LINCOLN, Neb. — Barney Cotton

Vegao Bowl Saturday.

3 14

3ust PORE

choked up as he described the challenges that come with serving as ¹

Utah during the first half of the Las

Falcon Saints

The Beavers areshut down on offenseand suffer a 60-52 loss on the road,B3

Just like it sounds, grab some snowshoes and head for your favorite

Baldwin

goal against

13

OregonState falls to Quinnipiac

Snowshoe running

coach Dave celebrates

Panthers Browns

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

winter activities that are a little off the

have, always will.

Now I like to ski as much as anyone else, but Mt. Bachelor ski area's nordic

• Community Sports Calendar, Scoreboard and Briefs,Bg

Interim coachingjobs present bowl challenges after his team scored a field

2 14

Inside

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Colorado State interim

Lions Bears

Seahawks Cardinals

tnog, fudge, But looking at two weeks of eggbowl games, darkbeer, and

nonprofits. '%Te have a number of fund-

2 13

Cowboys Colts

sands of dollars eachyear and connect with their golf-playing ent. And whether the fundrais-

exans Ravens

atnots

able to raise hundreds of thou-

This past year was no differ-

3 35

C.,

entral Oregon's golf courses cook up more scrambles than a busy

donors.

Vikings

'Hia PI

He wants to accomplish what is really tugs at you. I wish I could make clearly hard to do — maintain a busiit all go away, but obviously that's not ness-as-usual atmosphere following the reality we live in." Bo Pelini's firing. He promises to make Cotton is among five interim coachsure the players have the best experies who will be in charge of teams this ence possible at the Holiday Bowl.

Yet, he still feels the punch in the gut from Pelini's firing and sadness for assistant coaches who don't know

what the future holds after new coach Mike Riley takes full control following the Dec. 27 game against Southern

California. "Little by little, guys are being given

bowl season. The others are Dave Baldwin at Colorado State, David Gibbs at Houston, Joe Rudolph at Pittsburgh and D.J. Durkin at Florida.

Cotton already has landed his next job as offensive coordinator at UNLV.

Baldwin is a candidate to replace Jim McElwain as the Rams' head coach.

11

3'4-31D

RR D

E DL F

yluy smart

Gibbs hopes to stay on as defensive

someone else and that spot will be

coordinator for Tom Herman. Rudolph might join the staff of former

filled by someone else," Cotton said. "Those are the hardest things. You're

Pitt coach Paul Chryst at Wisconsin. SeeInterim /B4

notices that this spot will be filled by

4

•s

I,

I I •

I

I •

I

I

I I

•I •

I

I

• •


B2

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY Time TV/Radio Men's college, GeorgeWashington vs. Ohio 11:30a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Colorado vs. DePaul 1:30 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Miami (Ohio) at OhioState 3 p.m. Big Ten Men's college,KansasatTemple 4 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Colgate at Syracuse 4 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, UT-Martin at Butler 4 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Mercer atTennessee 4 p.m. SEC NBA, Portland at Houston 5 p.m. BlazerNet Men's college, Coppin State at Michigan 5 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, WeberState at Oklahoma 5 p.m. Root Men's college, Wisconsin at California 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Wisconsin-Milwaukee atArkansas 6 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, UC Santa Barbara at Oregon 6 p.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Miami at Providence 6 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Charleston at LSU 6 p.m. SEC Men's college, LoyolaMarymount vs. Wichita State 8 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Tulane atWashington 8 p.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Hawaii vs. Nebraska 10 p.m. ESPNU BASKETBALL

FOOTBALL

College, Miami BeachBowl, BYUvs. Memphis NFL, Denver at Cincinnati SOCCER English, Stoke City vs Chelsea

11 a.m. E S PN 5:15 p.m. ESPN noon

N B CSN

ON DECK Today Boysbaskelball:CascadeatCrookCounty,7p.m.; Gilchrist atMitchell/Spray,1:30p.m. Girls baskelbalkCascadeat CrookCounty, 5:30 p.m.; Gilchrist atMitchell/Spray,noon

FOOTBALL

IN THE BLEACHERS

College

In the Bleachers O 200u Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

Bowlschedule AH TimesPST

12/22

Tuesday

HOCKEY

Today Miami BeachBowl BYU(8-4) vs.Memphis (9-3),11 a.m. Tuesday Boca Raton(Fla.) Bowl Marshal(12-1) l vs.Northern glinois (11-2), 3p.m. Poinsetlia Bowl Navy(6-5)vs.SanDiegoState(7-5), 6:30p.m. Wednesday BahamasBowl W.Kentucky(7-5)vs.C.Michigan(7-5), 9 a.m. Hawaii Bowl Rice(7-5)vs. FresnoState(6-7), 5p.m. Friday, Dec.26 glinois (6-6)vs.LouisianaTech(8-4),10 a.m. Quick LaneBowl Rutgers(7-5) vs.NorthCarolina(6-6),1:30 p.m. St. Petersburg(Fla.) Bowl UCF(9-3) vs.N.C.State(7-5), 5p.m. Saturday, Dec.27 Military Bowl VirginiaTech(6-6) vs.Cincinnati(9-3),10 a.m. Sun Bowl Duke(9-3)vs.ArizonaState(9-3),11 a.m. IndependenceBowl Miami(6-6)vs.SouthCarolina(6-6), 1p.m. Pinslripe Bowl BostonCollege(7-5) vs.PennState(6-6), 1:30p.m. Holiday Bowl Nebraska (9-3) vs.Southern Cal(8-4), 5 p.m. Monday,Dec.29 Liberly Bowl WestVirginia(7-5)vs.TexasA&M(7-5),11 a.m. Russell Athletic Bowl Clemson (9-3) vs.Oklahoma(8-4), 2:30p.m. TexasBowl Texas(6-6)vs.Arkansas(6-6), 6 p.m. Tuesday,Dec.30 Music CityBowl NotreDam e(7-5) vs.LSU(8-4), noon Belk Bowl Louisville(9-3)vs.Georgia(9-3), 3:30p.m. Foslers FarmBowl Stanford(7-5) vs.Maryland(7-5), 7p.m.

NHL

America's Line

Beysbasketball:La Pineat Lakeview,4 p.mc Lost River atGilchrist, 4:30p.m. Girls basketball: LaPineat Lakeview,2:30 p.m.

Friday Girls basketball:Ridgeviewvs. Greshamat Gresham HolidayTournament, 7:15p.m. Saturday Boys basketball:LesSchwahOregonHolidayHoopfest; Summivs. t NorthEugene at Summit, 7;45 p.m.; Bendvs. McNaryat Summit, 4:15p.m.; MountainViewvs. Craterat Mountain View,7:45 p.m. Girls basketball: Les SchwahOregonHoliday Hoopfest: Bendys. Milwaukie at Bend, 7:45 p.mc MountainViewvs. Marist at Summit,11 a.m.; Summivs. t Liberty at Summit, 6 p.mc Ridgeview at GreshamHoliday Tournament, TBD Wrestttng: Madrasat Pendleton Invite, TBD

Sunday Boys basketball: Bend,MountainView,Summit at LesSchwahOregonHolidayHoopfest,TBD Girls basketball: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at LesSchwabOregon Holiday Hoopfest, TBD; Ridgeview at GreshamHoliday Tournament, TBD

BASKETBALL

TUESDAY

Men's college BASKETBALL

Men'scollege,Diamond HeadClassic,teamsTBA 11:30a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Detroit Mercy at Arizona State noo n Pac - 12 Men'scollege,Diamond HeadClassic,teamsTBA 1:30p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Stanford at Texas 4 p.m. E SPN2 Men's college, Cal State Northridge at Louisville 4 p.m. E SPNU Men's college, NJIT atVillanova 4 p.m. FS1 Men's college,Diamond HeadClassic,teamsTBA 6p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, South Dakota State at Utah 6 p . m . Pa c -12 M en's college,LasVegasClassic,teamsTBA 6 p.m. FS1 Men'scollege,Diamond HeadClassic,teamsTBA 8:30p.m. ESPNU Men's college,LasVegasClassic,teamsTBA 8:30 p.m. FS1 FOOTBALL

C ollege, Boca Raton Bowl, Marshall vs. N. Illinois 3 p.m. E S PN College, Poinsettia Bowl, Navy vs. San DiegoSt. 6:30 p.m. ESPN HOCKEY 5 p.m. NBCSN NHL, St. Louis at Colorado Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TI/or radio stations.

Pac-12 All TimesPST

Sunday'sGames

Quinnipiac60, OregonState52 SouthernCal75, BostonCollege71. Washin gtonSt.82,SanJoseSt.53

Monday'sGames

DePaul at Colorado,1:30 p.m. WisconsinatCalifornia, 6p.m. UC Santa Barbaraat Oregon,6 p.m. TulaneatWashington,8 p.m.

Sunday'sSummary

Qtlinniqiac 60, OregonSt. 52 OREGON ST. (8-3) Gomis3-61-2 7, Schaftenaar7-100-018, Payton 0 0 30 20,Duvivier4-121-110,Morris Walker 3-9 0-0 7, Robbins3-7 0-0 6, N'diaye0-0 0-0 0, Sanders0-2 0-0 0, Reid1-4 2-2 4.Totals 21-63 4-7 62.

QUINNIPIAC (5-5) Harris 1-42-24, Drame3-9 0-1 6, Hearst 5-10 11-11 24,Chandler0-1 0-0 0, Conti 5-101-214, Floras 0 2000, Hutton1-7012, Chigha1-11-23, Daniels2-50-04, FordJr.1-6 0-0 3. Totals 19-55 15-19 60. Halftime —Quinnipiac 32-26.3-Point GoalsOregonSt. 6-15(Schaftenaar4-6, Morris-Walker 1-2, Duvivier 1-4, Sanders0-1, Robbins 0-2), Quinnipiac7-25(Conti 3-8, Hearst 3-8, FordJr. 1-5, Floras0-1, Harris 0-1, Hutton0-2). Fouled Out — Payton II. Rehounds—Oregon St. 27 Gomis 7), Quinnipiac 46(Drame7). Assists-

regonSt.13 (Duvivier4), Quinnipiac15 (Chandler 5). Total Foul— s Oregon St. 20, Quinnipiac

SPORTS IN BRIEF

10. A — 1,313.

Sunday'sGames

TOP 25 No. 6Virginia 76,Harvard27 No.17 Maryland 73, OklahomaState64

FOOTBALL QB WinStOnCleared in COnduCt hearing —Documentsobtained by TheAssociated Press show that Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston was cleared of the allegations hefaced at astudent code of conduct hearing this month. Thehearing focused on sexual assault allegations a former student brought against Winston two years ago. A prosecutor decided not to criminally charge him, citing a lack of evidence. Former Florida SupremeCourt judge Major Harding wrote in a letter to Winston that the evidencewas "insufficient to satisfy the burden of proof." The hearing was to determine whether Winston violated four sections of the code of conduct — two for sexual misconduct and two for endangerment.

SOCCER BraZil draWS With U.S. to Win home tOurney —Brazil's women's soccer teamheld on for a 0-0 draw with the United States to win the International Tournament of Brasilia on Sunday in Brasilia, Brazil. Brazil had the tiebreaker in the final because it finished with the best result in group play at the four-team competition in the nation's capital. Five-time world player of the yearMarta andthe rest of the Brazilians celebrated in front of a crowd of more than11,000 at the Mane Garrincha, which hosted seven World Cup matches earlier this year. Brazil controlled possession during most of the gamebut the Americans pressured late andalmost scored awinner just before the final whistle when aheader by defender Becky Sauerbrunn struck the crossbar after being tipped by Brazilian goalkeeper Luciana. The U.S. also had alate goal disallowed for offside. Brazil appealed for a penalty earlier in the second half. Brazil had won its previous three matches. It beat Argentina 4-0, the U.S.3-2 andChina4-1. Marta scored a hat trick in the come-from-behind win against the Americans a weekago. — From wire reports

"He intentionally entangled his face mask in my hand!"

EAST Army72,Maine69,OT Canisius67,HolyCross48 Hartford82,FIU69 Quinnipiac60,OregonSt. 52 SouthernCal75,Boston College71 StonyBrook67, Loyola (Md.) 52 SOUTH Alabama 60,AppalachianSt.59 Georgia65,SetonHall 47 GeorgiaSt.68,SouthernMiss. 55 Hampton75,N. Arizona66 Lipsc omb69,AustinPeay63 MiddleTennessee65, TennesseeSt.47 Samford64,Louisiana-Monroe50 SouthCarolina78,Coker52 Troy 65,Nicholls St.64 Virginia76,Harvard27 W. Carolina66, UNCAshevile 62 Winthrop100,Reinhardt72 MIDWEST Cleveland St. 69, SanFrancisco65, OT Evansville81,AlabamaSt. 63 FerrisSt.82,Bowling Green68 Nebra ska-Omaha77,Texas-PanAmerican72 Saint Louis58,Vermont 55 Valparaiso82,Goshen55 SOUTHWE ST CoastalCarolina72,Cent. Arkansas55 Maryland 73, OklahomaSt. 64 NorthTexas62,Creighton 58 FARWEST Bryant48,Denver46 San Diego 71, SanDiegoChristian 61 Seattle66,Sacramento St.47 South Dakota67,Montana62 Washington St.82, SanJoseSt. 53 TOURNAME NT Don HaskinsSunBowl Invitational First Round Kent St.53,N.Dakota St.52 South Point Holiday Classic First Round GreenBay66, UALR46 UC Irvine55, Bradley47

Women's College Sunday'sGames

TDP 25 No. 1SouthCarolina 84,Liberly 44 No. 2Uconn86, UCLA50 No. 3Texas67, No.4TexasA&M65 No.5NotreDame64,SaintJoseph's50 No. 6NorthCarolina 85,Elon67 No.13 Duke 8989, Kentucky 70 No. 10Louisville 70,No.24California 57 No.14Maryland110,CoppinState51 No.19OklahomaState66,USC62 No. 18MichiganState89, No.19Syracuse76 No. 23lowa100,Drake98 No. 21Mississippi State68, Miami(Ohio) 42 EAST Binghamton 72,Rider67 Hofstra75,Boston College 61 KentSt.62, Colgate61 Navy71, St.Peter's 35 Pittsburgh78,YoungstownSt. 52 PortlandSt.71, Columbia66 Princeton84, Monmouth(NJ)53 Providence67,Duquesne56 RhodeIsland60,Bryant56 Uconn86,UCLA50 SOUTH Alabama 87,NewOrleans58 Charlotte86,Davidson51 Clemson 66,SC State57 Coll. ofCharleston72, Mercer59 Dayton71,Vanderbilt 67 Duke89, Kentucky68 Maryland110,CoppinSt. 51 MichiganSt.89,Syracuse76 NorthCarolina85, Elon67 Richmond70,E.Kentucky56 UAB73,South Alabama43 Virginia74,Howard 53 VirginiaTech73,Radford60 MIDWEST lowa100,Drake98 lowaSt.76,Fairfield 63 Marquette 65,W. Ilinois 57 Minnesota 67, Cent. Michigan64 N. lowa51,N.Illinois 42 Notre Dame64,SaintJoseph's50 Purdue70,Wright St.46 SouthCarolina84,Liberty 44 UC Irvine63,Denver 55 SOUTHWES T Arkansas71, Oklahoma64 NichollsSt. 57,UTSA49 TCU79,SamHoustonSt.55 Texas67, TexasA&M65 TexasTech60, Houston 54 UALR 66,Tulsa59 FARWEST Albany(NY)71, CalSt.-Fullerton 49 CS Bakersfield74 UNLV71 Colorado76,Wyoming 71 ColoradoSt.65, CalPoly63 FresnoSt.68,Oregon59 IdahoSt.63, Seatle 55 Louisyille70,California 57 MississippiSt.68,Miami(Ohio)42 NewMexico56,N.Arizona37 Oklahoma St.66,SouthernCal62 TOURNAMETN ASUClassic Championship Lehigh72, E.lllinois 69 Third Place ArizonaSt.88,Northwestern75 Gator HolidayClassic E. Washington55,GeorgiaSouthern42 Florida78,Southern U.49 SJU ChartweHs Holiday Classic Championship IndianaSt.73,St.John's67,2OT Third Place Auburn56, SMU43

HometeaminCAPS NFL Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog Today

NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE

AH TimesPST

EasternConference Atlantic Division

Broncos 3 r/ t

GP W L QT Pts GF GA Montreal 34 21 11 2 44 92 83 Tampa Bay 35 20 11 4 44 113 93 Detroit 3 4 17 8 9 43 94 84 Toronto 34 19 12 3 41 114 102 Boston 34 17 14 3 37 86 88 Florida 3 1 14 9 8 36 69 79 Ottawa 33 14 13 6 34 89 92 Buffalo 34 13 18 3 29 66 109 Metropohtan DlvlslOII GP W L DT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 3 2 2 2 6 4 48 102 72 N.Y.lslanders 33 23 10 0 46 104 91 N.Y. Rangers 31 17 10 4 38 93 81 Washington 32 16 10 6 38 95 85 Philadelphia 33 13 14 6 32 92 99 Columbus 32 14 15 3 31 79 102 NewJersey 35 12 17 6 30 77 102 C arolina 3 3 9 20 4 22 68 92

3t/t 48

College Today Miami BeachBowl M emphis P K 1 56a t Tuesday Boca RatonBowl 1 1 10'/~ 67

Poinsettia Bowl

B ENGALS

BYU No lllinois

Navy Wednesday,Dec. 24 BahamasBowl W Kentucky 2t/r 3t/t 6 5'It CMichigan Hawaii Bowl 1'/z 59 FresnoState Friday, Dec.26 Hearl of Dallas Bowl 4 '/p 6 59' / p lllinois Quick LaneBowl NCarolina 3 3 66' I t Rutgers St. PetersburgBowl WesternConference CFlorida 2 r/t t r g 4 9 ' $ NC State Central Division Saturday, Dec.27 GP W L QT Pts GF GA Bowl Chicago 3 4 23 9 2 48 106 67 Cincinnati 3 Militarv Ht 3 50a t Va Tech St. Louis 3 3 21 9 3 45 100 81 Sun Bowl Nashyige 3 1 21 8 2 44 87 64 Arizona St 8 '/t 8 65'/ t Duke Winnipeg 34 17 10 7 41 83 80 IndependenceBowl Minnesota 31 16 12 3 35 91 84 Miami-Fla PK 3'yt 6 1'yt SCarolina Dallas 32 14 13 5 33 95 109 Pinstriue Bowl Colorado 33 12 13 8 32 85 101 BostonCol 3 Z / t 40 PennSt PacificDivision Holidav Bowl 6 6 61'I t GP W L DT Pts GF GA Nebraska Anaheim 3 5 2 2 8 5 49 101 96 Monday, Dec.29 Liberlv Bowl SanJose 3 4 1 9 11 4 42 97 87 31/2 661/2 Texas W Virginia A8M Vancouver 32 19 11 2 40 92 90 Russell Athletic Bowl Los Angeles 34 17 11 6 40 94 84 Oklahoma Clemson C algary 35 1 7 1 5 3 37 100 95 TexasBowl A rizona 32 1 1 1 7 4 26 74 104 Arkansas 4 6 45' I t Texas E dmonton 3 4 7 2 0 7 21 74 116 Sunday'sGames Colorado 2, Detroit1, SO DEALS Dalla s6,Edmonton5,SO Boston4, Bufalo 3,OT Transactions N.Y.Rangers1, Carolina0 Chicago 4, Toronto0 BASKETB ALL Philadelphia4, Winnipeg3, OT National Basketball Association Today'sGames MEMPHISGRIZZLIES— Recalled GJordan AdOttawaatWashington, 4p.m. amsandF/CJarnegStokesfromlowa(NBADL). Nashvilleat Columbus,4p.m. FOOTBAL L PittsburghatFlorida,4:30 p.m. National Football League Arizonaat Vancouver,7p.m. KANSASCITY CHIEFS — Rel eased G Jarrod SanJoseatAnaheim,7p.m. Pughsleyfromthe practice squad.SignedOTCurtis Calgar yatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Feigt tothepractice squad. Tuesday'sGames MIAMI DOLP HINS — ReleasedLB Jake Knot. Nashyitleat Boston, 4p.m. SignedWRMatt Hazelfromthepractice squad. Carolinaat NewJersey,4p.m. SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS — Pl aced LB Chris MontrealatN.Y.Islanders,4 p.m. Borlandoninjured reserve. SignedLBChaseThomas Washingtonat N.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. from the practicesquad. Philadelphia at Minnesota,4 p.m. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—ReleasedTERaShaunAlTorontoatDallas,4 p.m. len. Signed TEKeavon Milton fromthe practicesquad. Buffalo atDetroit, 4:30p.m. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Placed S Major PittsburghatTampaBay,4:30 p.m. Wright on injuredreserve.SignedDBC.J. Wilson Arizonaat Edmonton,5p.m. from the practicesquad. HOCKEY St. LouisatColorado, 5p.m. Winnipeg atChicago,5:30 p.m. National HockeyLeague CAROLINAHURRICANES— Activated FAlexanScoring Leaders der Seminfrominjured reserve.ReassignedFJustin ThroughSaturday Shhugto Charlotte (AHL). GP G A PTS COLUMBUSBLUE JACKETS — Assigned G JakubVoracek,Phi 3 2 12 30 42 OscarDanskfromKalamazoo(ECHL)to Springfield TylerSeguin,Dal 31 23 16 39 (AHL). ClaudeGiroux, Phi 3 2 10 29 39 PITTSBU RGHPENGUINS—AssignedGEric HartEvgeniMalkin, Pit 32 15 23 38 zell fromWilkes-Barre/Scranton(AHL) to Wheeling Vladimir Tarasenko,StL 33 20 17 37 (ECHL). SAN DIEGO ST t'It 2'/t

5 4'/t

NHL ROUNDUP

vaanc e a eou e The Associated Press

tage five minutes into the third peri-

DETROIT — The Colorado AvalatTche had the luxury of calling on a six-time NHL All-Star for the ninth round of a shootout.

od and finally cashed in when Pavel Datsyuk wristed a power-play shot past Avalanche goalie Calvin Pickard for his 13th goal.

