Serving Central Oregon since190375
MONDAY December23,2013
SnQWShQetQUI' SPORTS • B1
LOCAL• A7
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
Family findscomfort as hopefadesfor missingplane
College sportscutsMany universities do awaywith their smaller programs.B1
Blue reindeer eyes — For life above theArctic Circle, perhaps evenmoreuseful than a glowing red nose.A3
By Chris Collins
They are grateful their last
WesCom News Service
visit with Steve's oldest son,
BAKER CITY — Steve and Terri Smith have fond memo-
Dale, and his family ended with embraces and expressions of love for one another. And they are grateful for the outpouring of support they havereceived from people
ries of Thanksgiving and are heading toward Christmas
with grateful, but broken, hearts.
phntOS all over the world On A6 since e p ane
flying over the dense forests and steep mountains of central Idaho en route from Baker City to Butte, Mont. "We're so grateful to
piloted by Dale disappeared Dec. 1. But they are heartbroken at
Baker for all the prayers, donations and concern
the overwhelming realization
that the five people aboard appear to have been lost while
community," Steve Smith, 72, said Wednesday during an interview at his home on
Mill Creek Lane tucked up against the Elkhorn Mountains, about 10 miles west of
Baker City.
we've experienced from the
SeePlane/A6
'Bug that ate Christmas' — The balsamwoolly adelgid causes despair.AS
rea s o remem rance
Health-plan worriesExperts caution that too many first-time buyers mayjust be picking the cheapest plan.A6
IN SALEM
Push gFOWS
Candlestick memories
forrural
V
— Saying goodbye toSan Francisco's iconic, often frigid stadium.B5
LNTN,
' „1 1
rise on the EastCoastalarms marine scientists.A10
taxdeal
i
Dolphin deaths —Asharp
r
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By Lauren Dake
SP
r
UNIILU )IAIH ARMT
ERNFS'I F RRICG5 J
The Bulletin 10 1 /
JOHN I GALLAGHER
In world news —Apple's
I
DENNIS C HAMILTON
PATRICE H LOLLI5
PETTR P MARTIN
HAART D PARR
DONALD V RIECER
ELVIN W SAMUELSON
FRANR 0 THOMA5
SHELDON D ICHUITF
deal with a Chinesecarrier. A2
1«1
FLTON DICFEN5 I
JAMEI D WILLIAMSON tOUR UN
w N FO R EIGN NA1IOIIALS
DO
STEVEN IP
package crafted to benefit Nike, guaranteeing the
F
DOWNED AHIGRAFT F
I'TER-
SALEM — At the end of this month, a legislative retail giant some tax cer-
AUGUST R I
tainty, is set to expire — no otherbusinesscan applyfor
EDITOR'SCHOICE
the same deal.
Surveillance attitudes: uneasyyet familiar
CHRISTOPHER FA HAR
RONALD E IRWINtS, LT
PERR'Y HENRY JEFF S O N
But there is growing momentum to ensure smaller, more rural businesses get
a chance to strike a similar bargain. Several lawmakers are
grappling with howto take the 30-year tax agreement created for Nike, which will
also likelybenefit Intel, and translate it into something that could help smaller busi-
nesses throughout the state. Rep. John Huffman,
By Marc Fisher and Craig Timberg
R-The Dalles, said it's an
liAESIV
issue that"won't go unanDE
The Washington Post
swered in the 2015 session."
E SSICA A N N
Lastyear, the governor called lawmakers backto the Capitol for a one-day special sessionto approve a deal assuring Nike its cor-
ELLIS
porate income tax structure
WASHINGTON — JU-
lie Beliveau's 16-year-old daughter, a new driver, was heading from her home in Ashburn, Va. toward a job interview the other night
when she found herself in Leesburg, Va.— the wrong
won't change for 30years. The bargain doesn't give
CPL U
direction entirely. Upset
the company a tax break.
and fearing that she'd blow the interview, she called
But it does ensure the corporate tax structure, known
her mother, who instantly
as the single sales factor,
won't change. SeeTaxes/A4
launched her tracking program. "I just opened my phone, and I could see where she was,HBeliveau said.
Mother guided daughter to the interview, where she
got the job. Score one for surveillance.
Yet Beliveau says she would never use the pro-
gram just casually to check her daughter's whereabouts. "That's going over the line," she said.
SeeSurveillance/A4
TODAY'S WEATHER ~~
Most l ycloudy High 49, Low 26 Page B10
INDEX Calendar A7 Movies A9 Classified Cf -6 Nation/World A2 Comics/ Sports Bf -1 0 Puzzles C3-4 Tee Crosswords C4 to Green B9-10 Local/StateA7-8 Television A9
Andrew Clevenger/The Bulletin
W
reaths and other Christmas decorations adorn the grave of Cpl. Jessica Ann Ellis in Arlington National Cemetery on Friday.
A former Central Oregon Community College student, Ellis, at right, was 24 when she
By Jad Mouawad and MarthaC. White New York Times News Service
)t-
was killed on May 11, 2008, when a vehicle she was riding in was hit by an improvised explosive device in Baghdad. She was an Army health care specialist serving her second deployment in Iraq, assigned to the 2nd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault).
jrl /~ ~
Flying coach can be a bruising experience these days. Rory Rowland said he w as rudely rebuffed after
-
/
he asked the person in front of him not to recline
his seat on a red-eye flight. When he later got up to use the bathroom, and the other passen-
Each December, Wreaths Across America
lays wreaths on every grave at Arlington National Cemetery, as well as at veterans' cemeteries and other locations nationwide. For more
ger had fallen asleep, HI
information on the organization, go to www .wreathsacrossamerica.org.
hip-checked his seat like you wouldn't believe," Rowland, a speaker and
— The Bulletin
consultant, said, then feigned innocence when the enraged passenger complained to a fhght
The Bulletin
An Independent Newspaper N
Vol. 111,No. 357,
D
Andrew Clevenger/The Bulletin
26 pages, 3sections
Q i/l/e use recycled newsprint
:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
For airlines, a hard look at seating
NOre phOtOS Online Q o Check out this story at bendbulletin.com to see sl aideshow travelog to Arlington National Cemetery by GregKnox. Courtesy Greg Knox
attendant. With air travelers in-
creasingly feeling like packed sardines, flying has become a contact sport, nowhere more than over the reclined seat. See Airlines/A5
A2
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
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Winter weather —The first full day of winter brought a wild mix of weather across the U.S. onSunday: ice and high wind in the Great Lakesand NewEngland areas, flooding in the South, snow in the Midwest and record-shattering temperatures in the 60sand70s along the mid-Atlantic. Snowand ice knocked out power to 440,000 homes and businesses in Michigan, upstate New York and northern New England, andalso left more than 475,000 people without electricity in eastern Canada. It could bedays before the lights are back on everywhere. At least nine deaths in the U.S.were blamed on the storm, including five people killed in flooding in Kentucky and a woman who diedafter a tornado with winds of130 mph struck in Arkansas. Five peoplewere killed in Canada in highway accidents related to the storm.
one
asne or o By Eric Pfanner and Brian X. Chen New YorJz Times News Service
Just about any way you slice
Google's Android operating system dominate for several reasons, particularly price.
year ago. Samsung's global
In China, some smartphone
Still, analysts were optimistic that Apple would sell a lot of phones through China Mobile, thoughthey offered wide-ranging estimates for how many
makers, like Huawei, Coolpad huge potential pie. and ZTE, offer Android phones On Sunday, Apple and Chi- for less than $100, while Apple na Mobileannounced a deal to lists the iPhone 5C at $739, and bringthe iPhone to the Chinese the 5S at $871. Apple said that carrier, the largest wireless net- it would reveal pricing of the work in the world, on Jan. 17. iPhones for China Mobile cusAn agreement with China tomers at a later date. Mobile could, at least initially, Apple is the No. 5 smartgive Apple abig lift into the vast phone player in the country, beChinese market, analysts say, hindSamsung and theChinese increasing its worldwide sales. handset makers Huawei, Leno"China is an extremely import- vo and Yulong. ant market for Apple and our The slow sales of the iPpartnership with China Mobile hone in China are reflected presents us the opportunity to in the overall shrinkage of bring iPhone to the customers the company's share of the of the world's largest network," global smartphone market Timothy D. Cook, Apple's chief — to 12.1 percent in the third executive, said in a statement. quarter, down from 14.3 perBut the company will face cent inthe same period a year many challenges in capturing ago, according to the marthe Chinese market. ket research fir m G a rtner. While Apple's smartphones Meanwhile, Lenovo,the No. are dominant in th e United 3 player, which sells the vast States and a majorplayer in Eu- majority of its smartphones rope, the company has strug- in China, had 5.1 percent of gled to gain much traction in the global market in the third China, where phones using quarter,from 4.1 percent a it, 763 million customers is a
share remained flat at 32.1 percent.
NSA Panel —A memberof President Barack Obama'sadvisory committee on signals intelligence, the panel that recommended major restrictions on theNational Security Agency's data collection, on Sunday countered the notion that the panel hadfound no value in the agency's activities. Michael Morell, a former acting director of the CIA, said that although the panel of independent experts did not find evidence that the National Security Agency's efforts had helped stop a terrorist attack, the ability to monitor whether foreign terrorists were calling Americans remained important.
more. William Power, an ana-
lyst for Robert W. Baird, said Applecould sellasm any as30 million more iPhones in 2014,
while Toni Sacconaghi, an analyst for Sanford C. Bernstein
Syrian COnfliCt —At least 25 people were killed in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Sunday, anti-government activists reported, in the eighth straight day of intense government bombardment of rebel-held areas there, while a suicide car bombing that the state news media blamed on insurgents killed at least10 people in the central province of Homs. Even aspreparations are being madefor internationally sponsored peacetalks scheduled for late January, violence in Syria appears, if anything, to have escalated in recent weeks.
research, offered a more conservative estimate of 15 million
iPhones. Apple sold about 23 million iPhones in China over the last year, Sacconaghi said. Apple has long pursued a deal with China Mobile. The carrier showed signs of warming up to Apple only after it began losing customers to com-
Russiah pflSOhef —After a decadeof incarceration that transformed Russia's wealthiest man into its most famous political prisoner, Mikhail Khodorkovsky faced journalists in Berlin on Sundayfollowing a head-spinning 36-hour journey to freedom. Khodorkovsky recounted with a detachedhumor how, in the hours after a surprising clemency from his nemesis, President Vladimir Putin, hewas awakened at 2 a.m. Friday by prison guards at apenitentiary near the Finnish border andwhisked away,first to St. Petersburg, then onto a special flight to Germany.Askedabout the biggest change in himself, he gave animpish shrug: "I grew10 years older."
petitors that offered the iPhone.
The second- and third-largest carriers in the country, China Unicom and China Telecom,
have had longstanding arrangements with Apple, but they are much smaller than China Mobile.
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
NSW YOfk d88tllS —A man involved in a custody dispute who was supposed to turn his 3-year-old son over to the boy's mother Sunday instead threw the child off the roof of a 52-story Manhattan apartment building before jumping to his death, police said. Officers responding to anemergency call reporting two jumpers from the building on the UpperWest Side around noon Sundayfound Dmitriy Kanarikov, 35, of Brooklyn, and the boy onthe lower rooftops of two separate nearby buildings. Themanwas pronounced deadat the scene and his son, Kirill Kanarikov, was pronounceddeadat a nearby hospital, police said.
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Egyptiah SeiltehCSS —Three activists who played leading roles in the uprising against former President Hosni Mubarakwere convicted Sunday of participating in protests and sentenced to three years in prison by anEgyptian court. The activists — Ahmed Maher, MohamedAdelandAhmed Douma — werealsoeachorderedtopay more than $7,000 in fines. Humanrights advocates said the harsh sentences werethe first verdicts in a political case against non-Islamists since the military ousted President MohammedMorsi of the Muslim Brotherhood in July.
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Tll8I pfOtSStS —In one of the more provocative moves of Thailand's monthlong political crisis, anti-government protesters marching through Bangkok onSunday vowed todisrupt the coming elections in their campaign to rid the country of its most influential political family. As tens of thousands of protesters rallied at several points in Bangkok, the capital, the main protest leader, SuthepThaugsuban, instructed his followers to gather outside the building where the governing party of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra andother smaller parties had planned to register for the Feb. 2national elections. "We will shut down the country; we will block everyone casting ballots," Suthep said.
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United Nations Mission in South Sudan via The AssociatedPress
Wounded civilians from Bor, South Sudan, thecapital of Jonglei state andsaid to bethe scene of fierce clashes betweengovernment troops and rebels, are assisted after being transported by U.N.helicopter to Juba, the capital, on Sunday. Also Sunday,American citizens were evacuated from the contested areaafter a local rebel commander provided assurances that there would be nointerference, Western officials said.
By Gardiner Harris New York Times News Service
NEW DELHI — The police
• Buying overseas clothing, U.S flouts its own advice,AS
The fire a t t h e T a zreen over the years. Fashions factory on Nov. 24, Bangladesh has more than 2012, was later eclipsed by a 4,500 garment factories, which
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in Bangladesh charged the owners of a garment factory and 11 of their employees day were the factory's owners, with culpable homicide in the Delowar Hossain and his wife, deaths of 112 workers in a fire Mahmuda Akther, as well as last year that came to symbol- M . Mahbubul Morshed, an enize the appalling working con- gineer, and Abdur Razzaq, the ditions in the country's domi- factory manager, according to nant textile industry. local news reports. The case is the first time Bangladeshi officials have the authorities have sought to been under intense domestic prosecute factory owners in and international pressure Bangladesh's garment indus- to file charges against those try, so powerful that the state deemed responsiblefor last has long sought to protect year's deaths. Fires have been owners from unionization ef- a persistent problem in the forts by workers and from in- country's garment industry ternational scrutiny of workfor more than a decade, with ing conditions. hundreds of workers killed
building collapse in April that
— From wire reports
— Bulletin wire reports
Chargesfor Bangladeshi factory owners infire 0'
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The evacuation, which involved about15Americans, was carried out by helicopter from the U.N. compoundinBor,whichissurroundedby2,000 armed youths. It came oneday after U.S. special operations forces tried to evacuate theAmericans there, only to turn backafter the threeOsprey aircraft being used for the mission ran into heavy small-arms fire.
cost the lives of 1,100 workers
employ more than 4 million workers, many of them young
and brought global attention
women. The industry is cru-
to the unsafe working condi-
tions and low wages at many garment factories in Bangla-
cial to the national economy as a source of employment and foreign currency. Garments
desh, the No. 2 exporter of ap-
constitute about four-fifths of
parel after China. The fire also the country's manufacturing revealed the poor controls that exports, and the industry is top retailers had throughout expected to grow rapidly. their supply chain, since reOn the night of the fire, tailers like Wal-Mart said they more than 1,150 people were were unaware that their apinside the eight-story building, parel was being made in such working overtime shifts to fill factories. orders for various internationAmong those charged Sun- al brands.
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MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • 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.23, the 357th day of 2013. Thereareeight days left in the year.
DISCOVERY
HAPPENINGS
rismas,rein eere es urn ue
Holiday travel —Icy weather is expected to continue making roads hazardous from the upper Midwest to northern NewEngland. A2 Eglfpt —Secular groups plan to protest a verdict under the country's controversial new protest law.A2
HISTORY Highlight:In1913, the Federal Reserve Systemwascreated as President Woodrow Wilson signed the FederalReserveAct. In1788, Maryland passed an act to cede anarea"not exceeding ten miles square" for the seat of the national government; about 2/3 of the area became the District of Columbia. In1823,thepoem "Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas" was publ ishedanonymously in the Troy (N.Y.)Sentinel; the verse, more popularly known as "'Twas the Night Before Christmas," was later attributed to Clement C.Moore. In1893, the Engelbert Humperdinck opera "Haensel und Gretel" was first performed, in Weimar, Germany. In1928,the National Broadcasting Company setupa permanent, coast-to-coast network. In1933,President Franklin D. Roosevelt restored the civil rights of about1,500 people who'd beenjailed for opposing the (First) World War. In1941, during World War II, American forces onWake Island surrendered to theJapanese. In1948,former Japanesepremier Hideki Tojo andsix other Japanesewar leaders were executed in Tokyo. In1963, the Soviet Union announced theexecution of Lavrentiy Beria, former headof the secret police, for treason. In1962, Cubabegan releasing prisoners from the failed Bayof Pigs invasion under anagreement in which Cubareceived more than $50 million worth of food and medical supplies. In1968, 82 crew members of the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo were released byNorth Korea, 11months after they had beencaptured. In1972, in football's "Immaculate Reception," FrancoHarris of the Pittsburgh Steelers caught a passthrown by Terry Bradshaw andscored atouchdown after the ball wasdeflected during a collision between Jack Tatum of theOakland Raiders and theSteelers' John Fuqua; the Steelers won, 13-7. A 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck Nicaragua; thedisaster claimed some5,000 lives. In1986, the experimental airplane Voyager, piloted by Dick Rutan andJeanaYeager, completed the first non-stop, non-refueled round-the-world flight as it returned safely to Edwards Air ForceBasein California. Ten yearsage:The government announcedthefirst suspected (later confirmed) case of mad cow disease inUnited States, in Washington state. A jury in Chesapeake,Va.,sentenced teensniper Lee Boyd Malvo to life in prison, sparing him the death penalty. Five years ags:Rene-Thierry Magon de laVillehuchet, founder of an investment fund that had lost $1.4 billion in Bernard Madoff's Ponzi scheme, was discovered deadafter committing suicide at his Madison Avenueoffice. One yearage: President Barack Obama,HawaiiGov. Neil Abercrombie andother dignitaries attended amemorial service for the lateSen. Daniel Inouye atHonolulu's National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific.
BIRTHDAYS Emperor Akihito of Japan is80. Actor-comedian Harry Shearer is 70. Gen.WesleyClark (ret.) is 69. Actress SusanLucci is 67. Rock singer EddieVedder is 49. — From wire reports
The adaptation makes it easier for them to see in
A Sami handler in traditional clothing holds two of his herd of reindeer in Saeriselka, Finnish Lapland. On
the dark Arctic winter. By Deborah Netbum
researchers collected eyes
Los Angeles Times
during both the winter and summer months, then mailed
Rudolph the fictional rein-
deer was famous for his oddly colored nose, but his true-life cousins have eyes that change color depending onthe season. In the summer, the eyes of Arcticreindeer appear gold, and around Christmas they turn to a deep blue, biologists have discovered. It's not holi-
them off to Glen Jeffery, a neuroscientist wh o
Europe's northern
s t u dies
vision at University College London.
fringe, the mammals live in the Arctic homeland of the indige-
"That first time, they sent
me 10 eyes from summer and 10 eyes from winter," Jeffery said. "When I opened them, I had the biggest shock I've
nous Samiof Norway, Swe-
day magic, butratheraunique ever had in science — the winadaptation that helps these ter ones were clearly blue and animals deal with the strange the summer ones were clearly light conditions at the top of gold. I wished I had someone the world. The reindeer's world is one
tO n
of extremes. Above the Arctic Circle, Christmas falls in the
The color change occurs not on the iris, but on a reflective
midst of a 10-week period of
perpetual twilight in which the sun never rises and the landscape is cast i n b l uish
hues. But from mid-May to late July, the sun never sets, creat-
ing a long, endless day. Biologists at the University of Norway in Tromso, one of the largest cities situated north of the Arctic Circle, wondered how the reindeer
managed the transition from a world of near-total darkness to one of blinding light, when springtime sunlight reflects off still-unmelted snow.
den, Finland
and Russia. David McDougall I The Associated Pressfile photo
sitting next to me to exclaim
has been shown in a mamm al," Jefferysaid. retina that's known as the taIn a study published in the petum l u cidum, K a r l-Arne Proceedings of the Royal SoStokkan and his colleagues in ciety B, Jeffrey and his colNorway discovered. leagues in Norway explained H umans don't h ave t h i s that when a reindeer's tapestructure, but lots of other tum is blue, 50 percent less animals do. It helps noctur- light is reflected out of the eye nal animals see at night by than when the tapetum is gold. bouncing light back inside the A reindeer with a blue tapeeye, giving the light receptors tum sees less clearly than one in theretina a second chance with a gold tapetum, but its to be stimulated. The tapetum eyes are 1,000 times more sensurface behind the central
sensitivity is probably a worth- completely to let in as much while trade-off for reindeer on light as possible. That action the ground because it allows also causes a flap to descend them to detect a moving predator in the darkness — even if
they can't see it clearly. "Reindeer are very plastic, so it is not surprising the eye would change," said Perry Barboza, who studies Arctic animals at the University of Alaska at Fairbanks and was not involved with the study. The scientists determined
sitive to light. that the color of light reflected "Clinically, the reindeer be- by a reindeer's tapetum likely flash of "eye shine" you see when a cat looks into a car's come glaucomic," Jeffery said. depends on how much fluid headlights. Perhaps Santa should find pressure there is in the eye itTo find out, they collected Scientists had always as- animals of a nother species self. It took Jeffrey and his colreindeer eyes from the Sami, sumed that this piece of ocular to pull his sled on one of the leagues in Norway nearly 10 indigenous herders who often anatomy's color was fixed. darkest nights of winter. years to figure this out. slaughter the animals around
the solstices. The Norwegian
lucidum is responsible for the
"This is the first time that a
But the scientists argue that
In the dark winter months,
change in color in the tapetum losing acuity and gaining light
the reindeers' pupils dilate
over the back of the eye where
fluid normally drains out. Since the fluid has no way to escape,the pressure inside the
eye increases. That, in turn, causes collagen fibers in the tapetum to squish together,
which changes its color from gold to blue. But blue and gold are not
the only colors in the reindeer tapetum spectrum. The
researchers also checked the eyes of a small herd of reindeer that lived on the campus of the University of Tromso,
and who were exposed to permanent distant urban lighting. Instead of turning blue in the
winter, they became green.
Study: HIV infection causes immunecells to self-destruct By Monte Morin
BREAKTHROUGH
Los Angeles Times
Scientists say they have dis-
covered a process by which the AIDS virus kills key immune cells: It triggers a preprogrammed self-destruct sequence within the cell that is
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Pg&
cells were dying from pyroptosis, a form of cellular suicide.
Pyroptosis, which in Greek means to go down in flames, is one of a number of preprogrammed self-destruction prointended to alert other immune cesses that cells are equipped cells of a crisis. with. In pyroptosis, a cell beIn papers published simul- gins to swell and then bursts, taneously last week in Science releasing its contents, as well and Nature, researchers at the as inflammatory compounds. Gladstone Institutes and the Those inflammatory comUniversity of California, San pounds then attract other imFrancisco, wrote that they not mune cells, which seek to fight only discovered this little-un- the infection. derstoodprocess,butalso iden-
In the case of HIV, however,
tified an existing drug that may the arrival of new immune cells haltit. provides further targets for the "Our studies have invesligat- virus, and the cyde continues. ed and identified the root cause Green and his colleagues of AIDS," said Gilad Doitsh, a wrote that the cell initiates pycoauthor of both studies and a roptosis in response to the acGladstone virologist. "Despite cumulation of viral genetic masome 30 years of HIV research, terial within the cell. Although this key HIV/AIDS process has
remained pretty much a black box," he said in a prepared statement.
the material is unable to create new viral particles, the cell rec-
ognizes the material as a threat and essentially sacrifices itself in attempt to summon other im-
Both studies focus on the body's CD4 T cells, white blood cells that help defend against infection. These cells are also the primary target of the human immunodeficiency virus,
"The cyde of abortive infection, inflammatory death and
or HIV, which injects its own genetic material into the im-
response is undermined and, in fact, centrally contributes to
mune cells. recruitment of new cells likely explains how this innate host
mune cell, causing the host cell HIV pathogenesis," the authors to reproducethe virus many wrote. times over. Through experimentation, Yet there are many immune researchers determined that cells in which the viral repro- the dangerous genetic mateduction process fails, and the rial was detected by interferhostcellnever becomes a re- on-gamma-inducible protein 16 production factory for the vi- (IFI16), which in turn activated rus. These cells are sometimes the cell's trigger for pyroptosis, called "bystander" cells, and it an enzyme called caspase 1. has long puzzled scientists as Armed with that knowledge, to why they died, eventually the researcherstested differleaving the body with so few ent caspase 1-inhibiting comimmune cells that it can no lon- pounds on infected tissues and ger defend itself against even found that some were as effecminor illnesses. tive in preventing the depletion Dr. Warner Green, the se- of CD4 T cells as viral inhibitnior author of both studies, and mg drugs. Gladstone's director of viroloResearchers are planning gy and immunology research, a clinical trial to determine wrote t ha t
a f t e r s t u dying whether one of the anti-inflam-
HIV-infected tonsil and spleen matory drugs tested can help tissues, he and his colleagues stoptheprogression ofdisease determined that the bystander in HIV-infected people.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
Surveillance
would be shirking their responsibility if they did not take
Taxes
Continued from A1
advantage of available technol-
Continued from A1 The single sales tax factor impacts companies that have large amounts of
ogy to monitor their children's online behavior.
Amid this year's revelations
about the federal government's vast apparatus for tracking the movements and commu-
nications of people worldwide, Americans are uneasy with the extent of surveillance yet
often use snooping tools in their own lives, a Washington
One mother i n A s h burn who asked not to be named, to
rr~p tf,l7
avoidembarrassing her child, :tf i'
said she and her husband read
' II
"
through their middle-schoolage daughter's Facebook chat transcripts an d
d i s covered
that boys had been pressuring her tosend revealing photos
Post poll has found.
The sweet spot between liberty and security has been
of herself. The parents inter-
4 38
hard to pinpoint ever since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on
vened and prevented a sexting incident; now, a few years later,
sales outside of the state.
As long as Nike creates 500 new jobs and invests $150 million in the state, its
corporate taxes will continue to be based only on sales that happen within
Oregon for the next three decades. Roger Lee,
e x ecutive
New York and Washington.
they have decided not to mon-
Remarkable advances in in-
itor their daughter's Facebook account, to teach herthebene-
director of Economic Development for C e ntral Oregon, said the deal illustrates the power of
fits of trust.
certainty. It's a constantly
The struggle over just how much to watch varies from family to family, and no clear guidelineshave emerged, accordingto school counselors.
changing tax landscape, Lee said. "And hey, if these larger companies are asking for some certainty, it might
Some teens are now being
make sense small business
monitored not only by parents but also by their schools,
would like certainty as well," he said.
formation technology have enabled counterterrorism tactics far more sweeping and intrusive — and powerful — than the United States had ever deployed. At the same time,
the relationship between consumers and businesses was
elementally altered as mobile phones, GPS, Google and Facebook gave corporations
Photos by Matt McClain/The Washington Post
Lynne Beliveeu, right, in Ashburn, Ve., does not track the whereabouts of her 17-year-old daughter Jessice, left. "I feel there should be some things that parents don't necessarily know," Jessice said. "And anyway, in the past, before ail this technology, most kids turned out just fine."
a few thousand of which have
a new capacity to track their
crypt their communications or
customers' behavior.
use tools that allow people to
This year, in the months
since former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden leaked secret
documents detailing U . S. surveillance programs, it has
'PIIJ
become clear that there are
PQ
not yet widely accepted norms about who may watch whom and when and where tracking is justified. The Washington Post's poll found that Ameri-
I
cans' attitudes about surveil-
lance are anything but consistent, whether the sample is Howard University student Nie Farmer, 18, hes no qualms about the entire nation or a single,
her mother's insistence on tracking her whereabouts until she
conflicted person. Nearly seven in 10 Amer-
turns 25. "Legally, I'm an adult," Farmer says, "but I keep it on for her because it's ell about staying safe."
icans are concerned about
how much personal information government agencies and storehouse of information that private companies collect, the Facebook and Googlecollect poll found. But among parents about users to be creepy and 40 or older — the group most intrusive, because she does likely to have teenagers — 70 not see anybenefit from giving percent said they monitor the them her data. websites their children visit. Go ahead, listen to my calls, Many also review their kids'
track my movements, said Ter-
texts, emails and social-media ry Brickerd, mother of college use. A small number of Amer- and high school students and icans also report tracking the vice president of the parents movements of their spouses or association for Broad Run using video feeds to monitor High in Ashburn: "I don't care. I don't have anything to hide. elderly parents.
Governmentsnooping, parental snooping Northern Virginia tech en-
trepreneur Zachary Thompson, 30, is typical in disliking government surveillance but
Because they're not
l i sten-
ing to us individually — they
distinguish between useful surveillance and unacceptable
he posts on Facebook or other
sue, and it was discussed
their data are more likely to be
dangerous situations.
male, conservative and well educated.
Shifting attitudes
John Burke, 70, is retired
As attitudes shift, business-
during the one-day Nike special session. Rep. Greg Smith, R-Heppner, said there were a lot of "hurt feelings among
from acareerinfederallaw en- es keep coming up with new
l awmakers" during
forcement and has been disap-
session. "One or two districts in the state of Oregon got special consideration while other parts of the state that
ways for consumers to keep
pointed, even angered, by news tabs on relatives, friends and reports about the NSA's ap- colleagues. proach to collecting data from Although The WashingU.S. citizens. Burke eschews ton Post's poll found that only Facebookand other socialme- 6 percent of those surveyed dia, avoids giving out his So- use "granny cams" to monicial Security number and tries tor elderly relatives, market to steer clear of businesses that research indicates that the sell customer information to popularity of such products is other marketers, but he won- likely to grow sharply. Life360, ders if the effort is worthwhile. an app that allows families
t h at
could have benefited from
like legislation were excluded," Smith said. "You still have legislators saying, 'why not us? why not our small businesses?'" Smith said.
now." He's similarly sanguine about the government's tracking. "It's not the details that
tions on their phones, has been really have no way of knowing downloaded more than 60 mil-
McLane, R-Powell Butte, said there seems to be
what anyone does with our in-
lion times. "More children than
more of a focus lately on helping the state's rural
the NSA is harvesting, but it's the relationships," he said. "If
formation, and especially what adults saythey feel safer"when the government does." their location is being moni-
check on her children, ages 12
those in the Portland busi-
and 14, and her husband, start-
nesses (groups) we need to strike," McLane said.
times you don't know what the scope of it or the scale of it is,"
tests against the monitoring,
plummeting cost of video tech-
lance often vary depending on Internet services. "People can nologymade itcheap and easy who is doing it and how clear take that stuff and really dig for people to track each other, the purpose is. Beliveau, for into your life." Americans have grown so example, does not mind the Bob Moses, 50, an informa- comfortable with these techtracking the government does tion technology worker for nologies that large majorities to sniff out potential terrorists, the AFL-CIO, said he would say they take little or no prebecause she believes innocent like more anonymity when cautions to protect their digpeople have nothingto fear. he shops online, but he under- ital privacy. Nearly six in 10 She is not particularly both- stands that Google and others Internet users do not use tools ered by the intimate knowl- offer their services without that can block websites from edge Wegmans collects about charge and need a way to tracking their behavior, seven her grocery shopping, be- make money. in 10 say they have not delet"For that, I give up some of ed online posts that might be cause she gains from the exchange — the store offers her my rights," Moses said. "It's a embarrassing, and more than discounts. But she finds the trade-off I accept, at least right eight in 10 say they never en-
ed using the program even before her kids ventured out on
But he does not see similar protections against overreach
by private companies. "They are trying to make a quick profit," he said, "and there's not
a standard in terms of ethics." Every time she goes to a CVS, Peggy Brown gets evidence that the drugstore tracks her purchases. The personal-
It's too early to say how
their own, to get them used to the idea that mother would al-
a package aiding rural businesses would be craft-
ways be watching. "I pay for their phones, so it's part of the bargain," she said. Her daughter, who is 12, pro-
ed. But McLane noted that
there are plenty of options. "Instead of $150 million and 500 jobs, how about
$5 million and 50 jobs,"
McLane said. "We would scale it back but still create
incentives for people to locate and expand." — Reporter: 541-554-1162, Idake@bendbulletin.com
"I don't care if somebody in
many other societies through the government listens to my his travel for work, said that, phone calls," she said. "I don't by comparison, he trusts that mind being checked on. I don't the press, Congress and the mind being tracked. And our courts will help curb the NSA's children will care even less, beexcesses. cause they're growing up with "These are things that are all this, always connected. It's missing in many countries," he just who we are." said. "I'm not saying that the government is perfect I'm just saying that the government may be self-correcting over N QRTHWEsT
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ized discount offer she is hand-
ed with her receipt "shows that they know what medications I've gotten," she said. "And that
bothers me more than what the government's doing, because they're doing things to protect us.
Need an extra$2,QOO? Just tell us how you would spend it.
But Brown, 59 and a recent
retiree from a job in a medical office, figures there is little the average person can do to proher first phone at age 10. "Le- tect personal data. "Everything gally, I'm an adult," Farmer just gets more and more exsaid,"but Ikeep it on forherbe- posed," she said. cause it's all about staying safe.
a Life360 vice president.
but Roberts responds that even said Tarek El-Ghazawi, 55, a parents in past generations computer engineering profes- kept tabs on kids. "I always had sor and director of the High to give my mother an itinerary Performance ComputingLab of where I was goingto be," she at George Washington Univer- sald. sity's campus in Ashburn. "But Roberts said that if she is goyou know you are giving up ing to use technology to keep part of your life." her family safe, it is reasonEl-Ghazawi, a U.S. citizen able for the government to do who emigrated from Egypt the same to protect the nation.
time."
economies recover.
Julia Roberts, a 48-year-old writer who uses Life360 to
tored, said Amanda Zweerink,
three decades ago and has seen
House Republican Mike
"The plight of rural Oregon has not gone unnoticed ... and while we have momentum and interest from
you've got something to hide, then you ought to be worried How muchisoutthere? about it." Many Americans expressed Moses appreciates tech- s imilar c oncerns; th e p o l l nology's capacity to keep his found that only 9 percent of family safe. When his children Internet users are "very conwere younger, he demanded to fident" that their efforts will be their friends on Facebook protect their privacy. That lack so he could monitor their ac- of clarity drives some people to tivity. He recently helped a col- search for new ways to protect league buy a "granny-cam" for their information, while others the home of her elderly mother, shrug and conclude that they who struggles with dementia. are powerless. "What worries you is someAnd he used an AT&T service
intrusions — by the NSA, by Anyway, if I turn off the app, private companies and by fam- Shack in Ashburn, near the she gets right on the phone, so ily members. epicenter of Loudoun's 4.5 mil- I might as well just keep it on." lion square feet of data centers. In the fewyears since smartMany collectors He is very cautious about what phones, social media and the Attitudes toward s u rveil-
browse anonymously. through students' social-media Those who act to defend postings to look for potentially
or friends to share their loca-
look for patterns. So what's the big deal? I mean, without that, how many terror attacks would we have?" called "FamilyMap" to track B rickerd does no t m i n d the movements of his children,
information. "What privacy? On the Internet, there is almost no privacy," said Austin McCuiston, 19, a food runner at Ford's Fish
in
particular, have proposed legislation to get at this is-
"I doubt my precautions are very effective," he said. "We
embracing similar tools in when companies track her ages 17 and 22 — stopping his own life. Thompson, who purchases and online search- with his older child only when owns an Internet service pro- es, either. 'Tm glad American she moved out of the house. "It's peace of mind," Movider, YellowFiber Networks, Express tracks me, because has had to respond to federal twice they've called me when ses said. "It's the 21st-century court orders to hand over user something unusual happened, family." data. "It sucks, to be blunt, be- and that protected me," she Cameras and police cause there's nothing you can sald. do," he said. T he Was h Most Americans seem to B ut w he n i t ington Post poll have made their peace with c omes to h i s "Wt785 WOI'I'IGS found Americans video surveil lance cameras, daughter — not y p U IS S pm8~jmBS almost e q u al- which are now widely used by yet 2 years oldly bothered by governments and businesses, ,5 k he already plans government surespecially in densely populatto track her in a Wt l Bf: the SCOPe ve i l lance as they ed areas. In The Washington way that parents pf j( Of ~I7e SCBle are by corporate Post's poll, more than four out a generation ago snoopmg> wlth of five Americans were comcould hardly have Of lt IS. 69 percent con- fortable with the number of c erne d abou t cameras in use or even would imagined. H e kA O W Ou g are and others said a gtytflg U p pgrf pf tracking by I n- favor having more installed. parent's relationternet se a r ch Only 14 percent would like to I f ll ship with a child and social-media see fewer cameras. is fundamentally But about half of Americans Tarek EI-Ghezewi, companies and 66 different fro m computer engineering percent worried wanted limits on how long poa g overnment's professor a bout what t h e lice may keep location data on with its citizens. government does. citizens. Such data are collect"I fully a nticOverall, more-ed- ed by advanced video surveilipate when she comes of age ucated and a ff luent A m er- lance systems, license-plate putting up a fire wall and mon- icans were less likely to be readers and other technologies. "Whatever you do on your itoring everything she does," concernedabout surveillance. he said. "That's a parent's Political conservatives tended phone, you shouldn't mind responsibility." to be more concerned about anybody seeing it," said Nia In Ashburn, the sprawling government surveillance. Farmer, 18, a Howard UniversiNorthern Virginia suburb ty student whose family owns where development was super- Similar responses aplace in Ashburn Village. She charged by Loudoun County's across all ages is okay with NSA efforts to lo1990stech boom, massive data T he survey did no t f i n d cate terrorists, even if it means centers — the guts of the In- significant differences in atti- collecting information f r om ternet — have replaced farms tudes toward government sur- her phone. "That's all there to along rolling, formerly rural veillance across age groups. protect us," she said. roads. People in Ashburn have Forty-five percent of AmeriFarmer is even fine with her l ived and worked with t h e cans younger than 30, more mother's insistence on trackInternet since it first became than any other age group, said ing her whereabouts until she widely used, yet even here, in they were "very concerned" turns 25. After all, her mother townhouse communities and about how sites such as Face- has been watching her moveestate home developments book and Twitter use their ments remotely since she got built hard by the data centers, residents wrestle with how to
R ural l a w makers,
contracted with a California company, Geo Listening, to sift
Technology and trust Some of those who decide not to monitor family members argue that using such technologies undermines trust, effectively dedaring that ordinary human connections are insufficient.