Jarome Iginla scored in the tie-

The Avalanche tied it w ith 4:15 left in regulation when Erik John-

breaker to lift the Avalanche to a 2-1 victory over the Detroit Red Wings

on Sunday night. Iginla got a wrist shot past Petr Mrazek, who had turned away six

straight Avalanche shooters. Nathan MacKinnon and Matt Duchene also scored inthe tiebreaker as Colorado

ended a three-game road trip with five points. Iginla said he thought too many prior shooters were trying to fake their way past Mrazek so he took a more direct approach when it was his turn.

"No one had really shot," he said.

"I just wanted to come in and pick a

spot." Gustav Nyquist and Tomas Tatar had shootout goals for Detroit, which

a pass from Datsyuk near the net but shotwide. The duo had a combined l l s h ots i n r egulation and overtime.

oo

. QDLIGH T

son scored on the power play for his eighth of the season. Colorado was coming off a 5-1 win at Buffalo on Saturday night. "Defensively, even if we gave up

Also on Sunday: Flyers 4, Jets 3: WINNIPEG, Manscored 10 seconds into overtime,

sending Philadelphia to a victory over Winnipeg. Blackhawks 4, Maple Leafs 0: CHI-

Avalanche coach Patrick Roy said. "I thought, under the circumstances, we performed pretty well." Mrazek had 22 saves through overtime. Pickard finished with 34. "I think w e

Four of Detroit's last five home losses have been in shootouts.

itoba — Rob Zepp made 25 saves in his NHL debut and Jakub Voracek

30 shots, it was back-to-back games,"

CAGO — Patrick Katm had a pow-

er-play goal and two assists, leading Antti Raanta and Chicago to the win.

Rangers 1, Hurricanes 0: NEW YORK — Ryan McDonagh scored

c r eated 35 shots,"

Detroit captain Henrik Zetterberg said. "There's a iot of chances that we thought the puck was going in Paul Sancya/The Associated Press but (Pickard) came up and made the Detroit center Pavel Datsyuk (13) and Colorado center John Mitchell (7) battle for

in the first and Cam Talbot made 18

saves." Colorado had the best chance in

the puck during the first period of Sunday's game in Detroit.

— Loui Eriksson scored 2:14 into

Red Wings were unable to take ad-

vlctoTy. Stars 6, Oilers 5: EDMONTON, Al-

penalty late in the first period, but the

saves, leading New York to its sixth consecutive win. Bruins 4, Sabres 3: BOSTON overtime, and Boston rallied for the

overtime when Brad Stuart found

has dropped six in a row, four of them himself 10 feet from Mrazek but the in tiebreakers. The Red Wings fell to goalie made a pad save. 1-7 this season when the game goes Colorado's Maxime Talbot reto a shootout. ceived a high-sticking, double-minor Detroit had a 22-12 shots advan-

in S - i nS ooou

vantage of the power play. Red Wings coachMike Babcock put Datsyuk back together with for-

mer linemate Zetterberg, who got his

22nd assist on the third-period goal. The duo skated with wing Justin

Abdelkader. The line nearly got a second goal late in the third when Zetterberg got

berta — Tyler Seguin had two goals and an assist, and then scored in the

shootout to help Dallas to its fourth consecutive win.


MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014• THE BULLETIN

NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION

B3

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Teachingteam

a ons ut own as a sto

how to win part of LeBron's

maturing process By Broderick Turner

uinni iac

Los Angeies Times

LOS ANGELES — An hour after Cleve-

land suffered its worst defeat of the season, a 29-point blowout to Atlanta on Wednesday night, LeBron James sat in

a chair on the baseline with a cold drink in his hand and watched his young teammate, point guard Kyrie Irving, work on his craft. The cameras caught James looking on admiringly as the 22-year-old Irving went through shooting drills with the Cavaliers' assistant coaches. When it wa s over, Irving and James

shared a moment, the two of them nodding and smiling.

Mark Duncan / The AssociatedPress

Cieveiand's LeBron James, left, shoots over Memphis' Quincy Pondexter in the third quarter of Sunday's game in Cleveland. James scored 25 points and had11 assists in the Cavaliers'105-91 win over the Grizzlies.

James and the Cavaliers are nearly one-

third of the way into the season, and so far he has been a patient instructor to his teammates, who view the four-time NBA most

valuable player as their sage. "He's been doing that every day," Cleveland assistant coach Larry D r e w s aid.

"It's not just in games, but in our practices, our shoot-arounds, our film sessions. For

LeBron, because he's won championships, he's teaching these guys what it takes to get there."

"I think we can compete against anybody when we're playing at our best," James said after the Atlanta game. "But it's going to take us maintaining our focus every single day because we cannot afford to take a step backward." So James talks to his teammates about

practicing hard, being selfless, how to cope with adversity, about living and playing in a media bubble and dealing with the high expectations placed on the Cavaliers this season.

"He definitely had to be patient because we have some great pieces and some great players, but four of our top six players have never been to the playoffs," said Tyronn Lue, Cleveland's associate head coach.

Two of those players are All-Stars Irving and Kevin Love, who missed the postseason in his six seasons with Minnesota. The oth-

er two players are key reserves Dion W aiters an d

T r i stan

Thompson. James

Lue said that James has

grown as a p l ayer after spending the last four seasons living under the microscope in Miami, where he won two NBA championships and went to four consecutive NBA Finals. It's that maturity, Lue said, that has helped

avs ea r izz ies ROUNDUP

The Associated Press CLEVELAND

-

LeB-

ron James and Kyrie Irving stepped aside and let one of

against West teams. Anderson Varejao scored 18 and Irving had 17 points and 12 assists for the Cavs, who are 11-3 since their sluggish 5-7 start. the Cleveland Cavaliers hanMarc Gasol scored 23 and dled one of the Western Con- added 11 rebounds for the ference's best teams, beating Grizzlies, who played without the short-handed G r izzlies forward Zach Randolph. 105-91. Also on Sunday: The Cavs have been waiting Kings 108, Lakers 101: SAC-

22 points, and Toronto beat

been some rumblings that he has peaked as aplayer. In his first 23 games this season with Cleveland,James' numbers have declined

slightly from last season in Miami. He's shooting 49.4 percent from the field (56.7 percent last season), while averaging 25.4 points (27.1), 5.4 rebounds (6.9) and 3.7 turnovers (3.5). James lost some weight over the summer,

dropping to a listed 250 pounds, considerably less than his rumored weight of 270 pounds last season in Miami.

"I don't see that much of a loss of step at all," said an Eastern Conference scout about James.

The scout, who is not authorized to speak publicly, sees only a slight decline in James' athleticism. "I think it's an adjust-

ment of playing at a new weight. Maybe his vertical isn't as high, but it's still really, re-

ally high." Whenever James does show his age on the court, Lue expects him to duplicate the

approachtaken by Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan. "When Jordan slowed down and when

Kobe slowed down, they became more mid-range game players," Lue said. "I think LeBron will be the same way.

"He's so fast and so strong. You continue to play to your strength. When he slows down, he'll be a better post-up guy, better

mid-range guy, instead of going to the hole and getting beat up." Meanwhile, the immediate challenge for

James and the Cavaliers is to keep improving and become the best team in the East. Charles Barkley, the Hall of Famer who is

an analyst for TNT, complains that James has been "a little too passive." Barkley recalled how James deferred to

Dwyane Wade in their first season together in Miami in 2010-11. Barkley also recalled that when he was traded to the Phoenix

Suns in 1992 he initially deferred to Kevin Johnson and Dan Majerle. At some point, Barkley said, James has to

tell all the Cavaliers, "It's my team." "Hey, listen. I like Kyrie and I like Kevin, but if I'm LeBron, I tell them, 'I'm going this way. Y'all follow me,'" Barkley said. "He went through the exact same thing in Miami, so that's why I'd like to see LeBron be a

little more aggressive. "The best player has to be the best player. The best player can't let other guys get off. And look, LeBron James is still the best player in the world. No question."

RAMENTO, Calif. — DeMar-

and Kyle Lowry each scored New York for its sixth consecutive win. Heat100, Ceitics 84: MIAMI

— Luol Deng had 23 points, James Ennis scored 10 of his

16 in the fourth quarter and Miami beat Boston to end a

five-game home losing streak. Pacers 100, Timberwoives 96: MINNEAPOLIS — C.J. Miles scored 28 points and David West bulled his way to the

tent Waiters to become more cus Cousins had 29 points reliable. It's still a work in and 14 rebounds in his second basket for two big points with progress but Waiters, who has start since returning from a 34 seconds to play to help Indifrequently been mentioned in seriousillness,and Sacramen- ana hold off Minnesota. trade rumors over the past two to beat Los Angeles to snap a 76ers 96, Magic 88: ORseasons, is showing signs of five-game losing streak. LANDO, Fla. — Michael Cardeveloping into a steady scorer Peiicans 101, Thunder 99: ter-Williams scored 21 points off the bench. OKLAHOMA CITY — Antho- and Philadelphia rallied in the "He's learning every day," ny Davis scored 38 points to second half to beat Orlando for said James, who had 25 points lead New Orleans past Okla- its third victory of the season. and 11 assists. "He's a young homa City. Nets 110, Pistons 105: NEW guy. He hasn't experienced Suns 104, Wizards 92: YORK — M a so n P l umlee much in this league, so for him WASHINGTON — Eric Bled- scored 10 of his 21 points in the to havea game likehehad,we soe and Markieff Morris each fourth quarter and had 12 reneeded it." scored 17 points, Goran Drag- bounds in Brooklyn's victory James scored 16 in the sec- ic added 16 and Phoenix beat over Detroit.

~eXt 4II

UC Santa Barbara at Oregon State E van Conti h a d n i n e iiiihes 6 30 Points after halftime and p m Tuesday finished with 14 points for Dec '30 Q uinnip~"( ) . TV: pac-l2 I t was t h e f i r s t t i m e Quinnipiac has ever hosted or beaten a power-conference school. the final 20 seconds to help hold off Oregon State.

"Just the fact that we were able to host a Pac-12 team speaks volumes of where the

program has gone and will hopefully continue to go," Moore said. Olaf Schaftenaar led Oregon State (8-3) with 18 points on 7-of-10 shooting, including

4 of 6 from 3-point range. Malcolm Duvivier added 10 points.

Oregon State shot 44 percent in the second half, after 35.7 in the first, and got within 53-50 with 2:44 to go. But Duvivier's layup

with 23 seconds left was Oregon State's only field goal in the final 2:30. The loss snapped a five-game winning streak for Oregon State in its first-game ever in Connecticut. "We reminded our guys that after the run that we were on, the wins that we were hav-

ing, that the smallest thing can get things to turn," Oregon State coach Wayne Tinkle

said. "We didn't have the same cohesion and the same energy today. It's a valuable lesson for us moving forward." Schaftenaar's 3-pointer and Langston Morris-Walker's layup pulled Oregon State within 37-33 with 15:17 left. The teams trad-

NBA SCOREBOARD

"It's also a situation where LeBron has to be patient but also demand a lot," Lue said. "It's a fine line because he has a team that's potential." James, who turns 30 on Dec. 30, is in his 12th season in the NBA, and there have

four straight free throws m

TORONTO — Lou Williams

James push his teammates the right way.

real good and he can see the talent and the

ards' winning streak at six.

season-best 61 percent from the field to improve to just 3-6

for the enigmatic and inconsis-

State on Sunday.

Hearst did not score in the second half until he hit

Raptors 118, Knicks 108:

opponent. On Sunday, Dion Waiters finished Memphis. Waiters scored 13 of his 21 points in the fourth quarter as

Hearst finished with 24

points to lead Quinnipiac to a 60-52 win over Oregon

Washington to end the Wiz-

ond half and the Cavs shot a

their teammates polish off an

The Associated Press HAMDEN, Conn. — Zaid Hearst scored 20 of Quinnipiac's 32 first-half points, but it was his defense on Oregon State's leading scorer that caught the eye of his coach. Gary Payton II, averaging 13.6 points per game, was held scoreless on just three fieldgoal attempts. "Deny him one pass away, blow up every dribble handoff,blow up every screen,keep him in front of you and don't foul. And he pulled it off today," Quinnipiac coach Tom M oore said of Hearst' s defense.

ed points for the next 12-plus minutes as neither team was able to string together a stop

Standings AIITimesPST Eastern Conference W L Pct GB d-Toronto 22 6 786 d-Atlanta 19 7 731 2 Washington 19 7 731 2 d-Chicago 17 9 654 4 Cleveland 16 10 615 5 Milwaukee 14 14 500 8 Miami 13 15 464 9 Brooklyn u 15 423 10 Boston 10 15 400 1(P/2 Orlando 10 20 333 13 Indiana 9 19 321 13 Charlotte 8 19 296 13'/2 Detroit 5 23 179 17 NewYork 5 25 167 18 Philadelphia 3 23 u5 18 Western Conterence W L Pct GB d-Golden State 22 3 880 d-Portland 22 6 786 1'/2 d-Memphis 21 6 778 2 Houston 19 7 731 3'/2 Dallas 20 8 714 3'A LA. Clippers 19 8 704 4 SanAntonio 17 u 607 6'/2 NewOrleans 14 13 519 9 Phoenix 15 14 517 9 Oklahoma City 13 15 464 10'A Sacrame nto 12 15 444 11 Denver 12 15 4l4 11 LA. Lakers 8 19 296 15 Utah 8 20 286 15'/2 Minnesota 5 2 1 192 1P/ d-divisionleader

Sunday'sGames

Toronto08, NewYork108 Cleveland105,Memphis 91 Sacramento108, LA.Lakers101 Phoenix104,Washington92 Miami100,Boston84 Philadelphia 96, Orlando88 Brooklyn110,Detroit105 NewOrleans101,OklahomaCity 99 Indiana100, Minnesota96

Today'sGames Denver at Charlotte,4 p.m. TorontoatChicago,5 p.m. PortlandatHouston,5pJs. Utah atMemphis, 5p.m. AtlantaatDallas, 5:30p.m. LA. Clippers atSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Sacramento atGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Tsesday'sGames ChicagoatWashington, 4 p.m. Bostonat Orlando, 4p.m. NewOrleansatIndiana,4 p.m. Minnesotaat Cleveland, 4p.m. LA. ClippersatAtlanta,4;30 p.m. Philadelphia at Miami,4:30 p.m. Denver at Brooklyn,4:30p.m. PortlandatOklahomaCity, 5 p.m. Charlotteat Milwaukee,5 p.m. DallasatPhoenix, 6p.m. GoldenStateatLA. Lakers, 7:30p.m.

Summaries

Pacers100, Timberwolves 96 iNDiANA(100) S.Hill 2-5 2-2 7,West7-9 0-0 14,Hibbert 6-11 3-415, Watson 3-9 0-0 7, Stuckey3-81-1 7,Miles 10-184528, Allen1-4002, Rudez01 000,Scola 5-9 0-210, Sloan 5-10 0-010. Totals 42-84 1014100.

MINNESOT AI96) Muhammad 8-185-621,Young4-90-28,Dieng 3-54-410,LaVine2-64-49, Wiggins2-81-25, Williams 10-162-2 24,Budinger6-10 0-013, Bennett 0-1 0-00,Adrien0-01-21, Hummel1-32-2 5, Danielso-1 0-00.Totals36-7719-2496. Indiana 20 32 23 25 — 100 Minnesota 17 21 30 28 — 96

Pelicans101, Thunder 99

Cavaliers105, Grizzlies 91

NEWORLEANS(101) MEMPHIS (91) Babbitt 1-4 0-0 3,Davis16-226-7 38, Asik 1-4 Prince1-40-0 2, Leuer7-142-216, Gasol 10-17 1-2 3,Holiday4-120-011, Evans6-170-012, Cun- 3-423, Conley5-131-111,Lee1-52-24, Koufos4-8 ningham 350-06, Anderson5-151-114, Rivers2-4 0-08, Calathes2-20-04, Pondexter1-42-45,Carter 0-0 4, Ajinca 5-7 0-010, Salmons0-0 0-00. Totals 5-92-212, Udrih1-40-02, Adams2-30-04,Stokes 43-90 8-10101. 0-30-00. Totals 39-8612-1591. OKLAHOMA CITY (99) CLEVELAND (105) Jones5-91-1 12,Ibaka2-82-26, Adams5-62-4 James9-154-6 25, Love4-90-0 8,Varejao 9-12 0-018, Irving8-130-1 17,Miler 0-10-0 0, Waiters 12, Westbrook10-279-11 29, Roberson3-41-2 7, pson1-2 Morrow3-60-0 7, Collison1-40-0 2,Jackson7-13 9-161-1 21,Dellavedova1-20-02, Thom 2-219, Lamb 0-21-21, Perkins 2-40-04. Totals 1-2 3, Marion5-6 0-011, Harris0-00-0 0. Totals 38-8318-24 99. 46-76 6-10105. Newerleans 25 2 8 23 25 — 101 Memphis 19 22 29 21 — 91 OklahomaCit y 2 8 2 0 33 18 — 99 Cleveland 22 30 25 28 — 105

Kings108, Lakers101 LA. LAKERS (101)

Raptors 118, Knicks 108 Anthony12-263-528,Acy3-81-2 7, Aldrich4-4 3-311, Calderon4-116-615, HardawayJr. 3-82-2 10, Dalembert1-10-0 2, Ja.smith6-u 4-416, Prigioni 3-52-28,Larkin2-30-05,Wear2-52-26. Totals 40-8223-26108.

Gay 8-155-9 24,Thompson 1-10-0 2, Cousins 9-19 11-1529, Collison 7-133-5 19, McLem ore 10-18 1-223,Landry1-3 2-24, Evans0-1 2-2 2, Hollins 0-00-00, Williams2-51-1 5, Stauskas0-1 0-00,McCallum 0-30-00.Totals38-7925-36 108. LA. Lakers

Sacramento

J.Johnson5-7 0-0 10,A.Johnson4-7 1-49, Valanciunas 2-66-6 10, Lowry7-126-622, Ross7-15 0-1 18,Vasquez9-13 0-0 21,Patterson2-6 0-0 5, Williams6-146-6 22,Hansbrough0-21-41, Caboclo 0-3 0-0 0,Nogueira0-1 0-0 0. Totals 42-86 20-27 118. New York 25 26 24 33 — 108 Toronto 33 25 33 27 — 118

76ers 96, Magic 88

Nets1110, Pistons105

PHIULDELPHIA (96) Covington4-11 2-3 11, Mbaha Moute 4-9 0-0 9, Noel 5-133-3 13, Carter-Wiliams7-126-8 21, Sampson 2-50-05,McDaniels4-60-09,Sims5-11 2-212, Wroten 3-1I 3-510,Grant1-44-46. Totals 35-82 20-2596. ORLANDO (88) Harris 7-211-1 17,O'Quinn3-7 1-2 8, Vucevic 8-143-619,Payton0-71-21,0ladipo10-162-223, Frye2-40-04, Fournier5-113-716, Dedmon0-1 0-0 0, Ridnour0-20-0 0, B.Gordon0-0 0-00, Harkless 0-1 0-00.Totals 35-8411-2088. Philadelphia 23 1 4 27 32 — 96 Orlando 20 22 18 28 — 88

DETROIT (105) Singler1-40-0 2,Smith5-163-613, Drummond 7-15 4-8 18,Jennings3-12 0-0 8, Caldwell-Pope 6-15 3-320,Monroe7-102-416, Butler 0-20-0 0, Augustin2-4 0-05, Meeks6-91-213, Jerebko3-4 3-310. Totals 40-9116-26105. BROOKLYN (110) Johnson5-94-616, Garnett4-7 2-410, Plumlee 9-10 3-5 21,Jack7-14 1-1 15, Karasev2-6 4-4 9, Teletovic 592 213, Anderson2 82 26, Morris 2 4 1-26,Bogdanovic4-73-314,Jordan0-20-00. Totals 40-7622-29110. Detroit 18 33 27 27 — 105 Brooklyn 28 25 30 27 — 110

SIIIIS104,WiZardS 92 PHOENIX (104) Tucker2-3 2-2 6, Mark.Morris7-142-2 17, Len 3-3 2-6 8,G.Dragic6-u 2-2 16, Bledsoe6-15 5-6 17, Plumle22004, e MarcMorris 590211, Green 5-71-1 13,Thomas4-12 2-210, Randolph 0-22-22. Totals 40-7818-25104. WASHINGTO NI92) Pierce4-133-412, Humphries2-4 0-0 4, Gortat 3-4 3-4 9,Wall 5-15 4-514, Beal 4-115-714, Butler 6-114-517, Porter2-4 0-0 4, Nene1-80-0 2, Miller 0-1 0-0 0, Seraphin7-122-416, Temple0-00-00,Gooden0-00-00.Totals34-83 21-29 92.

Phoenix Washington

22 28 29 25 — 104 23 27 21 21 — 92

Heat100, Celtics 84 BOSTON (84) Green4-122-2 13,Sullinger4-81-2 9, Zeller 10-15 2-322,Smart1-40-0 3, Bradley2-10 0-04, Tumer2-62-21,Bass1-22-24,0lynyk5-133-413, Nelson1-60-03, Wright3-50-06, CrowderO-20-0 0. Totals 33-8312-15 84. MIAMI I100) Desg9-154-423,Wiliams4-01-1 u, Andersen 3-61-3 1,Chalmers5-131-411, Cole7-131-2 15, Haslem3-44-410, Ennis4-8 6-616, Hamilton O-I0-00,Granger2-72-2T.Totals37-7820-26 100. Boston 21 21 19 23 — 84 Miami 28 24 20 28 — 100

Drame's block led to Conti's 1-for-2 trip to the line and a 56-50 lead with 37 seconds left.

Oregon State's first fivebaskets of the game were from 3-point range as the Beavers took

an early 15-9lead. Quinnipiacresponded with a 13-2 run, cappedby Hearst's 3-pointer at the 5:54 mark. Hearst scored the final 13 points of

thehalf for Quinnipiac, to Oregon State's nine, for a 32-26 lead at halNme.

NEWYORK(108)

Johnson2-5 2-2 7, Davis4-5 2-2 10,Hill 4-12 0-0 8, Price2-6 3-4 8, Bryant8-30 6-6 25,Young 7-14 8-826,Boozer3-7 0-06, Sacre1-21-4 3, Lin 1-3 2-2 4, Ellington1-31-2 4. Totals 33-87 2530101.

SACRAME NTO(108)

and score on consecutive possessions. Ousmane Drame's turnaround baseline jumper ended Oregon State's brief4-0 run and extended Quinnipiac's lead to 55-50 with I:59 to go.

ROUNDUP

TORONTO (118)

Leaders ThroughSaturday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden, HOU 2 6 2 0 2 223 685 26.3 James,CLE 24 215 139 606 25.3 Bryant,LAL 26 217 169 640 24.6 Davis,NOR 25 234 135 603 24.1 Curry,GOL 25 2u 99 598 23.9 Anthony, NYK 2 5 2 2 0 109587 23.5 Griffin, LAC 27 239 141 626 23.2 Wade,MIA 20 179 86 456 22.8 Aldridge, POR 2 7 2 44 112615 22.8 Butler,CHI 24 170 162 525 21.9 Thompson, GOL 24 183 83 518 21.6 Bosh,MIA 23 180 102 496 21.6 Lillard,POR 28 205 116 600 21.4 Ellis, DAL 28 235 92 595 21.3 Gay,SAC 24 177 128 507 21.1 Irving,CLE 25 172 108 494 19.8 Gasol,MEM 26 183 142 509 19.6 Green,BOS 24 163 103 468 19.5 Rebounds G OFF DEFTOT AVG 27 106 250 356 13.2 Jordan,LAC Drummond,DET 27 122 210 332 1z3 Gasol,CHI 23 58 210 268 0.7 Chandler,DAL 28 117 208 325 11.6 Vucevic,ORL 23 76 189 265 0.5 Randolph,MEM 26 97 200 297 0.4 Duncan,SAN 23 72 181 253 11.0 Aldridge,POR 27 75 213 288 10.7 Loye,CLE 25 50 215 265 10.6 Asik, NOR 22 83 148 231 10.5

FreshmanleadsUSC over BostonCollege The Associated Press BOSTON — Freshman Elijah Stewart is

already in the USC record books, going 10 for 10 from the field against Boston College on Sunday to tie a school record.

Coach Andy Enfield is equally impressed with what his freshman guard did when he wasn't shooting.

"When you go 10 for 10 from the field, it's a pretty good game," Enfield said after Stewart was perfect from the floor, adding

four rebounds and two blocked shots to help the Trojans beat BC 75-71. "But he did some

things today he couldn't do a month ago." Stewart's perfect 10 shooting performance tied Taj Gibson, who also went 10 for 10 against Boston College in the NCAA

tournament on March 20, 2009. Also on Sunday:

Pac-12 Washington St. 82, San Jose St. 53: PULLMAN, Wash. — Josh Hawkinson scored 25

points and grabbed 13 rebounds as Washington State defeated short-handed San Jose State.

Top 25 No. 6 Virginia 76, Harvard 27: CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Mike Tobey scored 15

points in the first half and Virginia held Harvard to one field goal before the break in a

romp. No. 17 Maryland 73, Oklahoma State 64: STILLWATER, Okla.— Jake Layman had 21 points and 11 rebounds and Maryland beat Oklahoma State to improve to 11-1.


B4

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

FOOTBALL COMMENTARY ~siti ~s

's exi?

i ns oinin 0 By Mark Snyder

two met in the air for a quasi-chest bump/hug, one of the increasingly rare explosions of emotion from Harbaugh re-

Detroit Free Press

ollowing Sa t u rday's gut-wrenching loss, Jim Harbaugh was out of answers.

F

cently on the field or off.

Those speaking for him also were on the Web during

A fter hi s t e a m b l e w a t hree-touchdown lead i n a

the game. On Twitter, some-

38-35 overtime loss to the San Diego Chargers, the San

one used Photoshop to replace the 49ers' logo on Harbaugh's play sheet with a block M. He

Francisco 49ers' coach faced the news media and admitted

let it sit on Twitter for a while,

Rick Scutert /The Associated Press

there wasn't much to explain

but fans took it seriously, so

Seattle running back Marshawn Lynch (24) breaks free from Arizona outside linebacker Alex Okefor (57) for a touchdown

about his 7-8 team.

he later posted the regular

run during the second half of Sunday night's game inGlendale,

With only a week to go in the NFL season and everyone

Arizona. The Seahawks beat the Cardinals 35-6.

or as Michigan's top candi-

photo with his altered version. After the late night, the Harbaugh speculation revved up again Sunday morning when CBSSports.com's Jason

date for its open job — he was

La Canfora, a former Free

just disappointed by the game

Presswriter,offered a bit of insight.

outside wondering about his future — whether in the NFL

itself late Saturday night. The former Wolverines star

He echoed Rapoport's re-

quarterback is U-M's primary candidate, and it's believed he has serious interest in the position. There was an NFL Network report last week about

San Francisco49ers head coach Jim Herbsugh watches es players

warm up before Saturday's gameagainst the San Diego Chargers in Santa Clara, California. Harbaugh hasbeen linked to the open head coaching position at Michigan.

"It doesn't feel like a lot to

for him. Before Saturday's game, it was the NFL Network's Ian

Rapoport, saying Harbaugh will meet with the 49ers' brass in the two days after the Dec. 28 finale to tell them

whether he's interested in going to Michigan or staying in the NFL, where he can be traded to another team with

his permission.

fense that's supposed to be one of the NFL's best. That team from the Pacific Northwest sure looked

know him insist.

35-6 victory over the Ari-

his coach, Joe Philbin, would Ben Margot/The Associated Press

return in 2015. Ross is also Michigan's biggest financial booster.

Though Harbaugh remains the primary target, Michigan apparently continues to work on the safety net in

Though he has one year re- will miss the playoffs. case it doesn't work out with maining on the five-year conDuring the Sa n D i ego Harbaugh, as occurred in tract he signed in 2011, NFL game, the commentary came the 2011 search when Brady experts are unanimous that from the fans. Hoke was hired. he won't be in San Francisco One pair attended the game Part of La Canfora's report next season. with Michigan signs that said pointed out that U-M's search The 49ers finish their sea- "Come Home Jim" with U-M has targeted NFL coaches son next week, hosting the logos and one that said "Ann Doug Marrone ( Buffalo), Arizona Cardinals at Levi's Arbaughr." Sean Payton (New Orleans), Stadium and, like the CharH arbaugh's primary i n - John Harbaugh (Baltimore) gers, who were fighting for a game highlight came after and Jason Garrett (Dallas), playoff spot, Arizona will be quarterback Colin Kaeper- though it noted that John fighting for playoff home-field nick's third-quarter 90-yard Harbaugh is not i n terested advantage. touchdown run. When the and Garrett is on the verge For the first time in Har-

quarterbackcame to the side-

o f an

e x t ension w it h t h e

baugh's four years, the 49ers line Harbaugh leapt, and the Cowboys.

Interim

the Gators against East Carolina in the Birmingham Bowl

es who will be somewhere else playing experience, certainly

Continued from B1

on Jan. 3.

The 58-year-old Cotton ing for Frank and working grew up in Omaha, played for Bo and having Coach Osoffensive line for the Corn- borne as the (athletic direchuskers and served as a grad- tor) here," Cotton said. "And u ate assistant u nder T o m having the chance for Bo and Osborne. He was Frank Sol- Coach Osborne to give my ich's offensive coordinator in boys the opportunity to come

Durkin has been connected

to severaldefensive coordinator jobs since finding out this week he wouldn't be retained

wouldn't have traded work-

"I've been here five years with our guys," Durkin said. "I want to make sure they get my very best as a head coach to go win this game and finish things off the right way. That's where my focus is." 2003 and held several jobs on

by McElwain, Florida's new coach. The interim jobs might be more challenging for Baldwin For Cotton, his imminent and Rudolph, whose bosses parting with Nebraska will be were not fired but instead left more difficult than perhaps it for better jobs. will be for other interim coach"It's a process that goes through the mind right now," Baldwin said. "You're 10-2, ~~~coolsculpting yet you're not sure if you'll be employed at all next year. LEFFEL Don' t setr/rf((r anyone There's limbo, but we acGE N T E R b((t ap / (rrti(s((rgeo(r for C((0/r(u//r/ng 8 cept that in this profession. If 0

you're worried about it, you

next year.

48

play at Nebraska, where their

dad played and where my has had three sons play for folks have lived.... I'll always Nebraska. be thankful and always be "I wouldn't have traded my blessed." Pelini's staff since 2008. He

,

ww(N.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006

NFL

normal 49ers schedule, and, by all accounts, he remains focused on the job he's doing. Competitive and loyal to his players, he feels he owes them all his energy, those who

Stephen Ross announced that

Asked whether Saturday's

Which left others to speak

G LENDALE, A r i z . step closer." Seattle's defense was stiArizona's only remaining fling as usual and its of- hope of winning the division fense had a record-break- is to have the Seahawks lose ing eruption against a de- to the Rams and the Cardinals

destination f a de d S u n day when Miami Dolphins owner

maining, so the waiting game continues.

his future.

son finale, so they can beat

One potential Harbaugh

that job has another week re-

where he was not asked about

The Associated Press

speak twice this week on his

It's just that he is still work-

say right now, tough loss," he said in the news conference,

By Bob Baum

baugh decision after the sea-

ing candidates. Harbaugh is scheduled to

ing for his current positionHarbaugh has been very clear that he talks publicly only about the job he has — and

game was a microcosm of the season with a hot start, falling back, revving up again then losing, Harbaugh wouldn't go there.

port that the 49ers also will be motivated to get a quick Harother teams to the hot coach-

a contractoffer of six years for $48 million, crushing his current five-year, $25-million deal with San Francisco. Seems like a perfect match, right?

Offenseleads'Hawksto 35-6 rompoverCardinals

wise, Arizona will be relegated to a wild-card spot and a first-round game on the road.

a lot like the Super Bowl The Cardinals would have champs of last season in its clinched the No. 1 seed in the conference with a victory.

zona Cardinals on Sunday Instead, the Cardinals sufnight. fered their most one-sided loss "I think i t

f e els better of the season and their only

than last year," Seattle de- one at home in eight games. fensive end Michael BenWilson had the longest run nett said. of his career (55 yards) and Russell Wilson threw matched the longest pass of for two touchdowns and his career (80) in the Searan for another and the hawks' fifth straight victory. Seahawks amassed a franMarshawn Lynch sat out chise-record 596 yards to close in on another NFC West title and the No. 1 seed in the conference. "That's about as much

fun as you can have playing NFL football in the regular season," Seahawks coach Pete Carroll said. Seattle (11-4) moved into a tie with Arizona (11-4) for first in the NFC West and holds the tiebreaker by virtue of two wins over the

Cardinals. A Seattle win at home over St. Louis in next week-

the first quarter with what the

team called an "upset stomach," then came in to score on a 6-yard run in the second

quarter and a spectacular, multiple tackle-breaking 79yard scoring run in Seattle's 21-point fourth quarter.

After his long run, Lynch spun around in the air and

grabbed his crotch facing the field before falling to the turf. Third-string q uarterback Ryan Lindley, pressed into action with an injury to Drew Stanton in the previous game,

end'sregular-season finale

was 18 for 216 yards and an interception against a Seattle

would clinch the NFC's No.

defense that ranks No. 1 in

1 seed. That would have the NFL and has allowed 33 the Seahawks at home points in its past five games. "He needed more help," throughout the playoffs, until they'd come back to coach Bruce Arians said. this same Arizona stadium "He didn't jump offsides on for the Super Bowl.

third-and-goal, that's for sure.

cornerback Patrick Peterson said. "You can't tak-

about how we expected him to

"They're playing awe- Points were going to be a presome football," Cardinals mium for us. Overall, he threw do.

ing nothing away from that ball club. They have

a championship pedigree,

' NQRTHWEsT

what it takes to win on the road, what it takes to win

CROSSING

the division. Obviously, it's not over yet, but they're one

2 LocationsinBend Main Center

WINDOW TREATS

win at San Francisco. Other-

Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's

2150NEStudioRd,Suite10

teestside.

NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suitetto

Ttt1 SW10th • Redmond • (S41)S48-8616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com

shouldn't have gotten into this profession."

www.northwestcrossing.com

541-389-9252 sylvanObendbroadbsnd.com

A Free Public Service

The bowl games amount to

auditions for soon-to-be unemployed coaches, said Gibbs, who'll be across the field from Rudolph when Houston plays Pitt in the Armed Forces Bowl on Jan.2.

"If you're good at your job," Gibbs said, "you realize that if you go out there and coach your butt off and your kids play hard and play good, you have a better chance of getting a job than if your kids go out there and lay down and get beat up on national television." Baldwin, the Rams' offensive coordinator, said he didn't hesitate to accept the inter-

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties

im job for Saturday's game against Utah in the Las Vegas Bowl.

"There's a lot of uncertainty that goes on with the players in this process, and we wanted to make sure they understand

I

we're here for them and we're

going to make this happen," Baldwin said. "We're a 10-2 football team for a lot of good

reasons. Let's make some history and win 11 games." D urkin, w h o w a s Wi l l

Muschamp's defensive coordinator, said because of the transitory nature of the busi-

ness, it's not awkward when an interim coach takes over

for a departed head coach. He said he appreciated the trust athletic director Jeremy Foley

showed in asking him to lead

1

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ig or use the • l 33 0 QKg©Zgg) service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.

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B6

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

O M M U N IT Y BASEBALL

PORTS

E

1VD

or scott.whitejNfleetfeet.com. MOMS RUNNINGGROUP:Rain or shine, 3 to 4.5 miles every Thursday, 9:30 a.m; FREEZEYOUR FANNY WALK/RUN/SWIM: free; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall Dec. 27; Three-mile run/walk, 8-mile St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or angelaIN "prison breakout run," or 3-mile run and footzonebend.com or lisa.nasr@me.com. 500-yard swim biathlon; $20, registration requested, free for children12 and younger; MOVE IT MONDAYS:First and third registration at 8:30 a.m., 8-mile run starts at Mondays of each month. Carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled. All 9 a.m., 3-mile run/walk and biathlon starts at 9:30 a.m.; Madras Aquatic Center, 1195 other runs start and finish at FootZone. Usually 3-5 miles, paces 7-12 minutes per SE Kemper Way; 541-475-2537 or www. mile; free; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 N.W. macaquatic.com/events. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or melanie© footzonebend.com. RUNNING NOON TACORUN: Noon taco run on RUN INTO THENEWYEAR: Dec. 31; Wednesdays from FootZone. Order food Participate in a 2- to 3-mile run/walk on Bend's from the Taco Stand it will be ready upon west side; bring lights or wear reflective gear; your return; free (tacos not included); noon; proceeds benefit the Bethlehem Inn andthe FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or teagueINfootzonebend.com. Bend High Walking Club; $10, registration requested, non-perishable food donations PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP WITH accepted; 11:30 p.m.; Fleet FeetSports, 1320 MAX KING:Tuesdays; Interval-based NW Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or running group. Locations vary; free; 5:30 peggy.white©fleetfeet.com. p.m.; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or maxjNfootzonebend.com. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUNS: Thursdays; Locations vary. Call Roger REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP: uesday Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more info; 5:30 group runs in Redmond. Meet at 314 SW p.m.; Bend. Eleventh St. All abilities welcome; free; 6:30 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www. FLEET FEET WEDNESDAYRUNS: Fleet Feet's Run this Town runs, usually 3-5 miles; runaroundsports.com. free; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW REFLECTIVERUN:Wednesdays, 6 p.m.; Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. group fun run of 3-5 miles; bring headlamps; free;; Fleet Feet Sports,1320 NW Galveston GROWLER RUN:Group run of 3-5 miles on Thursday from Fleet Feet. Share a growler of Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or scott.white© fleetfeet.com. beer from Growler Phil's after the run; free; 6 p.m.; Growler Phil's, 1244 NWGalveston RORK SATURDAY RUNS:Weekly run Ave, Bend, OR97701, Bend; 541-390-3865 or walk with the Redmond Oregon

MULTISPORT

BEND SOUTHLITTLELEAGUE REGISTRATION: Jan.16; Little League baseball and softball registration for kids ages 5-14 in the Bend South district; free; 5-9 p.m.; Bend Field House, 1182 Centennial Court; 541-385-5583 or www.bendsouthll. org.

CLIMBING BEND ENDURANCE COMPETITIONTEAM: Mondays, Wednesdays,Thursdays; Competitive climbing team; $1,600; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S.W. Bond St., Suite 142; www.

bendenduranceacademy.org. BEND ENDURANCEDEVELOPMENT TEAM:Mondays, Wednesdays;Forages 9 and older; developmental climbing team; $480; 4 p.m.; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S.W. Bond St., Suite142; www.

bendenduranceacademy.org.

CYCLING INDOOR CYCLINGCLASSES: Bowen Sports Performance indoor cycling

classes; Mondays, 6a.m. andnoon;

Tuesdays, 6:30 a.m and 5:30 p.m.; Wednesdays,noon;Thursdays,6:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m.; Fridays, noon; Saturdays, 8 a.m; $10 for first-time visit;; Bowen Sports Performance, 225 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-977-1321 or info©

bowensportsperformance.com.

Emailevents at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.com/comsportscal.

Running Klub. Saturdays at 8 a.m. Email Dan Edwards for more info; free; 8 a.m.; downtown Redmond; rundanrun19CNyahoo. com or www.raprd.org. SATURDAY A.M. RUNS: 8 a.m. meet at Fleet Feet Sports Bend. Various routes. Mostly trail. We will car pool to a trail head if necessary. Expect longer runs 4-8 miles of beautiful local routes; free;; Fleet Feet Sports,1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; 541389-1601 or www.fleetfeetbend.com.

SNOW SPORTS MBSEF STEVENSONYOUTH NORDIC PROGRAM:For kids ages 7-11; held at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; 10-week program, Jan. 3-March 8, including a three-day Christmas camp Dec. 26-28; $190;; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 3000 Century Dr, Bend; 541-388-0002 or www.mbsef.org. BEA NORDICYOUTHCLUB:Bend Endurance Academy; Dec 20-March1; Ages 7-11; one and two days a weekoptions; Sat and/or Sun;The YouthClubfocuses on fun and introducing youth to the basics of cross-country skiing and joys of winter; No ski pass necessary and transportation is provide; starts at$200; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S. W. Bond St.,Suite 142; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. BEA YOUTHAFTER-SCHOOL NORDIC: Bend Endurance Academy; Jan 7-Feb 25;

Ages 7-11;Wednesdaysearly release for

Highland, Westside, High Lakes and Miller Schools; New for this skiing season, the Nordic After School program is designed for participants that have little to no previous

IN BRIEF

experience and are excited to get outside and moving in the snow; BEAstaff pick-up participants from select schools at early dismissal and return to BEAoffices; No ski pass necessary and transportation provided; $160; Bend Endurance Academy, 500 S.W. Bond St., Suite142; www.

bendenduranceacademy.org. SHE'S ONSKIS NORDIC SESSIONS: Nordic ski class for women who want to ski one day aweek with acoach;six-weeksessions open to advanced-beginner level and above; $160 for clinic only or $180 for clinic and trail pass;9:30a.m.;M t.Bachelorskiarea,3000 Century Dr, Bend; http://www.mtbachelor. com/site/winter/nordic/lessons.

TABLE TENNIS TABLETENNIS EVENING PLAY: Monday, eveningplay hosted by Bend Table Tennis Club; drop in fees are $3 for adults and

$2 for youths andseniors; 6-9 p.m.; Boys 8 Girls Club of Central Oregon (Bend), 500 NW Wall St Bend, OR97701; www. bendtabletennis.com.

TENNIS NEW YEARKICKOFF DOUBLES TOURNAMENT: Jan. 9-11; Men's and women's doubles tourney; NTR combined of 6.0, 7.0, 8.0; entry deadline Jan. 5; fee includes light snacks and beverages; held at the Sage Springs Club 8 Spa; $25 per player;; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive; 541-593-1000 or bharrington@ destinationhotels.com.

COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD

SWIMMING Bend swimmerscompete at nation-

8IS —Four BendSwim Club swimmers competed at USASwimming's 2014 Winter Juniper Championships in FederalWay,Washington, earlier this month. BenBrockman swam in three events, placing 51st in the 200-yard butterfly, 70th in the 500 freestyle and71st in the 200 free. Paul Rogers finished 41st in the 1,650-yard free. John Hartmeier was70th in

the100 backstroke and86th in the 200 back. And Elli Ferrin finished103rd in the girls100 back. Most events at the championships, which boated some of thetop18-and-under swimmers in the country, had between120 and 150 swimmers.

OREGON SENIORGAMES

tration openedDec.1 for the second annual Oregon Senior Games,which will run from June17to 21in Bend. TheOregonSenior Games aredesigned for athletes ages 50 and older. Sports such asshuffleboard, pickleball, cycling, track and field, golf, and swimming will be stages at the 2015Games. Athletes, who can register at www.oregonseniorgames. com, will be entered to win afree iPad if they sign up for the Gamesby Feb. 2.

Early regiStratiOn OPenS — Regis-

— Bulletin staff reports

TG.I.F.— t shot 2 shotherewego; Bret Borovec

VOLLEYBALL

278//28; JoyReeves 212/539 NEVADAFUN— IFLP2;KenFisher234/598;Amanda Baessle191/499 r

Redmond Volleyball Association Dec.19

Women'sLeague DeathattheNet No name VolleyGirls Just Lucky SnapCracklePop Kiss MyAce I'd HitThat SettingDucks PurpleBandAid

cowpiespikers

W 52 46 40 39 38 38 29 24 19 6

L 13 20 24 28 29 30 36 42 49 60

W 41 38 38 32 22 21 17 16 13 3

L 7 9 11 17 26 27 30 34 35 46

W 42 39 36 32 26 24 19 9 8 3

L 7 8 10 15 23 23 28 39 40 45

Basketball Men's ADivision Week 5 CountryCatering GFP KnightRyderz 10 Barrell Furnish/ZenithAuto

snowplanks SonnyCaldwell Goodyear/WiliamPoter Attorneys continental shaggers

Tuesdayco-ed

Holiday Continued from B1

Clowning around

lic. Bring your own bucket of Getfat Want to practice juggling? balls — baseball or softballs I covered this m or e i n Or stilt walking'? Or ninja — andyou even get a discount. depth two weeks ago, but

You can wing it, or wait

rolls? The Bend Circus Cen-

until Jan. 3 and go on a group run with the Central Oregon Running Klub (CORK), which has partnered with local snowshoe running enthusiast

ter hosts open gyms every M onday and Friday from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Bend's funkiest

shoe Running with Laura group runs the first and third

gym has circus props, tumbling mats and even aerial equipment for experienced acrobats available to use. Workshops and classes are

Saturdays of every month for

also offered.

as long asthereissnow to run on.) For experienced runners, snowshoe running is a great way to rekindle an old habit. It also is about a million times more enjoyable than running on a treadmill. Websltes: www.snowshoe-

Website:www.bendcircuscenter.com

Laura Kantor. (Her Snow-

runwithlaura.com, www.cen-

traloregonrumtingklub.org.