Jessica Beliveau, a junior at Broad Run High School and Julie Beliveau's niece, said she appreciates her mother
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Lynne's decision not to track
her whereabouts. "I feel there should be some things that parents don't necessarily know,"
Jessica said. "And anyway, in the past, before all this technology, most kids turned out just fine." But many parents say they
c u ctin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TODAY'S READ:HOLIDAY WOES
A5
IN FOCUS: THE GARMENT INDUSTRY
Despairover the ug that ate Christmas Buying overseas
By Darryl Fears
England and moved into the southern Appalachians in
The Washington Post
In West Virginia's scenic Canaan Valley National Wildlife
the 1950s, where the popu-
Refuge, with its gently sloping
"has caused the destruction of the Fraser fir in the natural
lation probably exploded. It
mountains and emerald acres of timber, Mike Powell relishes
stands," Sidebottom wrote. The same adelgid was de-
the perks of his job as a caretaker of the land: the sounds
tected in San Francisco in 1928
of a gurgling stream and the fresh pine scent of evergreens. But one sight deeply troubles him — the haggard look of the valley's fabled Christmas
P
since the 1950s. Adelgids are about the size
men. The eye-popping green hue that makes people want
of a freckle and about as hard RobertF. Billings/Texas Forest Servicevia The Washington Post
had yellowed. A few were cov- Balsam woolly adelgid, an Insect that destroys wild fIr trees, was ered with hideous waxy balls, first dIscovered In 1957 on Mount Mitchell, N.C. a telltale sign that they were
under siege by the balsam woolly adelgid, a tiny insect you'll only see it on tree farms. struggle to survive in exceedwith a n o torious reputation These trees will survive on tree ingly cold temperatures. among entomologists, who call f arms, but in the wild . . . w e But farther south, the trees it "the bug that ate Christmas." could lose that tree." struggle. Climate change could Along the southern AppaFraser firs, North Carolina's worsen the problem, Powell lachian range, they are eating best-selling Christmas t ree, said, if temperatures warm two of the nation's most pop- have been all but wiped out in the northern range, Masular wild Christmas treesCanaan and Fraser firs — to death.
and has chomped through sub-alpine and silver firs in Idaho, Oregon, California and otherareas ofthe Pacific Northwest in large numbers
trees. Some are bent like old to adorn them with ornaments
clothing, U.S. flouts own advice
on Mount Mitchell in Mount Mitchell State Park since the
adelgid was discovered there in
People who buy Christmas the mid-1950s. "The Fraser fir is ... in peril, trees at farms need not worry. Farmers who grow Christmas badly affected by this adeltrees control thepest with apo- gid," said Andrew Liebhold, a tent and costly insecticide, two- research entomologist for the man crews spraying one to two U.S.ForestServicein M organacres a day. They work with town, WVa. "I don't expect them to totalagricultural extension agents to develop the most efficient ly disappear in my lifetime," pest management strategy be- Liebhold said. But the die-off of cause, said Rick Dungey of the Fraser firs at Mount Mitchell is National Christmas Tree Asso- a major concern. Younger trees ciation, "it's very expensive." are growing there now, "but But there's no stopping adel- the danger is when they're oldgids in the wild, where apply- er" and reach 20 feet, a height ing chemicals might take out at which, for unknown reafar more organisms than the sons,adelgidscravetheirsap. target. Balsam firs, including the "We've seen a tremendous Canaan and Fraser varieties, decline" in the Canaan fir are common in North Ameriin its native area, said Pow- ca, especially from Massachuell, who manages a tract of setts to Maine and the Canawoods for the Nature Conser- dian provinces of Quebec and vancy. "We're concerned that Ontario. They thrive in cold it'll decline to the point that areasmainly because adelgids
sachusetts and much of New
to remove. They are all female and don't engage in sex. Eggs develop without mating. Two
to four generations hatch each year. They have no natural predator.
"It actually feeds on the trunks or large branches of trees," Liebhold said. Their
mouths are like a straw that punctures the bark. "When they're feeding, they release a chemical in the trees that cause
England. Christmas trees in Ameri-
them to deform. When they
can forestsare home to birds,
take nutrients from the trees
and, in the Canaan Valley, the West Virginia northern flying squirrel, which was recently taken off the endangered species list.
and they ultimately die." The feeding process creates thousands of waxy, woolly balls, which give the adelgid
"It's part of our national her-
suck in large numbers, they
its name. A similar insect, the
hemlock woolly adelgid, lays itage, people have gone out to up to 300 eggs in a single woolget their own tree for genera- lyball. tions, and this is the prize tree They leave dead shoots and they went for," Powell said. branches, swelling around the The balsam woolly adel- shoot nodes known as gouting, gid is an uninvited guest in a stiff trunk and growth rings North America, but it's been
with red, hard wood instead
around so long that it seems of the healthy, creamy white like part of the family. It came wood, Sidebottom wrote. from Europebeforethe 1900s, Nature has its own way of when there were no regula- dealing with problem parasittions guarding against inva- oids — organisms that kill their sive pests, Jill Sidebottom, a hosts — but nature takes its forestry extension specialist at North Carolina State Uni-
sweet time. "If we wait 100,000
versity, wrote in an essay last year. It probably arrived in New
a resistance," Liebhold said,
years, the firs here will develop the way they probably did in Europe.
By lan UrbIna
er audit this year and recent interviews with workers.
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — One
of the w orld's biggest clothing buyers, the U.S. government spends more than $1.5 billion a year at factoriesoverseas,acquiring everything from the royal blue shirts worn by airport security workers
In Chiang Mai, Thailand, employees at the Georgie & Lou factory, which makes clothing sold by the Smithsonian Institution, said they
were illegally docked over 5 percent of their roughly $10-per-day wage for any clothing item with a m i sto the olive button-downs take. They also described requiredforforestrangers physical harassment by facand the camouflage pants tory managers and cameras sold to troops on military
monitoring workers even in
bases. But even though the
bathrooms. Federal agencies rarely
Obama
adm i n i stration know what f actories make
has called on Western buyers to use their purchasing power to push for improved industry work-
their clothes, much less req uire audits o f t h em , a c cording to i n terviews with
procurement officials and industry experts. The agencies, they added, exert less oversight of foreign suppliers
ing conditions after several workplace disasters over the last 14 months, the U.S. government has done little to adjust its own
than many retailers do. And
there is no law prohibiting the federal government from buying clothes p roduced overseas under unsafe or abusive conditions.
shopping habits. Labor Department of-
ficials say that federal agencies have a "zero tolerance" policy on using overseas plants that break local laws, but American government suppliers in countries including Bangladesh, the Dominican
"It doesn't exist for the exact same reason that Ameri-
can consumers still buy from sweatshops," said Daniel Gor-
Republic, Haiti, M e xico, Pakistan a n d V i e t n am
show a pattern of legal violations and harsh work-
ing conditions, according to audits and interviews at factories. Among them:
padlocked fire exits, buildings at risk of collapse, falsif ied wage records and repeated hand punctures from sewing needles when workers were pushed to
don, a former top federal procurement official who now works at George Washington University Law School. "The government cares most about getting the best price." Frank Benenati, a spokesman for the Office of Management and Budget,which overseesmuch offederalprocurement policy, said the administration has made progress in improving oversight, including an executive order last year tightening rules against federal suppliers us-
Airlines
hurry up. In Bangladesh, shirts with Marine Corps logos sold in m i litary stores
Continued from A1 Now, it's only getting worse,
"The a dministration i s w ere made at D K K n i t wear, where child laborcommitted to ensuring that
as airlines re-examine every millimeter of the cabin.
ers made up a third of the workforce, according to a
our government is
2010 audit that led some vendors to cut ties with the
tors who place a premium on integrity and good business
Over the last two decades, the space between seats-
hardly roomy before — has fallen about 10 percent, from
ing factories that rely on debt
bondage or other forms of forced labor. d oing
business only with contrac-
plant. Managers punched ethics," he said. workers for missed production quotas, and the Weekly plant had no functioning alarm system despite pre- Entertainment vious fires, auditors said. Inside M AGAZ I N E Many of the problems re• • TheBulletin main, according to anoth-
34 inches to somewhere be-
tween 30 and 32 inches. Today, some airlines are pushing it even further, leaving only a knee-crunching 28 inches. To gain a little more space, airlines are turning to a new
generation of seats that use lighter materials and less padding, moving the magazine pocket above the tray table and even reducing or eliminat-
Find Your Dream Home TheBulletin
Food, Home & Garden
ing the recline in seats. Some
are even reducing the number of galleys and bathrooms.
Passengers In their seats on an Allegiant Airlines flight from Las Vegas to Colorado SprIngs, Colo. To
Southwest, the nation's larg-
gaIn a little more space to add more seats, airlines like Allegiant, which uses seats that do not recline,
est domestic carrier, is install-
JoeGiron/New York Times News Service
are turning to a new generation of seats that use lighter materials and less padding.
ing seats with less cushion and thinner materials — a svelte
of a coach seats, which is 17 to a flight from Washington to Frankfurt, Germany last year, 18 inches. As the cabins grow more Odysseas Papadimitriou, the crowded, airlines say they are chief executive of WalletHub. thinking only of their custom- com, a personal finance social ers, trying to keep costs down. network, was challenged by a Jude Bricker, the senior vice tall passenger seated behind president of planning at Alle- him when he reclined his seat. giant, said the airline's nonre- "He was like, 'Hey, watch it, clining seats have fewer mov- buddy. I don't fit here with you ing parts and so require less reclining the seat,'" he said. maintenance, which m eans Papadimitriou called the lower costs. This allows the flight attendant to mediate the airline to keep its fares low, he dispute and eventually tilted sald. his seat back, but the price "We are continually re- he paid to recline was a fitful minded from customers and night's sleep, as the other pastheir behavior that what they senger grumbled and pushed want most is convenient service with a low fare," Bricker
sard. Several budget carriers in
HOLIDAY DEADLINES ~i ~me~
land, the speaker and consultant, found out.
EasyJet. Air France, for its
sengers in coach, Spirit can pack 178. And that's a good thing, Spirit says. "Customers appreciate the
from reclining. Airlines ban
the critical area around the
knees. For passengers willing to pay more, airlines offer more more constrictedthese days. room at a price. Business class Travelers are also getting big- remains an ultracompetitive ger. In the last four decades, market that s ees c onstant the average American gained innovation and comfortable a little more than 20 pounds amenities, like seats that reand his or her waist expand- cline fully. Airlines are also ed about 2.5 inches, accord- increasingly offering several ing to the Centers for Disease rows of coach seats with more Control and Prevention. The legroom — also at an extra dimensions of airplanes, how- price. ever, have not changed and Still, the squeeze is on for neither has the average width most passengers in coach. On
.
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The Bulletin 'Nb~ y e ua Sageand Atemy
PC
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The Bulletin will be closed on Wednesday, December 25 Retail & Classified Display Advertising Deadlines PUBLICATION ....... ......................................D EADLINE
Thursday 12/26......................................... Monday, 12/23 - 8 am FrIday 12/27 .............................................. Monday, 12/23 - 8 am FrIday GO! MagazIne 12/27 ........................ FrIday, 12/20 - 5 pm
conflicts other than bumping
into other passengers, as Row-
that prevent a seat in f ront
Rick Seaney, the chief ex-
the rest of the flight. There are ways of resolving
seats, including Ryanair and
cally accommodates 150 pas-
ecutiveof FareCompare.com, said the airline business had changed in recent years, after airlines parked older planes
against the back of his seat for
Europe have also adopted stiff
domestic flights, which never take more than an hour, has installed nonreclining seats where the magazine pocket hasbeen moved above the tray table to provide more space in
front of you moving up and down throughout the flight," said Misty Pinson, a spokeswoman for Spirit.
• • Th eBulletin
~
model known in the business and started flying with fewer as "slim-line." It also is reduc- empty seats. In the past five ing the maximum recline to 2 years, he said, carriers had cut inches from 3. These new seats capacity — the number of seats allow Southwest to add anoth- they fly — about 12 percent. "The flip side is they can't er row, or six seats, to every flight — and add $200 million a afford not to fill up their seats," year in newfound revenue. Seaney said. "This is a mas"In today's environment, sive sea change." the goal is to fit as many seats With so little space to hagin the cabin as possible," said gle over, passengers have deTom Plant, the general manag- veloped their own techniques er for seating products at B/E for handling the crowded Aerospace, one of the top air- conditions. "They jam their knee into plane seat makers. "We would all like more space on an air- the back of your seat as hard craft, but we all like a competi- as they can and they'll do it retive ticket price." peatedly to see if they can get Some carriersare taking a reaction," said Mick Brekthe smush to new heights. ke, a businessman who flies Spirit Airlines, for instance, for work a few times a month. uses seats on some flights with "That's happened to me more the backrest permanently set than once, and that usually back 3 inches. Call it, as Spirit settles down after they realize I'm not going to put it back up." does,"prereclined." The low-cost airline startThe passengers Brekke has ed installing the seats in 2010, encountered are not even the squeezing passengers into most extreme: Some have takan industry low of 28 inches. en to using seat-jamming deWhile the Airbus A320 typi- vices, known as knee guards,
fact that there is no longer interference from the seat in
HIGH DESERT BANK
"I lean forward and tap
them on the shoulder and say,
'I'll buy you a drink if you don't push your seat back,'" Rowland said. "It's made flying very pleasant."
CLASSIFIED LINE AD DEADLINES Wednesday, 12/25 - Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24 - Noon
Thursday, 12/26 - Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24 - Noon
Classifieds • 541-385-5809 HolidayHours:ChristmasEve12/24- 7:30 amto 3pm • Closedon12/25 The BulletinCirculationTelephoneService HolidayHours(541-385-5800): ChristmasEve12/24:6:00 am- 3 pm • 12/25: 6:30 am-10:30 am
them, but they work, users say.
Smaller seats are not the only reason passengers feel
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A6
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
LOOKING AHEAD: AFFORDABLE CAREACT
Plane
Anew eat an wor: stic ers oc
pouring we've received as a family," he said as tears welled in his eyes and rolled down his cheeks.
Continued from A1 "We can't believe the out-
By Caria K. Johnson The Associated Press
CHICAGO — As a key enrollment deadline hits Mon-
In addition to Steve's son, Dale Smith, a 5 1 -year-old
software executive from San Jose, Calif., the six-seat single-engine Beechcraft Bonanza aircr aftcarried Dale's 26-year-old son, Daniel, and his 20-year-old daughter, Amber; Daniel's wife, Sheree, 26; and Amber's fiance, Jona-
mium: $1,400.
While the health law makes many preventive services free
— such as vaccines, blood pressure screening and mamhealth insurance have been mograms — most medical sizing up policies on the new care is paid out of pocket until government health care mar- the deductible level is reached. ketplace and making what Some of the new plans offer seems like a logical choice: limited coverage for certain They're picking the cheapest servicesbefore a patient has day, many people without
one.
met the annual deductible.
I ncreasingly, experts i n healthinsurance are becoming concerned that many of these first-time buyers will be in for a shock when they get
These services can include primary care, some prescrip-
For this year's ThanksgivCourtesy Smith family ing visit, Dale first flew to The family and friends as they gathered for their Thanksgiving holiday in Baker City included, in Baker City to deliver his wife, sons, Craig, 17, and Nathan, 12, to Steve and Terri's house. Dale then flew to Butte to
common chronic conditions such as high blood pressure
boarded the plane to leave Baker City, the Smiths, who
unpaid at the hospital, seem surprised that health insur-
ward God in th e m idst of
edged one new buyer, Adrienne Matzen, 29, an actor in
ancedoesn'tcovermore ofthe
about all of t h is," acknowl-
what for two common situa-
Before Dale and the others are members of The Church
of JesusChrist ofLatter-day Saints, attended Sunday service.
"I really felt there were blessings," Terri said. "We had just been to church and had
sacrament. They were all temple-worthy and on the right path. I took that as a blessing."
And while some people might direct their anger totragedy, the Smiths say there has been none of that from
Chicago who's mostly been costs. "They previously had no inwithout insurance since she turned 21. Though she needs surance coverage at all and so regular care for asthma they might not be happy," said and a thyroid condition, she Cynthia Rahming, an enrollsays she's looking for a low ment counselor in Houston. monthly premium because Fearing the sticker shock, she makes less than $20,000 a Loyola University Health Sysyear. tem in Chicago is offering payHospitals are worried that
ment plans to spread the out-
It was about 11:30 a.m. Dec. 1 when the five flew out of Baker City. Dale was expected
"Somewhere along there I
got a feeling something was wrong," Steve said of that winter afternoon.
He remembers his son expressing concern before he left about the weather, and in
hindsight Steve wishes he'd have persuaded Dale not to
with a nonprofit charity based in Fairfield, which is about
make the trip.
"He said there was a possibility of icing," Steve recalled.
co and Sacramento. "There is
ible: $167. no winning in this." Comprehensive data on pre-
er fruitless lead came from a miner who thought he'd heard a plane experiencing engine trouble overhead. As a former Civil Air Patrol
plane went missing en route from Baker City to Butte, Mont.
observer, Steve's role during the search was to ride with pi"You look back and you say, Jose where they were met by lots as they flew over the rug'How could I have prevent- Dale's mother, Fran Phillips, ged Idaho country looking for ed that? How could I have and Janis' parents, so they the plane. "Knowing my son, if he had stopped it?'" could return to school. Dale's wife was especially any ability to move about, he Terri and Janis had been tracking the plane on the In- optimistic her family would would have built a fire and been sending up a signal," he ternet service FlightAware as survive, Steve said. "Janis is a really strong, up- sald. it made its way east. About 2 And Terri remembered the p.m. Janis noticed the flight beat person. Just until recenthad diverted to Salmon, Ida- ly she has had a very upbeat bright pink skirt Amber was ho. And then the line of flight attitude. She is a remarkable wearing when she left Baker stopped, Terri said. woman." City. "She would have changed Terri called her pilot dad He says the same about his clothes and that pink skirt and other pilot friends to see son. "When he was growing up, would have become a red what they thought of what she and Janis had seen on the I took him out and showed flag," she said.
Searchers later told them that Dale Smith called air
traffic controllers asking for back in Baker City that after- coordinates to make an emernoon to pick up his wife and gency landing at the Johnson two boys for their return trip Creek airstrip. And a short to California, the Smiths said. time later, at about 1 p.m.
deductible to about $2,500. A top-of-the-line platinum plan halfway between San Francishas thelowest average deduct-
S. John Collins I Baker City Herald
their family. "They're in God's hands," Internet. Steve said. "We find comfort At one point Terri says she in a loving God who takes turned to her husband and care of us." asked, "Should we be calling The five left from the Bak- people'? "And he said yes." er City airport after church with a supply of sandwichTheir online research led es, jellies and jams that Terri them to the Johnson Creek had packed for their trip. The a irstrip n e a r t h e Fr a n k group also had water and Church-River of No Return warm clothingaboard. Wilderness Area. Janis then Hugs, kisses and words of calledemergency tel ephone love were exchanged before numbers. Once she reached the family members parted. authorities in Valley CounThey had planned to reunite ty, Idaho, the Smith family Jan. 4, the date set for Amber learned a search for Dale's and Jonathan's wedding. plane had already begun.
those who rack up uncovered of-pocket costs. medical bills next year won't Some who had private inbe able to pay them, perpetu- s urance policies that w e r e ating one of the problems the canceled may find that keepnew health care system is sup- ing the same deductibles may posed to solve. mean higher premiums. The new federal and state In California, Diane Aghealth insurance exchang- none complainedin an ones offerpolicies ranked as line post on her state's health bronze, silver, gold and plati- marketplace. " How i s t h i s num. The bronze options have affordable'? I am a healthy the lowest monthly premiums 62-year-old single woman and but high deductibles — the these new premiums will cost amount the policyholder must me over $200 more per month paybefore the insurer picks up than my existing plan." any of thecostofm edicalcare. The new insurance system On average, a b r onze requires policies to cover more plan's deductible is more than services than some consumers $4,300, according to an anal- had chosen to buy in the past. "It's all a matter of having a ysis of marketplace plans in 19 states by Avalere Health. budget and it only goes so far," A consumer who upgrades to said Agnone, an executive a silver plan could reduce the
searchers tracked it. Anoth-
road leading from the Smiths' Steve and Terri Smith (on the couch), along with Terri's daughter, home to Pocahontas Road. Katie Morrissey, recount the events of Dec. 1, when Dale Smith's
site to read the benefits sum-
tions: having a baby and managing Type 2 diabetes. To be sure, the new health law did away with the whopping deductibles in p lans previously offered to people without e mployer-provided coverage.Out-of-pocket costs are now capped at $6,350 for individuals and $12,700 for a family. But some people who have been payingtheirown medical bills, or leaving them
the premium." Counselors who have been helping people choose policies say many are focused only on the upfront cost, not what the insurancecompanies agree to pay. "I am so deeply clueless
But nothing was found when
homemade go-cartdown the
is it's important to understand
just don't want to look only at
The family has established a website to keeppeople informed as thescaledback search continues: sites.google.com/site/ searchfordalesplane/ search-timeline.
up from Provo, Utah. Crystal recently completed chemotherapy for bone cancer. "We just had a wonderful weekend," Terri said of the Thanksgiving celebration. In addition to sharing a holiday dinner, the family went bowling, caught a movie, and some, including Dale, even took a ride aboard a
It's unclear how many plans
mary. It spells out who pays
a market analysis firm. "You
Searchuydate
Michael Christensen, drove
ance — about 15 percent of the population - "the lesson plan," said Matt Eyles, a vice president of Avalere Health,
Wert, of Murray, Utah. In the back row from left are Keiiie Morrissey, Craig Smith, Janis Smith, Michael Christensen and Steve and Terri Smith.
pick up the other four. Dale and Janis' other daughter, Crystal, and her husband,
tion drugs and routine care for
shock after Jan. I, when those ers to tell. who sign up for policies now can begin getting coverage, is Surpriseduninsured seen as a looming problem for Lynn Quincy of Consumers a new national system that has Union, a public policy group, been plagued by trouble since suggests that consumers narthe new marketplaces went row their options to five plans, online in the states in October. then go to each insurer's web-
the total cost of ownership of a
the front row, from left, Sheree Smith and her husband, Daniel; Dale Smith; Nathan Smith; Crystal
Janis, and their two younger Christensen; Amber Smith and her fiance, Jonathan Norton; and family friends Lyie and Suzanne
for most of the initial cost. provide this feature, and it The prospect o f s t i cker may not be easy for consum-
For those without i nsur-
I
than Norton, 24.
medical care next year and and diabetes.
discover they're on the hook
l
him how to survive — how to build a fire in a snowstorm,"
Though he didn't want to
be the naysayer in the group, Steve said he had a feeling he said. Dale's son, Daniel, and by about the second day that Dale's f u t ur e s o n -in-law, searchers would not find his Jonathan, both were Eagle family members alive. "About 'Iiresday I didn't Scouts and had received survival training through Boy feel their spirits anymore," he Scouting. And all three men sald. S till, w i thout p r oof, h e had served LDS missions. Dale didn't make it through holds out hope. "I would dearly love to be the ranks tobecome an Eagle Scout. proved wrong," he says. "He was an inventor," his Whatever happened, Steve said he believes Dale led the father said. He finished high school way for his children. "I have a vision of my son early and had earned his associate's degree before he helping the rest of them enter began his mission at Marys- into God's kingdom," he said. ville, Ohio.
When Dale returned from Ohio, he enrolled at Brigham Young University where he earneda degree in electronic MST on Dec. I, he lost radar engineering. He and his wife met in college and were marand cell tower contact. "They said he wasn't pan- ried in 1984. icking," Terri said. But he was L ooking back o n t h e reporting icing and engine search, Steve admits he wasn't as optimistic about failure. Still, as they headed for the outcome as other family Cascade, Idaho, Monday, members were, even as new Dec. 2, they had high hopes leads developed. the group would be OK. On Tuesday, Dec. 3, a faint Craig and Nathan Smith re- emergency locator t ransturned to their home in San mitter signal was picked up.
At this point, with snow covering the area and sub-ze-
ro temperatures, the official searchhas ended. Authorities will continue to follow up on
any new leads, and pilots flying over the region will keep a lookout.
Next spring the family plans to head back to the area. " We'll t ak e A T V s and
camp there and continue the search, however long it
takes," Steve said. "If we can't find them this spring, we'll be back next spring. That's our life's mission from now on."
miums isn't available, but in
one example, a 30-year-old in Chicago would pay an average of $222 per month for a bronze plan, $279 for a silver or $338 for a platinum.
A Free Public Service
Little understood The complexities of insur-
ance are eye-glazing even for those who have it. Only 14 percent of American adults with
insurance understand deductibles, according to one recent study. The danger of a wrong snap judgment is great for those under financialpressure-
especially those with modest incomes who make too much to qualify for the government subsidies available under the new health care system. Sub-
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
sidies aren't available for in-
dividuals making more than $45,960. Most of the uninsured make
less than that, but many still pick the cheapest plans.
I
"Price rules," said John Fo-
1
I
1
ley, a Legal Aid counselor in Palm Beach, Fla., who has
been helping people enroll. Some applicants see the catch.
"The real big surprise was how much out-of-pocket would be required for our family," said David Winebrenner, 46, a financial adviser in Lebanon, Ky., whose deductible
topped $12,000 for a family of six for a silver plan he was considering. The monthly pre-
0 gggg •
ig or use the • l 33 0 QKg©Zgg) service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.
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MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A7
LOCAL Ee TATE STATE NEWS Portland Salem
Man onfire —Authorities say aman in Portland caught onfire because hewassmoking a cigarette while handling stolen gasoline. Portland police said Sundaythat 62-year-old Harry Frederick Suniville wastreated for injuries after a fire that burnt his pantsand singed his hair. Suniville's vehicle also suffered fire damage.Suniville has beencharged with criminal mischief in the second degree,reckless burning andtheft in the third degree.He'sbeen booked into jail andwill be arraignedtoday.
DESCHUTES COUNTY
ae
Well shot! Readerphotos
enies sui 's c aims
• Former investigator alleges hosti a le environmentandsexandagediscrimination
of Oregon has been dismissed not 'hostile', and to the best from the lawsuit, leaving Flao fF laherty's information and
Bulletin staff report
treatment of employees who
Deschutes County and District Attorney Patrick Flaherty
exercised their right to protect-
havedeniedclaims by aform er investigator who alleges she was discriminated against and wrongly fired from her
tile work environment which amounted to employment dis-
back in an answer to the amended complaint. Intheanswer,Flaherty notes that more than 70
ed speech" and created a"hoscrimination." She alleges sex and age discrimination, as well
position.
as retaliation for filing a com-
Sharon Sweet filed a lawsuit in federal court in U.S. District Court in Eugene in April, alleging Flaherty"engaged in a pattern andpractice of disparate
plaint with the Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries. She has since filed two
amended complaints, the most recent in November. The state
herty and the county as the
bel ie f , prior to her position
remaining defendants. Last month, Flaherty fired
being eliminated, (Sweet) di d not complain about the working environment
• We want to see your photos of holiday lights for another special version of Well shot! that will run in
the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbendbniietin.com /bolidnylightsand we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to rentierpbotos© bendbuiietin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the bestfor publication.
in the District Attor~, ' I ne y ' s Office,"Flaherty's s» ,4 attor n ey Keith Bauer p ercent of his employees „ w writes in the answer. "Deschutes County are female, induding the bulk of the office's Flah e rty inves t igated her claims
management. "(Sweet) was not discrim-
of employment discri m i nation based upon age,
inated against or treated
sex an d ' w histleblowing' and
disparately; the work environ- concluded her claims were ment in the Deschutes County unfounded." District Attorney's Office was See Lawsuit/A8
Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 5 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Voter info — oregon officials havebeen making money byselling voter information to political parties andprivate companies. TheStatesman Journal reports that theoffice ofthe Oregon Secretary of Statehas made nearly$90,000 off fees during thepast five years byselling thevoter registration database. Oregon charges$500for the database,far higher than the $7chargedin Washington state orthe $30 charged inCalifornia. The voter registration database includesinformation such aseachvoter's name, address,dateof birth andvoter history. It doesn't showhowanyone voted.
Have a story idea or sndmission? Contact us!
The Bulletin r.s et
Call n reporter
Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters ...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367
Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects......541-410-9207 Salem ....................541-554-1162 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business ..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
— From wire reports
Submissions • Letters andopinions: Mail:My Mickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com
CIVIC CALENDAR
• Civic Calendarnotices:
There are nomeetings scheduled for this week. Contact:541-333-0354, news@bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write "Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.
jjjiI
Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "CivicCalendar" inthesubject and includeacontact name and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
4k.
rr
• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academicac hievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
U.S. Forest Service volunteer ranger Bill Wallace lends n group of snowshoers through the trees during n Snowshoe with a Ranger hike Sunday at Mount Bachelor.
EVENT
CALENDAR TODAY THE TRAINMAN:Watch Michael Lavrich's extensive collection of toy trains running on atrackand ask questions; free; 10a.m.-1 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar. SANTALANDATTHE OLD MILLDISTRICT: Take a photo with Santa, children's activities, Tree of Joyandmore;free, additional cost for takehome phot os,$5 donation for children's activities; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; SantaLand, 330 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the CowboyCarriage, located betweenBen& Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. THE TRAINMAN: Watch Michael Lavrich's extensive collection of toy trains running on atrack and ask questions; free; 2-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar. THE TRAINMAN: Watch Michael Lavrich's extensive collection of toy trains running on atrack and ask questions; free; 6-8 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar. TORREY NEWHART8't ADAM CARLSON: The Eugene jazzpianist and drummer perform; free; 7-9 p.m.; BrokenTopBottle Shop & Ale Cafe,1740 N.W.
• Forest Servicvol e unteers return to Mount Bachelorfor wildernessappreciation hikes By Tyler Leeds
trees, which weresheddingwhat
The Bulletin
remained of an ice storm earlier
teersbegantheseason's
inthe weekend. Despite the conditions and the occasional
ftee Mount Bachelor
tumble, everyone made itback
.S. Forest Servicevolun-
snowshoetoursthisweek- to thebase unscathed with an end, takingsixvisitors thmugh enhanced appreciation of the ice-coveredsnow Sunday. region's flora, fauna, geology and Three Forest Service volunpubliclands law. "Giving the tours never gets teers ledthehikers on a crunchy one-mile hike to a vantage point old; everygroup's so different," looking toward Broken Top and said volunteer Ginny Elliott, 61, a South Sister. The continuous selfdescribed "recoveringteacher"who taught middle school crash of falling ice hitting snow underlinedthe guides'warning science. "To be able to talk about to avoid standingtoo dose to and experience the wilderness
Pence Lane,Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703 or www. btbsbend.com. TUESDAY THE COMMUNITY
CHRISTMASEVESERVICE: Hostedby BobShaw,with carols, familyfun, a choir performance,AvenueHand more; $6 plusfees; 3, 5and7 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835N.W. Wall St., Bend;541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. WEDNESDAY NO EVENTSLISTEDMERRY CHRISTMAS! THURSDAY SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertrnuseu.orr. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILLDISTRICT: Ride in the CowboyCarriage, located betweenBen8
Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's,680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. FRIDAY SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonrnmrnrs; 11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE OLD MILLDISTRICT:Ride in the CowboyCarriage, locatedbetween Ben& Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's,680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-0131. JAZZ AT THEOXFORD:The Oregon PianoSummit, with two piano andGordon Lee, Randy Porter, BenDarwish and Darrell Grant; $45 plus
fees; 8 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W.Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. PETERRODOCKER:The Portland folk-pop singersongwriter performs, with Lamp; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. SATURDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; BendIndoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E Third St.; 54 I-3 I7-4847. SCIEncEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!:Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonrnmrnbs; 11a.m. and1:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. CARRIAGERIDES IN THE
TObe able to talk
Contact: 541-617-7825, objtsObendbulletin.com
about ancl experience
• Community events: Email events to communitylife@ bendbulletin.comorclickon "Submit anEvent" onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe
the wilderness
ence between the Hemlock
regularly is really such a great opportunity."
pines on the mountain and the ponderosa pines down in Bend, as well as the scurrying of voles and micedown between the snow and ground — an area called the subnivean zone-
calendarpageinside.
Contact: 541-383-0351
• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries:
— Ginny Elliott, 61,
the guides placed the day's hike in political context. See Snowshoe/A8
OLD MILLDISTRICT:Ride in the CowboyCarriage, located betweenBen8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. JAZZ AT THEOXFORD:The Oregon PianoSummit, with two piano andGordon Lee, Randy Porter, BenDarwjsh and Darrell Grant; $45 plus fees; 5 p.m.;TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W.Minnesota Ave., Bend;541-382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. LASTSATURDAY:Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food anddrinks and a patio andfire pit; free; 6-10 p.m.; TheOld Ironworks Arts District, 50 S.E Scott St., Bend; www.j.mp/lastsat. "MCCONKEY": Ascreening of the documentary about the examination of thelegacyone athlete left to sport; $10plus fees in advance,$13atthe door; 7 p.m., doorsopenat 6 p.m.; TowerTheatre,835 N.W. Wall St., Bend;541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.