Hit the cages

The San Francisco Giants still

don't have a third baseman, so who knows where a couple of sessi ons in the cages could lead? Website: ww wbendelks/

fatbikes are a great way to

extend the riding season and explorenew terrain.Head out on local snowmobile trails

over the holiday break and then check out the new fatFieldhouse bike-specific trails at Wanoga Sno-park, which are expectTelecool ed to be built in January and Telemark skiers are, with- February. Hutch's Bicycles, out a doubt, the biggest ba- Crow's Feet Commons and dasses on the mountain. WebCyclery are a few of the Several Bend shops — Pine

local bike shops that offer fat-

Mountain Sports and Moun- bikes for rent. tain Supply, to name a couple Websltes: Central Oregon world that feels better than — rent tele packages. Earn Fatbikes' Facebook page, squaring up perfectly on a your waydown the mountain www.hutchsbicycles.com, fastball, please let me know. with a few hundred lunges. www.crowsfeetcommons. The Bend Fieldhouse boasts Websites:wwwpinemoun- com, wwwwebcyclery.com, five batting cages that are tainsports.com, www.moun— Reporter:541-383-0305; available to rent by the pub- tainsupplybend.com beastes@bendbulletin.com.

things, and will make the Pa- is vital. dres better next season, but Upton, also an outfielder, ithout ch a nging there are reasons they were is a lower risk than Kemp anything, the San available in trades. because of his sterling health Diego Padres were For Kemp, health is a con- history. But Upton also prolikely to improve next sea- cern. Duringthe completion of duced what is looking more son. The entire lineup un- the trade with the Los Angeles and more like his career seaderperformed in 2014, and Dodgers, in which the Padres son in 2011: a 6.1 WAR to go the team's poor season totals received $32 million to offset with 31 home runs and 21 stomasked some improvement the $107 million remaining len bases. He finished fourth in the past few months. on his contract, he was found in the National League MVP Rather than waiting to see to have arthritis in his hips. A voting (two places below how much better the team host of other injuries caused Kemp) and seemed on his would be if some of his play- Kemp to miss 56 games in way to being one of the best ershad more typicalseasons, 2012 and 89 games in 2013. players in the game. however, A.J. Preller, San Any additional health worries Upton has been an effecDiego's general manager, re- are enough to question wheth- tive player the past three seashaped the roster, trading a er Kemp can ever return to sons, worth an average of 2.7 huge chunk of the farm sys- his form in 2011, when he was WAR, but his reputation has tem for Justin Upton, Matt probably the best player in the outpaced his production. Kemp, Wil Myers and Derek National League. The good news is that UpNorris. Kemp was worth 8.6 Wins ton, 27, is at an age when S uddenly, a team o f l i t - Above Replacement in 2011, many players reach their tle-known underperformers according to Baseball-Ref- physical peak. And his rehad a group of household erence. Since then, his WAR markable power for a playnames with excellent creden- was just under four for two er of his frame makes Petco tials: five All-Star appearanc- seasons and below two for Park, which has humbled es, two Gold Gloves, four Sil- one season. That represents many so-called sluggers, less ver Sluggers, a rookie of the an upgrade for San Diego, daunting. Last season with year and two top-10 finishers but Kemp is entering his 30s Atlanta, Upton hit 17 home in MVP award voting. and is no longer the dynamic runs that traveled 400 feet or The Padres won the head- wunderkind who burst onto more, according to ESPN's line war, and excited their the scene for the Dodgers in home run tracker, including a fan base, but it will take more 2006. A permanent move to 477-footer off Jenrry Mejia of than next season to judge the left field might help protect the New York Mets that will flurry of activity because of his body and reduce some not soon be forgotten. the potential of the prospects of the damage his below-avMyers, the 2013 AL rookie who were traded. erage play in center caused. of the year, was such a covetThe more immediate is- The $75 million th e t eam ed minor leaguer that Tampa sue is whether San Diego will pay Kemp is the larg- Bay acquired him by trading acquiredas talented a group est financial commitment in James Shields, a No.l starter. as many seem to think. Each Padres history, so finding a He played in just 87 games in player is capable of great way to keep him on the field 2014 and regressed in virtu-

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ally every category. No one would suggest that last season was indicative of Myers' talent, but his maturity was

questioned. Myers, 24, once viewed as a building block, was instead shipped out for

even younger players. Norris, one of the leaders of the surprising Oakland Athletics last season, rode a strong first half to an All-Star appearance. But as is com-

mon with catchers, he was not nearly as effective in the second half, with his on-base

plus slugging percentage droppingt0.638 from.879 before the All-Star break.

Norris, 25, can play some first base to lessen the wear and tear on him, and he will

most likely be a San Diego fan favorite as he was in Oakland. Other teams have tried

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drastic face-lifts like this with mixed results. If the players

o• •

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fit well, stay healthy and play to their potential, San Diego

could be a real force. But by mortgaging the

~ Is Cenir C~euerueev rousarrr?

t eam's future to m ake t h e deals, the Padres will have a

hard time mounting a threat in a division dominated by the San Francisco Giants and the Dodgers. Preller has made a name

for himself, and acquired a lot of name players, but the jury will be out on these moves for

years to come.

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MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014• THE BULLETIN

T EE TO

R EEN PROFESSIONAL

0 seasonup ate:T e GreensatRe mon By Zack Hall

The Greens at Redmond

The Bulletin

T his is another installment in a weekly Tee To Green feature in which we check in via email with Central Or-

tive course in southwest Redmond:

Number ofholes: 18 Status:Openyear-round, weather permitting Location: 2575SW GreensBlvd., Redmond Tee times:541-923-0694 Course stats:Par 58, 3,554 yards Head golf professional:None Course designer:Robert Muir Graves (1996) Extras:Indoor driving facility, putting green andpractice bunker, pro shop,snackbar,banquet/meeting

Q•

Website: www.greensatredmondgc.com

egon golf facilities for an offseason update. This week we contacted Michael

Shipley, operations manager at The Greens at Redmond. Shipley, who is the son of owner Randy Shipley, has been in charge of The Greens' daily operations since the family purchased the course earli-

er this year. This is what he had to say about the current business of golf and about The Greens, an 18-hole execuHow wa s

facilities

b u siness in 2 014?

• For our first year, we have had a • better-than-expected response to The12th Hole at The Greens at Redmond golf course.

Q•

Q•

percent completed on bringing the grass on the greens to full playability

we keep golf as golf, we will use our original nine holes for traditional golf while FootGolf is being played.

greens, and course and slope rating adjustments.

and about 65 percent on the fairways

and rough. We also restored the bunkers, which were almost like hitting

Much has been made about

Q •• n ew i n i tiatives to g r o w

A

into bringing the course back to its

5 will be completed by the summer.

original condition. We are way ahead These changes will mean new yardof our schedule, as we are nearly 90 age distances, new looks from tee to

the Bend Park 8t Recreation Foundation, which has hosted

Continued from B1

the Gopher Broke Scramble charities." Golf Tournament for the past Lampert knows both ends 11years. of the relationship well. Not This year the Gopher Broke only does he run the golf was played at Bend Golf and operations of the Prineville Country Club a n d a t t ractmunicipal golf course, but as ed 124 players, raising some coach of the Crook County $25,000forscholarships in the High School boys golf team, Bend park district's programs. he also organizes the annual That is a nice haul by most fundraiser tournament for the any measure. school's golf programs. Most golf facilities want to L ampert is no t a l one i n

touting the success of the golf-charity relationship. "A well-run golf event on a premiere course in beautiful Central Oregon is a wonder-

host the events, too, and not

just out of altruism. Golf courses often charge

fundraisersa fee to use the course, and in some cases the courses earn revenue through

sales of food, beverage and come together and have fun merchandise. "For us, it is goodwill for the while raising funds for nonprofit organizations providing community, a chance to showcritical programs and services case our course and our prodin our region," says Vito Di- uct to new players, and still an M aio, director ofresource de- avenue for us to help our botvelopment for the United Way tom line," says Lampert. ful way for the community to

of Deschutes County, which

Still, according to Tim Fra-

raised some $20,000 at its ley, director of player develUnited Way Charity Golf Clas- opment at Awbrey Glen Golf sic in May at Crosswater Club in Sunriver.

Club in Bend, fewer tourna-

Cooperation

cent past. But that is not all

Some charities say the cost to use most courses has ticked

ment fundraisers are being staged locally than in the rebad. For one thing, it means Aw-

up slightly in recent years, and brey Glencan balance fundothers say they must book raisers with its members' detheir tournament dates earlier

than they used to. Regardless, even during the meat of the

golf season, tournament organizers often find willing hosts among Central Oregon's 30 golfcourses. In fact, every golf facility in

your club either started to Q •• Has offer or does it plan to implement any of those initiatives?

sire to use the course.

"The last few years the demand for courses has come down in line with participa-

The Associated Press D UBAI, U n ited A r a b Emirates — India's Arjun Atwal won the Asian Tour's

season-ending Dubai Open on Sunday, rallying on the final hole tobeat 19-year-old South Korean player Wang Jeung-hun by a stroke. A shot behind entering with a birdie and Wang made a bogey. The 41-year-old Atwal won for the first time since the PGA Tour's 2010 Wynd-

ham Championship. He finished with a 6-under 66 for

• We are also planning on having

a 16-under 272 total at The

• both traditional golf and Foot-

A

Golf leagues throughout the summer. We believe in the "Tee it Forward" approach, making golf more enjoyable for more people and golf rounds that don't take all day. We may also try the

Els Club Dubai. "This one feels really special," Atwal said. "I've gone through some really tough times the last few years with injuries and losing

15-inch holes next summer. Our philos-

my card on the PGA Tour

will have three afternoons dedicated

ophy is "Let's make golf fun!" Because of that, we are open to all new ideas for the enjoyment of the game.

the

out of concrete when we first took over

game (FootGolf, 15-inch holes, Speedat the beginning of the year. golf, etc.). What, if any, of those initiatives would you consider the most Were anychanges ofnote made Are any changes and/or im- promising? • to the facility duringthe lastyear? • provements to the facility sched• The Greens has already designed • When we bought The Greens uled for 2015? • a nine-hole FootGolf course us• at the first of the year, we said it • Though no m a j or c h a nges ing the "new holes" on our back side would be at least a two-year project. • were completed in 2 0 14, the of the course. The first two months Most of our efforts this past year went new tee boxes on (hole Nos.) 3 and saw play increasing each week. We

A

India's Atwall claims win in Dubai

the par-5 18th, Atwal closed

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

our changes. Rounds were up, which included both the women's and men's clubs. Returning annual pass holders were about95 percent,w hil e new annual pass holders were more than what we had budgeted for. Our only area that didn't see an increase was outside tournament play. Tournaments and leagues will be our main focus going into our 2015 season.

Charity

B7

to FootGolf and will increase the days and times when there is a need. So that

How they did A sampling of Central Oregon golf fundraisers in 2014 and howthe approximate proceeds of each event compared with 2013: • Birdies 4 Babies (Caldera Links andGolf Park): $39,000, up from $17,000 • Crook County High School Golf TeamBenefit Tournament (Meadow LakesGolf Course): $9,000, down from $9,600 • Father's House Missions Golf Tournament (Aspen Lakes Golf Course): $2,000, up from $1,700 • Gopher Broke Scramble (Bend Golf andCountry Club): $25,000, down from $27,000 • Go Golf! Tournament (Broken TopClub): $50,194, up from $46,842 • St. Charles Redmond Volunteer Golf Event (Eagle Crest resort): Flat • First Story's Annual Charity Golf Tournament & After-Party (Tetherow Golf Club): Up 13percent • United WayCharity Golf Classic (Crosswater Club): $20,000, flat

• Wildland Firefighter Foundation Benefit Golf Tournament (TheGreensat Redmond): $5,000 up from $3,000

tion of fundraiser events," says Sources: fundraiser organizers Fraley, who, like Lampert, helps organize his own fundraiser, the Central Oregon Golf fundraisers come and the region hosted at least one Junior Golf Association's Ju- go, to be sure. But many thrive fundraising event during the nior 23. "Speaking for Awbrey year after year. 2014 golf season. Glen, we are always willing to No blueprint for success "We have had the honor of host up to five events during a exists, though. In fact, while working with some tremen- season. We try to space them scrambles are the most popdous local courses and it is not out one per month if the sched- ularformat, fundraisers can a challenge to find a great site ule permits." differ greatly. "A golf fundraiser must be a to host the event," says Kim Formula forsuccess J ohnson, administrator f o r good fit for the organization's

— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhallibendbulletin.com.

demographic and donor base Family Relief Nursery. "We in order for it to be successful," are switching up the event as says Claire Duncan, executive director of First Story, which

well — venue, format, auction items, et cetera — not letting

hOldS First Slory'An snual Charity Golf Tournament & After-PartyalTetherowGolf Clubin Bend. It iS

things get stagnant." "We use the golf to attract

important to choose fundraisers that really connect you to

people, and gather folks together,but we do not make your constituents." very much at all off of the golf The Go Golf! Tournament itself, as we try to keep entry — Newport Avenue Market's fees low," says Neil Austin, suannual event to raise money

"The Go Golf! is one of the

Lauren Johnson, who runs the event that raised more than

point where I almost wanted to quit. Thanks to a few

of my family and friends, I didn't, and here we are."

Wanghad a 67. "I hada lot ofpressure," Wang said. "I just tried my best. I don't have any regret. I think I did my best. I just tried to play my game, but I cannot do that because of the pressure." Scotland's Simon Yates was third at 13 under after a68.

WIHDOW TREATS

perintendent of the Redmond

for the Hunger Prevention Interagency Hotshot Crew, Coalition of Central Oregon which raised some $5,000 (up — touts its consistent ownfrom $3,000 in 2013) for the ball format in part for its Wildland Firefighter Foundasuccess. tion at a benefit tournament only play-your-own-ball tournaments in the area," says

and all that stuff. It was at a

at The Greens at Redmond in

May. "We make more money off of hole sponsors, silent auctions, et cetera.

There can be a danger with $50,000 this year. "Coupled his model, Austin adds. "We are putting more effort with being an annual event that our vendors, partners and into securing donations and industry friends can c ount sponsors early, and it has paid on happening with g reat off," he says. "In my opinion food and drink, at a beautiful the merchants and businesses time of the year (July), gen- of Central Oregon have been erally played in the middle so helpful and gracious, but I of the week — we feel this is am concerned with overtaxthe recipefor success of our ing their generosity." tournament." Regardless, fundraisers will Birdies 4 Babies, the golf-re- not be disappearing from Cenlated fundraiser for Bend's tralOregon golfcourses anyMountainStar Family Relief time soon. Nursery, raised $39,000 last The reason is obvious, says year with its event at Sunriver Ray Wheeler, who organizes Resort's par-3 course, Caldera the Father's House Missions Links and Golf Park. But the organizers are not married to the format.

Golf Tournament.

4 Babies will try a new team

event, which this year was

"We enjoy this method of raising mission funds for our Despite the success, Birdies church," says Wheeler of his

format in 2015 at a new golf course, Broken Top Club in

held in June at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters. "EvBend. eryone goes away with some"The Birdies 4 Babies fund- thing and each year we have raiser relies on an amazing a little bigger roster of players team of volunteers who do the

and even more door prizes.

work to put on the event, and loyal communities of golfers

Everyone has fun."

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GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomescontributions to its Hawkes/Perry,No. 8; Fahe y/Parker, No. 9; PaxtoN weekly local golf results listings and events Bloo,No.15;Brown/Olson, No.17. calendar. Clearly legible items should be uxed to the sports department, 541-385MEADOW LAKES 0831, emailed to sports©bettdbttllenn.com, Chris tmasGoose,Dec.13 ormailedtonn.Box6020;Bend,On 97708. Chapman Gross: 1,Jeff Brown/Jeff Storm,63. 2, Patrick Andrade/Dewe ySpringer, 74.uet:1 (tie), JohnMarino/ Club Results ChrisHardy,63;BruceBurson/Jim Johnson,63; Dennis Willings/KimBradshaw,63. EAGLECREST KPs — Jeff Storm,Nos.8,17. Central Oregon Winter Series, nec. 12 LongPutt—JeanGregerson, No.1. at RidgeCourse Skins — Gross:Andrade/Springer,No.2;GoodBetler Ball ew/See graves,No.4;Marino/Hardy,No.10;Hatch/ A Flight — Gross:1, Ro gerEichorn/Don Orrell, No.13.Nu: Brockman/Zangari, Nos.6, 12; 65.2,ZachLampert/Jim Montgomery,66.3,Ron Jackson, Seals/HarryPaik, 69.Nel: f, PatHtlffer/MarcBeebe, Goodew/ SeegravesrNo.4;Spangler/Barnhouse,No. 61. 2, ScottBrown/DonOlson, 63. 3, Verl Steppe/ 5; Christian/Christian,No.8; Marino/Hardy,No.10; Willings/Bradsh aw,Nt. u; Cleveland /Martin, No.16; NormOrio, 66. BFlight —Gross:1,MarkGarcia/Matt Burgess, Anderson/Sullivan,No.17. 72. 2, BobStirling/Lyle Zurflu, 74.3, Paul Nemitz/ RobertHolloway,75, net:1, Pat Fahey/HerbParker, Calendar 62. 2 (tie),DaveBarnhouse/SteveSpangler,64;Hank Mccauley/JerryCoday,64. The Bulletin welcomescontributions to ln CFlight — eross:1, KellyPaxton/HelmtltBloo, weekly localgolf eventscalendar. Itemsshould lednne. Box6020,Bend,On97708; 77. 2 (tie), ToddGoodew/Ralph Schlappi, 78; Tim be mai Swope/ Reed Sloss,78.Ntn f,FredBushong/Kim faxed to the sporls deparlment at 541-385Bradshaw,63.2 (tie), PaulGrieco/JimZant, 66;How- 0831; or emailed tospotts@bettdbulletin.com. ard Zangari/DenniBroc s kman,66. KPs —AFlight; MarcusBeebe, No. 3. BFlight; TOURNAME NTS SteveSpangler, No.13. CFlight: RogerPalmer, No.6. Jatt. 23: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat High Desert Resort nearWarm Springs. Skins —Gross:Eichorn/Orrell, No.13;Lampert/ Kah-Nee-Ta Montgome ry,No.14.Net McCaul ey/Coday,No.4; Triple-sixtournamentbeginswith an11a.m.shotgun.

141 SE 3rd • Bend

62$80 LBOYO ACRESRg. . BENg

Two-person teamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperleam.Costis $30for professionals, $50 for amateurs.Costincltldes grossandnel skinscompetitions.Carlcostsextra.All playersmust signupby noon on theWednesday beforethe event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call PalHuller,headproal Crooked RiverRanch, at541-923-6343or email him al crrpat©crookedriverranch.com . Jan.31:SuperBowlScrambleatMeadow Lakes Golf Coursein Prinevile. Scramble is forfour-person teamsandleesoff with an11 a.m.shotgun.Costis t80 perleamplust25 per-persongreenfee.Toregisler orformoreinformation, call theMeadowLakesgolf shop at541-447-703.

Feb. 6: CentralOregonWinter Series eventat Meadow LakesGolf Clubin Prinevile. Sham bletournamentbeginswith an11 a.m.shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper

leam. Costis$30forprofessionals, $50for amateurs. Cost includes grossandnel skinscompetitions. Cart costs extra.All playersmustsigntlp bynoononthe

Wednesday before the event. Toregister orfor more information, call PalHuffer,head proalCrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat©

crookedriverranch.com . Feb. 21: CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat CrookedRiver Ranch. Beter-ball tournament begins with an 11a.m. shotgun.Two-person teams with no morethanoneprofessional allowedperteam.Cost is $30 forprofessionals,$50foramateurs. Costincludes gross andnel skinscompe titions. Cart costsextra. All playersmustsign upby noonontheWednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor moreinformation, call PalHuller, headproat CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343 or email himat crrpat@crookedriverranch.com. March 7:PolarBearOpenalMeadowLakesGolf Course in Prinevile. Individualstroke-playtournamentleesoffwith a10a.m,shotgun, Costis $20per teamplust25 per-persongreenfee. To register orfor moreinformation,call theMeadowLakesgolf shopat 541-447-7113.

HAPPY HQLIDAYs FROM THE PHYSICIANS AND STAFF AT BEND UROLOGY tt ' &wHvea

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W EAT H E R

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014

Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,lnc. ©2014 i

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TEMPERATURE

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PRE 58 at ttrtllamette Pass:Mild anddry today with a mix ofsunandclouds. Patchyclouds tonight. Becomingcloudybutdry tomorrow. PRE138ut DiamondLake: Mild anddrytoday with intervals of doudsandsunshine.