• Obituaries, Death Notices:
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AS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
CALIFORNIA NEWS
Foes of bullet train are gainingsteam • They consider$3.2Binfederal moneyfor the project questionable
can demand repayment of the money if the state fails to com-
chairman of the appropria-
plete the work or fails to come chairman of the state's trans- and that $9 billion in bonds. up with matching funds. portation c o m mittee. "We The legal setback was foreDenham asked the GAO to should take a long, hard look." s h adowed three years ago by determine whether the state is Dan Richard, chairman of t h e r ai l authority's own law- violating the grant agteement the California High-Speed Rail yer. George Spanos told the by not having already lined Authority, countered that the r ail board its plans to begin up funds to match the federal recent setbacks to the bullet c o n struction i n t h e C entral contribution. train — connecting Los Ange- Valley did not comply with the The rail agency's refusal to les and San Franrequirements of the acknowledge the growingrisks cisco with 220 mph bond measure. to taxpayers and the project eCt) trains — represent "(The Pf'OJ A second admin- has become part of a political normal challenges haS beef l istra t iv e d e cision, strategy to keep the project encountered by gij j by the fe d eral Sur- moving, said Elizabeth Alexant, visionary public face Transportation is, a co-founder of a Bay Area worksprojects. fa ljul' e . They Boar d , has stalled watchdog group that has been Inarecentdebate are tyyjflgtp the state's ability to critical of the rail authority. on Public radio, he execute its Plan for Richard "is whistling past P the characterized the majfe up the first 29 miles of the graveyard," said DeSaulnilegal problems as ru l eS aS they con s truction. er, who doubts the mil authorilargely procedural gp a /pflg " The board reject- ty can come up with the money and suggested that ed a request by the it needs to comply with state "crossing the T 's — U.S. Rep. Jeff rail agency to delay law. But Rod Diridon, executive
tions panel for transportation, have asked the Government
would resolve the
By Ralph Vartabedian Los Angeies Times
LOS ANGELES — Califor-
nia's strategy of tapping $3.2 billion in federal money to begin construction of an ambi-
tious bullet trainproject maybe legally flawed and could put the state in financial jeopardy, key lawmakers say. After recent legal rulings that bar the use of state money
for the project, legislators from both political parties say that even the use of federal funds
is questionable and the entire project needs to be reassessed. U.S. Rep. Jeff
D e nham,
R-Calif., the chairman of the House rail subcommittee, and Rep. Tom L atham, R-Iowa,
and dotting the I's" D
en h am, R-Caiif.an env i r onmental director of the Mineta Transreview of the project. portation Institute at San Jose The review could State University and a former
Accountability Office to inves- issues. tigate the issue. Claims of a "major setback significantly push back any chairman of the high-speed rail "It has been a colossal fail- are wildly overstated," he said. c o n struction. board,said he believes there ure," Denham said."They are Two major legal blows in reD e s pite the setbacks, the railare viable options. trying to make up the rules as cent weeks have put the bullet authority chief said he could He said the state can build they go along." t rain project at a crossroads. sta r t c o n struction with t h e a shorter initial section from California lawmakers worSacmmento Superior Court federal grants. He pointed to a M erced to Palmdale, reducing ry that the state is trying to Judge Michael Kenny indefi- December 2012 modification early outlays to $27billion. push the project through with nitely blocked the sale and use of the grant agreement that alGov. Jerry Brown could help a financing plan that risks leav- of $9 billion in state high-speed lowed the state to spend feder- dose the remaining $15 billion ing it with billions of dollars in railbonds. al grants first and match them shortfall by asking the Legislalosses. Kenny ruled the rail agency with state money later. ture to commit to the project bil'The political key for us is lionsin anticipatedrevenue from If the state cannot eventually failed to meet legal requirematch the federal funds, it may ments that it identify the source getting dirt moved," said one new greenhouse-gastaxes. have to repay the money and of the money needed to com- authority source who asked not State legislative analysts be left with a partially built rail plete an initial $31 billion seg- to be on the record disaming have warned that option also system. ment between Merced and the s t rategy. But some say that tactic could run afoul of legal restric"I am concerned about the San Fernando Valley. isunrealistic andlegallyrisky. tionsand could encounter opstate's risks," said state Sen. The state has identified only Und e r the 2012 grant modifi- position from environmental Mark DeSaulnier, D-Concord, the $3.2 billion in federal grants cation, the federal government groups.
Lawsuit Continued fromA7 Flaherty denies the b u lk
nel rules by not disdosing a
the office without authorization
romantic relationship with another investigator in the office,
tions" about his office.
who is now her husband.
of the lawsuit, saying Sweet's work was no t
He further notes in the an" c onsistently swer that he sent a letter to
above expectations" during the time she worked for him and that she violated person-
1 L
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Gary Hayden tells participants facts about Mount Bachelor and the surrounding wilderness prior to a Snowshoe with a Ranger hike Sunday outside the Forest Service hut at Mt. Bachelor ski area.
Snowshoe
62, Wallace's hero has a permanent place in the region's Continued fromA7 geography — Waldo Lake, "It's really special to be do- dwarfed only by Crater Lake ing this work now, as it will in Oregon,was named for soon be the 50th anniversary
of the Wilderness Act," said volunteer Bill Wallace, 71, referencingthe 1964 federal
law signed by President Lyndon Johnson that now protects more than 100 million
acres of land. Standing before a vista of the Three Sisters Wilderness
him. "Getting to that viewpoint was incredible," said Rachel E rickson, 27, who was i n town from Grants Pass. "With the conditions so
bad, we decided to give snowshoeing a try instead of paying for a lift ticket," said Sten Erickson, 29, Rachel's
Area, Wallace even dug into the law's prehistory, telling the story of Judge John Waldo, Wallace's "personal Oregon hero, someone who should be right up there with
husband. "It doesn't hurt that the trip was free."
John Muir."
and New Year's Day. Snow-
Waldo was an Oregon
The tours will be offered at 10 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. every Saturday, Sunday and school holiday, except Christmas
and fanatic explorer of the
shoes are provided by the Forest Service. The tours leave from the Forest Ser-
Cascades, one of the first to
vice station at Mt. Bachelor's
champion the preservation of the wilderness surrounding the mountains. Though he died in 1907 at the age of
West Village area and last approximately 90 minutes.
Supreme Court chief justice
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds®bendbulIetin.com
and was "making false accusa- Sweet were not discriminatory. Flaherty's answer a sks the court to dismiss Sweet's
complaint. sible and the county's liability Sweet in January 2012, severDeschutes County, mean- shouldbe reduced.Italso asks al monthsafter she was fired, while, also denies the allega- that Flaherty be required to that alleged she had entered tions and suggests the county's pay the county's attorney fees.
TheBulletin
IV To help me live. The Bulletin file photo
Horse-drawn carriage rides in the Old Mill District continue Saturdays and Sundays.
DONATE TODAY
Calendar Continued fromA7 BILLWADHAMS BAND:Theformer Animotion front manandhis band perform; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww. mcmenamins.com. JAZZ AT THEOXFORD:The Oregon Piano Summit, with two piano and Gordon Lee,Randy Porter, Ben Darwish and Darrell Grant; $45 plus fees; 8:15 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W.MinnesotaAve.,Bend;541-3828436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. HOPELESSJACK&THE HANDSOME DEVIL:ThePortland blues-punk band performs, with DonQuixote and Blackflowers Blacksun; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. SUNDAY SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers;11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. CARRIAGERIDESIN THEOLD MILL DISTRICT: Ride inthe Cowboy Carriage, located betweenBen&Jerry's and Francesca's; proceedsbenefit the KIDS Center; weatherdependent; donations accepted; 2-5 p.m.;Ben&Jerry's, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. DEC. 30 SCIENCEPARTY:ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org.
"THECROODS":A screening ofthe 2013 animated comedy (PGj; free; 1 p.m.; RodrigUezAnnex, Jefferson County Library,134 S.E ESt., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.lcld.org. CARRIAGERIDES IN THEOLD MILL DISTRICT:Ride in the Cowboy Carriage, locatedbetween Ben8 Jerry's and Francesca's; proceeds benefit the KIDS Center; weather dependent; donationsaccepted; 2-5 p.m.; Ben &Jerry's, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. "PETERGABRIEL:NEW BLOOD LIVE IN LONDON 2011": A screening of afilm combining animation andonscreen graphics with Gabriel's voice and a 46-piece orchestra; $12general admission, $48 club pass, plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.
PATRIMONY: ThePortland blues band performs for NewYear's Eve, with other bands to beannounced; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend;541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com.
+
aihu ' $tt t 4j
jAN. 1
SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. MATT BROWN(OFRUBY HILL): The Washougal ,Wash.bluessingersongwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. jAN. 2
DEC. 31 SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers;11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. NEW YEAR'SDANCEPARTY: Eugene's TheSugar Beetsperform; $18 plus fees inadvance, $23 at the door; 8 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E.Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. REDSOLOCUPNEWYEAR'S EVE PARTY:Featuring live broadcast of Times Squareandprizes; $3plusfees; 8 p.m.; Maverick's CountryBar &Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd.,Bend;541-325-1886 or www.maverickscountrybar.com. NEW YEAR'SEVEATOLDST. FRANCISSCHOOL: JeffCrosby & The Refugeesperforms in the theater and Worth performs in Father Luke's Room; $5 for music; 9 p.m.-midnight; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com.
t lceti '
SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers; 11a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. FAMILYFUNDAY:Central Oregon Disability Support Networkand Oregon Family Support Network provide a day of fun; free admission anddinner; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Bouncing Off TheWall, 1134 S.E Centennial Court, Bend;541306-6587 or www.j.mp/dayoffun.
s
ShoW yOur SuPPOrt
for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital® by dOnating in Our stores today.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Thanks and Giving
jAN. 3
SCIENCEPARTY: ELECTRICITY!: Learn entertaining information about electricity; $3 for members, $5 for nonmembers;11 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S.U.S. Highway 97,Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. Contact:54t -383-0351, communitylife© bendbulletin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbutletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.
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MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A9
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
' ersono neres's rou o s o i TV SPOTLIGHT
Otherwise, CBS has left the
QV
The cable network has been
series in place on Mondays, releasing much of its product precisely because it is so serial- on its home video label, so it's ized and pretty much demands quite likely the documentary that sort of consistent telecast also will go that route within
By Jay Bobbin zap2it
was Detective CarQ •• Why ter killed off on "Person
pattern. Even with that, the network tried throughout the
the next several months.
of Interest"'? She was a key
character in the show.
fall to get more people involved
Is Ryan Seacrest host• ing New Year's Eve on ABC again this year'?
— Bill Muth, Curwensville, Pa.
in it, stressing in ads that it wasn't "too late" to viewers
she was ... which is A•• Yes, precisely why the CBS
who might have thought they'd
reappear, but it would be in
flashbacks. the program "Suits" Q •• Has been canceled? I haven't
been able to locate it for the past month. — Pat Ketterer, Reynoldsburg, Ohio • As is m e n tioned f r e -
A • quently here about cable series, they often break up their seasons, with shows
returning several months after the first half of their seasons end. So it is with "Suits," which is in the middle of its third round. USA N etwork
expects to bring it back right after the Winter Olympics ... especially since Michael P helps will t ur n u p i n t h e
• He certainly is. The evA new multiple-year deal with • er-busy Seacrest has a
Will "Ttvistede be re-
shake things up, and actress eliminate her character at this point — though others, including fellow "Interest" stars Jim Caveizel and Michael Emerson, didn't know until filming of thecrucialepisode began. It's possible that Carter could
— Cindy Forrest, Baltimore
missed the boat.
series' producers did it, to hear them tell it. They wanted to Taraji P. Henson maintains it was the intent from the start to
Q•
Q •• turning anytime soon?
the network to continue as
— Wendy Morrison,
host and an executive produc-
Buffalo, N Y. er of "Dick Clark's New Year's • Reasonably soon. The Rockin'Eve,"with Jenny Mc• ABC Family drama will Carthy and Fergie again asresume its first season Feb. sisting him with the on-cam11, a little later than original- era duties both in prime time ly planned. The show initially and late night this time. was supposed to be back on . tri, Jan. 7, but the network ultiI have noticed the hockCourtesy Newscom mately decided to bring back • ey p i c tures b e hind "Ravenswood" then instead, the desk of Agent Booth on Taraji P. Henson's stint as Detective Carter came to an abrupt end on the CBS drama "Person of Interest." Henson maintains it was so that series could benefit "Bones," and I seem to rememthe intent from the start that her role would come to an end. from being partnered with ber he had a connection to parent show "Pretty Little LiPittsburgh. Are those pictures ars" on the same night. of the Pittsburgh Penguins? course of the season's six re- after two or three shows, it — Donna Ferguson, It's a shame that Whoomaining episodes. disappeared. Lisbon, Ohio Even after those are done, — Zelda Bohelmann, • pi Goldberg can't have • Actually, they're of the "Suits" won't be going away Port St. Lucie, Fla. her documentary on Moms • Philadelphia F lye r s. permanently. USA already You might want to have Mabley on a more-viewed sta- Booth (played by David Borehas renewed th e s e ries • a chat with the person tion. I would love to see it, but anaz) is a native of that city ... — a strong performer rat- who was in charge of doing I do not subscribe to HBO. Do but he also has a Pittsburgh ings-wise, particularly when the taping, then. The Toni Col- you think it ever will be shown Steelers coffee mug, so that town's sports teams may not both broadcast and cable se- lette-Dylan McDermott series on a different station? ries are considered — for a does have holiday pre-emp— Kathleen Sitzman, be completely out ofluckwhere Season 4, to begun running in tions for the next two weeks, Lincoln, Mich. his fan worship is concerned. • It's always possible, but mid-2014. largely for the benefit of fans — Send questions of general of the highly serialized drama • that isn't likely to hapinterest via email to tvpipeline@ Do you know what hap- who may have seasonal plans, pen for a while, since it just tribune.com. Writers mustinclude • pened to "Hostages"? then returns with a two-hour debuted last month, and HBO their names, cities and states. We were having it taped, and season finale Jan. 6. currently holds the rights to it. Personal replies cannot be sent.
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MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and iMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby: I am a woman in an exclusive, committed relation-
you are. Worse, he also has a adult children if they would like problem telling the truth. If Vince you to attend for emotional supship with "Vince." We have talk- wanted only you and was ready to port. Because they are all grown ed about a future together and settle down, he wouldn't compul- and presumably busy with their getting married. My only issue is sively look online to see who else lives, if your presence isn't needed I can't seem to keep him off of dat- is available. at the funeral, you could schedule ing sites. Even when I catch Vince Dear Abby:I'm conflicted about a family reunion at a time when r ed-handed, h e ' l l my role in support- it's convenient for all of you. deny it or blame it on ing m y c h i l dren Dear Abby:What do I do about a his friend "using his through the death of friend who often interrupts a conDPPR ID." my ex-wife. We di- versation to check his phone and I have asked him vorced 25 years ago. look up the topic on the Internet'? over and over to deThere was no sig- He then adds to — or correctslete the sites, but he nificant other in her the discussion we are having. It's won't. He continues to tell me he's
life. I would like to support them
in love with me and wants only me. He says I'm the woman of his
emotionally, but I feel the burial, Any advice? funeral, etc., are matters for their — Overcorrected in Texas family and her relatives. Dear Overcorrected: Whether My question is, am I r ight? someone doing this is offensive And how soon should I go and be or not depends upon the spirit in with my children? We have been which it's being done. Your friend in close touch, and I believe they may not be certain that what heknow that I care and I'm here for or you — is saying is correct and
dreams. If that's true, there should
be no need for him to look anymore, right? Please help me understand his
obsession, and if there are any tools I can use to be more effective to talk to Vince about this. — Fuming in Florida
starting to r ui n
t h e f r i endship.
them. They live across the coun-
he wants to verify it. Often when
try, so the distance and cost of
— Conflicted inTexas ity to recognize when someone is Dear Conflicted: I'm sure no stringing you along is what needs one expects you to contribute fi-
people check information online, they find more information on the subject. Your friend may be doing it in the spirit of helpfulness. My husband and I do this with each
improvement.
other often, and neither of us is
Dear Fuming:Your communica-
transportation are concerns.
tion tools are just fine. Your abil-
nancially to the funeral of some-
You may feel you are in a com- one from whom you have been offended. mitted relationship, but Vince ap- divorcedfor a quarter of a centu— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com pears to be less committed than ry. However, you should ask your or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, DEC. 23, 2013:This yearyou often think in lofty terms when deciding how to invigorate your life. Others trust your judgment more and more. If you are single, a new door opens, and you will meet many newpeopleasa result.Takeyour time getting to know others; you have many admirers. If you are attached, the two of you love Stars showthe kind being together of dayyou'Iihave and often pian a ** * * * D ynamic date night alone ++++ poslt've together. Schedule
several weekends * Difficult
away together as a couple. VIRGOis detail-oriented.
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * A discussion in the morning will encourage you and a partner to clear up the remaining holiday details. By midafternoon, the Christmas spirit hits you. Put on some holiday music while you finish up any wrapping you have to do. Tonight: Invite a friend over to swap gifts.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * Your mood appears tobe contagious. You will need to jump over an obstacle that might involve a loved one's
resistance. Runerrands andcatch up on calls. Touch base with friends and start swapping good wishes for the holiday. Tonight: Indulge a loved one.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * Honor what is going on with a parent or older relative. An unanticipated expense emerges out of the blue, which will encourage you to curb any frivolous spending. Still, you might opt to buy a couple of small items for
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
last-minute presents. Tonight: Honor a
change. CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * * Y ou'll express the fervor of the holidays and engage others to join in. A child or loved one could be cantankerous at best, but you'll help even this person out. Whatever you do naturally pleases others. Stop midday and assess what is left to do. Tonight: With loved ones.
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * You'll be thinking ahead with the understanding that a road block is about to appear. You will move through your errands and other matters efficiently. You instinctively might recognize that something or someone has been left out. Do some backtracking. Tonight: At home.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You express unusual vitality and excitement about the next few days. Your creativity seems to feed off the holiday. You will delight a child or loved one just by sharing your thoughts and feelings. Make plans to join a group of friends. Tonight: Celebrate.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** A hassle might become bigger than it really is because of fatigue and boredom with an issue. Let it go for a while, and build up your stamina. Do something for yourself, even if you feel overwhelmed with last-minute errands. Tonight: Drop in on an older relative.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) *** * Friends surroundyou. Hope-
fully you are not in the position of doing last-minute shopping, but rather off enjoying a holiday event. Some of you could decide to go ice skating or indulge in some other activity to revitalize yourself. Tonight: Music, lights and mistletoe set the scene.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) *** Tension buildsasexpensesseem to multiply. You must meet certain responsibilities, no matter what. A partner might pitch in and ease your burden, which will allow you to relax a little. Take advantage of this extra time. Tonight: Visit with someone you won't see for a while.
CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan.19) ** * * * I f you kick back and detach, a last-minute problem will solve itself. You also will understand more of the mechanics of the issue. Your sense of humor could emerge. Drop by a party or two, and start wishing others a Merry Christmas. Tonight: Let the fun continue.
aauaRjuS(Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * * Your role might be more pivotal than you realize. You could have a lot of errands to take care of, while someone makes an important request. A partner might offer to pitch in. Together, all of the tasks you have to do will become easier. Tonight: Quality time with a loved one.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * You might have special plans. Unfortunately, others don't seem to realize that fact, or you have not shared it with them. In any case, you could find yourself
overwhelmed. Peoplewantyourcompany, so make time for them. Tonight: The
only answer is "yes." © King Features Syndicate
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 12:40, 3:45, 7, 10:10 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 12:50, 2:20, 3:35, 5:10, 6:20, 8:05, 9:10 • THE BOOK THIEF (PG-13) 12:35, 3:50, 7:15, 10:20 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 11:10 a.m., 2:10, 4:55, 7:50 • FROZEN(PG)10:35 a.m., t:15, 4:10, 6:50, 9:35 • FROZEN3-O (PG)10:55a.m.,t:35,4:25 • THEHOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 10:30 a.m., 12:30, 2, 4, 6, 7:30, 9:30 • THE HOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG HIGH FRAMERATE3-D (PG-13) 1, 4:30, 8 • THE HOBBIT:THE DESOLATION OF SMAUG IMAX3-D (PG-13) 11a.m., 2:30, 6:30,10 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 3:30, 6:45, 9:55 • NEBRASKA(R) l2:55, 3:40, 6:15, 9:05 • OUT OFTHEFURNACE(R) 7:05, 9:50 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 10:40 a.m., 1:30, 4:40, 7:35, 10:25 • TYLERPERRY'8A MADEA CHRISTMAS (PG-13)10:45 a.m.,1:10, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG) 1:45, 7:20,9:40 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS3-O (PG)11:25 a.m., 5 • High Frame Rate movies record and play visuals at twice the rate or higher than normal. • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
TV TODAY 5:25 p.m. onESPN, "NFL Football" —As the Atlanta Falcons sink in the NFC South, Matt Ryan andhis mates get a chance to play spoiler tonight in Northern California when they face Colin Kaepernick and the San Francisco 49ers. The Niners hope to lock upone of the two wild-card berths in the
NFC, so a loss to an also-ran teamsuchastheFalcons would be most ill-timed for them. For the Falcons, avictory would likely be the bright spot of an otherwise brutal season down in Dixie. Bp.m. on58, "The Sing-Off" — Obviously, there's no telling at this point who will prevail, but the fat lady definitely will be singing, metaphorically at least, in the season finale, as the three remaining groups find out who will claim the $100,000 grand
prize and a recording contract. Nick Lachey is the host, while Jewel, Shawn Stockman and Ben Folds serve as judges. 8 p.m. on BRAVO,"The Real Housewives ofBeverly Hills"What do you do with a problem child? Some wealthy parents send their unruly offspring away to school — and that's what Kim does with Kingsley, her difficult dog, in this new episode. Yolanda hosts a dinner party with music bytheCanadian Tenors but inadvertently causes a rift amongthewomen. Brandi's insulting behavior toward Joyce continues in "She Hearts You, She Hearts You Not." gp.m. on29, "The Great Christmas Light Fight" — The series winds down with one more round of competition, as families deck their dwellings with enough lights, props and gadgets to make Clark Griswold's decorating scheme look subdued. A $50,000 grand prize awaits the winning household. "ExtremeMakeover:Home Edition" alumni Michael Moloney and Sabrina Soto are the judges. 9 p.m. on BRAVO,"Vanderpump Rules" —After Katie shares the rumor that Kristen and Jaxslept together, Stassi comes up with an elaborate plan aimed at getting the couple to confess. Lisa hires a secret diner to sample and evaluate the service at SUR,but her employees are distracted by other things in the newepisode "Sherlock Stassi." © zap2it
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A10
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
IN FOCUS: MARINELIFE
Ocean'seat examine as o in eat ssoar By Lizette Alvarez New Yorh Times News Service
MIAMI — Like a macabre
marine mystery, the carcasses — many badly deteriorated and tossing about in the surf — first turned up along the coast of New Jersey in June.
Soon, droves of them washed up in Virginia, the Carolinas, Georgia and most recently Florida, their winter home.
Nearly 1,000 bottlenose dolphins — eight times the histor-
.{p,
ical average — have washed up dead this year along the
Yy~
Eastern Seaboard from New
York to Florida, a vast majorNew York Times News Service file photo ity of them victims of morbill- The lower jaw bones and teeth of deceased dolphins are saved for ivirus. Many more are expect-
C CCC C C C
0
research in Melbourne Beach, Fla. This year, nearly1,000 bottle-
ed to die from the disease in nose dolphins — eight times the historical average — have washed the coming months.
up dead along the Eastern Seaboard, puzzling scientists.
The high death toll from the resurgence of the virus, which killed 700 dolphins in remain scientifically murky an outbreak 25 years ago, has — disease, a polluted environalarmed marine scientists, ment, infection and possible who say it r emains unclear
residue from the BP Deepwa-
why the dolphins have suc- ter Horizon oil spill in 2010. "It is alarming when you cumbed to the disease. The deaths, along with a spate of see so many different die-offs other unrelated dolphin die- of marine mammals going on offs along Florida's east and at once," said Erin Fougeres, west coasts, raise new ques- a marine mammal biologist tions about the health of the with the National Oceanic and ocean in this part of the coun- Atmospheric Administration's try and what role environmen- fisheries service, which is tal factors may be playing, sci- tracking and investigating the entists said. deaths."We can'tsay they are
'Canaries in a coal mine'
linked. But it says there are a
lot of challenges that marine mammals are facing."
"Marine mammals are very good sentinels for ocean and This time around, scientists human health, and they really who first encountered morbillact likethe proverbial canaries ivirus 25 years ago were able to in a coal mine," said Dr. Greg pinpoint the disease soon after Bossart, a veterinary patholo-
gist and senior vice president in charge of animal health at the Georgia Aquarium. "They give us an idea of what's occurring in the environment." B ecause bottlenose d o l -
phins are top predators, have long life spans and live near shore, Bossart said, "whatev-
er happens coastally impacts them and potentially us." The deaths, classified as an
unusual mortality event, have puzzled scientists. They show
no discernible demographic pattern, affecting dolphins that are young and old, male and female. One possible explanation is that some of those that have died this year were not alive during the first out-
breakand may notbeim mune to the virus. In Florida, the situation is
particularly dire, with dolphins facing a triple threat this year. Nearly 80 dolphins who live permanently in the state's ecologically compromised Indian River Lagoon estuary on the east coast have died. An
C
coastal interaction between dolphins in the inlets."
The Indian River Lagoon, a diverse estuary, has been tainted by huge algae blooms caused in part by too much nitrogen. Research on some of the dead dolphins in the es-
lo
tuary — 76 died this year, the third series of deaths since 2001 — has showed that some
C
METKR
had high levels of mercury, fungal diseases, antibiotic-re-
C;
sistant bacteria and oral-genital tumors. The dolphins
RsT.>858
found were emaciated. "You have to think, 'Where
does antibiotic-resistant bacteria come from in dolphins?'"
said Bossart, who is involved in a long-term study of the Indian River Lagoon dolthe initial wave of dead dol- phins. "One thought is that it phins washed ashore along the comes from environmental Eastern Seaboard. By August, pollution." the federal government had Scientists a r e mon i t orconfirmed through necrop- ing the areas below Brevard sies that the virus was present. County on the east coast of More than 90 percent of the 181 Florida to see if morbillivirus dolphins tested had the virus. continues its spread as the dolDuring the first outbreak in phins head farther south. the late 1980s, it took scientists On the Gulf Coast, from several years to uncover the the Texas-Louisiana border reason for the die-offs, Foug- through the Florida Panhaneres said. Scientists found the dle, the dolphin die-off has virus only after testing dol- gone on far longer, a phephin tissue retroactively. nomenon that scientists have There is little scientists can been unable to fully explain. do to stop the airborne mor-
Since the first deaths near-
billivirus, which cannot be spread to humans. During the last outbreak, the virus killed
ly four years ago, more than 1,000 dolphins have died. The deaths initially began in Lake
off dolphins for 10 months,
Pontchartrain in Louisiana in
February 2010, before the BP dolphins may continue to die oil spill. The spill added other through May. The dolphins possible causes for the high infect each other by expelling rate of dolphin deaths. which means that this time,
air through their blowholes.
Gulf Coast states and the
federal government are still Many threats investigating the impact of In th e m e antime, o ther the oil spill in the region, and threats remain, chief among scientists cannot yet say why them the possibility that the the dolphins are dying. So far, virus could spread to Gulf it appears that toxins or moradditional 233 perished in the Coast dolphins and the vul- billivirus are not the primary northern Gulf of Mexico this nerable population in the Indi- cause. "We can't conclusively say year. Both of those events have an River Lagoon. "The results could be cat- what role oil played at this also been l abeled unusual mortality events by the federal astrophic," said Stephen Mc- time," Fougeres said. "But the government. Culloch, program manager event is pretty unprecedented The causes of death appear for marine mammal research in terms of how long the dieto be unrelated; each group at Florida Atlantic Universi- off has been occurring and of dolphins faces separate ty's Harbor Branch, adding how many have died as part of challenges that in some cases that "there is some degree of that event."
IN FOCUS PHONE SCAM
States crack down on'cramming,' an esti mated $28costtocitizens By Pamela M. Prah
only states that ban third-parSome cramming charges can ty charges on landline phone beassmallas$2or$3permonth WASHINGTON — S t ates bills. But state attorneys general and easy to overlook, but othare stepping up efforts to help from 43 other states are joining erscan totalas much as $24.95. consumers who find mysteri- an effort to tadde the growing Even consumers who do not ous, and usually bogus, charges problem of cramming on cell- text have been crammed. Often, ontheirphonebills. phones. More than one-third of theseconsumers areelderly. Some 12,500 Vermont house- American homes (35.8 percent) The elimination of cellphone holds and businesses are receiv- had only wireless phones in cramming should be "a coning refund checks this month 2012, up from less than 5 per- sumer protection priority," attotaling more than $900,000 cent in2003, government data torneys general from 40 states for illegitimate charges that ap- show. said in a letter they sent earlipeared on their landline phone More information on avoid- er this summer to the Federal bills. ingmystery charges is available Trade Commission. The effort These victims of "cramming" from the Federal Trade Com- was led by Vermont Attorney got their money back as part mission. Cramming victims General William S orrell, a of a $1.6 million settlement be- also may file a complaint with Democrat, and Indiana Attortween the state and 25 sellers of the Federal Communications ney General Greg Zoeller, a voicemail, email and other ser- Commission. Republican. vices. But in many cramming Cellphone cramming often Texas Attorney General cases, people don't get refunds begins when a consumer re- Greg Abbott, a Republican, last — and mightnot even know ceives a text message with an month filed a lawsuit against they were swindled at all. offer to enter a contest. By reply- four "content providers" who As many as 20 million peo- ing, the consumer unknowing- werebehind a cramming scam. plearecrammed eachyear,but ly signs up for a monthly, week- But Abbott also sued a comonly about 1 in 20 realizes it, the ly or daily service that provides pany, Mobile Messenger U.S. Federal Communications Com- the latest weather, traffic, news, Inc., that handled billing for mission estimates. Cellphone sports or celebrily gossip. The cellphone carriers. Abbott's exand landline crannning could chargefor this "service" ends panded focus has attracted the cost consumers up to $2 billion up on the consumer's cellphone attention of wireless carriers, ayear. bill, often labeled as a"premium the cellphone industry and othVermont and Illinois are the textmessage." er states. Stateane.org
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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Scoreboard, B2 Skiing, B3 Community Sports, B8 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Today
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday-Sunday
NFi. football, Atlanta Falcons atSau Francisco 49ors, 5:40 p.m. (ESPN): The final Monday night game of theseason is a rematch of last season's NFCchampionship contest, though while the 49ers are contenders to return to the Super Bowl, the disappointing Falcons aregoing nowhere. Tonight's game isalso the last regular-season game to beplayedat San Francisco's Candlestick Park.
College football, SheratonHawaii Bowl, Oregon State vs. BoiseState, 5 p.m. PST(ESPN):The Beavers, behind the potent combination of quarterback Sean Mannion andreceiver Brandin Cooks, will be trying to snap fiave-game losing streak whenthey take onthe Broncos at AlohaStadium in Honolulu on Christmas Eve.BoiseState will be playing under interim headcoach BobGregory.
NBA basketball, Chicago atBrooklyn, 9 a.m. PST(ESPN); OklahomaCity at New York, 12:30 p.m. (ABC);Miami at LA. Lakors, 2 p.m. (ABC);Houstonat Sao Antonio, 5 p.m. (ESPN);LA. Clippors at GolriouState, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN): Injuries to a number of marqueeplayers have taken some ofthe luster off the Christmas feast. But there should still be plenty to satisfy a hoop fan's appetite.
NBA basketball, LA. Clippers atPortland, 7:30 p.m. (TNT):The Clippers and their first-year coach, DocRivers, face the Blazers for the first time this season in a clash of contenders in theWestern Conference. Chris PaulandBlakeGriffin lead the wayfor Los Angeles. Later this week: LeBronJamesandthe reigning NBA champion Miami HeatmakeaSaturday night stop at Portland's ModaCenter.
Prop basketball, i.os SchwabOregon Holiday Hoopfost ioBend:Summit, Bendand MountainView highschools host three days of action. In addition to the host teams, girls teams include Lincoln, Willamette, Grants Pass, Forest Grove andLiberty, and boys teams include Liberty, Milwaukie, Lakeside (Wash.), Evergreen (Wash.) andVanier (British Columbia).
lNglDEQN$9 ]0
tournamentsto helpraisemoneyfor Centraloregoncharities,B9
COLLEGEFOOTBALL
• Offseason update: Quail Run Golf Course, B9 • Golf calendar, B9 • Majors were not necessarily won with the best shots, B10
Oregon State falls behind early before suffering an 83-71 loss to Akron at the Diamond Head Classic in Hono-
NBA Clippers needOT to deat T-Wolves Late three, free throws lift Los Angeles over Minnesota,B3
a on trip ack home
NFL Bills
Dolphins Vikings
By Kevin Hampton Corvallis Gazette-Times
Colts
For most of the Hawaiian players on the Oregon State football team, the trip to this
week's Hawaii Bowl is a chance for family and friends to see the Beavers play in person.
Devon Kell's family was ahead of the game. senior season this year, so his family — parents David and Dayna and younger brother Drew — decided
NeXt uP
to move from Hilo, Hawaii, to Corvallis to watch him
Boise State vs. Oregon State
P "So „y now we're all going
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Katio Bach, of Koizor, right, and son Quinn, 10, cruise down the tubing hill at Mt. Bachelor ski area on Sunday west of
Bond. Tubing is one ofmanyoptions for families to got out of the house during the winter break.
to go back and be home for the holidays, stay there and then we'll come back once school starts again," Kell
said. Kell said he is excited to see friends and additional
family members while in Honolulu for Tuesday's Christmas Eve game. He is also eagerto eatsome home cooking and get a lot of sun. The Hawaii Bowl was a pleasant surprise for Kell.
See Beavers/B8
Ducks readyto go to work in San Antonio
Chiefs
2 7
Rams Buccaneers
2 13
ets
Kell was headed into his
KICE-AM 940
Beavers fall to Zips in Hawaii
lulu,B3
COMMUNITY SPORTS
Beavers' Ke ta es
Radio:
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
• Here are a fewhints for thoselooking to get out of the houseduring their long winter vacation
Alpine skiing
By Beau Eastos
are also a hit w it h f a milies be-
bunny hill and its lift, the Carrou-
The Bulletin
The Christmas break is upon us.
cause of how easy it is to manage sel chair, are free to all ages. This multiple skill levels. Mom, Dad is the perfect way to see if your
For 16 straight days, most Central
and the kindergartener can putter
You do not have to break the b ank to t ake the f amily t o M t .
Bachelor this year. The mountain's
preteen is interested in downhill
Oregon kids are out of school. No homework. No Tests. And
around at their own pace while skiing without investing in a fullteenage skiers can test themselves day lift ticket to find out. Daily
on some days, no practice for area athletes.
on numerous loops at Mt. Bach-
The possibilities in this Winter Wonderland we call home — despite
elor's nordic area or at Virginia Meissner Sno-park. Area shops also rent baby carriers on skis that allow parents to take the littlest of
therecentwarm weather — areendless.Here are some outdoor ideasto adventurers along. keep the family active and busy this Price: Ski packages typically start holiday season: at $15 a day; Mt. Bachelor Nordic half-daypasses are $7 for kids unNordic skiing der 18 and $14 for adults; Virginia Light on the wallet compared Meissner Sno-park and its groomed with alpine skiing, nordic outings trailsare free.
passes are not cheap — a dults
are $79, teens are $67 and kids ages 6-12 are $47 — but Mt. Bachelor does offera "Kids Ski Free"
Browns
2 13
Cowboys Redskins
2 23
Panthers Saints
13
itans Jaguars
2 16
Bronco Texans
3 13
Giants Lions
2 20
Cardinals Seahawks
1 10
Steelers Packers
31 3
Patriots Ravens
41 7
Chargers Raiders
2 13
Eagles Bears
5 11
program ifa parent purchases at least a three-day pass. (Kids 12 and under receive a free pass for
the same number ofdays as their parent's pass. Note, this deal must be purchased at least four days in
advance.) SeeHoliday/B8
By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard
The Oregon Ducks did not wait until Christmas to unwrap the Alamo Bowl game
COLLEGE ATHLETICS
plan. No. 10 Oregon was focused on preparing for its Dec. 30 m atchup
t NeXt up
with Texas throughout last week inside the Moshofsky Center.
"We've kind of been in full game-plan mode since
retu r ning back to practice this week," Ducks coach Mark Helfrich said after Friday's practice. "The two
weekends prior we were Monday, Dec j u st trying to get ahead m terms of conditioning, special teams, blocking, tackRadio: ling, fundamentally, and KBND-AM1110 then giving guys time to finish up academically." The Longhorns (8-4), despite a disappointing season hampered by a bad start and compounded by injuries to key players, still have plenty of high-level talent. They will also be determined to end the Mack Brown era with a win in front of a pro-Texas crowd at the Alamodome. See Ducks /B8
Cutting sports a growing trend Temple men's gymnasts Colton
By Will Graves The meeting was brief. A few
and Evan Eignor pause after
minutes, tops. Temple athletic director Kevin
working out in Philadelphia in
Clark did not mince words. Stand-
early Decembor. Temple announcodthat
practice facility earlier this month, Clark scanned the crowd of dozens
it is eliminating seven of its 24
football players — and told them that the university's financially
sports, including men's gymnas-
strapped athletic department was cutting their sport at the end of the
Tom Gralish I The Philadelphia Inquirer
down against the Seattle on Sunday.
Seahawks suffer
The Associated Press
Howard, loft,
tics, effective next fall.
Arizona's Michael Floyd walks off the field after a touch-
ing inside the football team's indoor of student athletes — none of them
2013-14 academic year. There were not a lot of details.
No lengthy question-and-answer session. SeeCutting /B4
rare homeloss
Anzona scores alate touchdown to take a 17-0 victory over Seattle on Sunday,B7
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Today's Bowl
Game Today,Dec.23 Beef 'O' Brady'sBowl Ai St. Petersburg, Fla. Ohio (7-5)vs. East Carolina(9-3), u a.m.(ESPN)
B2
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time Men's college, DiamondHeadClassic, consolation, GeorgeMasonvs. OregonSt., 11:30 a.m. BASKETBALL
Men's college, DiamondHeadClassic, first semifinal, lowa State vs. Akron 1:30 p.m. Men's college, MoreheadState at Tennessee 4 p.m. Men's college, DiamondHeadClassic, second semifinal, South Carolina vs. TBD 6 p.m. Men's college,GrandCanyonatNew Mexico 6 p.m. Men's college, Northern Arizona atArizona 7 p.m. Men's college, DiamondHeadClassic, consolation semifinal, St. Mary's vs. TBD 8:30 p.m.