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

Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 6 22-2 7 HoodooSkiArea: est. openingPec.28 Mt. Ashland 0 22-3 4 0 40-6 8 Mt. Bachelor Mt. Hood Meadows 10 15-15 Mt. HoodSki Bowl: est. opening Dec.23 Timberline Lodge 0 6-6 Wigamette Pass:est. opening Dec.26 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 2 24-40 Vail, CO 2 31-3 1 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 1 30-48 Squaw Valley,CA 2 18-4 5 ParkCityMountain,UT 2 25-25 Sun Valley, ID 8 20-6 1 Source: OnTheSnow.com

48 contiguousstates) National high:82 at Marathon, FL National low: P

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TRAVEL WEATHER

City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 61/42/0.00 63/42/pc High 48 39 57' in 1 9 18 lington 52/SB Portland Akron 31/26/Tr 43/36/c Meac am Losti ne 53/49 41' 22' -15'in 1990 Low / 4 /34 Albany 31/27/Tr 36/33/pc •W dle+ n4 1/ 2 42/ 2 3 Enterprise • he Pall Albuquerque 51/28/0.00 56/28/pc • • 40/ Tigamo • 6 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: A mild and andy • Anchorage 25/17/0.02 29/23/sf 55/41 Mc innvill • Joseph Atlanta 50/46/Tr 54/47/c 44 Govee • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.10o dry day today with n t •• u p i Condon /33 46 26 Atlantic City 41/31/0.00 46/41/r Cam Record 1.02oin 1989 intervals of clouds union 20 Lincoln Austin 56/50/0.00 68/46/pc o 41/ Month to date (normal) 0.9 4 (1.54") and sunshine. Partly 54/49 Sale Baltimore 42/29/0.00 40/35/r • pmy Granitee Year to date (normal) 9.55o (10.70o) cloudy tonight. 55/ • /34 Billings 54/32/Tr 43/28/sn ' Baker C Newpo 46/26 B arometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 1o0 Birmingham 56/33/0.00 59/55/c 4/45 56/50 • Mitch ll 46/26 Bismarck 39/11/0.00 33/21/sn C a m P S h m a u R e d WEST:There can be a 46/32 I\ p rV RS I SUN ANDMOON Boise 47/42/1.02 49/31/c Yach • John eu shower in spots early 55/47 Boston 42/39/c 55/51 • Prineville Day 2/23 Today Tue. tario Bridgeport, CT 36/30/Tr today, otherwise it dry 37/32/0.06 44/41/sh 47/32 • Pa lina 45/30 7:37 a.m. 7: 3 8 a.m. 5 34 Buffalo 33/26/0.00 40/33/pc out but remains rather Floren e • Eugene • Re d Brothers 4529 4:30 p.m. 4: 3 1 p.m. cloudy. Valee 58/50 Burlington, YT 27/1 6/0.00 33/30/pc Su iVere 47/32 7:52 a.m. 8: 4 3 a.m. 49/33 Caribou, ME 24/1 6/0.00 27/22/c Nyssa • 4 6 / 2 • La ptne Ham ton Charleston, SC 51/44/0.01 57/49/sh 5:48 p.m. 6 : 5 7 p.m. J untura 51/ 3 1 Grove Oakridge Co Charlotte 51/42/0.00 45/39/r • Burns OREGON EXTREMES Full La s t New 48/30 55/45 /42 Chattanooga 48/31/0.00 55/48/c 59 9 • Fort Rock Riley 46/29 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 48/29 Cheyenne 47/29/0.03 35/20/sn e S 46/26 46/31 Chicago 36/31/Tr 41/38/r High: 65' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 38/27/0.00 48/44/c Jordan V gey Dec 28 Jan 4 J a n 1 3 J a n 2P at Medford 59/49 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 66/47 Cleveland 31/28/0.00 44/36/c Low: ae' 44/27 Marsh Lake 48/30 ColoradoSprings 52/23/0.00 43/1 8/sh Tuuight's uity:At 12:09 p.m. today, the sun 47/31 at Baker City 49/30 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 46/39/Tr 48/35/c • Paisley 8/ will be at its lowest altitude of 21 degrees a Columbia, SC 56/44/0.03 51/44/r • 50/32 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 53/49/Tr 59/52/c Medfo d 5 1 / 32 above the southemhorizon for the year. Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 37/28/Tr 46/39/c 58/ 52/32 • 42 Klamath Concord, NH 32/27/0.02 37/31/c Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • FaRS • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 62/53/0.00 76/59/pc Bro ings 56/ 57/ 53/34 49/31 49/29 Dallas 52/47/Tr 63/44/pc Dayton 38/21/0.00 46/40/c Denver 54/24/Tr 43/25/sn 1P u.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Des Moines 43/36/Tr 45/33/r 1 I~ T ~ T I 0 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 36/27/0.00 40/35/pc The highertheAccuWealheruomiiy Index number, Astoria 56/54/0.14 54/47/c 56/45/r La Grande 52/39/0.32 46/26/c 45/32/c Portland 59/5 3/0.0653/46/c 56/46/c Duluth 33/29/Tr 35/32/sn the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, Baker City 44/38/0.37 46/26/c 42/31/pc La Pine 45/39/2.43 46/32/c 48/31/c Prinevige 52/ 45/0.3847/32/pc48/32/ c El Paso 63/34/0.00 67/39/s 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 57/57/1.75 57/48/sh57/47/s Medford 65 /48/0.17 60/42/pc 56/39/c Redmond 49 / 43/0.4348/32/pc 50/33/c 12/-9/0.00 1/-6/c Fairbanks Bums 49/36/0.14 46/29/c 47/28/c Ne wport 55/5 2 /0.48 56/50/c 57/47/r Roseburg 58/ 5 7/0.5960/47/c 58/44/c Fargo 35/32/0.00 39/32/sn Eugene 56/54/0.77 56/46/sh 55/42/c N o rth Bend 5 7 / 55/0.57 59/50/c 59/48/c Salem 59/53/0.46 55/46/c 57/47/c Flagstaff 54/26/0.00 52/27/s Klamath Fags 53/46/0.6353/34/pc 50/31/s Ontario 50/41/0.55 53/34/c 47/30/c Sisters 52/42/1.37 49/32/c 51/33/c Grand Rapids 35/30/Tr 40/36/c For webcameras of ourpasses, goto Lakeview 50/39/0.03 49/31/c 48/29/s Pendleton 59/49/0.01 49/34/c 51/38/c The Dages 5 7 / 43/0.78 55/41/c 55/42/c Green Bay 36/29/Tr 38/32/sn www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams Greensboro 47/36/0.00 40/37/r Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday l44 at Cabbage Hill: Intervals Ofclouds and Harrisburg 37/24/0.00 39/34/r sunshine today;mild anddry. Harfford, CT 34/31/0.04 39/36/c Helena 45/32/0.06 42/21/sn US 2P atSuntiumPass:Mild anddry today 83/67/0.00 78/68/sh with a mixture ofclouds andsunshine. ~ os ~ t o e ~ 2 p e ~s o s ~do s ~ 5 0 s ~e o e ~7 o s ~ a o s ~ g o s ~ f p ps ~1108 Honolulu ~ tos ~ o s Houston 61/48/0.00 73/56/c US 26 atGov'tCamp:Times ofcloudsand Huntsville 55/32/0.00 56/52/c NATIONAL sunshine todaywith a mild aftemoon. Indianapolis 36/20/0.00 44/43/c Que c 22/1 Jackson, MS 61/35/0.00 67/57/c US 26 atOchocoDivide: Sunshinemixing with EXTREMES Jacksonville 58/56/0.16 73/62/r some cloudstoday; dryandmild. YESTERDAY (for the

Yesterday Normal Record

38'

~

Partly sunny

Rain

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatilla Hood 49/34 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

ria

"'"

38'

~

OREGON WEATHER EAST: A lingering shower early in some Seasid areas, otherwise it 53/49 remains mostly cloudy Cannon

FRIDAY

***

Hi/Lo/W 53/34/pc 50/48/r 41/41/c 41/23/s 28/17/s 60/55/t 54/48/sh 58/37/sh 49/44/sh 39/31/pc 67/52/t 30/16/sf 49/33/c 47/44/c 48/46/r 47/42/c 41/38/r 33/29/pc 70/61/t 52/48/r 57/54/r 29/16/pc 47/33/c 56/50/r 49/47/r 38/19/pc 44/35/c 61/57/t 67/60/1 53/50/r 40/38/i 65/43/pc 54/36/sh 54/49/r 37/20/pc 42/32/c 46/41/r 33/29/sn 51/26/pc 3/-10/sf 36/24/sn 42/21/s 46/37/r 42/30/sn 48/46/r 44/42/c 45/43/sh 36/28/c 78/67/1 59/40/sh 64/49/t 51/38/r 69/41/1 78/64/t

Litlle Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

50/41/0.00 64/43/0.00 Auckland 68/64/0.00 Baghdad 63/48/0.00 at Newport, VT 3/41 Bangkok 90/72/0.00 Precipitation: 1.2B" Beijing 36/16/0.00 ssft Luke Beirut 66/55/0.04 at Arcata, CA n unaico alk elum us • Omah , i i i s i 4 7/27 * * • Doh Berlin 44/39/0.05 44/53 4 /39 2 * * * 43/ 2 s Veg us e11 * * Bogota 68/52/0.05 ' Kunsus CftX i i y 6 44 * o 54/49 Budapest 45/39/0.00 * Ibu erque 48/31 i x x x ~j j Buenos Ai r es 72/57/0.08 45/3l x x x 56/28 ushyff * Los An fos a Ci Cabo San Lucas 80/56/0.00 d d d 4/55 8 /37 x x x 'L Cairo 68/54/0.00 d d d d Anchorage x x v'8 48 • Ai Calgary 41/27/0.00 *29/2 Cancun 82P3/0.82 8 nu' Phoen 68/48 WPs Dublin 55/43/Tr 7 58 II 43/ 7/3 Edinburgh 53/42/0.88 40/29 J 4 4 4 4 4 4 Geneva 46/30/0.00 d d d Harare fri d 74/62/0.48 Hong Kong 66/54/0.00 Honolulu»oci Chihuuhuu Istanbul 54/49/0.49 75/40 oooo'o'ov.v.'o'oe o Mi smi Jerusalem 57/45/0.00 Monte y 82/7ft, 80/53 Johannesburg 82/60/0.00 s Lima 75/64/0.00 Lisbon 57/41/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 54/41/0.00 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 57/32/0.00 Manila 85/75/0.13

52/48/c 55/44/pc 72/57/s 63/43/s 83/68/pc 47/22/s 65/53/sh 51/47/c 68/41/pc 46/38/pc 73/53/c 79/55/s 68/51/pc 41/24/pc 83/74/pc 54/46/r 48/41/r 50/35/pc 78/63/1 63/59/s 48/44/s 55/44/sh 81/61/1 76/65/pc 58/47/s 54/48/c 57/30/s 84/76/sh

57/32/0.00 59/51/c 57/41/r 80/65/0.00 82P2/pc 82/74/pc

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

37/31/Tr 40/37/r 46/32/c 38/31/0.15 37/32/sn 35/29/sn 54/25/0.00 57/53/c 62/48/r 58/52/0.00 73/63/sh 72/48/t 36/31/Tr 43/41/sh 51/50/sh 36/32/Tr 43/39/sh 51/49/sh 43/28/0.00 49/44/r 54/49/c 48/41/0.01 57/37/pc 45/31/pc 42/34/Tr 42/32/sh 38/28/sf 80/62/0.42 80/66/t 81/69/c 69/47/0.00 80/56/s 76/50/s 40/35/0.00 44/40/sh 48/35/c 40/31/0.00 42/39/r 53/48/sh 65/47/0.00 68/48/pc 68/43/s 33/27/0.00 42/35/c

50/45/c

71/55/s 64/53/s

75/53/s

62/55/r 52/45/c

74/63/1

35/21/Tr 35/31/0.12 50/38/0.00 Rapid City 50/20/Tr Reno 62/50/0.00 Richmond 47/36/0.00 Rochester, NY 37/26/0.00 Sacramento 65/57/Tr St. Louis 45/41/Tr Salt Lake City 44/38/0.53 San Antonio 55/51/Tr San Diego 68/55/0.00 San Francisco 63/59/0.02 San Jose 62/56/Tr Santa re 45/30/0.00 Savannah 51/48/0.06 Seattle 55/49/0.11 Sioux Fags 38/30/Tr Spokane 49/37/0.38 Springfield, MO 42/40/0.00 Tampa 78/64/0.35 Tucson 64/40/0.00 Tulsa 49/42/0.00 Washington, DC 45/36/0.00 Wichita 46/41/0.04 Yakima 59/40/0.12 Yuma 69/48/0.00

Providence Raleigh

i

Amsterdam Athens

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 38/34/0.14 40/29/sn 34/20/c 45/34/Tr 48/31/c 40/29/c 34/25/0.00 40/35/c 45/40/r 56/43/0.00 68/46/s 65/40/s 42/20/0.00 51/43/c 58/51/r 43/33/0.00 42/32/c 37/28/c 55/33/0.00 58/45/c 53/37/sh 68/50/0.00 74/55/s 77/54/s 43/22/0.00 54/49/c 58/49/r 36/30/Tr 38/34/r 43/31/c

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln

slifsx /28

* ** ** '

Yesterday Today Tuesday

City

8

38/33/c 43/40/c 45/39/c 49/44/sh 42/40/r 52/50/r 39/23/sn 33/16/pc 57/32/pc 55/31/s 42/38/r 53/47/c 39/32/pc 48/43/c 64/47/s 60/44/pc 51/44/c 52/38/r 47/27/r 42/30/pc 72/49/pc 61/40/c 65/51/s 65/48/s 67/46/s 48/19/pc 35/11/s 55/44/r 39/29/sf 35/24/sn 41/30/c 42/36/pc 50/35/c 44/33/sh 76/66/1 79/68/c 66/41/s 64/36/s 57/37/pc 48/33/pc 42/39/r 51/47/sh 52/32/c 40/28/c 50/34/pc 49/38/c 75/56/s 74/47/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

51/44/c 60/47/s 72/61/pc 60/42/pc 86/70/pc 48/26/s 63/53/pc 51/42/c 69/45/s 51/35/pc 77/61/s 81/55/s 65/49/s 37/29/pc 83/74/pc 50/39/sh 45/35/c 51/35/s 76/63/t 69/63/pc 55/48/s 55/40/pc 78/60/pc 76/65/c 59/48/pc 54/48/pc 53/30/pc 82/77/sh

90/75/0.00 88/66/s 73/49/0.00 69/48/pc Montreal 19/12/0.00 23/22/c Moscow 36/32/0.32 30/26/pc Nairobi 82/61/0.10 77/59/1 Nassau 82/64/0.00 81/70/pc New Delhi 61/42/0.00 63/43/c Osaka 46/37/0.02 43/36/pc Oslo 28/14/0.20 41/35/pc Ottawa 19/9/0.08 23/17/pc Paris 48/39/0.00 50/43/pc Rio de Janeiro 100/76/0.00 90/75/1 Rome 63/43/0.00 60/44/pc Santiago 72/54/0.00 78/49/s Sao Paulo 86/73/0.00 84/66/1 Sapporo 29/28/0.06 24/20/sn Seoul 23/11/0.06 37/24/sn Shanghai 43/29/0.00 46/34/s Singapore 88m/0.09 83P6/t Stockholm 32/27/0.00 39/27/c Sydney 79/64/0.00 83/69/pc Taipei 60/58/0.27 59/55/pc Tel Aviv 67/53/0.02 66/54/sh Tokyo 52/43/0.00 50/39/pc Toronto 36/27/Tr 37/32/pc Vancouver 50/39/0.37 48/41/c Vienna 46/38/0.01 49/46/pc Warsaw 41/35/0.11 48/45/r

84/66/s 68/46/pc 36/32/i 36/21/c 80/60/pc 83/71/s 64/44/c 50/37/pc 42/30/pc 35/32/i 49/41/pc 85/74/r 60/45/c 85/53/s 73/64/1 28/24/sf 45/35/c 54/40/s 86/76/t 33/27/pc 79/69/1 71/59/s 66/52/pc 50/39/s 43/39/c 48/40/r 55/40/pc 49/40/r

WINTER SPORTS ROUNDUP

America Hears HEARING AIDS. Helping Heeple Hear Better Established 1979

HEAR BETTER FOR LESS

P

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~%%d'. '.

Marco Tacca/The Associated Press

Elisabeth Goergl of Austria competes before taking first place in an alpine ski women'sWorld Cup

• o~

-"V •

o..

~

74

super-G in Val d'Isere, France, Sunday.

The Associated Press

gasps from fans at the bottom of the Oreiller-Kil-

VAL D'ISERE, France — American Lindsey Vomt's bid for a record-equaling 62nd World

ly course. She lay on her back for a few moments, then flexed her right legbefore getting up.

Cup win will have to wait a little while longer.

"I was on the limit and hit some softer snow and lost a little bit of elevation, and then I wasn't

out of Sunday's super-G race after entering a gate slightly too wide, as Elisabeth Goergl beat Olympicchampion Anna Fenninger by .05 seconds to lead an Austrian 1-2. Although Vonn did no damage to her troublesome right knee — after starting to race again only recently following two operations — she landed heavily on her right elbow. "I was risking everything and attacking the course. That sometimes happens in super-G, you don't have any training runs and you have

able to make the gate," the 30-year-old Vonn said. "The most important thing is my knees are good." Overall leader Tina Maze of Slovenia finished third, .13 behind Goergl. "The course today was really tricky and I kind of like that," the 33-year-old Goergl said.

• • ' s

MANUFACTURER DIRECT PRICING •

It was the former super-G world champion's

on Gran Risa: ALTA BADIA, Italy — Marcel

a Very 1Ong day.n

slalom race. Extending his first-rttn lead, the

Hirscher beat Olympic champion Ted Ligety "I didn't feel quite as sharp as I normally do," by a large margin to post his third career win Vonn said. "I was a little bit tired, yesterday was on the Gran Risa course in a World Cup giant

Perhaps fittingly, Vonn can now do so at

seventh World Cup race win, and her first since

finish and was.01 ahead of Georgl's time on the first split.

three-time defending overall champion from Austria clocked a two-run time of 2 minutes, 30.17 seconds.

Ligety, the American who has twice won this race,moved up from seventh after the opening leg to finish second, 1.45 seconds behind. After going too tightly into a turn, Vonn went Thomas Fanara of France placed third, a furinside on her skis and slid off course, prompting ther three hundredths back.

the Austrian resort of Bad Kleinkirchheim, where a downhill and a super-G are set for Jan. 10-11.

"My coaches reported that there were some weird turns."

winning a super-G in the Italian resort of Cortisomehow funny. I have some ice on it. It's just a na d'Ampezzo in January. Goergl finished seclittle bit swollen but no big deal." ond in Saturday's downhill. After winning Saturday's downhill, Vonn Also on Sunday: was looking for a fourth consecutive podium Hirscher beats Ligety for 3rd career win

She was looking to move level with Austrian

R'R%

s •

just one inspection," Vonn said. "I hit my elbow,

great Annemarie Moser-Proll for all-time wins.

* ~V

olou

Austrians finish1-2 in super-G The four-time World Cup winner crashed

X

+

• •

-

.

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Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

Jewelry Collection and so much more! Gifts starting as iow

Ruger M77 Mark i i stainless 22-250 rifle with 6-18x44 Vortex CrossFire II scope with www.bendbulletin.com 350 rnd of ammo. Au Womens Taylor Made To shopONLINE are exc. cond. $900 Burner Bubble clubs, contact Polly 541-821-1046 full set woods, irons Glock 19 Gen. 4, Dark directly at with bag & pull cart, Earth, mint condition, 200 pairs of X-Coun249 pollyschoenhoff l ike n e w . $35 0 . $575. 541-771-3222 try & Downhill skis, Art, Jewelry 541-593-7107 © gmall.com many leading brands, Advertise your car! & Furs (Atomic, K2, Head, forAdd A Ptcturei 246 Call for information eign imports, etc.) with Reach thousands of readers! and a FREEcatalog bindings, in great conGuns, Hunting Call 541-385-5809 12ct Amethyst 8 qold The Bulletin Ciassifieds ring, $200. In Reddition, some like new. & Fishing mond, 520-891-0258. 541-749-0494 Children's 8 adult sizes. Cheaper than a 1-day 1901 Remington 7mm Iver Johnson 357 Mag Items shipped rental! $22/pair. Call rolling block, excel- SA revolver w/holster, directly to you! for information/location. lent condition, needs $280. 541-383-3117 541-408-1828 back s ight, $ 3 7 5. Mossberg 20ga pump, 253 541-728-0445 Mod. 500C, exlnt, $250. TV, Stereo & Video Ruger 243 Mark II w/3x9 245 Redfield wide a n g le 300 Weatherby Above artwork, Golf Equipment scope, exlnt, $550. S&W magnum Mark V created in 1975 in Wineguard/carry-out 9mm Mod. SW9VE, exlnt, German made, with $250. 541-977-5358 Bangkok, Thailand, auto portable CHECK YOUR AD Leupold 3x9x50 is fabricated from litsatellite antenna erally thousands upon scope. adapts to either Dithousands of wax $1600 obo. recTV or Dish sysparticles, and can 541-480-9430 tem. $500 or best only be described as offer. 541-549-4834 unimaginable art! pays CASH!! Painting is 44" x 32". on the first day it runs Bendforlocal all firearms & Asking$2,500 cash to make sure it is cor255 231-360-5105 (Bend) rect. "Spellcheck" and ammo. 541-526-0617 • New, never fired Computers Weatherby Vanhuman errors do ocbought a new boat? guardS2, synthetic cur. If this happens to Just Where can you find a Computer APC back-up, Sell your old one in the cal 30-06.$550. your ad, please con- classifieds! Ask about our •stock, helping hand? exc cond, new battery, New, never fired tact us ASAP so that Super Seller rates! $10. 541-617-7486 Howa, wood stock, cal From contractors to corrections and any 541-385-5809 .300 Win Mag.$725 adjustments can be yard care, it's all here Look at: Must pass backmade to your ad. CASH!! in The Bulletin's ground check. Please Bendhomes.com 541-385-5809 For Guns, Ammo & call 541.389.3694, "Call A Service The BulletinClassified for Complete Listings of Reloading Supplies. leave message. 541-408-6900. Professional" Directory Area Real Estate for Sale Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

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Chinese Men « e pu - Three produced in solid chasing products or, teak. Dimensions: services from out of I Yorkshire-Doxie cross Donate deposit bottles/ the area. Sending lI 15" high x 6.5" wide. SMALL happiness Figures were cans to local all vol., package F, $400. Cell, c ash, checks, o r s non-profit rescue, for produced in 541-389-2517 i credit i n f ormation Thailand in 1978. feral cat spay/neuter. may be subjected to $200 for T railer a t Jak e ' s 210 i FRAUD. For more D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Furniture & Appliances information about an s aii 3 statues, cash. 1-231-360-5105 Petco (near Wal-Mart) advertiser, you may i (in Bend) in Redmond; or dot call t h e Ore g ont nate M-F a t S m ith A1 Washers8 Dryers ' State Atto r ney ' Sign, 1515 NE 2nd $150 ea. Full war240 i General's O f fi ce Bend; or CRAFT in ranty. Free Del. Also Consumer Protec- • Crafts & Hobbies Tumalo. Can pick up wanted, used W/D's tion h o t line a t i 541-280-7355 large amts, 389-8420. i 1-877-877-9392. Probably don't want to www.craftcats.org miss! Viking Quilt Del TheBulletin > s igner w it h la r g e sew~ng centraloregon since «903 amount of extras and i ncludes 10 el e c 212 tronic stitch cards. Antiques & Lovely price of $795 firm. 541-549-1947 Collectibles Doxie-Poos!AKC mom, Dining Chairs (8) 241 AKC dad, hybrid best of A Dept. 56 D ickens' & Table both breeds! 8 wks. M's Bicycles & Village, 8 pieces at Moving, just 6 $350; 1 F, $425. They $50 ea. + accessoAccessories months old. sell fast! 541-977-7773 ries. 541-382-3456

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N EW Marin A r genta Nev er ridden 2010 m o del Shimano 105 thruo ut. 6 06 1 a l u m. triple- butted Hydro Edge Road main frame with carbon s eat-stay and E 4 anti-flex chain-stay. Fits 5'8"- 6'1" $750 ($825 if you want PD 5 700 B l ac k S h i mano 105 pedals)

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

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Purchased at Haven Homes for $10K; asking $5,000.