TV/Radio ESPNU 940-AM ESPNU
ESPNU ESPN2 Root
Pac-12 ESPNU
FOOTBALL
College, BeefO'Brady's St. Petersburg Bowl, East Carolina vs. Ohio 11 a.m. NFL, Atlanta Falcons atSanFrancisco 49ers 5:25 p.m. SOCCER English Premier LeagueSoccer, Arsenal FC vsChelsea FC noon
ESPN ESPN
NBCSN
HOCKEY
NHL, Minnesota Wild at Philadelphia Flyers 4:30 p.m.
NBCSN
TUESDAY FOOTBALL
Time
College, Hawaii Bowl, Boise State vs. OregonState.
5 p.m.
TV/Radio ESPN
Listings are themostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible forlatechangesmade by TV orradiostations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF WINTER SPORTS
ON DECK Thursday Boys basketball: Redm ondat Wilsonville Tournament,TBD;Ridgeviewat PalmSpringsTournament in California,TBD;Madrasat Stayton Tournament, TBD; CrookCounty at AstoriaTournament, 6:30 p.m. Girls basketball: Ridgeview,Madrasat Stayton Tournament,TBD;Crook County at AstoriaTournament,6:30p.m. Swimming: Summivs. t FarragutNorth (Knoxvile, Tenn.)atJuniperSwim& FitnessCenter,2 p.m.
Sunday
White finishes third in slopestyle — shaunwhite finished third at the U.S.Grand Prix on Sunday in Copper Mountain, Colo., putting himself in strong position to earn aspot on the U.S.team for the Olympic debut of slopestyle. White, who hurt his left ankle last weekand skipped the halfpipe in Copper Mountain to focus on slopestyle, scored a90.75 on his first run, which put him in second place. Norway swept the top two spots, with Staale Sandbech (97 points) getting the win andTorstein Horgmo finishing second (94.75). Sarka Pancochova oftheCzech Republicwonthewomen'sevent.
Boys basketball: Bend,MountainView,Summit at LesSchwabOregonHolidayHoopfest,TBA;Ridgeview at PalmSpringsTournament in California, TBD Girls basketball: Bend,MountainView,Summit at LesSchwabOregonHolidayHoopfest,TBA Wrestling: Ridgeview,Madras, Culverat Freeberry Tournamentin Pendleton, TBD
FOOTBALL College Bowl Glance
All Times PBT
BASEBALL Dodgers close to dealwith reliever Chris Perez — The Los Angeles Dodgers are closing in on aone-year contract with former All-Star closer Chris Perez,according to a person familiar with the situation who spokeunder the condition of anonymity because the deal hasn't been finalized. Financial terms of the prospective deal aren't known. Perez, 28,was anAll-Star with the Cleveland Indians in 2011 and2012 but was released bythem onOct. 31.Perezhada difficult season this year, when he was arrested on marijuana charges and lost his job as the Indians closer.
BASKETBALL Grant Otitat NOtre Dame deCauSe Of aCademiCS —Notre Dame will be without leading scorer Jerian Grant for the rest of the season because of anacademic problem. The university posted a statement from Grant on its website Sundayevening that said he is no longer enrolled in the school because of anacademic matter he didn't handle properly. Hesays hetakes responsibility for his lack of good judgment and thepoor decision hehasmade. Grant, the son of former NBAplayer Harvey Grant, wasaveraging 19 points a game. The news comes aday after the Irish (8-4) squandered aneight-point lead in the final 50 seconds in aloss to No. 3 Ohio State at Madison Square Garden. NO. 1 UCORRdOWnSNO. 21 Cal — Breanna Stewart matched her career high with 29 points to lift No. 1 Connecticut to an 80-47 rout of No. 21California on Sunday in theMaggie DixonClassic at Madison SquareGarden inNewYork. Stewart had10 rebounds for the Huskies (12-0j, who werecoming off a rout of No. 2 Dukeon Tuesday night. Just as in that game, thesensational sophomore made her presencefelt early and often. She had13 of the Huskies' first16 points and finished the half with 21 — onemorethan Cal had at that point.
FOOTBALL Texas A8I's Claidorne arrested on drug chargesTexas A8 Mstandout freshman linebacker Darian Claiborne has been arrested on two drug possession charges. Claiborne wasarrested Sunday on charges of possession of a dangerous drug andpossession of less than two ounces of marijuana, according to the Brazos County Jail website.
GOLF Teen golfer Ko splits with coach of 11 years —Teenage golf star Lydia Kohas split with the only coach she has hadsince she took up the sport as a5-year-old. Guy Wilson, who has worked with the16-year-old Ko for11 years, issued astatement saying he was "incredibly disappointed" the partnership is over. — From wire reports
Today, Dec.23
Beef 'O' Brady's Bowl Al St. Petersburg, Fla. Ohio (7-5)vs.East Carolina(9-3),11 a.m.(ESPN)
Tuesday, Dec.24 Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu OregonState(6-6) vs. Boise State (8-4), 5 p.m. (ESPN) Thursday, Dec.26 Little CaesarsPizza Bowl At Detroit BowlingGreen(10-3) vs. Pittsburgh(6-6), 3 p.m. (ESPN) Poinsettia Bowl At Ban Diego Northernlginois(12-1)vs.UtahState(8-5),6:30 p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Dec. 27 Military Bowl At Annapolis, Md. Marshal(9-4) l vs.Maryland(7-5),11:30 a.m.(ESPN) Texas Bowl At Houston Minnesota(8-4) vs.Syracuse(6-6), 3p.m.(ESPN) Fight HungerBowl At Ban Francisco BYU(8-4)vs.Washington(8-4), 6:30p.m.(ESPN) Saturday, Dec.28 Pinstripe Bowl Al New york NotreDam e(8-4) vs.Rutgers(6-6), 9a.m.(ESPN) Belk Bowl Al Charlotte, N.C. Cincinnati(9-3)vs.NorthCarolina (6-6), 12:20p.m. (ESPN) Russell Athletic Bowl Al Orlando, Fla. Miami(9-3) vs.Louisville (11-1), 3:45p.m.(ESPN) Buffalo Wild WingsBowl At Tempe,Ariz. KansasState (7-5) vs. Michigan(7-5), 7:15 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Dec.30 Armed ForcesBowl Al Fort Worth, Texas MiddleTenn essee (8-4) vs. Navy(8-4), 8:45a.m. (ESPN) Music City Bowl At Nashville,Tenn. Mississippi(7-5)vs.GeorgiaTech(7-5), 12:15p.m. (ESPN) Alamo Bowl At San Antonio Oregon(102)vs.Texas(84),345 p m.(ESPN) Holiday Bowl At Ban Diego ArizonaState(10-3) vs.Texas Tech (7-5), 7:15p.m. (ESPN) Tuesday, Dec.31 AdvocareV160Bowl AlSbreveporl, La. Arizona(7-5) vs. BostonCollege(7-5), 9:30a.m. (ESPN) Sun Bowl At El Paso, Texas VirginiaTech(8-4) vs.UCLA(9-3),11a.m.(CBS) Liberty Bowl At Memphis, Tenn. Rice(9-3) vs.Mississippi State(6-6),1 p.m.(ESPN) Chick-fil-A Bowl Al Atlanta TexasA&M(8-4) vs.Duke(10-3), 5p.m.(ESPN)
DREGDN ST. (6-3)
In the Bleachers O 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrrck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
rz/z>
Robbins1-3 0-02, Barton2-3 5-59, Brandt1-3 0-0 2, Collier 2-4 6-8 10, Nelson4-15 10-11 20, Cooke2-4 2-2 6, Ifdiaye 1-1 0-0 2, Duvivier 1-1 1-2 3, Morris-Walker1-1 0-0 2, Gomis3-4 3-4 9, Schaftenaar 2-50-04, Reid 1-40-02. Totals 21-48 27-3271.
AKRON (6-2)
Treadweg 7-1010-1324, Evans5-82-217, Ibitayo 3-5 2-4 9,McAdam s3-8 0-0 8, Forsythe4-6 0-18, Cheatham, Jr. 1-10-03, Harney0-30-00, Diggs2-8 7-911, Kretzer1-70-03,Johnson0-20-0 0.Totals 26-58 21-2983. Halftime —Akron 35-34. 3-Point Goals—Oregon St. 2-10 (Nelson2-5, Barton0-1, Schaftenaar0-2, Cooke0-2), Akron10-26(Evans5-7, McAdams 2-7, Cheatham, Jr.1-1, Ibitayo1-2, Kretzer1-7,Diggs0-2). FouledOut—Forsythe,Reid. Rebounds—Oregon St. 29 (Cogier,Gomis5), Akron33(Treadwell 10). Assists — Oregon St.8 (Nelson 4), Akron13(Treadweg 4). TotalFouls—OregonSt. 24,Akron25. A—8,694.
Friday Boys basketball: Mountain View vs. Lakeside (Wash.)at LesSchwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest at MountainView,6 p.m.; Bendvs. Liberly at Les SchwabOregonHoliday Hoopfest at Mountain View, 7:45p.m.; Summit vs. Vanier(British Columbia) atLesSchwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest at Summit, 7:45p,muRedmond at Wilsonyile Tourname nt, TBD;Ridgeviewat PalmSprings Tournament in California, TBD;Madrasat Stayton Tournament,TBD;Culver atRiverside, TBD;Crook CountyatAstoria Tournament, 6:30 p.m. Girls basketball: Bendvs. Lincolnat LesSchwab OregonHolidayHoopfest, 12:45p.m.; Mountain View vs. ForestGroveat LesSchwabOregon Holiday Hoopfest, 11 a.m.;Summit vs. Liberly at LesSchwab Oregon Holiday Hoopfest, 6 p.m.; Ridgeview,Madrasat StaytonTournament, TBD; Culver atRiverside,TBD;Trinity Lutheranat Cougar Classicin Crow,TBA; CrookCountyat Astoria Tourname nt, 6:30p.m. Wrestling: Ridgeview,Madras, Culverat Freeberry Tournament in Pendleton, TBD;Redmond at Sierra NevadaClassic, TBD;Bend at NWDuals atWestview High School, TBD Saturday Boys basketball: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at LesSchwabOregonHolidayHoopfest,TBA;Redmond atWilsonvilleTournament, TBD;Ridgeview at PalmSpringsTournament in California, TBD; Madrasat StaytonTournament, TBD;CrookCounty at AstoriaTournament, 6:30 p.m. Girls basketball: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at LesSchwabOregonHolidayHoopfest,TBA;Sandy at Redmond, 2p.m.; Ridgeview,Madrasat Stayton Tourname nt, TBD;Trinity Lutheranat Cougar Classic in Crow, TBA; CrookCounty atAstodiaTournament,6:30p.m. Wrestling: Ridgeview,Madras, Culverat Freeberry Tournamentin Pendleton, 10 a.muRedmond at SierraNevadaClassic, TBD;Bendat NWDuals at WestviewHighSchool,TBD Swimming:MadrasatGreshamInvitational, TBD
Akron 83, OregonSt. 71
IN THE BLEACHERS
Women's College
"No! I said 'kick,' you
Wednesday,Jan. 1 Hearl ol Dallas Bowl At Dallas UNLV(7-5)vs. NorthTexas(8-4), 9 a.m.(ESPNU) Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Nebraska (8-4) vs.Georgia(8-4), 9a.m.(ESPN2) Capital OneBowl At Orlando, Fla. Wisconsin(9-3) vs. SouthCarolina (10-2), 10a.m. (ABC) OutbackBowl At Tampa, Fla. lowa(84)vs.LSU(93),10a m.(ESPN) Rose Bowl At Pasadena,Calif. Stanford (11-2) vs. MichiganState (12-1), 2 p.m. (ESPN) Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. Baylor(11-1)vs.UCF(11-1),5:30 p.m.(ESPN)
Sunday'sGames East Albany(NY)64, Colgate50 BostonU.69, NewHampshire 58 E. Michigan64,Monmouth (NJ) 53 PennSt.85,AlcornSt.62 St. John's72,TexasA&M70 StonyBrook70, Wagner 51 UConn80, California 47 Viganova59 Temple 58 South Alabama St.57,SavannahSt.52 Duke69,Kentucky61 LouisianaTech81, AlabamaA&M51 idiot! Kick his butt!!" SouthCarolina70, SCState26 St. Bonave nture58, UNC-Greensboro46 VCU94,FloridaA&M67 Midwest Dayton87,Toledo75 Kansas82, Tulsa 78 Milwaukee 73, lginois St.58 Minnesota67,Auburn54 Missouri75,W.Illinois 60 Nebraska-O maha70, Austin Peay54 NotreDame106, Cent. Michigan72 Tuesday, Dec.31 O aklan d 7 2 , W.Michigan62 Advocare V106Bowl urdue57, Bowling Green48 Arizona 7 7 Bos ton CollegeP WichitaSt.69,Texas-PanAmerican40 Bun Bowl Ucla 7 7 Virg i nia TechAbileneChristian58,Southwest TexasTech57 Liberly Bowl 71,Jacksonville 62 Mississippi St 7 7 Rice FAU UTSA86, Te xa s St . 83 Chick-lil-A Bowl Far West T exas A&M 12.5 12 . 5 Duke
ColoradoSt.59, Weber St. 54 Wednesday, Jan. 1 Gator Bowl HOCKEY Georgia 9 9 Nebraska Heart ol Dallas Bowl NHL N. Texas 6.5 6.5 Unlv Capital OneBowl NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Wisconsin 2.5 1 S. Carolina All TimesPST Outback Bowl Lsu 7.5 7.5 lowa EasternConference Rose Bowl Atlantic Division Stanford 15 5 MichiganSt GP W L DT Pls GF GA Fiesta Bowl Boston 3 6 24 10 2 50 100 75 Baylor 17.5 17 C. Flori d a Tampa Bay 36 22 11 3 4 7 100 86 Thursday, Jan. 2 Montreal 3 8 22 13 3 4 7 96 84 Sugar Bowl Thursday, Jan. 2 Detroit 3 8 17 12 9 43 99 105 At New Orleans Bowl Toronto 3 8 18 16 4 40 105 111 Alabama(11-1) vs. Oklahoma(10-2), 5;30 p.m. Alabama 14.Sugar 5 1 5 . 5 O kl ahoma 38 14 1 7 7 3 5 106 126 Ottawa (ESPN) Florida 3 7 14 18 5 33 87 117 Friday, Jan. 3 Friday, Jan. 3 Buffal o 3 6 9 2 4 3 2 1 64 104 OrangeBowl Cotton Bowl Metropolitan Division At Miami 1 1 O klahoma S t Missouri GP W L DT Pls GF GA OhioState(12-1) vs.Clemson(10-2), 5 p.m.(ESPN) Drange Bowl P ittsburgh 38 27 10 1 5 5 121 83 Cotton Bowl Ohio St 5 2.5 Clemson W ashington 36 19 13 4 4 2 115 109 At Arlington, Texas N ewJersey 37 15 15 7 3 7 90 94 Missouri(11-2)vs.OklahomaState(10-2), 4:30p.m. Saturday, Jan. 4 P hiladelphia 36 16 16 4 36 89 103 (FOX) CompassBowl C arolina 3 6 1 4 1 4 8 3 6 83 101 Vanderbilt 3 2.5 H ou s t on N.Y.Rangers 37 17 1 8 2 3 6 86 101 Saturday, Jan. 4 C olumbus 36 15 17 4 3 4 97 103 BBVACompassBowl Sunday,Jan. 6 N.y.lslanders 37 10 20 7 2 7 93 129 At Birmingham,Ala. Go Daddy Bowl WesternConference Vanderbilt(8-4)vs.Houston (8-4),10 a.m.(ESPN) Ball St 8.5 8.5 Ark ansas St Central Division GP w L OT Pls GF GA Sunday,Jan. 6 Monday, Jan. 6 Gonaddytcom Bowl Chicago 3 8 25 7 6 5 6 140 105 BCB Champi o nshi p Al Mobile, Ala. St. Louis 3 5 24 7 4 5 2 125 81 F lorida St. 8. 5 8.5 Aub u r n ArkansasState (7-5) vs. Ball State(10-2), 6 p.m. Colorado 3 5 23 10 2 48 102 83 (ESPN ) Minnesota 3 8 20 13 5 45 87 92 Dallas 3 5 17 12 6 40 101 105 BASKETBALL Monday, Jan. 6 Winnipeg 3 8 16 17 5 37 101 110 BCBNational Championship Nashville 3 6 16 16 4 36 83 103 Men's College At Pasadena, Calif. Pacilic Division Florida State(13-0) vs. Auburn(12-1), 5;30 p.m. Sunday'sGames GP W L DT Pls GF GA (ESPN) East Anaheim 3 8 2 6 7 5 57 124 96 Colgate 79 Ursinus51 Los Angeles 37 25 8 4 54 104 71 Drexel59,St. Francis (Pa.)49 SanJose 3 6 2 2 8 6 50 116 90 Betting line Harfford66,St. Peter's 56 V ancouver 39 22 11 6 50 106 93 Marist 76, Penn 62 P hoenix 35 1 9 1 0 6 4 4 110 108 NFL PennSt.92,Mount St.Mary's 82 C algary 36 1 3 1 7 6 3 2 91 115 (Home teamsin CAPS) 73,West Virginia 70 Favorite Opening Current Underdog Purdue E dmonton 38 11 24 3 2 5 95 133 RhodeIsland62,NewHampshire45 Today NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime R utgers 75, Army 7 2 4 9ERS 13 14 Falco ns loss. SetonHall92,E.Washington 70 Sunday'sGames StonyBrook76,Cornell 54 College N.Y.Rangers4, Minnesota1 South Today, Dec.23 Vancouver2,Winnipeg 1 Auburn77,BostonCollege67 Beef O'Brady's Bowl Today'sGames E . Carolina 12.5 13 . 5 Ohio Elon 67,FAU62 Phoeni xatBuff alo,4p.m. LouisianaTech83, Louisiana-Monroe61 Torontoat N.Y.Rangers,4 p.m. Mercer79,Mississippi 76 Tuesday, Dec.24 Anaheim atWashington,4 p.m. Miami71,LaSalle 58 Hawaii Bowl Columbus at Carolina,4 p.m. 67,AlabamaSt. 54 Oregon St 2. 5 3 Boise St Milwaukee Pittsburghat Otawa,4:30p.m. Ohio70,Richmond69,OT N.Y.IslandersatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Tulane65,Northeastern62 Thursday, Dec.26 Tampa Bayat Florida, 4:30p.m. Little Caesars Ptua Bowl UCF90,Valparaiso62 MinnesotaatPhiladelphia, 4:30p.m. Bowling Green 5.5 5 Pittsburgh Midwest NewJerseyat Chicago, 5p.m. Poinsettia Bowl BowlingGreen64, Detroit 62 BostonatNashvile 5 p m N. Illinois 1. 5 1 UtahSt Creighton 68, California 54 St. Louisat Calgary, 5p.m. RlinoisSt.69,DePaul 64 Winnipeg at Edmonton,6:30p.m. Friday, Dec. 27 Indiana90,KennesawSt. 66 Dallasat LosAngeles,7:30 p.m. Military Bowl lowa86,Ark.-PineBluff61 ColoradoatSanJose, 7:30p.m. Marshall 25. 2 Maryland Nebraska-Om aha76, Seatle 69 Tuesday'sGames TexasBowl Northwestern58,Brown52 No games scheduled Minnesota 4. 5 4.5 Syracuse Oakland100,Robert Morris 94 Fight HungerBowl SouthernCal79, Dayton 76, OT Washington 3 3 Byu WichitaSt.77, NCCentral 66 DEALS Southwest Saturday, Dec.28 Baylor81,SouthernU.56 Transactions Pinstripe Bowl GeorgiaSt.99, UTSA68 HOCKEY Far West NotreDame 16 14 . 5 Rut gers Natioaal HockeyLeague Belk Bowl FloridaGulfCoast77,FloridaA&M68 WASHINGTON CA P ITALS— ReassignedCCasey Mississippi St. 71, South Fl o ri d a 66 N. Carolina 2. 5 3 Cinci nnati Wellmanto Hershey(AHL). N. Illinois 71,UCRiverside64 Russell Athletic Bowl Central HockeyLeague Louisville 3 3.5 Miam i-Fla Nevada Bg,lona 72 St.CHARLESCHILL— AnnouncedGLinusLunBuffalo Wild WingsBowl Radford94,SacredHeart 78 din was reassi gnedto theteambySpringfield (AHL). Kansas St 3 3.5 MichiganSan Francisco77,American U.69 SignedDBrockWilson. WaivedGKevinMcFarland. UCLA 83, Weber St. 60 COLLEGE Monday, Dec.36 Uconn82,Washington70 NOTRE DAME—Announced senior men's basketArmed ForcesBowl Wyoming 72,N.Colorado59 ball G Jeri a n G ran t i s no longerenrolled in theschool Navy 6 6.5 Mid Tenn St Tournament because of anacademic matter. Music City Bowl DiamondHeadClassic Mississippi 2.5 3 Geo r gia Tech First Round TEXAS A&M—Dismissedsophomore basketball GJ-MychalReesefor violating athletic departmen t Alamo Bowl Akron83,OregonSt.71 Oregon 13 14 Texas lowaSt.79,GeorgeMason67 rulesandregulations. SuspendedfreshmanLBDarian Holiday Bowl Claiborneafter hewasarrested ontwodrugpossesArizonaSt 13.5 14 Tex as Tech Bunday'sSummary sion charges.
NHL ROUNDUP
Ran ersuse I
eiio tooverta e Wi
The Associated Press
bot made 24 saves in the Rangers' 4-1 two assists. Kreider made it 4-1 with
NEW YORK — The New York Rangers were running out of time
victory over the Minnesota Wild on
said he decided on his starting goalie for today, but didn't reveal his "Probably our best game aii year choice. "He's a young kid that's learning when it comes to playing a full 60 minutes and everyone contributing," the NHL game," Vigneault said of Hagelin said. "We definitely needed the 26-year-oid rookie Talbot. "He 7:14 remaining.
to make anything out of the longest
Sunday night. Talbot allowed the first goal but
homestand in team history.
was steady the rest of the way in re-
The first seven games of the ninegame Madison Square Garden stay produced one win and only four of a possible 14 points for the Rangers, who seemingly lost their way in front of goalie Henrik Lundqvist. Enter backup Cam Talbot, who got the rare start and kept aii but one
lief of the struggling Lundqvist, who started the previous eight games and one of these just to feei good about allowed at least three goals in the ourselves." past seven outings. New York improved to 2-4-2 on
puckout.
"We owed the fans this one," Tai-
bot said. "They've been supporting us quite a bit lately, and we haven't really produced for them." Benoit Pouiiot tied it in the first pe-
Cari Hagelin and Mats Zuccareiio riod, Chris Kreider added a goal in scored second-period goals, and Tai- the third, and Derick Brassard had
Minnesota, which has lost four of
six, has netted only 13 goals in eight games. Also on Sunday: Canucks 2, Jets 1: VANCOUVER, British Columbia — D e fenseman
Chris Tanev broke a tie in the third of our goaiies and gave us a chance period and Vancouver beat Winnipeg to win." after Canucks goalie Roberto Luongo the homestand that concludes today Jason Pominville scored for Minleft early because of an injury. Luonagainst Toronto. nesota, and N i kias B ackstrom go left with 3:30 remaining in the first "There is not a whole iot of time to stopped 32 shots. He made his second period. Earlier, Luongo had his ieg think about it," Talbot said. "Just go straight start in place of Josh Hard- clipped by big Winnipeg defenseman out there and try to carry this game ing, who is out while adjustments Dustin Byfuglien, and was knocked into tomorrow." are made to medication for multiple fiat during a goal-mouth collision Rangers coach Alain Vigneault sclerosis. with the Jets' Blake Wheeler. came in here and did what we expect
MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL ROUNDUP
A ron o so Ore onStatera The Associated Press HONOLULU —
D e m etri-
us Treadwell scored 16 of his game-high 24 points in the first half and Nyles Evans added 17 points — including a season-high five 3-pointers — and Akron beat Oregon State 83-71
in a first-round game of the Diamond Head Classic Sunday. The Zips (6-2) shot 44.8 percent from the field and 38.5 (10 of 26) behind the arc to pick up
little bit. That really helped us." Nelson and Collier were av-
eraging 22.1 and 21.3 points, r espectively, entering t h e game. Nelson was held to 4-of15 shooting from the field and Collier was just 2 of 4. Akron built a 10-0 lead to
open the game and led by as many as 16-2 early on after
back-to-back 3-pointers by Evans. Oregon State closed out the first half on a 15-9 run,
capped by Roberto Nelson's have now won 28 of their last buzzer-beating trey, to pull 33 games dating back to past within 35-34 at halftime. season. Cheikh N'diaye's putback The Beavers (6-3), who en- with 7:02 to play cut the Zips' tered the game ranked second lead to 56-53, but Reggie McAd(53.7 percent) in the nation in ams answered with a 3-pointer field goal percentage, shot 43.5 from the left corner to help Akpercent for the game to see their ron regain a six-point lead. "We grinded it out on the dethree-gamewin streak snapped. "We did a good job guard- fensive end and knocked down ing their best players," Akron some 3-pointers, that was big," coach Keith Dambrot said. "We Treadwell said. "We hit free did a good job on (Roberto) throws, that was also big." Nelson, we did a good job on The Zips made 13 of their (Devon) Collier and our power 14 free throws in the final 2:31 forward (Treadwell) beat them and were 21 of 29 for the game. physically and shocked them a Treadwell was 10 of 13 from the their sixth straight win. They
Eugene Tanner/The Associated Press
Oregon State guard Roberto Nelson (55) has his shot blocked by Akron guard Deji Ibitayo (4) in the first half of Sunday night's game at the Diamond Head Classic in Honolulu. The Zips beat the Beavers 83-71.
line and grabbed 10 rebounds. bounds as Baylor won its 10th Quincy Diggs finished with 11 straight home game. points and was 7 of 9 on free No. 17 lowa St. 79, George throws. Mason 67: HONOLULU "We executed well against Georges Niang scored 22 the zone (defense)," Dambrot points to lead Iowa State in said. "We haven't seen a lot of the first round of the Diamond zone but we did a lot of good Head Classic. things against the zone. Had No. 25 lowa 85, Ark.-Pine Bluff we made a few open ones, it 61: IOWA CITY, Iowa — Josh would'vebeen a wider margin Oglesby scored 13 points in his but we missed some open ones season debut as Iowa rolled. that our guys make." UCLA 83, Weber St. 60:LOS Also on Sunday: ANGELES — Kyle Anderson No. 10 Connecticut 82, Wash- helped put UCLA back in the ington 70:SEATTLE — Shaba- win column by scoring a cazz Napier scored 15 of his 20 reer-high 23 points, leading points in the second half and the Bruins to a win over Weber grabbed six rebounds to lead State. Connecticut to a victory over Creighton 68, California 54: Washington. OMAHA, Neb. — Doug McNo. 11 Wichita State 77, NC Central 66: WICHITA, Kan. Darius Carter scored 19 points and Wichita State overcome -
Jeremy Ingram's 37-point night in a victory over North Caroli-
Dermott overcame a slow start to finish with 20 points and 11
rebounds, and Creighton defeated California. Southern Cal 79, Dayton 76: DAYTON, Ohio —
P e 'Shon
Howard hit a 3-pointer as time
na Central.
No. 12 Baylor 81, Southern expired to lift Southern California to an overtime victory Austin had 14 points and 10 re- over Dayton. U. 56: WACO, Texas — Isaiah
NBA ROUNDUP
i®tgf$i „ -
Clippers needovertime to take out Timberwolves
-
>XtX4
The Associated Press canned two free throws at the other end to seal LOS ANGELES — Jared Dudley made a go- the victory. ahead 3-pointer with 38 seconds remaining in Crawford ended the third quarter with a overtime and Chris Paul added five free throws
buzzer-beating 3, cutting Minnesota's lead to
in the final 19 seconds, leading the Los Ange- 85-83. Reserve Darren Collison scored the Cliples Clippers to a gritty 120-116 victory over the pers' first nine points in the fourth, and all that Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday night. got them was a one-point deficit with 8:37 to Blake Griffin had 32 points and 10 rebounds play. and was an uncharacteristic 10 for 11 from the Griffin powered the Clippers to a 56-54 halffree throw line before fouling out with 4:08 left time lead with 20 points, offsetting 22 points in OT. The defending Pacific Division cham- by Love — the second straight game in which pions extended their winning streak to a sea-
ttI4
$ d~lSCI~1
A. O'Ise<
Love had at least 20 in the first half.
son-best five games while beating the TimberRefereeMarc Davis made a highly queswolves for the eighth straight time, their longest tionable foul call against Griffin — his third of current streak against any opponent.
the game — as Love initiated contact with him
Jamal Crawford had 22 points for Los Angeles, 7-4 since losing starting forward J.J. Redick with a broken right hand and a torn ligament in his wrist but 5-0 since Crawford was moved into the starting lineup. Paul finished with 19
while trying a desperation, buzzer-beating shot
points and 13 assists.
from at least 10 feet behind the midcourt line
before intermission. Love made all three free throws.
Marco Tacca/The Associated Press
Liechtenstein's Tina Weirather, center, winner of an alpine ski women's World Cup giant slalom, celebrates on the podium with second-placed Switzerland's Lara Gut, left, and third-placed Sweden's Maria Pietilae-Holmner, in Val D'Isere, France, Sunday.
Clipperscenter DeAndre Jordan, who came in leading the league in field goal percentage,
Kevin Love had a season-high 45 points and played just 9 '/2 minutes in the first half after picking up his third foul with 10:15 left in the second quarter. 104-91 loss to the Lakers on Friday night. It was Minnesota forward C orey B r ewer, who Minnesota's first overtime game since beating missed all eight shots he took against the Orlando at home on opening night. Lakers, did not attempt a field goal in his first Nikola Pekovic had a career-high 34 points 11 minutes on the floor. His first shot was a and 14 boards. Kevin Martin scored 16 points 3-pointer that reduced the Clippers' lead to 50after averaging 29 in the Timberwolves' other 49 with 1:43 left in the half. Those were his only two meetings against the Clippers — both nar- points of the night. row losses as well. Point guard Ricky Rubio Also on Sunday: played 38 scoreless minutes with 12 assists. Raptors 104, Thunder 98: OKLAHOMA Matt Barnes, in just his second game back CITY — Kyle Lowry scored 22 points, making following an eye injury, was ejected with 56 a pair of clinching free throws with 9.8 seconds seconds left in the third quarter after commit- left, and Toronto handed Oklahoma City its ting a flagrant 2 foul against Love on a drive to first home loss. The Raptors outscored Oklahothe basket with the Clippers leading 77-75. Love ma City 6-0 in the final 1:25, all from the free sank both free throws, then added a go-ahead throw line, and ended the Thunder's nine-game 3-pointer after Minnesota retained possession winning streak. following the flagrant foul. Pacers 106, Celtics 79: INDIANAPOLISMinnesota was leading 106-102 before the Paul George scored 24 points and Lance SteClippers forced OT. Crawford made a driving phenson recorded his third triple-double of the layup and a dunk after Paul forced Martin into season, leading Indiana over Boston. Stephena turnover. Pekovic then missed an 11-foot- son had 12 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists er and a 20-footer in the final 2 seconds of as Indiana (22-5) won its second straight and regulation. maintained its grip on the Eastern Conference's Pekovic had a chance to redeem himself, but best record. He's the only player in the league missed a 5-foot baseline hook shot and Paul with more than one triple-double this season. tied a season best with 19 rebounds for the Timberwolves, back at Staples Center after their
NBA SCOREBOARD
Weirat erta es iantsaom, maintainsWor Cu ea The Associated Press VAL D'ISERE, France — World Cup leader Tina Weirather of Liechtenstein protected her lead from the first run to win the first gi-
antslalom race ofhercareer on Sunday, her second victory of the season and third of her
All TimesPST
d-Indiana d-Miami Atlanta d-Toronto Washington Charlotte Detroit Boston Chicago Cleveland Brooklyn NewYork Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee
Eastern Conference W L 22 5 20 6 15 12 11 12 13 13
t4 13 15 t6
12 tr 10 10 9 8
Pct GB 815
769 1'A 556 7 440 10 480 9 464 9'/t 448 10 414 0 385 0'A 385 0'/t 346 12'/z
t6 16 tT 1 8 308 13'/t 8 t g 296 14 8 20 286 14a 6 21 222 16
Western Conference W L d-Portland 23 5 Oklahoma City 22 5 d-SanAntonio 21 6 d-LA. Clippers 20 9 Houston 18 10
16 to
Phoenix Dallas Denver GoldenState LA. Lakers Minnesota NewOrleans Memphis Sacramen to Utah d-divisionleader
15 12 14 t2 15 13 13 14 13 t5 0 14 11 t5 8 18 8 22
Sunday'sGames
Indiana106,Boston 79 Toronto104,OklahomaCity 98 LA. Clippers120,Minnesota06, OT
Today'sGames
NewYorkat Orlando,4p.m. Detroit atCleveland,4p.m.
Pct GB 821
815 r/t 778 t'/t
690 3a 643 5 615 6
556 7'It
538 8 536 8
481 9'/t 464 10 440 10'/t 423 11
308 14 267 16
Milwaukee at Charlotte, 4 p.m. AtlantaatMiami,4:30 p.m. Indiana at Brooklyn, 4;30p.m. Dallas atHouston, 5 p.m. Utah atMemphis, 5p.m. TorontoatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. LA, Lakers atPhoenix, 6 p.m. GoldenStateatDenver, 6p.m. NewOrleansatSacramento, 7p.m.
Summaries Sttnda y' sGames
Cliqpers120, T'wolves116(OT) MINNESOT A(116) Brewert-5 0-0 3, Lovet5-2313-15 45,Pekovic
16-28 2-334, Rtibio 0-40-0 0, Martin7-12 1-1 16,
oklahomaciir 21 35 28 14 — 98
Pacers106, Celtics 79 BOSTON (79) Green4-9 t-t 0, Bass 2-9 2-26, Sullinger 3-9 0-1 6, Crawford4-110-09, Bradley 6-14 0-013, Faverani0-30-00, Lee5-100-1 11,Wallace 0-03-4 3, PresseyO-t 0-0 0,Httmphries4-6 0-08, Olynyk 3-10 0-0 6,Brooks1-2 3-4 6. Totals 32-84 9-13 79. INDIANA (106) George 9-134-524, West3-72-28, Hibbert 7-0 1-415, G.Hill 3-8 0-0 7,Stephenson5-15 1-2 12, Grange r4-80-012,Scola2-35-69,Watson3-62-2 9, Mahinmi2-20-1 4, Copeland1-40-02, Sloan0-1 0-0 0, Butler1-2 0-02, Johnson1-30-0 Z Totals 41-8315-22106. Boston 17 20 21 21 — 79 Indiana 20 32 28 26 — 106
MbahM aottte 1-50-22, Cunningham0-22-22, Barea4-0 2-412,Shved0-20-0 0,Httmmel1-4 0-0z Totals 45-9620-27116. LA. CLIPPERS (120) Leaders Dudley6-142-315, Griffin 0-20 1O-u 32,Jordan 2-40-04, Paul6-197-819, Crawford9-190-1 Through Suttday'sGames 22, Collison8-121-218, Hollins t-t 0-02, Barnes Scoring 1-2 1-23,Green2-50-05,Jamison0-1 0-00. Totals G FG FT PTS AVG 46-9721-27120. Dttrant,OKC 27 241 228 759 28.1 Minnesota 24 3 0 31 21 10 — 116 Anthony,NYK 26 244 165 690 26.5 L jt. Clippers 24 32 27 23 14 — 120 Love,MIN 27 231 171 700 25.9 James,MIA 26 236 145 648 24.9 C urry, GO L 25 210 102 607 24.3 Raptors104, Thunder 98 Harden,HOU 23 168 168 549 23.9 George,IND 27 218 138 644 23.9 TORONTO(104) R 28 268 111 647 23.1 Ross2-100-0 6, Johnson7-112-2 17, Valanci- Aldridge,PO C ousi n s, SA C 25 207 148 562 2z5 unas 6101-213, Ltwry61677 22,DeR ozan720 3-5 17,Salmons5-123-3 14, Hansbrough 0-33-43, Afflalo,ORL 26 197 115 566 21.8 Westbrook,OKC 24 185 06 519 21.6 Patterson 2-30-05, Novak0-00-00, Vasquez1-65-6 Lillard,POR 28 188 140 603 21.5 T.Totals 36-9124-29104. Irving, CLE 26 204 108 559 21.5 OKLAHOM ACITY(98) 25 192 121 533 21.3 Dttrant5-1612-1224,Ibaka490-09, Perkinsg-1 DeRozan,TOR 0-00, Westbrook8-17 10-0 27, Sefolosha1-22-25, Nowilzki,DAL 26 201 108 549 21.1 Lamb3-80-07, Adams 0-3 0-00, Jackson1-114-4 Griffin, LAC 29 230 141 606 20.9 6, Collison 32 2 26,Jones342-28, Fishert-23 3 Ellis, DAL 27 205 128 558 20.7 6. Totals 28-76 35-36 98. Martin, MIN 26 168 136 525 20.2 Toronto 25 37 13 29 — 104 Thompson, GOL 28 202 61 552 19.7
right things." World slalom champion Mikaela Shiffrin was eighth, improving from her 12th-place finish in slalom at Courchevel on Tuesday. The previous weekend, the 18-year-old had
fast-improving career. "Today was a very great day for me. It was failed to finish another GS in the Swiss resort always my dream to be good in GS," Weirath- of St. Moritz. "I was really tired coming from the U.S. to er said. "I took quite a long time to get there. It feels awesome to have my first win (in GS)." here (Europe). I had to rethink how I was doWeirather leads overall with 595 points ing things, getting my recoveries and stuff," over Lara Gut (568), who finished second, and Shiffrin said. "Before this race I actually got Maria Hoefl-Riesch of Germany (535). some rest and I felt a lot better today, which "It's cool to have the chance to fight for it. means that I just have to ski faster. I'm happy It's the first time I've been so consistent. But
it's only December so I'm not thinking about that," Weirather said. "It's just that I've been
with the top 10."