German She p herd Puppies; 5 - M ales, 1-Female; AKC. More Info Visit www.fordanDining tableplus 6 chairs, custom dporscha.com made, 82"x43"x29" Maremma Guard Dog end grain walnut and pups, purebred, great alder. $1150. d ogs, $35 0 e a c h, 541-312-2393 541-546-6171.

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S how y o u r s t u ff . Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 perweek. V isit w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n .c om , c l ic k o n " P L AC E A N A D "

and follow the easy steps. All ads appear in both print and online. Pleaseallow 24 hours for photo processing before your adappears in print and online.

541-41g-eeeo

French Bulldog AKC pups $3000 & up. 1F/1 M 541-233-3534

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Antique Barber Chair complete with headrest & strops! Swivels, reclines. Built in 1901, in good condition considering age. Perfect gift - excellent TV chair for the man who has everything!$2700 Interesting trades considered. 541 408-1828

Men's Enhanced Aluminum Alloy-constructed Crossroads Sport 2012, S/N ENI14764,has never been used or ridden.Wheel & rear reflectors, removable front basket, special order comfort seat, Planet Bike eco-rack, unisex bar, Shimano non-slip gear system. Was $940;selling for $775 cash, firm. 1-231-360-5105

BSSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com

To place your photo ad, visit us online atw ww.bendb u l l e t i n . c o m Or call with questions,5 41-385 - 5 8 0 9


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

C2 MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014•THE BULLETIN

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in 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 ................................. $20.00

lcall for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

MX

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 255

260

Computers

Misc. Items

263

269

Tools

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

r e - BUYING & SE LLING Viking wire feed 180 quires computer ad- All gold jewelry, silver amp welder, $199. vertisers with multiple and gold coins, bars, 541-693-4480 For newspaper ad schedules or those rountfsi wedding sets, delivery, call the class rings, sterling silWhitegate woodworkselling multiple sysCirculation Dept. at tems/ software, to dis- ver, coin collect, vin- ing table on wheels, 541-385-5800 close the name of the tage watches, dental $100. 541-693-4480 To place an ad, call Fl e ming, business or the term gold. Bill 541-385-5809 "dealer" in their ads. 541-382-9419. 264 or email classified@bendbulletimccm Private party advertis- GAF slide p rojector, Snow RemovalEquipment ers are defined as holds 40 2x2 slides, The Bulletin those who sell one $20 541-617-7486 Snow Blower, Craftsman computer. 26" 2-stage, great cond, Lawn Crypt for two at $175. 503-930-5606 257 Poulan model 810 Deschutes Memorial electric pruner w/extras Musical Instruments Gardens near the Pond. 265 $150. 541-693-4480 $1500. 541-771-4800 • Building Materials

T HE B ULLETIN

270

1948 Wurlitzer piano, all wood, no plastic. Tuned in Nov., looks like new, with bench $700 541-382-3837 People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough

Piano Showroom!

We carry most makes, all sizes and styles - and all expertly serviced! Locally Owned Since 1983 1155 SW Division (Scandia Plaza) Bend • 541-389-5240 260

Misc. Items

Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655

BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.

Olhaunsen regulation size pool table in very good shape with cues, balls, misc. accessories. $1 000.

Wineguard/carry-out auto portable satelliteantenna adapts to either DirecTV or Dish system. $500 or best offer. 541-549-4834

55 nx36", nearly 1-1/2 n thick, never

Found 12/16, 4 pieces of a master lock that looked like it came off a commercial trailer. Found between 10 a.m. & noon on Obsidan Rd, about 200 yards east of Ward Rd. 541-410-0519.or 541-306-4490 to claim

installed, $300 or best offer. • Bronze & Crystal 2-tier, 6-arm chandelier, 22" across, $300 or best offer. 541-923-7491

Found a Kindle Fire, Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini, and a book at Crest. Building Supply Resale Eagle 541-306-8079 Quality at LOW PRICES 52684 Hwy 97 La Pine Habitat RESTORE

541-536-3234

Open to the public .

REMEMBER: If you

Prineville Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale 1427 NW Murphy Ct. 541-447-6934 Open to the public.

541-382-3537

266 261

Medical Equipment Elite Traveler red electric scooter, fine condition, little used, basket &charger included $300. 541-312-2741 or 541-771-9474. 263

Tools 14 a x 40" wood lathe

on rolling stand, $100. 541-693-4480

to

Lost 8 Found

eBellingham,

541-389-1272 or The Bulletls Classlneffs 541-480-4695 Baldwin upright apt. size iano 46" H, w/ matching paying cash ench, great cond, $400. Wantedfor Hi-fi audio & stu541-382-1867 dio equip. Mclntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 PIANO

Shop our

• Cambria Quartz n

Call 54 I -385-5809 ro m o te ou r s ervice

Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care

• Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO ADVERTISER

have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend Redmond

541-923-0882 Madras 541-475-6889

Prineville

541-447-7178

or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

Since September 29, 286 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has Sales Northeast Bend been limited to models which have been ** FREE ** certified by the Oregon Department of Garage Sale Klt Environmental Qual- Place an ad in The ity (DEQ) and the fed- Bulletin for your gaeral E n v ironmental rage sale and reProtection A g e ncy ceive a Garage Sale (EPA) as having met Kit FREE! smoke emission standards. A cer t ified KIT INCLUDES: woodstove may be • 4 Garage Sale Signs identified by its certifi- • $2.00 Off Coupon To cation label, which is Use Toward Your Ad permanently attached •Next 10 Tips For "Garage to the stove. The Bul- Sale Success!" letin will not k nowingly accept advertising for the sale of PICK UP YOUR uncertified GARAGE SALE KIT at woodstoves. 1777 SW Chandler 267

Ave., Bend, OR 97702

NOTICE: Oregon state The Bulletin Fuel & Wood Serving Central Oregon sincergea law requires anyone who con t racts forNOTICE: Oregon Landconstruction work to scape Contractors Law WHEN BUYING be licensed with the (ORS 671) requires all FIREWOOD... Construction Contrac- businesses that adpe r form To avoid fraud, tors Board (CCB). An vertise t o active license Landscape ConstrucThe Bulletin means the contractor tion which includes: paydeck s , recommends is bonded & insured. p lanting, ment for Firewood arbors, Verify the contractor's fences, only upon delivery CCB l i c ense at water-features, and inand inspection. stallation, repair of ir- • A www.hirealicensedcord is 128 cu. ft. rigation systems to be contractor.com 4' x 4' x 8' th e • Receipts should or call 503-378-4621. l icensed w it h 308 The Bulletin recom- Landscape Contracinclude name, Farm Equipment mends checking with tors Board. This 4-digit phone, price and the CCB prior to con- number is to be in& Machinery kind of wood tracting with anyone. cluded in all adverSome other t rades tisements which indi- • purchased. 3 pt quick attachment Firewood ads also req u ire addi- cate the business has for category I tractor, MUST include tional licenses and a bond,insurance and species $120. 541-693-4480 8 cost per workers compensacertifications. cord to better serve tion for their employ316 our customers. ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 Irrigation Equipment Debris Removal or use our website: The Bulletin www.lcb.state.or.us to 1hp irrigation pump, JUNK BE GONE check license status $100. No texts; call I Haul Away FREE before contracting with All Year Dependable 541-693-4480 For Salvage. Also the business. Persons Firewood: Seasoned; Cleanups & Cleanouts doing lan d scape 325 Mel, 541-389-8107 maintenance do not Lodgepole, split, del, Hay, Grain & Feed r equire an LC B l i - B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 or 2 cords for $365. cense. Call fo r m u lti-cord 1st Quality, 2nd cutting Handyman grass hay, no rain, discounts! barn stored, $250/ton. 541-420-3484. I DO THAT! Call 541-549-3831 Painting/Wall Covering Home/Rental repairs Patterson Ranch, Sisters 269 Small jobs to remodels ALL AMERICAN Honest, guaranteed Gardening Supplie Quality orchard mixed PAINTING work. CCB¹151573 • & E q uipment grass hay, $190-$235 Interior and Exterior Dennis 541-317-9768 ton, small bales. Deliv. Family-owned avail.541-280-7781 Residential & Commercial BarkTurfSoil.com betwn Bend/Redmond 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts TURN THE PAGE 5-vear warranties Wheat Straw for Sale. HOLIDAY SPECIAL! For More Ads PROMPT DELIVERY Also, weaner pigs. Call 541-337-6149 542-389-9663 The Bulletin 541-546-6171 CCB ¹193960

476

775

Hay, Grain & Feed

Employment Opportunities

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results!

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

325

-lh

. 0 0

Medical Assistant

Community C o unseling Solutions has a full-time position open for a Medical Assistant i n our Grant County Health Department located in John Day, Oregon. Wage range $11.15 - $16.73/hour DOE. Excellent benefit package. For an application, please contact Human Resources at ( 541)676-9161 o r download an application at www.communitycounselingsolutions.org. For a c omplete job d e scription, g o to www.worksourceoregon.org ¹1295523

Call 541-385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

• Roommate Wanted

Nice sober living apt, no pets. Background check. $400+ util. 541-647-8954

NEW Marlette Special

1404 sq.ft., 4/12 roof,

a rch shingles, d b l dormer, 9 lite door, glamour bath, appliance pkg, $69,900 finished on site

PRICE GUARANTEED TILL MARCH

JandMHomes.com 541-548-5511

AptiMultiplex General

Garage Sales Garage Sales

CHECKYOUR AD

Garage Sales

632

870

Boa t s & Accessories

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition,$23,500 503-646-1804

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor- 541-385-5809 rect. eSpellcheck" and human errors do ocWinter Clearance cur. If this happens to 341 3 Bdrm, 2 Bath, Nfentaf Health your ad, please con1601 sq.ft., Serving Central Oregon since1903 Specialist Horses & Equipment tact us ASAP so that RETAIL Community C o uncorrections and any Bayliner 185 2006 $85,609 2 awesome Shetland seling Solutions has adjustments can be open bow. 2nd owner SALE Pony weanling colts. two full-time Mental made to your ad. — low engine hrs. $77,599 Finished Great 4-H project for exp. Health S p e cialist 541 -385-5809 — fuel injected V6 On Your Site. youth. They will steal positions open in our The Bulletin Classified — Radio 8 Tower. our hearts. Can deliver Boardman Office. J & M Homes Great family boat 541-548-5511 o r Christmas. $ 1 50 Salary range Senior ApartmentPriced to sell. each 541-788-1649 $31,200-$50,400/ Independent Living $11,590. year DOE. Excellent ALL-INCLUSIVE 541-548-0345. benefit p a c kage. with 3 meals daily .•-, NS For an application, Month-to-month lease, 875 please contact Hucheck it out! Watercraft man Resources at Call 541-233-9914 ( 541)676-9161 o r ds published in eWa download an appli648 5th wheel 3-horse tercraft" include: Kay cation at www.comSilverado 2001 aks, rafts and motor Houses for munitycounseling29'x8' trailer. Deluxe Ized personal Rent General showman/semi living solutions.org. For a watercrafts. Fo c omplete job d e 850 "boats" please se quarters, lots of exPUBLISHER'S scription, g o to tras. Beautiful condi- www.worksourceoSnowmobiles Class 870. NOTICE tion. $21,900. OBO 541-385-5809 All real estate adverregon.org ¹1296025 541-420-3277 tising in this newspaper is subject to the Serving Central Oregon since tgta Gelded Quarter Horse, Call The Bulletin At F air H ousing A c t 15 hands, 7-yrs old, 541-385-5809 which makes it illegal 880 $1 500. Broke, t ame, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail to a d vertise "any entle, 5 4 1 -589-4948 Motorhomes harneyhayfieldOgmail.com At: www.bendbulletin.com preference, limitation 4-place enclosed Interor disc r iminationstate snowmobile trailer based on race, color, w/ Rocky Mountainpkg, One gently used single Plumber Journeymen Neededfor new conreligion, sex, handi- $8500. 541-379-3530 pony cart with 5 3" shafts, $450. 2 Head struction. Start immedicap, familial status, ately! Good pay/benefits marital status or nastalls and harness set 860 up for Shetland pony Call Gary, 541-410-1655 tional origin, or an in- Motorcycles & Accessories tention to make any but can be adjusted for a mini horse. $100. such pre f erence, 2007 Winnebago The Bulletin limitation or discrimiPhone eve n i ngs, Outlook Class "C" nation." Familial sta541-443-4301. 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, chasing products or I tus includes children Tough-1 Horse Blanket services from out of a under the age of 18 excellent condition, sz 78, 1200D, new in bag, l the area. Sending living with parents or more extras. $100. 541-318-4829 legal cus t odians, Asking $55K. c ash, checks, o r pregnant women, and Harley Davidson Ph. 541-447-9268 l credit i n f ormation 358 people securing cus- 2001 FXSTD, twin l may be subjected to tody of children under cam 88, fuel injected, Farmers Column FRAUD. 18. This newspaper Vance & Hines short For more informawill not knowingly ac- shot exhaust, Stage I 1 hp pressure pump tion about an adverwith Vance & Hines with 20 gallon tank, l tiser, you may call cept any advertising fuel management for real estate which is $150. 541-693-4480 the Oregon State in violation of the law. system, custom parts, l Attorney General's extra seat. Office C o n sumer t O ur r e aders a r e Allegro 32' 2007, like $1 0,500OBO. new, only 12,600 miles. Protection hotline at l hereby informed that Call Today s s all dwellings adverChev 8.1L with Allison 60 I 1-877-877-9392. 541-516-8684 tised in this newspatransmission dual exgThe Bulletin g per are available on haust. Loaded! Auto-levan equal opportunity eling system, 5kw gen, basis. To complain of Harley Davidson power mirrors w/defrost, d iscrimination cal l 2 slide-outs with awLooking for your next 883 Sportster HUD t o l l-free a t nings, rear c amera, employee? 1998, 20,200 miles, 1-800-877-0246. The traifer hitch, driyer door Place a Bulletin help exc. cond., w/power window, cruise, toll free t e lephone 421 wanted ad today and $3,500. exhaust brake, central number for the hearreach over 60,000 541-548-2872. Schools & Training vac, satellite sys. Asking ing i m p aired is readers each week. $67,500. 503-781-8812 1-800-927-9275. Your classified ad HTR Truck School will also appear on REDMOND CAiviPUS bendbulletin.com Our Grads Get Jobs! • RV Parking which currently 1-888-438-2235 receives over 1.5 WWW.HTR.EDU Full hookup RV s i te million page views avail. through April every month at 476 30th, $325 + e l ec. Harley Fat Boy 2002 no extra cost. Employment 14k orig. miles.. ExCentral Oregon KOA Beaver Marquis, Bulletin Classifieds cellent cond. Vance 8 541-546-3046 1993 Opportunities Get Results! Hines exhaust, 5 40-ft, Brunswick Call 385-5809 spoke HD rims, wind or place floor plan. Many vest, 12e rise handle CAUTION: your ad on-line at extras, well mainBanjj bars, detachable lugAds published in bendbulletin.com tained, fire supgage rack w/back "Employment Op~o ©%[]Q pression behind rest, hwy pegs 8 many portunitles" include refng, Stow Master chrome accents. Must employee and indesee to appreciate! 5000 tow bar, pendent positions. Rm(081 $10,500. In CRRarea $21,995. Ads fo r p o sitions call 530-957-1865 541-383-3503 ® Xz@z(aw that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With HDFatBo 1996 any independentjob opportunity, please • H o mes for Sale i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra NOTICE c aution when a p 528 All real estate adverplying for jobs onFleetwood D i scovery tised here in is subLoans & Mortgages 40' 2003, diesel, w/all line and never project to th e Federal Completely options - 3 slide outs, vide personal inforF air Housing A c t , WARNING mation to any source Rebuilt/Customized satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, which makes it illegal The Bulletin recom2012/2013 Award you may not have etc., 32,000 m iles. to advertise any prefmends you use cauresearched and Winner Wintered in h e ated erence, limitation or tion when you proShowroom Condition deemed to be repushop. $79,995 obo. discrimination based vide personal table. Use extreme Many Extras 541-447-8664 on race, color, reliinformation to compaLow Miles. c aution when r e ion, sex, handicap, nies offering loans or s ponding to A N Y $15,000 amilial status or nacredit, especially online employment 541-548-4807 tional origin, or intenthose asking for adad from out-of-state. tion to make any such vance loan fees or We suggest you call companies from out of preferences, l i mitathe State of Oregon tions or discrimination. state. If you have Consumer Hotline We will not knowingly HD Softtail Deuce 2002, concerns or quesat 1-503-378-4320 Fleetwood Southtions, we suggest you accept any advertis- broken back forces For Equal Opportuwind 1991, 33', 454 consult your attorney ing for real estate sale, only 200 mi. on GMC. Owner died; yrs nity Laws contact which is in violation of new motor from Haror call CONSUMER of storage. Loaded Oregon Bureau of this law. All persons ley, new trans case HOTLINE, Labor 8 I n d ustry, with factory options. are hereby informed 1-877-877-9392. and parts, s p oke Twin AC & 2 TVs, Civil Rights Division, that all dwellings ad- wheels, new brakes, 97'I -673- 0764. electric steps & corBANK TURNED YOU vertised are available n early all o f b i k e ner jacks, tow pkg, DOWN? Private party on an equal opportu- brand new. Has proof outside shower, great The Bulletin will loan on real es- nity basis. The Bulle- of all work done. Retire tread. $15,500. 541-385-5809 tate equity. Credit no tin Classified movable windshield, Jim, 541-408-1828 problem, good equity T-bags, black and all is all you need. Call chromed out with a Add your web address Oregon Land Mortwilly skeleton theme to your ad and read• Redmond Homes gage 541-388-4200. on all caps and covers on The Bulletln's ers. Lots o f w o rk, web site, www.bend- LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Looking for your next heart and love went bulletin.com, will be secured trust deeds & employee? into all aspects. All Ias able to click through note,some hard money Place a Bulletin help done at professional automatically to your loans. Call Pat Kellev wanted ad today and Freightliner 1994 shops, call for info. website. 541-382-3099 ext.13. reach over 60,000 Custom Must sell quickly due readers each week. Motorhome to m e d ical bi l l s, General Your classified ad Will haul small SUV $8250. Call Jack at The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturwill also appear on 541-279-9538. or toys, and pull a day night shift and other shifts as needed. We bendbulletin.com trailer! Powered by currently have openings all nights of the week. which currently re870 8.3 Cummins with 6 Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts ceives over speed Allison auto Boats 8 Accessories start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and 1.5 million page trans, 2nd o wner. end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoviews every month 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, Very nice! $53,000. sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. at no extra cost. like new, 135hp I/O, fow 541-350-4077 Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a Bulletin Classifieds time, Bimini top, many minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Get Results! extras, Karavan trailer The Bulletin are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of Call 385-5809 or with swing neck current To Subscribe call loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackplace your ad on-line registrations. $7000. ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup at 541-385-5800 or go to 541-350-2336 and other tasks. For qualifying employees we bendbulletin.com www.bendbulletin.com offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Manufactured/ Mobile Homes Please submit a completed application atten17.5' Seaswirl 2002 tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available List Your Home HOLIDAY RAMBLER at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanWakeboard Boat JandMHomes.com VACATIONER 2003 I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be We Have Buyers 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, tons of extras, low hrs. obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Get Top Dollar workhorse, Allison 1000 Full wakeboard tower, Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Financing Available. light bars, Polk audio 5 speed trans., 39K, No phone calls please. Only completed appli541-548-5511 speakers throughout, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, cations will be considered for this position. No completely wired for Onan 5.5w gen., ABS resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reNew Dream Special amps/subwoofers, un- brakes, steel cage cockquired prior to employment. EOE. 3 bdrm, 2 bath derwater lights, fish pit, washer/dryer, fire$50,900 finished finder, 2 batteries cus- lace, mw/conv. oven, The Bulletin on your site. tom black paint job. ree standing dinette, Serving Cenrral Oregon sincergea J and M Homes $12,500 541-815-2523 was $121,060 new; now, 541-548-5511 $35,900. 541-536-1008

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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 22, 2014

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wii'sbprtz

C L U B M onday, Dece mber22,2014

It depends

ACROSS 1 Pocketbook part 6 Waiter's last word after

38Gumshoes,in old crime fiction 39 Grand feather 40 of C apri serving food 41Annoy 11Place 42 Country singer (part of a table Steve setting) 43Trojan king 14Hunt illegally during the Trojan 15France's longest War river 44 Sporting 16Award bestowed champion with by a queen: Abbr. a drive for success? 17Busybody 47 Descriptive 18Ban Ki-moon's language predecessor at the L.N. 49 "Of course you're right" 20 Jeopardize SOAnger 22Colon,in analogies 51 Not commissioned, 23 Classic yideo after "on" game with ghosts 53"TheFast and 27 Mosey the Furious" 30"Twoand a Half co-star Men" co-star 57What "E" means starting in 2011 on a gas gauge 33 Femur's locale 62Verb-forming 34Two Romanov suffix czars 63 Witch 35 Photo 64 Brainteaser (campaign events) 65 Court divider

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"Do your kids still believe in Santa Claus?" I asked Unlucky Louie in the club lounge. He has a collection at home: some quite young, some older. "It depends," Louie replied. "On what?" "On whether they've s t arted getting clothes for Christmas," Louie shrugged. If you asked an expertdeclarer which suit to attack at today's 3NT, he would say it depends. The actual declarer won the first spade with the king and led the ace and a second club, hoping for a 2-2 break. Instead, West discarded, and when East won and returned a spade, South went down two.

clubs, he bids two diamonds and you jump to three hearts. Partner next bids three spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner shows slam interest. If he wanted to stop at four hearts, he would have bid it. Your hand is slammish; you have prime values. Cue-bid four clubs. Even if he signs off at four hearts, you will try again with a cue bid of four spades or fivediamonds. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 45A7

QQJ 4 OKQ54 48642

SEVEN TRICKS South has six top t r icks: two spades, three diamonds and a club. If the diamonds break 3-3, he has seven tricks and can force out the ace of hearts for two more. So after South wins the first trick, he must test the diamonds. When both East and West follow to three rounds, South leads a heart next to assure his contract. If the diamonds failed to break evenly, South would try for a 2-2 club break. DAILY QUESTION

WEST 4 Q 10 8 6 4 9 1 08 7 5

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S K A T E

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Youhold: 4 K 5 9 K 9 2 Opening lead — 45 6 0 A3 2 4 A 9 7 5 3. Y o urpartner opens one heart, you respond two (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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PUZZLE BYTOM MCCOY

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56The sun SBCut,as grass 59Trident-shaped letter 60 Number of Canadian provinces

61 Soph. and jr.

Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosawords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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happened?"

60 Lion, and a hint to critters that begin 17-, 24-, 40- and 50Across 65 "Too rich for my blood" 66 Ecstatic review 67 Dispense, with "out" 68 Pond critters 69 Was in debt

70 River of Hades DOWN 1 Close-up lens 2 Not whispered 3 Walk leisurely

item 54 Off-the-wall 55 Spay or neuter 56 Tattooist's surface 59 Wal-Mart warehouse club 61 Belly 62 Extra-play qtrs. 63 Time for lastminute Christmas

39 Support gp. for troops 41 E pluribus 42 Like o f b ricks 47 Game often involving a cart 49 Dust Bowl refugee 50 "Ghostbusters"

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51 The"N"in TNT 52 "Fiddle-faddle!"

setting

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

E M A T H L A R E A 19 "Hell's Kitchen" I T I E S contestant 25 Sitarist Shanker S T O 26 Bowling over B L I N 27 Major leagues, in L O A M baseball slang R U B B E R 28 What singers Sing in When they M A N A C L E A don't harmonize M R I R R E L E V 29 Trendsetting EST E E M M E socialite CO R O L I N 31 Sunblock letters U N O A N O N 32 Cartoon frame 33 Words said with R I G O R B E T impatience S E R E O N E 35 DVD E T N A S S T A predecessor 36 Suspect's need xwordeditoroaol.com

L I L A C O L I V A P 0 K E R M E E M O I M A U S T A I R S D U C K I E I R H E A D A N T L S I P 0 S T O U R B E L L E H E B A L L O N O N E S T EW I D E 12/22/14

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By Roger Wtenbergand JeffChen (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

12/22/14


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-38

5-5809

THE BULLETIN• MONDAY DECEMBER 22 2014

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882

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Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessorie

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

RV PACKAGE-2006 Monaco Monarch, 31 ', Ford V10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen bed 8 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv microwave, 2 TV's, tow package,$66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep Wranglertow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 speed manual,$1 1,000 541-815-6319

Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $18,900.More pics available.541-923-6408

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Laredo 30' 2009

• Pyg •-I

(4) 235/70R16 studded on aluminum wheels, fit 2002 Ford E x plorer. $200. 541-419-7550 (4) 285-75R16 studded tires w/6-lug alum. wheels, 80% tread, fit Chev pickup, $350. 541-923-2112 (4) Hankook studded tires on rims, like new, 225/70R-16, $250. 541-306-0346 (4) P235/70R-16 studded tires on 5-lug steel wheels, very low mileage, for 2004 Honda Pilot. $300. 541-388-4939 (4) Toyo 235-65-17 tires 75% rubber, $80. 541-693-4480 (no texts)

.

=' v v'— ~

Winnebago 22' 2002 - $28,500 Chevy 454, heavy duty chassis, new batteries 8 tires, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w /brake, 21k m i ., more! 541-280-3251

$22,500

541-419-3301

2009- AWD, same vehicle as the Es-

cape, in great

shape! Vin¹J13074 Oni $13,977 ROBBKRSON ~ ~

condition, rigged for RV towing, new Michelins, 115,811 miles, $7500. 541-548-6181

Jeep Cherokee Sport 2001, 4.0, straight 6, new studded tires 8 summer tires on rims. 1st $3200, it's yours! 541-923-4237 Jeep Liberty 2012

Buick Rendezvous 2005, V6, 144K miles, clean inside & out, white over black, gray interior, good tires, $4900. 541-408-1826 Chevy Cruze 2014

na aaa

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 4WD, w/traction control, alloy wheels, mud 8 snow t ires, tow pkg. + trailer break, back up camera, r oof rack, ABS breaks + independent system, blue tooth connection, hands free cell phone c a p ability, compass, o u tside temp, inclinometer, 32K mi., p r istine condition, $29,900. 541-549-1736 or 541-647-0081.

Limited Edition. PRAYING FOR SNOW! Vin¹149708

Automobiles

WANTED: Buick (or comparable 4 dr sedan) with under 80K miles, for under $8500. 541-408-1828

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 12/31/14

HONDA ELEMENT 2004 very good

Four Continental tires Dodge 1990 full size, like new, $120. 1/2 ton 4x2, $1500. 541-693-4480 (no texts) 541-536-1141 Tire cable chains, new, 14"-15" call for sizes, FORD F150 2011 MONTANA 3585 2008, $25. 541-617-7486 exc. cond., 3 slides, 932 king bed, Irg LR, Ready to makememories! Antique & Arctic insulation, all Top-selling Winnebago - reduced by Classic Autos 31 J, original owners, non- options $3500 to $31,500. smokers, garaged, only 541-420-3250 New body style 18,800 miles, auto-levelcrew cab 4X4, ing jacks, (2) slides, upVin¹A21126 graded queen bed, bunk 20,998 beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storROBBERSON age, maintained, very LINcoLII ~ IM RO S clean!Only $67,995!ExA Private Collection tended warranty and/or fi1956 Ford pickup Snowbird Special! 541-312-3986 nancing avail to qualified Open Road 36' 2005 1932 DeSoto 2dr Dlr ¹0205.Price good buyers! 541-388-7179 1930 Ford A Coupe model is like new thru 12/31/1 4 1929 Ford A Coupe w/3 slides!! King 881 1923 Ford T Run. bed, hide-a-bed, All good to excellent. Travel Trailers glass shower, 10 gal. 935 Inside heated shop water heater, 10 Sport Utility Vehicles BEND 541-382-8038 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 2007 Jayco Jay Flight 16' awning. 2005 29 FBS with slide out & model is like new! BMW X3 35i 2010 awning - Turn-key ready $25,995 Exlnt cond., 65K miles to use, less than 50 to541-419-0566 Chevelle Mallbu w/1 00K mile transfertal days used by current 1966 able warranty. Very owner. Never smoked in, 885 Complete clean; loaded - cofd no indoor pets, excellent restoration, weather pkg, premium cond., very clean. Lots of Canopies & Campers $32,900. pkg & technology pkg. bonus features; many Keyless access, sunhave never been used. Skamper 1990 8-ft pop(509) 521-0713 roof, navigation, satelAsking $18,000. C a l lup cabover camper, im(in Bend, OR) lite radio, extra snow Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r maculate, many extras, tires. (Car top carrier more info /more photos. 3-burner stove, heater not included.) $22,500. w/thermostat, hot water 541-915-9170 heater, oversized presDutchman Denali sure water s y stem„ 32' 2011 travel Fantastic Fan, lots of trailer. 2 slides Evstorage, sleeps 4, $3750. What are you erything goes, all 541-617-0211 looking for? kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway 1965 Mustang You'll find it in bars, water 8 sewer 0 Hard top, hoses. List price The Bulletin Classifieds 6-cylinder, auto trans, 00 $34,500 - asking power brakes, power $26,800 Loaded. steering, garaged, Must see to appreci541-385-5809 well maintained, ate. Redmond, OR. engine runs strong. 541-604-5993 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 908 541-598-7940 Four Winds 2008 Aircraft, Parts 18' travel trailer & Service used very little Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 $8500. Automatic, 6-cylinder, 541-719-1217 tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyMercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, less entry, 69K miles. soft & hard top, excellent Excellent condition; 1/3interest in condition, always gatires have 90% tread. Columbia400, raged. 1 55 K m i l es, $11,995. Financing available. $11,500. 541-549-6407 Call 541-598-5111 Heartland P r owler $125,000 2012, 29PRKS, 33', (located © Bend) like new, 2 slides-liv541-288-3333

00

Mercury Nfariner

Chevy Si i verado 1500 2 0 1 4, L T , Hybrid Limited, 4 WD, crew c a b , 2009 AWD, great tires. short box, 5.3L, new VINO A17570 Feb. 28, 2014. Not $23,977 driven since June 2014. Gar a ged. ROBBKRSON Loaded, brown tan ~ maaa a cloth interior, 4900 m i., $34,9 9 0. 541-312-3986 541-480-5634 Dlr ¹0205. Price gythrp©gmail.com good thru 12/31/14

Have an item to sell quick? Chevy Silverado 2012 4x4 Crew Cab If it's under 39K miles, '500 you can place it in White Diamond paint, Tonneau cover, leather The Bulletin heated seats, running Classifieds for: boards, tow-ready, new tires (only 200 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days miles on them), like new inside and out! '16 - 3 lines, 14 days $28,900. (Private Party ads only) 541-350-0775

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

-

Ford Escape

ToyotaSienna 2005

Gas Saver! Auto. Only 14k miles Vin¹277341

$13,977 ROBBERSON u eeoLe~

Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 12/31/14

PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, new tires + mounted studded snow tires, $7250. 541-433-2026 Lx

E

II IR W R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 12/31/14

Runs great! Bargain Corral Price

$6,err

Nearly perfect! Must see! vin¹ 142671

Vin¹264100

$11,977

ROBBERSON y JEEP WRANGLER

LIIICOLII ~

~

ROBBERSON

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 12/31/14 rrv

v

2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

$22,500.

541-419-5980

MERCEDES-BENZ GL450 2 0 10 I m maculate, c ustom wheels and new 20" tires. 2nd set MBZ wheels with snowflake tires. Full new car ext. warranty March 2017. 59,500 miles. Fully loaded incl. DVD and NAV. $34,500. 541-815-3049

o Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside 8 out, one owner, nonsmoker, loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

$12,977

Vin¹615069

ROBBERSON I I N c 0 L II ~

Toyota Camry LE 2007 73,200 miles, newer tires, includes keyless start after factory, Buick LeSabre 2005 4 studless snow tires m id-size with o n l y not on nms. $9300. 179k miles. $3,900 541-771-0005 or obo. 541-419-5060 541-389-3550

2006 - Great runner, must see. VIN ¹159299 $7,977. ROBBKRSON y LINcoLII ~

I M RDR

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 12/31/14

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

Norm06@msn.com

V W CONV.

1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswaqen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399 933

Pickups

L

1 955 C h e vy, c l a s s ic . R e a l beauty. Powerful engine. 15,000

miles. Always garaged. $4,000. 555-9999

541-408-7826

882

Fifth Wheels

Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987,New stove, fridge. Good furnace, AC. Stereo, DVD player. Queen bed WITH bedding. 20 ft. awning. Good shape. $4500 541-977-5587

CALLcx TODAY 5

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 25,000. 541-820-3724

SEMI-DRY VAN

53' long x102" wide, good tires, no dings,

$8500.

541-7'I 9-1217

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

IM RO R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pricing good thru 12/31/14

Automobiles

V W 1977, r ed, n e w paint, fresh m otor. $7500. 541-536-1141

Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer.

20

AWD Sedan. Bargain Corral Price

975

2010 - Gorgeous, AWD. Vin¹310777 $26,977. ROBBERSON IM ROB

FIND IT!

SUY IT' SELL ITr The Bulletin Classifieds

BuickLaCrosse

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 12/31/14

na m a

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 12/31/14

940

Vans

NfercedesGLK350

LlllcoLN ~

oi ~

Oldsmobile CUSTOM CRUISER WAGON 1991 1 owner, 8 seatbelts, 118K mi, 350EFI Vs, auto, $3000 541-385-6168 or

2005 Diesel 4x4

2

ROBBERSON

ing area & l a r ge closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to

tow! 15' power awning, power hitch 8 stabilizers, full s i ze queen bed, l a rge shower, porcelain sink 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bo& toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571 nanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $85,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, Keystoneiaredo 31' and painted. $23,500. RV 2006 w ith 1 2 ' Tom, 541.788.5546 slide-out. Sleeps 6, Hangar for saleat queen walk-around Redmond Airport - not bed w/stora~e undera T Hangar - $38,000. neath. Tub shower. 541-420-0626 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide-through stora ge. E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; AskSave money. Learn ing $13,600 to fly or build hours 541-447-4805 with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, Looking for your 150 HP, low time, next employee? full panel. $21,000 Place a Bulletin help obo. Contact Paul at wanted ad today and 541-447-5184. reach over 60,000 readers each week. 916 Your classified ad Trucks & will also appear on Heavy Equipment bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS on-line at FORD 2N GAS bendbulletin.com BEND 541-382-8038

m e Oe

541-312-3986

19,977 LlllcoLN ~

C5

975

3.SSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com

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Legal Notices

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c omplies with t h a t LEGAL NOTICE addressed to TRUSTEE'S NOTICE statute the trustee's "Urgent O F SALE File N o . Request Desk" either 7023.77755 R e f e r- by personal delivery ence is made to that to the trustee's physic ertain t rust d e e d cal offices (call for admade by Susan L. or b y f i r st Bennett, as grantor, to dress) class, certified Amerititle, as trustee, r eturn receipt mail, rein favor of Mortgage addressed to Electronic R egistra- quested, trustee's post oftion Systems, Inc as the box address set nominee for Ameri- fice can Sterling Bank a forth in this notice. Due to potential conMissouri Corporation, flicts with federal law, its successors and persons having no assigns, as b enefi- record legal ciary, dated 05/09/08, table interestorinequirecorded 05/14/08, in subject property the will the mortgage records only receive informaof DESC H UTES tion concerning the County, Oregon, as lender's estimated or 2008-21098 and sub- actual bid. Lender bid sequently assigned to i nformation is a l s o Wells Fargo B ank, available a t the N.A. by Assignment web s ite, recorded as trustee's 2014-08759, covering www.northwestNotice is t he f o l lowing d e - trustee.com. scribed real property further given that any named in ORS situated in said county person has the right, and state, to wit: Lot 86.778 at any time prior to Three Hundred and five days before the Seventy-Six (376) in last set for the Tollgate Eighth Addi- date a v e t h is tion, Desc h utes s ale, to hproceedCounty, Oregon. Said foreclosure real property being ing dismissed and the deed reinstated more accurately de- trust payment to t he scribed as: Lot Three by beneficiary the enH undred and S e v- tire amountofthen due enty-Six (376), Tollthan such porgate Eighth Addition, (other of the principal as r ecorded May 1 6 , tion would not then be due 1978, in Cabinet B, no default ocPage 455, Deschutes had and by curing County, Ore g o n. curred) o t her d e fault PROPERTY AD- any complained of herein DRESS: 14907 Snaf- that is capable of bef lebit S i sters, O R ing cured by tender97759 Both the ben- ing the performance eficiary a n d the required under t he trustee have elected o bligation o r tr u s t to sell the real propand in addition erty to satisfy the obli- deed, paying said sums gations secured by to tendering the perthe trust deed and a or formance necessary notice of default has cure the default, by been recorded pursu- to all costs and ant to Oregon Re- paying actually invised Statutes expenses in enforcing the 86.752(3); the default curred and t rust for which foreclosure obligation together with is made is grantors' deed, trustee's failure to pay when attorney's fees nand ot due th e f o l lowing the sums: monthly pay- exceeding provided by ments of $1,712.01 amounts OR S 8 6 .778. beginning 1 1/01/09; said Requests from per$2,526.78 beginning sons named in ORS 2/01/1 1; $ 1 , 921.16 86.778 for reinstatebeginning 2/1 / 12; ment quotes received $2,326.09 beginning less than six days 7/1/14; plus prior acto the date set crued late charges of prior the trustee's sale $ 333.64; plus a d - for be honored only at vances of $6,376.41 will discretion of the that represent paid the eneficiary or if r e foreclosure fees and b by the terms of costs, property in- quired loan documents. spections, lock rekey, the In construing this nolawn care, winterizathe singular intion, brokers p rice tice, the plural, the opinion and padlock; cludes "grantor" intogether with title ex- word any successor pense, costs, trustee's cludes n i nterest t o th e fees and attorney's igrantor as well as any fees incurred herein other person an by reason of said de- obligation, theowing fault; any further sums mance of whichperforis seadvanced by the ben- cured by said trust eficiary for the protecand the words tion of the above de- deed, "trustee" and "benefiscribed real property ciary" include their reand i st inte r est successors therein; and prepay- spective in interest, if any. The ment penalties/premi- trustee's rules of aucums, if applicable. By tion may be accessed reason of said default at w w w .northwestthe beneficiary has trustee.com are d eclared al l s u m s incorporatedand by this owing on the obliga- reference. You tion secured by the also access salemay statrust deed immedi- tus a t ww w .northately due and pay- westtrustee.com and able, said sums being www.USA-Foreclothe following, to wit: sure.com. For further $277,226.93 with inp l ease terest thereon at the information, Tagrate of 5.875 percent contact: Kathy Northwest per annum beginning gart Services, Inc. 10/01/09; plus prior Trustee P.O. Box 997 Belleaccrued late charges vue, WA 98009-0997 of $333.64; plus ad- 4 25-586-1900 envances of $6,376.41 nett, Susan L. B(TS¹ that represent paid 7023.77755) foreclosure fees and 1002.170393-File No. costs, property i nspections, lock rekey, LEGAL NOTICE lawn care, winteriza- IN T H E CI R CUIT tion, brokers p rice COURT O F THE opinion and padlock; STATE OF OREGON together with title exFOR THE COUNTY DE S CHUTES. pense, costs, trustee's OF fees and a t torneys U.S. Bank National fees incurred herein Association, Succesby reason of said de- sor Trustee to bank of fault; any further sums A merica, N.A. a s advanced by the ben- Successor to LaSalle eficiary for the protec- Bank, N . A . , as tion of the above de- Trustee fo r M e r rill scribed real property Lynch First Franklin and i st inte r est Mortgage Loan Trust, therein; and prepay- Mortgage Loan ment penalties/premi- Asset-Backed Certifiums, if a p plicable. cates, Series 2007-3, W HEREFORE, n o - Plaintiff, vs. A UREtice hereby is given LIO GARCIA; MOIthat the undersigned SES ROJAS trustee will on March CHAVEZ; G U ADA16, 2015 at the hour LUPE GARCIA GARof 10:00 o'clock, A.M. CIA; M O R T G AG E i n accord with t he ELECTRONIC REGstandard of time es- I STRATION SYS t ablished b y OR S TEMS, INC.; BANK 187.110, at the folOF AMERICA, N.A., lowing place: inside SUCCESSOR TO the main lobby of the FIRST FR A N KLIN Deschutes C o u nty CORP., AN OP. SUB. Courthouse, 1164 NW OF MLB&T CO., FSB; Bond, in the City of CASCADE VIE W Bend, County of DE- HOMEOWNERS ASSCHUTES, State of SOCIATION; OCCUOregon, sell at public PANTS O F THE auction to the highest PREMISES, D efenbidder for cash the dants. No. i nterest in t h e d e - 14CV0659FC. CIVIL scribed real property SUMMONS. TO THE which the grantor had DEFENDANTS: or had power to con- Aurelio Garcia and vey at the time of the Occupants o f the execution by grantor Premises. NOTICE of the trust deed, to- TO DEF E NDANT: gether with any inter- READ THESE P Aest which the grantor PERS CAREFULLY! or grantor's succes- A lawsuit has been sors in interest ac- started against you in quired after the ex- the ab o ve-entitled ecution of the trust Court by U.S. Bank National Association, deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations Successor Trustee to thereby secured and bank of America, N.A. t he costs an d e x - as Successor to Lapenses of sale, m- Salle Bank, N.A., as cluding a reasonable Trustee fo r M e r rill charge by the trustee. Lynch First Franklin Notice is further given Mortgage Loan Trust, that for reinstatement Mortgage Loan or payoff quotes re- Asset-Backed Certifiquested pursuant to cates, Series 2007-3, O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Plaintiff. Pla i ntiff's 86.789 must be timely claim is stated in the c ommunicated in a written Complaint, a written request that copy of which is on