She thought that she could have done better, however, with more preparation. "I think the first run was a little bit straight-
healthy for some years now and I could improve a little bit every summer. I feel very strong and feel ready for more than just downhill, but also super-G and GS."
er than I thought it would be from looking at it on inspection. It's a lesson for next time,"
Julia Mancuso of the United States did not finish the second run.
straighter so I can go, because some of the other girls hammered it and they were really
After winning a super-G race at St. Moritz Standings
SKIING ROUNDUP
last weekend, the 24-year-old Wierather secured her third career win and 13th podium finish with an overall time of 2 minutes, 24.10 seconds.
she said. "I have to be able to see it's a little fast, and that's where I lost some time."
Defending overall champion Tina Maze, who was second in Saturday's downhill, improved in her second run to finish 11th.
The Slovenian is still looking for her first
"It's a process of many years. I tried to improve my technique, my physical perfor-
win of the season and says she feels mentally tired.
mance. It's like a big puzzle and at the moment it looks like it is working," Wierather
have. Since St. Moritz every day I'm in ski
said. "I used to play tennis until I was 12. I never liked this battle. In skiing it's you against the hill and you see the time. You just fight the hill and not the other girls. That's what I like about ski racing." Weirather was 0.75 seconds clear of Gut,
"Maybe it's the result of the program I
boots, skiing and training and it's tough to be inshape every day and to concentrate 100 percent," she said. "I really need two days' break now, just to relax a little bit. I think it's
who had been second. Italian Federica Brignone was fourth,
pretty tiring when you're going up and down and fighting every day to be positive." The 30-yearold Maze looked setfora com petitive time but almost fell on her first run. Also on Sunday: Hirscher wins, Ligety 3rd in Alta Badia gi-
ahead of th e f ormer World Cup w i nner
ant slalom: ALTA BADIA, Italy — Two-time
who was third after the first run, and 0.95 ahead of Sweden's Maria Pietilae-Holmner,
Hoefl-Riesch. defending overall World Cup champion MarGut has four World Cup wins this season, cel Hirscher won the challenging giant slaand five podiums, but had failed to finish the lom on the Gran Risa course with two solid last two GS races. runs, while favorite Ted Ligety finished third "It's always fun to be on the podium and at the site of one of his most memorable victo make points," the 22-year-old said. "But I tories. Hirscher, an Austrian, clocked a twowas skiing good even in Beaver Creek and St. run combined time of 2 minutes, 37.45 secMoritz before going off course." onds for his second consecutive GS win after Pietilae-Holmner, the GS runner-up at the a victory in Val d'Isere, France, last weekend. 2007 worlds, secured her first World Cup po- Alexis Pinturault of France finished second, dium in GS. 0.35 seconds behind, and Ligety, the Ameri"It's a p erfect Christmas present," the can who won by a massive margin last year, 27-year-old said. "I had two seasons with both was 0.41 back. Another American, Tim Jitlknee injury and shoulder injury. I'm back off, finished fifth to match his career best without injury so I can put the energy in the result.
B4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
OLYMPIC MEN'5 HOCKEY
Teammatesexpectc emistry, t istime inre, w itean LIe By Pat Borzi
point, saw Parise cut to the net from the top of the right circle. Instead of shooting, Suter slid
New Yorh Times News Service
ST. PAUL, Minn. — No one needed introductions in July when the five players who make up the leadership group for the U.S. Olympic men's hockey team met with the team's coaches and executives at a hotel near Minneapolis-St.
the puck across the ice to forward Jason Pom-
inville, who had a better angle to find Parise. Pominville's shot dinged off forward Dany Heatley, and an opportunistic Parise popped in the rebound. "I think their playing together so much will help," said Brown, the Los Angeles Kings' captain. "You talk about Suter and Parise being
s. '0
Paul International Airport, and later for dinner at an Italian restaurant. All five — David Backes, Dustin Brown, Ryan Callahan, Zach Parise
and Ryan Suter — played on the silver-medal U.S. team at the Vancouver Games in 2010, and
teammates, that just brings more comfortabili-
ty to the room, when you've got groups of guys thathave played together.You neverknow how
in various combinations at other international tournaments.
they put the team together, but I think Suter and
But one thing is new for the Sochi Games:
Parise are absolute locks." Backes, the St. Louis Blues' captain, added: "They'resome ofthe bestplayersin the league at their positions. If they're playing together, we'll be a lot better because of it."
Parise and Suter are now teammates on the Minnesota Wild.
Since Parise and Suter signed their block-
7
buster 13-year, $98 million free-agent contracts in July2012, coach Mike Yeo teamed themin ev-
The U.S. team will be named at the Winter
ery imaginable configuration — even strength, first-unit power play, even killing penalties.
Classic on Jan. 1. No player from the leadership group is expected to be cut from the ros-
g@m ~
That could benefit the U.S. team in Russia.
ter, though Callahan is expected to be out of
On a conference call last week, U.S. Olympic general manager David Poile said familiarity
' '~~ ~
the New York Rangers' lineup for a few more weeks with a sprained knee. Poile said the
sr a owwlltgw
team's captain would probably come from that
would determine certain line combinations,
defense pairings and special-teams units. Poile cited the Pittsburgh Penguins' defense partners Brooks Orpik and Paul Martin as an example
Jim Mone /The Associated Press
Jay LaPrete/ The Associated Press
The experience of playing together will help Minnesota Wild players Ryan Suter, left, and Zach Parise lead the United States as it prepares for the Winter Olympics in February in Sochi, Russia.
of such a tandem, presuming Martin returns from a broken tibia next month as expected
and Orpik recovers from a concussion. "That type of chemistry is the type of thing we're looking for," Poile said. And that is exactly what Parise and Suter say theycanprovide. "There will probably be a handful of guys who are there with other teammates as well, but I think we'll be playing a lot together in different situations, power play, penalty killing," said Parise, a left wing. "We'll have that familiarity on the ice, knowing where the other guy
there with Zach. He works so hard. You get a
"We played together on a few other teams,"
lot of chances on the ice. I think it will benefit us for sure — special teams, all over the ice, and
Suter said. "We'vebeen lucky enough to win
the U.S. under-18 team win the country's first
ing where Parise likes the puck around the net
togetheron some other teams. Every time you off the ice, too. Just being a little more fannliar get to play on the same team with someone, the with someone definitely helps." more you do it, the more familiar you get." In 2002, Parise, who grew up in Minneapolis, Suter leads the National Hockey League in and Suter, who is from Madison, Wis., helped time on ice, as he did last season, and his sensgold medal in the age group, at the world cham- frequently pays off. Suter assisted on eight of pionships. They went on to play two seasons Parise's 18 goals last season, and he has assistwith the U.S. national junior team, winning the
ed on nine of 15 this season.
group, with the other four being alternate captains. The United States did it that way before Vancouver,a team captained by Jamie Langen-
brunner of the New Jersey Devils, with Parise and Suter among the alternates. "Even outside us five, there will probably
be other guys that either wear the C or the A during their season, so I don't think there's going to be any shortage of leaders," Parise said. "Us, we played the last time, we had success the last time," he added. "It's guys who play the game the right way, pretty coachable guys. In the short term, the quicker you get your team playingthe same way, the more successyou're going to have." For the two who know each other best, the
gold medal at the 2004 junior world championThe familiarity showed in the second period transition to red, white and blue should be ships. Suter became a senior national team reg- of a recent 4-3 victory over the Chicago Black- seamless. Suter, a defenseman, added: "I love being out ular in 2006-07, and Parise the next season. hawks. On a power play, Suter, at the right As Suter said: "It can't hurt."
likes to go. From that aspect, it might help us a little bit."
Cutting Continued from B1 Alongside his 16 teammates
ing difficult. "It's like having the ice Spelman College, a historically black Division III women's hockey team practicing on college in Atlanta, dropped in- slush," Coleman said. trimming seven sports in 2014.
dealing with the ugly fallout from former coach Mike Rice's bumpy tenure. The
gram, which moved from the Mid-American C onference back to the Big East (the remnants of which are now called
creased costof travel. The Finding a landing spot will be AAC now spreads from Con- difficult. The Owls begin their necticut to Texas. It is not just final season of competition on the football team making Jan. 17, 2014. "Obviously an opportunithose trips. Most of the 15 other sports that will stick around ty has been taken away from need to play in Houston, Mem- us," he said. "We're trying not phis and Florida too. to think about it too much, if Clark maintains that even that makes sense. We can only with mediocre attendance control what we can control. and even more miserable re- This sport is really who we sults, football prevents the are." athletic department from beOr, as of July 1, 2014, who ing subsidized entirely by the they were.
the American Athletic Con-
university. D eputy
women's basketball team, a
on the men's gymnastics team, tercollegiate athletics entirely With no plans or money to national power at times under sophomore Evan Eigner sat in this year in favor of a health build a state-of-the-art field C. Vivian Stringer, has seen stunned silence. and fitness program designed and a travel budget stretched attendancedrop by more than "When I heard the news,"
to benefit all 2,100 students.
to the limit, the school felt it
Eigner said, "I kind of went
Some schools are expanding would be easier cut field hock— Duke announced recent- ey entirely. Coleman said sevnumb a little bit." Temple's announcement ly its plan to add softball in eralfield hockey players are that it is going from 24 sports 2018. But the Blue Devils are a in the process of transferring, deep-pocketed exception. to 17 next fall, a move that one of the reasons why Robert will eventually save about While athletic departments Morris announced the deci$3-3.5 million a year, was just at the Division I level are not sion early. the latest in a growing line of going anywhere, schools that Coleman pledges to invest colleges and universities that opt to downsize are faced with the estimated $1 million-plus are reshaping overextended thorny questions. The biggest the school will save when the athletic programs by shut- is the notion that athletes in students for the six eliminattering smaller sports to help one sport are more valuable to ed sports are off the books to make those that remainthe school — and vice versabeefing up the recruiting and particularly those designed than athletes in another. travel budgets for the remain"It's a football thing and ing sports, including a men's to bring in revenue — more competitive. chasing the dollars," said basketball program that upset To be honest, Eigner still is Turoff, who has led Temple mighty Kentucky in the Nanot sure what happened. He men's gymnastics to 18 East- tional Invitation Tournament understood the athletic de- ern Intercollegiate Gymnas- last spring. The victory, compartment was in a tight spot tics League titles. "But there's plete with a storming of the financially. He knewthere had nowhere in the mission state- court at the final buzzer, gave been talk about changes and ment of the athletic depart- the school the kind of splashy the threat of cuts. It was all ment that its goal is to raise public-relations boost Olympic just white noise until suddenly, money. sports cannot provide. "It's to give opportunity to it became all too real. It is that way across the He heard the part where student athletes." board in college athletics, Clark said the school would Robert Morris athletic di- where football and men's bashonor all of the scholarships rector Craig Coleman is not ketball are typically the enfor the affected student ath- quiteso sure thatis a fair as- gines that drive the budget. letes until they graduated. He sessment. Like Clark at Tem- Yet even with television monheard the part where Clark ple and Maryland athletic di- ey pouringinto power confersaid the school would do what rector Kevin Anderson, Cole- ences,the price ofkeeping up it could to find new athletic m an stressed the school' sdeci- with the big boys is steep. sion-making is designed to do In 2012, the cost of operating homes for those wishing to transfer. a better job of providing a level a Division I football program Eigner just did not hear playing field for the sports it rose 10.8 percent, according what he would consider a sen-
sible argument for cutting a program that takes up a small
does offer.
The private school located 15 minutes west of Pittsburgh fraction of the athletic depart- is thriving. Enrollment is skyment budget yet nets confer- rocketing so quickly that the ence championships. He grew university bought a Holiday up wanting to compete at Tem-
percent. The declining profit margin — if the program is profitable at all — combined with the shifting conference Inn located just off campus affiliation landscape is putting some schools in a bind. and turned it into a dorm. It was not always that way. Rob- But with belt-tightening steps ert Morris added six sports on college campuses becoming more widespread even as between 2004 and 2006, in part to help make the transfor- tuition levels jump at an ex-
is not just the schools in power conferenceseither.Robert Morris, which plays in the Northeastern Conference, is
one of the few Division I pro-
dard facilities make schedul-
a t h letic
ference), averaged just 22,473 director Pat Craft said the athfans this year at cavernous letic department was "limping along" on a $44 million budLincoln Financial Field, an NFL stadium that houses the get spread across 24 sports. Philadelphia Eagles. And with Going down to 17 will leave the AAC no longer guaran- Temple in line with most other teed a spot in one of college AAC schools. football's marquee bowls Not that it provides much next season (and the $17 mil- solacetoEigner. Sure,he could lion payout that comes with explore a transfer. But when it), lean times could get even Temple is gone there will be leaner. only 16 Division I men's gymA major factor is the innastics programs remaining.
•
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52,454 that came with a $102
grams in the country that does million expansion completed not practice or play on an ar- in2009. tificial surface. The substan-
Things are even more dire at Temple. The football pro-
to the NCAA. At th e same time, revenue rose only 4.6
ple, where his stepfather Fred Turoff has been coach since 1976. He grew up wanting to walk out of his graduation ceremony with a degree in hand and four years of college gym- mation from commuter school ponential rate, athletic departnastics under his belt. into a destination. While Cole- ments are no longer immune. Now he may get one or the man allows that the strategy Rutgers was ahead of the other, but not both. worked, it also stretched the curve when it dropped six "I wouldn't want to go any- department thin. sports in 2007, most to help "For years, the emphasis offset a universitywide $80.7 where else but Temple," Eigner said. "Gymnastics is a big part was on growing enrollment million shortfall. The cuts had of my life. Competing colle- and adding sports and not little long-term effect on the giately is a big goal of mine. necessarily having funding health of the athletic departFor our team, gymnastics is to make those sports com- ment. Rutgers athletics spent really a part of our identities. If petitive," Coleman said. "It $ 28.7 million more than i t you take away the opportuni- was about quantity and not made in 2011; the school took ty,you'reaffectingwho we are quality." money from its general fund as individuals." The Colonials spent less and student fees to cover the A growing number of whom money per s t udent athlete rest. Meanwhile, the results on are finding themselves forced than any other program in the to choose between staying NEC. While there was enough the field have been middling in school or competing else- money to field 23 teams, there at best. The Scarlet Knights where after their programs was not enough in the school's have gone a respectable 53-36 are dissolved to help other $13 million athletic budget with six bowl appearances in sports deal with geographi- to give each sport what the football since 2007, and attencally confounding — if more school feels is necessary to be- dance at High Point Solutions Stadium has averaged more lucrative — conference align- come a contender. ments, increased travel budThe field hockey program, than 45,000 — better than it gets and coach salaries. one the Colonials are cutting, was 15 years ago but still short Rutgers did it in 2007. Mary- went 11-8 this past fall but is of the new seating capacity of land followed suit in 2012. It
half since 2007-08.
The men's basketball team
continues to struggle and is
•
•
•
•
•
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MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B5
emar a emomen a mai ne a n es ic • The curtain is about to draw at the iconic stadium in San Francisco
star player for the other team
was always going to take one day off during a series at the Stick."
Several former 49ers players marveled at the perpetually damp state of the field.
By Ron Kroichick
Drainage imp r ovements mostly alleviated that problem
San Francisco Chronicle
in recent years, but onetime
running back Roger Craig described numerous games in which footing was ridiculously difficult.
SAN FRANCISCO — For
a drab, bone-chilling, windswept punching bag of a stadium, Candlestick Park enjoyed one hell of a good run. The Stick hosted two World Series, two Major League Baseball All-Star Games and eight NFC C h ampionship
Clark embraced the condi-
tions, suggesting they slowed down all the players who were faster than him.
One of Clark's teammates, offensive lineman Randy
Games. Joe Montana and Jer-
ry Rice spun their magic on the soggy field alongside the bay, as did Willie Mays and Willie McCovey. The Beatles, Rolling Stones and Pope John Paul II stopped by. And not even one massive earthquake could bring the old lady down. The San Francisco 49ers will play their final regu-
C ross, often did some i m -
promptu scouting on his way to the Stick. Even if the 49ers' website says the field is more
than 13 feet above sea level (a fact confirmed by Recreation and Park Department offi-
cials), Cross always thought the playing surface actually /'~r
was below the level of the bay.
'gr.'
"If you drove up and the tide was above the rocks," he said, "you knew it was going to be a swamp, even if it was 75 degrees and sunny."
lar-season game at Candle-
stick tonight against the Atlanta Falcons. That will bring
to a close — barring an unEric Risherg /The Associated Press expectedplayoffgame next Crews clean a seating area below the press box at Candlestick Park in San Francisco last week. The San Francisco 49ers are about to Not al l o f Ca n d lestick's month — nearly54 years of play their last NFL game at the stadium they have called home since1971. Candlestick Park was also the home of the San Francisco quirkiness is this visible. Brent swirling hot-dog wrappers, Giants from 1960-1999. Jones, a tight end for the 49ers frigid summer nights and infrom 1987 to 1997, once made delible sports memories. an unexpected discovery as he "One time, a guy got injured on the play before running toward the infield, walked down the long, narrow Former 49ers wide receiv- the 49ers and the Pittsburgh er Dwight Clark, who carved Steelers in December 2011. only to see the ball suddenly tunnel from the locker room I punted. He wasn't on the field very long, but out the most enduring image Call them Candlestick-escarry over his head and over to the field three or four hours the wind had totally switched by the time we when he soared skyward to que moments. the fence for an unlikely home before a game. make The Catch in January Still, the stadium's legacy lined up. So in a matter of a minute or two, run. Jones came upon a small, 1982, acknowledged his mixed will revolve around its infa- it went from being at my back really hard to Another t i me , S i m mons dark room w ith a ssorted feelings about the Stick. mously unpleasant climate. said, heavy fog rolled into pieces of junk. He found an "It was a dump, but it was L on Simmons, the Hall o f being in my face really hard." C andlestick during a G i - ancient-looking hot-chocolate our dump," Clark said. "We Fame broadcaster for the Gi— San Francisco 49ers punter Andy Lee ants-Dodgers game. McCovey maker, took it back to the lockhad a lot of history there, and ants and 49ers, recalled how hit a fly ball to center field, but er room and plugged it ina lot of success." the Stick's television and radio the ball disappeared into the and it worked. C andlestick w a s hom e booths were exposed to the in the late 1950s. Lee said. "He wasn't on the fog. By the time Duke Snider The next week, Jones startfor the baseball Giants from elements in the inaugural seaOne day, then-Giants vice field very long, but the wind eventually found it, McCovey ed a tradition of mixing hot 1960 through 1999 and for the son of 1960. president Chub Feeney vis- had totally switched by the had lumbered into third base chocolateand coff ee to load 49ers from 1971 through this Simmons and his partner, ited the site for the first time time we lined up. So in a mat- with a triple. up on caffeine before games. season. (The Oakland Raid- Russ Hodges, began wearing in the afternoon. He asked a ter of a minute or two, it went If the wind and cold aggra- Sometimes, he p oured h ot ersalsoplayed there for part parkas they had needed for construction worker if it was from being at my back really vated the Giants, it truly tor- chocolate over his hands to of the 1960 season and all of the Winter Olympics that year always so windy, and the man hard to being in my face really mented opposing players. make them sticky. Jones con"It was harder to play the vinced his teammates that the 1961.) And it was a true Bay in Squaw Valley. Hodges and replied, according to a Chroni- hard." Area original, known as much Simmons soon persuaded the cle story, "Oh, no, sir. The wind Many National League game there than at any oth- machine broughtgood luck for its rampant quirkiness as Giants to enclose their booth, only blows between 1 and 5 in outfiel ders shared Lee's frus- er b allpark," s ai d G i a nts because "Mays and McCovey the stage for feats of athletic but the visiting broadcasters the afternoon." tration. Simmons, now 90, re- broadcaster Duane Kuiper, used this back in the day." That's the essence of Cangrandeur. were not as fortunate (at least Perfect for a ballgame. called McCovey hitting a high who played for the team for Among those feats: Juan for a while). Candlestick was the f i rst pop fly to shallow right field four seasons (1982-85). "But dlestick, in many ways — a bit "They were so grateful we stadium to be built entirely of against the ol d M i l waukee we always thought we had offbeat and bursting with San Marichal and Warren Spahn had their epic 16-inning pitch- gave them parkas in the sum- reinforced concrete. The ini- Braves. Hank Aaron started an advantage, because the Francisco sports history. ing duel in 1963, Joe Morgan mertime," Simmons said. tial excitement reached the launched his Dodgers-spoiling Longtime Dodgers first point where Vice President home run in 1982, and Will baseman Steve Garvey, like Richard Nixon, in San FranClark lined his pennant-win- many visiting baseball play- cisco to throw out the first ning single in 1989. Dwight ers, dreaded the long walk pitch at Opening Day on April Clark sparked a series of dra- from Candlestick's t hird- 12, 1960, declared it w ould matic postseason catches, base dugout to the visiting be "one of the most beautiful r with Terrell Owens (1999) and clubhouse along the right- baseball parks of all time." Vernon Davis (2012) offering field line. Garvey sometimes At least it was one of the worthy encores. dodged more than insults. most interesting parks. Soon "I remember walking back after Candlestick opened, the As for quirkiness, Giants ~ ipitcher Stu Miller provided the to the tunnel after a one-run city commissioned a study first clue during the 1961 All- loss, and something whizzed of the wind problem and The Star Game, barely more than a by me," Garvey once said. "It Chronicle ran columns deyear after the ballpark opened. was a gin bottle. I picked it up bating the wisdom of putting Miller was not blown off the and saw it was half full. Right a dome atop the stadium. It mound, as legend has it, but a then, you knew you were at was expanded in 1971, to acfierce gust of wind knocked Candlestick. commodate the 4 9ers, but "In New York, they would that only made the wind more him off balance, caused him to balk and cemented his place in have kept it full for more im- unpredictable. Candlestick lore. pact. At Candlestick, they Andy Lee understands all There was more weirdness had to drink half of it to keep too well. Lee, the 49ers' puntto come, from the Giants us- warm." er the past 10 seasons, meticing helicopters to dry the field Even the early days of Can- ulously studies weather patduring the 1962 World Series, dlestick Park included strange terns in advance of games. He to much-maligned shortstop twists. Some people wanted routinely gauges Candlestick's Johnnie LeMaster w earing the new stadium built down- e ver-shifting wind o n t h e a jersey with "Boo" stripped town, south of Market Street. sideline before a punt — and acrossthe back instead of his The contractor, Charles Har- often sees it abruptly change name (1979), to two power fail- ney, feuded with city officials direction. "One time, a guy got injured ures interrupting a Monday — they traded lawsuits at one night football game between point — during construction on the play before I punted," e -
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B6 TH E BULLETIN • MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013
NFL SCOREBOARD Sunday'sGames
East
Patriots 41, Ravens 7
T Pct P F P A y-New England 11 4 0 .733 410 318 Miami 8 7 0 .533 310 315 N.Y.Jets 7 8 0 .467 270 380 Buffalo 6 9 0 .400 319 354 W L
N ewEngland Baltimore
14 3 3 2 1 — 41 B0B 7 — 7 First Quarter NE — Blount1run (Gostkowskikick), 9:39. NE — Vereen 4passfromBrady (Gostkowski kick),
4:51.
NE —FG Gostkowski42,7:15.
FourlhGuarler Bal — Flacco1run (Tuckerkick), 9:21. NE — Blount7run(Gostkowski kick), 2:05. NE— Cha.Jones fumble recovery in end zone (Gostkowski kick), 1:59. NE — TWilson 74 interception return(Gostkowski kick),:40. A—71,433.
NE
T 0 9 0 11 0 13 0
T ennessee 6 J acksonville 4 Houston 2
6 - 2 -0 1-6-0 4-7-0 4 - 4-0 2-5-0 5-6-0
NFC Div 3-1-0 3-2-0 1-3-0 2-3-0
3-1-0 2-3-0 1-3-0 3-2-0
Pct P F P A .667 361 326 .400 346 371 .267 237 419 .133 266 412
Ho me Away AFC 5 - 2-0 5-3-0 8-3-0 2 - 5-0 4-4-0 5-6-0 1 - 7-0 3-4-0 4-7-0 1 - 7-0 1-6-0 2-9-0
NFC Div 2-2-0 5-0-0 1-3-0 1-4-0 0-4-0 3-2-0 0-4-0 1-4-0
North L 5 7 8 11
T
W L y Denver 1 2 3 x-Kansas City 11 4 S an Diego 8 7 O akland 4 11
T 0 0 0 0
W y-Cincinnati 10 Baltimore 8 Pittsburgh 7 Cleveland 4
0 0 0 0
Pct P F P A
.667 .533 .467 .267
396 303 359 301
288 318 363 386
Ho me Away AFC 7 - 0 -0 6 - 2-0 4 - 3-0 3 - 5-0
3-5-0 2-5-0 3-5-0 1-6-0
7-4-0 6-5-0 5-6-0 3-8-0
NFC Div 3-1-0 2-3-0 2-2-0 3-2-0 2-2-0 3-2-0 1-3-0 2-3-0
West
Bal
21 19 3 00 358 34-142 28-121 1 58 237 1 -11 4 - 36 1 -22 2 - 61 3-75 0-0 14-26-0 23-42-3 2 -14 4 - 25 7-47.7 4-53.0 0-0 1-1 7 -58 9 - 83 31:58 28:02
Ho me Away AFC 7 - 0-0 4-4-0 8-3-0 4 - 3-0 4-4-0 7-4-0
South W L y-Indianapolis 10 5
SecondGuarler NE— FGGostkowski45,14:55. ThirdGuarler
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
Washington
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Summaries
P c t PF PA .8 0 0 572 385 . 7 33 406 278 .53 3 369 324 .2 6 7 308 419
H ome Away AFC NFC Div 7 - 1-0 5 -2-0 8 -3-0 4-0-0 4-1-0 5 - 3-0 6 -1-0 7 -4-0 4-0-0 2-3-0 4 - 3-0 4 - 4-0 5 - 6-0 3-1-0 3-2-0 3 - 4-0 1 -7-0 4 -7-0 0-4-0 1-4-0
3 3 14 3 — 23 First Guarler Oal—Murray3run(Baileykick),12;49. Was —FGForbath 36,4:15. Second Quarler Was —FGForbath22,7:36. Oal—Bryant 14 passfromRomo (Bailey kick), 4:37. Third Quarter Was —Garcon8passfromCousins (Forbath kick), 9:09. Was —Morris 4run(Forbathkick), 3:41. FourlhQuarler Was —FGForbath47,14:56. Oal—FGBailey25, 6:09. Dal — Murray 10 passfrom Romo (Bailey kick),
Cin — Green-Ellis 4 run(Nugent kick),13:12. Min — Wright 36passfrom Cassel (Walsh kick),
Cin — Green 29 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick),
5-85, Marshall 4-36, Forte 4-25, E.Bennett2-12, Weems1-8.Philadelphia:McCoy6-29,Jackson 4-29, Cele3-58, k Cooper3-53, Avant3-26, Ertz1-27, Polk1-8.
SecondQuarler Cin — Rey 25 interception return (Nugentkick),
Cardinals17, Seahawks10
Cin — Gresham16 passfromDalton(Nugent kick),
Arizona Seattle
10:02. :57.
10:02.
2:22.
Third Quarler
Cin — Sanu 7 passfrom Dalton(Nugent kick), Cin — Green 2 passfrom Dalton (Nugent kick),
3:19.
Min — Patterson35run(Walsh kick),1:34. A—61,555.
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards
Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
D al W a s
16 17 3 09 29 7 23-95 28-100 2 14 19 7 1 -62 3 - 35 3-51 5-107 1-0 1-6 17-27-1 21-36-1 2-12 0-0 3-51.7 3-43.7 1-1 0-0 6 -42 8 - 44 26:13 33 :47
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns InterceptionsRet. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-Yards Lost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards Time ofPossession
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
11 — 17
0 3 g
7 — 10
SecondQuarler
Sea—FGHauschka27,13:42. Ari —FGFeely 39, 2:15. ThirdGuarler Ari —FGFeely46,:27. FourthQuarter An — FGFeely26,10:39.
10:35.
1:08. A—80,411.
0 3 3
Sea —Miller11 passfromWilson(Hauschkakick),
M in
C i n 7:26. Ari —Floyd31passfromPalmer (Mendenhagrun), 24 2:13. 429 A—68,266.