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

C6 MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014•THE BULLETIN

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file at the Deschutes sentative, Will Dennis, E RLAND, LLC, / s / County Courthouse. Attorney at Law, 160 Mary Hannon, You must "appear" in NW Irving Ave., Ste. M ary H a nnon ¹ this case or the other 204, Bend OR 97701, 131074 side will win automati- within four m onths [mhannon Ologs.com] cally. To "appear" you after the date of first 7632 S W D u r ham must file with the court publication of this no- R oad, Suite 3 5 0 , a legal paper called a tice, or the claims may Tigard, O R 9 7 224. "motion" or "answer." be barred. All per- (360)260-2253; Fax The "motion" or "an- sons whose r ights (360)260-2285. swer" must be given may be affected by LEGAL NOTICE to the court clerk or the proceedings may THE C IRCUIT administrator w i thin obtain additional in- IN OURT OF T H E 30 days along with the f ormation from t h e C S TATE OF OR required filing fee. It records of the court, E GON FOR THE must be i n p r oper the personal repre- COUNTY OF form and have proof sentative, or the law- CROOK JUVENILE o f service o n t h e yer for the personal DEPARTMENT. IN plaintiff's attorney or, r epresentative, W i l l THE MATTER OF if the plaintiff does not Dennis, Attorney at JEPSEN, have a n a t t orney, Law, 160 NW Irving EMILEE DOB: 01/O'I/2010, A proof of service on the Ave., Ste. 204, Bend Child. CASE NO. plaintiff. The object of OR 97701 Telephone 14JU03197. SUMt he complaint is t o 541-388-3877. Dated MONS. TO: foreclose a deed of and first published on Van Zuyen. trust dated March 14, December 22, 2014. Stephen IN THE NAME OF 2007 and recorded as /s/ Will Dennis, Attor- T HE STATE O F Instrument No. ney for Personal Rep- OREGON, you are 2007-17193 given by resentative, Linda Ann directed to appear Aurelio Garcia, a mar- Gossard. before the a bove ried man as his sole entitled Court at 300 and separate propNE Third S t reet, erty o n pro perty Prineville, Oregon commonly known as Need help fixing stuff'? on January 12, 2015 2 0067 M t . Fai t h Call A Service Professional at 2:30 p.m. in conP lace, B end, O R find the help you need. n ection wit h t h e 97702 and legally de- www.bendbulletin.com above entitled matscribed as: Lot FIFTY ter. A hearing will be (50), CAS C ADE held upon a Petition VISTA P.U.D., Desfiled on October 14, LEGAL NOTICE chutes County, OrTHE CI R CUIT 2014, c o ncerning egon. The complaint IN OF T HE Emilee Jepsen. This seeks to f o reclose COURT OF OREGON summons is p uband terminate all in- STATE pursuant to terest of Aurelio Gar- FOR THE COUNTY lished DE S C HUTES. the order of the Circia and Occupants of OF cuit Judge of t he the Premises and all T he Bank o f N e w Juvenile Court. The Mellon FKA The other interests in the York of New York, as order directs this property. The "motion" Bank "answer" (or Trustee for the certifi- summons be pubor "reply") must be given c ateholders of t h e lished once a week CWABS, Inc., for three weeks cirto the court clerk or in Prineville, administrator w i thin Asset-Backed Certifi- culation Series Oregon. You have a 30 days of the date of cates, right to be r eprefirst publication speci- 2006-15, Plaintiff, vs. sented by counsel fied herein along with JUAN A. MARTINEZ, at every stage the the required filing fee. JR; JENNIFER L.A. proceeding. If of you HOMEThe date of first publi- MARTINEZ; F I NANCIAL, are financially uncation of the s um- FIELD to retain an atmons is December 8, INC.; STATE OF OR- able OCCU - torney, the court will 2014. If you are in the E GON; OF T HE appoint one to repactive military service PANTS you. Teleof the United States, PREMISES, Defen- resent phone (541) dants. No. or believe that you yo u 14CV0826FC. CIVIL 447-6541 i f may be e ntitled to TO THE wish assistance in protection o f the SUMMONS. obtaining a SCRA, please con- DEFENDANTS: attact our office. If you Juan A. Martinez, Jr. court-appointed If you have do not contact us, we and Occupants of the torney. ab o u t N O TICE q uestions will report to the court Premises. these matters, you TO DE F ENDANT: that we do not beshould contact an EAD THESE P A l ieve that yo u a r e R CAREFULLY! attorney i m mediprotected under the PERS lawsuit has been ately. Date of first SCRA. If you h a ve A against you in publication Decemquestions, you should started abo v e-entitled ber 22, 2014. Date see an attorney im- the second publicamediately. If you need Court by The Bank of of York Mellon FKA tion December 29, help in finding an at- New 2014. Date of third torney, you may con- T he Bank o f N e w publication January tact the Oregon State York, as Trustee for 6, 2015. DATED this Bar's Lawyer Referral the certificateholders 12th day of Decemthe CWABS, Inc., S ervice o n line a t of Asset-Backed Certifi- b er 2 0 14 . E r r ol www.oregonstatebar. OSB Series LaRue, org or by calling (503) cates, Dep u ty 2006-15, Pla i ntiff. 123688, 684-3763 ( in t h e c l ai m i s District Attorney. Portland metropolitan Plaintiff's in the written LEGAL NOTICE area) or toll-free else- stated Complaint, a copy of PUBLIC HEARING where in Oregon at which is on file at the NOTICE (800) 452-7636. AtC o u ntyBEND LANDMARKS torneys for Plaintiff, Deschutes Courthouse. You COMMISSION SHAPIRO 8 S UTH- must "appear" in this P ROJECT N U M ERLAND, LLC, / s /. case or the other side BER: 14-1095. APMary Hannon, will win automatically. P LICANT: City o f Mary H a nnon ¹ To "appear" you must Bend. NATURE OF 131074 APP L ICA[mhannon © logs.com] file with the court a le- THE paper called a TION: Amendments 7632 S W D u r ham gal "motion" or "answer." to Chapter 10.20 R oad, S u it e 3 5 0 , "motion" or "an- Historic P reservaTigard, OR 9 7 224, The swer" must be given tion Code in order to (360)260-2253; Fax to the court clerk or bring th e Ci t y's (360)260-2285. administrator w i t hin preservation code LEGAL NOTICE 30 days along with the into compliance with IN T H E CI R CUIT required filing fee. It Oregon State COURT O F THE must be i n p roper the Certified Local GovSTATE OF OREGON form and have proof ernment (CLG) proFOR THE COUNTY o f service o n t h e gram qualifications. OF DE S CHUTES, plaintiff's attorney or, CRIPROBATE DEPART- if the plaintiff does not APPLICABLE TERIA: Bend DeMENT. In the Matter have a n at t orney, v elopment C o d e of the Estate of Dlproof of service on the 4.6.200(B). ANE LESLIE URELL, plaintiff. The object of Section PROPERTY LOCADeceased. Case No. the complaint is to TION: Cit y wide. 14PB0145. NOTICE foreclose a deed of DATE, TIME, TO INT E RESTED trust dated July 21, P LACE AND L O PERSONS. NOTICE 2006 and recorded as C ATION OF T HE IS HEREBY GIVEN Instrument No. HEARING: T u esthat the undersigned 2006-67560 given by day, January 20, has been appointed Juan A. Martinez, Jr. 2015 at 6:00 p.m. at A dministrator of t h e a nd J e nnifer L . A . NW Wall Street, Estate. All persons Martinez, h u s band 710 Bend, OR, in City having claims against and wife on property Hall Council Chamthe estate are r ecommonly known as bers. ADDITIONAL quired t o pr e sent 2124 NE Wells Acres INFORMATION: them, with vouchers R oad, B end, O R The application, all attached, to the un- 97701 and legally de- documents and evidersigned attorney for scribed as: Lot Eight dence submitted by the personal repre- (8), Block Five (5), or on behalf of the sentative, Will Dennis, TAMARACK PARK, applicant and t he Attorney at Law, 160 City of Bend, Des- application criteria NW Irving Ave., Ste. chutes County, Or- are available for in204, Bend OR 97701, egon. Land situated in at City Hall within four m onths t he State o f OR , spection at no cost and will after the date of first County of Deschutes, be provided at a publication of this no- City of B end. The r easonable c o s t . tice, or the claims may complaint seeks to ONTACT P E R be barred. All per- foreclose and termi- C SON: Heidi sons whose r ights nate all i nterest of at (541) may be affected by Juan A. Martinez, Jr. Kennedy 617-4524, the proceedings may and Occupants of the hkennedyObenobtain additional in- Premises and all other doregon.gov. Send f ormation from t h e interests in the proptestimony to records of the court, erty. The "motion" or written the B en d L a n dthe personal repre- "answer" (or "reply") marks Commission sentative, or the law- must be given to the c/o CDD, 710 NW yer for the Adminis- court clerk or admin- Wall St., Bend, OR trator, Will D ennis, istrator within 30 days 97701, or attend the Attorney at Law, 160 of the date of f irst hearing and NW Irving Ave., Ste. publication specified public state your views. 204, Bend OR 97701 herein along with the Telephone required filing fee. The LEGAL NOTICE 541-388-3877. Dated date of first publicaTO INTERESTED and first published on tion of the summons PERSONS December 22, 2014. i s D e cember 2 2 , Richard Charles Up/s/ Will Dennis, Attor- 2014. If you are in the ham has been apney for Administrator active military service pointed Administrator of the Estate, Dawn of the United States, of the estate of Roy Hathaway. or believe that you Douglas Mathis, demay be e ntitled to ceased, by the Circuit LEGAL NOTICE protection o f the Court, State of O rIN T H E CI R CUIT SCRA, please con- egon, Des c hutes COURT O F THE tact our office. If you C ounty, Case N o . STATE OF OREGON do not contact us, we 14PB0120. Al l perFOR THE COUNTY will report to the court sons having claims OF DE S CHUTES, that we do not be- against the estate are PROBATE DEPART- l ieve that yo u a r e required to present MENT. In the Matter protected under the them, with vouchers o f th e E s t ate o f SCRA. If you h a ve attached, to the AdP HILIP D . GOS - questions, you should ministrator at 250 NW SARD, D e c eased. see an attorney imFranklin Ave n ue, Case No. 14PB0127. mediately. If you need Suite 402, Bend, OrNOTICE TO INTER- help in finding an at- egon 97701, within ESTED P ERSONS. torney, you may con- four months after the NOTICE IS HEREBY tact the Oregon State date of December 15, GIVEN that the un- Bar's Lawyer Referral 2014, the first publidersigned has been S ervice o n line a t cation of this notice, appointed personal www.oregonstatebar. or the claims may be representative. All org or by calling (503) barred. Ad d itional i nformation may b e persons having claims 684-3763 ( in t h e against the estate are Portland metropolitan o btained from t h e required to present area) or toll-free else- records of the court, them, with vouchers where in Oregon at the Administrator, or attached, to the un- (800) 452-7636. At- t he lawyer for t h e dersigned attorney for torneys for Plaintiff, Administrator, Patrithe personal repre- SHAPIRO 8 S UTH- cia Heatherman.

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-639729-NH Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made bv, DIANE K. SEMANCIK, A MARR IED WOMAN a s Grantor to NORTHWEST TRU S T EE SERVICES, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T EMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR UNION FEDERAL BANK OF INDIANAPOLIS, as B eneficiary, da t e d 6/1 5/2005, recorded 6/20/2005, in official r ecords o f DE S CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2005-38641 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and S tate, to-wit: APN: 181218BA00511 LOT 11 OF HOLLYGRAPE SUBDIVISION, C I T Y OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 19710 HARVARD PL, OR BEND, 97702-3010 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.752(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 12/1/2012, and all subsequent i n s tallments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent p roperty taxes, insurance premiums, ad v ances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries e ff orts to protect and preserve i ts security, al l o f which must he paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. By t h is reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all o bligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $251,886.45 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.8750 p er a n num f r o m 11/1/2012 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all t rustee's f ees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by th e b e neficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, the u n dersigned trustee will on 4/2/2015 at the hour of 11:00 am, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, At the front entrance of the C ourthouse, 11 6 4 N.W. Bond S t reet, B end, O R 977 0 1 C ounty o f DES C HUTES, State o f Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the s aid described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest w h ic h the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs and e x -

penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee.

Notice is further given that a n y pe r s on named i n Se c tion 86.778 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure p r oceeding d ismissed and t h e trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), t o gether w ith t he cost s , trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance r e q uired under the obligation or

trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.servicelinkasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing a n o b ligation, t h e performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If any irregularities are disc overed within 1 0 days of the date of this sale, the trustee will rescind the sale, return th e b u yer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the s ale shall be entitled only t o a r eturn of t h e m onies paid to t h e Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the Beneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged thr o u gh bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan i n w h ich case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. As required b y law, y o u a r e hereby notified that a negative credit report r eflecting o n y o u r credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Without limiting t he t r ustee's d i s claimer of representations or w arranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some residential p roperty sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to b e t o xic. Prospective purchasers o f res i dential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. Q UALITY MAY B E CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR A TTEMPTING TO C OLLECT A D E BT AND ANY INFORMATION O BT A INED WELL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. TS No: OR-14-639729-NH Dated: 11/1 8 / 14 Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington, as T r ustee Signature By: Nina Hernandez, Assistant Secretary T rustee's Mailing Add r ess: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington C/0 Q u ality L o an Service Corporation 411 Ivy Street San D iego, C A 92 1 0 1 Trustee's Ph y sical Address: Quality Loan Service C orp. of Washington 108 1st Ave South, Suite 202, Seattle, WA 9 8 104 Toll F r e e: (866) 925-0241 A-4498666 12/08/2014, 12/1 5/2014, 12/22/2014, 12/29/2014 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-637174-NH Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made by, PATRICK O'TOOLE AND AMY O'TOOLE, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE and E SCROW CO., a s trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE E LECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T EMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR MORTGAGEIT, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 12/13/2006, recorded 12/22/2006, in official r ecords o f DES CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2006-83210 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and S tate, to-wit: APN: 109241 1 713200000801 A PORTION OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER (NE 1/4 SE 1/4 ) O F SECTION 2 0 ,

TOWNSHIP 17 com In construing this accept proposals for SOUTH, RANGE 13 notice, the masculine the sale of the 63 lots EAST OF THE WIL- gender includes the and/or bare land until LAMETTE M E R I D- feminine a n d the January 19, 2015 at IAN, D E SCHUTES neuter, the singular 5:00 pm. I n dividual COUNTY, OREGON, includes plural, the lots will not be sold. DESCRIBED AS word "grantor" FOLLOWS: FROM A includes any succes- For more information POINT WHE N CE sor in interest to the on the proposal proTHE S O U THEAST grantor as well as any cess, contact John CORNER OF SEC- other persons owing Russell: 503T ION 2 0 BEA R S a n o b ligation, t h e 986-5281 (Salem); 9 41' SOUTH 16 performance of which john.russell@state.or. EAST, 2282.25 FEET; is secured by said us. T HENCE NOR T H trust deed, the words 89'-52'14'93 WEST, "trustee" and "benefiLEGAL NOTICE 25.00 FEET TO THE ciary" include their TRUSTEE'S NOTICE POINT OF BEGIN- respective successors O F SALE File N o . N ING; THEN C E i n interest, if a n y. 7023.111603 R e f er N ORTH 8 9 952'14'93 Pursuant to Oregon ence is made to that WEST, 290.00 FEET; Law, this sale will not c ertain trust d e ed T HENCE NOR T H be deemed final until m ade by B rian G . 0 0909'46'93 E A S T , the Trustee's deed Stone and Diana J. 155.00 FEET; has been issued by Stone, as grantor, to T HENCE SO U T H Quality Loan Service Amerititle, as trustee, 89936' EAST, 290.00 Corporation of in favor of Mortgage F EET; THEN C E W ashington. If a n y Electronic R e gistra SOUTH 00'-09'46'93 irregularities are tion Systems, Inc., as n ominee fo r E v e r WEST, 153.64 FEET discovered within 10 TO THE POINT OF days of the date of green Moneysource BEGINNING. Com- this sale, the trustee Mortgage Company, m only k nown a s : will rescind the sale, its successors and 62969 Santa C r uz return th e b u yer's assigns, as b e nefi A venue, Bend, O R m oney a n d tak e ciary, dated 08/09/07, 97701 Both the ben- f urther a c tion a s recorded 08/24/07, in eficiary a n d the necessary. If the sale the mortgage records trustee have elected is set aside for any of Deschutes County, to sell the said real reason, including if Oregon, as property to satisfy the the Trustee is unable 2007-46595 and sub obligations secured by to convey title, the sequently assigned to said trust deed and Purchaser at the sale Wells Fargo Bank, notice has been re- shall be entitled only N.A. by Assignment as corded pursuant to t o a r eturn of t h e recorded 2012-44047, covering Section 86.752(3) of m onies paid to t h e Oregon Revised Stat- Trustee. This shall be t he f o l lowing d e utes: the default for the Purchaser's sole scribed real property which the foreclosure and exclusive remedy. situated in said county is made is the grant- The purchaser shall and state, to wit: Lot ors: The installments have n o fur t h er twelve (12), Block one of principal and inter- recourse against the (1), Ponderosa Es est which became due Trustor, the Trustee, tates, Des c h utes on 2/1/201.2, and all the Beneficiary, the County, Ore g o n. subsequent i n stall- Beneficiary's Agent, PROPERTY AD ments of principal and or the Beneficiary's DRESS: 21130 interest through the Attorney. If you have S outheast Wil d e r date of this Notice, previously been dis- ness Way Bend, OR thr o u gh 97702 Both the ben plus amounts that are charged due for late charges, bankruptcy, you may eficiary a n d the delinquent property have been released of trustee have elected taxes, insurance pre- personal liability for to sell the real prop miums, ad v a nces this loan i n w h ich erty to satisfy the obli made on senior liens, c ase this l etter i s gations secured by taxes and/or insur- intended to exercise the trust deed and a ance, trustee's fees, the n o t e ho l ders notice of default has and any attorney fees right's against the real been recorded pursu and court costs aris- p roperty only. A s a nt to O r egon Re ing from or associ- required by law, you vlsed Statutes ated with the benefi- are hereby n otified 86.752(3); the default ciaries e fforts to that a negative credit for which foreclosure protect and preserve report reflecting on is made is grantors' i ts security, all o f your credit record may failure to pay when which must be paid as b e submitted to a due th e f o l lowing a condition of rein- credit report agency if sums: monthly pay statement, including you fail to fulfill the ments of $ 2,093.46 all sums that shall ac- terms of your credit beginning 0 9 /01/12 crue through r ein- obligations. W ithout and $2,096.58 begin statement or pay-off. limiting the trustee's ning 4/1/13; plus prior Nothing in this notice disclaimer of accrued late charges shall be construed as r epresentations o r of $358.56; plus ad a waiver of any fees warranties, O r egon vances of $1,681.00 owing to the Benefi- l aw r e quires t h e that represent paid ciary under the Deed trustee to state in this foreclosure fees and of Trust pursuant to notice that some resi- costs and property in the terms of the loan dential property sold spections; t o gether documents. By t his at a t r ustee's sale with title e x pense, reason of said default may have been used costs, trustee's fees in manufacturing and attorney's fees the beneficiary has declared all o bliga- methamphetamines, i ncurred herein b y tions secured by said the chemical reason of said default; deed of trust immedi- components of which any further sums ad ately due and pay- are known to be toxic. vanced by the benefi able, said sums being Prospective ciary for the protec the following, to-wit: purchasers of tion of t h e a b ove The sum of residential p r operty described real prop erty and its interest $269,320.69 together should be aware of ith interest thereon at this potential danger therein; and prepay the rate of 5.8750 per b efore deciding t o ment penalties/premi annum from 1/1/2012 place a bid for this ums, if applicable. By until paid; plus a ll property a t the reason of said default accrued late charges trustee's sale. the beneficiary has thereon; a n d all Q UALITY MAY B E declared all sums ow trustee's fees, CONSIDERED A ing on the obligation DEBT COLLECTOR secured by the trust foreclosure costs and any sums advanced ATTEMPTING TO deed immediately due by th e b e neficiary COLLECT A D E BT a pursuant to the terms AND ANY of said deed of trust. INFORMATION Whereof, notice OBTAINED WILL BE hereby is given that USED FOR T H AT Quality Loan Service P URPOSE. TS N o : of OR-14-637174-NH Corporation Washington, the Quality Loan Service undersigned trustee Corporation of will on 4/6/2015 at the Washington, as hour of 1 1:00 am, Trustee Signature By: Standard of Time, as Nina Her n andez, established by section Assistant S ecretary 1 87.110, Ore g o n Trustee's Mai l i ng Revised Statues, At Address: Quality Loan the front entrance of Service C o rp . of the Courthouse, 1164 Washington C/0 N.W. Bond S t reet, Quality Loan Service B end, O R 97 7 0 1 Corporation 411 Ivy County of Street San Diego, CA DESCHUTES, State 92101 Trus t ee's o f Oregon, sell a t Physical Ad d r ess: public auction to the Quality Loan Service h ighest bidder f o r Corp. of Washington cash the interest in 108 1st Ave South, the said d e scribed Suite 202, S e attle, real property which WA 98104 Toll Free: the grantor had or had (866)925-0241 power to convey at A-FN4499249 the t i m e of the 12/1 5/2014, 12/22/2014, execution by him of the said trust deed, 12/29/2014, t ogether with a n y 01/05/2015 i nterest which t h e PUBLIC NOTICE grantor or his successors in interest Forked Horn a cquired after t h e Subdivisi on, Redmond execution of said trust The Oregon Departdeed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations ment of State Lands is thereby secured and requesting proposals the cos t s and for purchasing 63 expenses of s a le, builder-ready residenWant to impress the including a tial lots, including an relatives? Remodel reasonable charge by adjacent 19.5 acres of the trustee. Notice is bare land. The propyour home with the further given that any erty is located at SW help of a professional p erson named i n Yew and 45th Aves., from The Bulletin's S ection 86.778 o f Redmond. "Call A Service Oregon Rev i s ed Professional" Directory Statutes has the right The department will to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed ~ E P U R LI C and the trust deed reinstated by payment IIICÃFICES to the beneficiary of the e ntire a m ount INWPC&RT~ ~ then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not An important premise upon which the principle of then be due had no democracy is based is thatinformation about default oc c urred), together w i t h the government activities must be accessible in order costs, trustee's and for the electorate Io make well-informed decisions. attorney's fees and c uring an y ot h e r Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo default complained of i n t h e N o t ice o f citizens who want fo know more about government Default by tendering activities. the per f ormance r equired under t h e Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin o bligation o r tr u st deed, at any time prior classifieds or go fowww.bendbullefin.com and to five days before the click on "Classi%ed Ads" ate last set for sale. For Sale Information Or go to www.publicnticeoregon.com. Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: The Bulletin www.servicelinkasap.


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