10 2 09 17-115 37-81 94 34 8 1 -22 2 - 27 6 -158 1-3 0 -0 3 - 38 13-27-3 27-38-0 4 -20 2 - 18 5-39.4 4-40.0 1-1 1-1 5 -40 6 - 55 20:28 39:32
First downs TotalNetYards Rushes-yards Passing PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions Ret. Comp-Att-Int Sacked-YardsLost Punts Fumbles-Lost Penalties-Yards
A ri
Sea
16 10 3 07 192 43-139 20-103 168 89 2 -6 3 - 47 2-46 5-125 1 -0 4 - 48 13-25-4 11-27-1 2 -10 4 - 19 5-48.8 9-37.2 0-0 2-1 7-46 9- 1 02 37;24 22:36
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING —Minnesota: Patterson 3-54, PeterRUSHING —Dallas: Murray22-96,Romo1-(mison11-45, Cassel3-16.Cincinnati: Green-Ellis12nus1).Washington:Morris 24-88, Cousins2-10, 24, Bernard13-20,Sanu3-12, Dalton1-10,M.Jones Timeof Possession East Morgan 1-4, Hel u Jr. 1-(mi n us 2). 2-6, Peerman 2-6, J.Johnson4-3. H ome Away N FC AFC W L T Pc t PF PA Div INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS PASSING —Dallas: Ro mo17-27-1-226. WashPASSING —Minnesota: Cassel 13-27-3-114. Philadelphia 9 6 0 .6 0 0 418 360 4 - 4-0 5 -2-0 8-3-0 1-3-0 3-2-0 ington: RUSHING —Arizona: Egington15-64, MendenCousi n s 21-36-1-197. Cincinnati:Dalton27-38-0-366. Dallas 8 7 0 .5 3 3 417 408 5 - 2-0 3 -5-0 7-4-0 1-3-0 5-0-0 hall 21-63, S. Taylor 2-15, Palmer5-(minus 3). SeatRECEIVING —Dallas: Williams 4-84, Bryant RECEIVING —Minnesota: Jennings 4-27, tle:Lynch18-71, INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS N.Y.Giants 6 9 0 .4 0 0 274 377 3 - 4-0 3 -5-0 5-6-0 1-3-0 2-3-0 4-73,Murray3-15,Beasley2-29, Witen2-13, Austin Wilson2-32. RUSHING —New England: Blount 16-76, Rid- Washington 3 12 0 . 2 00 328 458 2 - 6-0 1 - 6-0 1-10-0 2-2-0 0-5-0 Patterson3-8, Effison2-22, Wright1-36, Banyard PASSING —Arizona: Palmer13-25-4-178. Se1-8, Clutts1-4.Washington:Garcon11-144, Moss 1-11, Simpson 1-8, Peterson 1-2.Cincinnati: attle: ley15-54,Vereen2-6r Bolden1-6. Baltimore:Rice Wilson11-27-1-108. 2-13, Paulsen 2-7, HeluJr. 2-5, Young2-5, A.Robin11-40,Taylor3-39, Pierce10-31, Scott2-11, Flacco Green 7-97,M.Jones6-85,Sanu 4-35,Gresham South RECEIVING —Arizona: Fitzgerald 3-18, Dray son 1-14,Davis1-9. 2-0. 3-49, Hawkin3-37, s Bernard2-47,Green-Egis1-10, 3-16, Roberts2-25,Ellington2-8,Golden1-63, Floyd W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC D i v PASSING —NewEngland: Brady14-26-0-172. Eifert1-6. 1-31, Bagard 1-17. Seattle: Kearse3-38, Tate2-34, x-Carolina 1 1 4 0 .7 3 3 345 221 7 - 1-0 4 - 3-0 8-3-0 3-1-0 4-1-0 Baltimore: Flacco22-38-2-260, Taylor1-4-1-2. Lynch 2-5, Miller 1-11, Lockette1-9, Baldwin1-8, 2-2-0 4-1-0 Cardinals23, Bnccaneers13 RECEIVING —New England: Edelman NewOrleans 1 0 5 0 . 6 67 372 287 7 - 0-0 3 -5-0 8-3-0 Willson1-3. Eagles 54, Bears11 Atlanta 4 10 0 . 2 86 309 388 3 - 4-0 1 -6-0 3-7-0 1-3-0 1-4-0 7-77, Amendola2-45, Bolden2-16, Dobson1-21, 7 3 3 0 — 13 4 11 0 . 2 67 271 347 3 - 5-0 1 -6-0 2-9-0 2-2-0 1-4-0 TampaBay Hoomana wanui 1-9, Vereen 1-4. Baltimore: TampaBay St. Louis B 14 3 6 — 2 3 Chicago g 3 8 g — 1 1 Titans 20, Jagnars16 M.Brown4-51, Oickson4-44, Pitta 4-34, TSmith First Guarler P hiladelphia 21 3 9 2 1 — 54 North 3-69, Pierce 3-27,Rice2-23, J.Jones1-11, Scott1-2, TB — Rainey1run (Lindell kick),631. First Quarter Tennessee 3 3 7 7 — 20 Leach 1-1. W L T P c t PF PA H ome Away N FC AFC D i v Second Quarler Phi — Cooper 5 passfromFoles (Henery kick), Jacksonville 7 6 3 g — 16 Chicago 8 7 0 .5 3 3 417 445 5 - 2-0 3 -5-0 4-7-0 4-0-0 2-3-0 StL — Stacy1 run(Zuerlein kick),13:48. 9:54. First Quarter GreenBay 7 7 1 .5 0 0 384 400 4 - 3-1 3 - 4-0 5-5-1 2-2-0 2-2-1 StL — Bailey 27run(Zuerlein kick), 12:04. Phi — M c C o y1 run (H enery ki c k), 7:44. Steelers 38, Packers31 Ten—FGBironas45,9:05. Detroit 7 8 0 .4 6 7 382 362 4 - 4-0 3 -4-0 6-5-0 1-3-0 4-1-0 TB — FGLindell 35,;00. Phi — Celek 10passfrom Foles (Henery kick), Jax — M.Lewis 4 passfrom Henne (Scobee kick), Minnesota 4 10 1 . 3 00 377 467 4- 3 -0 0- 7 -1 3-7-1 1-3-0 1-3-1 ThirdQuarter Pittsburgh 7 3 21 7 — 3 8 1:27. 4:45. TB — FG Lindel l 32, 9:23. GreenBay 7 7 7 10 — 3 1 SecondQuarler SecondQuarler West StL — FGZuerlein 54,5:08. Phi — FGHenery49,1:07. First Quarter Ten—FGBironas52, 1:55. FourthGuarter H ome Away N FC AFC Div GB — Boykin 5 passfromFlynn (Crosbykick), W L T Pc t PF PA Chi — FGGould50,:00. Jax — B row n 7 pass from Henne (kick blocked), StL — FGZuerlein 25,11:15. x -Seattle 1 2 3 0 .80 0 390 222 6 - 1-0 6 -2-0 9 -2-0 3-1-0 3-2-0 4;02. Third Guarter :43. StL — FGZuerlein 48,3:15. Pit — Sanders1 passfrom Roethlisberger (Suish- San Francisco 10 4 0 . 7 14 349 228 5 - 2-0 5 -2-0 7 -3-0 3-1-0 4-1-0 Phi — Thornton safety, 9:52. ThirdQuarler A—54,423. A rizona 10 5 0 .66 7 359 301 6 - 1-0 4 -4-0 6 -5-0 4-0-0 2-3-0 Phi — McCoy1 run(Henerykick), 7:11. am kick),:01. Jax — FGScobee36,9:22. St. Louis 7 8 0 .46 7 339 337 5 - 3-0 2 - 5-0 4 - 7-0 3-1-0 1-4-0 SecondGuarler C hi — M ar shal l 6 pass f r om C u tl e r (E. B enn et t pa ss Ten — G r ee ne1 run(Bironaskick), 4:01. TB StL x-clinched playofspot GB — Lacy14 run(Crosby kick),1:53. from Cutler),:00. FourthQuarter First downs 1 4 1 8 y-clinched di v i s i o n Pit — FGSuisham31,:02. FourlhGuarler Ten—N.Washington 30 passfromFitzpatrick (BiTotalNetYards 1 70 27 7 Today'sGame Third Quarler JacksonvileatIndianapolis,10a.m. Phi — Polk10 run(Henerykick),11:19. ronaskick),14:25. Rushes-yards 23-59 39-129 Pit — Roethlisberger13run(Suishamkick), 11:51. AtlantaatSanFrancisco,5:40 p.m. N.Y.JetsatMiami,10a.m. Phi — Bo yki n 54 i n tercepti o n return (He nery ki c k), A—60,559. Passing 1 11 1 4 8 8:00. GB —Lacy2 run(Crosbykick),519. Sunday,Dec.29 DenveratOakland,1:25 p.m. Punt Returns 0 -0 3 3 4 Pit — Spaeth11 passfrom Roethlisberger (Suish- GreenBayat Chicago,10 am. KansasCity atSanDiego,1:25p.m. Phi — Brown65run(Henerykick), 6:14. T en J a x KickoffReturns 0-0 0-0 am kick),1:55. Houstonatlennessee,10a.m. St. LouisatSeaitle,1:25 p.m. A—69,144. First downs 22 15 0-0 0-0 Interceptions Ret. Pit — C.Agen40interceptionreturn (Suishamkick), DetroitatMinnesota,10a.m. SanFranciscoatArizona,1:25p.m. TotalNetYards 3 46 289 Comp-Att-Int 16-26-0 16-20-0 1:37. CarolinaatAtlanta,10a.m. Tampa Bayat NewOrleans,1:25p.m. C hi P h i 44-182 21-63 Rushes-yards 7 -47 1 - 10 Sacked-YardsLost FourlhQuarler Clevelandat Pittsburgh,10a.m. BuffaloatNewEngland,1:25p.m. First downs 18 28 Passing 1 64 226 4-46.5 2-44.0 Punts GB — FGCrosby22,12:04. WashingtonatN.Y.Giants,10a.m. Philadelphiat aDallas,5:30p.m. TotalNetYards 2 57 51 4 PuntReturns 1 +1) 1-4 2-2 2-2 Fumbles-Lost GB — Kuhn1 run(Crosbykick), 7:14. Baltimore atCincinnati,10a.m. 19-61 36-289 KickoffReturns Rushes-yards 0 -0 1 - 43 3 -26 7 - 85 Penalties-Yards Pit — Bell1run (Suishamkick),1:25. Passi n g 1 96 22 5 Interceptions 1-0 1-8 R e t. Time of Po s se ss i o n 25:54 34:06 A—77,999. AH TimesPST 0-0 2-2 PuntReturns Comp-Att-Int 17-26-1 24-34-1 8 -169 3 - 2 1 Sacked-YardsLost KickoffReturns 3 -17 2 - 11 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS Pit GB 0 -0 1 - 5 4 Punts Intercepti o ns R et. 3-46.7 4- 45.5 RUSHING —Tampa Bay: Rainey20-37, Page Comp-Att-Int First downs 21 26 22-39-1 21-25-0 0 -0 0-0 4-26, Jennings3-27, D.Moore3-17, Rivera2-43, kick), 4:28. Fumbl e s-Lost 1-19, Glennon 2-3. SI. Louis:Stacy33-104, Bailey Sacked-Yards TotalNetYards 3 43 37 0 Mastrud1-12, O.McF Lost 5-46 2-5 1 -4 4 - 1 5 adden1-8, Streater1-2. San A—71,761. Penalties-Yards 1-27, Clem ens4-0, Cunningham1-(minus2). Rushes-yards 29-151 30-151 Diego: 6-37.8 2-44.0 Time ofPossession Royal4-54,Gates3-42,Allen3-26,Mathews 35:39 24:21 PASSING — TampaBay:Glennon16-26-0-158. Punts Passing 1 92 2 1 9 3-20, Woodhead 3-1 1-1 Fumbles-Lost 3-16, VBrown2-38, Philips1-5. D en H o u St. Louis:Clemens16-20-0-158. PuntReturns 2 -41 2 - 16 Penal t i e s-Yards 2 -10 2 - 15 First downs 25 14 I N DIVIDUAL S T A TIS TICS RECEIVIN G— Tampa Bay: Jackson 5-98, Time ofPossession KickoffReturns 5-117 6-167 29:40 30:20 TotalNetYards 5 11 24 0 Wright4-27,Owusu2-13, Lorig2-5, Underwood1-7, RUSHING —Tennessee:Greene19-91,C.JohnJets 24, Browns13 InterceptionsRet. 1-40 1-7 Rushes-yards 18-114 26-87 Leonard1-4,Ra son 22-90, Filzpatrick 3-1.Jacksonville: Jonesiney1-4. St. Louis:Bailey3-44,HarComp-Att-Int 17-29-1 21-39-1 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS ng 3 97 15 3 key3-22,Cook2-27,Givens2-24,Pettis2-16,Quick Drew13-45,Robinson1-11,Todman6-6, Henne1-1. 3 7 g 3 — 1 3 Passi Sacked-Yards Lost 1 -5 3 - 1 3 Cleveland RUSHING — Chicago:For te9-29,Bush7-20, Punt Returns 5 -21 5 - 7 0 2-16, Stacy1-5,Kendricks1-4. PASSING —Tennessee: Fitzpatrick 17-26-1N.Y.Jets 0 1B B 14 — 24 Punts 5-35.6 5-41.6 Kickoff Re t u rns 4 -99 1 - 22 Cutler 2-15, McC o w n1-(mi n us 3). Philadelphia: 181.JacksonviHe:Henne24-34-1-237. First Quarter Fumbles-Lost 2-1 1-1 Interceptions Ret. 2-3 0-0 McCoy18-133, Brown9-115, Foles2-17, Jackson RECEIVING — Tennessee: N.Washin gton Cle — FGCundiff 27,6:30. 7 -58 9 - 90 Penalties-Yards 6-117, Walker 4-35, Wright 4-22, Battle 1-4, C. Comp-Att-Int 32-51-0 18-37-2 Bengals42, Vikings14 2-12, Pol2-12, k Smith1-2, Vick2-(minus2). SecondQuarler Timeof Possession 26:40 33:20 S acked-Yards Los t 1 -3 3 - 23 PASSING — C h icago: Cutler 20-35-1-222, Johnson 1-3, Greene 1-0. Jacksonvi l le: Brown Cle—Baker 5 run(Cundiff kick),6:47. 6-48.7 8-44.9 Minnesota 7 g 7 0 — 1 4 McCown2-4-0-20. Philadelphia: Foles21-25- 5-71, M.Lewis4-50,Taylor 4-45,Jones-Drew4-24, NYJ—Nelson 6 passfromSmith (Folk kick), 1:18. Punts INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 0-230. Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0 Cincinnati 14 14 14 0 — 42 Sanders4-20,L.Thomas1-13, Meester1-9, Todm an NYJ—FGFolk21,:00. RUSHING —Pitlsburgh: Bell 26-124,Roethlis8 -67 4 - 57 First Guarler RECEIVING —Chicago: Jeffery 6-76, M.Bennett 1-5. Penalties-Yards FourthQuarter berger 1-13,Dwyer1-7, FJones1-7. GreenBay: 28:53 31:07 NYJ —Nelson 5 pass fromSmith (Folk kick), Time ofPossession Lacy15-84,Starks10-47, Kuhn3-12, Flynn2-8. PASSING —Pitlsburgh: Roethlisberger16-28- 14:14. I N DIVIDUAL ST A T IS TICS Cle—FGCundiff 21,9:40. 1-167, McBriar1-1-0-30.Green Bay: Flynn21RUSHING —Denver: Moreno11-76, Ball 4-32, NYJ—Smith17run(Folk kick), 3:19. 39-1-232. Hillman3-6. Houston: Karim8-30, D.Johnson12A—76,957. RECEIVING—Pittsburgh: A.Brown 6-105, 29, Grimes 5-23, Schaub1-5. Miller3-17,Sanders 2-7,Paulson 1-30, Spaeth1-11, PASSING — Denver: Manning 32-51-0-400. C le N Y J Houston: Cotchery1-9, Dwyer1-7, WJohnson1-6, Bell 1-5. Schaub18-37-2-176. 19 25 GreenBay:J.Jones9-84, Boykin5-54, Nelson3-46, First downs RECEIVING —Denver: Oecker10-131, O.ThomLacy2-6, Starks1-23,Quarless1-19. TotalNetYards 2 83 42 2 as8-123,J.Thomas6-78,Tamme3-22,Moreno2-26, 21-115 39-208 Rushes-yards Caldwel 2-12, l Green1-8. Houslon:Griffin 5-66, A. Passing 1 68 21 4 Johnson 4-63,Martin4-35,D.Johnson2-1,Hopkins Giants 23, Lions20(OT) 2-39 0-0 PuntReturns 1-8, G.Jones1-4, Karim1-(minus1). KickoffReturns 3-92 0-0 N.Y. Giants 310 0 7 3 — 23 Interceptions 0 -0 2 - 44 Ret. Detroit 0 3 9 8 B— 20 Comp-Att-Int 18-40-2 20-37-0 Colts 23, Chiefs 23 First Quarter Sacked-YardsLost 3-10 0-0 NYG —FGJ.Brown41,3:49. Punts 3-49.3 3-46.0 Indianapolis 0 13 10 0 — 23 SecondQuarler 0-0 0-0 Fumbles-Lost KansasCity 7 g 0 0 — 7 Det — FGAkers37,12:38. Penalties-Yards 3 -24 6 - 35 Firsl Quarler NYG—Jernigan20passfrom Manning (J.Brown Timeof Possession 27;17 32:43 KC — Charles 31run(Succopkick),11:05. kick), 2:19. SecondQuarter NYG —FGJ.Brown52,:09. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS Ind — FGVinatieri 46,11:40. Third Guarter RUSHING —Cleveland: Baker 17-64, Gordon Ind — D.Brown33passfromLuck (Vinatieri kick), Det—Bell1run (Akerskick), 9:06. 1-22, Camp bell 2-21,Ogbonnaya1-8. N.y. Jets: 9:23. Det — Fairley safety, 1:01. Ivory 20-109,Powell7-54, Smith 10-48,Kerley1-8, Ind — FGVinatieri 45,1:54. FourlhQuarler Hakim1-(minus11). Third Quarler Det—Riddick 2 run (Fauria passfrom Stafford), PASSING —Cleveland: Campbell18-40-2-178. Ind — D.Brown51run(Vinatieri kick),12:55. 11:50. N.Y. Jets:Smith20-36-0-214,Bush0-1-0-0. Ind — FGVinatieri 30, 2:47. NYG —Hil 38interception return (J.Brownkick), RECEIVING —Cleveland: Gordon6-97, Cooper A—75,396. 4:57. 4-26, Barnidge 2-23, Baker2-12, Tyms2-12, Little Overtime 1-4, Ogbonna ya1-4. N.Y.Jets: Kerley5-70,Nelson Ind KC NYG —FGJ.Brown45, 7:32. 4-33, Powel4-26, l Winslow3-35, Cumberland 2-30, First downs 19 18 A—63,996. Holmes 2-20. TotalNetYards 3 67 28 7 34-135 20-155 Rushes-yards N YG D e t Passing 2 32 13 2 First downs 15 24 Panthers17, Saints13 4 -32 3 - 23 PuntReturns TotalNetYards 2 79 35 5 0-0 5 -140 KickoffReturns 21-41 36-148 N ew Orleans 0 6 B 7 — 13 Rushes-yards 2-1 0-0 Interceptions Ret. 0 7 3 7 — 17 Passing 2 38 2 0 7 Carolina Comp-Att-Int 26-37-0 16-29-2 3 -23 1 50 Second Q u arl e r PuntReturns 1 -9 4 - 21 Sacked-Yards Lost NO — FGS.Graham40,10:49. KickoffReturns 1 -56 4 - 55 4-50.3 5-54.0 Punts 2-36 1-0 NO —FGS.Graham24,7:22. InterceptionsRet. 1-0 5-2 Fumbles-Lost Comp-Att-Int 23-42-1 25-42-2 Car—D.Wiliams 43run(Ganokick),1:45. Penalties-Yards 3 -31 7 - 65 2 -18 2 15 Third Quarler Sacked-Yards Lost Time ofPossession 38:20 21:40 6-46.5 6-45.0 Car—FGGano40,7;21. Punts 2-1 1-1 FourthQuarter Fumbles-Lost INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 5 -30 7 - 60 NO — J.Graham 5 passfrom Brees(S.Graham Penalties-Yards to reach targeted readers with your message, products and offers! RUSHING —Indianapolis: D.Brown 10-79, kick), 6:37. Time ofPossession 29:43 37:45 Richardson16-43,Choice1-8, Luck6-5, Havili1-0. Car—Hixon14passfromNewton(Ganokick),:23. Beginning Friday, February 7th and extending through Sunday, KansasCity:Charles13-106,A.Smith 6-47, Davis A—73,825. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 1-2. RUSHING —N.y. Giants: A.Brown16-40, PasPASSING—Indianapolis: Luck 26-37-0-241. February 23rd, The Bulletin will provide... coe1-2,Cox2-1, Manning2-(minus 2).Detroit: Bell ND C a r Kansas City:A.Smith16-29-2-153. 20-91, Bush 12-34, Ross1-16, Riddick2-8, Stafford First downs 20 10 RECEIVING —Indianapolis: Whalen7-80, HilTotalNetYards 3 65 22 2 ton 5-52, Rogers4-42, Richardson3-15, D.Brown 1-(minus1). 30-126 18-81 PASSING —N.Y. Giants: Manning 23-42-1- Rushes-yards 2-31, Fl e ener 2-8, Doyle1-6, Saunders1-6, Havili Passing 2 39 1 4 1 1-1. KansasCity: Bowe5-46, Charles 5-38, Avery 256. Detroit Staford25-42-2-222. 4 -30 2 - 2 0 3-32, Fasano1-19,McCluster1-11, Gray1-7. RECEIVING —N.y. Giants: Jernigan6-80, My- PuntReturns 1 -21 2 - 41 ers 4-53, Nicks4-52, Randle4-40, A.Brown2-14, KickoffReturns of the Winter Olympics in our Sports section! Ret. 1-4 2-0 MurphyJr. 2-10,Pascoe1-7. Detroit: Bell 10-63, Interceptions Comp-Att-Int 30-45-2 13-22-1 Bills19, Dolphins 0 Fauri a3-43,Johnson3-43,Ogletree2-29,Durham A limited number of high-visibility ad positions will be made 6 -42 4 - 4 0 2-14, Burleson 2-12,Bush2-10, Dickerson1-8. Sacked-YardsLost 7-48.6 8-50.8 Miami 0 g 0 0 — g Punts available adjacent to the coverage, first come first served! 0-0 0-0 3 7 0 9 — 19 Fumbles-Lost Buffalo Chargers26, Raiders13 4 -40 3 - 26 Penalties-Yards First Guarler +ju Buf — FGCarpenter 45,6:42. Timeof Possession 38:48 21:12 Oakland B 1B B 3 — 13 Second Qu arter San Diego 3 7 1B 6 — 26 Buf — Jackson9run(Carpenter kick),13:18. INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS First Quarter RUSHING —New Orleans: Ingram 13-83, FourthQuarter AD SIZES: SD — FGNovak27, 2:42. Buf — FGCarpenter 21,12:01. K.Robi n son 6-18, Brees 1-9, Thomas 4-8, Col l i ns SecondQuarler Buf — FGCarpenter 22,6:43. 3-8, Stills 1-3, Sprol e s 1-2, Mea c he m 1-(mi n us 5). Oak —O.McFadden5run(Janikowski kick), 10:39. Carolina:D.Wiliams12-67, GinnJr. 1-7, Newton Buf — FGCarpenter 26,2;26. SD — Mathews7run (Novakkick), 3:13. 4-6, Tolbert1-1. A—54,305. Oak —FGJanikowski 20,:10. Full color and black & ehite PASSING — Ne w Or l e a n s : Br e e s 3 0 4 4 2 2 8 1 , ThirdQuarler McCown 0-1-0-0. Carolina:New ton13-22-1-181. M ia Bu f SD — Allen4 passfromRivers(Novakkick), 5:00. RECEIVING —New Orleans: J.Graham5-73, First downs 6 18 SD — FGNovak48,:56. Colsto n5-63,Thomas5-7,Moore3-47,Sproles3-18, TotalNetYards 1 03 39 0 FourlhQuarler Watson 2-26, Sti l ls 2-23, Me ache m 2-14, C o l i ns 2-3, Rushes-yards 12-14 51-203 SO — FGNovak28, 14:51. Ingram1-7. Carolina:Olsen4-35, GinnJr. 2-66, Passing 89 18 7 Full color and black & ehite Oak —FGJanikowski 42,11:19. 3-0 4-0 Hixon 2-18,Tolbert 2-5, Smith 1-44, LaFell 1-13, PuntReturns SD — FGNovak33, 6:23. D.Wigiams1-0. KickoffReturns 5-83 0-0 A—65,675. Interceptions Ret. 1 -0 2 - 17 Comp-Att-Int 12-33-2 15-25-1 37, Texans13 O ak S D Broncos Sacked-Yards Lost 7-46 1-6 First downs 14 24 10-50.1 6-36.3 TotalNetYards 2 65 34 4 Denver 318 B 21 — 37 Punts Fumbl e s-Lost 2-0 3-0 17-59 37-148 Houslon 3 3 7 g — 1 3 Penalties-Yards Rushes-yards 6 -37 4 - 31 First Quarter Passing 2 06 196 Time ofPossession 23;29 36:31 0 -0 3 - 35 Den—FGPrater 32, 8:50. PuntReturns 6 -140 2 - 1 1 Hou—FGBullock45, 2:02. KickoffReturns I N DIVIDUAL ST A T IS TICS 1-0 1-0 InterceptionsRet. SecondQuarler RUSHING —Miami: Miller 3-8, Dan.Thomas Comp-Att-Int 20-36-1 19-29-1 Den—D.Thomas 36 pass from Manning(Prater 9-6. Buffalo:Jackson19-111,Spiler 20-77,Lewis 1-0 1-5 Sacked-Yards Lost kick), 14:54. 8-13, Summ ers 2-7, Graham1-(minus2), Goodw in 5-54.2 1-37.0 Hou—FGBullock35, 6:06. Punts 1-(minus 3). 2-1 2-2 Den—FGPrater 25,:56. Fumbles-Lost PASSING — M iami: Ta n n ehi g 10-27-0-82, Mat . 12-73 3 - 24 Den—FGPrater 44,:00. Penalties-Yards Moore 2-6-2-53. Buffalo:Lewis15-25-1-193. Timeof Possession 25:18 34:42 ThirdGuarler RECEIVING —Miami: Walace 4-38, Clay4-32, Hou—Martin 15passfromSchaub(Bullock kick), Hartline 2-53,Mathews1-9, Dan.Thomas1-3. BuffaINDIVIDUAL STATISTICS 10:33. lo: W oods 3-70, Spiler 3-26, Chandler2-31,Graham RUSHING —Oakland: Jennings 10-45, D.McFourthQuarter 2-8, Jackson2-7, LSmith1-24. Den—Decker 10passfromManning (Prater kick), 2-27, Hogan Fadden 4-8,McGloin1-5,Jones2-1.San Diego: Mathews 25-99,Woodhead8-52,Riyers4-(minus3). 13:26. PASSING —Oakland: McGloin 20-36-1-206. Den—Decker20passfromManning (Prater kick), Cowboys 24, Redskins23 San Diego:Rivers19-29-1-201. 6:57. RECEIVING — Oakland: Holmes5-71,Reece Den—J.Thomas 25 passfromManning (Prater Dallas 7 7 0 1B — 24
uJ
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+ l +~ The Bulletin
MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B7
NFL
rizona e S SO
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$ ~$ e ~
By Tim Booth
,/
The Associated Press
g G
SEATTLE Carson P almer felt c o n fident i n where he needed to go with the throw.
®N
He also knew he was
\
throwing to a wide receiv-
er who hadn't made a reception in the previous 57 minutes.
A perfectly placed throw by Palmer and a juggling catch by Michael Floyd kept
ception was his only catch
and Larry Fitzgerald was held to three catches for 18 yards. Arizona didn't need
to be explosive offensively because ofits defense. Wilson was 11 of 27 for
108 yards, taking his first home loss since he was at North Carolina State. Seattle went three-and-out sev-
en times and they had only
the Arizona Cardinals in
22:36 of possession.
the playoff hunt for another week with a surprising 17-
to throw and when he did,
10 win over the Seattle Se-
ahawks on Sunday. Palmer overcame four inDavid J. Phillip/The Associated Press
Palmer finished 13 of 25 for 178 yards. Floyd's TD re-
terceptions to find Floyd on
Wilson rarely had time he missed open receivers. His final pass was underthrown, deflecting off Doug Baldwin and into the arms of Karlos Dansby with 1:56 left.
Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning smiles after throwing his fourth touchdown of Sunday's game in Houston. It was Manning's
a 31-yard touchdown with
51st touchdown pass of the season and set a new NFL record.
2:13 left, and surging Arizona won for the seventh time The final pass was anin eight games and snapped other moment of debate for the Seahawks' 14-game the Seahawks, who earlier home win streak. thought they had recovered "It's tough not to get the a fumble only to have reball thrown your way until play side with Arizona. the last play of the game esThe pass appeared to sentially," Palmer said. hit the ground before deThe Cardinals were nas- flecting off Baldwin and to ty on defense, frustrating Dansby. It was ruled an in-
annin sesmar, roncoswin NFL ROUNDUP
The Associated Press HOUSTON
-
Peyton
coming three turnovers while
Manning had to prepare for a 2-point conversion and
sions. Their defense helped
couldn't celebrate when he
Adams intercepting Schaub
them out after that, with Mike
set the NFL record for touch- at the Houston 28. down passes in a season in Manning wasted no time 2004. making Houston pay and On Sunday, when Denver's found Decker two plays later quarterback regained the for the touchdown that exrecord against the Houston
Texans, he was able to soak in the historic moment.
tended the lead to 23-13.
"I thought the turning point
was the Mike Adams inter-
"It was very special," he ception," Denver coach John said. "Very rarely during an Fox said. NFL game do you get to have It was al l B r oncos after a moment like that." that, with Manning grabbing Manning regained his re- t he record w it h t w o m o r e cord with 51 when he threw touchdown passes. for 400 yards and four touchManning made the redowns, including three in the cord-setting throw to Julius
Bengais 42, Vikings 14:
benefiting from two turnovers and 12 penalties for 73 yards by the Raiders. Philip Riv25 yards for a touchdown as ers threw a go-ahead, 4-yard Cincinnati clinched the AFC touchdown pass to r o okCINCINNATI Vincent Rey returned an interception North with a win over Min-
ie Keenan Allen and Ryan
nesota. Andy Dalton threw four touchdown passes. The Bengals (10-5) remained perfect at home and secured an unprecedented third straight playoff appearance when
Mathews ran for 99 yards and one touchdown, setting a career high with l,lll yards. Nick Novak kicked four field goals for San Diego.
Miami lost at Buffalo. Then
Giants 23, Lions 20: DETROIT — Josh Brown's 45-
the Bengals won the division
yard field goal on the third
when the Ravens fell to the Patriots.
drive of overtime lifted the
Patriots 41, Ravens 7: BALTIMORE — Logan Ryan had two interceptions, LeGarrette
Blount scored twice and New England ended Baltimore's title. He surpassed the 50 mates patted him on the head. four-game winning streak. TD passes Tom Brady threw He then took off his helmet The previous time these two in 2007 and led the Broncos and walking to the sideline teams met, the AFC title hung (12-3) to a 37-13 win over the and pumped his fist once. His in the balance and Baltimore Texans (2-13) that extended teammates came out to greet used a strong second half to Houston's franchise-record him and he gave dozens of pull out a 28-13 victory. In this high-fives as he grinned and one, New England took a 17-0 skid to 13 games. Manning did it on a 25- walked to the bench. leadearl y in the second quaryard pass to Julius Thomas Decker picked up the ball ter and never let up behind a with 4:28 remaining. Just 2 after Thomas dropped it after defense that forced four turnt/z minutes earlier, he tied the the touchdown and tucked it overs and had four sacks. mark with a 20-yard pass to in the side of his jersey, where Steelers 38, Packers 31: Eric Decker. it remained as he walked off GREEN BAY, Wis. — Le'VeManning figures Brady the field. on Bell ran for a 1-yard touchwill overtake him again one Manning laughed when down with 1:28 left, then Pittsday, especially if the NFL asked about Thomas not burgh withstood Green Bay's moves to an 18-game regular holding onto the ball after the last throw into the end zone season. score. and dealt the Packers' playoff "I think it's a unique thing "It wouldn't have surprised hopes a blow. It's a long shot, and a neat thing to be a part me if Julius would have went but the Steelers (7-8) are still of NFL history, even though and handed it to some babe mathematically in the hunt for it may be temporary," he said. up in the stands, trying to an AFC wild-card spot. They "So I'm going to enjoy it as get her phone number in ex- need a lot of help. long as it lasts, and hopeful- change for the ball," he joked. C hiefs 23, Colts 7: KA N ly the Hall of Fame will send "That would be right up Ju- SAS CITY, Mo. — Andrew the ball back once somebody lius' alley." Luck threw for 241 yards and throws for more." Thomas didn't realize his a touchdown, an d D o nald He entered the game with reception set the record when Brown ran 51 yards for an47 and his first touchdown he caught it. other score as Indianapolis "I came back to the side- beat Kansas City in a potential came on a 36-yard pass to D emaryius Thomas i n t h e lines and I'm sitting down preview of an AFC wild-card second quarter. The second on the bench and somebody game. The Colts (10-5), who was a 10-yard throw to Deck- said: 'That was the one,'" he have already wrapped up the er earlier in the fourth period. said. "Maybe I shouldn't have AFC South, took advantage of The Broncos already had a dropped it so carelessly, I four turnovers by the Chiefs spot in the playoffs, but their should have kept it." (11-4) to win for the fifth time victory, combined with KanDecker led t h e B r o ncos in their past six tries against sas City's loss to Indianap- with 10 r eceptions for 131 Kansas City. olis, gave them the division yards, and Demaryius ThomBills 19, Dolphins 0: ORfourth quarter to give Denver its third straight AFC West
beat hapless Oakland by over-
Thomas and walked toward the end zone, where his team-
New York Giants and knocked Detroit (7-8) from postseason contention. They lost for the
fifth time in six games, blowing fourth-quarter leads in each setback that might seal Jim Schwartz's fate. The em-
battled coach chose to play for overtime by running out theclockwith 23 seconds and two timeouts left from the Detroit 25. When the crowd
reacted with a chorus of boos,
Russell Wilson into the first
terception on the field and
home loss of his profession- referee Scott Green told a al career and giving Palmer pool reporter there was not a chance to come through
late. Palmer did and now Week 17 has meaning for
i ndisputable e v idence t o overturn that call.
Baldwin was emphatic
Arizona.
the ball hit the turf.
out," Palmer said. "There
get that call," Baldwin said. " I believe the ball hit t h e ground. But that's not why
"An ugly win is a win regardless of how it comes
"I would have loved to
was a handful of t imes where th e b a l l re a l ly we didn't win the game." bounced their way today Until the winning scoring and we were resilient, kept drive, Palmer's day was defighting, kept believing and fined by poor decisions and came out and got a win." unlucky bounces. He was Palmer wa s m i s take intercepted in the end zone prone early, throwing three by Kam Chancellor on Arizona's opening drive when of his four interceptions in the first half. He was twice his passdeflected off Rob intercepted in the end zone, Hausler. He was picked off including Richard Sher- by Malcolm Smith in Seatman's second pick of the tle territory in the second game early in the fourth quarter on a tipped pass quarter. and twice threw intercepHis winning drive made tions to Sherman, the secup for the earliererrors. ond a poor decision.
Schwartz turned his head toward the stands and appeared
Palmer led Arizona 75
to angrily shout back at the
been targeted four t i m es
a fter Seattle took a
fans.
previous without a reception, but he beat Byron
lead on Wilson's ll-yard TD pass to Zach Miller.
Maxwell down the sideline and Palmer's throw was on the mark. T he 58-0 b e ating t h e
Palmer started with a thirddown completion as he was
Rams 23, Buccaneers 13: ST. LOUIS — Robert Quinn
got three of St. Louis' seven sacks and set a franchise sea-
son record. Quinn leads the NFL with 18 sacks. He broke Kevin Carter's franchise re-
cord of 17 in that 1999 Super Bowl title season. Zac Stacy rushed for 104 yards on 33
carries and a touchdown, and the Rams (7-8) matched their victory total from last year.
Fellow rookies Stedman Bailey scored on a 27-yard reverse and Alec Ogletree forced two
fumbles. Jets 24, Browns 13: EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Geno Smith threw two touchdown
passes to David Nelson and ran foranother score to lead the New York Jets. Smith had
his first game with at least
But Palmer was fantastic
yards in 10 plays. Floyd had on Arizona's decisive drive 1 0 -9
Dec. 24, 2011, against San
about to get sandwiched by Clinton McDonald, flipping a pass to Jake Ballard for 17 yards. The drive was kept going when Smith was flagged for defensive holding on a t h ird-down incompletion.
Francisco. "Any time you come on
dropped a perfect throw
the road and the team beats
beyond Maxwell and i nto
Seahawks put on Arizona last season in Seattle is history. The memory now is Arizona handing Seattle its first home loss since
On third-and-6, Palmer
you 58-0 and you have to come back to their place, it lingers to the back of your head," Arizona defensive tackle Darnell Dockett said. "If you got any pride in any game of football, when a team beats you by 58, you
Floyd's hands. He juggled it at first but controlled the
k now you t h in k
of the best," Arizona coach
a b out i t
and it's stuck on you."
ball as he hit the turf.
Rashard Me n denhall scored easily on the 2-point conversion with 2:13 left. "Whether we make the
playoffs or not, we beat one Bruce Arians said.
two TD passes since October, with no turnovers or sacks.
The rookie was 20 of 36 for 214 yards and also ran for 48
CHARD PARK, N.Y. — The
yards — including a 17-yard yards. Wes Welker missed Dolphins had a three-game scoring scamper in the fourth his second straight game winning streak snapped and quarter. team win games and we won after sustaining his second are in jeopardy of missing the Titans 20, J aguars 16: the division today in a com- concussion in four weeks on playoffs for a fifth consecu- JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Nate petitive AFC West," Manning Dec. 8. tive season. With the loss to Washington scored on a 30said. "That's a good thing." Schaub found K e shawn Buffalo, Miami (8-7) needs yard reception in the fourth Manning had p revious- Martin on a 15-yard touch- help from other teams. Miami quarter and Tennessee got a ly established the record by down pass to get Houston hosts the New York Jets next much-needed defensive stop throwing 49 touchdown pass- within 16-13 early in the third weekend. The Dolphins' loss late to end a three-game losing es in 2004. quarter. clinched the AFC East for New streak with a win over JackHe has a career-high 5,211 Andre Johnson finished England. Kyle Williams had sonville. Tennessee (6-9) overyards passing this season, w ith f ou r c a t ches fo r 6 3 two of Buffalo's season-best came a 10-point deficit in the which is third in NFL history yards. He has 103 catches this seven sacks to key a stifling second half and won for just and 265 yards shy of the 5,476 season to reach 100 for the defensiveperformance. the third time since Septemyards Drew Brees gained in fifth time in his career, tying Cowboys 24, Redskins 23: ber. Washington finished with 2011. an NFL record for most sea- LANDOVER, Md. — Tony six catches for 117 yards. "The guy is a great quar- sons with at least that many Romo r e covered f r o m a Eagles 54, Bears 11: PHILterback, obviously," Houston receptions. bad interception and rallied ADELPHIA — N i c k F o l es interim coach Wade Phillips Also on Sunday: Dallas from a n i ne-point, threw two touchdown passes, crown.
"This only means something because it helped our
said. "The last one, I was surprised that they threw it deep
as had eight catches for 123
P anthers 17, S a ints 1 3 : CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Cam late in the game, but that's Newton t h re w a 14 - y ard part of football." touchdown pass to Domenik Matt Schaub started for the Hixon with 23 seconds left to first time since Oct. 13 in place lift the Panthers to the team's of an injured Case Keenum. first playoff berth since 2008. He finished with 176 yards Carolina (11-4) can wrap up and one touchdown with two the NFC South and a f i rstinterceptions for the Texans. round bye with a w i n n ext The Broncos couldn't do Sunday at Atlanta. The Pan-
anything offensively in the third quarter, gaining just 38 yards, and had to punt on each of their four posses-
fourth-quarter deficit to Wash-
LeSean McCoy ran for two
ington. He found DeMarco scores and Philadelphia routMurray for a 10-yard touch- ed Chicago in a matchup of down pass on fourth down with 1:08 remaining. The vic-
tory ended a two-game Dallas skid — as well as a five-game December losing streakand sets up a winner-takeall regular-season finale for the NFC East title next week,
thers intercepted Drew Brees when the Cowboys (8-7) host t wice and sacked hi m s i x the Philadelphia Eagles. times to avenge a 31-13 loss to Chargers 26, Raiders 13: New Orleans two weeks ago. SAN DIEGO — San Diego
first-place teams with oppo-
site stakes. Chicago's loss sets up two winner-take-all games for NFC division crowns next
week. The Bears (8-7) came in needing a win to clinch the NFC North and secure the No.
3 seed while Philadelphia was just trying to stay healthy. But the Eagles (9-6) played like the team trying to lock up a playoffberth.
I
Elaine Thompson/The Associated Press
Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Golden Tate is tackled by Arizona Cardinals' Justin Bethel in the first half of Sunday's game in Seattle. The Seahawks lost17-10 to the Cardinals.
MONDAY, DEC 23, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T EE TO
B9
REEN
Offseason update: Quail Run Golf Course
(Clockwise, from top left) The Newport Avenue Market team holds up a check that was donated
for Backpacks in
<9
Qa
1
Bach acbs taBend
By Zack Hall
H~
The Bulletin
Bend with funds raised by the Go! Golf
Tournament in July at Broken Top Club. Participants Kathy Murch, at left, with friends Kathlein and Bill Guthrie pose
s
wB ~
earlier this year at the season-ending
This is the latest install-
ment of a weekly Tee To Green feature in which we Central Oregon golf facilities for an offseason up-
Birdies 4 Babies tournament at Caldera Links at Sunriver Resort.Bend FC
date. This week we contact-
Timbers staff pose
ed Todd Sickles, general manager at Quail Run Golf
for a picture with Portland Timbers star Will Johnson, second from left, at the Bend FC Timbers Annual Golf Outing in June at Tetherow Golf Club.
c heck in vi a email w i t h
Course in La Pine.
Sickles came to Central Oregon in 2007 as Quail
tt +sL~,
Jt
Run's head pro and became
the course's general manager in 2010. A pro since 1989, Sickles had this to say
about the current business of golf and about Quail Run, La Pine's only golf course:
Courtesy photos
• How was business in • 2013?
• Business was a little • erratic in 2 0 13 but
overall it was a great season for us. We were up over the last couple years.
any changes of Q •• Were note made to the facility during the last year? • We continue to make
A such as removing hun-
• minor a d j u stments,
dredsoftreesin congested areas.This helps improve the quality of turf and playability on the course. • Are a ny c h a nges • and/or i mpr o vements to the facility sched-
uled for 2014? We plan on c on• tinuing o ur l o n g -
A•
t erm plan on
turf m an-
agement through forest management. a recession that Q •• After began in 2007, how have your golf operations changed in recent years?
A • been very focused on creative marketing and • Since 2007 we have
creating a f riendly and quality golf experience for all our golfers.
• Nonprofits around Central Oregon still use golf as aprimary vehicle to raisefunds How they did
By Zack Hall The Bulletin
A sampling of Central Oregongolf fundraisers in 2013and howthe apA fundraising golf tourna- proximate proceeds of eachevent compared with 2012: ment is about as hard to find in Timbers Golf Outing (Tetherow Golf Club): Up$1,000 Central Oregon as a mountain Bend FC Boys 8 Girls Club/Redmond Kiwanis Golf Fore KidsTournament: Flat bike attached to and SUV. Eachgolf season,theregion's Birdies 4 Babies (throughout Central Oregon): Up to$29,000 from courses are swarmed with $23,400 do-gooders and avid golfers in Crook County High School Golf Team Benefit Tournament (Meadow a marriage of golf and charity Lakes Golf Course): $9,613, up from $9,207 that generates thousands upon Golf World Pacific Amateur Golf Classic (courses throughout Central thousands of dollars. Oregon): $12,000, up from $11,000 For many Central Oregon Gopher BrokeScramble (Bend Golf andCountry Club): $27,000, up from nonprofits, such golf events $20,000 serve as the chief means to Go Golf! Tournament (BrokenTop): $46,842 in first year generate funds. La Pine Lions Scramble ForSight (Quail RunGolf Course): "Significantly The 2013 golf season was no worse" different, and likely the 2014 season will be the same. Riverhouse Invitational Golf Tournament (River's Edge): $3,220, down "Overall, golf does still presfrom $3,500 ent a viable vehicle to raise St. Charles Medical Center RedmondVolunteer Golf Tournament (Eagle funds," says June Overberg, Crest Resort): Flat, $15,000 a volunteer who helps orga- Three Sisters OpenWomen's Golf Tournament (Eagle Crest Resort): Flat nize the St. Charles Redmond
Are the local golf fa• cilities doing enough
Sources: fundraiser organizers
Q•
Volunteer Golf Tournament, a 6-year-old event played at
to attract and foster local
Eagle Crest Resort that has
Foundation staff and volun-
play? If not, what more can be done?
teers work hard to offer an
A • Central Oregon are doing a lot to bring golf to
consistently raised between $15,000 and $20,000 each year for the hospital's birthing center. "Many of our supporters are
Central Oregon residents.
returners, as are the partici-
There is always room for i mprovement and I a m
pants in the tournament itself," she adds.
• I think a ll of u s i n
sure we will all continue to
make it more desirable for golfers to come here. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.
NeadowLakesGolf Course, at aglance Status: Openseasonally Location:16725Northridge Drive, La Pine Tee times:541-536-1303 or 800-895-GOLF
Course stats:Par 72, 6,897 yal ds
Director of golf:ToddSickles Course designer:J!m Ramey (original nine, 1991;second nine, 2006) Extras:Driving range, putting and chipping area, practice bunkers, snack bar, pro shop Website:golfquailrun.com
What is the draw'?
"Sponsors like to be involved and players report that they love th e t o urnament,"
says Kim Johnson, volunteer coordinator for the Bend Park Recreation F o undation,
which hosted the 10th Gopher
Central Oregon golfers who reach out to each other and event that provides good ben- their clubs in various creative efit to sponsors and a fun and ways," says Tim Rusk, execu-
well-organized
t o u r nament tive director of MountainStar.
for players, and ultimately to The fundraiser, which begenerate a good return for rec- gan in 2005, raised $29,000 reation scholarships," she says. this season, up about 20 perOf course, hosting a suc- cent over 2012. "We are absolut ely overcessful tournament is not easy. Overall, it appears that 2013 whelmed by the generosity of produced mixed results in the local golfing community Central Oregon — not surpris- and golf clubs involved in the ing in an area with dozens of program this season," Rusk tournaments spread across the says. region's 30 golf courses. The Go Golf! Tournament, which is organized by Bend's
Broke Scramble in Septem-
Loyalty
ber at Bend Golf and Country Club. "The event typically fills The Gopher Broke tournam ent raised $27,000 for scholarships, allowing lower-income children and families, and those with disabilities, to
Event organizers in general benefits Backpacks in Bend to say that loyal participation is a fight childhood hunger, raised key ingredient to a successful $46,842 in its inaugural event benefit golf tournament. this year at Broken Top Golf Birdies 4 Babies, a season- Club in Bend. long fundraiser that ends each The tournament was bolyear with a tournament at Cal- stered by the allegiance of pardera Links atSunriver Resort ticipants in the long-running
participate in Bend Park &
and benefits M o untainStar
in advance."
Newport Avenue Market and
Calendar
TOURNAMENTS
Jan.17:CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat Kah-Nee-Ta High Desert Resort nearWarmSprings. Tr1ple-six tournam ent beginswith art 11a.m. shotgutt. Two-person teams with nomorethanone professionalallowedperteam. Cost is $30for profess1onals$50 , for amateurs. Cost includesgrossand net skinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra. All players must signUpbynoonontheWednesdaybeforethe event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call Pat Huffer,headproatCrookedRiverRanch, at 541-9236343 oremail himatcrrpat©crookedr1verranch.com. Jan. 31:CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat Meadow LakesGolf Course1nPr1nev1lle. Aggregate shamble tournament beginswith an11a.m.shotgun. Two-person teamswith rtomorethanorteprofessional allowed perteam. Cost is$30for professionals, $50 foramateurs. Cost includesgrossandnet skins
ners and industry friends can
count on happening with great food and drink to boot," Johnson says. "And it is at a beauti-
ful time of the year (July), and generally played on a middle day of the week."
Outlook
Nursery's child abuse and ne- Golf! replaced this year, says glect prevention programs, Lauren Johnson, who took gives almost sole credit for over this year for father, Rudy and is a credit to how the tour- its success to the fundraiser Dory, as Newport Market's nament is organized, Johnson participants. tournamentorganizer. "It exists because of the says. What keeps the golfers com"Bend Park & Recreation passion and effort of caring ingback'?
organizes an annual fundraiser for Crook Country High School's golf teams. In a fu n draiser event, Lampert observes, a golfer
The tournament's haul represented an uptick from 2012
includes grossattd net skins competitions. Cart costsextra.All playersmustsign upbynoononthe Wednesday before theevent. Toregister or for more information, call PatHufer, headproatCrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat© crookedriyerrattch.com. March1: PolarBearOpenat MeadowLakesGolf Course inPrinevile. Individualstroke-playtournamentteesoff witha10 a.m.shotgun, Costis $20per teamplust25 per-persongreenfee.Toregister orfor more information,call the Meadow Lakesgolf shop at 541-447-7113.
March13: Central OregonWinterSeries event at JuniperGolfClubinRedmond.Triple-six tournament beginswith an11a.m.shotgun.Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team. Cost is$30for professionals, $50foramateurs. Cost includesgross attd net skins competitions. Cart costsextra.All playersmustsign Upbynoononthe Wednesday before theevent. Toregister or for more information, call PatHufer, headproatCrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himat crrpat@ crookedriyerrattch.com. March21:Central OregonWinter Seriesevent at PronghornClub's NicklausCourse near6end. Scrambletournament beginswith an11a.m, shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanonepro-
"Gathering donations for
those events is more and more difficult because of the increasingly large amount of donation requests that businesses receive daily from many different types of organizations and charities," says Lampert. "The golf, however, provides a fun way for people to donate while also getting
Course in Prineville, Lampert
Recreation District programs.
competitions.Cartcosts extra.All playersmustsign up by noonontheWednesdaybeforetheevent.To register orformoreinformation, call PatHuffer,head pro at CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343or email himatcrrpat@crookedriverranch.com. Feb.1:SuperBowlScrambleatMeadow Lakes Golf Course 1nPr1nev1lle.Scrambleis forfour-person teamsandteesoff with an11a.m, shotgun, Costis $80 perteamplus $25per-persongreenfee.Toregister orfor moreinformation, call theMeadowLakes golf shopat541-447-7113. Feb. 14:CentralOregonWinterSeriesevent at CrookedRiverRanch.Beter-ball tournament begins with an11a.m.shotgun.Two-person teamswith no morethanoneprofessional allowedperteam.Cost is t30 for professionals, t50 for amateurs.Cost includes grossand net skins competitions. Cart costs extra.All playersmustsignttp bynoonott the Wednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor more information, call PatHuffer,headproatCrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343oremail himatcrrpat@ crookedriverrattch.com. Feb. 28:CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at EagleCrestResort 1nRedmond.Shambletournament beginswithan11a.m.shotgun. Two-personteams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam. Cost is$30for professionals, $50for amateurs. Cost
can play in a competitive setting and have the added incentive of helping a charity or nonprofit.
A perpetually sputtering something in return — a comeconomy has added a head petitive and fun round of golf, wnld. with cart and a meal." "At our tournament we have Ryan Shore, president of not set the bar too high for how Bend FC Timbers and orgamuch to raise, but it definite- nizer of the youth soccer club's ly has been harder since the Bend FC Timbers Annual Golf economic downturn," says Jim Outing, says there should alSmith, treasurer of the La Pine ways be demand for these Lions Club, which hosts the benefit events as long as there La Pine Lions Scramble For is demand to play golf. "In many cases, people are Sight. The annual tournament is a fundraiser to pay for eye going to play golf anyway, and exams andeyeglassesforthe what a way to have fun while economically disadvantaged. supporting a nonprofit organiThe May tournament did zation," says Shore, who saw a "significantly worse" com- modest gain at his 2013 event pared with 2012, as the tour- at Tetherow Golf Club. "We love these types of nament struggled to draw enough golfers, Smith adds. fundraisers because they are Still, nobody should expect local and help benefit the chilcharity events to wane. dren and families right here in " We still feel that i n L a Central Oregon," Shore adds. Pine it is our biggest fundrais- "Our event is sponsored by loer, thanks to sponsorships," cal companies and we in turn Smith says. invest back into our local comEven in difficult times, us- panies. This is a win-win for ing golf as a fundraising ve- everyone involved." hicle makes sense, says Zach — Reporter: 541-617-7868, Lampert. The head profeszhall@bendbulletin.com. sional at Meadow Lakes Golf
Rude Rudy event, which Go
686 NW York Drive, Ste.150 Bend, ORI 541-306-3263
lESSCNNM
BEST TIRE IAEIIE PRONIIE s• s
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GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomes contributions to its weekly local golf events calendar. Items shouldbe mailed to p.a.Box 6020,Bend, OR 97708; faxed to thesports department at 541-385-0831; oremailedto sports@bendbslletin.com.
"The GG (Go Golf!) is one of the only play-your-ownball tournaments (instead of a more typical scramble), coupled with being an annual event that our vendors, part-
I
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Chnstttt tss
Goose
rol4rtultnent
DOW 'LiAKES 601LF I'U'RSF. fessiottal allowedperteam.Cost is $30for profes-
sionals,$50for amateurs. Cost includesgrossand net skinscompetitions. Cartcostsextra.All players must signupbynoonontheWednesdaybeforethe event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call Pat Huffer,headproatCrookedRiverRanch, att41-9236343 oremail himatcrrpat©crookedriverranch.com. March29:CrossCountry tournament at Meadow LakesGolf Course1nPr1nev1lle. Individual strokeplay tournam ent forcesgolfers to takea newpath around Meadow Lakesover12holes.Teetimesbegin at 8a.m.Plightedfield includesbothgrossand net payoutsandKPcompetitions. Costis $20plus reducedgreenfeeof $15. Formoreinformation or to register,call theMeadowLakes proshopat 541-
ISTiMAS GIFTi CERTIFICATES
Ilcw ait • tt o
0
t ot Oto 's
447-7113. April 4: Central Oregon Winter Serieseventat BrasadaCanyons Golf Clubitt PowellButte.Shamble tournamentbeginswith an 11 a.m. shotgun.
Two-person teamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam.Cost is $30for professionals, $50 foramateurs. Costincludesgrossandnet skins competitions.Cartcosts extra.All playersmustsign Up by noonontheWednesdaybeforetheevent.To register or for moreinformation, call PatHuffer,head pro at CrookedRiver Ranch, at 541-923-6343or email himatcrrpat@crookedriverranch.com.
GPLF ( QU+5E II
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Reschedulert to This sat. Dec. 21st
'
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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208
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212
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Furniture 8 Appliances
Antiques & Collectibles
CAT FOR ADOPTION- Donate deposit bottles/ Maine Coon 8 wk. kit-
Loveseat, new, brown 5'x3'2" exc. cond. free - I a m moving cans to local all vol., tens, unique pets, no Reber's Farm Toy Sale! around a lot and want non-profit rescue, for apers, 1 polydactyl $300. 541-504-0707 Each Sat. & Sun., 10-5 ITEMS FORSALE 264- Snow Removal Equipment her to have a good feral cat spay/ neuter. emale, 1 male, $100 until Christmas, 4500 SE People Look for Information Cans for Cats trailer ea. obo. 541-389-0322 home! Very cute and 201 - NewToday 265 - BuildingMaterials Tillamook Lp., Prineville. About Products and sweet, 9yo, shorthair at Bend Petco; or do- Newfoundland Pups. 6 202- Want to buy or rent 541-447-7585 266- Heating and Stoves nate M-F a t S mith S ponsor needed f o r s payed calico. A l Services Every Day through 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood old 2 black bovs. W ill, a s w eet c a t, Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or wks ways uses litter box, $1100, w/ $400 deThe Bulletin Classiffeds The Bulletin reserves 204- Santa's Gift Basket 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers at CRAFT, Tumalo. p osit to h o ld . d oes not jump o n Jil l found abandoned 8 right to publish all 205- Free Items 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment counters. Have had Call for Ig. quantity 541-279-6344 emaciated, his collar R olltop desk with 7 the from The Bulletin 208- Pets and Supplies wrapped around his drawers, medium oak, ads 270- Lost and Found her since kitten. She pickup, 541-389-8420. newspaper onto The Pomeranian puppy www.craftcats.org 210 -Furniture & Appliances neck & under one leg. $250. 541-548-4051 is fine with other aniBulletin Internet webGARAGESALES 10-week-old male, 211- Children's Items It was that way a long mals, not m i schie- English Bulldog female site. 275 - Auction Sales black and silver. time & rubbed a hole 212 -Antiques & Collectibles vous. Great companpuppy,3t/gmos old, What a sweet heart! 280 Estate Sales in his upper chest ion! 21 5 964-3051 215- Coins & Stamps $2000. 541-382-9334 The Bulletin $275. 541-480-3160 down to the bone. Vet tnnnng Central Oregon sincefgtg 281 - Fundraiser Sales Elizabeth enchantabull.com 240- Crafts and Hobbies cleaned it up 8 su282Sales Norlhwest Bend Good classified ads tell 241 -Bicycles and Accessories tured him, but his leg 284- Sales Southwest Bend the essential facts in an 242 - Exercise Equipment Have an item to had atrophied & we interesting Manner. Write 286- Sales Norlheast Bend HANCOCK & 243 - Ski Equipment hope we can save it. sell quick? from the readers view not 288- Sales Southeast Bend IVIOORE SOFA 244 - Snowboards We're a small rescue If it's under the seller's. Convert the Salmon/Coral che245 - Golf Equipment 290- Sales RedmondArea & the bill was a big hit facts into benefits. Show nille fabric with dia'500 you can place it in 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 292 - Sales Other Areas for us right now. A German Shepherd mond pattern. TradiCavalier Pup p ies, reader howthe item will sponsorship for Will 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. parents on site. the The Bulletin FARM MARKET born 11/21/13. Ready pups, tional styling with help them insomeway. would be a blessing. 248- HealthandBeauty Items Taking deposits. 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery in Jan. Pick out pup pillow back, This Classifieds for: A foster home for him loose 541-280-2118 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs seat now with deposit. Pick 316- Irrigation Equipment advertisingup would be great while down-wrapped 251 - Hot TubsandSpas up after Christmas. BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 325- Hay, Grain and Feed brought toyou by he recovers, or better cushions, roll arms, '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 541-408-5909 or two matching 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies Search the area's most yet, a forever home. skirt, '163 lines, 14 days 541-548-4574. 255 - Computers p illows and a r m The Bulletin comprehensive listing of 5 41-598-5488, 3 8 9 341 - Horses andEquipment SertingCenlrci Oregon nncc tttn covers. L i k e new 256 - Photography (Private Party ads only) classified advertising... 8420. CRAFT, Box 345-Livestockand Equipment $1 000. 257 - Musical Instruments real estate to automotive, POODLE pups AKC toy, 6441, Bend 9 7708, condition. 347 Llamas/Exotic Animals 541-526-1332 258 - Travel/Tickets merchandise to sporting tiny teacup, cuddly people www.craftcats.org 240 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 259 - Memberships goods. Bulletin Classifieds dogs. 541-475-3889 Crafts & Hobbies 358Farmer's Column appear every day in the Pug Chihuahua mix, 8 Yorkie male, 6 months, 260- Misc. Items GREAT personality! 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing print or on line. Tick, Tock 261 - Medical Equipment wks., 1st shots, female. $500. Can deliver. 383- Produce andFood $125. 541-389-0322 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. Chihuahua puppies, tiny, Call 541-385-5809 AGATE HUNTERS Call 541-792-0375 Tick, Tock... 1st shots/dewormed, www.bendbuffetin.com Queens/and Heelers Ponshers • Saws 263- Tools • • c• $250. 541-977-0035 210 ...don't let time get Standard & Mini, $150 208 208 The Bulletin Repatr & Supplles & up. 541-280-1537 Furniture & Appliances Serving Central Oregon tince gtg away. Hire a Chihuahua puppy, adorPete & Supplies • P ets & Supplies c g c www.rightwayranch.wor able male, born 8/23, German Wirehaired professional out dpress.com 0 $100 OBO. Pointer pups, AKC, 5 F, A1 Washers&Dryers Aussie/Heeler mix, of The Bulletin's The Bulletin recom$800. 541-454-2132 $150 ea. Full warshots & dewormed, 541-410-8888 241 Call a Pro "Call A Service mends extra caution ranty. Free Del. Also $150. 541-977-4686 Chi-Pom male puppy, Jack Russell Puppies, Bicycles & when purc h asWhether you need a wanted, used W/D's Professional" born Nov. 17, avail mid541-280-7355 ing products or ser- AUSSIE MINI p ups, $250. Silver yorkie Jan. 2 fems, 1 male, fencefixed,hedges Accessories Directory today! o l d er$550 ea. 541-576-4999 vices from out of the blue merle & black tri. c ross m al e trimmed or a house puppy $150. CASH or 541-536-4115 area. Sending cash, $350.541-408-5325 G ENERATE SOM E 541-546-7909. checks, or credit inbuilt, you'll find 202 EXCITEMENT in your The Bulletin Just bought a new boat? Labrador puppies, AKC, f ormation may b e professional help in neighborhood! Plan a recommends extra ' Sell your old one in the Want to Buy or Rent chocolate, $250. subjected to fraud. classifieds! Where can you find a garage sale and don't l caution when purAsk about our 541-977-6844 The Bulletin's "Call a For more informachasing products or s helping hand? Super Seller rates! forget to advertise in CASH for dressers, tion about an adverService Professional" Labradors AKCservices from out of I 541-385-5809 classified! dead washers/dryers tiser, you may call From contractors to Chocolates & yellows, the area. Sending 8 2005 Maverick ML7n Directory 541-385-5809. 541-420-5640 the O r egon State Aussies, Mini, AKC Red/ yard care, it's all here shots, wormed, health/ cash, checks, or s M ountain Bike, 1 5 541-385-5809 (small). Full Attorney General's Blue merle, Black Tris, 2 hip guar. 541-536-5385 Wanted: Longmire or in The Bulletin's l credit i n f ormation frame suspension, Maverick Office C o nsumer litters. 541-788-7799 or www.welcomelabs.com Garage Sales may be subjected to Hell on Wheels "Call A Service Rodent issues? Free hock, SRAM X O Protection hotline at 541-598-5314. 1st season dvd. l FRAVD. For more sdrivetrain AKC puppies, adult barn/ shop cats, & shifters, 9 1-877-877-9392. Professional" Directory Labradors 541-419-6408 information about an s 2 yellow females left! fixed, shots, some Garage Sales Aussie-Tzu male pups. rear cassette, advertiser, you may I speed OFA hips & elbows certifriendly, some n o t. Will be ready with 1st Garage Sales 34-11, Avid Juicy disc The Bulletin fied. Both parents on site. Will deliver. 389-8420 / call t h e Or e gon / brakes. Well SnttingCnntrnl Oregonttncn tggt USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! shot 8 worming on t aken ' State Atto r ney ' Great field & family dogs. Find them Jan. 3. $ 350 each. c are o f. $950 . Sheba-Inu Pom rat terDoor-to-door selling with Adopt a rescued kitten Kelly 541-604-0716 or $300. 541-390-7484 l General's O f f i ce 541-788-6227. in rier mix, pup, shots Consumer Protec• 541-489-3237 fast results! It's the easiest or cat! Fixed, shots, Llewellin Setter & Walker and wormed. Asking t ion ho t l in e at I The Bulletin ID chip, tested, more! Hound pups, make great way in the world to sell. Ladies brand new i 1-877-877-9392. Rescue at 65480 78th Border Collie/Black Lab Dachshund mini pie- Christmas gifts! 4 males, $200. 541-977-7935 Classifieds Electra purchased cross, male. Free to oood St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ I $125;3females, © Siberian-Husky pup, The Bulletin Classified baldmale,$450.Call 2010 Asking $550. I TheBulletin > home, Jack, 541-508-0386 Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. AND Wolf-Husky pups, $150. Ready to go! terning Cenrrai Oregon since t»03 for info. 541-385-5809 541-312-2448 541-385-5809 541-419-2502 541-447-1323 www.craftcats.org $400 ea. 541-977-7019 •
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*Ad runs until it sells or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)
Item Priced at: • Under $500 • $500 to $999 • $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over
FOR AOLITRf At
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Your Total Ad Cost onl: $29 $39 $49 $59
I ncludes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with
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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 b endbulletinic o m reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
266
286
Heating & Stoves
Sales Northeast Bend
NOTICE TO ADVERTISER ** FREE ** Since September 29, Garage Sale Klt 1991, advertising for Place an ad in The used woodstoves has Bulletin for your gabeen limited to mod- rage sale and reels which have been ceive a Garage Sale certified by the OrKit FREE! egon Department of Environmental QualKIT INCLUDES: ity (DEQ) and the fed- • 4 Garage Sale Signs eral E n v ironmental • $2.00 Off Coupon To Protection A g e ncy Use Toward Your (EPA) as having met Next Ad smoke emission stan- • 10 Tips For "Garage dards. A cer t ified Sale Success!" w oodstove may b e identified by its certifiPICK UP YOUR cation label, which is GARAGE SALE Kll at permanently attached 1777 SW Chandler to the stove. The Bul- Ave., Bend, OR 97702 letin will not knowingly accept advertis- The Bulletin ing for the sale of toriog cootral oregonsince foot uncertified woodstoves. Advertise your car! Add A Picturei 267 Reach thousands of readers! Fuel & Wood Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Claestleds
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,
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caution when purchasing products or I services from out of •
.00
I the area. SendingI c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f ormationI • may be subjected to
Roommate Wanted I Oregon Medical I FRAUD. Seeking roommate in Training PCS For more informa- I my age range (over 40). Phlebotomy classes tion about an adver- • Call 541-312-3085. begin Jan. 6, 2014. you may call Registration now open: I tiser, 632 ore onmedicaltrainin .com the Oregon State I Attorney General's Apt JMultiplex General 541-343-3100 Office C o n sumer s Protection hotline at l 476 CHECK YOUR AD I 1-877-877-9392. Employment LTh Bullet Opportunities
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The Bulletin
I
recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection.
• A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood
:> Qfy J~;QJI)~k Can be found on these pages:
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Looking for your next on the first day it runs employee? to make sure it is corPlace a Bulletin help portunities o include rect. oSpellchecko and Hay, Grain & Feed wanted ad today and employee and indehuman errors do ocreach over 60,000 cur. If this happens to First quality Orchard/Tim- pendent positions. readers each week. purchased. Ads for p o sitions othyiBlue Grass mixed your ad, please conYour classified ad • Firewood ads tact us ASAP so that hay, no rain, barn stored, that require a fee or will also appear on MUST include upfront investment $250/ton. Patterson Ranch corrections and any bendbulletin.com must be stated. With species & cost per Sisters, 541-549-3831 adjustments can be which currently cord to better serve any independentjob made to your ad. receives over 1.5 opportunity, please our customers. 541-385-5809 million page views Find It in i nvestigate th o r The Bulletin Classified every month at oughly. Use extra The Bulletin The Bulletin Classlgeds! caution when apno extra cost. PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Serving CootcolOsottoosince SIS 541-385-5809 Bulletin Classifieds is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right plying for jobs onGet Results! to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based oo the policies of these 1 cord dry, split Juniper, AptANultiplex NE Bendj line and never proCall 385-5809 newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party $200/cord. Multi-cord vide personal inforLooking for your or place Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. discounts 8 t/s cords mation to any source NEAR HOSPITAL next employee'? your ad on-line at available. Immediate 2 bdrm duplex, large you may not have Place a BUHetin bendbulletin.com delivery! 541-408-6193 researched and yard, garage. Avail242 246 246 257 help wanted ad able now. $825 mo. deemed to be repuExercise Equipment Guns, Hunting Guns, Hunting Musical Instruments today and 541-480-9200 What are you table. Use extreme reach over & Fishing & Fishing c aution when r e looking for? 60,000 readers Rm(jjcc) s ponding to A N Y each week. 12ga New England online employment You'll find it in Houses for shotgun, $85. Call I RugerRedLabel 1 Your classified ad ad from out-of-state. 20 ga. 0/U English John, 541-410-3367 I stock, The Bulletin Classifieds will also Rent General We suggest you call choke tubes appear on the State of Oregon beautiful $1000; CASH!! PUBLISHER'S bendbulletin.com Consumer Hotline ~ Browning BPS12 ga For Guns, Ammo & Mason & Hamlin 541-385-5809 Life Fit R91 NOTICE which currently at 1-503-378-4320 Reloading Supplies. [ pump26"w/choke Baby Grand Piano. Recumbent BikeAll real estate adverFor Equal Opportureceives over 541-408-6900. tubes, beautiful All Year Dependable Absolutely like new Beautiful black lactising in this newspanity Laws contact 1.5 million page ( $425; Springfield Firewood: Seasoned; with new batteryquer finish. Still un528 per is subject to the Oregon Bureau of 1911 A1 45acp6 views every Cedar, Spl i t, D el. operates perfectly! der warranty. F air H ousing A c t Labor 8 I n dustry, Loans & Mortgages I mags, workdoneto I month at no Bend: 1 for $185 or 2 Clean, always A great Christmas which makes it illegal Civil Rights Division, extra cost. housed inside home. for $350. Lodgepole Gift! 825,000 to a d vertise "any 971-673- 0764. WARNING Bulletin 1 for $205 or 2 for $2100 new; (orig. $47,000) preference, limitation DO YOU HAVE The Bulletin recom$385. 541-420-3484. Classifieds selling for $975. swingroll61 ©gmail. The Bulletin SOMETHING TO disc r imination mends you use cau- or Serving Central Oregons oco tOIB Great Christmas gift! Get Results! com based on race, color, SELL tion when you proThe Bulletin's 541-647-2227 541-385-5809 Russian semi-auto 380 541-312-2425 Call 541-385-5809 FOR $500 OR religion, sex, handivide personal "Call A Service pistol, Baikal IJ70-17A, or place your ad LESS? information to compa- cap, familial status, $325. 541-550-7189 Professional" Directory on-line at Non-commercial Add your web address nies offering loans or marital status or naNordic Trac A2350. 260 bendbuHetin.com tional origin, or an inadvertisers may is all about meeting to your ad and readcredit, especially Presents beautifully. WANTED Ruger LCP Misc. Items place an ad tention to make any ers on The Bulletin's yourneeds. those asking for adHardly used. A .380 wl or w/o laser. such pre f erence, with our web site, www.bendvance loan fees or Just bought a new boat? perfect holiday gift. Will pay CASH. Call Buying Diamonds "QUICK CASH Call on one of the bulletin.com, will be Sell your old one in the companies from out of limitation or discrimi541-408-6633 $350.00 /Gofd for Cash nation." Familial staSPECIAL" able to click through professionals today! classifieds! Ask about our state. If you have Cash and carry. 1 week3lines 12 Saxon's Fine Jewelers tus includes children Super Seller rates! automatically to your concerns or ques541-390-1713. Need to get an oi' 541-389-6655 541-385-5809 website. Seasoned Tamarack tions, we suggest you under the age of 18 ~t wooko t o t ad in ASAP? split & delivered. consult your attorney living with parents or BUYING 341 Plumber, Journeymen legal cus t odians, Ad must or call CONSUMER $220. 541-977-2040 Find exactly what You can place it Lionel/American Flyer Needed for new coninclude price of pregnant women, and Horses & Equipment HOTLINE, you are looking for in the trains, accessories. online at: struction. Start immedisin people securing cusNeed help fixing stuff? ~ le item oi tsoo 1-877-877-9392. 541-408-2191. ately! Good pay/benefits CLASSIFIEDS or less, or multiple tody of children under www.bendbulletin.com Call A Service Professional Call Gary, 541-410-1655 BANK TURNED YOU 18. This newspaper items whosetotal BUYING & S ELLING find the help you need. does not exceed 245 All gold jewelry, silver www.bendbulletin.com DOWN? Private party will not knowingly ac541-385-5809 SALES PERSON $500. and gold coins, bars, 2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H Local floor covering store will loan on real es- cept any advertising Golf Equipment wedding sets, 269 slant Shilo, great equity. Credit, no for real estate which is Weatherby 340 mag- rounds, has immediate need tate Call Classifieds at class rings, sterling sil- Gardening Supplies c ondition. $ 5 9 0 0 for problem, good equity in violation of the law. CHECKYOUR AD num Mark V , al l ver, F-T salesperson. 541-385-5809 collect, vinobo. 541-317-0988. • Must possess com- is all you need. Call O ur r e aders a r e weather finish & com- tagecoin & Equipment www.bendbulletin.com hereby informed that dental posite stock, Burris gold.watches, puter knowledge; have Oregon Land Mort- all dwellings adverBill Fl e ming, 4x12 scope, f I ve 541-382-9419. sales & design experi- gage 541-388-4200. FIND IT! tised in this newspaboxes ammo. Like BarkTurfSoil.com ence Check out the SUY IT! are available on • Knowledge of carpet, LOCAL NONEYIWe buy per n ew! $ 1350 o b o . classifieds online SELL IT! Just too many secured trust deeds & an equal opportunity 541-419-3262. vinyl, tile, hardwood & PROMPT DELIVERY on the first day it runs www.bendbulletin.com note, some hard money basis. To complain of The Bulletin Classifieds natural stone. collectibles? 542-389-9663 to make sure it is cord iscrimination cal l Call Pat Kellev Updated daily Call The Sugetln At • Responsible for show- loans. 541-382-3099 ext.13. rect. oSpellchecko and HUD t o l l-free a t A BIT LESS TACK room coverage, man541-385-5809 Sell them in human errors do oc- DPMS Panther AR10 1-800-877-0246. The 20% OFF sale on se- agement of individual For newspaper cur. If this happens to 308 W in., People Lookfor Information toll free t e lephone s c ope, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail The Bulletin Classifieds lected items. 2500 accounts for c l ients delivery, call the number for the hearyour ad, please con- bi-pod, $1500. At: www.bendbulletin.com About Products and sq. ft. of gently used working on r emodel Circulation Dept. at tact us ASAP so that 541-4'I 9-7001 ing i m paired is English 8 Western and/or new construc- Services Every Day through 541 -385-5809 541-385-5800 corrections and any 249 1-800-927-9275. tion. Material selec- The Bulletia Classineds saddles, show clothTo place an ad, call adjustments can be Guns, reloading equiptions, estimates, sales ing, bridles, saddle Art, Jewelry 541-385-5809 Downsizing! LOTS of made to your ad. ment, ammo, brass, agreements, ordering pads, Home Deco. & Furs or email knives & other sporting Christmas decor, inside 541-385-5809 product, i n s tallation Gift Certificates. 165 The Bulletin classifiedttbendbulletin.com sosviots centraloregon since l90s & out, includinq collecwork orders and inThe Bulletin Classified goods. 541-576-4213 NE Greenwood Ave tions. 541-388-9270 voicing. Actively purBend 541-323-3262 The Bulletin Sorviog Central Ocottoo sinceSta sue new accounts and Prepress Systems Analyst rospects. Take care of The Bulletin ages based on experiThe Bulletin is seeking a Prepress Systems 270 To Subscribe call your investments ence. Email resume Analyst. This person works with staff mem541-385-5800 or go to Lost & Found and cover letter to: with the help from in day-to-day production of The Bulletin's www.bendbulletin.com wall 970@hotmail.com bers • • C al l 5 4 I -385-5809 products, and with Commercial Print custom14-kt white gold The Bulletin's Lost: Men's prescripers, to ensure efficient prepress processing ladies wedding band tion glasses 12/14 "Call A Service and successful runs on press. This position with a bright polish to r o m ot e o u r service possibly on north end Pressroom requires knowledge of computer hardware, finish, 1.66 carat Professional" Directory Night Supervisor o f Bond o r W a l l software and operating systems, as well as diamond Hearts and 541-388-2596 The Bulietini located in beautiful Bend, OrHandyman Adult Care in-depth experience with litho plate production arrows, round cut, egon, is seeking a night time press superviV ictorian S t yle d o l l and offset printing. The right candidate will Sl -1 Clarity, F color. sor. We are part of Western Communications, TURN THE PAGE house, fur n ished. Life Tree Personal I DO THAT! have an understanding and background in Appraised at Inc. which is a small, family owned group con$350. 541-322-0682 For More Ads Service LLCHome/Rental repairs graphic arts workflow, and a thorough knowl$15,000. Very sisting of seven newspapers: five in Oregon Senior Concierge Service Small jobs to remodels edge of prepress layout software. unique piece. The Bulletin 263 and two in California. Our ideal candidate will • Errands• Home Mgmt. Honest, guaranteed Asking $9500. manage a small crew of three and must be • Organizing 541-389-2591 Tools work. CCB¹151573 541-281-7815 able to l e arn ou r e quipment/processes This is a hands-on position, involving work with Dennis 541-317-9768 Commercial Print customers during job planquickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for Building/Contracting ning, production, and with troubleshooting as Newin box, our 3 t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/ REIIIIEMBER: If you REEVE HANDY required. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace leadership experience preferred. In addition to or nearly new NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC have lost an animal, SERVICES. Home & and an equal opportunity employer. our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have nudon't forget to check law requires anyone Commercial Craftsman Tools: Repairs, merous commercial print clients as well. We • 10o Stationary who con t racts for Carpentry-Painting, The Humane Society Send a resume with qualifications, skills, offer a competitive wage and opportunity for construction work to radial arm saw, Bend Pressure-washing, experience and past employment history to: advancement. be licensed with the 541-382-3537 Model ¹315.220100, Honey Do's. On -time The Bulletin If you provide dependability combined with a Construction ContracRedmond $375. promise. Senior Oil paintingby 1777 SW Chandler Ave. positive attitude, are able to manage people tors Board (CCB). An • 10o Stationary table 541-923-0882 Discount. Work guarnoted NY artist Julie PO Box 6020 active license and schedulesand are a team player, we saw w/guide rails, P i e ille 541-389-3361 Heffernan, 22ox1 8" Bend, OR 97708-6020 would like to hear from you. If you seek a means the contractor anteed. oct-cct-tt78; model ¹315.228590, or 541-771-4463 framed, $500. Attention: James Baisinger is bonded & insured. stable work environment that provides a great or Craft Cats $325. Bonded 8 Insured 541-548-0675 by Friday, January2, 2014. Verify the contractor's place to live and raise a family, let us hear • 6-1/Bo Jointer 541-389-8420. CCB¹181595 CCB l i c ense at from you. planer "Professional" www.hirealicensedContact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at model ¹351.227240, Want to impress the 261 Home Repairs, Remod contractor.com anelson©wescom a ers.com wi t h your Pressman $250 obo. relatives? Remodel or call 503-378-4621. els, Tile, Carpentry • Hot Tubs & Spas complete resume, references and salary hisCall 541-504-6413 Experienced press operator your home with the The Bulletin recom- Finish work, M ainte tory/requirements. No phone calls please. daytime hours. mends checking with nance. CCB¹168910 Hot Springs salt water help of a professional Drug test is required prior to employment. Our Smith River, CA. production plant is seekthe CCB prior to con- Phil, 541-279-0846. Spa, no chemicals, EOE. from The Bulletin's ing an experienced Goss community press tracting with anyone. o nly m o nths o l d . 265 "Call A Service operator. We have 8 units that have been well Some other t rades Landscapingfvard Care Health forces sale. Building Materials Professional" Directory maintained and added to during the past sevalso re q uire addi$7000. 541-548-4677 tional licenses and NOTICE: Oregon LandCUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE eral years including rebuilt quarter folder. We La Pine Habitat Immediate opening in the Circulation departhave CTP operation with Kodak equipment as certifications. REWARD!Lost Canon scape Contractors Law RESTORE Get your well. camera Rebel T3i with ment for an entry level Customer Service Rep(ORS 671) requires all Building Supply Resale Debris Removal lenses in big black resentative. Looking for someone to assist our business businesses that adQuality at We are Western Communications, inc. a fambag at Mt. Bachelor subscribers and delivery carriers with subvertise t o pe r form LOW PRICES ily owned company that has 7 newspapers in JUNK BE GONE bus park/ride, Bend. scription transactions, account questions and Landscape Construc52684 Hwy 97 delivery concerns. California and Oregon. Our company provides Has pics of 8 2-yr. I Haul Away FREE tion which includes: a ROW I N G 541-536-3234 a great culture and work environment. This dad, horses, cooking. For Salvage. Also l anting, deck s , Open to the public . Essential: P o s i tive a tti t ude, s tro n g plant prints 2 of our publications plus a limited Irreplacable shots! Cleanups & Cleanouts ences, arbors, with an ad in service/team orientation, and problem solving amount of commercial printing, which we hope Prineville Habitat 541-633-6094 Mel, 541-389-8107 water-features, and inThe Bulletin's skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a to grow. This is a 4-day, 32-hour shift that rerepair of irReStore Just bought a new boat? stallation, Look at: fast-paced, performance-based customer call quires hands on community press experience rigation systems to be "Call A Service Building Supply Resale Sell your old one in the Bendhomes.com center environment and have accurate typing, and ideal candidate will be willing to assist in icensed w it h th e 1427 NW Murphy Ct. Professional" classifieds! Ask about our lLandscape other areas outside the pressroom such as phone skills and computer entry experience. Contrac541-447-6934 for Complete Listings of Super Seller rates! Directory Most work is done via telephone so strong prepress and mailroom as needed. tors Board. This 4-digit Open to the public. Area Real Estate for Sale communication skills and the ability to multi 541-385-5809 number is to be inBEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP task is a must. Smith River is centrally located between Crescluded in all adver255 Domestic Services cent City, CA, one of our papers that prints evtisements which indiThe cold weather is upon us and sadly there are Computers cate the business has ery Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday a.m. with still over 2,000 folks in our community without Work shift hours are Monday through Friday A ssisting Seniors a t approximately 5,000 circulation, and Brookbond, insurance and T HE B U LLETIN r e - permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Home. Light house a compensaings, OR. Our Brookings publication is also keeping & other ser workers quires computer ad- camps, getting by as best they can. tion for their employMust be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, approximately 5,000 circulation that prints on v ices. L icensed 8 The following items are badly needed to ees. For your protec- vertisers with multiple weekends or early morning hours might occaWednesday andSaturday a.m. Both Crescent help them get through the winter: Bonded. BBB Certi tion call 503-378-5909 ad schedules or those sionally be required. Pre-employment drug City and Brookings provide excellent quality of fied. 503-756-3544 e CANIPING GEAR: Used tents, sleeping bags, selling multiple sysor use our website: testing required. life to raise a family. tarps, blankets. tems/ software, to diswww.lcb.state.or.us to Drywall close the name of the e WARM CLOTHING: rain gear, boots, gloves. check license status Please send resume to: If this sounds like you, we would like to hear before contracting with business or the term ahustedtN bendbulletin.com from you. Please send resume with referWALLS R US PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT the business. Persons "dealer" in their ads. ences and salary requirements to: David DeHang tape, texture, THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER doing lan d scape Private party advertisThe Bulletin longe, Qu a lit y Con t ro l Sup e rvisor SosvsogCeotrai Oregon since $03 scraping old ceilings, maintenance do not ers are defined as 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ( ddelonge@triplicate.com), PO B o x 2 7 7 , & paint. 25 yrs. exp. r equire an LC B l i - those who sell one Pleasehelp, you can make EOE/Drug free workplace Crescent City, CA 95531. Call Bob, 760-333-4011 cense. computer. a big difference in our community. 325
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Cy the Cynic says he has a feeling that when something goes wrong with hi s c omputer, those "error reports" he is asked to send wind up in the same place as letters to Santa Claus. Luckily, bridge players aren't obliged to submit an error report when they go wrong. At five diamonds, South ruffed West's jack of spades and led the king of trumps. West took the ace and led anotherspade, and South ruffed and drew trumps, leaving him with none. South next led the ten of hearts to finesse. When East won, he cashed the ace of spades for down one.
ANSWER: Your hand isn't strong enough to bid 2NT and surely not strong enough for (or suitable for) two spades. Bid two diamonds to return to the probable 5-2 fit. The problem shows why it's wrong to open one diamond and bid two clubs with four cards in each minor; the result may be a 4-2 trump fit. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 4 i K65 3 2
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I have to report that South erred. He could have succeeded after he drew trumps by taking his club tricks, then guessing to end-play East with the ace of spades to lead from the king of hearts. But South's best line is to 6nesse in hearts at Trick Two. W hen E as t w i n s , h e ca n ' t profitably lead another spade. If he returns a heart, South wins, forces out the ace of trumps, ruffs the spade return, draws trumps and claims.
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Youhold: 4 A Q 7 4 Q K 8 6 2 0 5 3 4 8 7 6 . Your partner opens one diamond, you respond one heart Opening lead — 4 J and he bids two clubs. What do you say? (C) 2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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By Pattf Varel
(c)2013 Trfbune Content Agency, LLC
12/23/13
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, DECEMBER 23 2013 860
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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Motorcycles & Accessories
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
658
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Houses for Rent Redmond
Crook County Homes
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Redmond Homes Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
gjl77,000
541-546-4607
Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536. $4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend
541-548-5511
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION Prices Slashed Huge Savings! 10 Year conditional warranty. Finished on your site. ONLY 2 LEFT! Redmond, Oregon 541-546-5511
JandMHomes.com Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
882
Watercraft
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Fleetwood Wilderness ,xti! tercraft" include: Kay N.W. Edition 26' 2002, a la • aks, rafts and motor 1 slide, sleeps 6, Ized personal queen bed, couch, watercrafts. Fo stove/oven, tub/ "boats" please se shower, front e lec. N avion R V 200 8 , Class 670. jack, waste tank heat- Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Sprinter chassis 25'. ers, s tabilizers, 2 Weather Model 34 5B, 541-385-5609 Mercedes Benz diesel, prop. t a nks, no licensed thru 2/15, exlnt 24,000 miles, pristine smoking/pets, winter- cond. 3 elec slides, solar Serving Central Oregon since1903 cond., quality through- i zed, g oo d c o n d.panel, 10 gal water htr, awning, (2) 10-gal out, rear slide-out w/ $8500 OBO 14' 880 propane tanks, 2 batts, queen bed, d e luxe 541-447-3425 catalytic htr in addition to Motorhomes captain swivel f ront central heating/AC, genseats, diesel generator, tly used, MANY features! awning, no pets/ smokMust see to appreciate! ing. $78,500 o b o . $19,000. By owner (no Ready to deal! Financdealer calls, please). Call ing avail. or text541-325-1956. 541-382-2430
C5
The Bulletin
COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500. 541-548-4969
Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-460-2019
Keystone Laredo31' Rt/ 20 06 w ith 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E as y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500
King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
CHECK YOURAD
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn core rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any ad!ustments can be made to your ad.
541-447-4805
away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
'
•
•
Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665 865
Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel motorhome w/all options-3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Rexair 28-ft etc. 32,000 m iles. motorhome, 1991Wintered in h eated Ideal for camping or shop. $64,900 O.B.O. hunting, it has 45K 54'I -447-6664 miles, a 460 gas engine, new tires, auCheck out the tomatic levelers, classifieds online Onan generator, www.bendbulletin.com king-size bed, awUpdated daily ning. Nice condition Sell or trade? $6700. 541-815-9939
Layton 27-ft, 2001 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air condItioninq, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8895. 541-316-1388
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687
ATVs
Honda TRX 350 FE 2006, 4 wheel drive, electric start, electric s hift, n ew tire s , $2500, 541-960-6006.
Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1968 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l ift. 4 0 00W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504
870
Boats & Accessories
Garage Sales Garage Sales
Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Sunchaser Pontoon boat - $19,895 20' 2006 Smokercraft cruise, S-6521. 2006 75hp. Mercury. Full camping e n closure. 541-385-5809 Pop u p ch a nging room/porta-potty, BBQ, swim ladder, all gear. Trailer, 2006 E a syloader gal v anized. P urchased new, a l l records. 541-706-9977, cell 503-607-1973. KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
18'Maxum skiboat,2000,
inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755 Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them in someway. This advertising tip brought toyouby
The Bulletin
Harley Davidson Sportster 2 0 01 , 1 2 0 0cc, 9,257 miles, $4995. Call 21' Sun Tracker Sig. seMichael, 541-310-9057 ries Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp, live well, fish fndr, new int, extras, exc cond, Get your $7900. 541-508-0679
business
882
541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
Sening Central Oregonsince fetg
FACTORYSPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes
881
DreamCarsBend.com
®.
Super Clean Prineville $1 5 8 ,000. Spacious 1600 sq.ft., 3 Starter. bdrm, 2 bath home w/ 1620 sq.ft., on a large 2 car garage located 3/4 acre lot on city in S W Re d mond. services. All updated Large living room and to the 'T' and ready to utility room. F ridge move in. Have to call 850 incl. $1200 mo. + sec. on this one. Just hit the market. dep. 615-400-6915 Snowmobiles Scott McLean, Principal Broker 693 1994 Arctic Cat 580 541-408-6908 Office/Retail Space EXT, in good Realty Executives condition, $1000. for Rent Located in La Pine. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Call 541-406-6149. 500 sq. ff. upstairs Search the area's most office on NE side of comprehensive listing of 860 town, private bath, all classified advertising... util. paid. $500 month Motorcycles & Accessories estate to automotive, plus $500 deposit. real merchandise to sporting 541-460-4744 goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Kael &RmRs Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com lRe ©nlh 2013 Harley Davidson Dyna The Bulletin Senlng Cottfel Oregel! ence istg Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, 764 brand new, all stock, plus after-market Farms 8 Ranches exhaust. Has winter 745 cover, helmet. Burns, OR. 447 acres, Homes for Sale Ranch FSBO Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. $365,000 541-589-1630. Info at Call anytime, NOTICE www.elkridgecabin.co 541-554-0384 All real estate adverm/447AcRanch.html tised here in is subject to th e F ederal 771 Harley Davidson 2009 F air H ousing A c t , Super Glide Custom, which makes it illegal Lots Stage 1 Screaming to advertise any prefEagle performance, erence, limitation or SHEVLIN RIDGE too many options to discrimination based 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, aplist, $8900. on race, color, reli- proved plans. More 541-388-8939 gion, sex, handicap, details and photos on familial status or na- craigslist. $159,900. tional origin, or inten- 541-389-8614 Find exactly what tion to make any such preferences, l i mitayou are looking for in the 775 tions or discrimination. CLASSIFIEDS Manufactured/ We will not knowingly Mobile Homes accept any advertising for r eal e state which is in violation of 1994 Marlette 2 bdrm, 1 this law. All persons bath, excellent shape, are hereby informed new furnace & air condino n -smoker. that all dwellings ad- tioninq, vertised are available $14,000. 541-526-5920 on an equal opportuHarley Davidson nity basis. The BulleCall a Pro 2011 Classic Limtin Classified Whether you need a ited, LOADED, 9500 miles, custom paint n fence fixed, hedges egoodbuy Say "Broken Glass" by trimmed or a house Nicholas Del Drago, to that unused new condition, built, you'll find item by placing it in heated handgrips, professional help in auto cruise control. The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin's "Call a $32,000 in bike, Service Professional" only$20,000 obo. 541-316-6049 5 41-385-580 9 Directory 541-385-5809
880
ds published in eWa
HDFatBo 7996
•
875
Ads published in th "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, • house and sail boats.
For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. • 541-365-5609 •
The Bulletin
Sernn Central gre on srnce 1903
ow ou r
541-548-0318 (photo aboveis oi a similar model& not the actual vehicle)
ss•1• w t & TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $125 900 30 900 miles new Michelin tires great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150
Tioga 24' ClassC Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
„
•
M/innebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. n 17 Flat Screen, s o u nd, NATIONAL DOLPHIN Surround 37' 1997, loaded! 1 camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awslide, Corian surfaces, ning, Inwood floors (kitchen), verter,Generator, Auto Jacks, 2-dr fridge, convection Air leveling, Moon microwave, Vizio TV & roof satellite, walk-in roof, no smoking or shower, new queen bed. p ets. L ik e n e w , White leather hide-a- $74,900 bed & chair, all records, 541-460-6900 no riets or smoking. $28,450. Call 541-771-4800
Head south for the winter! 1997 Tropical by National RV.35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new awnings, everything works, excellent condition, 1 owner, non-smokers, $15,000 OBO. 541-408-7705
Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004,35Ki loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541485-5809
u . e
]j
only 6 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
For Sale 1990 5th Wheel Transporter
Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500. Ask for Theo, 541-260<293
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809
1/3 interestin Columbia 400, $150,000 (located I Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, I $400/mo. 541-948-2963
2004 CH34TLB04 34'
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
WEEKEND WARRIOR Toy hauler/travel trailer. 24' with 21' interior. Sleeps 6. Self-contained. Systems/ appearance in good condition. Smoke-free. Tow with 3/g-ton. Strong
suspension; can haul ATVs snowmobiles, even a small car! Great price - $8900. Call 541-593-6266 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5609
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 16' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. ins ide & out. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5~/~ years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527.
1/3 interest i n w e llequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65 000. 541-419-9510
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellentperiormance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
Monaco Lakota 2004 5th Wheel 34 ft.; 3 s lides; immaculate c ondition; large screen TV w/ entertainment center; reclining chairs; cen1974 Beffanca ter kitchen; air; queen 1730A bed; complete hitch and new fabric cover. 2180 TT, 440 SMO, $18,000 OBO. 180 mph, excellent (541) 548-5886 condition, always hangared, 1 owner
for 35 years. $60K.
R
R
ln Madras, call 541-475-6302
MONTANA 3585 2006, Dramatic Price Reducexc cond 3 slides
king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation all options $35 000 obo 541-420-3250
tion Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, Call The Bulletin At offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great 541-385-5809 visibility for aviation busiPlace Your Ad Or E-Mail ness. 541-948-2126 or At: www.bendbulletin.com email 1jetjock@q.com
o ur
u .
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES!
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck
We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.
Modern amenities andall the quiet you will need. Room to grow jn your own little paradise! Call now.
can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
BSSl 1C S T o pl a ce y o ur a d, v i si t
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Keystone Challenger
Full COIOr PhOtOS For an adctifional ("Special private parly rates apply to merchandise and automotive categories,)
o
Orbit 21' 2007, used
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.
'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422, in La Pine ) ILL DELIVER
ww w.b end b ul l et i n . com or cal l 54 1 - 3 85 - 58 09
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
C6 MONDAY DECEMB ER 23 2013 •THE BULLETIN I
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
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975
975
975
975
975
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
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Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou
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AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
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932
933
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Corvette Coupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil,
garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell!
Buick LaCrosse CXS 2005, loaded, new battery/tires, perfect $8495. 54'I-475-6794 Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
Corvette 1979 L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
aged or abused. $12,900.
Dave, 541-350-4077
541-923-1781
Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
1996, 73k miles,
Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose premium sound stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Ga-
raged, perfect condition $5 9 ,700. 541-322-9647
Buick Regal S Cus-
Fax it to 641-322-7263 6 1,752 mi., exc. cond., V6, The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin's 3.1 L, fuel injected, "Call A Service 4 dr., FWD, exc. all season tires, new Professional" Directory battery and alternais all about meeting tor, very clean, exc. your needs. a/c and heater, pb, pw and s t eering. Call on one of the $4000. 541-419-5575 professionals today! tom 1994,
541-385-5809 Ford Supercab 1992, color with Superhavvkengine, power every- brown/tan atching full s i z e Only 1 Share thing, new paint, 54K m c anopy, 2WD, 60 orig. miles, runs great, over drive, 135K4mi., Available exc. cond.in/out.$7500 full bench rear seat, Economical flying obo. 541-480-3179 in your own slide rear w indow, IFR equipped CORVETTE COUPE bucket seats, power Acura Legend, 1992, What are you Cessna 172/180 HP for Glasstop 2010 seats w/lumbar, pw, black on black, chrome only $13,500! New wheels, new tires, Grand Sport - 4 LT HD receiver & trailer looking for? Garmin Touchscreen loaded, clear bra brakes, good tires. beautiful cond! $2250. avionics center stack! 541-549-6589 You'll find it in hood & fenders. Good cond i tion. Exceptionally clean! New Michelin Super $4900. 541-389-5341 The Bulletin Classifieds Hangared at BDN. GNC Y ton 1971, Only Sports, G.S. floor Look at: Call 541-728-0773 $19,700! Original low mats, 17,000 miles, Bendhomes.com mile, exceptional, 3rd Crystal red. 541-385-5809 for Complete Listings of owner. 951-699-7171 916 $42,000. Area Real Estate for Sale 503-358-1164. Trucks & Cadillac El Dorado Heavy Equipment 1994 Total Cream Puff! Body, paint, trunk as FORD XLT 1992 The Bulletin showroom, blue 3/4 ton 4x4 leather, $1 700 wheels To Subscribe call matching canopy, w/snow tires although 541-385-5800 or go to 30k original miles, GMC Sierra 1977 short car has not been wet in www.bendbulletin.com bed, exlnt o r iginal possible trade for 8 years. On trip to BMW M-Roadster, classic car, pickup, cond., runs & drives Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., Peterbilt 359 p otable great. V8, new paint 2000, w/hardtop. motorcycle, RV $4800. 541-593-4016. water truck, 1 990, and tires. $4750 obo. $19,500 $13,500. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp 541-504-1050 In La Pine, call 57,200 miles, pump, 4-3" h oses, Titanium silver. Not 'i 928-581-9190 Want to impress the fl( camiocks, $ 25,000. many M-Roadsters relatives? Remodel 541-820-3724 available. (See your home with the Just too many Craigslist posting id 931 help of a professional Lincoln LS 2001 4door collectibles? ¹41 55624940 for Automotive Parts, from The Bulletin's additional details.) sport sedan, plus set Serious inquiries "Call A Service of snow tires. $6000. Service & Accessories Sell them in Jeep CJ5 1979, only. 541-480-5348 541-317-0324. Professional" Directory Original owner, 87k The Bulletin Classifieds Avalanche Extreme stud- miles, only 3k on new ded tires on rims, 215/60- 258 long block. Clutch R16, used 1 seas, gd cond package, Warn hubs. 541-385-5809 $200. 541-604-0963 Excellent runner, very NorthPirelli Scorpion snow & dependable. 6~/~' plow,Warn ice tires, 295/45-R20 on man Oz Italian racing rims, 6000¹ winch. $7900 I nternational Fla t best reasonable Bed Pickup 1963, used 1 season, fits Jeep or 1 Grand Cherokee. $2500. offer. ton dually, 4 s pd. 541-549-6970 or Jerry 541-480-9005 trans., great MPG, 541-815-8105. could be exc. wood 1000 932 1000 1000 hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. Legal Notices Antique & Legal Notices Legal Notices 541-419-5480. Classic Autos R IGHT T O R E I N- printed or ordered LEGAL NOTICE STATE. Any person on line from Central 935 AMENDED B u i lders named in ORS 86.753 Oregon Plymouth B a rracudaSport Utility Vehicles TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Exchange at - The has the right, at any OF S A LE 1966, original car! 300 T rustee under t h e time that is not later http://www.planson1921 Model T hp, 360 V8, centerby clicking terms of t h e T rust than five days before file.com Delivery Truck lines, 541-593-2597 Deed desc r ibed the Trustee conducts on "Public Works Restored & Runs herein, at the direc- the sale, to have this Projects" and then $9000. tion of the Beneficiary, foreclosure dismissed on "City of Bend" or 541-389-8963 hereby elects to sell and the Trust Deed in person at 1902 BMW X3 2 0 07, 9 9 K t he p r operty d e - r einstated by p a y - NE 4th St., Bend, miles, premium pack- scribed in the Trust ment to the Benefi- Oregon. age, heated lumbar Deed to satisfy the ciary of t h e e ntire VW Bug Sedan, 1969, supported seats, pan- obligations s ecured a mount then d u e , Entities intending to fully restored, 2 owners, oramic moo n roof, thereby. Pursuant to other than such por- submit a proposal with 73,000 total miles, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- ORS 86.745, the fol- tion of the principal as should register with $10,000. 541-382-5127 non headlights, tan & lowing information is would not then be due the Central Oregon Builders Exchange black leather interior, provided: 1. PARTIES: had no default ocBuick Skylark 1972 Have an item to n ew front 8 re a r Grantor:REBECCA J. curred, by curing any as a planholder in Matchless! 17K original brakes O 76K miles, CARLTON order to receive adsell quick? miles! Sunburst yellow/ AND other default that is one owner, all records, RANDY L. CARLTON. c apable o f be i n g denda. This can be white vinyl/Sandalwood. If it's under very clean, $16,900. cured by tendering the done on-line or by 15 factory options includTrustee:FIRST 5414854360 ing A/C. 'Sloan docu- '500you can place it in A MERICAN T I T L E performance required contacting Central B u i lders mentation." Quality reCOMPANY. Succes- under the obligation or Oregon The Bulletin Exchange at: (541) Trust Deed and by paint. COMPLETELY orisor Trustee:NANCY 389-0123, Fax (541) inal interior & trunk area Classifieds for: K. CARY. Beneficiary: paying all costs and 389-1549, or email PRISTINE). Enqine comOREGON HOUSING expenses actually inChevy Tahoe 2001 admin © plansonpartment is VERY MUCH '10 - 3 lines, 7 days AND C O M M U N ITY curred in enforcing the at 5.3L V8, leather, o riginal. No r ust, no SERVICES DE- obligation and Trust file.com. Proposers air, heated seats, '16 3 lines, 14 days responsible for leaks, evervthino works! PARTMENT, STATE Deed, together with are 120K mi. $19,900. 541-3F3-t 898 (Private Party ads only) fully loaded, OF OREGON, AS- t he t r ustee's a n d making sure they $7500 obo have all a ddenda 541-460-0494 SIGNEE OF GOLDEN a ttorney's fees n ot Chevy 1955 PROJECT 933 EMPIRE M O RT- exceedingthe amount before s u bmitting car. 2 door wgn, 350 ORS proposals. G AGE, INC., D B A provided i n Pickups Take care of small block w/Weiand 8 6.753. Yo u ma y ALL PACIFIC dual quad tunnel ram your investments reach th e O r egon T he deadline f o r MORTGAGE. 2.DEwith 450 Holleys. T-10 SCRIPTION OF State Bar's Lawyer submitting proposwith the help from 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, als is: January 21, Referral Service at PROPERTY: The Weld Prostar wheels, The Bulletin's or 2014 at 3:00 PM. real property is de- 503-684-3763 extra rolling chassis + 1966 Ford F250 "Call A Service scribed as follows: Lot toll-free in Oregon at Proposals must be extras. $6500 for all. 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, received HEATHER PARK, 800-452-7636 or you physically 541-389-7669. P/S, straight body, Professional" Directory 3, may visit its website by the City at the loin the City of Verruns good. $2000. at: w w w.osbar.org. cation listed below nonia, County of Co541-410-8749 TURN THE PAGE Legalassistance may by the deadline. No lumbia and State of be available if you faxed or electronic Oregon. 3. REFor More Ads CORDING. The Trust have a low income (email) p r oposals The Bulletin Deed was recorded and meet federal pov- shall be accepted. Need to get an ad as follows: Date Re- erty guidelines. For Chevy pick-up truck in ASAP? corded: N o vember more information and Sealed p roposals Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, 1954, all there, started 20, 2007. Recordinq a directory of legal aid shall be d elivered auto, high miles, runs to to: Gwen Chapman, restore, you finish! No. 2007-014457 Ofg programs, g o good. $1700. P urchasing M a n $6800. 541-480-3646 Fax it to 541-322-7253 ficial Records of Co- http://www.oregon541-633-6662 lawhelp.org. Any ager, City Hall, Adlumbia County, OrThe Bulletin Classifieds Where can you find a questions regarding ministrative Office, egon. 4.DEFAULT. The Grantor or any this matter should be 2nd floor, 710 Wall helping hand? other person o b li- directed to Lisa Sum- Street, Bend, OrChevy 1986, long bed, From contractors to Paralegal, (541) e gon 97701. T h e four spd., 350 V8 regated on the Trust mers, (TS outside of the enDeed and Promissory 686-0344 built, custom paint, yard care, it's all here ¹07754.30529). velope or box conNote secured thereby great t i r e s and in The Bulletin's Ford Model A 1930 DATED: October 22, taining the proposis in default and the wheels, new t a g s, "Call A Service als shall include the Coupe, good condition, $5000 Beneficiary seeks to 2 013. /s/ Nancy K . obo. $14,000. 541-588-6084 541-389-3026 Professional" Directory foreclose the T rust Cary. Nancy K. Cary, p roposers n a m e Successor T rustee, and b e m a rked: Deed for failure to Hun t er, "Financial A d v ipay: M o nthly pay- Hershner ments in the amount LLP, P.O. Box 1475, sory Services". of $1,390.00 each, Eugene, OR 97440. The City of Bend redue the first of each LEGAL NOTICE serves the right 1) to month, for the months City of Bend reject any or all proof April 2013 through Request for posal not in compliOctober 2013; plus Proposals ance with public solate charges and ad- Financial Advisory licitation procedures vances; plus any unServices and requirements, paid real p r operty 2) to reject any or all taxes or liens, plus The City of Bend reproposals in accorinterest. 5.AMOUNT quests proposals to d ance with O R S DUE. T h e a mount provide financial ad279B.100, 3 ) to due on the Note which visory services for cancel the solicitai s secured by t h e t he City and t h e tion if the City finds Trust Deed referred to B end Urban R e it is the public interherein is: P r i ncipal newal Agency. The est to do so, 4) to balance in the amount City desires to enseek clarifications of of $167,216.37; plus ter into a three year any or all proposals, interest at the rate of agreement with the and 5) to select the 5.6250% per annum option to extend for proposal which apfrom March 1, 2013; two additional one pears to be in the plus late charges of year terms with a best interest of the $ 232.10; plus a d - qualified firm expeRetail & Classified Display City. vances and foreclo- rienced in providing sure attorney fees and financial a d visory Advertising Deadlines Published costs. 6.SALE OF services. Services December 23, 2013 PUBLICATION ............................................. DEADLINE PROPERTY. The to be provided inTrustee hereby states clude, but are not Thursday 12/26......................................... Monday, 12/23 - 8 am Gwen Chapman that the property will limited to, providing Purchasing Manager Friday 12/27 .............................................. Monday, 12/23 - 8 am be sold to satisfy the professional advice 541-385-6677 obligations secured by and assistance on Friday GO! Magazine 12/27 ........................ Friday, 12/20 - 5 pm t he Trust Deed. A n City financings, deLEGAL NOTICE Amended Trustee's v elopment o f fi NOTICE OF PR O Notice of Default and n ancing pla n s, POSED BANK CLASSIFIED LINE AD DEADLINES Election to Sell Under post-issuance comMERGER - Notice is Terms of Trust Deed pliance, and develh ereby given t h at Wednesday, 12/25 - Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24 - Noon has been recorded in opment of B ank of t h e C a s Thursday, 12/26- Deadline is Tuesday, 12/24- Noon the Official Records of l ong-range d e b t cades, 1100 NW Wall Columbia County, Or- strategy. Street, Bend, DesCI888ified8 • 541-385-5809 egon. 7. TIME OF chutes County, OrSALE. Date:March 6, The request for proe gon 9 7 701, h a s HolidayHours:ChristmasEve12/24- 7:30 amto 3 pm • Closedon12/25 2014. Time:11:00 posal, a d d enda, made application to a.m. Place:Columbia planholders list, and the Federal Deposit County Courthouse, n otification of r e The Bulletin CirculationTelephoneService HolidayHours (541-385-5800): Insurance Corpora230 Strand Street, St. suits for this project tion for its written conChristmas Eve12/24: 6:00am-3 pm • 12/25: 6:30am- j0:30 am Helens, Oregon. 8. may be v i ewed, sent to merge with PriceReduced! Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
Porsche 911 Turbo
Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928
Subaru STi 2010, 16.5K, rack, mats, cust snow whls, stored, oneowner, $29,000, 541.410.6904
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands of readers!
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin ClassiBeds
Volkswagen Touareg 2004 Meticulously maintained. Very clean inside and out. V6. Recently serviced 60 point inspection sheet. $7200 Call 541-480-0097 FIND IT!
BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds
A RE P U S L I C NOTICES HVEPCbRTANTT An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the elmtorate to make well-inform& decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to citizens who want to know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go to www.bendbullefin.com and click on "Classi%ed Ads"
The Bulletin
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The Bulletin will be closed on Wednesday, December 25
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Home Federal Bank, ter described are in der penalty of perjury located at 500 12th default for reasons set before a notary public, A venue South , forth below and the and state: (a) Your N ampa, Can y o n beneficiary declares true name; (b) The County, Idaho 83651. all sums due under address at which you The merger will be the note secured by will a c cept f u t ure completed i n tw o the trust deed de- m ailings from t h e steps. First, Cascade scribed herein imme- court and f orfeiture Bancorp, Bend, Or- diately due and pay- counsel; and (3) A egon, t h e pa r ent able. G R ANTORS: s tatement that y o u company of Bank of Kris M. Bales and have an interest in the the Cascades, will ac- Kimberly A. B a les. seized property. Your quire Home Federal BENEFICIARY: Frank deadline for filing the Bancorp, Inc., Nampa, H. Baker, Trustee, claim document with Idaho, th e p a r ent FBO Century Devel- forfeiture cou n sel company of H o me opment LLC Retire- n amed below is 21 Federal Bank, pursu- ment Trust Dated De- days from the last day ant to the merger of c ember 17 , 2 0 0 2. of publication of this Home Federal Ban- T RUST DEED R E- notice. Where to file corp, Inc. with and CORDED: August 10, a claim and for more into Cascade Ban- 2009, in Book 2009, i nformation: D a i na corp, with Cascade at page 34187, Offi- Vitolins, Crook County Bancorp as the survi- cial Records, Des- District Attorney Ofvor. Immediately fol- chutes County, Or- fice, 300 N E T h ird l owing t h e firs t egon. P R OPERTY Street, Prineville, OR merger, Home Fed- COVERED BY 97754. eral Bank will merge TRUST DEED: PAR- Notice of reasons for with and into Bank of CEL 1 O F P A RTI- Forfeiture: The propthe Cascades, with TION PLAT 2005-69, erty described below B ank of t h e C a s- DESCHUTES was seized for forfeicades as the surviv- COUNTY, OREGON. ture because it: (1) i ng institution. T h e DEFAULT: Failure to Constitutes the prohome officeand ex- pay: 1. Unpaid princi- ceeds of the violation isting branch offices of pal in the amount of of, solicitation to vioHome Federal Bank $312,065.00. 2. late, attempt to viowill become branch Monthly interest-only late, or conspiracy to offices of Bank of the payments i n the violates, the criminal Cascades i m medi- amount of $1,658.62 laws of the State of ately following the from July 2011 to the Oregon regarding the merger. The existing present: $43,124.12; manufacture, distribubranchoff ices ofBank 3. Late fee of five per- tion, or possession of of the Cascades will cent (5%) for each controlled substances remain as branch of- payment received af- (ORS Chapter475); fices of Bank of the ter the 10th of a ny and/or (2) Was used Cascades i m medi- month: $2,156.21; 4. or intended for use in ately following the Trustee's Sale Guar- committing or facilimerger. antee: $1, 2 36.00. tating the violation of, This notice is p u b- S UM O W IN G O N solicitation to violate, l ished pursuant t o O BLIGATION SE - attempt to violate, or Section 18(c) of the CURED BY TRUST conspiracy to violate Federal Deposit In- DEED: $358,581.33. the criminal laws of surance Act. Any per- Notice is given that the State of Oregon son wishing to com- any person named regarding the manument on this pursuant to Section facture, distribution or application may file 86.753, Oregon Re- possession of conhis or her comments vised Statutes, has trolled su b stances in writing with the re- the right to have the (ORS Chapter 475). gional director of the foreclosure proceedFederal Deposit In- ing dismissed and the IN THE MATTER OF: surance Corporation trust deed reinstated at its regional office, by cur i n g the (1) US Currency in 25 Jessie Street at above-described de- the am o un t of Ecker Square, Suite faults, by payment of 1 ,555.00, Case N o 13-11069 seized June 2300, San Francisco, the entire amount due CA, 94105-2780, not (other than such por- 5, 2013 from Krista later than January 9, tions of principal as Vela. 2014. The non-confi- would not then be due dential portions of the had no default ocapplication are on file curred), and by payLEGAL NOTICE in the regional office ing all costs and exand are available for penses actually NOTICE TO INTERESTED P ERSONS. i nspection dur i n g incurred in enforcing regular bus i ness the obligation and GINGER L. DURDANhours. Photocopies of trust deed, together SHAW has been apthe n on-confidential w ith trustee's a n d pointed Personal Repportions of the appli- attorney's fees, at any resentative of the ESOF LEI c ation file w il l b e time prior to five days TATE DURDAN, Deceased, made available upon before the date last by the Circuit Court, request. P U BLICA- s et fo r t h e s a l e . TION DATES: DeMARK G. REINECKE, State of Oregon, Deschutes County, under cember 10, 2013, De- Successor Trustee. Case Number c ember 23 , 2 0 1 3, LEGAL NOTICE 1 3PB0143. All p e rJ anuary 4 , 20 1 4 . NOTICE OF SEIZURE sons having a claim BANK OF THE CASFOR CIVIL against th e e s tate CADES - BEND, OR- FORFEITURE TO ALL m ust p resent t h e EGON, HOME FEDPOTENTIAL c laim w i t hin fo u r E RAL BA N K CLAIMANTS AND TO months of th e f i rst NAMPA, IDAHO. ALL UNKNOWN date of this LEGAL NOTICE PERSONS READ THIS publication notice t o H e n drix, NOTICE OF SALE CAREFULLY Brinich & B e rtalan, Mark G. R e inecke, at 716 NW HarSuccessor T r ustee If you have any inter- LLP, riman Street, Bend, under the Trust Deed est i n t h e s e i zed Oregon ATTN: d escribed bel o w , property d e scribed Lisa N. 97701, Bertalan, or hereby elects to sell, below, you must claim they may be barred. pursuant to Oregon that interest or you will Additional information Revised Sta t utes automatically lose that may be obtained from S ections 86.705 t o interest. If you do not court records, the 86.795, the real prop- file a claim for the the Personal Representaerty described below property, the property tive or the followingat 10:00 a.m. on Feb- may be forfeited even named attorney for ruary 7, 2014, in the if you are not con- The Personal lobby of the offices of victed of any crime. sentative. DateRepreof first B ryant, L ovlien & To claim an interest, publication: DecemJarvis, 591 SW Mill you must file a written ber 9, 2 013. HENView Way, Bend, Or- claim with the forfei- D RIX B R INICH & egon. All obligations ture counsel named BERTALAN, LLP, 716 of performance which below, The w r itten NW HARR I MAN, are secured by the claim must be signed Trust Deed hereinaf- by you, sworn to un- BEND, OR 9 7 701, 541-382-4980.